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>UNHMT\N BEACH TO-DAYn,,? DB^
\u25a0\u25a0>•;"' ! PAINS POMPEII•t and GRAND FIREWORKS
• The SULTAN OF SULB
;^::nh,-7t|,tn :Ma'tr-« \V*j."-»£\u0084'<*.
THEIARLOFPAWTUO'^fVCIT V O best won nrt.^7
•»\u25a0 m o Htn at I'IUCKs U.\e. a,4\KMCKEnnorKEn tjisatrf.. c*i,*»*Ev«. *:I.V Mat. S«t.. 2:U. li. W. L*>rer'» i-\u25a0\u25a0--.
BLANCHE RMS M THE BLOHDE bJigniICC Mad. Square G«rrl«i. Ev'cs. »30
— -'U\J\j'3 Vme. Chartona TCalker-K'.irsU-sr"Island"* an»l Rra'd Table $1*». "VPTTMaG-n. Aim. SOe. Knant PUat Ls*rd. t> ZtUXXiX^
CASINO [FfMfMat Saturday. 2:15. 211£§ l'U\'A\ iM^l
AXI> Ml**FAY TEUPtF.TtO.
BDSTOCKS^.^PAPADISE ROOF GARDENS V *>
VAUDEVILLE, r^^^CRYSTAL GARDENS ȣHIT OF* TIIE TOWN! Erfry Kve at
•3f>
••nAHLI^G OF THE GALLERY CODS"*"THE MtESS PARADE" and VAIDE^ILiX.
QRn&nwAY theatre cm » \u2666 B^»y.~^~~\u25a1nUHUnH Iose «OI\TRY: oxe flag: •»\u25a0 v.ire-
HENRY W RATXtiE prwrarsO.\E REAL Ml<»l« \| COMEDY.
I*TH WEEK-iTH MONTH
PRINCEofPILSEN
Going 4th to the country?Allmen's holiday wear is ready
—Norfolk suits. \u25a0
Flannels turn \u25a0 and crash suits >
Puck trousers.NepHgee shirts.Bathing suits.IjOw shoes— russets.
Straw and soft hats
Allboys' holiday wear is ready.
Stores closed to-morrow.Rogers, Peet & Company.
258 Broadway, opposite City Hall.and 7 and 8 Warren St.
842 Broadway, cor. 13th. We fillordersand 140 to 148 4th Aye. by mall.
12C0 Broadway, cor. 323.and 54 West 33d St.
The Turf.CONEY ISLAND JOCKEY CLUB.
K.UIM. AT SHEErSHEAD BAY.Jane is to Jnlv 7. 2:36 I. M. Rain or <hlne.
14TH DAY—THE PAASV anil 5 Other Races.1,-avo Ea«t ".4th £:.. E. P... via L I.P. R . at 11 A. M.12:U>. 12:*» (I*oParlor <"ar Train>. 1:1O. l:ii>.2:l(i. 2:4".3:10. Take ferrjr fi.K Whitehall St . N. T. 11 A. M.. andthereafter every 2O m!r!UT»«. r-nr.rtrtinx at "ftth Street.F.rooklyn. with Brooklyn lletKbta Trolley direct to track.Fare tor.^utf. 33 minutes r.y trolley. Brooklyn Rar'-I Trar..«i:from Brooklyn KriiK? iN. V aide), Briflg*- trains viaKir.RS County ar..l Trtehton P^ar-h U^d, a>-> KlatbusnAvenue Surface Lln»- vii rtri;ht">n Heifh Road, every 10minute? From Broadway, ">\ iiharr.^bursr. tak* ir>cean ay.
car?. Concert by UnrtT.(iRA.XU STAXD, .<:,«>. FIELD STATED. 75e.
4 DVERTISEMENTS an^ «ar«- \u25a0« fcr The Tribunerev.-. -1 at their Cptown OlCce.
NO. i.:;«^t DKUAUWAY.A<svertl«mer.ts will bt received at the follewlnr branch
offices nt repular ofSre rate« until ? o'clock p. m. via.:2.%4 Sth-ave.. i. «. rat 2*ln.
-IBS t;th-.ivc. cor-
12Trt-st.: 92 East 14l!i-«t.: 257 West t»sl st. fc«-t,v»«.r! "• and Sth avm ;
-_'«;."t West 12»th-st.: lA'H
3il-nve.. bctwwr TRth art! TTth its. 1.02«j :td-ave..
pT NICHOLAS 'ROYAL TENETIis 2A.TD
•ISS^^ - WllDßliirREV. 6. CAMPBELL MORGAN
win preach la
CARNEGIE HALLEvery Sunday Evening
J..- -x July
AT S O'CLOCK.
|g«\f raa special new-yorsIjlvtWTj AND LCNA PARK EXFRE?SE^lWl>|t' VIA ••L" FEOM BROOKLYN• *- >-*\u25a0
TERRACE GARDEN £*.£££•£t^- "THE 3IERRY WAR"
Er>r aIWORLD I*VAX. Sew f.rnuji.iJtIM CINEMATOGRAPH.
Ml> X'
Extra Attra;::D=s. Chirrr.:ns liualc
Amusements.JIADISOS MAf\A«a \u25a0\u25a0 AdDi.. '.<io.SQI ARK Bs# ( 8
*£Ro *\u2666•\u25a0»». .-U.OO.
(..VBDI.N sT% *St^ 3 Box •Seat*. 91.23.JAPAN BY NIGHT.
THE NEW JAPANESE COMIC OPEHA.
A\l) BOVTOVS LADIES' ORCHESTRA.Japan*-**" Shop*. Tea House and Restaurant
s\J A irOVIO GRAND CIRCLIi. IVway * r.Pth StIYIAJS&itI) Etits at s. Matinee Wed. * Sat. at 2
24th WEEK m^Sf™WIZARD OF OZ I£i'iM&WITH MONTGOMERY *STONE. |By.& sa.t.Mat 150
Maiiy PrOStrationS caused by this hot spell. One relief
in sight the refreshing features of
Next Sunday's TribuneSome of which are given below.
Summer Resorts-News from all of them, with picturesque photo*.
Happy New-YorkersBathins in Old Ocean's Swellina Surf. Pafle of Pictu
Taking Pictures Through a Telescope,With Samples of the Pictures Taken.
The Artistic Colony at Marion, Mass.How the Sunday Observance Laws
Are Obeyed in New York.
A Colony of Beavers in New Jersey.
Backward Women—
The many Brooklyn women who jump backward from opentrolley cars.
Thorny Crowns.Unhappy fate that has stricken sovereign ladies, by Lx-Attache.
Norwich Old Home Week.Humors, incidents, pictures.
Seal Hunting on the Labrador Coast—
A dirty and dangerous business.
The Rich Collection of Rare Treesin Prospect Park, Brooklyn.
Summer Sessionat Oxford University, Lngland.
PHE.NOMILNAL!TH£ TRIBUNE'S gains in sales grow
greater month by month.
January, 17V
February, 20°*
| March, 22 |
1 April,2 9%]1 May, 38% 1June, 34°0
The above percentages represent the gains in sales of
The Daily and Sunday Tribunein the respective months of 1903 as compared with 1902.
-GET OM THE BAjVD WAGOy."
THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS.FOREIGN PORTS.
Liverpool, July I—Arrived,1—Arrived, steamer Majestic (Br). Smith,
New-York via wu'T.stown.Soleld* June 30 Sailed, steamer Grecian Prince (Bri.
McMillan. New-York.Glasgow, July I—Arrived,1
—Arrived, steamer Ancfcorla (Br>. Wads-
worth. New-York.Queenstown July 2. 1 p m Sailed, steamer Germanic
(Br). Hambleton (from Liverpool). New-York: ar-rived, steamer Auracla (Br). Potter, New-York forLiverpool *and proceeded).
Hamburg. June 29—
Sailed, steamer Pallanza (Get"), Behr—mann, New-York.
Naples. July -. 7 a—
Arrived, steamer Knnia; Albert<Ger), Polaek, New- for Genoa.
Palermo. July I—Arrived1—
Arrived steamer Powhatan (Br», Ham-den. New-York tor Malta, etc.
Fayn!. July 2—
Passed, steamers Hoheczollem (Ger).Meissel. Genoa and Naples for New-York; LahniGVrt. Bolts, New-York for Naples, Genoa, eto.
Steamers La. Savole (FT), Havre; Phoebus <Gef). Flush-ing (for order;.'. Deutschland tGer), Hamburg via Ply-mouth and Cherbourg: Carbarossa <G«r), Bremen viaPlymouth and Cherbourg; a Oterl, Port Antonio; Leon(Nor), Sousa. via Puerto Plata; Themjsto (.Dutch), Ham-burp and Rotterdam; Havana. Havana an! Mexicanports; Monroe. Norfolk and Newport News; Benefactor,Philadelphia; City of Washington. Nassau. Santiago, etc:El 9ud. Galveston; Antilia (Bri. Nassau; Ravensdale (Br).Progreso and Tamplco; City of Macon, Savannah; Blu?-flelds. Baltimore.
Steamer Mar.ltoj<3r). Cannons. London June 21. to the.Atlsntli" Transport LJne. with mdse. Arri\ed at the Barat S:3O \u25a0 m.
Steamer Carpatfcla ißri, Barr. Liverpool June 28 andQu«-^r.?town -• to Vertical H Brown * Co. with l<3 cabinand (VJi> steeraa-e passengers, mails and rail!. Arrived atthe Bar at 12:23 p m.
Steamer Jefferson. Dole. Newport News and Norfolk,to the OIJ Dominion Ss Co. -with passengers and mdse.
Steamer Chattahoochee. Lewis. Boston, to the Oceaa PsCo. with m lse
Steamer Hup^ma. Wltherell. Punta Gorda June 26. •<">the American Agricultural Chemical Co, with phosphaterock. Vessel to the New-York and Porto Rico Sa C .Will discharce itCart?iet. X. J.
Steamer El I'ia Mason, New-Orleans, five days, to theSouthern Pacific Co. with •".dee.
Steanwr Old Dominion. Burton. Boston, to the Joy SsCo. with passengers and mdse.
Steamer Hou.«atonlc <Br>. Henry. Liverpool June IS. toPhilip Ruprecht. In ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 3p m.
Steamer Benedict (Br). Ever. Marians June 12. Para 1»and Eartados X to Booth & Co. with1 passenger, mailsand mdse. Arrived at th« Bar at 4:30 p m.
Steamer Rustinpion (Br), Nicholson. Cardenas .Tune 22,Satrua 25 and Ma:anzas 27. to J H Winchester A Co. withsugar. Arrived at the Bar at 4 p m.
Steamer Denver. Risk. Galveston June 25. to C HMallory& Co. with passengers and mdse.
Sandy Hook, M J. July 2. 9:30 p m—Wind south; light;clear.
SAILED.
Port of New-York, Thursday. July 2. 1903ARRIVED.
SHIPPING NEWS.
OUTGOING STEAMERS.TCVDAY. Vessel
Vessel. For. Line. Malls --lose. failsCymric. Liverpool, White Star 12. 0ft mByr^n.Parnambuco. Lamp <£ H01t.... 7:00 a m 10:00 a mPJilivia. Hayil. Hamb-Am .. 9:3oam C:oOr.mMaraval. Grenada. Trinidad ©am 12:<irtmMexico. Havana. Ward 12:00 m 3:oopmPrins d NedTlanden, Hayti. Dutch lli:f«)a m l:<»pmLarrpasas. Qalvecton Mallory 3:00 pinSablne. Mobile, Uallory 3:i»'pnApach». Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pro
SATURDAY, JULY 4.
Umbrla. Liverpool. Canard «.3i«m 12:00 mKroonland. Antwerp. Red Star S:(V>am 10:0OamFurnr—rn Glase'-w. Anchor ":30 am 12:'» mI'rinzffs Ir»n«>. Naples. N. G. Lloyd. .lO;3itam 1:<X> p mNorste. Denmark, Srand-Am 11:i>
<'>am 2:00 pmManitoo, Lon.inn. A* Trans .•«> am'iermania. Naples, Fnbre
—-St. Nicholas. Antwerp. Fhofnlx /Buffalo. Hull. Judfr>n
——Trinidad. Bermuda, Quebec 8:00 a m liV<V>a mAlene. Jamaica. Hamb-Am 9:30 am 12:OOmZulia. Curacao. Red I\u25a0 6:30 am .iv.mi'na.mn. San Juan. N. Y. .£- PR... 0:00 a m 12 1"-
El Sud. Gaiveaton, Morgan—
3:00 pmEl Rio. Nvw-Orteaß*, Morgan &:'«"> p mHamilton. Nnrf<Vk. Old Dominion.... 3:Popm
MONDAY. JULY «.Princess Ann« Norfolk, Old _....-
——8:00pm
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
MINIATURE ALMANAC.Sur.rije 4:3C.?unset 7:34 Moon sets 12 27 Hoes f> ape S
HIGH WATEii.
A M -Sandy Hook 2:06 Guv. Island 2:3s Hell Gate 4 24P.M.—Sandy Hook Z£2[Goy. Island 3:24;He1l Gate 5:13
INCOMING STEAMERS.TO-DAY.
Vessel From. Line.Zanzibar Leith. June 13•Brooklyn City.... Swansea, June IT Bristol CityHindoo Hull. Jane > . WilsonIndrar.t Algiers. June aO
SATURDAY. JI'LY 4.
•Luc&nla Liverpool. June 27 Cunard•La Touralne Havre. June 27 French•New-York Southampton. June 27 American•Moltke Hamburg. June 29 Hamb-AmArabic Liverpool. June -*.. White StarAfndi Gibraltar. June 19Montevideo Havana. June 3t.> Spanish
SUNDAY, JULY 8•Trojan Frtnc« ... Gibraltar. June 23 PrinceSomerset Clyde. June 23Comanche Jacksonville, July 1 Cljde
•Brings ail.
n,- r,mpanying it which have been recently Issue iby the Long island Kailroad Company will prove a
The guide is a directory to Long Island, givingth« towns, with the advantages of each, rates athotels and boarding houses, and even a little his-tory <>f each town. The volume, "Unique Long'
contains over a hundreo half tones of vi»ws•\u25a0 island.
Details of Oregon Short Line Purchase Com-I pleted
—$50,000,000 Bond Issue.
The details of the purchase of the part of theOregon Short Line south of Salt Lake City by theBan Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake RailwayCompany, it was announced yesterday, have beer-,completed, and a cash payment of $l£.00i)/«v> wasmade yesterday. A bond lwu» of 550,000,000 wasauthorized InApril by the San Pedro, Los Angelesand: Salt Lake, of which $40.a»~>.000 is to be issuedat once. These bond- are to tie taken rrincipallyby Senator W. A. Clark, president of the road,
and his associates, and the proceeds will be up^d
as follows: Eighteen million dollars will be de-voted to refunding to the interests which advancedthe cash paid out yesterday the sum expended.and the rest will be issued for construction andequipment purposes, at the rate of $l,O»,000 amonth. Of the J18.080.000, about 17,800,000 will payfor the Oregon Short Line ml.eag'v includingbranches, and $1,200,000 will be applied to theacquisition of other properties alnr.g the Ran PedroHarbor to Los Angeies terminals, and to pay forthe construction of track already completed, aswe.! as the equipment, etc.. recently purchased bySenator Clark and his associates.
BOTH BOYS ARE DROWNED.New-Haven. Conn., July 2.—George VUsort#and
Charles Schlayer, fourteen years old. were drownedInthe Quinnipiac River this afternoon. They wereswimming and one of them sot Into a hole. Hiscompanion went to his assistance, and was clutchedso tightly that both -went down.
NOT TO BUILD A THEATRE IN BOSTON.[BTTEI-EGBATH TO THE TRIBUNE.]
Boston, Mass., JUly 2.—Messrs. Rich, Harris &Prohman have given up the option they held onthe Children's Mission property. in Tremont-st.,
and have abandoned their project ot building atheatre on this Bite, to replace the old Boston Mu-seum, recently torn down. No reason is given, be-yond the fact that the firm will retain its lease ofthe Park Theatre, and does not care to extend itsinterests. Including also the Hollis and Colonial.
PAY $18,000,000 IN CASH.
Says It Was Not Invited to Take Part inMonmouth Battle Anniversary.
James B. Morris Post. Xo. 46. of the Grand Army
of the Republic, at Long Branch. X. J., has issueda statement referring to the Battle of Monmouthcelebration. The statement says, in part:
On June 27. 1903. the citizens of Monmouth Countycelebrated the 125th anniversary of the Battle ofMonmouth, Many organizations were invited toparticipate in the celebration of that historic event,
but of ail the different organizations the one thatshould have been among the foremost on such anoccasion— Grand Army of the Republic—left out. Our forefathers fought on the Monmouthbattlefield for their freedom and for a constitutionfor a united country, that they and their posteritymight enjoy it to the end of time. . . .
Thirty-eight years have passed since the close ofthe Civil War, and the few left of the MonmouthCounty men who braved the hardships and priva-tions of warfare feel that when that historic eventwas to be celebrated they should have i,.-. thefirst to be thought of by the patriotic citizens ofFreehold, and should have been shown the cour-tesy, if nothing more, of a general invitation to bepresent. Nothing would have pleased Them morethan to have made their appearance there, withoutany expense to the committee in charge; but wesuppose the men of to-day are perfectly satisfied toreap the harvest of the seed sown when over fivehundred thousand of the very best of the bravestmen the North produced surrendered their livesfor their country, and that th<?\- feel that the sol-diers of the Rebellion are men of the past.
But what Is the use of feeling slighted?The celebration has passed, and was probably a
Fuccess for the originators of the scheme; but we.the members of James B. Morris Post. No. 4S. feelthat after all the soldiers of from ISSI to 1*65 didIn behalf of this county, the committee who ar-ranged the celebration have been ungrateful to itsdefenders.
IfGarbage Burning Plant Is Not
Removed. Say* Cow plainer.A.l a meeting of the taxpayers of Morrisanla
held before the board of local improvements forthe Iforrisania district, in the Borough Hall at
One-hundred-and-sevent> -s-eventh-pt. and Third-sve., yesterday, to consider the abolition of thePc Curie garbage burning piant, at St. Joseph-
st. and Whitlock-ave., a threat was made that ifthe plant was not removed the people wouldblow it up with dynamite.
Clarence R. Lester, of One-hundred-and-forty-fourth-st. and the Southern Boulevard,declared that fumes from the plant made resi-dents ill, that windows had to be kept closed,that it was impossible to hang- cloth--sthe line, as they became dirty from the smoke,
and that flaky cakes blew in the open windowsand covered food, so that it was unfit to eat.
Rudolph Doherr spoke in a similar strain. Hefirmly believed that if the plant was not re-moved the residents would combine and blowit up with dynamite.
Superintendent Lake of the Lincoln Hospital,at Concord-aye. and One-hundred-and-forty-fourth-st., asserted that the windows of thehospital during ihe warm weather had to bekept closed on account of the smell, and thatthe two hundred patients suffered greatly.
The board adopted resolutions declaring theplant a nuisance, and asking the Board ofHealth to cause its abatement.
G. A. R. POST COMPLAINS.
WILL USE DYNAMITE.
There is no denying that th^ Reliance Is• shaken my confidence InShamrock 111. 1 saw the Reliance race yesterday,
nel O'Neill, and the colonel isyachtsman . I ame opinion.
..- if th« Constitution and Columbia is.me, to be < ltd a nef
Car a.« the breaking of record* g • -why. that should be e\; o, There is noth-ingin all that. All the boats are fast, misrhty fast,
;. and that old Columbia la a \u25a0i.indy.
No Race for Shamrocks Yesterday—
Chal-
lenger IsMuch Lightened.A lot of extra fittings which mere put on board
for the trip across the Atlantic were removed fromShamrock 111 yesterday. Sir Thomas Llpton saidhe expected to race the two Shamrocks to-morrow.The two Shamrocks were towed down the Bayyesterday morning, and after being Joined by theErin which bad arrived from Newport, all pro-ceeded to the Horseshoe, inside Sandy Hook, wherethey anchored. Sir Thomas Upton, however, de-cided not to take the yacht* out.
Sir Thomas was not downcast at the fast time hehad been made by the Reliance on Wednesday.Said he:
SIB THOMAS STILL CONFIDENT.
Adams that Sir Thomas Upton h»» accepted anInvitation to be present at the club on Saturdayevening. July 11, when he will be entertained at adinner. C. Oliver lselin. J. P. Morgan. E. D. Mor-gan ur.d W. Butler Duncan are to be among theguests of honor.
GUIDE TO LONG ISLAND TOURS.The hot weather of the last few days has sud-
denly reminded everybody that itIs high time to b«migrating to a place where the summer is lassprostrating Than In tne city, and where cocl breezesawl green fields temper th© heat. The question ofwhere to go Is taklnf a prominent place In theminds of manj. To those who are so perplexed alittle g-uk'e to Long Island and the album of views
WASHINGTON BUILDING STRIKES ENDED.Washington, July I.
—The employers" association
of the buildingtrades of Washington and tho coun-cil of allied building trades of the Central LaborUnion have signed an agreement to submit allerrievances to an arbitration committee of tenmembers, equally divided between tha two sidesThe agreement takes effect at once.
• '\u25bawing to the Insufficient number of applicantsfor the position of temr>oraj-y clerk, the examina-
tion which was scheduled to take pla.ee on Kan-day has been postponed, and the receipt of ap-plications, •which \u25a0was to have closed en Wednes-day, ha#< been extended to July 17, at 4 p. m.
BIR THOMAS TO SEE FIREWORKS.Sir Thomas Llpton will celebrate the Fourth to-
morrow night as giiest of the management ofPain's fireworks dlsp'.ay in the Manhattan Beachamphitheatre. A feature of the exhibition will bethe showing for the first time lr. this country ofPaln"s Neapolitan bombs, frcm the London factory.The Bhells are thirty-six inches in diameter, and. ItIs said, are thrown from mortars to a height of1.700 feet, when they explode, throwing- out. vari-colored Btarß. Another novelty will be a repre-sentation of Niagara Falls in fire.
NEW-YORK CITY.The cornerstone of the new Church of the
Disciples of Christ, One-hundred-and-sixty-nlnth-St.. near FYfcnklln-ave., willbe laid on Sunday at4 p. m.
WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY.Board of Aldermen \-i!»ttP Bronx Far* e_nfl the Zoolog-
ical Park, leaving: City Hall at 10:30 a. m.Smoker and stag of the Benjamin B. Odell Club of tho
XXVIIIthAssembly District. No. 835 East Eißhty-KC-ond-St., 6 p. m.
P'.imir!«>r nights festival of non-oommtMione-3 officers ofthe Ist Battery. Fort Wendel, evening.
Band concert*. M->mir.f»i<le. Hudson, Battery and WilliamH. Beward pu.rW»; 8 p. m.
PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS.ASTOR—B. Harvey Welch, of Philadelphia. EM-
FlßE—Captain H. D. Laney. U. 8. A FIFTHAVENUE—Colonel Henry Glllam. of Hot Springs.OREGORIAN-^John L. Moore, of St. Louis. IM-PERIAL—S. Harrison Wagner, of New-Hav-jn.MANHATTAN—R. L. Agassiz. of Hamilton. Mass..and C. H. Wickham and W. B. Post, of Hartford.WALDORF-ASTORIA—B. Thaw, of Pittsburg.
HOME NEWS.
Chicago Judge Fines TwoOthers and ParolesEleven Women Strikers.
<~"hicac;o. July 2.—Jail sentences have been Im-posed on two labor leaders by Judge Jesse Holdjm,and two others are required to pay fines. The menwere adjudged in contempt of court for failure torespect the injunction restraining 1 them from in-terfering with the business of the Kellogg' Switch-board and Supply Company.
Arthur A. Hopkins, business agent of the Bias*Moulders' Union, was sent to the county jail forthree months, and with him. went William Lyrch.to serve thirty days. John O'Brien and ThomasQueenan were fined $100 each. The court gave
eleven women striker? until July 20 to prove bytheir conduct That there will be. no further viola-tion of the injunction on their part.
SENDS LABOR LEADERS TO JAIL.
Board of Conciliation Begins Business Meet-ings in Wilkesbarre.
Wilkesbarre, Perm.. July The board of concilia-tion which Is to adjust the grievances of the mineworkers met here to-day. Some grievances wereconsidered, hut no conclusions were reached. An-other meeting will be held on Thursday next. Thesession to-day was secret, but it is understood thatthe deliberations were conducted in a harmoniousmanner and that there were no disputes that 'wouldcause a disagreement.
Most of the session was taken up with one griev-ance, that of the manner of computing the 10 percent advance
—whether it shall be on the net or
grops oarninK". This grievance was submitted byPresident Fatay of the Ninth District. He present-ed figures of the earnings of the men in that re-gion to prove the merit of their contention. Thefigures of Mr.Fahy were not complete, and. as the-other side questioned some of the deductions, thisqupstion was set aside until another meeting, whenthe statistics needed will be supplied and an effortmade to reach an agreement.
President Dettrey of the Hazleton district sub-mitted a list of the grievances of the miners in thatregion.
PRESENT MINERS' GRIEVANCES.
ney was shot in the back by Blesar. The
wound was slight.
I! Assaulted Non-Vnion Man. WhoThen Shot Him Fine Also.
William Sweeney, a member of tho Compressed
Air Workers' Tnion. was sentenced yesterday by
Judge John A. Blair, of the Hudson County
Common Picas roun. in Jersey City, to six
months in the penitentiary and a fine of ?I<*>for an aaaault on John 81-sar, \u25a0 non-union man.who was nt work in the North River tunnel in
the recent strike of the .-om pressed air workers
and laborers. Judge Blair snil to Sweeney:
Tf you stood alone in this matter the court
might be Inclined to leniency, but y<>u represent.1 bods of men who consider themselves aboveth^ law. Every man has a rlpht to •ell his laborfor what he pleaask, :.n<i should not l>e int^r-ferod with in so doinp. The question of wagesis one between the employer and the employed,ar.l cannot be dictated by any body of n-.pn.
This court willprotect the man who i? workingfor a livelihood whether he belongs to a unionor not
The ripht to labor must be secured as gunran-y thf> lav.-. The practice of persons con-
sidering themselves superior to the law andtramplinp upon the rights of others :r becomingtoo common. M-n who want to laboT honestlyshould be protected. The only grievance youhad against this man was that he was a lal-oic-and you assaulted him. in spite of the fact thatthe constitution guarantees htm that right andhappiness in its pursuit. Ioue;ht to send youto Stat<> prison, but good representations inyour behalf have been made.
UNIONIST GETS 6 MONTHS.
The Reliance finished the course in remarka-bly fast time, as the following summary shows:
eCEW-TORK YACHTCLI.B—FOURTH RACE—TOR BO-
FOOTERS—
RXAXGUI4UB COURSE—
THIRTYMILES—TEN MILES TO A LEG.
Weather EecotjdStart mrk. mark. Finish.
TiuhT. H MS 41.M.P. H.M.B HM3U:liar,c» 12J2;u0 1X2:20 2:44:10 S:21:20\u25a0Corsetltution l-uS2:5"< :M!*bl«dat 12:4O.Olurnfcia J1';30:44 Did not !ilil»h-
The- \u25a0 tirr.«* of the Reliance for tie thirty
aniles was 1! hours, 59 minutes and 20 second?.Wot the first leg of the course it was 1hour and
pO seconds; for the second leg. 51 minutes and£/) seconds, and for the third, 47 minutes and 10[seconds.. Tne latter time is said to be a new{record for v*nnautical miles.
Itwas learned later In the evening that threeother men of the Columbia's crew were so badly[bruised by being thrown by the eea against*pars or. her deck, that they had to be brought
on chore for treatment by a local physician.They were then taken back to the Columbia's•tender, the Park City.
CONSTITUTION'S GAFF BREAKS.The Columbia on the same tack had crossed
,ahead of both. She went about Just as theIhandicap gun was flred. Th© Reliance made{her first tack to port at 12:35, the Constitution;coming around 30 seconds later, and the Co-lumbia to the starboard tack at 12:30:40. Aminute later the eld "boat crossed the bow of
[the Reliance by a few lengths. Barr tacked onthe Columbia's weather at once. All were
fen the port tack now, when suddenly the Con-•stitution's gaff broke at a point in the wake
,of the inner bridle of the peak halyard. The\u25ba broken end of the gaff in falling tore a big
hole In the mainsail Captain Rhodes kept the\u25a0 yacht off before the -wind for fifteen minutes,
when Ehe was towed by her tender, the Satel-lite, to Newport, and later on to Bristol.
This left the race to the Reliance and theIColumbia, and a right brave fight the old boat,jnade against the new one in that ten mile!thrash to "windward in as ugly a eea as ever{two yachts raced- The Reliance had started'something like a minute «nd a half astern of•the Columbia, but they had travelled quite
Steven miles to windward before the Reliance\u25a0was able to cross her bow and "weather her.
?6be did it at 1:14 o'clock, after the two hadmade sis tacks apiece, in which tha Columbia
ion the starboard tack crossed tha Reliancejthree times.
'\u25a0 In the next fifteen minutes they made threeItacks, the last one carrying them close In tojjoint Jude. from which point they were able•to fetch the first mark, about four miles to the•southeast. As they approached tha mark Itwas;noted that they had both overstood a little oniaccount of the haze. They came down for the
nark with a good hard full, the Reliance lead-ing by about two minutes. She had Just round-
ed the mark at 1:52:20 when the Columbia lostTier man.
The bow plate of the Reliance stove Into-dayis on the port side about a foot above the water,3ire and about ten feet abaft the stem. Thedent runs lengthwise of the plate. It is aboutfive feet long and a foot -wide, and perhaps four
'inches deep. The yacht will be taken to the.HerreshoCr works at Bristol, where the plate•will be straightened out.
Captain \u25a0Nat" Herreshoff was on board theReliance to-day. Both Mr. Iselin and Mr.Mor-gan say it is the first time that a 00-footer puther bowsprit tinder in a race.
There was a southwest breeze of from twen-ty to twecty-flve miles an hour, and a nastytea was running when the committee yacht Ri-viera anchored this morning about three milesoff Ochre Point. The course was an equilateraltriangle, ten miles to a leg, the first leg being«outhwest by west, dead to windward, the sec-or.<" southeast by east one-half east, a reach,then another reach north one-half west, to thefinish
The Reliance and Columbia came out fromNewport at 11:30, lugging email club topsails
.and burying their lee rails as they travelledout to th*» start. They soon found it would befatly to carry anything more than three lowerrails, so the club topsails were quickly low-ered and lashed securely on deck amidships.Captain Rhodes of the Constitution followedThe others* lead when that sloop came out halfen hour later, and all three made things snugabout decks for the ten-mile thrash to wind-
'\u25a0ward. which They knex was to be a wet one.end it proved to be the hardest bit of workthey had yet encountered.
TIT IN HEAVY BREEZE.No more exciting start was ever seen than
In su<-h a breeze, "with the yachts
mder the tremendous press of can-vas, ther* waa danger every moment of an ac-cident. R-twf^n the warning signal at 12:25
» r-e to atart, five minutes later, the Re-lianf? and the «""onstltution ran off to the -west-T-ard of the line. The Constitution tacked firstend headed for the line on the starboard tack.Captain Barr put the Reliance about, placing;that yacht a few lengths out on tha weatherbow of the Belmont yacht. This was only thirtyseconds before gunfire for the start, and they\u25a0were more than two minutes away from the
Sine. Barr kept the B-eliance off. forcing Rhodesoff too. The latter tried to luffacross the newiboat's Traki» and gain the weather berth, butj*he new boat was going too fast forhim, so they.crossed the line witha. small handicap, with, the'.Constitution under the lee beam of the Re-fllance.
NEWPORT SERIES ENDED.C. Oliver laettn, the manager of the Reliance,
«aid to-nig-M that he was so well satisfied -withthe performance of that yacht that he wouldrot race h^r ar.y more until th© cruise of the!B«w-T«rk Yacht Club, which begins on July 16.\u25a0Th* regatta committee formally announced to-
that the Newport series of races \u25a0was*nded.
New Yacht Dents Plate—Constitu-tion's Gaff Broken.
lET TELnr.RAPH TO THE TRIBCNE]Newport. K. 1.. July *J.—There ;? a chapter
of j»cc-.d»-'r>s to record to-day in the race of thefooters, for in the heavy sea oft Block Isl-
and a sailor was washed off the Columbia's bow-sprit and drotvned. the Constitution^ gaff was
broken cijrhl minutes after the start, and theTteliance, which sailed the course, had a bowplate stove in while thrashing to windward be-
tween the start and the outer mark. The
«>ail< r lost was Carl B. Olsen. of Hanefoss, Nor-way. The yacht was four mile"? southeast from
Point Judith, and within two minutes of the
first Turning: mark, when Olsen and two others.known as bowsprit men. were carrying a Jib-topsai! out or. the bowsprit to snap it on theBtay. Suddenly the yacht plunged into one ofThe big .«ea?. The bowsprit, with the men onIt, went clear under the wave. When li cameup Olsen was missing- ar.d the sail was drag-ging under the yacht's bow as she tore along
at a speed of not less than twelve knots an hour."'Man overboard!" was the cry. E. D. Mor-
(ran. who was steering, luffed the yacht in the\u25a0wind at once and ordered the small boat low-
ered. Two men Jumped into her. and for half an•hour they looked for Olaen. but he never ap-peared again. The martingale hit him when hefell. Captain Miller said, and he was probablykilled by the blow. The Columbia was then
\u25a0turned back to Newport by her tender, the ParkCity. Mr. Morgan said that he should not raceany more this week.
LARCHMONT DINNER FOR SIR THOMAS.
Th* *r<-hmont j-achtam*n are rejoicing: over the.jsouncernent mad* by Commodore Frederick T.
NEXT SUNDAY THE- TRIBUNE WILLBEGIN A NEW SERIAL STORY
DID you read "rtarry Revel," which con-cluded a few days ago ? Itwas a rattlingstory, full of life and go. Many Tribune
readers took the trouble to Write saying howmuch they liked it. One, a woman, complainedthat it was published just when she was gettingready for the seaside, and hadn't time to read thedaily instalments. Though that wasn't our fault,she suggested that we could square things byrunning another story when her time would per-mit a leisurely perusal. Probably there are agood many others who feel the same way. Ifthere are, they, as well as thousands of others,
There is, of course, a vein of love and romancerunning through it. And everybody will beinterested in reading about the dramatic cir-cumstances under which the lover is brought intorelations with a millionaire.
"THLCHAMELEON"is an American Story.It gives some fine pen pictures of a few collegeboys ;it draws interesting pictures of Americanfamily life.
will doubtless be glad to know that a NEWSERIAL WILL ELGIN ON SUNDAY, JULY5, and willbe continued every day in the Dailyand Sunday Tribune.
1 "THE, CHAMELEON"
SPECIAL MEXTTOX.
NEW-YORK DAILY TTaßijlvß, FRIDAY. JLLY 3. ISM)o.
AmuumenU.SAILOR DROWNED IN RACE
RELIANCE ENDS ALOSE.
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