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< t tmVO- L XimNO 87 NEW YORK FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26 1880 PRICE TWO CENTS = JOOTBALLINThESNOW TALK AND lnlNC rON aTnvaoMNa FOB JUS COLLEOE CHAMFIOHaUlF- Tk nio Vnnbl le to OI the ntert the Orme uind l l IA Two 1r I r- Ililllo without 0 Point Seorod by Either l > rl > ccton Bllll CUIrn the ChsvnaplMklB Thor woro Rront anticipations concerning the football mateh to bo played by the toftm of Princeton and Yale Colleges on the grounds of Iho Polo Association yesterday Vnlo mon wore onfldontthat their team would win for It had SofMtod everything It tackled Princeton men II not lulto so confident wero very hopeful that Uislr tem would hold tho championship hlch Ujey oUlm that they have held since 1877 Tho tew rulus are the Ilucby rules and wore Intro- duced ¬ by Harvard College In 1875 the irlmson team wont to Now Haven and jhowed Yalo how to play tho same The jluos wore without uniform and with- out ¬ experience nnd were defeated badly In 1B7R Yale returned tho compliment by do eating Harvard They then polished oft frlnooton who had adopted tho rules That was the mat tlmo that Princeton was baton by any football team Harvard tried 1877 nnd fatted That year Yale would not play lu the regular association names because luoi wanted A change In the number of mon constituting a team end Harvard and Prince- ton refused to make the change But Yale met Princeton In a friendly struggle which resulted In n drawn game Tho next year J873 Princoton bout Yale a Rout to nothing and did the dimn to Harvard Yale also beat Har- vard ¬ Last year the champions beat Harvard Yalo tied Harvard and the champions tied with Yfin Yale had returned to the association In 187B without thA chance In numbers having 1eon indo Thl year th change was made Devon men played on a side Instead of fifteen Columbia Joined tho association Yale entered thc arena full of hope Hardlne and who graduated In the pummer re ¬ CaDt oot graduates They were two of tho best players of last years team The other nIne worn nil experienced players most of them juniors and eentor all members of tho old team and men Her team fulfilled the oxpetttloflR of tho college It beat Harvard and Columbia nf tbo association antI all the outsldo loams that challenced It Princeton began the season lops propitiously Hho lost eIght of her team and the best of the team at that Hnllard Cutts Bryan Brotherlln Miller Duncan ant U- P grsduatodand did no return is post graduate McNnlr wbo Is In tho Theo- logIcal Seminary thought It not the square thIns to plttr and quit the team Lonoy was made Curtain and he sot a team together tha was good It boat Harvard and every dub tin the scores stood be- fore ¬ peAcntnllsel the blue met Neither hart been b ten Thoro could hnrdly bavo been a worso day for n football game than yeaterdav The rround wa frozen hard nnd covered with snow and tho air was raw and chilly lint this did Dot deter the friends of the colleges from flook Inl to tho Polo grounds Sixteen hotel coach t te1Flflg either tho orange and blue of Princeton or the blue of Yale drew up in line There were at least sixty carriages on tim rround Tho Irnne stand was crowded with women and moo In ulsters rounl roull I lt least 4 000 persons on the ground tho greatest over Gathered there The game wua to have been called at 2 oclock sharp but at that time n small army of mon with brooms nnd shovels were clearing the mow from the ground When the teams np pen red there was great cheering Tim Prince Ion boys clad In cape shirts and ttoeklngs of ernnirc nod l black In horizontal stripes end white knickerbockers resembled glgnntlo end muscular wasps Ynles men looked the harg sr They wore blno taps Lblrl and stock- ings ¬ white breeches and shirts some wore stout canvas jackets dirty with the grime of f hardfought contests They nvorncod 165 Dunslnll tIlls Included wlrey little Harding scales at 125 pound Princetons jnon averaged but ICO pounds- At 230 Referee W H Manning captain of Harvards foothall tenm called game As tbo loams took their places there was opportunity to see thorn Princetons rUlhlr wore Brad ¬ ford 81 McDermott 81 81 Peace 83 Loner 81 captain and Pilot 83 The- jtuarterbisk wa Winton the only fro liman In Inn teem experience at Last Hampton made him a valuable acquisition The half- backs were Morgan 83 and Chetwood 82 and ho basks were J Harlsn81 and Oauldwell- fll Some of the Prim ton men groaned when they saw the champions for Wltblngton one of the mainstays was laid up from a hurt re lelved In the game with Harvard two weeks ago iarr another excellent player was In the Invalid corns not having recovered from the tame with the University of Pennsylvania nnd pevoraux n strong and skilful rusher who had been kicked In tho eye In thegamo with Harvard irns not there Three good mon were missing and their substitutes hind had but little tram practice Yales rushers were Fuller 81 Beck 82 Vernon 81 Harding80Lamb81 ktorrs 82 and Adams 82 hedger 81 was the vuartnr hack Watson 81 tho captain and Camp 80 were the half backs and Ba- ton ¬ 81 tbo bl l k Yale had seven rushers nod poe back Princeton six rushers nnd two a r s friends were jubilant over their pros ¬ peele and backed their team liberally offering 10 to 50 and 1500 to 1250 Princeton mon these bets n tio at leaat for ac boplDlfor tording to the must win to win the bets tali won the kickoff Harding made the kick end the big ball went snlnnlnglnto the itt lao of Princeton got It and made a short run tackled nnd stopped by the boys In blue Out of the ruck the bal came spinning- and wns captured by Princeton who Intit I vvull up toward the Tale goal There was wild rush for the ball and for an In- stant ¬ It seemed as though the orange and black were to get a touch down Bacon of Yale grabbed tho bill ns It bounded- near tho goal but It slipped from his hands Loney of Princeton wAalllrc and touoh down seemed certain on the snow and thn twit instant Yales mon were on the bull and the blues had made a touch down for safety The rocket cheer of Princeton fol ¬ lowe this sharp play out to the 25yard line Camp Yales hard kli knr sent the ball high In tho air Bradford of Princeton caught it IhusInlnlnl n tree kick Wintn made the too and a From the throng the nowcovered ball wax tossed Gauldwell out of Princeton caught I tried tn wa tackled pr Yale thorn was IlnlrlllumhlA I and then Watson I of Yale was se bal under his arm tnlnl to make a run foothold eould and the next minute YalsH cap lain went to the earth under a crowd of Prince ¬ ton men Then Harlan sent the by a long kick well up toward i ales bal Watson was there and took It on tbo fly He attempted a fro kick nnd scrimmage on the lino followed Princeton man snapped the bill backward Vyintoii caught l and dodgid tho throng and started for the Yale goal ills triumph was short for ho WHS thrown by a toy In blue but tin ball had crept up toward Yalos mat The ball ngiln reached Harlan nnd this alrnlIIId youth hoisted thuglobo Into den ¬ to thl goal of Yale rite rushers followed again It seemed as though the lrlnceton would surely got a touch flown theIr second and last chance by n hair and again Yale touched down for safely 1 lien there was great cliiwriug by Un hopi with orange and Muck In their hutton holes The Yale men sported theIr colors In their faois aa w1 aa in their buttonholes When tile as kicked off by Yale pt f Princeton grabbed It und made a Pec He was caught A scrimmage followed and Ition ttto bail was hmPael out to Winton who made a kick for goal he 111d him anui Camp of IrBaoherouslround next minute he was yanked from his tfd 1 and untwood ol Princeton made lit with the ball He too was thrown tad In the slruKgle tint followed tinre WAre threats of a free fight Titer was more yelllnKthiin fighting howler and again hits game went on It was a serisof kicks anti lerlmmagrs for nn runnlnl10r rushing could h done tmcausx ot ground liar la of PrInceton did IltPory work In long ricking but nearly every kick was Into this hands of some ialo man for a ijuarter of an hour tho game was limply ci eerie of lonl kicks fits ball was rrldualy i worked UI toward the Princeton Yale tnn Princeton to touch down for safety st 255 amid Itnhl UnhlI halt I from thin Yale Princeton 8Dclntor tried to Mndlhf hail luarlnrs o Yalollonl hit the boya In bluo again rusholl i goal nnd UIH loge wore lort1 to Snottier touch down for Safety Again and again Princeton tried to drive hack Yale and twice inur they were force to toiiih down icr safety Alter the fourth touch down for Hufety the New J rsuv 005 grit I the bail well down by Yalos coil i for the blolplm hl1 I mudu theIr third touch Uld Yale k luk1 I niT s ii from thn 21 yards line but llltntttfrtng kick ly the Iln nllow IIV gIII work Ublllloulllr t tOied yl to neIther null hr fourth touch kick own for Illely 11 rlncplons gut n free 1 lit intoti try a place diCk of I the for gosh The hal ws fairly In thin hull Iround soil rplulrl a long and aourat klcl Ind It over goat but his wind wu favorable and the Prlnoeton had are hope that their freshman would It Chatwood dropped on on knee and bald tbs bal carefully Winton squatted and sighted atlantrthsTtttlDK Ibo wall plaoad sprang forward and kicked bal snow oVro bell slipped from his toe and left Into Camps bad and lsd In thaoantreof the Iround an In sttnt where It was being for when time was called The teams had boon strug- gling ¬ for threequarter of an hour Each had Vouched down four times for safety Nothing bed really ben done After a of fifteen minutes game was called This time the teams changed clOse but the wind seemed to favor Princeton for It al- most ¬ ceased and Yale had little ot Its help In the last Inning Wlnton kicked off for Prlnoo ¬ ton Camp sent the bal back and Winton throw I to who kicked It Aver the rushers head Into Iladgers hands The Yale man kicked It beck to Harlan nnd again tho Princeton kicker sent It over the hOlds of tho players Thus It went back and Princeton slowly gaining ground until altar It passed from Watson to Flint and from Chetwood to hedger the latter was forced to touchdown for safety This was Yalos fifth touch down for safety Then Yale by a series of short rushes and long kicks worked tho ball back toward Princetons goal nnd tho orange had to touch down for safety for the fifth time Then the battle wee waged down In the middle of the ground Titers was a fierce tussle and out of tile midst the ball was seen Olnl Harlan went for It muftod It and Princeton- man stopped It It wa dangerously near the goal of hi touch down for safety bv Prlnoeton followed then an effort- to thrive Yalo hack then another touch down for nfety Yalos men worked their hRrdcI It was now or never Princeton saw gnr nnd again touched down for safety A long kick from PrInceton sent tho boll away from danger but Camp caught It and drove It back I In the scrimmage that followed Princeton got l9 ball and titan mode tho ninth touch down for safety Tills was followed five minutes later by the tenth and In a minute more by Princeton eleventh touoh down for snfetv It wan close work with heavy odds In Yales favor Out the orange nnd black worked the ball Into the middle of tho Old and then hogan a scrimmage to kill time They saw that Yale was outplaying them and made a deeper ate effort to mnko a tie Yales boys In couches and on the ground hissed nnd called Baby game Princeton kept cool They had made a good light with I weak- ened ¬ team and were not lolll to give tip the championship for any of chaff The scrimmage went on Onco Harding crabbed the bul nnd made off with It but he was called I the referee Tlmo was nearly up and Yule tried hard to get thin ball They could not and time was called Neither aide had scored a point and the mon of lrlnceton were still cham- pions ¬ they claimed Yale men growled olored to play an hour longer or on Princeton men grinned cheered their team shouldered some of them and then wont home considerably richer with the money of the con- fident ¬ bV111 blue It was just 120 when the lame following Is tho scor- errlnoIDToh downs 0 O lalo 8aflv Touch Downs Prliicwu It Tale e Columbia and Princeton have not played this year As Harvard anti Yale both beat the Co- lumbia ¬ boys badly I Is not likely that they will tackle Princeton IllK I1KAT11 Of WILLIAM 11 PLOT Aat Actor nnd Manager wh woe Widely Known Throughout thIs CouMry William II Floyd ot Wallacka Theatre dlod yesterday morning at 110 Fourth nvenuo aged 18 The Immediate cause of his death was lirlghta dUeoso of the kidneys in nu acute form Mr Floyd was born near tho corner of Grand and Jackson streets In this city Ills father was I mechanic Young Floyd numbered among his playmates Dan Bryant William J Florence Chris Connor and Barney Williams who all went to school on the east side of the city His first dramatic appearance wu with an amateur company at Thalia Hall In Grand street Hn played Sktiy in the then popular Glance at Nsw York end was soon afterward engaged by the minstrel OhArley White to play small parts In negro pieces In a Bowery ball Ho then travelled for three sea- sons ¬ with Maggie Mitchell and while with her In New Orleans was married to Mla Anna Henrade one of tho Henrada sisters dancers who had boon brought from London by John Brougham Ills wife became nn actress On returning to New York twentyfive years ago he was engaged by the elder Wallack to play In his theatre at Broadway and Brooino street where he remained several seasons Hhortly be ¬ fore the war he Induce the minstrel Din Bryant appear IUbo Garden with a whit face and drlmnlvc Lover Irish novel of Handy And which had a long run both there and eubeequenthlat th present Wallacka Theatre Boon apr the war Mr Floyd became associated with Thomas King In the management of the Varieties Theatre New Orleans and was very successful for two sea- sons ¬ Ha was also In Chicago with LevI North and ut the Walnut Street Theatre Philadelphia Ha was encased ns ataea manager and actor by John Bulwyn for his now theatre In Boston and on Mr Belwyns death continued as such for three seasons with Arthur Cheney his suc- cessor ¬ who called tbo house the Globe Ho then engaged with Manager John McCullough- at the California Theatre San Francisco Since leaving them he was almost continuously stage manager and actor for Mi Wallack to the tIme Of his death Mr Iloyd rarel played the leading charac- ters ¬ ot pl always had prominent come ¬ dy ports In which ho Invariably made hil Tho New York public can roall htm Sir Frrderifk ttimmt in Money nnd liollu Sckln London Assurance He WM onu with Montague Beckett and others of the Lambs Club In this city and wee its Great Shepherd Ills wife antI three daughters aged respectively 19 16 and 12 survive him The two later aro nt HCho111 lelhlehemPa On Ihl Mr ¬ voloy on life for 00 which had Ho owned 1 large grounds nt Long Branch Whlln with Mr Cheney his salary wnl reported ns 1250 a WAko has long handsomely paid b WMInek The funeral will take place on Monday at 10 oclock ntthoLlttle Church Hound tho Corner Cemetery and the Intorment will b In the Long Branch STIIXCIINIA IN A FIO Pulllnc to Ret Fnaptoyntrnt o TOUDI Uennnn Attempt to End 111 IIf As Dr Harrison of tho Chambers Street Hospital was driving In an ambulance along Rlrlngton street about 10 oclock yesterday morning ho saw a One looking young man banleomel dressed lying on the sidewalk bo In response to a question from the doctor as to what wa the matter he replied In German that ha a little stoic and asked to be taken to a hospital I Ho was as- sisted ¬ Into the ambulance and driven to the Chambers Street Hospital On arriving there ho told the Doctor that ho he lied token a dose nf strychnia that Inorlnl In a fig Hu was put to bed and was d with slight convulsions which gradually Increased until they became very violent Tor three hours tim young man was In Intense agony arid at tImes his life WI despaired of Late In the after- noon ¬ begun steadily to Improve anti early In tim olonlnl he was pronounced out of He was at first reticent but finally said thn he had uiken poison because of Inability pro- cure ¬ employment Hu tied arrived in this country from Germany two weeks ago Ills name was George Knlmann and ho A Is years of age Ho Iet Ills home on account of some love affair bought the strychnia In Franco with the Intention of committing sui- cide ¬ but finally decided to try his fortunes In Amerlos Finding nothing to do lucre hn at- tempted ¬ his life The young titan Is evidently well bred and hits condition Inn attracted much sympathy at the hospital ICKItOVND IN Till ST IAWUKfiVK Hope ihmt the CIn e or Wrnlhrr will Fn tibIa Ih Vexel lo Work through MONTIICAL Nov 2ho river rose con- siderably ¬ during the night and burst the Ico blockade at various points but this channels have again filled up There are over ono hun- dred ¬ anti twentyfive crafts of various kinds on the river between Montreal rind juebnc which will lie safe In port In two days if tho present weather continue The Harbor Hoards of both ports will furnish all aTlluhlllellm towauu The steamship I UIRwn will I boo como a total wreck sprung a leak during the night anti although her remaining cargo wits thrown overboard she oontlnucd to nil If the tugs yot reach her In little alto may bn towed into a position safe from Ire shoves Hho Is n flue Clydebuilt vessel of 2 000 Ions nnd hail a general cargo of produce with fiftyeight heat of cattle nnd COO sheep specially obtained for the J Inullsh Christmas market Hho Pnluiigs to the Dominion line The steamships 1 Peruvian and Dominion will enoleavorto push through to Quebec tomorrow It hits weather continues as at present At Lachlna 100 men are employed sawing a passage at the entrance of the canal- In I orde to winter the lightships of Lake t3U SEN KERNANS SUCCESSOR BOMB JtinaiNiscifNCKs OF LAST WIN TUlta SESSION Ar ALDANT A Mldatckt Ianefc at wklcla Mr Arthur wa- NasnedMr IlepciV Inlocnee cud what It Meaatktr Conkllai View an Voodford- ALDJUrr Nov 24On tho night lat win tor whtn all opposition to the choice of clan Sharp as Speaker of the Assembly vanished as 1 snow bank under an April sun thoro emerged from tho Delavan noun don Bharpo con Arthur AttornoyQonaral Ward and several prominent members of the Legislature It was 2 oclock In the morning The skirmishing- had been done MajorCon Dusted had backed out early exSpoakor Alvord had withdrawn- his Individually single skirmisher and tho halfdozon who hoped to make Mr Skinner tho Speaker had shown tho white flag Oon Sharpe woe to be nominated for Speaker without oppo- sition ¬ and when thoy naked how this sudden collapse of all tho opposition was accomplished they wore told that don Arthur had come nnd that ho represented Itoscoe Conkltngs wishes Having dissipated opposition tho next thing was to oat some oysters anti tho little party just mentioned started for a basement sa- loon ¬ on State street Under the exhilaration ot tho cold oysters some confessions woro made Thoro woro confessions of disgust with Hayes of zeal to tho death for Grant nnd ono or two uncomplimentary allusions to George Wm Curtis GOD Arthur sat quietly salting nnd peppering his oysters raying few words hut somewhat disposed to applaud the prevailing sentiment Suddenly he wns struck pretty sonorously between tho ehoulder blades and the gesture was empha sIzed hy the remark And tiara gentlemen is the next Senator from Net York Uproarious applause followed hut Oon Arthur barely held tbe oyscrlhat was on Its WItO his mouth at the He swnlowOll smiled nnd thanked the ofllclnl Oen Arthur would very likely have been nom- inated ¬ by n caucus of the members of the last Legislature ant ns nil of these Sen- ators ¬ nnd n great many of the Assemblymen will take part In tho caucus next January It Is fair to nssumo that his chances would hove been oijuil at least to that of any other porson if ha hind not happened f get Into thoSdnateas its presiding officer Jut there might hale been some opposition to Arthur and ns thll op- position ¬ did not seem lost winter to per- sonal ¬ It Is a matter of some Interest to know whether the gentleman whom Ion Arthurs friends will name will meet with the same op- position ¬ that be wouldhavo encountered TheflerySenatorsnnd Assemblymen did not propose to bo bulldozed Into voting for Arthur will have n fair chance to make good somewhat cautious threats they matte Inst winter for of course the mon who would havn favored Arthur have somebody else In view I remember that a Senator after carefully look- Ing about to see If anybody was In hearing dis- tance ¬ pulled me Into a sheltered corner of the Delaran House lobby one night and actually salt Damn Arthur He thinks ho can brow ¬ ben us oOlnlr Senators Dut Ill show him Hiear from mo in the caucus I would just advise his friends Inl take him off the conrso Tb6r wits more or less of this winter although diplomatic Senators expressed themselves moro diplomatically But remem- bering ¬ how with n wave of his hand as H were and thou pronouncing of tue single word Conk ling by Ian ArlnurJAI n magician tInes presto all Sharpos election as speaker ceased it seems lair to tiresome that the Irate Senator and his friends wouldI show themselves In caucus somethlngnsdld the hub Irishman who had boon Insulted by a Hercules of a fellow antI who nftcr mtmsurlng his In suitors strength turned to hits friends nnd shouted with great passion Hold me back some nf vneA who knOB me temner nut Ion Arthur Is going to bold i the gavel in tho Senate He has taken four years with a contingency I instead of a possible six with a vote ant nn Influence Who Is the next best man There would b hardly any question that the Republican caucu would decide that the next bust man man whom the same statesman wbowolid have curried Gen Arthur through DUOUS I It were not for an I antI 1 and It a very long If and a very broad but I heard some very delicate hints last winter about Mr Chauncoy Depow a an antlConkllng cBndldnl Probably more of the tenltorl of I ILo AmtomUvmen than before hoard of It In one session woro told that here was a man who had had the Spartan fort tudn to decline political bonorssuch as the Alan to Japan anti at nn age when almost all young lawyers are gutting n living by their commissions out of the collection of debt Senator I hearlll somewhat noted lobbyist- say one day Ilt Senatordo you know that that man Dopew was on thn road to tho Oovurnorl place and thnro would have bees n step from that to tbe White lousl1 he bndnt declined political I honors counsel for the New York Control road Did he do that replied tho Senator He Isnt fit to be a politician titan for he knows which side of his bread thobutt l Is on and la- dd few politicians who do Great tales told about Mr Depews opportunities nnd about his abilities Hn certainly lied the ability tn make a speech on the railroad transportation question boforo n committee which kept even Senator Madden awake and Senator Wood said In his waggish way that a man wbo could do that was nt lo be President Hut some of thin country members took a dislike to Mr Dooew because ho road circus posters It seems that In the early spring days some circus company displayed tholr gorgeous posters on the fence UmleUrrou ls the now Capitol Mr Dopow one afternoon on his way to the Capitol to make an argument was attracted by a post ° r which rep ¬ resented a man as about to thrust lila head Into un elephants mouth Some members AnI him standing there and laughing at poster and he forfeited the respect they hind for him thereby As for Instance a somuwhat noted member from the St Lawrence Hirer re- gion ¬ saul that evening Thats the great Mr DDIMIW Is It Ivu heard moro or less about him but I never saw him until today I dont think tiny great shakes of a fellow with gray hairs lu his whiskers who can see anything funny In n circus sIgn hint It will bo remembered that the hills that Mr Depow made his brilliant arguments against did not peso It was hinted too that Mr Dopew might have arrivodntthe beginning of the fulness of years by this winter and would sock at fifty for a contInuance of the political honors that hocastasldoatthlrty Itsooms now that there was some foundation for this hint Here Is where the Influence of the it Is foil If Mr Chauncny Depow and tho powerful friends he has desire him to bathe next United States Senator thero U ovary chance that the next best omen to Arthur mayIn case he Is not Vepohlle harder fight- ers ¬ than lied persons to the blus- tering ¬ little Irishman to content with Chiuncey Dnpew has a very persuasive way ho have his friends He has some persuasive friends tim L jdslatur Judge Itobertson Is ono Senator another Majorden- HuMed Is another MajorGen Hustud Is sometimes called the Bald Etude of Westohes- tur Ills eye Is fierce anti his lend Is bald yet wo always thought that Oon had of tho owl than of the eagle In hula look lora inn nnd does unless of necessity fierce look very wise and whnu It was suggested to him late lest winter that possibly Mr Dnpow might have friends In thin caucus of 1881 Jan Hunted looked very like an owl The resemblance wont further ho said nothing It is said that the omen who would have sup- ported ¬ Arthur will now favor Mr Thomas 1llt Perhlpslhoy will WIS that the reason Cornll atPolnted to a twopenny ofllciiln N oiy wise man in Albany last winter saId Ill toll you about Tom Platt If ho evor got to be Senator he would begin at once tn organize a Tom Platt following In Now York State He wouldnt play second fiddle to Mr Conkllng a moment after begot It organized oman knows that better Ihnl lloscnn anil itoacon tiousnt intend to give Mr Tout Platt an opportunity to have a Ilai following It I still that thoso kept their eyes and ears wide open at the Hnpubllcan Committee rooms title fall haul reason to surmise something of this sort There tine been some mention of Gov Cornells name The Governor will have to have the undisguised support nf Senator Conkllng to got the nomination If any one should say that thl Governor so magnetlrnd the Legislature of year that they would get very enthusiastic whunuvur lila name was spoken that person would bi mistaken Joy Cornell somehow did not make himself very popular Possibly It wits because Pnllco Justice Jacob Patterson ocouloIIOO much of his tIme Hn sides thorn Is a vague Impression expressed by a Democratic Senator that toy Cornell him Illdol that It Is n straighter petIt to the White from thn Capitol at Albany than from the bannto Chamber n Washington Thero I his another name mentioned as thv possible next best man It lu t that of hlewait t I ii Wouillord homeloijy said I t think I It wns Hpnnlinr Alvorl that Wnodford rnd mentioned It Vrnodfords chnnues may be best illustrated by thn lolowlnl story Honutor Conklnlllhll chntlnl sortie friend ie I hnva tho reputation- of Innkhll men 1 do slncurelylmpaihut no ¬ accuse 10 of having made little Stew Woodford lintIt hits boon suggested that possible lIne one CnnIrlIng mny not greatly object to thu oboe tlon of Mr Dopew Thero may ban good deal In that but br tho time of tlm esneni AFRAID OI TflJB LAND ZHAQVR Jury Doty on tan BUato Ta ef4 Spread ofth ActtatUa LONDON Nov 2LA despatch t tho 2ml from Dublin says Meroblnl ell eons declare that Ihe servo on the jury- In the State trials for fear of severe Injury to their business or murder As the merchants havo business with all parl of the country they fear blnl If tho traverse are Mr Boycott baa received a threatening letter bearing London postmark DUBLIN Nov SAn application was made today In the Queens Bench Division for an at- tachment ¬ against the Evening Math newspaper for articles prejudicing the trials of the trnvor sore Mr Monroe law adviser to the late Government who appeared as counsel for the tfiifna Mali asked for an adjournment BO al- to enable him to prepare an nfTldavIt to meet the charge at once This was agreed to and the hearing was ndiourned until Monday Tho Protestant Archbishop of Dublin huts Issued a form of prayer for use by his clergy for iI amelioration present of tho disturbed tho country LONDON Nov STho Manchester Gear dmiin London correspondent pointing to the Importance todays meeting tho Cabinet Pays The state of affairs In Ireland since the I Initiation of the prosecution of the Land Lnaguers Increases tIm expectation that the Government will not much longer delay moving from Its present attitude It Is believed that Mr Forstor has changed his vlowa more de- oldodly than any other mombor of tho Govern- ment ¬ Ho has lately adopted an opinion In favor of maintaining the law with a strong hand It Is reported that he was so much In advance of hil colleagues that they pro ¬ ferred to await result of his trip to Ireland before deciding what eourol to pursue It I Is the conviction of those are In a position to bo well Informed that If ho returns with his vIews strengthened thnro will bo short session of Parliament before Christmas solely to enact coercive mnuresbut that Messrs Hrlght nnd Spencer will undoubt- edly ¬ makn a strong effort to defer tho assem ¬ blnl of Parliament until January when rome ¬ legislation could ba Introduced simul- taneously ¬ with coercion In connection with the foregoing the morn- Ing papers of today report an attempt t to shoot Cant John Mitchell renting a largo farm In Itoscommon nn attempt to shoot a Protestant clergyman In Tlpperary tho prosecution of sixty perAn In WeMport for Illegally assem- bling ¬ nn eviction besides various In- cendiary ¬ speeches houghlngs of cattle Ac LONDON Nov 25All the Mlnletlrl worn present at tho Cnbln council today previous- to the assembling of which Mr Forsler Chief Secretary for Ireland c <nlerrollwlh tho Mar mils of Hnrtlngton ant wont to Windsor Castlo and had an Interview with the Queen Thl ProMs Association says It Is authorlrod to that Mr Forater declared at the Cabinet council today that there was no necessity to adopt coercive measures In Ireland at present The Cabinet therefore decides that an early session ol Parliament was unnecessary The Cabinet has upon proposals to be submitted to 1111rlreed the Irish landnues lon No will b hold be Pirrsnunan Nov 25 About n month sffo there came to this city John W Round Hn lives In Philadelphia and Is ostensibly a book agent The real object of Mr Itolnnds visit- to Pittsburgh however was to establish In this community branch lodges of the secret order of United Irishmen Mr Ilolnnd huts been working quietly and the newspapers hitherto have said nothlnl about his presence lucre Ho hl successful In tile work A of United Irish- men ¬ has been established at Woods lion and another hits boon organized In the city Each of those lodges has n largo list ot Proper brA The object ol the association la to all thin anti poor Ireland and to extent lhi power and sphere of usefulness ot the parent organization In thl old country Should the Irish association upon Its branches for money or food the call will ba responded to at once and should tho call bo for men arms and ammunition response will bopromptanti- enorgetle Agents of tbo association are In all the principal manufacturing centres thoughout the country organizing 10dl0 anti they are meet- ing ¬ with a warm Patrick Murray who U a resident of thll oily In Mr Roland asslt ant In his On Monday night next a will he hold at Kellys Hall In Carson mtnl organize a new lodge and Mr lloland will make an address Judge llrennan of Da- kota ¬ I Is President of tbo society Jeremiah QDnnovnn well known a Uossa in Philadel- phia ¬ Is Secretary A LONG LIST OP WKKCKS Tie Ort Deulrnelloa lon t y tie Recast GoIeaIos of Life and 1roprrlr LONDON Nov 2Tlo stonmor Assyrian Monarch which broko her propeller blades and was obliged to put back has arrived at Fal- mouth In tow Tho etoamer State of Nevada which arrived at Glasgow on tho 23d inst from New York en ¬ countered fearful woathnr during the passage liar deck house was smashed and thlrtvflvo htoad of cattle wore killed She was hvo to for two dnr Tlo steamer Effective which hiss arrived at Glasgow from Montreal lost forty head of cat- tle ¬ overboard The British ship Canemara Cnol Durham from Quebec Oct 25 has Liverpool She lost deck load anti part of liar bulwarks The Austrian bark Atlas Cnpt Vldulioh from New York Oct 29 for Pnppenourg Is stranded Bt AtherlleU Her buick Is broken nnd she will bo n total wreck Her crew hnvo beon saved Tho steamer Grecian from Montroal for Glas- gow ¬ lost ninety heal of cattle overboard fhl Norwegian bark 1libra Capt Narvlg Bristol Oct 20for Wilmington foundered nn thin Sib Inst The crow have beau landed at Cowys The British hark Huano Oapt McKonzlo from Quebec Oct 14 for froon lost dock load- on the pissagn ST JOHNH N F Nov2ITho report of dis- asters ¬ already to the recent gales wore Ibo most destrmtlva ever expe- rienced ¬ In the colony At Old Perllcan and other ports on thin north side of Conception Hay six vessels the Dove Test anti four others names not given vare totally lost At Baron soil the Morning Star anti Saint Patrick were totally wrecked At lionnvlnti the Penguin Pert Prldo of the Oconn and Paragon were lost anti eight smaller rni more or loss dam- aged The sohooeer Bonny a driven out of Kings Covo and broken up At Lanso Cove Trinity Hay the Victory was driven on tho rocks anti dashed to pieces Several wrecks are reported at Green flay but nothing definite Is yet known Between twenty anti thirty vessels left for norther ports shortly before the gale and I that many of them were lost with hands on board The hark Sofala of london830 tons bound from Mlratnlchl Juoenotown drifted Into 1llon- cll Inv waterlogged and flying signals ¬ She VTIIS towed Into Harbor Buffet yes- terday ¬ by the mall Steamer urlew TIm CrAi arrived bore today antI the bark brought on na soon a possible AMnHHHTnunu Ont Nov 25Tho tow barge fihlawaneowned apt Time McGownn of this town Is reported lost with all hands In Luke Huron TORONTO Ont Nov 25Thom propeller Cali- fornia ¬ aftor 10R < lnl1O bushels wheat antI corn today at elevator was about to proceed to Ogdensbiirgh N Y when It was 10uncBhe lint been cut through nt the water I I and was Illnl rapidly Notwith ¬ staitdinicatrnnuoUa the pumps shin Im- mediately ¬ sank In twelve ft of water whero sItu now lies The new were saved ST JOHNS N F Nov 25ritu steamship Al Ill put In hero at oclock this afternoon her cargo on Ore Rite Is I InWen with cotton and bound from New OrloauS to Liverpool fourteen days out Heath of Alfred A Uallher Alfred A Gnlthor for twenty years ono of the director ol the Adams I ipres Compani diet at tin 1th y loue at 1 D A U > terday Mr Ualther hid lein sunVrlng from roimcstlon rf the lungs fur threo- Hetks Ihii bikly was taken on I lo hu homo lii Iniln nail last night and was accompanied I by lid I olfu sot ami ilaiikhtcr St lr I u I lutcoct Treasurer suit Mr Ii l llarnuni 51111 itt astir r ol tho Ado ii s 1KproM- lonipiny The fumral will tate place trout Mr Uaiihur hOloln tlnclnnall on Hun lay W Winchester tf th Adam hipreM Com pOlY lid tilt night Mr Unlthor was one ol tie fore xpressmen of this entry Hu was n Kltmtl tulsa I itt betn at tho hi tti m if his lauder i In the it- pn Minuets lie acquired a lorllloin tie bunlneis to which he adhered although nuiiiy c girt were mado tn In lute I him to embark in rallruiil enterprises I lie was untiiiitlled aa an rganlzcr nit I 111 the IJyonhea t lumsot the express hiP ryts Ills cc Inn rlliitlte In liariiiunUliu tonUictlim liiuicsti Ills 01 still te vMel rtKrilttd II he llittiae lliirnrd hit lisa Dinner Nnved The residence of William rlnuIoltln Pact Twenty ninth street I Ittcrmn N dOIy1 by lilt allOOI yesterday Ihncanne was A deftcllve Hue nlllh occurrml wilts Mr HUinelt vas roasting I r Thankitiiluiiit turkey Tho Tile tkiiiivluuu diluter ass arrud out with this stove suit t the rent nf tin ricoh ire by by the Insuranco neljhbora rue loss I stout flOO stat it tum- id I Never lleiivi fteter Hour Uakes made from Jtutlui 4 MomUjfeU lUltiug BUv k I Danier MiealI riBnallel I by A couth I is frtfd with 1011011 o UurilivuuJ sitU rar kold bjr druggists 1 II Is like tie sun II shines for II we uuau Dr Bull ol 8rup DoctorS prKillx jU WALL STREET WING SHOTS nnoKitna KNOAOINO iff A JArCH Fun run CUJllONBHll Lf J rss Wosdrfni IhoU Taylor RcmnrkiibU UsiDifer one In HhootlnB Dcfar and Aflr Lnack They wero a lively lot of sportsmon that met yesterday on the estate of Mr Alexander Taylor Jr at Rio Neck Woatohcater County to settle the question as to who was the best wing shot of Wall street Among Mr Taylor many Invited luole1oro the wollknown crack shots LIrdnce 11 Chapln E Luav lit Jr H T Lonll Dr Bartloson E P Ken nerd E Berrlan W II Catllnand tho Yachtsman Excuses woro made for tho absence of Mr 0 3 Osborn tbo Bogardus of the street Ho had figured eo lithe tbo night before on tho scrip dividend of 40 per cent on Northwestern that ho overslept and missed the traIn Mr Arthur ViceProsdent elect Intended to have boon present but was kept In conference with Senator Oonklnl in tho Fifth Avenue shooting- Mr Hotel until t arrive In time for tho Taylor had contracted for 100 strong live pIgeons With tho birds came a manifest that the 400 had boon expressed In prime order Tho birds wore counted In Mr Taylors carriage house under the double portraits of Garfield and Chester Byn slngularcolncldnncn the 100 hind dwindled down to exactly 32J A second count verified the number Say Taylor Bciuoaked a Rye Nook man Ill l Oarnold furnish those birds bondholders Put him outlshoutod I half dozen wolfed The shooters Iraplllhelr guns and started for the traps In The Neck man ndjolnlnl DolJ lve The contesting shots formed themselves a phalanx of six firing nt the birds from five traps thirty yards rise There wits a slight fall of snow at tho tIme but not enough to so rlously Interfere with the shooting Each man shot at twenty pigeons before lunch The seer ns furnished by a close Wall street fig- urer showed remarkable skill 1 was as fol- lows ¬ straight marks standing killed with first barrel X with second barrel and 0 missed Till SCORE KrOHK LOCH A TuylnrX 11 t 11 I I I XI I 111 I X I 11 I X 11- I XJiUlllcl- t I Cli nnl X I 1 I I X I I I X I 1 X I 0 I I XXluVtlled 1 k Lentltt11 I X 111 I I X XI I I I I I I X X X 0 XItt tilted tic V Lscitt1 I 01 X X X X I 11 I 11 1 I 1X X X 1 I XX X1B titled Ilr rllfonl X I X I 1 I X X I I X I I 11 Xkl I l tiitt tilted P Kennard111 10111 I XI I IIX I I I X 1ia killed Mr Leonard Jerome stood oil to the right ncjir the carriage housn throe hundred yards away from the platform from which tho con- testants ¬ for time championship of Wall street were shooting Ho hold his highlrpollshed- doublebarrelled backaction brichloader at aboautllulpolse The four plgronstiiiit escaped the eagleeyed phalanx sailed over Mr Jeromotf line at n great heIght He dropped nil but the last one with tim first barrel the fourth bird re- quiring ¬ both barrels Boys said the veteran rosycheeked sports ¬ man 1 would rather shoot ono bird woll up In this aIr than twenty from tho traps Ono of tho features ot the shooting was the beautiful work performed bv Mr Taylors re- trlevur Leo LO waited like il statue until or- dered ¬ to bring in the birds shot front tho plat- form ¬ but when Mr Jerome raised his gun Leo turned his eyes skyward and before the bird reached tIm ground would bo under It The veteran hunt shot over thin dng In this Everglades That dog said Mr Taylor has retrieved 310 birds In one day English Harry who blows the horn on Mr Taylors drag played Buy n 11 mom on the horn from the carrie house door in a man- ner ¬ that attracted the attention of all In the Held That means lunch la ready said Mr Taylor ID n horn replied Mr Jerome Shoot him cried a poor shot from Now streetBetter take a horn yourself said the great shot Tha lunch was relished with keen appetites anti moistened with a Ryo Neck brand ot am tmreolored fluid A scene of pleasant hilarity followed The Quiet yachtsman danced lively lies with Mr Palmer the oldest l atman of tbo Nock Mr Jerome offered to wrestle any man its VnMelientHr Vinnty for ft dollar just tnwarm tip for the second shoot anti the Portchester cornet Bond nilrrod up all hands with the Ritiiuet Galop Jhuii shooters started out for tho closing con tost aboutJ P M IhafollowlngscoreoiTlclally kept by thin New street broker shows a remark- able ¬ variation from thin first shooting lav cease AFTER LDNCU A T rlor0 0 XiiOOOOXO 00 X00 0 X0- X ic klllel B lllnpu0 0 00 X 00 00 X 00 00 X0 X 0 0 X6 killed K Uavltt00 0 00 0 XO 0 X 0 0DX0Oo 0 X 114 killed II Y lr Yltt000 0 00 0 X00 0000 X0 0 Ci o X3 tilted Dr llartle in00000 0 000 0X 000000 00 XJ killed F I1 kenimrd0 000 000 000 0000000I- i U sh killed Mr Jerome took up his former position The escaped birds canto circling over his hoed fester tItan he could load nnd fire It taxed Leos endurance to bring Mr Jeromes dead birds In the dog finally nearly breaking his back by fulling while endeavoring to climb up he sides of the carriage house to get at the birds on the roof While one bird was winging Its way toward Mr Jennie a sudden shot was heard Mr Jerome was observed scratching his right ear Time veteran looked in the direction of the plat- form ¬ nut immediately struck n hcellnoJor thicket a quarter of n mlltawny Shortly after Mr Jerome reached the thicket two wreaths of smoke arose In a few minutes Mr Jeromo approached the boya holdluu two quell anti lIve woodcock In his hands He was then pro- claimed ¬ the champion wing shot of Wall street The New street man whispered around that hn tint seen a young Englishman in corduroys with a velvet cap nn his heal a gun over lube shoulder anti a stuffed gnmelng nth IB side go Into the thicket just nhe td of Mr Jeromo Pale envy muttered Mr Jerome when in- formed ¬ otho base Inslituat Ion A shriving snow storm falling about 3 oclock put nn end to the sport Mr Jerome on behalf of the shooters and cuests ant townspeople who lied partaken Mr Tnylora hospitality spoke as follows Mr Taylor you have entertaIned the rep- resentatives ¬ of finance the lltotatl the vox popull anti dillettantl In your usual princely manner You are a splendid shunt but a poor politician You can ion down game better titan you cnn run for Congress You would maYo been successful In lbs late contest as a repre- sentative ¬ for this district If I tied not made thirteen speeches for you Thoso speeches laid you low Your just rebuke to the miscre- ant ¬ who rubbed red pepper into the ends of your excellent cigars luncheon drew tours to my eyes anti If you cnn discover and justly punish thin wretch who throw the remainder ot tim popper on the stove and drove us all Into the lIPid to shoot a second time you will de servo tho highest reward your fellow cltlzous can give you This speech was greeted with rousing cheers anti a tiger The company then broke up in good order and returned to their homes Thin snow storm did not provant thin members of the Fountain Gun Club from gathering at thBrooklyn Driving Park yesterday nftornoon Throe prll s were offered namely a suit of sportsman C clothes valued at 10 a French clock value d at 15 and H sportsmans trunk valued at p25 rite score book showed the large number nf ninety competitors Kaon fired at IMUOII birds handicap distance rise After fifty of tho contestants hat llnlslicd theIr scores It was HO near night that thin conclusion of the shooting wits postponed until Thursday next A liximy Iroiibecj by H Vctrrnn or isle The veterans of the war of 1813 began the celcuratlm if Es acuatlim hilly M suit rise Adjutant J Ulttil I Warner the adoted aout of the rettrani hoisted the flan over tie old ran In enlral tark and David Van Arnditle performed hits lima oiflce at tIe JIatttr Only via ci tie veterans were present roll call Tliew were lien Ahram iiotiy seed i 1St yeses hint Vat Ar Jalc- H flintS Hliiiw H7 Mniuil lcknirui i xx Inrdlner- LlllibriJue HI lila UilllamJ hurrr Hi They aitinded- neniir dt si IHUl hlircll Occuit lie tie old double PI w Lenient cc U iklilnjton a Alter tervM they went In the test tout i IOU us sid til situ its of tie pioj netor Mm OccUlt lint H Tliaiikitlvinu dinner iii Pally enter telnet tie company ulih I utrlollo 10105 tnt Mr Mill bridge unto SUItS recitation Still llnlly soil that so liSt of tie r let Cli II alt dll slice lust I tarnation- lla > tile Cii were HOW tint it handful Ill nut It would bs Mo to sly that a tow years would ntlke to put them sit In tier ratin whero lily wolill noon lo forgotten And ll bet 1110 tome1 volt he that tile day we eels brats will idiCi SCull be lomoltcn s lilt wits that tune caries I 11 ircdit tie I tCliilililtitttileStitOl I tie republic NcullInK Mntrli ut Nee Francisco BAN IlitMiHcn Cal Nov 25A sculling maieli I en lu lai biHuin Mitcnuti cf allojo slit smtlli cl Mtn hrmi eo d Isis 0CC ihrre inilci chIli a turn was 1011 by tin loriner vile 11 V7 A 05500 Cert Nllile ID heath Ttt NTI n Cnl Nov 23A Bpsclal lUsimteh to tin Vri5il I niii Ahiia fnl set 5 M I K Uuiiii seas kllle- lreilerdt h t iiiS sills which cart isi tint 3UU lest don n the mountain > IUe ma oscLKjoaepn DISASTER Th Captain sd as Ftmttn and Btamtn- Go Down with the Vessel SrKZZlA Nov 25The steamer On doJo ¬ sepIa sank almost ImmedIately after the eel llson Two hundred person are known to be drowned and fifty saved The fate of the other fifty Is at present uncertain Heartrending ictnts followed the collision u the OnolaJo- teph was without means to save the lives of the large number on board Eynwltnosaes ot the collision say they cannot satisfactorily explain the manner and cause ot the occurrence The passenger list of the OncloJosoph shows a total ot 261 persons on board end the sailors num- bered ¬ 33 Her cargo consisted of eighty tons of merchandise At n roll call of the survivors 85 passengers and 23 sailors only answered to their names Thin Captain also perished LONDON Nov 25A despatch to Lloyds from Leghorn confirms the report of the loss of 250 lives by the collision near Hpnzzln The Oriole Joseph was nn Iron screw steamer 823 tons gross anti the Ortegln was of 1853 tons burden LONDON Nov 20A despatch to the Standard from Paris says Great uneasiness Is felt in English and American circles hero as It Is feared that many EnglIshmen anti Americans were passengers on board tho steamer Oncle Joseph JiiiJR AND CANAL SItU Obstructed by Tee hnt Vessels Expected tn net Through HONDODT N Y Nov 25The river from below Hudson to Albany Is closed with Ice ranging from two to five IncItes In thickness A few steamboats and tugs have forced tholr way through from Catsklll to Schodack and Cooymans with difficulty The steamer Sara ¬ toga of the Citizens line of Troy which loft Now York on Tuesday evening lies at Catsklll and will not proceed further unless the Ice breaks up The steamers Thomas Cornell and James W BaldwIn which ply between this point and New York will continue on their routes for about three woks long- er ¬ unless compelled to close the season earlier through Increased severity of tIm woathor Navigation on tho Delaware and Hudson Canal is virtually closet nt present the leo several places being from two to six Incline thick and steadily Increasing Over 320 boats are on thus lIne ot canal anti It is be llcvdd they will all reach this city A few days of warm weather will reopen It and permit of the passage of thin loaded boats now on route to title water At Citsklll Saugortlcs anti all points below tim ferries are making their regular trips UED BANK N J Nov 25A heavy snow¬ storm set in at B oclock this morning and In ¬ creased In severity this evening The steamer Sea Hint has abandoned tier trips to New York for the present She lies been unable to heave her dock this week because of the ice A number of men end boys crossed the Nave sink River from Mlddletown side tolled Bank title afternoon 1311OnTANT 1IAIL1TAT LITIGATION The JLoulTlllB and 2Vaahvllle Combination Attacked In the Courts NASHVILLE Tenn Nov 25A minority of stockholders In tho Nashville Chattanooga and Bt Louis Itallroad representing about 50000 shares have filed a bill in thin United States Court at Nashville which la substance sets forth that Stephenson Evans Ilaldwln and Focg while acting as directors of tho road without communicating with the other direc- tors ¬ sold out thin property to the Louisville anti Nashville Compiny by agreeing to give up and turn over a majority of the stock so as to give the LouIsville and NashvIlle roa4 absolute control to tho detriment of the stockholders of the former road The point is made that the Louisville and Nashville road under its charter cannot own stock in another railroad anti that neither It nor the bank which holds thn stock in trust can vote It under the charter land that the election of di ¬ rectors in September last Is a void net a ma- jority ¬ of thin stock not being represented that In no event cnn the Louisville and Nashville vote more than 600 votes under the charter nnd that this gives the management to what are known as tha minority stockholders An In ¬ junction Is asked against the Louisville and Nashville road to enjoin It from running thin Nashville ClintlniiouKHmid St Louis rued or Interfering with Its management and agaInst making a lease and a receiver Is also asked nOJIL i brtTKD 2Ii4ISJ1113 The Italy end Denmark In Port A Famon horse llronuht by the Former Two National line steamships tho Italy and the Denmark arrived In this port yester- day ¬ morning Doth were several days overdue and report very heavy woathor throughout their voyages TIm Denmark sailed from London on Nov 7 thus requiring seventeen days for a voyage that Is usually made in twelve or four ¬ teen days Thn Italy brought over the famous French etnlllon Mortimer which wits recently purchased fur Mr Pierro Lorlllnrd In England for 8 000 also a tine brood mare and colt The animals made the voyage safely In spite of the stormy weather The Denmark also brought lllty fine horses A number of other line steamships are over ¬ due but no great charm was felt yesterday In regard to them Thou are the Silesia which loft Hamburg on Nov 10 Nevada and Algeria soilIng from Liverpool on Nov 11 Vine do Marseilles Havre Nov 13 and henry IJdte Antwerp Nov 7 Them was no further Information received yesterday In rnlntlon to the Ass rlau Monarch spoken by the Dnnnu on Nov 22 btilogVinn In dIsabled condition Hho was thou undiY sail as tier propeller wits damaged but the ship was not in a dangerous condition The Negotiation Over IlnlelcnoL- OXDOS Nov 25 During the right hours Bihllnn on tie 2t4 which preceded Dsrvltch Paihaj oc- cupatlon of Pulclgno the Albanian nuts a resolute stsuut I In the thy plantatIons outald the town Ad- aptch from Kaeuta aa > t tie Albanian lost In thliflkh twenty killed stud fillj wounded Tholurkuh loss wn conl Terabit lUGuii Nov 25 Dervlich Paiha havlnir Informed tile Pilnce ol Montenegro that he wa prei anM to hand over UulcUro the latter has replied that he cannot accept a fliers surrender but require a formal 555loi sill hunt he has invited the repreaentatlf of sit the posers to to present at the negoUaUon and sign the protocol of cci tlonU ix Nor 21 TheConiUntlnoplerorrxpondento tile Hrnr reports list It U belie led lie Monte neerln nil dectln to hike pnMi lon of DulclKllo ltnle guarantee axalnit Albanian attack tONiTiRTiforrr Nov 2V Dervlich PaVia has l hsuuel a proclamaUon lUtuiz that the 1orla will iirant land to any of the Inhabitant who wish to quit UulcUao nit the Turkish troops hoarse Nov bTii convention for tie cession o- Dulciiino Ills t teen sinned at Kunla- Uouio NY M A diiiauh to tie Smfirl riot listlute > a vi tue Montenegrin Ii haveipreMeil their read Ineu to huts poiioiilon of Dulcigno on rlJav A llrotber Furlou Assault As John Fllschler aged 20 of 93 Boholej- tieet Hrookln was alone In hisfatliert houw yestcr day afternoon blng upon a ted his brother Juiei ritichler sued SO entered anti lo gratify an old grudkc which had led to a quarrel loetwsuu them struck bus trotter John over tho heal with a bar stick Indicting flte severe kcalo wound Tint blows minute unenlecl ely John itscliler had no oiiportunlty to defend hint Mir slId he was knockeil kenyelebs Whan the ambulance surgeon strived he said ill oung man wounds vt ere serious Still he ftiare I they lust I roluetd eoncu lon ut tile trail which might prove fetal The Injured man was cst for In Ht caihriu Hoiplul slid Jami t UK tiler n aj lovkd iup Two Treaties nvhths China WAHIIINOTON Nov 25rhe Secretory of State this morning received a Uilegram frim the Coinmlnion- en at Itkln litter Oat of ITIh lost Informing hlu that on that day two treaties were signed ens of com merle aol the other concerning immigration Mr Trcs cot was lo less liklnu on the JJtti intt suit to brln bouts ihe treaties by itrst stuttiter By previous teic seam I r pysrus I ui s a iiroruuiuI tii at tue itiitnug ra tutu treoty secured In lii cit liir3 tue etitinril 5 ni ccitt- ieiiout or tli ilutrotulctlluu 1 tfliuiese iotlllrcrs b our ow ii- irgistation Tue uhOlChtS at tits coaitnsrCial tisaty ire lot yet kauwu The Anll > vvUh Movement LONDON Nov 25Thu TIIIIM Derlln corre ipondent telegraphs A semi oiticial note has teen com niunUauJ to tie netvspai er < stating that nhhc opinion regards the Jwih 1 iiuestlon exicllv asltdil tefor ttle relent delete lonlemnallon rf the antlJewish move nient by the Deputies hiss not In thIs lenst deuce teen male On the conlrari the strength of the nuot eutue itt lias beet is Cci tel 11Ly th del ate sat trout the countliai ness of tOot strength II will lie more hkel to deuce irish courage iinulit In Ihn Ice The Morris Canal through Now Joisoy lu beet Irozen over ant tie Ice Is becoming thicker alt tile time Th boatmen who were unable to make a port be tore the beginning of the roll weather sri now com pellet to how their nav llnough this lee This Ii very slow work sod the chances see tilt nnlena tie weathe Incomes warmer th buata nil be Imprisoned by tie Ice until spring NO CONTEST BY MR POTTS aovxnNOlf4rroEOr LVVLOTT XO TAKOt- I11S BEAT UNCHALLENGED now the New Jerter nepnbllesim Missed A- Ihnnceln the JTIorehoe Auensbly Dltrl The Work lie fore the Now Covermecw- TIIRHTOH N J Nov 25It may bo takoa- as a settled fact that Mr Potts will make no contest to prevent the Inauguration of Mr Infl- ow ¬ na Governor of Now Jersey Tho only pro test flied before the Board of Canvassers wee one against the return from Lower Township tape May County The township olerk in- formed tho board that by a clerical error he had put down Carter for Governor 150 votes and Ludtow for Congress 1C3 votes and that Ludlow should bo aubstltutod for Carter ndCarter for Ludlow Threo contlomen appeared as volunteer counsel for tho Republicans before thin Board of > t those Mr Henry 0 Pitney of Morrlstown was a oandldato for ono of the seats In the 8u promo Court which cloy McOlellan flllod with Joel Parker and ox8onntor Magi Mr Samuel Irey of Camden confidently expected to bo At ornoyQonoral If Mr Potts was elected and Mr William P Douglas of Jersey City was willing to bn a Sessions Judge In the same event Thcsothroo gentlemen wore stalwart la their affirmation of Mr Justice Joseph Altundo- Jradloys doctrlno that the canvassers had no Ightto go behind tho returns But thin ma orlty of the canvassers overruled thorn and counted the ICO ballots for Ludlow as this voters haul thrown thorn Thin Itupubllcnn minority Senator Martin anti Whltlcar before thondiourrnont presented a written protest against this action anti It was ordered on file But Mr Potts lied positively declared that ho would not bon party tn nnjr Contest against Mr Ludlows Installation In of- OBunl B8thoonielnl canvass should disclose evIdence of positive frauds or Irregularities such as might chancotho result whereas hura he only protest made Is agaInst ono return of 156 votes and Mr Iudlows plurality being 651 thie result would not bo affected by throwing out the township return But the army of tldewaltora who have boon netting n contest against Ludlows Installation ore wroth with tho Jersey City Bopubllcani About onohnlfof tho Dumoenitlo majority ol 4500 lu Hudson County wits thrown In tile 800- ond Assembly District which the Royutillnns- gerrymandorud into the form of n horse hioui in order to koop the Democrats of Jursor City well together Tbn Itepubllcans thought it hardly worth wbllo to make an Assembly nomination In thin Uorsoshoo and now it ap- pears that lied they dono so they would hnva mil n colornblo protnxt to contest tha election et- judlow The strength of the Democratic ma orlty mckee tIm nomination for Aosnmbly much souuht for in the Second District There ore gonerallyseteral Independent nomination there and the keenness of the contest often leads to accusations of sharp practice against ono another Whim it was soon by how small a plurality Ludlow was elected thin Republicans turned their eyes hopelessly upon the horse ihoeBoarohlng for some ground upon which ta- ason protest which could be carried over the tends of tile State canvassers Into a ItepublU can LegIslature coil that body would havomndt short work of liraileytt scruples against going nhlnd the returns while ML tho wouldba Judges and other expectants of Mr Pottaa- lountv would have crlod amen But the party to mink such a protest legally must bo a party in Intorxst nnd the Republicans lost their chance when they tilled to make a nomination for Assembly In thin Horseshoo cloy Ludlow will have tim appointment of five Mlpremx Court Judcvs to succeed Justloon 1ixnn Knupn and lIce whose terms expire In 1882 anti Justices Beuddor rind Van Uyckol who go out In 1883 Justices Dlxon is the only publlcan among them cloy McClellan was blamed for departing from the unwritten rule tlmohonorcd In Now Jersey that the Judaea should bo evenly divided ns nearly as possible between tho parties At present six of the nine Judges tIre Democrats Ono of the earliest and most onerous duties of the Governor will bo to appoint succnasorsto Honry 0 Kelsey Secretary of State Henry B LIttle Clerk In Chancery and aorehom Mott State Prison Keeper whoso terms expire next spring Of those Messrs Little anti Mott will probably decline ronomlnctlon Tim foes of ho Secretary of State Clerk In Chancery nod Clerk of the Snpromo Court were reduced br he Republlcin Legislature under n law which Istotakeeffeet witon the preent incumbents go out An investigation last winter disclosed the fact that tho fees of these throe officers average 20UOO aplece annually The Rnpub llcan reformers did not like to see so much money wasted on Democrats They despaired of turning tIle grIst into theIr own hoppers br electing a Republican Governor and hence the Democratic successors of these gentlemen will Imvo to worry iilonir on JOOOO n year each be stiles an allowance for clerk hire Even at thin reduced rates a number of Demo ¬ Crate are willing to servo tile State Lnon Ab belt who declined tho nomination forOovornor In favor of Mi Luttlow hues boon talked of for Hocrctiiry of Stnto amonc the opponents of the htnttt House wing of tint party but for n lawyer In active practice like Mr Ahbntt thin stake Is probably too light EfSheriff Reynolds of Ks sex n Newark banker Is also mentioned by the sumo Interest Hn would no doubt accept It But tIm friends of thin State house piopln sny that Mr Kolse Is willing to succeed himself anti that tile active part liii took first in forcing tint nomination of Ludlow and later in tile management of thin canvass renders It curtain that he will bo Secretary of State for tIle third term of five years- JosiiCLfBd thin Clerk in Chancery who also lies sorrel two terms thorn are n host of per- sons ¬ talked of Among these ore oxJudga Green of Vandnrpool Green A GummIng ot this city Garret 1 V Vroom of Trenton the Law Reporter of tim Nuw Jorsuy Supreme Court Jeronilnh B Cleveland Rfgistorof Hud- son ¬ County brother of Ornstts Clayelnnd of tho l nioi ratio National Commlttcn nnd Job Lip plncott Chairman ot tho Democratic County Committee In Hudson County The term of tlin Clerk of the Hupremn Court Bonjamln F Len does not expire for ft year later so that the pressure for tIm succession la not Imminent Attorno > Ganornl Stockton will undoubtedly bo reappoInted For Kocpei this State Prison thn most prominent candidate la- xScnntor Dayton of B rcon County Mr John Hall who tints been popular as Governors See rotary for six tears past will bosucceodod It Is said by tiny Ludlow son It Is understood that Senator Sowell havlna served as PruMdunt of hue bunate for three terms ant being now a prominent cindlditt for riieodorn I F indolphs seat as Senator In Congress will retire front tile Presldoncy- In faorof Senator Garret A Hobartof Passale- Countt Chairman of the Rupubllcan State Com- mittee ¬ hubs natural successor This heading candidates for the Spoakorshlo of this Hoiitn an Bonsnll of Camden and Vita Duyn of Nnwnrk Mr Bonsall Is the votera editor of tho Camden Jinilu l0t Mr Van Duyns is a surveyor In Newark Mr Bonsai Is said to he opposed to the Central Railroads bridge In Jersey City of which Mr Van Duyn wits an earnest advocate two years ago Ilnllllnn wiSh the lludan Ice Fields The steamboat Kt John of the PaoplosAlbanr line rrlvid at 5 M jeilerlity otter i a lianl Imltio with tile Ice ntlJf fiiie started from Allnnv it S clock yes- terday ntoriiinz wilt lui itttfnter SOt 5 Hghtcanio No icrioui ntiftructiotii wera met until Hudson was rfActird Thor ilia Ice I rait In AII tinlirckpii 5hst two tine thick In iiouet 1ln Ht Jill ti bftrkrtl anj chrBPtl on its Ice nllir Hi luannrr iii l a tMtrrniu ram an4- crioirit a channel tor Ucrult For twenty iU inliea Iho Ice fleliti lay lelore livr Melow that tie oliitructioui were In fornil Uljie lOudI uliti mate KeoJ progress arm Inn ab ut tour liuur late at rtlial Street tier itUnklnc- vrai nniivhirtit sot shp It ria ly for thf return trip ahoul4- ttif cunu ait ilei IJe to keel p tile tolLs runnini Tile lisraillilt ol lii LnUens lino arrived Irate Troy at about tie tame Unit AD Iluniir lu n Court Illocritphrr LONDON Nov 25Sir Theodore Martin this biographer of Irliico Albert who ran at a tan uIllicit- canliJale nai toiln ciecleJ Lord Rector M Anitrnnt- Unlterrltjr ilifculni Mr F A f rccuuo Iho hutirlan mitt un avowed liberal in iolitic Oarfleld 1lurallly In Oregon ruicKio Ill Nov 25A despatch to tie Tut unr ruin 1urtlnll I I OMCOII si I The utitiit TiltS of the state hut tohupiit u kin i OnrMtlt ji ICH Hancock IV Dili Wetter 40 ilmlUIJ plurality IM The Tkrimoiuelcr lu > ev York Yrlrrdny- AtHuilnutHPhnrmaeintl A M 2Vfi I AM- J ° UA M 7a t IJ M JP3J011 MJ1J til i MJ I til1 Mh1 UM J7 Miguel Omen 1rcdlcllun Rising follownd by stationary or lower barom- eter ¬ tallinii lolliHcJ i li itatuim or hli1 or teiii eia stIrs noith tiitttt wlnli tartly bully vuathcr occ- nonal rlu lu koutlicrn portion JOTTINGS IX AM tilUlt Till CITl Paniuel Inrker agnl IT or Nvr Point N J wsl Ores el utilld kalli on biher Ioud rstsric Samuel Tannin a wealth Jrwttti sugar refiner tli- hrother ol issue H Tuu11 Mu > orifJir > illy a- uiarrlcJ In Chicago cieriny 0 Mini Ixna AleiaaJcr KK Mayor llaigerlr of fork who ills leen vlntin < various point ot intert In till city under tha cars ot J- P I Pinch Eel JuJe I ami Ull JuUo Cullahan suit Urllrjtu Uctftrjur sailed tuy Ilia Vita of ZrussstsIs

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Page 1: chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1880-11-26/ed-1/seq-1.pdft < tmVO-L XimNO 87 NEW YORK FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26 1880 PRICE TWO CENTS = JOOTBALLINThESNOW

<

t tmVO-

L XimNO 87 NEW YORK FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26 1880 PRICE TWO CENTS

=JOOTBALLINThESNOW

TALK AND lnlNC rON aTnvaoMNa FOBJUS COLLEOE CHAMFIOHaUlF-

Tk nio Vnnblle to OI the ntert theOrme uind l lIATwo 1rI r-

Ililllo without 0 Point Seorod by Eitherl> rl >ccton Bllll CUIrn the ChsvnaplMklB

Thorworo Rront anticipations concerning

the football mateh to bo played by the toftm of

Princeton and Yale Colleges on the grounds of

Iho Polo Association yesterday Vnlo mon wore

onfldontthat their team would win for It hadSofMtod everything It tackled Princeton menII not lulto so confident wero very hopeful thatUislr tem would hold tho championship hlch

Ujey oUlm that they have held since 1877 Thotew rulus are the Ilucby rules and wore Intro-

duced

¬

by Harvard College In 1875 theirlmson team wont to Now Haven andjhowed Yalo how to play tho same Thejluos wore without uniform and with-

out

¬

experience nnd were defeated badly

In 1B7R Yale returned tho compliment by doeating Harvard They then polished oft

frlnooton who had adopted tho rules Thatwas the mat tlmo that Princeton was batonby any football team Harvard tried1877 nnd fatted That year Yale would notplay lu the regular association names becauseluoi wanted A change In the number of monconstituting a team end Harvard and Prince-

ton refused to make the change But Yale

met Princeton In a friendly struggle which

resulted In n drawn game Tho next yearJ873 Princoton bout Yale a Rout to nothing anddid the dimn to Harvard Yale also beat Har-

vard

¬

Last year the champions beat HarvardYalo tied Harvard and the champions tied withYfin Yale had returned to the association In187B without thA chance In numbers having1eon indo Thl year th change was madeDevon men played on a side Instead of fifteenColumbia Joined tho association

Yale entered thc arena full of hope Hardlneand who graduated In the pummer re ¬

CaDt oot graduates They were two oftho best players of last years team The othernIne worn nil experienced players most ofthem juniors and eentor all members oftho old team and men Her team fulfilledthe oxpetttloflR of tho college It beat Harvardand Columbia nf tbo association antI all theoutsldo loams that challenced It Princetonbegan the season lops propitiously Hho losteIght of her team and the best of the team atthat Hnllard Cutts Bryan Brotherlln MillerDuncan ant U-P grsduatodand did no returnis post graduate McNnlr wbo Is In tho Theo-logIcal Seminary thought It not the squarethIns to plttr and quit the team Lonoy wasmade Curtain and he sot a team together thawas good It boat Harvard and everydub tin the scores stood be-

fore¬peAcntnllsel the bluemet Neither

hart been b tenThoro could hnrdly bavo been a worso day

for n football game than yeaterdav Therround wa frozen hard nnd covered with snowand tho air was raw and chilly lint this didDot deter the friends of the colleges from flook

Inl to tho Polo grounds Sixteen hotel coachtte1Flflg either tho orange and blue of

Princeton or the blue of Yale drew up in lineThere were at least sixty carriages on timrround Tho Irnne stand was crowded with

women and moo In ulstersrounl roullI lt least 4 000 persons on the groundtho greatest over Gathered thereThe game wua to have been called at 2 oclock

sharp but at that time n small army of monwith brooms nnd shovels were clearing themow from the ground When the teams nppen red there was great cheering Tim PrinceIon boys clad In cape shirts and ttoeklngs ofernnirc nodl black In horizontal stripes endwhite knickerbockers resembled glgnntlo endmuscular wasps Ynles men looked the hargsr They wore blno taps Lblrl and stock-ings

¬

white breeches and shirts somewore stout canvas jackets dirty with the grimeoff hardfought contests They nvorncod 165

Dunslnll tIlls Included wlrey little Hardingscales at 125 pound Princetons

jnon averaged but ICO pounds-At 230 Referee W H Manning captain of

Harvards foothall tenm called game As tboloams took their places there was opportunityto see thorn Princetons rUlhlr wore Brad ¬

ford 81 McDermott 81 81 Peace83 Loner 81 captain and Pilot 83 The-jtuarterbisk waWinton the only fro liman InInn teem experience at Last Hamptonmade him a valuable acquisition The half-backs were Morgan 83 and Chetwood 82 andho basks were J Harlsn81 and Oauldwell-fll Some of the Prim ton men groaned whenthey saw the champions for Wltblngton oneof the mainstays was laid up from a hurt relelved In the game with Harvard two weeksago iarr another excellent player was In theInvalid corns not having recovered from thetame with the University of Pennsylvania nndpevoraux n strong and skilful rusher who hadbeen kicked In tho eye In thegamo with Harvardirns not there Three good mon were missingand their substitutes hind had but little trampractice Yales rushers were Fuller 81Beck 82 Vernon 81 Harding80Lamb81ktorrs 82 and Adams 82 hedger 81 wasthe vuartnr hack Watson 81 tho captainand Camp 80 were the half backs and Ba-ton

¬

81 tbo bl lk Yale had seven rushers nodpoe back Princeton six rushers nnd two

a r s friends were jubilant over their pros ¬

peele and backed their team liberally offering

10 to 50 and 1500 to 1250 Princeton monthese bets n tio at leaat for acboplDlfortording to the must win to win the

betstali won the kickoff Harding made the

kick end the big ball went snlnnlnglnto theitt lao of Princeton got It and made a shortrun tackled nnd stopped by the boys Inblue Out of the ruck the bal came spinning-and wns captured by Princeton whoIntit I vvull up toward the Tale goal Therewas wild rush for the ball and for an In-stant

¬

It seemed as though the orangeand black were to get a touch downBacon of Yale grabbed tho bill ns It bounded-near tho goal but It slipped from his handsLoney of Princeton wAalllrc and touoh downseemed certain on the snowand thn twit instant Yales mon were on thebull and the blues had made a touch down forsafety The rocket cheer of Princeton fol ¬

lowethis sharp playout to the 25yard line Camp Yales

hard kli knr sent the ball high In tho airBradford of Princeton caught it IhusInlnlnl ntree kick Wintn made thetoo and a From the throng thenowcovered ball wax tossed Gauldwelloutof Princeton caught I tried tn wa tackledpr Yale thorn was IlnlrlllumhlAI and thenWatsonI of Yale was se balunder hisarm tnlnl to make a run footholdeould and the next minute YalsH caplain went to the earth under a crowd of Prince ¬

ton men Then Harlan sent the by a longkick well up toward i ales bal Watsonwas there and took It on tbo fly He attempted afrokick nnd scrimmage on the lino followed

Princeton man snapped the bill backwardVyintoii caught l and dodgid tho throng andstarted for the Yale goal ills triumph wasshort for ho WHS thrown by a toy In bluebut tin ball had crept up toward Yalosmat The ball ngiln reached Harlan nnd thisalrnlIIId youth hoisted thuglobo Into den ¬

to thl goal of Yale riterushers followed again It seemed asthough the lrlnceton would surely got a touchflown theIr second and lastchance by n hair and again Yale touched downfor safely 1 lien there was great cliiwriug byUn hopi with orange and Muck In their huttonholes The Yale men sported theIr colors Intheir faois aa w1 aa in their buttonholes

When tile as kicked off by Yaleptf Princeton grabbed It und made a PecHe was caught A scrimmage followed andItion ttto bail was hmPael out to Winton whomade a kick for goal he111d him anui Camp ofIrBaoherouslround

next minute he was yanked from histfd1 and untwood ol Princeton madelit with the ball He too was throwntad In the slruKgle tint followed tinreWAre threats of a free fight Titer wasmore yelllnKthiin fighting howler and againhits game went on It was a serisof kicks antilerlmmagrs for nn runnlnl10r rushing couldh done tmcausx ot ground liarla of PrInceton didIltPory

work In longricking but nearly every kick wasInto this hands of some ialo manfor a ijuarter of an hour tho game waslimply ci eerie of lonl kicks fits ball wasrrldualyi worked UI toward the PrincetonYale tnn Princeton to touchdown for safety st 255 amid Itnhl UnhlIhalt I from thin Yale Princeton8Dclntortried to Mndlhf hail luarlnrs oYalollonl hit the boya In bluo again rusholligoal nnd UIHloge wore lort1 to Snottier touch down forSafety Again and again Princeton tried todrive hack Yale and twice inur they wereforce to toiiih down icr safety Alter thefourth touch down for Hufety the New J rsuv005 grit Ithe bail well down by Yalos coili

forthe blolplm hl1I mudu theIr third touch Uld

Yale k luk1I niT s ii from thn 21 yards linebut llltntttfrtng kick ly theIln nllow IIV gIII work UblllloulllrttOied yl to neIther null hr fourth touchkick

own for Illely 11 rlncplons gut n free1 lit intoti try a place

diCkofI thefor gosh The hal ws fairly In thin hull

Iround soil rplulrl a long andaourat klcl Ind It over goat but his

wind wu favorable and the Prlnoetonhad are hope that their freshmanwould It Chatwood dropped on onknee and bald tbs bal carefully Wintonsquatted and sighted atlantrthsTtttlDK Ibo

wall plaoad sprang forward and kickedbal snow oVrobell slipped from his toe andleft Into Camps bad andlsd In thaoantreof the Iround an In

sttnt where It was being for whentime was called The teams had boon strug-gling

¬

for threequarter of an hour Each hadVouched down four times for safety Nothingbed really ben done

After a of fifteen minutes game wascalled This time the teams changed clOse butthe wind seemed to favor Princeton for It al-

most¬

ceased and Yale had little ot Its help Inthe last Inning Wlnton kicked off for Prlnoo ¬

ton Camp sent the bal back and Wintonthrow I to who kicked ItAver the rushers head Into Iladgers handsThe Yale man kicked It beck to Harlannnd again tho Princeton kicker sent It over thehOlds of tho players Thus It went back and

Princeton slowly gaining ground untilaltar It passed from Watson to Flint andfrom Chetwood to hedger the latter wasforced to touchdown for safety Thiswas Yalos fifth touch down for safetyThen Yale by a series of short rushesand long kicks worked tho ball back towardPrincetons goal nnd tho orange had to touchdown for safety for the fifth time Then thebattle wee waged down In the middle of theground Titers was a fierce tussle and out oftile midst the ball was seen Olnl Harlanwent for It muftod It and Princeton-man stopped It It wa dangerously nearthe goal of hi touch down forsafety bv Prlnoeton followed then an effort-to thrive Yalo hack then another touch downfor nfety Yalos men worked their hRrdcIIt was now or never Princeton sawgnr nnd again touched down for safety A longkick from PrInceton sent tho boll away fromdanger but Camp caught It and drove It backIIn the scrimmage that followed Princeton gotl9 ball and titan mode tho ninthtouch down for safety Tills was followedfive minutes later by the tenth and In a minutemore by Princeton eleventh touoh down forsnfetv It wan close work with heavy odds InYales favor Out the orange nnd black workedthe ball Into the middle of tho Old and thenhogan a scrimmage to kill time They saw thatYale was outplaying them and made a deeperate effort to mnko a tie

Yales boys In couches and on the groundhissed nnd called Baby game Princeton keptcool They had made a good light with Iweak-ened

¬

team and were not lolll to give tip thechampionship for any of chaff Thescrimmage went on Onco Harding crabbedthe bul nnd made off with It but he was calledI the referee Tlmo was nearly up andYule tried hard to get thin ball They could notand time was called Neither aide had scored apoint and the mon of lrlnceton were still cham-pions

¬

they claimed Yale men growled oloredto play an hour longer or onPrinceton men grinned cheered their teamshouldered some of them and then wont homeconsiderably richer with the money of the con-fident

¬

bV111 blue It was just 120 when thelame following Is tho scor-

errlnoIDToh downs0

O lalo8aflv Touch Downs Prliicwu It Tale eColumbia and Princeton have not played this

year As Harvard anti Yale both beat the Co-lumbia

¬

boys badly IIs not likely that they willtackle Princeton

IllK I1KAT11 Of WILLIAM 11 PLOTAat Actor nnd Manager wh woe Widely

Known Throughout thIs CouMryWilliam II Floyd ot Wallacka Theatre

dlod yesterday morning at 110 Fourth nvenuoaged 18 The Immediate cause of his death waslirlghta dUeoso of the kidneys in nu acuteform

Mr Floyd was born near tho corner of Grandand Jackson streets In this city Ills fatherwas I mechanic Young Floyd numberedamong his playmates Dan Bryant William JFlorence Chris Connor and Barney Williamswho all went to school on the east sideof the city His first dramatic appearancewu with an amateur company at ThaliaHall In Grand street Hn played Sktiy in thethen popular Glance at Nsw York end wassoon afterward engaged by the minstrel OhArleyWhite to play small parts In negro pieces In aBowery ball Ho then travelled for three sea-sons

¬

with Maggie Mitchell and while with herIn New Orleans was married to Mla AnnaHenrade one of tho Henrada sisters dancerswho had boon brought from London by JohnBrougham Ills wife became nn actress Onreturning to New York twentyfive years ago hewas engaged by the elder Wallack to play In histheatre at Broadway and Brooino street wherehe remained several seasons Hhortly be ¬

fore the war he Induce the minstrelDin Bryant appear IUbo Garden witha whit face and drlmnlvc Lover Irish novelof Handy And which had a longrun both there and eubeequenthlat th presentWallacka Theatre Boon apr the war Mr

Floyd became associated with Thomas King Inthe management of the Varieties Theatre NewOrleans and was very successful for two sea-sons

¬

Ha was also In Chicago with LevI Northand ut the Walnut Street Theatre PhiladelphiaHa was encased ns ataea manager and actor byJohn Bulwyn for his now theatre In Bostonand on Mr Belwyns death continued as suchfor three seasons with Arthur Cheney his suc-cessor

¬

who called tbo house the Globe Hothen engaged with Manager John McCullough-at the California Theatre San Francisco Sinceleaving them he was almost continuously stagemanager and actor for Mi Wallack to the tImeOf his death

Mr Iloyd rarel played the leading charac-ters

¬

ot pl always had prominent come ¬

dy ports In which ho Invariably made hilTho New York public can roall htmSir Frrderifk ttimmt in Money nnd liolluSckln London Assurance He WM onu

with Montague Beckett andothers of the Lambs Club In this city andwee its Great Shepherd Ills wife antI threedaughters aged respectively 19 16 and 12survive him The two later aro nt HCho111lelhlehemPa On Ihl Mr ¬

voloy on life for 00whichhad Ho owned 1 largegrounds nt Long Branch Whlln with MrCheney his salary wnl reported ns 1250 a WAkohas long handsomely paid bWMInek

The funeral will take place on Monday at 10oclock ntthoLlttle Church Hound tho CornerCemeteryand the Intorment will b In the Long Branch

STIIXCIINIA IN A FIO

Pulllnc to Ret Fnaptoyntrnt o TOUDI UennnnAttempt to End 111 IIf

As Dr Harrison of tho Chambers StreetHospital was driving In an ambulance alongRlrlngton street about 10 oclock yesterdaymorning ho saw a One looking young man

banleomel dressed lying on the sidewalk boIn response to a question from the

doctor as to what wathe matter he replied InGerman that ha a little stoic and askedto be taken to a hospital IHo was as-sisted

¬

Into the ambulance and driven tothe Chambers Street Hospital On arrivingthere ho told the Doctor that ho he lied token adose nf strychnia that Inorlnl In a fig Huwas put to bed and was d with slightconvulsions which gradually Increased untilthey became very violent Tor three hours timyoung man was In Intense agony arid at tImeshis life WI despaired of Late In the after-noon

¬

begun steadily toImprove anti early In tim olonlnlhe was pronounced out ofHe was at first reticent but finally said thnhehad uiken poison because of Inability pro-cure

¬

employment Hu tied arrived in thiscountry from Germany two weeks ago Illsname was George Knlmann and ho AIsyears of age Ho Iet Ills home on account ofsome love affair bought the strychnia InFranco with the Intention of committing sui-cide

¬

but finally decided to try his fortunes InAmerlos Finding nothing to do lucre hn at-tempted

¬

his life The young titan Is evidentlywell bred and hits condition Inn attracted muchsympathy at the hospital

ICKItOVND IN Till ST IAWUKfiVK

Hope ihmt the CIn e or Wrnlhrr will FntibIa Ih Vexel lo Work through

MONTIICAL Nov 2ho river rose con-siderably

¬

during the night and burst the Icoblockade at various points but this channelshave again filled up There are over ono hun-dred

¬

anti twentyfive crafts of various kinds onthe river between Montreal rind juebnc whichwill lie safe In port In two days if tho presentweather continue The Harbor Hoards of bothports will furnish all aTlluhlllellm towauu

The steamshipI UIRwn willI boocomo a total wreck sprung a leak duringthe night anti although her remaining cargowits thrown overboard she oontlnucd to nil Ifthe tugs yot reach her In little alto may bn towedinto a position safe from Ire shoves Hho Is nflue Clydebuilt vessel of 2 000 Ions nnd hail ageneral cargo of produce with fiftyeight heatof cattle nnd COO sheep specially obtained forthe JInullsh Christmas market Hho Pnluiigs tothe Dominion line The steamships1 Peruvianand Dominion will enoleavorto push through toQuebec tomorrow It hits weather continues asat present At Lachlna 100 men are employedsawing a passage at the entrance of the canal-InI orde to winter the lightships of Lake t3U

SEN KERNANS SUCCESSOR

BOMB JtinaiNiscifNCKs OF LAST WINTUlta SESSION Ar ALDANT

AMldatckt Ianefc at wklcla Mr Arthur wa-NasnedMr IlepciV Inlocnee cud what ItMeaatktr Conkllai View an Voodford-

ALDJUrr Nov 24On tho night lat wintor whtn all opposition to the choice of clanSharp as Speaker of the Assembly vanished as

1snow bank under an April sun thoro emergedfrom tho Delavan noun don Bharpo conArthur AttornoyQonaral Ward and severalprominent members of the Legislature It was2 oclock In the morning The skirmishing-had been done MajorCon Dusted had backedout early exSpoakor Alvord had withdrawn-his Individually single skirmisher and thohalfdozon who hoped to make Mr Skinner thoSpeaker had shown tho white flag Oon Sharpewoe to be nominated for Speaker without oppo-

sition¬

and when thoy naked how this suddencollapse of all tho opposition was accomplishedthey wore told that don Arthur had come nndthat ho represented Itoscoe Conkltngs wishesHaving dissipated opposition tho next thingwas to oat some oysters anti tho little partyjust mentioned started for a basement sa-loon

¬

on State street Under the exhilaration ottho cold oysters some confessions woro madeThoro woro confessions of disgust with Hayesof zeal to tho death for Grant nndono or two uncomplimentary allusionsto George Wm Curtis GOD Arthur satquietly salting nnd peppering his oystersraying few words hut somewhat disposed toapplaud the prevailing sentiment Suddenlyhe wns struck pretty sonorously between thoehoulder blades and the gesture was emphasIzed hy the remark And tiara gentlemen isthe next Senator from Net York Uproariousapplause followed hut Oon Arthur barely heldtbe oyscrlhat was on Its WItO his mouth at the

He swnlowOll smilednnd thanked the ofllclnlOen Arthur would very likely have been nom-inated

¬

by n caucus of the membersof the last Legislature ant ns nil of these Sen-ators

¬

nnd n great many of the Assemblymenwill take part In tho caucus next January It Isfair to nssumo that his chances would hove beenoijuil at least to that of any other porson if hahind not happened f get Into thoSdnateas itspresiding officer Jut there might hale beensome opposition to Arthur and ns thll op-position

¬

did not seem lost winter to per-sonal

¬

It Is a matter of some Interest to knowwhether the gentleman whom Ion Arthursfriends will name will meet with the same op-position

¬

that be wouldhavo encounteredTheflerySenatorsnnd Assemblymen did

not propose to bo bulldozed Into voting forArthur will have n fair chance to make goodsomewhat cautious threats they matte Instwinter for of course the mon who would havnfavored Arthur have somebody else In view Iremember that a Senator after carefully look-Ing about to see If anybody was In hearing dis-tance

¬

pulled me Into a sheltered corner of theDelaran House lobby one night and actuallysalt Damn Arthur He thinks ho can brow ¬

ben us oOlnlr Senators Dut Ill show himHiear from mo in the caucus

I would just advise his friendsInl take him off the conrso Tb6rwits more or less of thiswinter although diplomatic Senators expressedthemselves moro diplomatically But remem-bering

¬

how with n wave of his hand as H wereand thou pronouncing of tue single word Conkling by Ian ArlnurJAI n magician tInes prestoall Sharpos election asspeaker ceased it seems lair to tiresome thatthe Irate Senator and his friends wouldI showthemselves In caucus somethlngnsdld the hubIrishman who had boon Insulted by a Herculesof a fellow antI who nftcr mtmsurlng his Insuitors strength turned to hits friends nndshouted with great passion Hold me backsome nf vneA who knOB me temner

nut Ion Arthur Is going to boldi the gavel intho Senate He has taken four years with acontingencyI instead of a possible six with avote ant nn Influence Who Is the next bestman There would b hardly any questionthat the Republican caucuwould decide thatthe next bust man man whom the samestatesman wbowolid have curried Gen Arthurthrough DUOUS I It were not foran I antI 1 and It a very long Ifand a very broad but I heard some verydelicate hints last winter about Mr ChauncoyDepow a an antlConkllng cBndldnlProbably more of the tenltorlofI ILo AmtomUvmen than beforehoard of It In one session woro told thathere was a man who had had the Spartan forttudn to decline political bonorssuch as theAlan to Japan anti at nn age when almost allyoung lawyers are gutting n living by theircommissions out of the collection of debt

Senator I hearlll somewhat noted lobbyist-say one day Ilt Senatordo you knowthat that man Dopew was on thn road to thoOovurnorl place and thnro would have bees

n step from that to tbe White lousl1 hebndnt declined political I honorscounsel for the New York Control road

Did he do that replied tho Senator HeIsnt fit to be a politician titan for he knowswhich side of his bread thobutt lIs on and la-dd few politicians who do Great talestold about Mr Depews opportunities nndabout his abilities Hn certainly lied the abilitytn make a speech on the railroad transportationquestion boforo n committee which kept evenSenator Madden awake and Senator Woodsaid In his waggish way that a man wbo coulddo that was nt lo be President Hut some of thincountry members took a dislike to Mr Dooewbecause ho road circus posters It seems thatIn the early spring days some circus companydisplayed tholr gorgeous posters on the fenceUmleUrrou ls the now Capitol Mr Dopow oneafternoon on his way to the Capitol to make anargument was attracted by a post °r which rep ¬

resented a man as about to thrust lila head Intoun elephants mouth Some members AnIhimstanding there and laughing at posterand he forfeited the respect they hind for himthereby As for Instance a somuwhat notedmember from the St Lawrence Hirer re-gion

¬

saul that evening Thats the great MrDDIMIW Is It Ivu heard moro or less abouthim but I never saw him until today I dontthink tiny great shakes of a fellow with grayhairs lu his whiskers who can see anythingfunny In n circus sIgn

hint It will bo remembered that the hills thatMr Depow made his brilliant argumentsagainst did not peso It was hinted too thatMr Dopew might have arrivodntthe beginningof the fulness of years by this winter and wouldsock at fifty for a contInuance of the politicalhonors that hocastasldoatthlrty Itsooms nowthat there was some foundation for this hintHere Is where the Influence of the it Is foilIf Mr Chauncny Depow and tho powerfulfriends he has desire him to bathe next UnitedStates Senator thero U ovary chance that thenext best omen to Arthur mayIn casehe Is not Vepohlle harder fight-ers

¬

than lied persons to the blus-tering

¬

little Irishman to content withChiuncey Dnpew has a very persuasive wayho have his friends He has some persuasivefriends tim L jdslatur Judge Itobertson Isono Senator another Majorden-HuMed Is another MajorGen Hustud Issometimes called the Bald Etude of Westohes-tur Ills eye Is fierce anti his lend Is bald yetwo always thought that Oon hadof tho owl than of the eagle In hula look lorainn nnd does unless of necessity fierce lookvery wise and whnu It was suggested to himlate lest winter that possibly Mr Dnpow mighthave friends In thin caucus of 1881 Jan Huntedlooked very like an owl The resemblance wontfurther ho said nothing

It is said that the omen who would have sup-ported

¬

Arthur will now favor Mr Thomas1llt Perhlpslhoy will WIS that the reason

Cornll atPolnted to a twopennyofllciiln N oiy wise man in Albanylast winter saId Ill toll you about TomPlatt If ho evor got to be Senator he wouldbegin at once tn organize a Tom Platt followingIn Now York State He wouldnt play secondfiddle to Mr Conkllng a moment after begot Itorganized oman knows that better Ihnllloscnn anil itoacon tiousnt intendto give Mr Tout Platt an opportunity tohave a Ilai following It I still thatthoso kept their eyes and earswide open at the Hnpubllcan Committee roomstitle fall haul reason to surmise something ofthis sort There tine been some mention ofGov Cornells name The Governor will haveto have the undisguised support nf SenatorConkllng to got the nomination If any oneshould say that thl Governor so magnetlrnd theLegislature of year that they would get veryenthusiastic whunuvur lila name was spokenthat person would bi mistaken Joy Cornellsomehow did not make himself very popularPossibly It wits because Pnllco Justice JacobPatterson ocouloIIOO much of his tIme Hnsides thorn Is a vague Impression expressedby a Democratic Senator that toy Cornell himIlldol that It Is n straighter petIt to the White

from thn Capitol at Albany than from thebannto Chamber nWashington

TheroI his another name mentioned asthv possible next best man It lu tthat of hlewaittIii Wouillord homeloijy said I tthinkI It wnsHpnnlinr Alvorl that Wnodford rnd mentionedIt Vrnodfords chnnues may bebest illustrated by thn lolowlnl story HonutorConklnlllhll chntlnl sortie friend ieI hnva tho reputation-of Innkhll men 1 do slncurelylmpaihut no ¬

accuse 10 of having made littleStew Woodford

lintIt hits boon suggested that possible lIneone CnnIrlIng mny not greatly object to thu oboetlon of Mr Dopew Thero may ban good dealIn that but br tho time of tlm esneni

AFRAID OI TflJB LAND ZHAQVR

Jury Doty on tan BUato Ta ef4Spread ofth ActtatUaLONDON Nov 2LA despatch ttho 2mlfrom Dublin says Meroblnl ell

eons declare that Ihe servo on the jury-In the State trials for fear of severe Injury totheir business or murder As the merchantshavo business with all parl of the countrythey fear blnl If tho traverseare Mr Boycott baa received athreatening letter bearing London postmark

DUBLIN Nov SAn application was madetoday In the Queens Bench Division for an at-

tachment¬

against the Evening Math newspaperfor articles prejudicing the trials of the trnvorsore Mr Monroe law adviser to the lateGovernment who appeared as counsel for thetfiifna Mali asked for an adjournment BO al-to enable him to prepare an nfTldavIt to meetthe charge at once This was agreed to andthe hearing was ndiourned until Monday

Tho Protestant Archbishop of Dublin hutsIssued a form of prayer for use by his clergyfor iI amelioration present of tho disturbed

tho countryLONDON Nov STho Manchester Gear

dmiin London correspondent pointing to theImportance todays meeting tho CabinetPays The state of affairs In Ireland since theIInitiation of the prosecution of the LandLnaguers Increases tIm expectation that theGovernment will not much longer delay movingfrom Its present attitude It Is believed thatMr Forstor has changed his vlowa more de-oldodly than any other mombor of tho Govern-ment

¬

Ho has lately adopted an opinion Infavor of maintaining the law with a stronghand It Is reported that he was so muchIn advance of hil colleagues that they pro ¬

ferred to await result of his trip to Irelandbefore deciding what eourolto pursue It IIs theconviction of those are In a position to bowell Informed that If ho returns with his vIewsstrengthened thnro will bo short session ofParliament before Christmas solely to enactcoercive mnuresbut that Messrs Hrlght nnd

Spencer will undoubt-edly

¬

makn a strong effort to defer tho assem ¬

blnlof Parliament until January when rome ¬

legislation could ba Introduced simul-taneously

¬

with coercionIn connection with the foregoing the morn-

Ing papers of today report an attempt tto shootCant John Mitchell renting a largo farm InItoscommon nn attempt to shoot a Protestantclergyman In Tlpperary tho prosecution ofsixty perAnIn WeMport for Illegally assem-bling

¬

nn eviction besides various In-cendiary

¬

speeches houghlngs of cattle AcLONDON Nov 25All the Mlnletlrl worn

present at tho Cnbln council today previous-to the assembling of which Mr Forsler ChiefSecretary for Ireland c<nlerrollwlh tho Marmils of Hnrtlngton ant wont toWindsor Castlo and had an Interview with theQueen

Thl ProMs Association says It Is authorlrod tothat Mr Forater declared at the Cabinet

council today that there was no necessity toadopt coercive measures In Ireland at presentThe Cabinet therefore decides that an earlysession ol Parliament was unnecessary TheCabinet has upon proposals to besubmitted to1111rlreed the Irish landnueslon No will bhold be

Pirrsnunan Nov 25 About n month sffothere came to this city John W Round Hnlives In Philadelphia and Is ostensibly a bookagent The real object of Mr Itolnnds visit-to Pittsburgh however was to establish In thiscommunity branch lodges of the secret orderof United Irishmen Mr Ilolnnd hutsbeen working quietly and the newspapershitherto have said nothlnl about hispresence lucre Ho hl successfulIn tile work A of United Irish-men

¬

has been established at Woods lion andanother hits boon organized In the cityEach of those lodges has n largo list otProper

brA The object ol theassociation la to all thinanti poor Ireland and to extent

lhi power and sphere of usefulness ot theparent organization In thl old country Shouldthe Irish association upon Its branches formoney or food the call will ba responded to atonce and should tho call bo for men arms andammunition response will bopromptanti-enorgetle Agents of tbo association are In all theprincipal manufacturing centres thoughout thecountry organizing 10dl0 anti they are meet-ing

¬

with a warm Patrick Murray whoU a resident of thll oily In Mr Roland assltant In his On Monday night next a

will he hold at Kellys Hall In Carsonmtnl organize a new lodge and Mr llolandwill make an address Judge llrennan of Da-

kota¬

IIs President of tbo society JeremiahQDnnovnn well known aUossa in Philadel-phia

¬

Is Secretary

A LONG LIST OP WKKCKS

Tie Ort Deulrnelloa lon t y tie RecastGoIeaIos of Life and 1roprrlr

LONDON Nov 2Tlo stonmor AssyrianMonarch which broko her propeller blades andwas obliged to put back has arrived at Fal-

mouth In towTho etoamer State of Nevada which arrived

at Glasgow on tho 23d inst from New York en ¬

countered fearful woathnr during the passageliar deck house was smashed and thlrtvflvohtoad of cattle wore killed She was hvo to fortwo dnrTlo steamer Effective which hiss arrived atGlasgow from Montreal lost forty head of cat-

tle¬

overboardThe British ship Canemara Cnol Durham

from Quebec Oct 25 has LiverpoolShe lost deck load anti part of liar bulwarks

The Austrian bark Atlas Cnpt Vldulioh fromNew York Oct 29 for Pnppenourg Is strandedBt AtherlleU Her buick Is broken nnd she willbo n total wreck Her crew hnvo beon saved

Tho steamer Grecian from Montroal for Glas-gow

¬

lost ninety heal of cattle overboardfhl Norwegian bark 1libra Capt Narvlg

Bristol Oct 20for Wilmington founderednn thin Sib Inst The crow have beau landed atCowys

The British hark Huano Oapt McKonzlofrom Quebec Oct 14 for froon lost dock load-on the pissagn

ST JOHNH N F Nov2ITho report of dis-asters

¬

already to the recentgales wore Ibo most destrmtlva ever expe-rienced

¬

In the colony At Old Perllcan andother ports on thin north side of Conception Haysix vessels the Dove Test anti four othersnames not given vare totally lost At Baronsoil the Morning Star anti Saint Patrick weretotally wrecked At lionnvlnti the PenguinPert Prldo of the Oconn and Paragon werelost anti eight smaller rnimore or loss dam-aged The sohooeer Bonny adrivenout of Kings Covo and broken up AtLanso Cove Trinity Hay the Victory wasdriven on tho rocks anti dashed to piecesSeveral wrecks are reported at Green flay butnothing definite Is yet known Between twentyanti thirty vessels left for norther ports shortlybefore the gale and I that many ofthem were lost with hands on board Thehark Sofala of london830 tons bound from

Mlratnlchl Juoenotown drifted Into 1llon-cll Inv waterlogged and flying signals ¬

She VTIIS towed Into Harbor Buffet yes-terday

¬

by the mall Steamer urlew TIm CrAiarrived bore today antI the barkbrought on na soon apossible

AMnHHHTnunu Ont Nov 25Tho tow bargefihlawaneowned apt Time McGownn ofthis town Is reported lost with all hands InLuke Huron

TORONTO Ont Nov 25Thom propeller Cali-fornia

¬

aftor 10R <lnl1O bushels wheat antIcorn today at elevator was aboutto proceed to Ogdensbiirgh N Y when It was10uncBhe lint been cut through nt the waterI I and was Illnl rapidly Notwith ¬

staitdinicatrnnuoUa the pumps shin Im-mediately

¬

sank In twelve ft of water wherosItu now lies The new were saved

ST JOHNS N F Nov 25ritu steamship Al

Ill put In hero at oclock this afternoonher cargo on Ore Rite Is IInWen with cotton

and bound from New OrloauS to Liverpoolfourteen days out

Heath of Alfred A UallherAlfred A Gnlthor for twenty years ono of the

director ol the Adams I ipres Compani diet at tin1th y loue at1 D AU > terday Mr Ualther hidlein sunVrlng from roimcstlon rf the lungs fur threo-Hetks Ihii bikly was taken on Ilo hu homo lii Inilnnail last night and was accompanied Iby lidI olfu sotami ilaiikhtcr Stlr I u Ilutcoct Treasurer suit MrIi

lllarnuni 51111 itt astir r ol tho Ado ii s 1KproM-

lonipiny The fumral will tate place trout Mr UaiihurhOloln tlnclnnall on Hun lay

W Winchester tf th Adam hipreM CompOlY lid tilt night Mr Unlthor was one ol tie fore

xpressmen of this entry Hu was n Kltmtltulsa I itt betn at tho hi tti m if his lauder iIn the it-pn Minuets lie acquired a lorllloin tie bunlneis towhich he adhered although nuiiiy c girt were mado tnIn lute Ihim to embark in rallruiil enterprises Ilie wasuntiiiitlled aa an rganlzcr nitI 111 the IJyonheatlumsot the express hiP ryts Ills ccInn rlliitlte In liariiiunUliu tonUictlim liiuicsti Ills

01 still te vMel rtKrilttd

IIhe llittiae lliirnrd hit lisa Dinner NnvedThe residence of William rlnuIoltln Pact

Twenty ninth street I Ittcrmn N dOIy1 bylilt allOOI yesterday Ihncanne was A deftcllve Hue

nlllh occurrml wilts Mr HUinelt vas roastingI r Thankitiiluiiit turkey Tho Tile tkiiiivluuu diluter assarrud out with this stove suitt the rent nf tin ricoh ire

bybythe

Insuranconeljhbora rue loss I stout flOO stat it tum-

id

I Never lleiivi fteter HourUakes made from Jtutlui 4 MomUjfeU lUltiug BUv k

I Danier MiealI riBnallelI by A couth Iis frtfd with

1011011 oUurilivuuJ sitU rar kold bjr druggists 1 II Is like tie sun II shines for II we uuau Dr Bullol8rup DoctorS prKillx jU

WALL STREET WING SHOTS

nnoKitna KNOAOINO iff A JArCHFun run CUJllONBHll

Lf J rss Wosdrfni IhoUTaylor RcmnrkiibU UsiDiferone In HhootlnB Dcfar and Aflr LnackThey wero a lively lot of sportsmon that

met yesterday on the estate of Mr AlexanderTaylor Jr at Rio Neck Woatohcater Countyto settle the question as to who was the bestwing shot of Wall street Among Mr Taylormany Invited luole1oro the wollknown crackshots LIrdnce 11 Chapln E Luavlit Jr H T Lonll Dr Bartloson E P Kennerd E Berrlan W II Catllnandtho Yachtsman

Excuses woro made for tho absence of Mr 03 Osborn tbo Bogardus of the street Ho hadfigured eo lithe tbo night before on tho scripdividend of 40 per cent on Northwestern thatho overslept and missed the traIn

Mr Arthur ViceProsdent elect Intended tohave boon present but was kept In conferencewith Senator Oonklnl in tho Fifth Avenue

shooting-Mr

Hotel until t arrive In time for tho

Taylor had contracted for 100 strong livepIgeons With tho birds came a manifest thatthe 400 had boon expressed In prime orderTho birds wore counted In Mr Taylors carriagehouse under the double portraits of Garfieldand Chester Byn slngularcolncldnncn the 100hind dwindled down to exactly 32J A secondcount verified the number

Say Taylor Bciuoaked a Rye Nook manIlll Oarnold furnish those birds

bondholdersPut him outlshoutod I half dozen wolfed

The shooters Iraplllhelr guns and startedfor the traps In TheNeck man ndjolnlnl DolJ lve

The contesting shots formed themselvesa phalanx of six firing nt the birds from fivetraps thirty yards rise There wits a slightfall of snow at tho tIme but not enough to sorlously Interfere with the shooting Each manshot at twenty pigeons before lunch Theseer ns furnished by a close Wall street fig-urer showed remarkable skill 1was as fol-lows

¬

straight marks standing killed withfirst barrel X with second barrel and 0 missed

Till SCORE KrOHK LOCHA TuylnrX 11t 11 I I I XII111I X I11I X 11-

I XJiUlllcl-tI Cli nnl XI 1 I I X I I I XI 1 X I 0 I I

XXluVtlled1k Lentltt11 I X 111I I X XI I I I I I I X X X

0 XItt tiltedtic V Lscitt1I 01 X X X X I11I 111 I1X X X 1

I XX X1B titledIlr rllfonl X I X I 1 I X X I I X I I11

Xkl I ltiitt tiltedP Kennard111 10111 I XI I IIX I I

I X 1ia killedMr Leonard Jerome stood oil to the right

ncjir the carriage housn throe hundred yardsaway from the platform from which tho con-testants

¬

for time championship of Wall streetwere shooting Ho hold his highlrpollshed-doublebarrelled backaction brichloader ataboautllulpolse The four plgronstiiiit escapedthe eagleeyed phalanx sailed over Mr Jeromotfline at n great heIght He dropped nil but thelast one with tim first barrel the fourth bird re-quiring

¬

both barrelsBoys said the veteran rosycheeked sports ¬

man 1 would rather shoot ono bird woll up Inthis aIr than twenty from tho traps

Ono of tho features ot the shooting was thebeautiful work performed bv Mr Taylors re-trlevur Leo LO waited like il statue until or-dered

¬

to bring in the birds shot front tho plat-form

¬

but when Mr Jerome raised his gun Leoturned his eyes skyward and before the birdreached tIm ground would bo under It Theveteran hunt shot over thin dng In this Everglades

That dog said Mr Taylor has retrieved310 birds In one day

English Harry who blows the horn on MrTaylors drag played Buy n 11 mom on thehorn from the carrie house door in a man-ner

¬

that attracted the attention of all In the HeldThat means lunch la ready said Mr

TaylorID n horn replied Mr JeromeShoot him cried a poor shot from Now

streetBetter take a horn yourself said the greatshot

Tha lunch was relished with keen appetitesanti moistened with a Ryo Neck brand ot amtmreolored fluid A scene of pleasant hilarityfollowed The Quiet yachtsman danced livelylies with Mr Palmer the oldest latman of tboNock Mr Jerome offered to wrestle any manits VnMelientHr Vinnty for ft dollar just tnwarmtip for the second shoot anti the Portchestercornet Bond nilrrod up all hands with the

Ritiiuet GalopJhuii shooters started out for tho closing con

tost aboutJ P M IhafollowlngscoreoiTlclallykept by thin New street broker shows a remark-able

¬

variation from thin first shootinglav cease AFTER LDNCU

A T rlor0 0 XiiOOOOXO 00 X00 0 X0-X ic klllel

B lllnpu0 0 00 X 00 00 X 00 00 X0 X 00 X6 killed

K Uavltt00 0 00 0 XO 0 X 0 0DX0Oo0 X 114 killed

II Y lr Yltt000 0 00 0 X00 0000 X0 0Ci o X3 tilted

Dr llartle in00000 0 000 0 X 0000000 0 XJ killedF II1 kenimrd0 000 000 000 0000000I-i U sh killedMr Jerome took up his former position The

escaped birds canto circling over his hoedfester tItan he could load nnd fire It taxedLeos endurance to bring Mr Jeromes deadbirds In the dog finally nearly breaking hisback by fulling while endeavoring to climb uphe sides of the carriage house to get at thebirds on the roof

While one bird was winging Its way towardMr Jennie a sudden shot was heard MrJerome was observed scratching his right earTime veteran looked in the direction of the plat-form

¬

nut immediately struck n hcellnoJorthicket a quarter of n mlltawny Shortly afterMr Jerome reached the thicket two wreaths ofsmoke arose In a few minutes Mr Jeromoapproached the boya holdluu two quell anti lIvewoodcock In his hands He was then pro-claimed

¬

the champion wing shot of Wall streetThe New street man whispered around that

hn tint seen a young Englishman in corduroyswith a velvet cap nn his heal a gun over lubeshoulder anti a stuffed gnmelng nth IB side goInto the thicket just nhe td of Mr Jeromo

Pale envy muttered Mr Jerome when in-formed

¬

otho base Inslituat IonA shriving snow storm falling about 3 oclock

put nn end to the sportMr Jerome on behalf of the shooters and

cuests ant townspeople who lied partakenMr Tnylora hospitality spoke as follows

Mr Taylor you have entertaIned the rep-resentatives

¬

of finance the lltotatl the voxpopull anti dillettantl In your usual princelymanner You are a splendid shunt but a poorpolitician You can ion down game better titanyou cnn run for Congress You would maYobeen successful In lbs late contest as a repre-sentative

¬

for this district If I tied not madethirteen speeches for you Thoso speecheslaid you low Your just rebuke to the miscre-ant

¬

who rubbed red pepper into the ends ofyour excellent cigars luncheon drew tours tomy eyes anti If you cnn discover and justlypunish thin wretch who throw the remainder ottim popper on the stove and drove us all Intothe lIPid to shoot a second time you will deservo tho highest reward your fellow cltlzouscan give you

This speech was greeted with rousing cheersanti a tiger The company then broke up ingood order and returned to their homes

Thin snow storm did not provant thin membersof the Fountain Gun Club from gathering atthBrooklyn Driving Park yesterday nftornoonThroe prll s were offered namely a suit ofsportsman C clothes valued at 10 a Frenchclock value d at 15 and H sportsmans trunkvalued at p25 rite score book showed the largenumber nf ninety competitors Kaon fired atIMUOII birds handicap distance rise After fiftyof tho contestants hat llnlslicd theIr scores Itwas HO near night that thin conclusion of theshooting wits postponed until Thursday next

A liximy Iroiibecj by H Vctrrnn or isleThe veterans of the war of 1813 began the

celcuratlm if Es acuatlim hilly M suit rise Adjutant JUlttilI Warner the adoted aout of the rettrani hoistedthe flan over tie old ran In enlral tark and David VanArnditle performed hits lima oiflce at tIe JIatttr Onlyvia ci tie veterans were present roll call Tliew werelien Ahram iiotiy seed i1St yeses hint Vat Ar Jalc-H flintS Hliiiw H7 Mniuil lcknirui ixx Inrdlner-LlllibriJue HI lila UilllamJ hurrr Hi They aitinded-neniir dt si IHUl hlircll Occuit lie tie old doublePI w Lenient cc U iklilnjton a Alter tervM they went Inthe test tout i IOU us sid til situ its of tie pioj netor MmOccUlt lint H Tliaiikitlvinu dinner iii Pally entertelnet tie company ulihI utrlollo 10105 tnt Mr Millbridge unto SUItS recitation Still llnlly soil that soliSt of tie r let Cli II alt dll slice lust I tarnation-lla > tile Cii were HOW tint it handful Ill nut It would bsMo to sly that a tow years would ntlke to put them sitIn tier ratin whero lily wolill noon lo forgotten

And ll bet 1110 tome1 volt he that tile day we eelsbrats will idiCi SCull be lomoltcn s lilt wits that tunecaries I11ircdit tie ItCliilililtitttileStitOlI tie republic

NcullInK Mntrli ut Nee FranciscoBAN IlitMiHcn Cal Nov 25A sculling

maieli I en lu lai biHuin Mitcnuti cf allojo slitsmtlli cl Mtn hrmi eo d Isis 0CC ihrre inilci chIli aturn was 1011 by tin loriner vile 11 V7

A 05500 Cert Nllile ID heathTtt NTI n Cnl Nov 23A Bpsclal lUsimteh to

tin Vri5ilI niii Ahiia fnl set 5 M IK Uuiiii seas kllle-lreilerdt h t iiiS sills which cart isi tint 3UU lestdon n the mountain > IUe

ma oscLKjoaepn DISASTER

Th Captain sd as Ftmttn and Btamtn-Go Down with the Vessel

SrKZZlA Nov 25The steamer On doJo¬

sepIa sank almost ImmedIately after the eelllson Two hundred person are known to bedrowned and fifty saved The fate of the otherfifty Is at present uncertain Heartrendingictnts followed the collision u the OnolaJo-teph was without means to save the lives of thelarge number on board Eynwltnosaes ot thecollision say they cannot satisfactorily explainthe manner and cause ot the occurrence Thepassenger list of the OncloJosoph shows a totalot 261 persons on board end the sailors num-bered

¬

33 Her cargo consisted of eighty tons ofmerchandise At n roll call of the survivors 85passengers and 23 sailors only answered totheir names Thin Captain also perished

LONDON Nov 25A despatch to Lloyds fromLeghorn confirms the report of the loss of 250lives by the collision near Hpnzzln The OrioleJoseph was nn Iron screw steamer 823 tonsgross anti the Ortegln was of 1853 tons burden

LONDON Nov 20A despatch to the Standardfrom Paris says Great uneasiness Is felt inEnglish and American circles hero as It Isfeared that many EnglIshmen anti Americanswere passengers on board tho steamer OncleJoseph

JiiiJR AND CANAL

SItU Obstructed by Tee hnt Vessels Expectedtn net Through

HONDODT N Y Nov 25The river frombelow Hudson to Albany Is closed with Iceranging from two to five IncItes In thicknessA few steamboats and tugs have forced tholrway through from Catsklll to Schodack andCooymans with difficulty The steamer Sara ¬

toga of the Citizens line of Troy which loftNow York on Tuesday evening lies at Catskllland will not proceed further unless the Icebreaks up The steamers Thomas Cornell andJames W BaldwIn which ply between thispoint and New York will continue ontheir routes for about three woks long-er

¬

unless compelled to close the seasonearlier through Increased severity of tImwoathor Navigation on tho Delaware andHudson Canal is virtually closet nt presentthe leo several places being from two to sixIncline thick and steadily Increasing Over 320boats are on thus lIne ot canal anti It is bellcvdd they will all reach this city A few daysof warm weather will reopen It and permit ofthe passage of thin loaded boats now on routeto title water At Citsklll Saugortlcs anti allpoints below tim ferries are making theirregular trips

UED BANK N J Nov 25A heavy snow¬

storm set in at B oclock this morning and In ¬

creased In severity this eveningThe steamer Sea Hint has abandoned tier

trips to New York for the present She liesbeen unable to heave her dock this week becauseof the ice

A number of men end boys crossed the Navesink River from Mlddletown side tolled Banktitle afternoon

1311OnTANT 1IAIL1TAT LITIGATION

The JLoulTlllB and 2Vaahvllle CombinationAttacked In the Courts

NASHVILLE Tenn Nov 25A minority ofstockholders In tho Nashville Chattanooga andBt Louis Itallroad representing about 50000shares have filed a bill in thin United StatesCourt at Nashville which la substance setsforth that Stephenson Evans Ilaldwln andFocg while acting as directors of tho roadwithout communicating with the other direc-tors

¬

sold out thin property to the Louisvilleanti Nashville Compiny by agreeing to give upand turn over a majority of the stock so as togive the LouIsville and NashvIlle roa4 absolutecontrol to tho detriment of the stockholders ofthe former road The point is madethat the Louisville and Nashville roadunder its charter cannot own stock inanother railroad anti that neither It nor thebank which holds thn stock in trust can vote Itunder the charter land that the election of di ¬

rectors in September last Is a void net a ma-jority

¬

of thin stock not being represented thatIn no event cnn the Louisville and Nashvillevote more than 600 votes under the charternnd that this gives the management to what areknown as tha minority stockholders An In ¬

junction Is asked against the Louisville andNashville road to enjoin It from running thinNashville ClintlniiouKHmid St Louis rued orInterfering with Its management and agaInstmaking a lease and a receiver Is also asked

nOJIL i brtTKD 2Ii4ISJ1113The Italy end Denmark In Port A Famon

horse llronuht by the FormerTwo National line steamships tho Italy

and the Denmark arrived In this port yester-day

¬

morning Doth were several days overdueand report very heavy woathor throughout theirvoyages TIm Denmark sailed from Londonon Nov 7 thus requiring seventeen days for avoyage that Is usually made in twelve or four ¬

teen days Thn Italy brought over the famousFrench etnlllon Mortimer which wits recentlypurchased fur Mr Pierro Lorlllnrd In Englandfor 8 000 also a tine brood mare and colt Theanimals made the voyage safely In spite of thestormy weather The Denmark also broughtlllty fine horses

A number of other line steamships are over ¬

due but no great charm was felt yesterday Inregard to them Thou are the Silesia whichloft Hamburg on Nov 10 Nevada and AlgeriasoilIng from Liverpool on Nov 11 Vine doMarseilles Havre Nov 13 and henry IJdteAntwerp Nov 7

Them was no further Information receivedyesterday In rnlntlon to the Ass rlau Monarchspoken by the Dnnnu on Nov 22 btilogVinn IndIsabled condition Hho was thou undiY sailas tier propeller wits damaged but the ship wasnot in a dangerous condition

The Negotiation Over IlnlelcnoL-

OXDOS Nov 25 During the right hoursBihllnn on tie 2t4 which preceded Dsrvltch Paihaj oc-

cupatlon of Pulclgno the Albanian nuts a resolutestsuutI In the thy plantatIons outald the town Ad-aptch from Kaeuta aa > t tie Albanian lost In thliflkhtwenty killed stud fillj wounded Tholurkuh loss wnconl Terabit

lUGuii Nov 25 Dervlich Paiha havlnir Informed tilePilnce ol Montenegro that he wa prei anM to hand overUulcUro the latter has replied that he cannot accept afliers surrender but require a formal 555loi sill hunthe has invited the repreaentatlf of sit the posers to topresent at the negoUaUon and sign the protocol of ccitlonU

ix Nor 21 TheConiUntlnoplerorrxpondentotile Hrnr reports list It U belie led lie Monte neerln nildectln to hike pnMi lon of DulclKllo ltnle guaranteeaxalnit Albanian attack

tONiTiRTiforrr Nov 2V Dervlich PaVia has lhsuuel aproclamaUon lUtuiz that the 1orla will iirant land toany of the Inhabitant who wish to quit UulcUao nitthe Turkish troops

hoarse Nov bTii convention for tie cession o-

Dulciiino Ills tteen sinned at Kunla-Uouio NY M A diiiauh to tie Smfirl riot

listlute > a vi tue Montenegrin Ii haveipreMeil their readIneu to huts poiioiilon of Dulcigno on rlJav

A llrotber Furlou AssaultAs John Fllschler aged 20 of 93 Boholej-

tieet Hrookln was alone In hisfatliert houw yestcrday afternoon blng upon a ted his brother Juieiritichler sued SO entered anti lo gratify an old grudkcwhich had led to a quarrel loetwsuu them struck bus

trotter John over tho heal with a bar stick Indictingflte severe kcalo wound Tint blows minute unenleclely John itscliler had no oiiportunlty to defend hintMir slId he was knockeil kenyelebs Whan the ambulancesurgeon strived he said ill oung man wounds vt ereserious Still he ftiare I they lust Iroluetd eoncu lon uttile trail which might prove fetal The Injured manwas cst for In Ht caihriu Hoiplul slid Jamit UK tiler n aj lovkd iup

Two Treaties nvhths ChinaWAHIIINOTON Nov 25rhe Secretory of State

this morning received a Uilegram frim the Coinmlnion-en at Itkln litter Oat of ITIh lost Informing hluthat on that day two treaties were signed ens of commerle aol the other concerning immigration Mr Trcscot was lo less liklnu on the JJtti intt suit to brlnbouts ihe treaties by itrst stuttiter By previous teicseam I r pysrus I ui s a iiroruuiuI tii at tue itiitnug ratutu treoty secured In lii cit liir3 tue etitinril 5 ni ccitt-ieiiout or tli ilutrotulctlluu 1 tfliuiese iotlllrcrs b our ow ii-

irgistation Tue uhOlChtS at tits coaitnsrCial tisaty ire lotyet kauwu

The Anll > vvUh MovementLONDON Nov 25Thu TIIIIM Derlln corre

ipondent telegraphs A semi oiticial note has teen comniunUauJ to tie netvspai er < stating that nhhc opinionregards the Jwih1 iiuestlon exicllv asltdil tefor ttlerelent delete lonlemnallon rf the antlJewish movenient by the Deputies hiss not In thIs lenst deuce teenmale On the conlrari the strength of the nuot eutue ittlias beet is Cci tel11Ly th del ate sat trout the countliainess of tOot strength II will lie more hkel to deuce irishcourage

iinulit In Ihn IceThe Morris Canal through Now Joisoy lu

beet Irozen over ant tie Ice Is becoming thicker alt tiletime Th boatmen who were unable to make a port be

tore the beginning of the roll weather sri now compellet to how their nav llnough this lee ThisIi veryslow work sod the chances see tilt nnlena tie weatheIncomes warmer th buata nil be Imprisoned by tieIce until spring

NO CONTEST BY MR POTTS

aovxnNOlf4rroEOr LVVLOTT XO TAKOt-

I11S BEAT UNCHALLENGED

now the New Jerter nepnbllesim Missed A-

Ihnnceln the JTIorehoe Auensbly DltrlThe Work lie fore the Now Covermecw-

TIIRHTOH N J Nov 25It may bo takoa-as a settled fact that Mr Potts will make nocontest to prevent the Inauguration of Mr Infl-ow

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na Governor of Now Jersey Tho only protest flied before the Board of Canvassers weeone against the return from Lower Townshiptape May County The township olerk in-

formed tho board that by a clerical error he hadput down Carter for Governor 150 votesand Ludtow for Congress 1C3 votes and that

Ludlow should bo aubstltutod for CarterndCarter for LudlowThreo contlomen appeared as volunteer

counsel for tho Republicans before thin Boardof> t those Mr Henry 0 Pitney of Morrlstownwas a oandldato for ono of the seats In the 8upromo Court which cloy McOlellan flllod withJoel Parker and ox8onntor Magi Mr SamuelIrey of Camden confidently expected to bo AtornoyQonoral If Mr Potts was elected andMr William P Douglas of Jersey City waswilling to bn a Sessions Judge In the sameevent Thcsothroo gentlemen wore stalwart latheir affirmation of Mr Justice Joseph Altundo-Jradloys doctrlno that the canvassers had noIghtto go behind tho returns But thin maorlty of the canvassers overruled thorn andcounted the ICO ballots for Ludlow as thisvoters haul thrown thorn

Thin Itupubllcnn minority Senator Martinanti Whltlcar before thondiourrnont presenteda written protest against this action anti It wasordered on file But Mr Potts lied positivelydeclared that ho would not bon party tn nnjrContest against Mr Ludlows Installation In of-

OBunl B8thoonielnl canvass should discloseevIdence of positive frauds or Irregularitiessuch as might chancotho result whereas hurahe only protest made Is agaInst ono return of156 votes and Mr Iudlows plurality being 651thie result would not bo affected by throwing outthe township return

But the army of tldewaltora who have boonnetting n contest against Ludlows Installationore wroth with tho Jersey City BopubllcaniAbout onohnlfof tho Dumoenitlo majority ol4500 lu Hudson County wits thrown In tile 800-ond Assembly District which the Royutillnns-gerrymandorud into the form of n horse

hioui in order to koop the Democrats of JursorCity well together Tbn Itepubllcans thoughtit hardly worth wbllo to make an Assemblynomination In thin Uorsoshoo and now it ap-pears that lied they dono so they would hnvamil n colornblo protnxt to contest tha election et-judlow The strength of the Democratic maorlty mckee tIm nomination for Aosnmbly

much souuht for in the Second District Thereore gonerallyseteral Independent nominationthere and the keenness of the contest often leadsto accusations of sharp practice against onoanother Whim it was soon by how small aplurality Ludlow was elected thin Republicansturned their eyes hopelessly upon the horseihoeBoarohlng for some ground upon which ta-

ason protest which could be carried over thetends of tile State canvassers Into a ItepublUcan LegIslature coil that body would havomndtshort work of liraileytt scruples against goingnhlnd the returns while ML tho wouldbaJudges and other expectants of Mr Pottaa-lountv would have crlod amen But the party

to mink such a protest legally must bo a partyin Intorxst nnd the Republicans lost theirchance when they tilled to make a nominationfor Assembly In thin Horseshoo

cloy Ludlow will have tim appointment of fiveMlpremx Court Judcvs to succeed Justloon1ixnn Knupn and lIce whose terms expireIn 1882 anti Justices Beuddor rind Van Uyckolwho go out In 1883 Justices Dlxon is the onlypubllcan among them cloy McClellan wasblamed for departing from the unwritten ruletlmohonorcd In Now Jersey that the Judaeashould bo evenly divided ns nearly as possiblebetween tho parties At present six of the nineJudges tIre Democrats

Ono of the earliest and most onerous dutiesof the Governor will bo to appoint succnasorstoHonry 0 Kelsey Secretary of State Henry BLIttle Clerk In Chancery and aorehom MottState Prison Keeper whoso terms expire nextspring Of those Messrs Little anti Mott willprobably decline ronomlnctlon Tim foes ofho Secretary of State Clerk In Chancery nodClerk of the Snpromo Court were reduced brhe Republlcin Legislature under n law whichIstotakeeffeet witon the preent incumbentsgo out An investigation last winter disclosedthe fact that tho fees of these throe officersaverage 20UOO aplece annually The Rnpubllcan reformers did not like to see so muchmoney wasted on Democrats They despairedof turning tIle grIst into theIr own hoppers brelecting a Republican Governor and hence theDemocratic successors of these gentlemen willImvo to worry iilonir on JOOOO n year each bestiles an allowance for clerk hire

Even at thin reduced rates a number of Demo ¬

Crate are willing to servo tile State Lnon Abbelt who declined tho nomination forOovornorIn favor of Mi Luttlow hues boon talked of forHocrctiiry of Stnto amonc the opponents of thehtnttt House wing of tint party but for n lawyerIn active practice like Mr Ahbntt thin stake Isprobably too light EfSheriff Reynolds of Kssex n Newark banker Is also mentioned by thesumo Interest Hn would no doubt accept ItBut tIm friends of thin State house piopln snythat Mr Kolse Is willing to succeed himselfanti that tile active part liii took first in forcingtint nomination of Ludlow and later in tilemanagement of thin canvass renders It curtainthat he will bo Secretary of State for tIle thirdterm of five years-

JosiiCLfBd thin Clerk in Chancery who alsolies sorrel two terms thorn are n host of per-sons

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talked of Among these ore oxJudgaGreen of Vandnrpool Green A GummIng otthis city Garret 1 V Vroom of Trenton theLaw Reporter of tim Nuw Jorsuy SupremeCourt Jeronilnh B Cleveland Rfgistorof Hud-son

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County brother of Ornstts Clayelnnd of thol nioi ratio National Commlttcn nnd Job Lipplncott Chairman ot tho Democratic CountyCommittee In Hudson County

The term of tlin Clerk of the Hupremn CourtBonjamln F Len does not expire for ft yearlater so that the pressure for tIm succession lanot Imminent Attorno > Ganornl Stockton willundoubtedly bo reappoInted For Kocpei thisState Prison thn most prominent candidate la-xScnntor Dayton of B rcon County Mr John

Hall who tints been popular as Governors Seerotary for six tears past will bosucceodod It Issaid by tiny Ludlow son

It Is understood that Senator Sowell havlnaserved as PruMdunt of hue bunate for threeterms ant being now a prominent cindldittfor riieodorn IF indolphs seat as Senator InCongress will retire front tile Presldoncy-In faorof Senator Garret A Hobartof Passale-Countt Chairman of the Rupubllcan State Com-mittee

¬

hubs natural successorThis heading candidates for the Spoakorshlo

of this Hoiitn an Bonsnll of Camden and VitaDuyn of Nnwnrk Mr Bonsall Is the voteraeditor of tho Camden Jinilu l0t Mr VanDuyns is a surveyor In Newark Mr BonsaiIs said to he opposed to the Central Railroadsbridge In Jersey City of which Mr Van Duynwits an earnest advocate two years ago

Ilnllllnn wiSh the lludan Ice FieldsThe steamboat Kt John of the PaoplosAlbanr

line rrlvid at 5 M jeilerlity otter ia lianl Imltio withtile Ice ntlJf fiiie started from Allnnv it S clock yes-

terday ntoriiinz wilt lui itttfnter SOt 5 HghtcanioNo icrioui ntiftructiotii wera met until Hudson wasrfActird Thor ilia Ice I rait In AII tinlirckpii 5hst twotine thick In iiouet 1ln Ht Jill ti bftrkrtl anj chrBPtlon its Ice nllir Hi luannrr iiil a tMtrrniu ram an4-crioirit a channel tor Ucrult For twenty iU inliea IhoIce fleliti lay lelore livr Melow that tie oliitructiouiwere In fornil Uljie lOudI uliti mate KeoJ progress armInn ab ut tour liuur late at rtlial Street tier itUnklnc-vrai nniivhirtit sot shp It ria ly for thf return trip ahoul4-ttif cunu ait ilei IJe to keelp tile tolLs runnini

Tile lisraillilt ol lii LnUens lino arrived Irate Troy atabout tie tame Unit

AD Iluniir lu n Court IllocritphrrLONDON Nov 25Sir Theodore Martin this

biographer of Irliico Albert who ran at a tan uIllicit-canliJale nai toiln ciecleJ Lord Rector M Anitrnnt-Unlterrltjr ilifculni Mr F A f rccuuo Iho hutirlanmitt un avowed liberal in iolitic

Oarfleld 1lurallly In Oregon

ruicKio Ill Nov 25A despatch to tieTut unr ruin 1urtlnll I IOMCOII si I The utitiit TiltS ofthe state hut tohupiit u kin i OnrMtlt jiICH HancockIV Dili Wetter 40 ilmlUIJ plurality IM

The Tkrimoiuelcr lu > ev York Yrlrrdny-AtHuilnutHPhnrmaeintl A M 2VfiI AM-

J ° U A M 7a tIJ M JP3J011 MJ1J tili MJ Itil1 Mh1 UM J7

Miguel Omen 1rcdlcllunRising follownd by stationary or lower barom-

eter¬

tallinii lolliHcJ ili itatuim or hli1 or teiii eiastIrs noith tiitttt wlnli tartly bully vuathcr occ-nonal rlu lu koutlicrn portion

JOTTINGS IX AM tilUlt Till CITlPaniuel Inrker agnl IT or Nvr Point N J wsl

Ores el utilld kalli on biher Ioud rstsricSamuel Tannin a wealth Jrwttti sugar refiner tli-

hrother ol issue H Tuu11 Mu > orifJir > illy a-

uiarrlcJ In Chicago cieriny 0 Mini Ixna AleiaaJcrKK Mayor llaigerlr of fork who ills leen vlntin <

various point ot intert In till city under tha cars ot J-

PI Pinch Eel JuJe I ami Ull JuUo Cullahan suitUrllrjtu Uctftrjur sailed tuy Ilia Vita of ZrussstsIs