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Show Robbed of Twenty Thousand. LORD LONSDALE. A Minneapolis, Minn., July 7. bold daylight robbery has Just come to FIELD & ROLLU, The British Noblemans Trip toths to the Times says : Publishers. Last Tuesday Henry Hade, who Icy Regions of the North. There has been a strange and Umost light came here for the purpose of marrying NEPHI CITY, Lord Lonsdale, bronzed by Arctic einster silence UTAH. on the week during tig g. suns, arrived in this city a few days tinent which recently was so disturb by Miss Rena Dysep, left the house in order to get shaved. He found the barber out, the New York World, after evil dreams and throbbings of th TnE little prayer beginnin Now I ago says and started homeward again, and was achis tramp of over 12,000 miles in the drum. lay me down to sleep was written by costed by a stranger who told him he was frozen reigon of the north. Young Emperor William is alone witl a barber John Rogers, the martyr. and would take him to his house I left here, he said, on the his on the 7th gloomy stillnessof tb thoughts and him. On the way the stranger shave of March of last year, and while Norwegian fords and glacial palisade anl Prince Bismarck now devotes n day away Ive traveled 12,000 miles. I to the tenor of these thoughts vve bjye n threw a quantity of vitriol in Hade's face. The victim was then carried ten miles great deal of time to playing solitaire. started with a valet and favorite dog, signs. into the woods, robbed of 20,000 and This was a favorite game of Napoleon but at Green lake, 500 miles north of The Czar, too, is away with his wife am away Winnipeg, I had to send them home family in an equally close seclusion ini bound to a tree. Hade remained in the try home on account of the cold. woods bound and unconscious for three The to realize that he is a human being fte purpose of my trip was to obtain speciGeorge W. Smalley, says Consul-Generdays. On Friday he succeeded in freeing on of instead a the ii wheel fly all, driving New, can easily save $10,000 mens, information as to localities, spe- the enormous and terrible mechanism o himself and wandered home. He has not from the fees of his London oflice in cies of birds, and varieties of game in the Russian Government. yet regained perfect consciousness, and the northern latitude! Though I may become four years. deranged. which the forces llut went in the interest of the Scottish ceaselessly weavi There is no permanently clue to the thieves. The Naturalist society it was virtually a and spin underneath these figurehead ari 20,000 wa3 in two negotiable drafts, one Queen Victoria still has her boots sporting trip. My reasons for return- uot resting. German officials are doggedl; made in the way elastic ing by the way of Montreal were to keeping alive the quarrel forced upon little on Milwaukee; the other on New York banks. sides, soft kid uppers, pointed collect the specimens I had left at difSwitzerland with a view to preserving t ferent points on my way out. and low heels. These pretext for hurling an army corps across Aithur Richmond Letters. specimens I found at Montreal weighed the Jura Pass when war comes. The Rus- The The Countess Crosy of the old nobil- over two tons. I had no thought of sian officers are no longer deigning to dis- New York, July 8. The Commerity of Austria has gone on tho road reaching the north pole. It was not a guise makers, but are swarming up the cial Advertiser says: Within the past All that I wank'd with her circus troupe. She will lake polar expedition. was to go as far as I believed animal Danube past the Roumanian towns intc decade there has been no event in the to it Paris before the exposition closes. life existed or as far as I could see Kervia, und one party of fifty actually American world of letters which provoked landed Wednesday at Draiia and closely such wide comment or excited so large a signs of animals. M. Carnot, president of the French Do you think the north inspected the fortifications the Rouman- measure of curiosity as the publication in be can pole ians have built there. the North American Review of tho series republic, in his youth served a regular reached? asked the reporter. I do. The Servian uutbories have got a hint t of letters to prominent persons under the was the prompt apprenticeship in a carpenters shop, , Certainly If a man wants to reach the dissemble their readiness to overthrow num de plume of Arthur Richmond. and is a clever craftsman at that trade. reply. pole he can do so, but he must not the Obrenovitz dynasty, and accordingly The two distinctive characters of the lettravel with a party. The voyage the boy king is cnee more .being salsamet ters were the extreme bitterness of perHenry W. Sage of Ithaca, N. Y., must be made large by sleds and not by open has just made another donation of $300-00- 0 sea. The great trouble has been that to. But the work of getting ready to di sonal and partisan feeling which they betrayed and the marked excellence and for the endowment of a library for large parties have been sent out only Russias bidding goes on untiringly. Here in Loudon the diplomatists believ vigor of their literary form. Shortly afCornell university, this last bequest to fail. To roach the pole the party in war more than they did when the scan ter the recent death ol Allen Thorndyke not number above three. bringing up the total of his gifts to mustWhat was at its highest ten days ago. Rice an attempt was made to establish the do you think of Alaska? that institution to about $1,000,000. The southwestern part of Alaska I Perhaps the public man in Europe whin- fact that he was not only responsible for found very valuable in seal, timber, -lie ves most firmly that a great arme the publication but had written the Arthur An American lady who was at the and minerals. I don't believe the recrash is coming is the Pope. He got pri Richmond letters. We have unimpeuch. writes: lastdrawing-rooThe queen ports that gold-fielabound in groat vatc news some days ago, some say Iron able authority that this series of letters is a homely little woman, but she has numbors. Vienna, others from Warsaw, and stil were written by Julian Hawthorne and Did you suffer from the cold? others from a secret friend in the qmrina Gail Hamilton. the loveliest hands I ever saw white, No, not as much as I expected. at Rome, which threw the whole Vaticai and soft as velvet. She There was one thing that annoyed me into an immediate panic. wears a few rings, and all of them more than the cold. Nobody exeep 1hat was the the cardinals, who are sworn The Sioux Commission. to secrecy small; no large stones or flaring gems. In the Arctic seas they mosquitoes. know exactly what this news was, but it i are simply dreadful. Crow Creek Agency, S. D.,July 9. so are They certain that it was a wamini was anothercouucil this afternoon. Kinglake, the English historian, thick at times that the sun is darkened practically There that war is on the way. who is now 78 years old, is not in by them. Ghost, Drifting Ghost aud Bulj It is believed, too, that this hurriedl; White But was a it went withal," jolly trip on the part of the Indians, and Ghost good health, lie used to say that he on his spoke I have had to eat summoned council discussed a plan of re would die as soon as his Invasion of some lordship. complained generally of the failure of the tho see at once hard from odd holy moving stuff, sleep in them justly, thatthey the Crimera was finished; but this places,pretty and take considerable abuse indications point to Valencia as th Government to treat a owned vast formerly territory, and that presentiment happily came to naught, from the natives, but I have learned a place of refuge most favorable. Nothin; his last volume having been completed great deal, and I hope my report on more definite than this has come to ligh, their lands had dwindled without their getthis trip will prove of interest to the as yet, but anything for it until they had but litin 87. developments are likely toconu ting Scottish Naturalist society. Ive been tle left, and now we are asked to sell part soon. of that. The other night a burglar got into in camps where the natives told me no very ever been before, and The Constitutional Election in Governor Foster, Major Warner and the house of a Bay City man named white man-haI've crossed a peninsula with the oold General Crook each spoke, giving reasons ming. Jackson, and made such a noise that 30 below zero, that the natives to why the act of Congress should be acNews. he awoke Mrs. Jackson. Sho got out saiddegrees could not be done, and to attempt Special the Denver cepted, acknowledging that the Indians had 8 Thi of bed, picked up a bed-sla- t, Cheyenne, Wyo., and it would be to give up my life. July But I doubtless grounds to complain of past When I election for delegates to the convention P banged the burglar over tho he id. did cross it, and here I am. treatment, which it was impossible now to a form for constitution reached I State Pacific the Then she fainted, and the midnight theproposed slope learned for but the Government proposed to rectify, visitor escaped, while Jackson still the first time that the report had gone of Wyoming was held throughout the Te- treat them fairly. out that I had met with a severe acciThere was a general desire rritory slept At the conclusion of the council those in dent which was likely to result in my in both parties to relieve the election imThe report came about in this of its partisan features. The ele- favor of tho bill began signing. It is It is stated that Pigott had his life death. : to result what the will way be, say possible just ction was as an event in whicli insured for the sun of 1,00.) in tho regarded I win with a party of Inbut at this hour the prospect for getting traveling had no or direct immediate connec. polities Scottish and law Life Insur- dians. wfc bn two of them got lost. English I is not encouragthe requisite ance offices, and paid the premiums spent tw ) days looking for them and tion. The main desire was to secure a good The lilies are diawn as ing. apparently constitution, und as the best way of securegularly up to the last. No claim has when foi nd one of them had fallen into ring it the election of is less of bitter feel, there last year,though men was con. good I yet been made upon the company. a crevic and had broken his leg. ing between the two factions. brought (he fellow back to camp and sidered necessary. The is can it not suicide, said, Pigolts some means or other it went out idea prevailed generally throughout tie by affect the policy, as it 'has been over that it wus I i it cry Although the that had met with tha Colorado's School Population-- . five years in existence. in yUuurw-nuitlcsCident. there were in The recently completed school cenLord r ml Lady Lonsdale, wih udeTr county .other overwhelmingly Mme. Ratazzi affected a gushing and sons of Arctic curiosities, sa'ocj l(v I or overwhelmingly Democratic, sus shows the population of the State be. p ! . to be passionate love for her second husband, England on the Celtic. hrhe only fight, therefore, in most of the tween. the ages of six and twenty-ontestified by girlish demonstrations, This is a gain of nearly 10,000 over counties was at the nominating convention, Mi, Itcliisoniau I'hilosopy. where good representative citizens were last year. The following are the figures kissing him in public, etc., and even The is that turns trodden so almost far when that she only invariably put in fhe field. The by counties going invited a on more heavily than before. vote in the Territory, but particularly in party of twelve to dinner she had only The a veruge man nevor looks up the counties where fusion tickets were in eleven chairs in the room, so that she the field, was extremely light, the people was compelled, as she archly expressed without teeing something he hates. An enemy can always do you harm, being very well satisfied with generally it, to sit in her old mans lap." but a friend can not always do you the work of the nominating conventions. good. In cases of fusion, as in this county, the During his sojourn at the czars You he ir many strange things apportionment between tho two parties winter palace the shah of Persia occu- wore itmight not for the fear that you will was made on the basis of the vote cast at pied rooms magnificently furnished. tell. the last election for Relegates in Congress. Do not offend. Every offense a man There will be a Decorations of red silk, enormous vases Republican majority in the commits makes one more defense for convention. of malachite, and doors mado of tortofor his ise-shell enemy. pleasod his oriental taste. There is some excuse for the man Bowen's Good Fortune, Fifteen carriages and forty horses who has no conscience; it is said that From the Denver Hepub cau. were placed at his disposal. He is conscience only makes a man coward- Thomas M. Bowen retraveling with a retinue of fifty-fiv- e ly; the two cars of ore he from returns ceived persons. The worst passions are occasionally of use to society; jealousy has caused brought up from his Golconda property Prof. Mommsen, the historian, who thieves to fall out and tell on each yesterday. A Republican reporter tried to learn the particular sum in which the will soon be 72 years old, expresses other. was written, but the Senator waived check himself with his e Death to a man does not seem sadvigor, it seems. A Berlin correspondent quotes dest in extreme youth or in extreme tho question as something entirely too him as saying of the Samoan commisage, but at the age that is nearest to trilling to talk about. A particular friend of Mr. Bowen was sion and its work: The controversy his own. aud from this gentleman however, found, The Bible the Lord made that says relative to Samoa is a strife which is man in his own we can there it was learned that theGoleonda washable The Governors Scored. unworthy of men. For my part I fore boleive the image: statement that the to make as great a reputation for itself as would not give a glass of Bavarian Lord is New Orleans, July 6. The Stale did the San Juan Consolidated in lsSl. At jealous. Men are. beer for all the islands in the Pacific Man thinks that if ho ever gets out that time the Little Ida, one of the group says editorially Tho marvelous military genius disocean. of one trouble he will never get in sent to market two cars of ore that netted" but a week of good luck the Senator more than 100,000. The Gou played by Governor Lowry. of Mississippi, another, Miss Laura White, who graduated makes him as foolish as ever. conda is on the same mountain, and many and Governor Nichols, of Louisiana, in r.t Michigan university in .architecture We all dislike the deutist who insists believe on the same vein as the Little Ida their combined efforts to suppress the and afterward studied the same sub- that we look cheerful while having a If, as is rumored, it has disclosed a prize fight served but to lend pocket ject in Paris, is now practicing her tooth pulled, but it is a fair sample of of rich ore, it will be a great thing for Del cdt it to as flagrant a violation of law and order as was ever committed. Governor Norte as well as for the ex Senator. profession in Ashland, Ivy. She is not the good advice going around. best all time the is like Doing your The Summit district in which the Lowry, after his military fiasco.can gather only an architect but a skilled mathea requisition upon the wearing your ISunday clothes on a matician. She was the first student at week group is located has been neglected his wit9 and issue soon forget that they of late State where Sullivan of people day; any Governor years. It contains thousands upon Ann Arbor to solve a problem that are your best clothes and backers may he found had been sent over by one of the great to wear something better. expeot you thousands of tons of low grade quartz and Kilraiu and their with careful treatment, should re- and have them apprehended and brought which English universities. Success brings in its train a great hack to Mississippi to he punished accorda number of additional cares. The presi- turn at least small profit, hut the regioi he shall then sot is but isolated not short only seasons are ing to law. The example When J. G. Binglow, a Washington dent is the busiest man in the United recurrence of a to deter more do will the rule However, there is Lig j,ay 0c pension attorney, rose last week to States, and his troubles are so numerthan the combined lawlessness vesterday's a mountain for the with company that he tenses about at night and capital argue a pension case involving the in- ous and some day it will quite likely be heard armies of Louisiana and Mississippi which moans in his sleep. crease of twenty-on- e an element of supreme from pensioners Tho same instinct that causes all from as one of the honuna camps of Colo- yesterday added $36 to $72 per month with allowances blunder of the funny tho urrant to ridicule to chase a stray cur from tho rado. for arrears Commissioner Tanner re- dogs pair of Governors. country causes the men to say mean Iht eighth national convention oi marked to him: If you can show me things to amiable people. When a big It is thought that President llarri- a shadow of law to warrant mo in giv- bull dog walks down the street none of the Christian Endeavor Society began it the First Hall in Philato the attack Regiment men are Armory him; intends calling an extra session of Con son dogs long these men the highest pension I'll ing same way. Atchison Globe. delphia Tuesday. Nearly 5.000 delegates gross early in October. imperil my commission to do it and I the were there Rev. F. M. Clark f Boston want you to succeed. J. G. Binglow was elected president of the convention. Indiscretions. Rumors of a Disaster. Early won his case. "It is strange how mnn is obliged New York, July 9. Efforts to comPresidential Appointments. Spain is excited over the news that to pay for his early exposurers or indismunicate with any point within the localsaid Senator Bizco del Borge, the famous brigand, cretions, Davis, of 'Washington. July S. Tim Presi- ities of Johnstown, New York, and Amhas been killed in the Cordova moun- Minnesota, recently, while lying ill in dent this afternoon made the following ap- sterdam, where rumors would lead to the When 1 was young 1 tains. Ho was a young man of noble Washington. impression that there has been a disaster was strong and vigorous. During tho pointments: on H Thomas Cavenaugli, of Olympia, V. of no small proportion, are unavailing birth, who some years ago got into a war I constantly exposed myself to all love difficulty in Madrid and killed his sorts of weather and to numerous T., Surveyor General ol Washington Ter- account of the fact that the telegraph wires dethroughout that section have been rival. He was obliged to flee and took fatigue;. I laughei at sickness, even ritory. II Thomas Faulconcr. of Ore stroyed. a Sheridan, ns llut Ill tell you that to the mountains. Organizing a band possibility Some reports have reached here that a within the la- -t ten tears I've been pay- pen. to he .meat for the Indians of Grande of outlaws he became the most successcaused the disaster, while a more in Rondo vice B. for it. John Agency cyclone Oregon, up My that ing physician says ful brigand of modern times so far as all these twinges and almost unbear- - MeGlane, resigned serious character is given to the story by Ho was a typical able aches and Spain is concerned. Bernard ICe , of Kmpuria, Kansas, to the indefinite and as yet unconfirmed rupakis are the result of brigand of romance handsome, cul- those exposures of more than a quar- - be pension agent at Topeka. Kansas, vice mors that there has been considerable loss ter of a century ago. f fife. tured, courteous, and cruel. George V. Click. THE ENSIGN. European War Cloud. New York July 7. A Londoscable 4 j al toe-cap- s, m well-rounde- d, Bom-an- three-fourth- s wtixtir-oaSb- . e (li.-)- . : or DEATH OF MRS. TYLER. THE WORLD. The The wife of on the 10th. Tyler died 10. Mrs. John Tyler died at the Exchange The business portion of Bakersfield, Hotel this evening from congestive chills. California, was burned on the 7th. She had only been at the hotel since SunSenator Washburne, the big miller day evening aud was to have left ou Monday to visit a son on the James River. On of Minneapolis, is said to be virtually bankTuesday forenoon she was taken with con rupt. chills. Medical skill proved of no gestive The President has appointed 11. A. avail and she died at 5:15 this evening. Taylor, of Wisconsin, commissioner of railMrs. Tyler leaves four children. Lueien roads. G. Tyler, president of William and Mary's A wagon bridge to cost $149,000 College, Virginia: Gardner G. Tyler, who lives in Charles City County, Virginia; will be erected over the river at MuscaDr. Roeklan Tyler of Washington City and tine, Iowa. Mr9. William Ellis of Montgomery County. offered An English syndicate has J ulia Gardiner, second wife of J ohu Tyley New famous Delmomco's for 1,000,000 tenth President of the United States, was York restaurant. horn on Gardiners Island, near East HampIt is stated that Empei,o William ton, N. Y., in ls20. She was educated at has forbidden officers of the German army Glegary Institute, New York City, and to visit the Paris exhibition. after a short time spent in travel through Europe she came to Washington with her of the Union PaThe corner-ston- e father in 1S49. A few weeks after their cific shops at Cheyenne were laid with aparrival they accepted an invitation from 10th. on the propriate ceremonies President Tyler to attend a pleasure The resignation by General Johnexcursion down the river on the war ston of the office of railroad commissioner steamer Princeton . Tne lestivities on this has been accepted by the President. occasion were s.id'y marred by the exploCamels are to be employed on a line sion of a gun on the vessel, causing loss of of coaches in New South Wales, the sultry life. Among those killed was Miss Gardiner's father. His body was taken to the climate being' very severe on horses. White House aud Miss Gardiner was Galveston telegrams announce the thrown a great deal into the society of the fact that last y ears work on the jetties President, owing to the peculiar circumhave increased the water on the bar by six stances of her father's death. President inches. Tylers first wife had died shortly after he The young Emperor of Germany, entered the White House and he paid Miss while hunting recently in the mountains ot Gardiner marked attention, which resulted Norway, was struck by a detached portion in their marriage in New York City, June 2ti, 1844. of a glacier. For the succeeding eight months of PresThe Missouri State Board of Equaliident Tyler's term she presided over the zation has decided to assess the Pullman White House with tact, grace and dignity. palace and sleeping cars operated upon the After March 4, 1st 5, Mrs. Tyler retired roads in various that State. with her husband to tlie seclusion of their Sullivan and his crowd were ar- country piaee, Sherwood Forest, on the rested at Nashville on their way north but banks of the James River in Virginia. She were immediately released by the judge remained in Virginia until after the civil before whom they were taken. war, her husband having died about the The Rome correspondent of the In- beginning of the strife, and then went to reside at her mother's residence on Castle-todependence Reltjc says the Pope at a reHill, Staten Island. After several cent consistory advised that Cardinal residence there she removed to years' he selected as his successor. The Acting Comptroller of the Richmond. Va., July Cur- rency has authorized the Citizens National Bank at Tacoma, Washington Territory, to begin business with a capital of 000,000. At Clay Center, Kansas, Mrs. Oiney, after rescuing her two children from her burning house, returned to save some household goods. She was overcome by the heat and burned to death. The city directory of Boston for 1889 contains 192,853 names, which marks an increase of 1,100 names over the number of last year. The list is small hut select, as every person on it knows beans. Advices from Manitoba and the Northwest say that the wheat crop has been permanently injured by the dry s weather. Not more than one half or the average yield is expected. Matilda Starling (colored) died in Austin, Texas, Saturday evening. She weighed 530 pounds, and was the largest woman in America. Her case puzzled the doctors. From one of her feet came worms as large as snakes. A carload of canned fruits donated to Johnstown sufferers by the citizens of Los Angeles, California, which arrived at Philadelphia last week, was disposed of at auction in small lots. The bidding was spirited and 1.212 wus realized. The election of delegates to the constitutional convention held at Cheyenne Wyoming, on Monday, resulted in the choice of thirty six Republicans, sixteen Democrats aud three independents. The convention will meet on September 2. t llarry Dixon, the young Mississip-pia- n recently appointed to a West Point cadetship by the President upon the statement of the boy's grandmother that her husband's son (the cadet's father) had been assassinated because of polities, failed to pass the physical examination required of two-third- cadets. old-tim- : Gol-coud- a i j 1 Widow Expires at Richmond. The big prize tight between Sullivan and Kilraiu for the championship of the world took place Monday at Richburg Mississippi. Seventy five rounds were fought befoie Kilraiu acknowledged himNeither party was very self whipped. badly punished, the tactics of Kilrain having boeu by dodging aud dropping to wear out tlie big Bostonian. The latter was vastly tlie superior iu courage, science and strength. A catfish weighing SO pounds caused considerable.exeitement on the river hank at Louisville. Mo., the other day. While a colored woman was washing clothes ou the bank she concluded to try her luck with tlie hook aud line, aud tying a trawl to her leg she threw the hook well out into the water aud continued her work at the tub it was uot long before two men's united strength was necessary to save the woman irom a watery grave, for the fish was rap. idly pulling her into the river. An order was made by Commissioner Sparks in March, lvs), suspending land entries iu Wyoming made within townships from 25 to 50 'inclusive, and east of range 105. on the ground that oil existed. This territory involves ever 2, 000,000 acres, and has long remained in this state of suspsen-sion- . Acting Land Commissioner Stone last week, after consultation with Secretary Noble, made an order relieving this suspension aud directing the examination of all entries with a view of patent. The famous Oneida community, founded by Noy os in 1SH, is in danger of One of its members, being abolished. Charles A. Barr, sets forth that the corporation has departed widely from the orig mal plan and has become a monopoly. He therefore wants an accounting and the ap poiutment of a receiver. With property of tlie community amounting in lsss to and its distinctive feature the practice Mr-o' free love having been abolished. larr sees uo further use for its corporate 500,-m- existence. n Richmond, Virginia, where she died. Mrs Tvler was a Homan Catholic in religion. Agricultural Prospects. Washington, July 10. The June crop report returns of the Department of Agriculture make an increase in the area planted in maize of about 1,3:13,000 acres and the total over 77,01X1,000. The condition of the crop is only medium, and lower than usual at this period of its development. West of the Mississippi, in the belt and the border of the arid region, the crop is generally in fine condition, though injured at points by overflows and excess of moisture. The great American desert is green with American cereals in high deThe general average of convelopment. dition is about 90. The condition of winter wheat is well Sustained, notwithstanding the injury by storm and floods, the general condition standing at 92. Occasional reports of iu jury from the Hessian fly, chinch hug, midge aud rust are received, but local estimates of the condition of the crop do not indicate much damage. The averages of condition of the jirineipal States are as follows: New York, 90; Pennsylvania, 90: Virginia, 90; Georgia. 94: Texas, Mi: Tennessee, 95; Kentucky, 88; Ohio, sv Michigan, s9; Indiana, S); Illinois, 94; Misd souri, 94; Kansas, 9S; California, 97. The returns concerning spring wheat in Dakota are very unfavorable, from tlie results of long' continued drouth. The averages of Wisconsin and Nebraska are each 95, Iowa, 97 ; Minnesota, 87. and the averages of Montana, Idaho and Washington are low. The general average is about S3, which is very low at this stage of growth. Rye maintains its condition and barley declines to about 92. Encampment Rates. Chicago, July 10. The tight be- tween the Grand Army of the Republic and the various railroad companies reached an acute phase this evening. This was the last day of the period named by the Grand Army men in which the railroads might gracefully surrender and give the usual rate of 1 cent a mile to persons attending the great annual encampment as announced to take place this year at Milwaukee. No surrender w as make by the railroads, and this afternoon the committee of G. A. R. department commuudcrs who have been agitating the subject held a meeting here and proceeded with an attempt to carry out the threat that in the event of the railroads provingolistinatethe encampment should be made if possible merely an assemblage of delegates instead of a huge popular gathering. The committee voted to send a circular letter to all department commanders throughout the country urging that attendance on the encampment be limited so far as practicable in the manner described. Preparations at Milwaukee for tlie entertainment of great crowds expected at the encampment have been virtually suspended owing to the disaction pute with the railroads, and of the committee of commanders may. it is feared, render the stoppage permanent. s Action of he G. A. R. Council. Milwaukee, July 9. At a stormy session of the Executive Grand last night, a set of resolutions were adopted practically stopping all further preparations for the National Encampment in August until assurances are g.veu that it will be held in this city. This action was due to a refusal of the Mayor and Common Council to appropriate for touts and barracks unless it was certain that the Grand Army men were coming. Eight State Department com Army-Counc- il Blunders met in Chicago and decided to issue circulars advising their posts not to come unless a one cent rate was charged b .he rai. roads. This action upset all oral plans and led to the above result |