Show r HE HAS NOT A CONDED 1 if General Carter Very Much i Evidence Yesterday MAKES AN ACCOUNTING AVD PRODUCES THE CASH TO SQUARE HIMSELF Colonel Boyle the Blatant BlncTc Knurd Dill Some More Orating at r the Uasl Meeting Last yigltt With the Industrial Army Say l They Want AVorlc Xo matter how gratifying it may have been to the masses who wedged themselves into the vacant space at the corner of Third South and West Temple in the darkness of last evening even-ing the meeting was a disappointment to CoiDnel Boyle Xor did the colonel i col-onel mince his words in expressing it I He was piqued The colonel appears i to be perpetually piqued In his exordium ex-ordium he stated that the reserves I had assembled there to express their sympathies for the workingmen now employed upon the city and county building and his order for them to fall in had met with a single response They were to have marched with us wailed the colonel but I have been informed that their leaders dot do-t lared they would not march with a lot of hobos Dot vos a s of a b was the sonorous interjection from a reeling bystander to the disgust of a bevy of women who had ploughed their way through the surging mass o discontent I discon-tent and taken their stand in the cen tre of it I We havent continued the colonel seizing the broken thread of oratory I in his teeth a hobo or tramp or a I disloyal citizen in our ranks We were I I here at 7 oclock and when they were called upon to fall in among us not a I i man of them moved They dont have I I to move railed the leader There when the too will I may come a time they wi be out of work and when they will be I glad to join us But we are glad they are working There is an election coming this fall though piped the i i colonel in reckless defiance of general i order Xo J which prohibits the dragging j I drag-ging of politics and religion into the I battalion and I hope you men will i studj closely the ticket that you vote I The speaker then turned his oracular I Catling upon Selectman Bamberger whom he severely denounced following I follow-ing it up with a tirade upon the president pres-ident and the authorities generally They say shrieked the colonel that 500 men are wanted in Idaho and that they will receive 150 a day But they want Carters men Let them put that proposition before us and well raise i 500 inen for them tomorrow morning in fifteen minutes What I they want is for Carter to disband his army but a good general never turns hack DOXEY ENTERS A PROTEST i At this juncture a afening call was made for Carter The darkness bad been growing denser all the while tho colonel was levying upon its pa I tence and the ciowd wanted the red i fire of the generals eloquence He was I not present however and a Sir Doxey j I who is at present holding a job on the city and county building was called j I upon He was there to protect against ho suspension of work upon the magnificent mag-nificent structure and were work suspended sus-pended he declared It would result in almost incalculable damage at this timeThe The gentleman continued Mr Doxy as he addresse1 himself to the colonel with thoughtless disrespect to the colonels new title has said that we have characterized the men of this I army as hobos I want to deny it T have worked in England Ireland I i Africa Scotland Australia and as far I west as this in America and never t1f I I have I said that my brother no matter f what his condition was a hobo I The colonel who as master of ceremonies cere-monies was always jn a position to I find avenue through which to fnd an pour I his oratory again rose from the stand I I didnt say was his rejoinder those had called hobos that all men caled us I and I dont want to be made a liar of I There was another shout for Carten Carter i 4 Yes interposed a voice that faltered I fal-tered wit the load that had been taken r on at a saloon hard by lets hear from the general and there are two thousand men here who will seize a train if he tells us to Put him out came the reproaches I from a half dozen who opposed violence vio-lence You cant do i an I dont bar your weight either was the maudlin reJoinder re-Joinder THE GENERAL APPEARS While this little burst of persiflage was going on between the spectators the general was carving his way through the crowd and finally appeared with vociferous demonstration above I it it The general was hoarse His voice i betrayed signs of deserting him but I was soon to thaw out under the II I warmth of invective I g The Tribune or any other paper t K said he peering studiously into the i pale upturned faces that were just discernible dis-cernible in the darkness that says I run away with 5600 falsifies was going go-ing to say lies which would have been the sauer kr ut of i I came into town yesterday morning tired and worn out called on Mr Lawrence then went to sleep at 1 oclock and slept until I oclock Then I arose and did some business Ill not say what it was There might be some reporters in hearing and these hirelings of the press have a faculty of saying every thing but the right thing My army has not disbanded nor will it disband notwithstanding the efforts of men in this city to accomplish it Now they tell us that thy I an get 150 a day for 500 men in Idaho Why thats all a ruse They dont want to hire th m They want to disband them and turn them back in this lirection My men are uneasy They want to push on to Washington I I ran get on the other side of the desert I can move my men to Washington Call on us cried a voice to which whih the general paid only momentary atten tiun and well seize a train aten They have raised 1500 which I have A asked them to put at my disposal 4 Jf Look will you what it is costing the county now for the support of my arm over 56000 a month Keep it here sixty days and i will have cost 13000 and if youll give youl me that amount Ill lead them in Washington in palace cars They want to go on They have a principle to fight for as American citizens Disband Why if they did you would have them upon your hands you would have to feed them from your own larders and failIng fail-Ing in that you will have a desperate j < amonstration in your community A QUESTION OF VERACITY How many men have you was the muffled query of a spectator Five hundred replied the general I say replied the spectator pushing push-ing himself nearer the stand there are not more n 175 His word at ailed the general summoned sum-moned one of his staff Lieutenant Mitchell who had accompanied him to the meeting How many are there In the army lieutenant demanded the chieftain The lieutenant reflected a moment and W replied that at breakfast about 400 had been served The crowd en turned upon the author of the untimely interruption t Throw him you r came the chorus JT > from n rloI Of < emultftude t 0 < > i i 7 l i i Hes a PInkerton shrieked the man with the jag on Quiet having been restored by the generals uplifted hand he turned his attention upon those whom he said had sought to malign and vilify him denounced in wholesale every man wh took issue with him leveled a bitter and lurid diatribe at the reporters who had criticised his incendiary utterances apotheosized the journalist whom h had found in his army and with this fiery invective to light him to bed departed de-parted from the meeting which was then adjourned |