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THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle States. THE eight-hour workday movement was begun in New York city quietly. Only about a dozen men went on strike. The socialist labor party and the Central Labor Union celebrated the day by a parade and mass meeting at Union Square. There were demonstrations, also, at Philadelphia, Boston. Pittsburg, and throughout the Eastern States generally. JAMES PALMER, convicted of the murder of Henry T. Whitehouse, of Portsmouth, was hanged at Concord, N. H. CATTLE and sheep sheds and barns and stables, covering nearly eight acres of ground in the West Albany (N. Y.) Live Stock Yards. were laid in ashes by an incendiary's match. THE Assembly in Albany, N. Y., passed a bill to abolish capital punishment. GEORGE WEBBER was killed at Belknap crossing, near Attica, N. Y., by being struck by a train. His wife's skull was fractured, injuring her fatally. THE failure of the Bank of America in Philadelphia has been followed by that of the Gloucester City (N. J.) National Bank. At the time of the failure the deposits were about $40,000. The depositors are mostly poor working people. FECHHEIMER, RAU & Co., shirt manufacturers of New Yorkcity, have failed; approximate liabilities, $350,000; assets, $275,000. PATRICK D. FLANNIGAN entered a saloon at Waterbury, Conn., ani asked Michael McDermott to drink with him. As McDermott responded Flannigan, without a word, emptied the six barrels of a 32-calibre revolver into McDermott's face and throat and then walked out. McDermott died within an hour. THE Fidelity Surety, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, of Camden, N. J.; the Port Norris Bank, the Merchants' Bank of Atlantic City, N. J., and the Merchants' Bank of Pleasantville, N. J., suspended payment. SHARPERS stole $1000 from the Rev. Father Thomas J. Ariens at Bridgeport, Conn., and left a baby on his hands. CRIMINAL proceedings have been begun against the officers of the broken Philadelphia banks. WILLIE HULSE. aged ten years. son of J. H. Hulse, No. 329 Hu ison street, New York, was shot and instantly killed by his playmate, Charles Sickles, aged fifteen, at Good Ground, Long Island, N. Y. A RUNAWAY accident occurred in Maple avenue, Penn., in which Willie Fitzpatrick. eight years of age, was instantly killed. His little sister was fatally injured, and two other children were badly bruised and cut, and the father of the dead boy was severely injured. Mrs. Fitzpatrick became violently insane after the accident. THE entire business portion of South Dayton, N. Y., has been destroyed by fire. Loss, $20,000. IN New York and Brooklyn nearly all the carpenters went to work under the eight hour day system. There was no striking necessary to gain this point. ASHINGTON QUINLAN, a member of the New York Stock Exchange, has disappeared owing about $100,000. JOHN CROMOCK, a morphine eater, killed his thirteen-year-old daughter at Foxboro, Mass., and then committed suicide. THE Singer Sewing Machine Works. at Elizabethport, N. J., covering two acres of ground, were almost wholly destroyed by fire, together with a considerable amount of the railroad property adjoining. The works employed about 3500 hands. The loss is about $3,000,000.