New York Clipper (Nov 1878)

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ae6 M.^qw a nonM t oa done an exaxsTeav^ the dnr/ejrthe mi^ii to siaiaalinlilai .crthara-anrlcae of ieaaiisiliiiia.lt mimadh of the coterie to hissm tan. a etreni— Jr imerlMto pier em oralywrralghJA, talM, which ere not Istcnnwnilest, e» buoi, tee pUybxgwf ttaVbst not peeee- ■ Tinf of the ssssesnd. «athe exhertiand, KtEa* Una oatate-doM tlOt areSSBWpley j, that to pewer that with them, as of Ihesavsrld, the »mlirh*e}rr«b Is ewtetter or ~ n do apeculor tin i pot, ior the lliii asjiHsj niai. Is'niiiiissail of four to swawasTawtiiree *" ,K *^. arch aa too oxakand of awe aicher waatlfied oekds. ot any —— In, whose TOM, tka«anlabt«x •arLtaass fecruaai lnthni aasse, A wins late thai la- searpoee, and — " to niijost . _ jaoaarra no good „ -^pS—- 1r ^ TT a.'fmW mi pl.y—weh wftw*ih«»t<^ M «.B.a.■aoolL-ClawToo*. The fisaltxras prlmatOr ■tabiito «Vato«Sma5anipt^iad tha facet waa naat his, lexcftnsw'ska throwes*-down the tramp "Then ba should, UmSteaWMwaiaBO.tbaBOIiadaa^c iiot exercised. ~i iiiL-a a aad 0 wanes 0Ba.bal11t-pan3an.and c was enaittwaaafl S5S7o -down-of tha ,. „ DMlF^natnveajd 110 time teraro-4 ■Itoaal* Owe stirs* to D'i«a«.l ilt aanalnlr »ooW tiara takan laaa <<8kDpl<><thaaiidM<a»Ato ton •dsn iWnj 1. qRn>«aalne Companies SI and -- J ~— ^ent 01 tola city, haMOant —" 13 was u*e»t end waraawal. n aiiiiaii lln inn thamk anyone asafklTlBil ■—In And ami X 44 dMae^teU!*-Fourth and Fifth Distracts prior iluiaaa ■' Trwe addlttoasri dlatrlcta wane made tha low paR'Of'Bia'lilaial.'vblch ehansedtha old exthaaalHlui'tnlDthe Sixth "and Berenth. Oorraool- tojat agt^i dk tpatdo datrla alibar tha Saranth or 'C£ JU Aaoade. Ot to a-eeae of manga. aOestroyell httar,wid thcsnawuly classe^e, your doaa^habltallon mob dap—If a ewaneT—with > Isoluiig waur. aUBtnly lav * n Willi ■miaaii l a 111 iisilmlin aeia. Let tha bed- ' nltta* or sharing* Wash the dog wen with r and^ofkaoapv«ad naa tha following- otat- rsetphur ewh,. Sox.,-whaleoU. Sox.. oU of tar Xoa.. ■aiil,lf»i,: wau mixed. Waah off and rwpeat In i^a^ajilnilUrthaiaaamt«TTalu"naeaMrf. Otve eianxr of axardaer no meat, but ■ninlaaimia aad MUlil s ss ssand twlcea day. ■■uaM, •sre/FeUe.—"L II the following decision 4B,rrec0 *tDor«baadcd euchre. A deala, and 0 la hlji pai c aaya ha aolsts and sou It alona. Can A than aw atana.'lTOoonaantat-vtnrioCT-.—Tea.'" i» Thede- 9kaan*»elaatlyvraoc. ItparmltaCtovertnallysay to his favanev: *TI will ro alana U yon are not strong anooin to do ay." X Waoao abow yon vbare It haa rapaaxadly decided Wheeling.—t. Tosr. card win «oat 75c — •» per vaakananria. .3. Tour lot- ted. 0. nf Tl lal n ai 1 1 * 1 1 on th»tday._ Tondo not «ate wtare, aodw* pr«etr to be exaued from poinjaa; "°J. W. W. BaS^'^The prramKU^ 1 ^ EgTpt, it Pttar-i ChiirelkB^rM,andlha8rraabnr( Cathadxal axe the three hlgbeatatraetttTearn the world, probahljt. - Evan kfruev—L Don't know.. X John O. Scholar of TotowOo to ahoat aa good aa any In Canada, wa nndar- B. EL Baxn, l^omlnitar.—L The ran, aa with truck, eanvilyjco an record u of an ewbthof a mile. X Bee tlaQaa In CincTHn AXJcaaac, price laeanbL - - HE. P.,ljnn.—Tu Currn tT.aiwto aniwar a thtr taa i ll on. He held tha beU np with one hand, banned both :n MEUng It to hto shoaWrer. T>. T. Karlbore.—Wa woold adrtoa that yon pre ■toot qnanes to the oamaan blmeeff, aa wo hara no <of^nala«ontiarabycouunnnlcatlhf with him. < ■ . \T. f>. Joins. Parte.—Too aiatea? ramiln, tw *y a hone, one mlla. lalJMj, by Inn Broaak. enn^tofflclaDynmedln8ns1and» . d. 1 *.Kearney.-W.L KaydfnnateaelieTofthagaltnr, and la located on Tramont erreet. Bo a tnn . V m m ■a a. Knam, Wanes.—Bam aent you totter ts a b ^&waidCooper'atanaaa«ayoTor tab ottywO ba 4woyean,we belwra. . _ . . . J.D.C.. New Bramwlck.—Harte Oordea la prtraUUfa ia Mr*. John T. Baynond. _ , D101. Boeheatar'—A loam Baker did not r« a majori- ty ot rotea. M. D. kL. Eaaax.—He reeenUy doaed Uaelrsma andrurnowbeaddraaaallneanorthlaaBoa. , . E.O7w.,8t.LO0Ja.—Wa donotknow "^ha prloeol tha flnaat barber-anop In Anerrca." P. McD.—ronraoaa an high at pokw, aniens It Vj agreed toplay ebaisbt-dnsbea. _ D. un r Tird Baxt.ptayed Dr. Landla trngedlan) and EL A. Flakas the agent tmanaarr). Biraacarrma. K m Be dfu rd.—It was not a wane-hit, as It enabled the neldars to lorea a man oat, A ComtAR Bbapkb, Washington.—Ihay wtn appear In doe time. W. a W.. Totk.—Addmai EL W. Collender, 19 Broad- way, thlaeity. W. kL J.TGalene.—Yon can call tha pOo"elghta,"and neither yonr oppooant nor yomael/can alter It,' W. BOBLToa, Montreal—Toe weight of par* BntUab bulldogs ranrae from 10*> to SOTj. end aoma an bea-rlar. Faub or Hawo, LowalL—Wa cannot any. nerar haying aavn each a baaueaa adrerttoad m any KzaruJh paper. TabbbT, New Castle.—WUllim BnToBlaka died la Bos- ton, Maaa.. April S, IBB. J. 0. EL. Nuhua.—II B cu make tbe two ha asm, his high win count beCon C'a low and pat him oat, A BfBscmiin, Toronto.—Ton can dadda tha mattar yoarself by the UteetrartoedBnguih.wlfn.; a ABD P., una.—Tha bast 1 ala that which Is moat ezpr*adTe- u aUUud Hall and Bowling Alley." Cos ~ rway. X Why that dlffaranoa of opinion be t wee n ttaaOwnrt thamselTra,' In the am place r i. ktalrln Foa- WSTwjS'hU thirty firth, year. BLaLvOzrord.—'Then an three esndldales. A hats B ajamt'C -will-notracelTe threehnndnd malorttyorar D. rhi ■TaiBnTlij a.pkirallr7-ToU,and nealrad three bnn- eBasl-OT«nD. 'who-nrlnit'' B sua. Tha three hon- aea-0 poUed-In axeaaaof Dwan a majority or libel mil n -li "orar D" had not beenlnaerted aaaasara'taw teaelanr.-A woold hare won, aa "majority'' Shan woold hare meanraxcaai orar both tha other canal. AanaobB.—L Of ooarae than to. X Than was no Brad, aa/ m aba Batnrntne: Board. Tbe Hon. Joseph P. Bradley ■■■I laaajn a meniDar of the BJactoral Conunisalon by aaf thwU'B.-8aprama Ooorc Aatwooftheee m BepabUeane and two Danim lata. It la to be 1 that •Jodae.Bradley, also of tha TJ. & Supreme •seleeted by them becanaabewaa ranrded aa no tie to either party. X Jadgaa of the U. B. D CeoTt-an appolaxea. ;1 A can make BJnmp. —, fljurf-rrandaco.—L'The Araonanta four-oared 1 Vwo-mllea.-wlth atnm, Ln 11m. Ua. Tbe exact la Tory eeldom ■ rowed by professional lour-oared aa, ana oot often by-amatenn m a corning raoa. A -Cannot gtre-arange time. 3 All other conainona ani^^ bjbUv, . an s*-*-nli* be sble to attain a leaser rata of speed on salt-water than on fresh, as tha 4bcmaT bnoya apaboat-bettar, and,aa In eoneeqnence then>to laasnaistance to be overcome, tha labor entailed ■em tha rower la not so mat, PBXtroic, Betrolt—Hesra an trnmpa, A having refosed. am ran the cards cartber. '-What was said by A bound " bar parry ko ran them. It was not A'a "drat ear," and t he eeld amounted to nothing. It was B's place, aa dealer, 10make propositions. If B had propositi to awn «r buch, without A's baring eald anythli' " ' aiHemlj hara refosed, and tha remit would ante same aa It la new. *A11 this to onr opinion. Thenhaa saver been a fixed role in print or out 01 it, governing the -faint. Oram Orrr.—At Denver, Col, Capt. Bogardns at- measptadto Dll foor birds, sprang fnmibar traps slmal sx^neasly. -Ha had foor RUnaat his disposal Thenrst ^nntaj picked op waant loaded, and after snapping It he • a * "ii , * J — —m-v np another, and, bnngug ^aern one bird with the ant barrel, and the other tLree wrlththaaaeond. Bogardns says he doea not know what ache rise waa. itwmat." Moncnal—Awlsa tha pot, Itwulmmate- -atal^wnas he callea hie own hand. B ahoold not hara np an cards nnnl ba had sent A's. Whan he np, and they became mixed with tha pack. It bseforhim to prove that he had even a pair, says be had amounts to nothing, jost aa A'a say- Id foor •"■ * w — * lag ha had roar aces did not compel him to show four a aan order en-win. HaaxT O.—L Marriage m this State Is by tha law ra- amnlul ss 111111 el ji s 1 nil 1 nntisi r That aaya a good deal, -■nd mrthar than thatwa do not can to say In print. X ' -Vo. Bat It la possible for a fonbra-born person to vota kaara wttbont talcing oat any papers whaterwr. X If jVapen are aeeeaury to tntltle sncb a foreign-born parson -an-vote, ha cannot take oat the final oaaanntli ha haa been Tien five years. J. M. F.,Bf. iAmto.—Thoa. ktagnln sent n negro-nUnatrel ' troup e to a astral ia. and It was probably with that troope that Mr. Wade was enraged. By addnatlna; letters of Saejojry to Mr. Hajtnlrm, manager of Baldwin s Theatre, an Manclseo. CaJ., and also to Sheridan Corbyn (who also toob another .mlnsrxel aonpe to Anstzmlla about the «unetlme).S32 Merchant street, that city, yon maybe get trace ot him. B_, Oeweeo.—"Bmith receives XiSO votes, Jones nd Brown 61L A bets B that Smith will not hare able to B.S. 1 majority. Who wintr" If yon have mada no nks ln yoor flames, tha dhpnte la absard. 80 far from Jia sta g a majority In tha oeoaJ isiiii of thwt word, Bmlth aaanoceran aprarallty of XfiOOk. Hie excaaeoverJt el isan la only 1,40°. Siiamisissa Oiiiliai il tha American game ot vingt- - tm, whieh la the one now usually played, oea with the .^awleraswa atand-ofll At tha w^f-i-**. game the -l^slftr -would have to. pay. Whether yon wan playing tha Eng- 9Ieu or the American game la to ba Interred from whether .«rnotBcalleda*-natnral"as soon as he got his second aTaxaonajca.—L Go to Blooma 1 , 338 and 340 Bowery, 1 a female attendant will take tbe proper measore- 1 for both symmetries and UghtA The first-namrd latva to be woven to order to insnn a perfect form, and of 1 ■ 11 — the tlghta most correspond in stxe. Ton con Id not ■xasaann yourself correctly for either. • J. C. 8.. lAfayetta.—Ferforman seldom, if ever, publish -their, own aoug-booaa. A well-known publishing arm in xnls city does eo, airing the perform era a certain ram of ■ naifif or numbsrof copies of the book for the right to xbb their name. -Ton eoold not repnbUah songs which an •j mu l ighted^ wlihont the owner'e conaent. y B. A.. Kmlentou—L One point. X a wis make two for a onehre. The game being regular euchre, the only ' jlayer wuo-could go alone was 0. There to no "lone" ln xteylmfone hand against one hand. ( Pour ate gi ran for •T,Brldi , . . jum. •TheMeatoabaordtbata man must continue on aortheraaeoa that, if he plays long enough, he will osr- tjsinrr . lneor a forfeit, or almost as certainly tall dawn and O. T. HaBXTS, Korrisunrn.—1. We publish brief accounta ..an the Issue Immediately following the dates on which the —■.->.— are played. X No. X We hare not seen any. ' There la no organbed football stsorlstlon In the States out- aide of the colleges. . 4_-Ko answers by mail -BVB. D., Upper oaranoe JLaicft.—There Is sometunes such .n> band ln poker aa a straight-flash. It Is a special bend laxrodrjced by Bgreement, and will beat foor aeea when ' ^la^laTed. r. F.-E., Philadelphia—He never acted In "Around tbe World' In-Eighty Daya;" which waa originally played In Tarla. Prance. It was first sated In America at (he iBowery-Tbeatra. this city, March 29.187S. C. HZ CLJa. Lndlow.—we cannot undertake to adrlee Too, but ahoold think that the American Institute Pair, In 'what city, or the Chicago. Exposition, woold be the best place to exhibit yonr Inrentlon. A. O.- C, National Home.—A has aa much of an adran< I aqi in making one of hie balls a nrer aa B haa In harlng ■two balls to play with. Instead ot one. B's play In potting A*s corer out waa ooarect. _ Currn Bitnia. BnCalo.—Walt and tea. TbeJaulcl ^ry Committee award the championship, and the m take Tar CLrrrau banner as well as the pennant, mdtvidaal prizes will be gold. —Earn.—L Weights an not used by amateor athletlo X Johnson Is claimed to hare made 12rL Sin. In the acanoing wide-Jump, but we cannot say whether be oted —■ ^- tot. X-Wa _do not know anything about it. Hajrooa.— L Straights, blazes and royal floabes an of no .abroe In. poker unless U la spi seil upon to play them. As •an the first and second, their valne should also be agreed lemenuX Five eees e ra the lowest quintet in poker-dice. JETHBX.—L .Unmarried. X After ber recent dirorce she .-ana authorized by the Co art to assume that name. X It Ja purely a matter of pplmon who is the beat chltd-acrresa -at the present time. TJsaoraiancaTBO. St. Loula—Write to J. H. Haverly, 'tHaverly'eTheatn, Chicago, m, and tell him what yoa wrlah to aoeompliab- .Wa would not advise yon to pursue .lb* other course. J-B. 3C, Ban.—Then to no settled practice. Usually, at -anxty-alx. the loser of a game has the first deal In the next game. Many players, bowerer, limit thla practice to three, handed games. A. A3BH.. Cleveland.—Capt. Bogardna' lowest score ln *i at 100 birds during his last visit to England waa a be waa defeated by Wallace by nine blrda. In his 1 with Capt. Shelley he scored 84. J. H., Brooklyn.—Those sons became American citizens at their htrth, and. unless meanwhile they hare done aaanallilna m ffrrfiilT That *nti—whi rj they need no na tu r e I- isarion-papera. Dxcuaas—"Haandenag Throogh the Park." "We Met, Xova," TDon^t You Bemember What Ton Fromlaed U9V' -—IrfttJe Sweetheart," -Down- by Dot Old Hill Scream *Jsy Handsome Blur-eyed Bride, 1 ' "Our Educated Feet." Saaaaar.—It to not eastornary for amateur athletic .associations to maxe use of weights in Jumping, but the "t^aws of Athletrea" do not prohibit their use, and In one -or two colleges they may be In favor. J. C, fJhlcAgo.—A can beheld to hto answer: "I extra." to which he gave walghs by laying down his cards ess If to "run" the deck, fie xaust "ran," If B Insists _ 'Eaxirra, Davenport.—1. Joe Cobom welched UUb the Ay be fought Mike MeCoole. X We think be haa weighed 1 than »>■■' walking about ln otiten'A dress, bat be r loasht s£ 185tj. arrsarrsiaaa. Boabealar —X-Bamoel PranchA Boa, cor. saaro f PnWm equan and Unlrerslcy place, thla city, can saupply y on witharorks on »~"™** X H. J. Baraa, East Xwwnui atrvet, near Broadway, this dry. A- H. N.. 'wlunlpet—1. Canaot stale tha greatest estl a rlanj number ex people wuu erer wlli u ass d the Derby - naea InJBnadaad. X Wa hare l-eard that hecannot, but »ara no pcnJOt* knowledge of tha tact. «. B. D„ Lot Angelea.-It to not Improbable that the ame you mention waa made. We hara no reeerd oa* time made ln any other race gorsrned by the same mnrtltmna 'r. kL' W.—L Then an more Irtoh than Germane in this .•Hey-by about 54J0O. x The neat rj. a caaaas waU probe, atrbe taken ln 1880. Jf caKHsr. Bocbestor.—It la purely a matter of. opinion too an tha beat performers ln the ar or Id ln the racpectlra --Unas named by yon. - V. D. Ii.. Chicago.—L BUon' Heron la at school Jn Bn- Aorojt, Apply ln pereou at may rislt yonr Buflalo.—L We.d .^jsaalonal ladlaa, .X >*ot to the do not ' T.-F..T.. l(arhlebead.-ltjs not .It as not ■crjctly^'tolldlng.'' It is - the ague af pro- X Ko arcs book In .from tha table, bmbag.'* andiit to rxnanr, PhULlfabaTK—Tha bat ra sawrmed to beoa-tae aaantlon just past, and the Danwlll wlcli tha party iba •named la aiecLad.- ' ~ J- H; B.. Maidens-Tour frVBil Is "skunked" beyond the jaaaa UiBaty of coritinUOTIS doubt In the mxo& of anyone but -,- -Toax SODxa.—Oeo. Ouyon walkzd 7S mi^a In llh. SSwj. a* Boebester. M. T.. Aug. a asst. Bmlth^ave npanar watkkag leas than -il nBlaa, k H. a.,Phlla.—He stands ahont aft. Ozuaralgns aboni TJT li. and is shoot forty-two yean old, we should indga. Fwexajt weight, age and height, address him. .- P- A- m-t Boston B is on on Us low, as C who gara aaya, a a tl m sde hath-gama. had two to go, while B bad but .' Oirsr 1ST s,..» jjonaon. Do not knew hto whem- aaiwira • Address a letter to him tneare of thtojoflce. and »taoAy eheltthe csetred IM<xm*no!L -CO. P.-gdwin werreat began an angagemsnC ln tha Bfenatorpenxn, Just below- Broome axraat, Haw Tot*, ^ flT B,, Praeidence.—Bev. Joelah Htnaon to aaM to *?J T, ^*« n ^f ^Sfi* 1 , l which KB. at. B. Btawedrew Aha charaetar af Uncle Tom; bat we cannot roucb IbrlL faxaraXT gripxa Fitcabarg— L The Benoklyn iLJ.) gBaeexn was bamed Dec s, me. x Tha AarJ^bnla mfl- dlssataroacaxred Dee. 19.1578. ^* ™" V- ksoax.—I. Wnteio the lady named, and tat her read the paay- *. Some atapa wan recently taken towards avmlag a ■■ssr.rfar the prrsrertlnri of Amerlcea playwitcbta. ■ IS wr wsiiir.|tnii_Th«im.fn,^,m < i-wtbmm pwna tAa ring. Tbe party who waa called upon to throw "~sbr mat bad not the ti'r* 1 *^* .— *** —11 f k» ^k^u^ -. I'll III aa 1111 a Co., lAfayetta.—The dealer at enchra must girw hlsisair preciaely the same ^ w ™'l?^^ of earda,. •akBh rjnaa around, that ha (cirea to tbe others. , J- H-,.%-"oa —1. <MDsnlta anoaranhr. X Tom Bayers 1 BmBenjamin twice. JTSig, • t being n —In 10, o, a, X d, a, than la no run for Ilk. SBTAjrr Batnsa, St. Loula—Harmg paaaad out, s had no iiaut to aay anything. THKX W.AHDO.H. Newark.-In this cannot vote without beli Coxa, c - the lasts. CancanoL Fire sixes maka tha >»i g>*awt hand at pokar- O. A. F., Clyd e. —See Currxa ALwaaac or wait for that for 1879, to ba bsned abant Jan. S next. C B. P., St, Louix—<JharleaOsnagbrr. who lought Tom Allan, died at Jacksonville, Fla> J. J. Jr.. EItt la.—Write to the Pope ManuJaetaring Company. 87 Summer street, Boston, kUaa. If. U—Have no data by which wa can tall yon which waa the coldeat Monday In those years. F. O. B.—The hone Duke or Magenta, now 00 nil way to En-eland, la a runner. B. B. T.. Brooklyn.—Ton cannot change the color with out the use of cosmetics. B. kL kL,' *8erlo~com 1c "—Letters remain la oar can until claimed by the parties to whom they are eddreaeed. kL B.—Edward Cooper, atayor-alact ei this dry, u a Democrat. J. J. D.—State the game eo that wneaAracogntoa it, and *•>!». .rale kf U» player also hit the firs baa, and wF - CoaSTanlCusan.—L April 1, 187X X Ahont Mi lost. C. B.L.. ATlagheny.—Tha statement to not dear to na, thoagh the facts an no doubt quite apparent to yourself. IV awn a. Amsterdam.—Tbe three tasteet conaecatrre* bei>e an Baroa' 3:13,1:131., S:I3J». A. B. C, Phlla.—Sayen' arm waa not broken ln hto fight withHeauan. . afar XaaxHiLL, Erie.—A forfeit must be posted before a obeli race can be published. Oaaurrov. Paterboro.—We have nothing to add to the anxwrrs we have already given. ▼oioa C tLnia a. Boston.—Apply to any good teacher. A number can be found In your city. EDDTBTOwg, Chester.—It to a fair bet-and A wins tbe bat, CoirsTaKT kraunaa, Lawrenoa Co.—We do not know. BL kL C, Baltxmon.—Hlab. low. Jack and the game. CaaaoLU—Write to Prof Edison, hfanlo Park. n. J. W. J„ PbUadelphto In California, March zCuTB. Ehsls B —No races an announced for that date. J. H , Newark.—About forty-two. we should say. Dick at., Atlantic—They will ba nerd If suitable. W. J. CHarnujt,—One dollar and fifty centa A. O. T.. Boaqnehanna—We cannot say. W. W.—Par two yean, we think. P. B.. Toronto-—They did not, B. P. H.—Then to no remedy. HAVTwa once mora decided the late ot tbe na- tion, and placed the distribution ot tbe loaves and fishes in the hands ot the snccesstal candidates, our duty Is done; bo the next thing ln order Is to get oat the old skates and sleighs, and pnt them in good running order lor the approaching a on, which, according to the weather-wise pro- phets, le to he unnanallr severe, or otherwise, aa the case may be. The first anoir and the flnt lea ot the season have already made their appear- ance, and the merry sleigh-bells will soon be heard on the avenues, while the cackle ot the bull frog will bo overshadowed toy the hllarlons Joou- larity ot the belles and the beaux as they glide over the frozen thoronghfares, or Join ln the mazy at the warm hoatelrle on the road, while the dispenser ot spiritual truth Is brewing a mug ot yo cTiolras Inn ruis—li ilnn or a llaeron «£ yw atoxs and racy hopscotch. THBATBICALB In New York aeem difficult te understand ]nst now. A year or so ago some ot onr most attractive Broadway stars, falling to draw ln their nsoal places along the line ot our great thoroughfare, passed over to the western quarter of the city, and did remarkably well there with a low scale of prices. Thla year they have once more made a change ot base, and the Old Bowery Is now their objective point. Thus, It the mountain will not come to Mahomet, Ma- homet most go to the mountain. EXTBAOBDHfABT zxuiTXausrr has been occa- sioned by the exhumation of the remains ot a. T. Stewart, and their concealment by the resurrec- tionists. Body-snatshlng Is no new thing ln this vicinity, but It required the theft of a millionaire's body to direct attention to the subject. The ar- rest and conviction ot the parties who stole the body ot Stewart may be the means, hereafter, of protecting the remalns-ot those who die poor. ' WHAT THE BABBBA£,L-Pl«ATaTB is to do With him- self In the dreary months of Winter, when base- ball Is not, and the bat and the ball are carefully laid away ln camphor. Is one ot the distressing questions now agitating his otherwise calm and unruffled mind. A stndy of the laws ot the game might help him to pass the lonely hours away, and better nt him for the requirements of the next campaign. AXiTHOUOH Congress Hall, the Atlantic, and other burnt-out hotels at Cape May stood close to the water's edge, not a resident of that celebrated watering-place had the forethought to pnt out the fire by topping the burning bulldinge into Old Ocean, whence they would have been carrlt d out to sea, and all traces of the conflagration been thereby obliterated. FIVE HTJNDBED TH0CBA5D PZBSONB are now ready to swear that they were guests last Sum mer at the hotels destroyed by Are on Saturday at Cap© May. Two hundred thousand will make additional affidavit that they were the very last that took a meal at Congress Hal], the Columbia, or the Centre House. Te late ice-cream vender standeth all the day Idle, and bewaileth ye] pasalng-away of ye sunny days of childhood, and all that that Implies. But ye living dispenser ot hot chestnuts emlleth in ye plenitude of his prosperity, and mocketh at ye In- firmities of ye obsolete dealer ln frozen wares. Verily, there is a time for all things. wbz> we tttik defeated candidates calmly nging "There la a happy land tar, tar away,' we cannat help believing that such men wen created for nobler purposes than to be stood up ln the political arena, merely to be knocked down by the cruel band of fate. Ah 1 The atAX of Boston -who, for several months past, haa made money -right straight along by so- liciting aid tor the purpose of assisting him to bury his gnndmother, data J net been gathered to his alleged deceased relative, and placed ln the silent tomb for. one year. T H E UNT E "VST It MKJfcarten Beade were, not aBea/ajUkt ot rtv pnttV. wiiirtiuloVfce atrongly^mppaAmfjaU him— some ese 'ot the things whlah he is apt to call his rivals. .'Hie reoant letter i to . the husband ot Frances Hodgson Burnett; touching the dram* atlratlon-of "That Lass o' towrle's" displays 1 tain characteristics which tn lght have made him jjifBjnoug, had not o^arar -.^ijnga rnade hint fia- mons. This tetter amtnppJ to Justify his course ln constructing »;j^Bay out ot matetlala ramlsbed try somebo^y-^lisa.. He declarvat -lhag there is no earthly rva«Boaj^%hy.he.alUjnld ttoj/^xwa^tlge Mrs. Burnett's noret ^7bi>^nXs)orea<,^ he savs, bar book has shown • utural ajkaa 7 proper desire to retain cepyr^JU In both oountrtea. But she has Hot printed brie syllable to lead one to suppose ahe deetrod to retain ttrrcer%U In It." This U Mi. Beaded plea. Italics and all. It tnay hie true that there Is no earthly reason— or shall we aay legal ceaaonr—why an J^igllsh-. man may not dramatize an American etory. We apeak thus ot "That Lass o' Lowrta's," becauxe It was written, printed and copyrighted tn Amer- ica, and because Urn, Burxrect, although an KngHthwoman by birth, achlered her flnt llt- arary distinction In this oountry. Undeniably Charles Beade waa at liberty to make a play out ot the story, if he so chose. He had the right to do it—legally. He could bring It out at any TingllnTi theatre—legally. He could profit by the brains of another, and' share' the receipts of the box-office—legally. But—but la thla the Oharlea Beade who, not very long ago, uncorked the vials of his -vituperative wrath and poured their vitri- olic contents upon the heads ot all thieves who atole the products of other men's brains? lathis the Charles Beade who, ln announcing his dram- atisation ot thla very story, advertised that he would give a handsome reward to any person who would "give him tamely notice ot piracy"— empbsndsed with a big PT Is this the Charles Beade who. In a prefatory note to the American edition ot "Pnt Yosttialf la His Plans" (we hay* not a copy ot the book at hand, bat we quote his worda as -nearly as wa can from memory), said that he hoped all. reputable pub llshen In this oountry' would respect the moral right which Messrs. Sheldon ft Co. had acquired by paying him liberally for the advanoe-aheeta ot his story T It this, indeed, be the same Charles Beade, then either time haa wrought ln him a marvelona change, or else that which we mistook for honest warfare against literary piracy was, ln fact, noth- ing more than the explosion of a very noisy blank-cartridge. But the author ot "A Simpleton" endeavors, ln his letter, to draw a sharp line between copy- right and'atagertght. He would have it appear that there Is no piracy about stealing the mater- ial for an acting drama. Legally he la right, so longaa thodrama, lnqneetlon le acted ln England. But what are the tacts in this case? Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett wrote a etory which achieved— and deserved—amatlng success. This story straightway reprinted ln London, and not long afterwards was adapted to the stage, intact, three verelona had been advertised (and two ot them performed) In England before Mr. Beade took the matter ln hand. With characteristic modesty he explains ln tils letter that he should not have undertaken the task if the other drama- ttstahad shown themselves capable of dealing with the subject. Having so tar condescended aa to take hold of this story and dramatize it, as It should be dramattzed, air. Beade pro c eeds te sell to an American actress the right to play his version ot an American story ln America I And he coolly writes to the author of that story: "Ho egg can be roasted all on one side. I cannot be divinely Just to American citizens in a boalneas where they never show me one grain of human Justice or even mercy; and so long as your nation Is a literary thief you must expect occasional reprisals. These reprisals are a sort of bad equity." Let It be remembered that this noble sentiment la expressed by the ehivalrlo cham. plon of the moral rights ot authors. But these are not all the tacts. Mrs. Burnett not only wrote, published and copyrighted "That Lass o' Lowrle's" in this country, but she re- served all stagerlghts, dramattzed her own novel, and copyrighted that dramatization. Mr. Beade closes his letter to Br. Burnett by asserting that ln the United States, as ln England, there Is no such thing as stagerlght ln a novel. Edu cated Londoners have been known to Inquire whether New-Torkera live exclusively on thi buffaloes which thez kill. In the streets, 01 , whether our diet is occasionally varied by the In- troduction ot a boiled papoose. We do not look to resident Englishmen generally tor a very com' prahenalve knowledge of America; but we con- fess to a certain degree ot surprise at «tmin g a writer ot Mr. Beade's posltlveness proclaiming his ignorance of our laws with such aelt-satlsned assurance; Doubtless he will learn. If he did not long ago know, that ln the United States there Is such a thing as stagerlght ln a novel, and, moreover, when that right la Infringed on, there is a law to punish the offender. So far aa we are able to learn, no exception to thla law Is made ln favor of Mr. Charles Beade, novelist. Very properly, Mrs. Burnett took It upon her- self to reply to the letter addressed to her hus- band. Her answer cannot fall to prove racy reading to Mr. Beade. She says, among other things, that some time ago she wrote a letter to the novelist requesting him to dramatize her story for England, but afterwards decided not to send It. "I wish I had now," she adds, "because then I might have retained an Illusion or eo. The keen but delicate irony of that sentence Is worthy of Its author. We have no doubt It will be appreciated by Mr. Beade. The author ot "Foul Play" tells us he Is a dramatist, and that nothing but bad laws ever drove him Into the novel. It that la so, let us thank bad laws. Mr. Beade should be Judged by the same rules which are applied to other men. We certainly have no desire to belittle his literary achievements. He has written some ot the best novels of the day. The crisp, bright style of his earlier works was a sort ot revelation. The trenchant tone of some ot hie later books effected reforms which Parliament had failed to accomplish. Perhaps he Is greater even as a dramatist than as a novelist; but If that be so, it seems a little odd that he should be forced to find material for his plays ln the brain-product of other writers. Greatness ln a dramatist Is the power to create, not to adapt. However, while we admire Mr. Beade's talents, we hold that he had no moral right to make use of Mrs. Burnstt's story without first consulting that lady; and he had no legal right to sell his version of a play which had al- ready been copyrighted ln this oountry. As for the letter which be addressed to Sr. Burnett, we can only repeat what we said at the outset: If Mr. Charles Beade were not a novelist of repute we should, arter reading that letter, be tempted to apply to him some one of the polite epithets which he Is continually applying to other people. ORK CLIP PEATHTS POIRCIS, ^5 ro» TBB .ejtw Tonx, cairr»B.- ; , ata eonrmttnjslwxWdaby polaoTilna rawyiloT. rTaswd AOOOLTt,»—Of the Society of Jeans and Ooilara o/l utina^aaa yrarkdse& BJUJWK.-O. Phelps ■FTtenajralTet^aigad tn tbe matnv fislx^pj patent tnedVluea. His raborainry In Jexvey City had AxsajjjBaai m Lentoon. Berth)* Vienna, m '* A elsewhere. At an aarly~age he waa apprenticed to Alfred B. Burrof Tn* Hartford (Ol) Ttracs, and he worked at the case. About B&Z he eame to this dry. and started a literary Journal with the title of TkeZmnre CUg. with Ked Bnnt- Une ss a serfaal writar^and baring offices suecasslrely ln Ann street, corner of Theatre Alley, and ln Spruce street. This paper died slowly, and about 1896 be entered Into the patentaaedlclna business sa a corer of consumption, the remedial agent harlng been furnished him by one whom he advertised lite naively aa "a re t iredphyuclaa whose aaada of Ote have nearly ran oat." The prescription count bepat up etvery little cost, save aa to one essential dmst. so namen that it oould not be found In any pbarma- enpsrla. and oould be procured nowhere bat at the Jersey City office ot 0. P. Brown, who at tha on teat resided in Orchard street, this city. Tha "retired physician" waa Dot wholly a myth. Mr. Brown la credited with harmg bean tbe author of "The Complete Harhallit,"—Baybrock. ^BaUaJDaVrBobart—An Enailsh metaphysician, scholar a^sntlior, -BJabooktannameToas. ana Include a num- ber or votnmeo on sportmg topics. Be once edited The iriiilaini riliinifin . sml ass s contributor to the Ency- olopssdla Brttannlea. He was a friend ol Soother, sir Wil- liam BamJiton and other illF* 1 "a Tll ' h *^ man—Newcastle, Bnw..Oet, tf, aged 81 BlaSS, Horace—Formerly a Valor ln the U. fl. Army. Ha was grannsl*^ St Wen Point In 1(31, and was In actire service until UW7. He spent fire yean in the aerriee orthe Oovarntaant of Chill, Bor"" ~ "'" BBOWrTTklllton H.—A member of the Philadelphia bar A2T xxr>i7xdrnsirT votes, after being pressed for bis occupation on essaying to poll his tenth Red that he waa a stone-cutter, but brought out the add!Usual fact ■served Us time" ln Slog Sing I Katiokai. Babe Basts, ot this elty ao _ the receipt of tl8a.6t0.66 In aid of the yeUow-fever sufferers up to Nov. 9, and we believe this la the largest stun received by any Institu- tion or committee lor that object. A2n> sow ye small boy walketh ln his sleep, and goeth for ye Fall pippins and ye greening*: and ye paterraal parent catchethye somriambuUst on ye fly with ye fornlddon fruit. And doth beat him with many ataipea. With ns vast ExsraizaKr*: ln theeomplloattons of political warfare, and Its knowledge ot the ec- caaxrleltles of weapons of offense and defense, ItiDow appears that Tammrnr "didat't know It WjBaT the closing of the polls on election day the bar-room setter suddenly found his occupa- tion Bane, tor the ~—«*-t„ had pertonsmed his duty to Jato fellow-man and closed up far Jnepsirs. Tbe OAS aXTsSAiriEa everywhere seem to be greatly evftrrlBM ln •private oyer the poaalbUlty of the success ot the electric fllnmlniitfrr, and yet ln public they edBact to make light of It. Tbe TzorijX 'most caiihusjaetio over the pros- pect' ol * resumption Of specie payment are those who have nothing to redeem, and have but lalat Hopes ol getting Myftlng, - - BPABK8 FBOK COLE.—The appended scintilla- tions are from the forge of our Indianapolie correspondent, though they are by no means forgeries: If a law could be enforced giving to the Indians their Just rights, at least one tribe would be tharikf nl for such a statute. You can discern the point It CU try. Sardou's latest popular effort Is entitled to a TUpionuL. Sett Diet for carpenters: .Fine-apples. The report that the commander of the Army of the Bio Qrande will be Ordered on the retired list lacks connrmatlon. Tony Denier carries his own orchestra, and It Is presumable he would have JVann other. Tbe policeman in "Evangeline" has a Co Idea opportunity to bcai (no re|arence to free lunches) """■«" Into notoriety. Hunters are now quaS&*g before the furious on- slaughts of farmers who have good praatdt for en. torolng the trespass laws. A Arm ln a Western city keeps a live fox en- sconced In a wired box In front of its place of business—a sly way of advertising. A weighty Invention: Edison's electrlo light; for doee It not make gasnyAt stock Assay f The managers of a an^hig**. fair- prohibited the sale of cider on their grounds, but offered premiums for the best wine—an un/axr discrim- ination. If a vessel should ship lbs crew at the leading city of southern Ireland.might not the former be appropriately named the cmlacracf At the funeral ot a carpenter's wife the offlola- ttng clergyman Innocently perpetr&te-d a pan by remarking that he hoped the bereaved husband of the deceased would join 'erln hsavan. Now is the time to take ln your Ice-plants and to dig. around your cat-arbor grape-vine. It Is a good time also tor raking up oyster-beds and put- ting frills on your scallops. THE chiceen that crew so at the close of every election In this city for: the psat twenty years Is waiting for further returns from the outlying countdea. _ ' ■_ Is it likely that the vaulting ambition ot those grave students ot Bt Mark will o'erleap Itself? Twenty-five thousand dollars la a goodly reward I TBZ soof-poTjE bubiniub has taken a rise since It was aacertalned that a Cooper has b ee n elected Mayor o t Hew T<iclc. . . -. , Tax xths of November are upon us, and yet the author ot "Beautiful Snow" remains an "nn- known quantity." oath America—Baltlmon. Md,, - B , aJVr^'lSlafe^^^-^WldeJT HefbrmerTykepttheHntledge H known as a hotel-keeper. He formerly kept the Hntledge House 00 Broadway, thla city. At tnetinaeof his death he waa proprietor of tha ItxxIst Eonss, aSmira, N. Y.—there Hot. & BAOHE, Henry W.—Of the C B. Coast Barrey. He had bean in the serrice for a number of tears, and last winter was rtsunned on the Florida coast—Brlsbel, B. L, Wot. S, *BBrTS0aT, BaDjamln-Of Harford County. Md. Ha had passed seventy yean or hto Urn on one farm—near Falto- iom. aid. , gov, a, and 09. BtOWK. HlTAbath—A aTuddangtiter of Jacob Feller of aarornnonarr fame—Camden County, Oa.. Nor. " aged m OtBkUnT, Philip—An old resident of Ulnar County, thla Stats. JuoommlttAd suicide by hanging—Walker Valley, H. T„ Boy. 4, aged 7*. DOWrT, TalesUoe—A Piwshytarlan minister. He form ertr reaMecVtn Oneida Ooonty. thla Stale, bat mora recent- ly la Sussex County, Vs. He wis a poet ol no mean order, sad a man dt tnrerlor education—Stony Creek, Vs., Nov. ''DrURW Mrs. Sarah-Of DeerOeld, N. rL-there, AOAN, Hanrsnt-^Por flft£ years a resident of Detroit, jtRBOHN. Hot. 7. lit ST. _ DBCKER. John—An old siags-drlveT on toe Plfth-ave- nae line, this elty. He had held tbe reins for twenty years, and had been employed on the old Red Bird line of stages In Third avenue. He fan dead while mounting te hi sbox—this city, Nov. 9, aged aa dutch, aITtm.— Formerly engaged In the woolen burt- neat ln Salem and Boston, Mass., and afterwards a tarmea nearFaorla.TU. In 1B46 be removed to Chleagn, and then became a Journalist and founded TTtc adcerttzcr, a Whbr aaper. For the past fourteen yean be bad been In the Chicago Post-omce—Chicago. 111., Kor. 6, agadff. DKLAF088E, Gabriel—a lemons Preach mineralogist. For more than fifty yean he had been a pnfeseor In the Unlrsrslty of France—Paris, Prance. Oct. Is, aged 64. DEMT8E, Simon—A veteran of the War ot 1811—Bay Bldge. ITT, Nov. «. aged 85. BAOAN. kfareent—For (If Mlrlx-thsrs, Rev. 6, aged II FAZT. Jsanjaeques—'i heeminent Swiss sutesman. He was educated In France, and took an active part in the liberal opposition to tha restontlon of the Bourbons after the fall or the first Napoleon. He published sevenl pam- phlets dnnng thla period on political economy. He waa a disciple of Adam Smith and of J. B. Ray, father or the { h i nu t Preach Minister ol Finance. He waa on onndenol thaPruace C^reucnncln 1827. aad on pnsMoa by tha ■nvarnment censors started the aTercun deFmaee aa JlZtu Steele-, ln which ha published a sales of articles entUled "lettrea d'un Amerlcaln." since that time ha haa played a prominent part sa a writer and poli- tician, both la Franea and Switzerland—Genera, Switzer- land. Nor. 6, aged HT arjBDIN, Jacques—An importer of watches and Jewelry, this city. Mr. uoedln waa born In Neufchetel, Switzer- land, and was the brother-in-law. as well aa tbe life-long friend, of-BarLorenzo Delmonlco He came to this coun- try in ISM, and rMned tbe firm of John aleneln A Co., watch Importera. At kfr. Hangin's death tha ftrm name was changed to Veuve J. Mangio. Uoedln A Co, Be died ln the office of John Shook, architect, while consulting with the latter about the firm's new place of business— this city. How. t, aged U. ifKAi, atcrgaa— a couimlsison merehaot and one of the original members ot tbe New Yelk Produce Exchange— Brooklyn. W.-T.. Kor. 7. sged 61. HIVEXIi, Bobart—The oilginal engraver of "Audubon's Blrda" Nearly fllty yean ago tbe natural cat oroseed the ocean In search of a firm nch and skllllal enough to attempt tha great task of engraving the remits of hu life- work. AuanBon reached London friendless, penniless and unknown. Vhlle bis uncouth dress endlong hair earned for bun the appellation ol —The Backwoodsman of Ameri- ca." Ko one came forward with courage enough tn make the AU plates for bis work. In hie despair he was about to jolt tbegiaUcJtv^when he beard oftbe firm or llavell A ,o. To thasn be went with hie portfolios filled with sketches m crayon and watex-colota in many of them Audubon had been obliged to make use or the Juice or ber- rles when his valuta had erven out on hto Journeys through the Western.wilds. Bobrrt Harall waa at last persuaded to undertake tha engraving of tha plates, and spent tour- taen yean In their completion. These original plates, which wen of capper, and welgned several tons, wen de- stroyed by On ln tnls city a lew rears ago. Mr. Harall bad resided In this country far many years—Tarrytown. N. v.. Nor. 7. HAIXnwBLU Karah—A resnectel member or tbe So- ciety of Friends—Philadelphia, pa, xov. 6, aged 8S UALAbtbYAM A, Yonloarl—A Japanese eoooiior, pres- ident ol the Tokio Dnlreraity. and vlea-presldtnt of the Educational Delegation sent to tbls country In 1876 to study the American school system—Japan, recently. UOHKES, Peter—An English clergyman who had on], looted a llbrarr ol over 25.000 rolomea, many orthe books being extremely rare—Plymouth, Eng., Oct. u, HAWBd. John—One of the oldest and most prosperous bakers ot this airy. Be was a member of the Frodace Ex- -A vaterari of tbe War or int. and for nt cirCaxthaga, N. T.—there, Oct. xZ "JOVHS. HenSr—A prominent ConjrmratlonalLzt cjpray- man and a pudnataof Yale CoHegaln the class otlOaV— xrridgaport^Ct.. Nov.», aged 7? JoiIKDAJT,' Kooert B.—Apooruonment Clerk of the Board of Assessors in Brooklyn, N. T. Ha was formerly llenienant-colonel ol the Fourteenth Regiment. N. O. et N. Y., and served with distinction in the Rebellion. Be dlsdnr apoplexy—Brooklyn, N. Y„ Nov. 7. aged a. JUDO. N. B.—A prominent TUIaola pallUcUn He had been chairman ot the Bepabllcan State Committee. Col- lector of the Port of Chicago, a member of Coo cress, and .... ~ " ' .Llncc waa appointed Jilnlstar to Berlin by Preeldsnt Cblcsao. I1L. Nov. 11, sged 66. KEMPER. Susan—An aunt or Ex-Oor. Camper of Vir- ginia—Warren ton. Va, Oct. 30, aged 84.' LEOPOLD, Charles-Duke orscblerwtg.Holsteln. He married the daughter of Frederick YL King of Denmark —Oct. Siaeedtf * LEHMAN, William H.—A member of the firm or Leh- man A Bolton, llthogTephie printers. Philadelphia, Fa- there. Nut. s, ai;ed 3U. LEWTR James J.—A veteran or the War or 1812—Phila- delphia, Pa., Nor 7, aged M. l^BJftlD, Mannce— a colonel ol militia and venerable rtsldent of Dudley, Mass-—there. Nor. 8, sged 92. MOSQOBBa. Tomsa Clprlano da—Ex-Prealdent of the old Bapnbuc of New Onnada and of tha modern Colom- bia, Since the death ol Bollrar, In 1890, he waa tbe most conspicuous character lo Colombian polities. He had fre- quently rlslted thla city, and twenty years ago delivered an address hen before tbe American Ethnological Socie- ty. Besides President or the Republic, he bad been Min- ister to Fraaee. Spain aod England, and Grand General ol tha Army—Coeonnco, State or Caaca. Colombia, Oct, i. aged 9L Mrs. Sallie—An Inmate of tbe Robertson Couniy(Ey.>i>oo house— there. Mot. 6. sged. It Is said, US. MAUUIRE, Mrs. Isabella—01 PuUadelpbla, Pa that city. Nor. 7. aged 92. MURPHT. John O.—A physician practicing In Rising Son, Pa.—there. Nor. G. MERCER, Samuel—Rear-admiral ln the British Navy- Deal. Eng.. Oot. St, aged 69. McBHIbE. Ja.. uaurire—Formerly engaged In the ship- ping business In this city. He waa a native or Inland, eame to this country ln 1890, and soeeeedod to tbe busi- ness of hisunels. Jamas MeBride ol Dublin, who tn 1810 started the Dublin Packet Company. Mr. MoBiide was at one time In partnership with Samuel Sloan, who after- wards'became pnudent or the Hudson-river Railroad. He retired from boalneas tweaty yean ago with an ample fortune—Bomerrule. N. J., Kor. 2. aged 74. MAQEE, James-Formerly a Dullness-rnan or Philadel- phia and largely Interested Ln pubbo corporations—Phila- delphia. Pa. Nnr. 3, aged 76. MaCDONALD, Prancia—senior member or the firm of Henderson Brothers, agents lor the Anchor Line ofeteam- ahlps. this city. A nstire or Scotland, he came to this country ln 1647. and ror more than twenty-fire yean he had been Identified with the shipping business. He waa one of the foonden or the New York Produce Tfxchange— Cllftoo. Staten Island. Nor. 7. aaed 33. M CAD AM. James BL—A young lawyer or this dry, son ol Judge n-i-i." of the Marine Uoun. On the morning of Oct. 23, during the heavy storm, be waa p"*'-, throogh Pi ne street , whan he waa struck on the head by a brick blown mm a chimney, it was this accident which result- ed in his death—this city. Nor. 6, aged U. kfUNROB, Henry P.—A well-known music-teacher, and one of tbe oldest citizens of <:smbrldze. Mass. He per- formed equally well on the rlolin and piano—Cambridge. Mass., Nor. 7. aged 7a. MORRISON, David—A wealthy retired merchant ol Aberdeen, Scotland. He waa born Id New Orleans, La., and waa a brother ot James M Morrison, president o( the Manhattan Company, this city. He wss an elder In the Free Charch or bcotiaod and bad deri-ted much time to church matters—Aberdeen. Scotland, Nor. 9, aged 70. PaliUPS. William—A res peered eitlzen, and one oftbe Trustees ot Flushing. L. I. Wblle psssiag out or a hotel la thla dry Nor. 4, he fell In an apoplectic fit, was re- moved to 4t Catherine's Hospital, and then remained until h!s death—this city, Nov. 7. PHIf.1 .TPS. John C—Formerly an Episcopal minister and a graduate of Harvard in the clue or 182a He waa a brother ot Wendell Phillips, and a eon or John Phillips, the flrvt llayex- of Boston—Boston, Mssa, Nov. n. PHELPS, John J.—Secretary or the Barton Brewing Co mpany ash New Haven, CL-tbat city, Nov. 6, aged 68. SxOTH, ABkrander— A prominent dtlzen or Youkera, N. Y..whero4eswaa extensively engaged In the manufacture ol carpets. Bnang the late political campaign be waa nominated oa tbe Republican ticket ror Representative ln Congress la the Twelfth (K. T.) District, at present repre- sented by Cla r kson N. Potter. The Sunday preceding the election he waa taken 11L and died on Tuesday at the very hour when his victory became known. His meioittyswaa about 2JS0Q m a district usually strongly Democratic Mr. Smith wsaa native of Trenton. N. J., bat had spent the yean of his msnhood In this State—Tonkera, N. Y„ Nov. 0. aared 60l SIMONSON. Aaron—A veteran oftbe War of 1812. Hto deatb reduces the number of veterans now llrlng ln Rich- mond County, N. Y„ to tea—Tottenrllie, Etaten Island, Nov. 7, aged 87 dNOivSKN. _ . delphlA ismlly. Her father waa a ablpplng-merchant In that dty, and her brother In-law, Joseph Watson, wi Mayor from IBM to 18X8— Baltimore. Md, Nov. s, aged 69. SDalWALT. DarldS.—Far thirty-three yean engaged ln the lee baslnest lo Baltimore, Md He —irrml a targe fortune—Baltimore, Md., Nov. J. eared 69. smith. Hszrlst L.—wife of Rixnop Smith of Kentucky —this eiiT,Nov. 1 TIRBBIX, Mrs. Susan L.—Widow of Stephen Tlrrell— Sonth Weymontb. Mass., Nor. 1, aged M. VANCE, Mrs. Harriett Newell—wife ol Got. z. B Vance of North Oarollna, aod daughter of the Rer. Mr. Bper, a Preabytatrtan minister—Ralelgb. N. 0L, Nor. S WADDBXL, a ugh—A granajun ot Gen. Hngh Wadder). wbo fought ln the BCTOlution. aod also of Oen. Francis Nash, wnowaa killed In the Battle of OeTmantown. He waa graduated at the University of North Carolina In 1818 ln the class with President Polk. He first studied medi- cine, hot afterwards abandoned It for law. In whlah he achieved dtermcrJou—Wilmington, N. C, Nor. x. aged 79. WIOOAN, Ebenezer—A minister ot tbe Do ten Jterbmv- ed Ohnrcn, formerly a pastor ln Puersoo. N. J. He died suddenly of apoplexy at the St. Charles Hotel—thla elty. Nor 5, acedO. WOOLLET, Joseph—For thirty-two yean ansb-dealer In Fulton Market, this city. He resided In Long Branch, N. J., wss rich, generous and apoplectic—this dry. Nor. 7, agedes. '..;.- BArjo^st-Ba^rcro was the norol sport which attracted a •elect party to en old landmark on "the Boston road," In Westchester, on Satrrrday, Nor. 9. The principals wen Jocko, a 98s) badger, and a bull-terrier answering to the name ot Prince, nearly ten pounds heavier, whose owners had matched them for S20D, three polls out or fin, each of ten minutes' duration. The teak undertaken by thadow was the pulling of his badgershlp thronith the half moori- sh aped bole In one end or a box with a sloping roof, whleh he succeeded ln doing at the first and third baits only, the badger at tbe fifth trial fastening his long, sharp teeth firmly ln the throat and windpipe of the canine, whose owner, perceiving that he coold not get loose, gave op in order to save Prince's lire. Jocko, who lookeoTabout as wall aa at first, was therefore hailed tbe winner, but tha owner of the badly-used-up Prince expressed hiswllllnx- neaj to enter Into another match. . . A Losu T»ar3 -Probably the longest ran road train ever drawn by a alnale looomottre waa that taken by kmslna Wo. 4 fromClerk's 'wry to Bunbury, Pa.. 81 miles, rathe Northern Central R ai lro a d, recently, consisting of 183 empty frelgkl cars, one loaded elght-wheeler, two Ja- booses, and a dead angina The tram waa 0,200 feet long —930 feet over a mile—and It wu upgrade work, but the rate of speed aTvragtd tea mlkw raw hour. sW KW ' xt Ajrax, xeTATOltBB. . Tale smd Trinity OoUeg* tDotball tsams led for the Dtastery at Bamnton Park, lawen, Ot,,. Nov. 9. There were ' only on the Trinity aide until Tale lent tour, g fifteen in all, aa follows: xrtretrw—for- wrairla, Starke, .FftTklna, T. P, WUoox, Elbert, xUtaeland, WilUama t' half-backs. Potwin, Melaon -, tiackB, Appleton, Washburn, p. L. Wilcox. The foUowing Tale mwn played with Trinity: Crouch, forward; Hill, haU-rsa^: Bacon and Wilson, tor- wards. F als fonrajda, Farwellv'T9; Lamb, '81; Ives, '81; Morehead,'"l», & & B. i Eaton, '811 King, •80; Hull, '81; Harding, "SOi half backs, Brown, P. O., Peters, '80; Thompson, T»: Watson.'81.8.8.8.; backs, W&keman, medical, Hlxon.'Sl; Badger, '62. In consequence of the great superiority ot the looal players, and the resultant one-sided char- acter ot the meeting, there was nothing In- teresting about the contest, which the Tales won by a score ot two goals and ten touch-downs to nothing. Befaree, 8. O. Bushnell A return match between Stevens Institute and Rutgers College was played at the grounds ot the Bt. Qeorge Cricket Club, Hoboken, N. J., same day, the opposing teams being made up thus: Bulgen —forwards, afttars. kfuller, Cramer, Oowan, Buh, Macauley, and Babbrouck; halt-backa, Uesara. Howe, Bee and Bandolph (captain); haoks, Hesara. Voorhees and Horns. CTnvwi torwarda, Kasara. Bpofford, Denton, Lelb, Dllworth, and Daihlen; halt-backs—afeesre. fhiydam, Merrltt (captain) and Aiken; backs—Messrs. Pracey. Bel* enberger and Byalop. The first halt (ss mln.) of this stubbornly-contested match yielded nothing, and In the next only one touch-down was obtained by Stevens, and Buydam secured & goal Just be- fore the extra ten minutes agreed upon were up, learlngSlerens riotorby onegoal to nothing. Bet- oreo, T. B. Williams.. ..The teams ot Princeton Col. lege and the University et Pennsylvania also played a match at Philadelphia on the Mb, the former winning by two goals and tour touch- downs to one goal, that being secured by H. H. Lee, the celebrated sprinter Howard and Am- herst likewise engaged ln a match on the same day, at Boston, Mass., the team being: BanaraV forwards—Oowdln, "19: Holmes, '19; Swift. "19; Perry. 'IB: Hone, '81: Warren, '83; Crashing. Iff dl- cal: halt-hanks Pushing, *T» (captain); Windsor, •79: Sedge wick. 83: Harrington, Medical School; Clark, 80; punks Houston, TV; Bacon, '80; Leth< erbee, '82. Amktnt: forwarda —Wheeler, '78; McGregor, '80: Guilds, 'tt; Deyo, "7»; ooodnow, '79; Goodrich, '79; Terry, T7; half narks Orltten- den, '81; QUlett, '80; DatUmer. '81: Bussell, '81; Oordon, '79; backs—Underbill, "81; Alden, '80; Hill. '80. During the llrat halt (IS mln.) the Har- Tarda secured a goal and two tonoh-downa to nothing for their opponents, and ln the second halt the former got two goals and one touch-down to nix, leaving Harvard the winner by three goals and three touch-downs to nothing. Umpires: H. Thurston for Amherst, F. W. Thayer tor Harvard; referee, H. L . Vlrgen. Ol&BBrfPOlBTT ATHIaKTIC CI.TJB The Tall games of this Long Island club were held on the Manhattan A. C. grounds, this city, on Saturday afternoon, Nov. 9, and were wit- nessed by a tew hundred spectators within the enclosure, and by many more from the windows ot the houses overlooking the grounds, which afforded an excellent view without the payment of a farthing. The management waa fair, but nod the Inner ring been kept clear of all except those wbo really had business to be there a boy named Bieel would have es- caped such injury aa he received by being etmok on the aide of the head by a 161b shot which Orasslck, the CUedonlan athlete, was amusing himself by practising with, without due regard to the proximity ot others. The lad was, we nndentand, aeverely Injured. We have no need to allude particularly to any one of the events, the results of whlah appear below: 0ac-Jtun4red-vardj kmsirrui not— Heat 1: W. J. Boberts, Staten Island A. a ant- stsrtl. 1 itlms, It " fredlng.8. A. A. C. (»), l;lf*x Beats: lie. Heat-i: W. J. Crowley. bVL (IS), 1:10,'a'a Heat o: J. a Toorbto. Adelphle A. C. (L8), 1: lus. Heat t: Jeaae PoweU OJ), 1:11s. Heat 7: H. H. Mortis, S. A. A. C-. 1: lOSis. Heats: FrankNichola, AmericanA_C.(TD), 1; loxa Tne weediag^it process was contlnoad through second-trial gaining places In tha final, which resulted thus; Toorbla. 1; CAJ. fiTierckbexnsr. S; Nichols, iS; Crowley. 4; won by leas than two feet. In 10a. caac.sxUr-snndlcdP tsaTk, open Final beat: M. Chat wick, N. T. (83s. start), iTF. B. Holmes. N T. (I0S). 2; J. O. Booney, Oreenpoint (83), S: W. T. Goodwin (83) and James H- Smith (83) dldnt finish; won by liim. In Sm. Wis., making his actual walking time 7m. •*>,». Quarter.mile-hand leap run. ope*—Heat 1: F. W. Jans- sen, 8. I. AC (Uyda). I: J.L.Bggllnton, a. A.C.(73).>; time, sSWs. Heat 1: B-fl MoCnary. ML A O (6SI. 1; J. Doyle, sVA. A. C. (SO). I; tOMa. Heat S: M. mils, B. A A. C (89). 1: H. Sehroeder. College CTty ofN. T. («), 1; SOX*. Heat<: w. A Emmons, Panwood A C. (40), 1; J. F. r ker. Brooklyn A O. (ffi), 5; iljia. Final heat: Janssen, i, aaker. S; MoCreery, 3; Emmons, 0: won by a yard ln47*4L Had not Bmmont been hindered by an outsider It waa thought that ba might hare won. Onc-kicidrrd-pdr. run, dob championship—D. H. 8teel. 1; B. Toorbees, 2; J. F. Burns, 3; J. W. Pace, a. Won by afootloUUa Four^aundred-aitd^rovty.wdr. run. elnb cbamptonshli D. H. Steel. 1; B. Voorhees, 2; B. H. Tan Andale, 3. ~ quite handily ln ttXf. rAree-mlle inaU;. clat ship- Won ab championship—Wm. H. Purdy, 1. B. B Pelton, 2. Time. 2un- an* . better than Pnrdy had ever before done, and yet he won by three-elKhte of a mile. Aunnina htgh-iirssp, dab championshlt ffobei I. Bod en, in. Tin.; H. B. ahepardson, 4ft, Sn. THE -WAIsK IN CHICAGO. We have received the following communication concerning the recent professional pedestrian contest In Chicago, which, from the statement therein made, appears to have been a strangely mlnffi*—eg*** ; CXIOAOO. ILL.. Nov. 8. 1878, Faaatt Qtraacv, Esq.— zasao- 51r.- I wish to state a few jaeu In connection with the 80-mlle walk given ben last Wednesday. Nov. a, at Use Bxpaaltloa BuUdlng. far the benefit of the Boon of the Good Shepherd. The executive committee or the lair fart tha mattar in the bands ot Dan- lalO'Lsary. Toe prl res were a medal and ago to flnt, eao to second, as to third, S13 to fourth. The eo tries ware Jim Smith, Oea Ouyon. O'Leary, Olmstead, Ruaaell, Roach, Bohmehl,and two ambitions novices, who petered outsoon after the start. Boasell quit at 17 miles, and Roach at 19 miles. Schmeblled from the sun by deliberately running, although Tanzey, referee, cautioned the men at the start that any running or skipping would disqualify the patty so doing. Then wen over 1,000 people pres- ent, and a general protest waa raited against Schmehl ronnina; but Scbmebl's jndga— Peter Odlln—In Tan- say's absence said that Schmehl waa walking fair; but, when Tar.rev returned, he went on the track, and told Schmehl he would take him off If he did notstop. He then started on a run, and, in spite of tbe protests from the crowd, continued to run. Tbe plan was to beat Smith out of first prize. Ouyon, Bmltb and Olmstead again pro- tested sgalnst Schmehl, but Tanzey told tbem to go on and not mind, aa Schmabl waa oat ol the walk; yet at tbe con- clusion of the match Tanzey eneaked oB and O'Leary awarded the first prize to Schmehl. A general cry of In- dignation was made against the ruling, as O'Leary had no right In the world to award any prizes, as be was a con- testant and a badly-osed-op one at that, Ooyoa bolng only 10 seconds behind him at the finish. We measured the track next morning, and tound It SOD yards over length In tbe 60 miles, and it waa very heavy, as it was only finished twenty mlnnteo before the start. O'Leary wrote a letter to Dr. Dunn, the holder or the medal, telling him to Sn It to Sehmehl, and Dunn did as directed. The Execn. ve Commlctce last night met and passed resolutions con- demning O'Leary. and Jndges fjculley and Morrison and Alderman Daly wen appointed to get np a medal and award Smith first prize, and present blm with a testi- monial, stating that Smith won (airly. I will send yon a statement mm the papers, as tbe matter to not yet ended, and O'Leary haa lost a gnat many friends by his action. Respect,, Cfus. E. Danaa. BICTCIOfi wa. HOBBE. We find this ln Zand md Water: I am furnished with a remarkable account of a race be- tween a horse and two bicyclists—one Cnaa Terroot, tbe champion of Prance, and the other M. Oraatln or the Vealnet, for a bet oOjOlrsnca. It waa run orar the first- rate road which crosses the forest ot St. Germain, near Paris (almost ln a straight line), from the gate close to the station, through Lea Logea. aa far aa the bridge of Le Cooflens. St. Honorlne. a distance of 11,030 metres (six miles 1,900 yards). Tbe horre led at first, but wss soon passed by Terront, who. wben the rail- way lines were crossed (not without awful jerking to both machines and carriage), went to the trout at a ran pace, and succeeded ln beatlog the exhausted animal by 26s. Time taken by Mr. Fiquet, Judge of the race: Cbae. Terronu 20m. 26a. beat performance oftbe kind on recorsl: bone. 20nv2s*,: Grassln, 21m. Terront'e time ror six miles waa 17m. 28a. What do our fast Iron-steed riders aay to thla ume T UoQbegob vs. Teublow.— The 25-mlle walk- ing match between Van McGregor and Sydney Thurlow, for a gold medal, was decided at the M. A. 0. Grounds, this city, Nov. 9. The first five miles were accomplished by HcQregor ln Mm Msec., leading his opponent by 600 yards. The ten miles wero walked ln lb. Mm. lOsec., McGreg- or at this time being ahead nine laps, or 1 mile and 220 yards, his opponent showing signs of dls tress. McGregor walked fifteen miles ln 3h. 2m issec., Thurlow falling more ln the rear. Here McGregor went off the track tor fifteen minutes, to change socks, eto. Twenty miles were gone over by McGregor in 4h. 10m., he at this time being two miles ln trout of his man. On the twenty-second mile Thurlow, seeing that his chance was hopeless, gave up, and McGregor fin , lehod the distance ln 5h. 17m. Msec. Timekeep- er, Dr. Goodman: umpires, W. B Brown for Mc- Gregor, L. Qlbney tor Thurlow; referee. Jack Oouldlng. Tax TTkrat made by the Eagle Hose Co. of Green- field, Mass., last month, 040 yards, laying 300 feet ot regulation hose, screw couplings (three roll turns), eight men. Including plpeman and hy- drant-man, light cart, standing start, slightly down grade, waa lm. 20XS., aa we are Informed by Foreman Blocomb, who also Incloses ln his communication a certiflcate as to the genuineness of the performance, to whlah the names of the starter. Judges and timekeepers are attached. At the previous tournament there Boee Co. No. S ot Northampton took first prize ln lm. 20*ea.. and It was to excel this that the Eagles ran. »..S52 ODHOS *?° AaTTMasToiTB ran another ex- hibition race, distance two miles, tor the cham- pionship, at Glasgow, Bootland, Oct, 18. Odds ot o to 4 were offered against each man by the book- makers, hut the tew people present were chary ot invesung. LIviiigBtone finished first by a yard, his time, Sm. 33s., being ia><o. slower than wben Ouramliigs ran Me present conqueror to » etand- SHU, in June last. Afterwords Cummlnga chal- lenged Uvtogstone to run him the samedlstanoe tor a big st ake, either ln xsTjgland or rJoouandT TBZ WBB3TL1BG ifATCB, collar-and-elbow holds, between John W. Babshaw and L. A. IX«n". took place at the Globe Theai^clevelxji^O Nov 4 It ended In a wrangle, TJoane olaJjnlng that he had ljeen unfairly treated, as the first referee had given the flnt fall against blm ln vio- lation ot tbe rules, and the second referee (tha rS5.L 0t .flJn nB f .? UWactlen l he^SnledhtoWo tails tp which he yea entitled through Babshaw breaking his hold to save himself. UedaSlnZt to continue, and Eabensw wslawtr^ed tte i^ait TTTJC HABD HfrBABBT . F . HOOK ABD LADDER CO Ot Leominster Mass., recently ran a trial tor speed twenty rrjgularmembers. paid by^ town Van! """•""•a « rods from, a b^dinfTio the truck, returning to building with It, splicing lad- der. ptaclngroot-ladder anTman on^ejt^eln i ,orwar 2 yjZ." V* 0 "! by Ohlef-englneer BpaulS. lug and aBmat ant-en glneers Damon and Dtiant. ■*^n? J f? 0 E3 a ?? plAoe at U»e Havens- ^Xven^^STdlctp^eo 5 S %^s%SZ n S 3 '2! i ' 3 - Thee. B^wi. Astoria. 0^ fn?m ' 0rwn P<>™«.dJ^rtaJjjlr^; toVTih mil os^rs^plr ^tak? ^ FTttt - kmJfl BioTOU THrrr fTn fifty V«S erklndln , over a halt i , winner's Ume ^ Wfg, Capps. propxttaaPot the Blch [g and Shooting taallery, offered 'ling 'during thej past month a upuaaaraaxrt ptlsaA and M In gold as the setjond. The first was won by Mr. Nether land, aad lbs fsBeond. by O. J. XotutCxtstla; Tax WBaVTLTBS ObabkoBbBIP.— James Qwemg and Chas. Connor on Nor. S signed artlclsa'and posted a forfeit ot $250 aside, wa are told,1ora collar-and-elbow wrestling match, best two In three fair back-falls, which is fixed to take place at Beethoven Hall, Boston, Not. 30. Tbb mBTtraB half-mile foot-race, between D. J. Boas ot Quebec, Canada, and Michael McCarthy,- came off on the Fair Grounds, Lowell, Mass,, oa SJatnrday, Nov. 9, Boss allowing McCarthy Uyda. Stan. Boss won ln Sm. Wit. The track was rough. Btakas. f 60 a side. A waVaTLiaTa xatcx, Gneco-Boman, best two ln three falU, catch-weight, tor tlOOasldeaad gate-money. Is announced as having been mads by Frank Boblnaon and Luelen Marc, to take place at Saunders' Hall, L&wTenoe, Mass., Nov. 99. W. H. Holt defea t ed A. W. Oerry ln a three- mile walk for a pair ot walking-shoes on Boston Common, Mass., Nov, a. Gerry gave np on the last tulle, and Holt finished ln 39m. The winner stands Stt, lln. ln height and weighs but Sin. J. BJ. MoLATOsOJX and John MoMahon have at Last made a match to wrestle, collar-and-elbow, for one thousand dollars a Bids, at MeOonnlck Hall, Chicago, DL, on Saturday evening, Nov. 16. A. W. Longley la final stakeholder. J. E. Wabbubtoh's tmav.r.wwnw to run any amateur one mile level, and give various starts up to fllty miles before he retires, haa been ac- cepted by John 8mlth aa regards tha mile, and by W. O. Davles at tour miles. Fbarx l. BiaBABOSoa last week attempted to walk 2*0 miles ln 73 hours at Springfield, Mass., and Is alleged to have had five minutes to spare at the close. 8, H. HlLLXB the sprinter, who was at Ply- mouth, Mich., Nov. 7, herewith returns '»■»»• to Fred Emerlck for favors received while ln Ypel lano. OBAS, A. HiBBnfiW and Chas. P. Daniels have been matched to walk twenty-five miles, tor $300, at Boston, Mass., on Monday, Nov. 35. Johh Hughes, aUaa "Greenhorn," has opened a saloon at No. 29 East 27th street, opposite Gil mote's Garden. EEZ3T the bicycle champion rode 18J£ miles ln an hour at Cambridge, Eng., Oct. 23. BASEBALL. TBB Ia-KAGIJK ClatUB AVBEAOES. Tbe foUowiog u« Ui« officii] iTrjrmi of the awUty-a>8T«n plAjen woo took p*rt la the Leacoe club « , h»mp W-hl p m*tfhwduring IBM, end who played In Hi ormoregimei i. lMlrrnple, MUwuk«e. 7. Bines. noTldeiie*.... 5. StaVrt, ChlCaxjTO 4. Sli*iTer, Jatllanapolla.. 6. Anmmx, Chicago - 6. Ptnp»oa t ObXcMfQ...., 7. Pike, CliieljiuiJur. a BlgbeALProTldenee 9. Brown, Providence... la P«t«i^_uuwmokew.... 11. Tork, Prorldenoe U. Dickenon. ClAclBauU 13. J. White, Olndntutl... Ii. Oerlieidft. CmclaDmU.. IV Hubidge, C^cexo.... 16. Jones. CliiclniAaUr. 17. Clspp. Indlsnspolu.. 18. McVey, Clncliuisxl.. 19. l^stla, Cblcikgo 20. Ke.ley, Clnclnnstl... 21. O'Rourke, Boston. .. 22. roler.MUwsnkee.... 5. Hsnkinson, Cbieago. 24. AHlMD,pTovldejice.... 33. CtaJtlldj', OtalCSkgO , 26. Burdock. Boston , 27. Lconsxd, Boston 2& Molan. IndlSAspolle.., 29. SiAllmn, Clneinnstl.., 30. HsJnnsn, Chics^n 31. Cevrajy, Provldenee...., 32. xejs* t iTTl nT. Boston..*... SI Mltohell, anclnutl.. 34. aoxrdmSan.Ullwa.akee. U. Bennett, HUvmake*.. 36. Warner, bdlsaupolls. 37. MornJl, Boston 3& Unnisn, Prorldence... 39. Rjemseii. Chlcmgo 4a Rswdmond. MUwsukee. 41. Flint,liidlsiispolla.... 42. SottoD, Boston 43. Wright, Boston 44. WUlTsmsota. Indlan^ls. 41 McttelTy, jj^lsnspolls 46. Mc CI ell to. Chicago... 47. Oeer, Olndnnatl.... 48l Qaest. IndLsAapolls. 49. Snjder. Boston AO. Bond. Boston. BL Cramer. Milwaukee.. A2, Hsjpie, Providence.... 03. Ward, ProTldsoee 64. Golden, kfUwankee.... 65. WttareT.HUwankee... 06. HoivjLo»UUwraiikee... 37. Holt-art, MUwanke*... 68. Nichols. Prorldence... 69. flweasr. Protldenee.., 60. Healy, Indlaaapolls. . 6L Croft, Tndianapoilfl.... 62. Po wen* Chicago..;, 63. Cory, ProTldeivce.., 64. Wheeler, PMTldence.. 63. McCormiek. Ind'nap 1 ^, 66. W. White, Cincinnati. 67. Nelson, IndlanspoHe. wberittslsut^r^* rooms, la, w?^- M " ware rooms. a till DQ .else tli 'cb,s^.^^s5S»i Js? !^^^a9lSW The nine nret named In tbe above list excel In batting araragea. while tbe leading nine ln fielding- averages of tbose who played In a majority of their elnb matches are Sullivan, Start, Decree Wright, Ooodman, Banuen. Mnr- nan, Clepp, Burdock and Hague. IsBACIXJB II.1E OAHK9. Tbe returned Leaone^lab players now ln the city played a picked nine nnder the name of the Pljawara on election day at the Union Grounds, Brooklyn, with the appended result: Lauoira. R. lB.ro.Aal Fltawat. a. 1b.po.i_x. Caaeldy.r.f.... 1 110 0 Anderson,3db. 0 0 13' Pike, U. 1 1 4 0 0 Knodell. a. e... 110 6 Kelly, e 2 2 3 0 3|Cramer.e 0 0 3 0 Ferguson, 2d b. 1 114 0 Walker, 1st b.. 0 ISO Nelson... s.... 1112 0 slcCann, p 0 0 0 2 Hanklnaon, Sb. 1 3 13 llBhloee, 2d b... 0 0 11 Larkln. p 110 2 1 Holden. LI....0 13 0 Bemsen, lstb.. 2 3 7 0 0]8m 1th. c I .... 0 0 i 0 I Brown, r. f 0 0 1 0 Totals 10 11 18 11 4l Totals.. T-eagne 0 6 0 Flyaway u 0 0 Buns earned—T-ascne. 4; F" rort—League, 4; Flyaway, 1. lb. 39m. Tbe other games were postponed on account of cold weather. ; Flyaway, U Umpire, Mr. Frank. .1 3 18 11 3 3 0—10 0 0 I— First base by er- " Time, NATION AX, vs. BAI.TIMOIUEC. The Baltlmoreana visited Wash in ((ton, D C. Kov. v. and played a tie game of fire innlnga with tbe Nationals. NaTUMval, B. 1B.FO.A.B. Honclca a 3 2 13 3 Baker, I. f. 2 2"- Oernardt, 2d b. 2 2 Bnyder. c 0 1 McQraw. 1st b.. 0 0 Chambers, e. f. 0 1 Kenny, r. r. 1 0 Trott, 3d b 1 2 Pierce, p 0 0 Totals., .. 9 10 IS 11 13 BALTiaOBS. Dlckerson. L, f. 1 Wood,c r..... 3 Say. a a 2 p...i- rji b.... a Smiley, 2d b... 1 Brana, r. f. 0 Bmltb,lstb.... 0 Matthews, p... 1 Molten, o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 _ 2 12 Totals.. .9 3 16 8 17 TUB CUP-PICK PRIZES. The time la at hand whan the reports from the secretaries or scorers of dabs of the International championship arena, cvrlna the fleldiDc atarlstlcs or their respective fielders, will be doe at this office, ihese returns being re- quired In order that we mar award the cold badges for the best play in each ot the nine positions or the frame. The conditions froveminfc the award ot these nine prises were pablished ln onr lame ol laarch 30 last, and ther should be strictly abided by, in order to present a record which will enable the dub-player* to be eligible ror tbe award of any ot tbe prlzea Thus, for instance, ln the estimate of chances to pat pLayers ont by assistance, no credit Is to be allowed a pitcher for a fleldlng a s si stan ce In the case or a batsman being-pot oat on strikes; nor Is an error tn be charred to the pitcher when a batsman takes hla base on called balls. The olne prizes will be awarded on the basis ot tbe best araraxe or percentage of ehancea to pnt players ont by fielding ae- ceeted trom all tbe chances offered. The prire-banner offered la now In thla office, and raadr to be awarded to tbe dab winning the International championship. w Thx MrLWADXix Cura.—Onr c ot r e sp ondent at Mllwan. kee. Wla.. reports ss follows: "The assertion la Ttte cnt- coeo Tribune Nor. 3 to tbe effect that tha Milwaukee Club had not been paid In full, and eoneeqnentlv would not be npruented ln tbe League next yea<. Is entirely without foundation. Every member of tne dub haa been par'' loll, with the exception or Peters. He deliberately lated his contract by refusing to play when ordered, and e club haa been paid In tely vlo- immediately departed for Chicago, where be played eev- oral games with the Chlcacoa. This la the whole cause ol the opposition to tha entrance or the Milwaukeee " Joftsra Srsisf oira, formerly manager tor tbe Bochester BasebUl Club, advertise, elsewhere toat ne Is open lor an e ngag ement Thx ex is a ums In onr care for Mr. SoJUran, catcher of the Worcester B. B. O. BILLIARDS. BRETTTIBg, W. A. Miller, tor many years manager of the room at the American Hotel, Philadelphia, bas purchased a bait Interest In Aronaon's room, that city Tbe Brunswick. <t Balke Co. have a elx-by-twelve table on exhibition at their ware- rooma. thla city E. j. pinnkett Is this week to open a room ln Philadelphia with Ave of H. W. Oollender*s tables Obarles Henry Fease keeps a room at No. 789 Eleventh avenue, tbls dry. On election night a crowd of men came In, and after a while fell to fighting with Fease. James Carroll and Isaao Brown so belabored blm with their flats and with ones and balls that his skull was broken, and he will prob- ably die. Coroner Ellinger took his ante-mor tern statement on Nov. 12, and leaned war- rants for the arrest ot the two men The three-ball matoh between Schaefer and Sloe- eon, to whlah we adverted last week. Is to be play- ed at the North-side Turn Hall, Chicago, on Nov. 20. Schaefer la practicing tor it aaalduonaly—ln fact, all the time. One day last week he played 1,000 np twice with Balnea and ouce with Dexter —3,000 ln all. Fifteen, years ago It could be pre- dicted with safety ot a player who practiced eo heavily for a pending match that he wonld lose It to a certainty; but tbeywere matches ln those days, while now "nobody can't tell no thin' 'bout anythln'." Henry Dunbar, F. A. Lntman and Bobt. H. Huston on Kov. 4 were elected to the Phil- adelphia Professional BllllarOVplayers' Associa- tion, which now haa twenty-throe active members. Boston Is to have a new room, with eight of Collender'a tables, It Is announced Maurice Daly has been giving exhibitions In 8tv Louis with fair success "Tank" Adams is to open In Philadelphia on the lstb Inst Between Wahlsirom, Bloaaon and Bcbaafer, there is no reason that Chloago should not be happy, particu- larly the ahort-enders therein. ■ eloh. tht attsiMann.'J* •■» « E«£?edejibtJnj7 twelve miichs - thMtbeylnxt aaooidileveT tnay ware sneussnu. laimneb sTu. Slal^ eKS! atplendld 8eldaB4aS5 aaa**-** we-UI-ailaO OICklL TasaTsaTiTi" Fark^SS^TOy^^S •^S^^axrtataly^t.^ftft Wh.at—a.y,,,, ^^saaslj On June 19 tha eloh las a - Park, in wbuh the ^n{atav^. , ! ars'ta am. winning ii^SPg9* \j££H mm on tbe wtiatttixSs * 4 •WBL* j OnJuneKtielljwiwL, "*» Island am •\mn^£5£J t J*t ska s_ ^ s^l lottr-lMleS^itJ^^S erta'21 and « t»uStjVlen^^«« sa&xSa^ jr^&s&s*!^ "bt Theb? lastrams la P MutSf* onJnly6.which tame iljsv^rsei? , » S2« * , J8 L." n « OUtTvistjaJliJVL 1 Newum-s is the best on the otkiaaf" On Jolr 9 the second X3f£* rastch of the season. tSS^aSii!!* Island aseond etertiZvlilni B!25J by 7i to aa. niie^siii^ B r'£S! battan score. J TBjnkMtSiXlS^m On Jnly 18 the llrst eLS aT^aljti George Clobs mrttt rn£Et*Aig** Mask battens won by 10) to 4lT„ with 31, and Giles that or BtTJ On Aog. 5 tbe xsnniaanisa, pect_Fark, and were dtieatad fVSTZ^'m the Detroit teamhyols axrs3 wSJ 1 1 bes«on the olher tO^T ™" ^asBsrli .On Aug. a the n tuhj ,v defeated the old ruanm SkSSStSt In. one tide with vfiSl Sj^aVS. 1 * The last nrst-sleven mstdTerra.ffifsa played sapu 28, when uirinailt l il B S'« pbla at rToipeet Tut. liVn^TSS. hoaan's sa waa tbs leaan of a! HuHF* lead Ins on the other skis vuh m On Oct. 10 ths aaogial aJsvsn Its eh. George second slsru bt O to5 tSZ H-TuckersJD and autSli On Oct. 19 the HsalsilxsmdsvasTli. with the Staten lalanaClahTsa^aur. 'hescores stood itrsaodtiuausai,?^ Island. Banc, led rmh a IsndSaiSri on the other sidewtUi t and u~"™*« _ . , TBB CLUB ATaBaiBX . Th * bartlnc avsnws of Un thbloTS—J BATTING ATERAQEH D flMJIIJTr7|l FLxrxaa. W. Scott W. Brewster J. Kogan S. E. Haai'ord R. Ol«| O. Scott B. F. Jenkins 8. H. UaHn B. Hooper C 11. Hiddleton 1a. Lore H. Tncker C H. Tyler W. Chippendale C. W. jsekaon E- O. Ames BOWLIXO ANALTLSB QT BOWUBS. L W. Brewster.... 1 B. Oreht i B. E^osfora'.'.'.' 3. C. W. Jackson.. 6L R. Boeper , 7. B. T. Jenkins... THE TURF. BX0680W TB. WAHLSTBOat.—The fU:teen-baH-pool match between these experts, for the benefit.of Ohlcagoans, was played sooner than was contem- plated when It waa entered Into. It took place at the North-side Turn Hall on the night of Nov. «. and Bloaaon, to whom was given the odds of the fifteen bell, won twenty-one games while Wahl- stromwMiosJjv eighteen. The announced etaka RACme AT JaOsWA'l Tbe elexnlon-dayraees at hrwlh ham, N. T., were rery largely at " standing that tbe weather rm& and nlstera and warm wrapt tl The racing was good, andontats one was won by a farorUe. Thi for (300, allowances for do fourths ot a mlla fbnr sSaitt E. alternately leading ip to I pole, wben Simon and 8iaTuk them, Uie former going by suds before Pique; BaaqniihADEa It' last. Time, 1:18. The horse i was the favorite, while IS tol vat! tbe winner The Hotel tab*. sweepof $30eACh,STBadaedt);t1»lt Delmonloo'a and BrnnawlckHateY three-quartere, had three itsnm,* being looked upon with aofl Irsr close struggls between hhnsod 1 from end to eod tennlnAtr^lnlMs latter by a half length, lftiiittbiff^' hadachance. Time,3JI—At"" mile and an eighth, for 1400, I LorlHard, brought oot tin 1 Bertha (921b) took the lead boai (105) at tbe end of a fnrlonijBJ"L well In front till the end; Warnsia 8uequebanna third by two laarisj,"" fourth, and Bonnie Wood (KB)1»* I Betting before tbe "tart;In*'" Bertha A telling raceotr-"'" eight starters, was next -I* Blmoon easily won this ra oe, m v and Nannie H. flOO) warefxT X" of the former being denrrflWi fore tbe start. Albert 006) tiia Hlgglns aOO) third, l»a^ B.wa ilfth, Hiss Sfatloy (84) »b3k >af5 seventh, and Pique last, A three-quarter-mile dash. D Startle (110) and Klr^stto P being a warm favorite, w» J by three lengths. Inil *, jW > distance A baU-mUedeABP P. Lortllard, followed, toT&W'- Belle Helens (107) wi» J"J2Cb determined fight for a™**? 1 ,- beat her out by «^^^Jainil Die Wood aOTlthlrd.andWariJlil^a 0:50... .Tbe closing rw >t» ■ chase. 3700, over ««» "™L (166) led trom start to fiwai, j nnlshlDg second, *MX. THE DDK OF xUOESTAjBjgJj ebrated three-year-oWthoresgni. trom this port for ^tf'S^i.i arteamsblpEgrvt. Heljo)^ I lam Brown and oneor tTSTilt the care ot horses on thewam Barrett, Hughes ^ESZfr' trainer are PaasetiaWJban thing possible to roMf* during the voyage was » receive tbe beetof earafol riving in Englandhewffl W^' possible to NeWTnarts^**^, stable-comrasnloM Fartg^i previously sent °^;^niTl> tared ln theBprlM that hewiu "^i^^rtaaa-, tag. minis -w^ff^ — J r^ormejices will bs oir TW O-TBalj Jane g-ftecond 10 Isj* 1 " Jerome Fark. bsWaojTjiJJ, Joly24-WonFllASlasa»". JoiySl-Secood to Brsauj three-quarters of sm^-K^f ttsf" August ll-«atpiHl taJ'aSaasi" tacky Stakes stfsrsiofa. — Aogast 16-Desd heuawws togiwiui 8rautstihrssa«« 1,D (urlusd; S637.M. ^ saj»« September »T»iVlW thr»iqoarten • f s ""«•',"i iei* ' 1I8B71 :*»•«, nut s"«^" Jena 8—Woo IVhajJiJr^ ahaltllaB^^Krf^ra,^ •S S-lMsten by spw" S perbv, voiles.edabsB^, jt 'Wsiwon'laSefa--- haiai8tbJ:3»':*L!»„ Oct S-Won J^ three-quarters, 'i&fMim*^ llntt.341: ralttf VgLA»*f* rn^.Mj^^ TUB WISH*** 8 "*5 and to ^ r * ^ thiw>' William OUes.rwas ak'i^fias^W^ andWin-xaJbar!,^ ^landf^^^aio.* 1 naring oommlj***'