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IBEU . «0«rD aC 1 5?i •• f % | TWO0HBTS ' | Ten 0*nt» n* Week. NTTMBEB 1450 '"*"1 Weekly Established 1850. J PITTSTON 'A., TUJESUAY, APRIL 19. 1887. V/ NIAL FKOl^FMNELL. )ID NOT W£1TE,fWE LETTER N THE LQiWMJjfii TIMES, *of Uad&Ur Secrr ryjtoio*® 1 *i Vl&nftz Cs»fcj«i Heat topic ha! sunk in the aqmStfou p»*ir the printing le London Tifflfljftil 6W fac simile of thC alleged to halve W»n sent UjMHr. Par jo Mr. Egan Aerttfifefter thorriyrder ol il Frederic C*r«U(U)fli and U mler vSocre Bourke in tiw ISifrsnix park, Dyldin, ir rse open the crime; ill;', fretted tlS , killing of Cavetid&b,, hjS ;ht BourkofatK no more than Ui* ticsei-ol ignaturo, •Cities S. PfirneB," which' top.of. one page, tho bod.y ot- the lcttt tut tlxD: other,- defers- from lEarnWi1 DE NOT A VIOLATION QP* LAW,* i TWO SAILORS PERISH WHILE TRYING TO SAVE THE SCHOONER. 1AT SEA. A -TT , WHOLESALE EXECUTIONS MR. JACOB SHARP - - ■' . :.r.VHVI AFTERNOON. SRECIAL* DISPATCHES. coH©C * C 4 ■■ j—*-v T 4 D. Dx;'fidtkn»t»l|. 1D'M»r¥ prdered by a Native Premier at the Drnnmlio Hjiploilon. an Interesting Point. San FbancisOO, April 1ft.—Advices received from Sydney, N. S. W., per steamer Mariposa, give the latest particulars regarding the. attempted assassination of Premier Bftkor, of 3th* .'Conga Island, by converted Wesley an natives. The correspondent'of The Sydney Herald at Suva, Fiji Islands, writes that Mr. Baker believed that an organized attempt to kill him and to overturn the government was to be made by the Wesley tins. Ho sAnt for soldiers and a large number of indiscriminate arrests were made. Ur. Baker put the prisoners through a form of trial, condemned them to death and the sentences were executed the same night. Tonga Islands. THREATENS TO TELL THE TRUTH WHEN HE IS PUT ON TRIAL. lCKRRms CoxiNEBSy ,N, Y, April 1» —\n explo-iii.u of » (lyBktni'e uarlricjge at shaft 1 01 the dw aqueduct tlila n.ofmng!(UleCI John Coyue and seriously injured six otheiS. " % "r Boston, April 10.—Collector Raltonstall. after a hearing, authorized tho landing of tbe eight English women who arrivod on the steamship Pavonia, under contract to the Crompton establishment at Providence. Their landing wajs at frst their ivnu portatyn %raa bWievdil 'In tHolailon oft1 th# statute to prevent the system of bringing large numbers of pauper workmen or women to this country and also to guard against the overcrowding of the labor inaiket in case'of s(xiko3. The Story or One Night Told by Mie ; 8*rvlvor*r-Fortjr CfwUe ofGa«ollne In 3t& fiofa JKlA »iril from $fce It oiling of the Teasel. ■Humor* That Sharp Will Zmplloato a Number of Prominent Politician*—"If Tlicy Go On and Persecute Me, I'll A Panrafcr Train Kucouiitera a Landslide. Make it Hot for Them." St. Jobksvillk, tJ V., April 19 —Passen- Passenger train Me. 14 with eight c«i«, on the New York Central lUiiriad, encountered a laudtlide at Fly Creek, twDD mile* west of thia place, about midnight. The engine and seveu cars were thrown from tho track. Eugioeer J»n-aar was killed, tho tiremau's leg was broken, and the passengers were shaken up and several slightly injured. 1 beei. New York, April 1ft.—Five men who had escaped from a burning wreck in which two of their shipmates perished, and who had been pickod up after drifting about for many hours in an open boat, arrived on the steamship Benefactor, Of-Clyde's They were «opt. M»j. D. Steward , HenryjUdMBi jin* gBf|uno% &a&el Smith, Charles* Anderson and Charles Thompson. Their vessel was the three mastod schooner George S. Marts. The men who went dowjf' with her were thimafie/ James Nute, and*. . sallcfr- knov*i (yjjtes f Bpfc." Thompson was so badly biiVnod about the face that he had to be taken to the Long Island hospital. Albany, April 19.—Thero is a definite rumor hero that Mr. Jacob Sharp has threatened to confess in case the district attorney does not let up on him. It was so stated in political circles of New York, and the assemblymen and senators who came up last evening brought the story up with them. Mr. Sharp has been represented as saying that he would tell the truth if he was brought to trial, no matter whether or not ha were to convict himself by so doing. lettoi inTI The Crompton company showed that the statute ..skillod operatives, who wouldnot compete any tataWiShod i?\- dustryf#ifiCl pre-sttiMfl aflldavitg to Ch£|Kv -that the liqe ot woi& 4»r %hiclj tluft) tyirijn&fip ensagtsa coul(tDiOt b6 done at present in this country, and that instead of taking away work from any American operatives they would be the ijiems of wakjng work M about 100 otlifrs, ):eCjmDso JV necessary to sonff aDrOiut for fife cutting and finishing of the ends of velvet. John Fretwell, of Manchester, a textilo expert, testified that it had been found impossible t*D secure skilled operatives here to do the special work of cutting and finishing tho ends of velvet, and that tho work of those women would no$ compete with any now existing in tho country. Thia is tho first caso of the kind that ha» arisen under tho new law. tary British Vice Consul R. B. Loofe arrived at Tonga, and after an inquiry decided that ha had np power to interfere. The storm again burst forth with redoubled fury. The WeC- Jeian . Mission college was invaded by an JMnett'nJDb.*! \V#sley$n« Were brutally'beaten and their houses Wrecked. Mr. Eeefe was again appealed to, but again refused to interfere. Among the earliest persons arrested and condemned to death was an ordained Wesleyan minister, David Finan, a man of the highest position and repute. whi he r SPORTING MATTERS. The ' , ..at tlie n - genuine signature in many respects, but is a clear attempt at imitation. thou; When the boodle trials first began Mr. Sharp had no fear of personal molestation. He knew that neither jaehne, McQunde nor O'Neil could well implicate him, and in this knowledge he felt safe. Ho didnt even object to being tried, if it would give the district attorney any satisfaction. It was only recently that he became alarmed. The same rumors that refer to his threatened confession say that the district (ittornegr has evidence that connects Mr. Sharp directly with the bribery of the aldermen. It is well known that he looked after the market here direct, though as that is for the district attorney of Albany county to look after, he dH not bother over that, but the business with the aldermen was done through agents. Within a short time Mr. Sharp has had cause to fear that one further in than the aldermen has peached. It may be one of the exiles. Whether it is or not, the rumors do not say, but something come to Mr. Sharp's ear to cause him alarm for his personal safety. He is reported to have Baid to a friend within a fortnight: "If they go on and persecute me, I'll make it hot for them, and they'd better understand it." Death of » Trainer of College Athlete* at New Haven. The celebrated stallion Buccaneer, 3i years old, was shot at Vienna. In 1808 *100,000 was offered for him, and refused. His hide will be stuffed and placed in the musoum at Pesth. The George S. Marts left Baltimore for Charleston with a general cargo on April II. Ckpt. Henderson left the loading of the vesBel entirely to agents.. When ha went on board the vessel just before she sailed, he. did not Wen know tB&t stored'near the mainmast were forty casks of gasoline. His crew, all colored men, ware shipped-on the day of departure. -.C■■■■■ During thp night of April 16 it Wew a gale, and the veesel rolled heavily. Squalls were ' frequent, and flashes of lightning at intervals lit ap.-tke -which seemed to shake with the peals of thunder. At 8 o'clock on the following morning the storm increased, and the captain ordered sail to be shortened. Lota# nefes 'were then heard in the hold, fjome of the cargo, had shifted. The captain took the wheel, anil the. lqate, .frith the Tfiompsou, and Bob, " raised the hatch and entered "the HtlRT ttf secure the qargo. Smith And Anderson, who had been called upJjQ shprtea sail, .returned to.the forecastle. . A moment later the captain felt a terrific shock. The top of the cabin flew into the air and a sheet of flame burst from the deok (ynidetypa, • - Flaipep seized the sails abd itoared swiftly up the mainmast. Jt seemed as if the vessel had been fctrt Into halves separated by a sheet of fire. Dropping the wheel the captain called loudly for the mate. The roar of the. fltupep drowned his cries. SCd" Orally he saw two figures burst out of the wqll of flange. Tfaey jygroJtoi.Uk ftwj Afldbrson. An instant later Thompson emerged from the fire and staggered toward the skipper with his face frightfully burned.* Then the. steward wis seen crawling along Hie port 'falling, just out of reach of the flames. In a moment he was clear of tho tire. Springing up he Joined the terrified ■ «COUP-. .,,u»T.«v :• -» " ' »•-. • "What shall we do?" cried one. "Tho fire will biTICtt Mb ltk A mintite* said1 another. "We must jump overboard to escape it," and he rushed toward tho railing. He was by the steward. the taate, with the steward, Thomp«in, and Bob, entered,the hold, ha found that the cargo was rapidly getting loose. The mate and Bob pished forward among the casks - containing gasoline. Thompson was within twenty feet of the casks. The steward had Ventured but a few feet from tile hatch. Then came the explosion. The entire starboard side of the vessel was blown opt. The steward sprang "Tip the hatch. As zmtt he wafoaMsed by j/Bhomps^'i ,wjj(Ilyr,over his face, which seemed to "be covereawith the burning . the mate and Bob, who were among the casks of gasoline when they exploded, and who doubtless had already perished. The steward was joined by Smith and Anderson, who had rushed up from tho forecastle. The dries of the captain were faintly heard aft. Tho steward crawled along thejaort railing, pttier three, in thei£tA-**y* phmgSp iitoa thJ&mes and emerged in frqnt of the wheel. When tB6 stewai i held batik the man who was about to- spring overheard, the captain remembered tho boat which hung from the stern. Tho men hurriedly lowered it into the water. Thompson, although badly burned, wu& tho first to sjujar 'into tba t)?at. The otbSR. bV3 of the wreck. Day soon broke. The three masts blazed like huge' torches until shortly before 7 o'olocjf, When they fell into * TEe sea had gained entrance to the hold. Another minute and tho flaming bulk disappeared beneath tfae surface. ■ All around the wave* were strewn with, halt burned wreckage, The wind and soa Jiad .gone 4Cnrn. Reading the little boat towartluindthenierfpulled at tho oars till nearly noon. Then tho smoke of a steamer was seen. " This was the Benofactor, rapidly them. The men stoCxl up in thirbqat' and waived their hats.. Tho steamer, and was soon hove to. Thompson was carefully lifted to the steamer's deck. . . - Nothing else was discussed and vehement denials of tho authenticity,of the letter were heard everywhere, oven Tory papers hesitating to attach credence to it. Mr. J. J. Clancy, Nationalist member of parliament, in denying it, said that a member of their party had goiio to Dublin to try to ferret out tho forger; whowasfciispeotted. -' George Siddons and Eugene Atkins, featherweights, fought a drawn battle near Danville, His. Many persons were under arrest, and six executions were to take iDlace the day after the departure of the steamer which brought the above news to Suva, and thirty the day following. The French and Germans have sent for men of war, and urgent representations made to the governor of the Tlji IilAUds to fnterftiVafcd depose either Mr. Baker or Mr. Moulton, a Wesley an missionary.The storm yesterday prevented the games at Baltimore, Cincinnati and Louisville. The Boston's trip has resulted in six victories out of seven games, with a profit of $2,600. Mr. Parnell, in an interview with a newspaper correspondent, pointed out that, although at first sight some of the letters composing the signature to the frc-sirttilA letter published in The Times appeared to resemble those which he habitually formed in writing lu* tvuU)S-"':)U,a,clpse mppwitimi and comparison c£ the I'orgery with his genuine signature showed a deaidod and striking difference in man}- important point). SEVERAL CHINAMEN HANGED The Cleveland Skating Rink and Baseball association has recovered a judgment for $2,555 against Henry V. Lucas, of St.. Louis, in the circuit court at Buffalo. Lucas bought out the franchise of the Cleveland club in tho National Baseball league several seasons ago, agreeing to pay $25,000 whenever his St. Louis club was admitted to the league. He guaranteed to pay $2,500 in any event, and of this amount handed over $500. By this deal he secured McCormlek, of Chicago; Glasscock, of Indianapolis, and Briody, of Detroit, which was always referred to by baseball people as a steal. Lucas tried to have the case tried in St. Louis, but the Cleveland men succeeded in bringing it to Buffalo, and Lucas did not put'in an appearance. The Cleveland management secured their judgment without any contest. New Haven, April 19.—'WiflianiC; bole, for fifteen years trainer of Tale students in athletics, died yesterday, aged 65 years. Nrw York, April 1#.—Mike Boden, the "Kanuek," and Jim Glynn, of Philadelphia, fought ten terrible rounds at Arlington hall, Long Island City,' under E. F. Mallahan's management About 500 prominent politicians and sporting men of New York , and Brooklyn witnessed the fight, Which was hard fought and ecieiltifio throughout. -No blood was drawn, however, and bot£ men quit in good condition. Glynn got the decision on account, of Bodante foufe. !D .iThi • '• For An Alleged Unprovoked' Murder Which Wbi Canst*C1 by Cruelty. "Further news from Tonga states that Wesleyans are being mercilessly plundered and maltreated by the king's soldiers. The premier does not anticipate any difficulty about French Interference in Tonga, and is cf.the opinion that German jealousy would 1 By tfce appeara*6e Crf the French so close to Samoa." San Francisco, April 19.—Hong Dye, the Chinaman, who murdered Mrs. Billiou in Colusa crtttnty several days ago, has not yet lieen captured, but facte havo leaked out concorning tho cause of. tlieJpj;uciui w.lii(:h put a new phnso on the case. It was thought that tlio murder was entirely unprovoked*; tliat Bye had always been treated kindly, and it was -also hinted that tho Chiifcunan wos in loye. with Annie Billiou, and shot Woaver because he was jealous of him. It was, however, when the-houseiof cojnr mons met that the excitement leeched fever he»tt „ X've reading of the Ir;ish coercion bill was before the house, the sequel to the Healy expulsion incident of Kritlay was awaited with eagerness: but most of all the question of what would be said or done in rofoiience to the "assassination" letter was uppermost as tho house fllied up with members.CINCINNATI STOVE MOLDtRS Kefuse to Handle Doycotted Patterns This conversation was repeated here this afternoon, but the gentleman who gave it said he could go no further. The nunors go further and give the names of several prominent politicians whom Mr. Sharp threatened to expose. How much truth there is In these tales none of the interested parties here will frankly tell, but, that, .there have been new and big developments in the Broadway business there is no doubt, and the assemblymen and senators who -were here observing Mr. Sharp's ministrations in times past, are taking great interest m the matter among themselves.Now. however, it appears that Weaver was in the habit of kicking Dye, and that on the day of the murdor ho gave tho Chinaman a beating witth a whip. Mrs. Billiou saw the wluppiug. administered, and hence the China-, man shot her, after first killing, a* life sappoowly Weaver. In addition to the three Chinamen hanged or shot for the crime, it is saiH'ttidt another Chinaman was killed at Jacinto by ,a party in search of Hong Djre, and" there is also a report that still,author has been haflged'In thi mountains by searchers. and Are Oat on Strike. Cincinnati, April J?.—The tabooed patterns sent here from St. Louis were offered to tho molders at the Favorite Stove works and Red way & Burton's foundry. Acting upon the advice of President Fitxpatrick, the men in those establishments refused to handle them and the lockout was inaugurated at 11 o'clock. An urgent Tory whip had brought out all tho available Tories and Unionists. Tho Liberal party was present in force, and the Nationalists were on luuid early talkihg excitedly. Mr. Parnell's entrance was greeted 'Isy tho'latter With a round of cheers. Ho seemod perfectly cool and took his seat in that quiet way which has marked him. No trace of ngitation was on his pale face as he folded his arms and talked in a low tone te those about him. Mr. Gladstone's entry brought out a great Liberal and Irish cheer. Hartington came in quietly onjl planted himself not far from Gladstone. Bolfoui- in amid a few Tory cheers. Smith was loudly cheered by the Toried. '" Nearly 1,000 men are affected. The indices tittns are for a long and stubborn struggle between the manufacturers and the molders. Preside* ftfefttrfcte WUd this itfternooni "This introduction of the patterns of a firm whose men are on a strike into the foundries in other cities is a combination of capital and might to crush labor and right. By trying to force the union molders in all the foundries ip the "country to work upon these , pat-' terhs tile' 'empld^m-a1 thhit 'tHejf toll' destroy the union and .prevent our demanding an advance to get living wages. The union is not only a powerful organization itself, but it is.bagked by the confederated trades pf the United States and Canada. However, it is : ««*•D♦'■ ijurfip* oC w«r» .hero uojrvto* of principle, aad they will find we can stay as long as they can." -The, Chinaman who was hanged several £imes to ipata him confess is now in a precarious condition and not expected to live. At Magnolia, Butte county, a Chinaman was caught by a mob last week, a rope put around Jiis neck and he was threatened #fth"diMith W he did not confess. He had nothing ■ to tell;' and after frightning him half to death the mob Jet h|m jjo. Gladstone's Oritltnle. - Pa., April 19.—Governor Beaver, recently presided at an ranti-coercion meeting in Philadelphia, which sent a message of encouragement and sympathy to Mr,- Gladstone. The' governor has received the , following ■from- G. W. Spencor Dyttletoni "J. am deslre4 by M*., .to acknowledge with his cordial thanks the receipt, pf the resolution which y6tf Have done nim tho ■ hottortt) transmit -t*J him on'behalf of the 5,000 people at the meeting presided' over by the governor of pCamsyl yoftia. jswid ex-gov- Ws." A Mliilfctnre Kebolllonbeared. ApeU 1#.—.A Pfcrra, D. T., The galleries were filing an/1 front one of them Mr. Healy looked doym, with, eC .yuift smile, awaiting tho coming up of the matter of his suspension. D• • ' ' A LEGAL FIGHT FOB THOUSANDS. special to The Evening. Journal soysi Qom pony Bf, Elevetith' Infantry, stationed at Fort Gully, baa receited orders to prdoeefr at • once to the Winnebago and Crow Cf»efc reservations and drive the settlers from the land. The company, under ootnmand of Cnpt. Myers, is on its way to Reservation,- The military orders are reported 't6 be strict, calling for the destroctioft olD property, if necessary, and the use. of flreiC7n* The greatest excitement exists, and it'would not be surprising to nee a miniature Riel rebellion inaugurated on these lands.. Those reservations were thrown open "by the Arthur administration Feb. as; llifM, and thousand of % built and the work of improvement coo tinned until Cleveland revolted, Arthur's proqlftmation and made hundreds of the settlers paupers. flfhiey 8ny» slio Signed a Release Col. E. R. King-Harman made his debut in the house in tho capacity of under secretary for Ireland by rising amid the cheers of the government party an4 the grpaus and hisses of the opposition to state that since t March 1 only two tenant hhtl'bteeA evicted frain the estates of the Marquis of Lansdowne, the expulsion of whom had involved the eviction of sixteen «ub-tnDnauts. uAtr iVxUrn Cjnke4l_wjbtther tljpl povero- Jnei. woKa conint to rafecind the sujpeusion; ir. HiSly. Sr. W. A. SmittfWflied W the government that the dttty they had to disc most disagroo- Able. The goveniment were sorry they were forced to ask that Mr. Healy bo named for transgressing the orders of the house. It would bo utterly out of question, however, when no apology had been given for this breach of the dei*ucieo of deliate, to rescind tho suspension. No motion that might lDe ' initio, tv D that oftsdt could be entertained without the general concurrence of the house. •C '. - I ' Tltrotifh False Statement*. j - Worcester, Mass., April 19.—Thq Sibley- Knowles case was opened before Master in Chancery' Hon. George R. Richardson, "bf Lowell) in this city, ex-Representative Rioe and his associates representing the Sibley hens, and Senator Itoar and tho Messrs. Hill the executors of the estate of Lucius j. Knoirtos. Tfilsfcuif invohes tffcmgand dollarf, t6 haVoioonf friud- j tHenMy keptiipjiax thf' Si|loys»yKno*lsBC' the two being the inventors of the noted Knowles steam pump, as well as the manufacturers of it. Sibley was forced out of the firm through business reverses, he having built a t2,00(1,000 cotton mill at Warren, and was forced to fail in consequence of the Boston fire' 0t . 1172j HftJ&MnC0rJt£. hieJinterest in tho pump works to his wifo before the failure, and later Mrs. Sibley was induced through through faWj statements to sign a release to Knowles-that be might sell the estate. The WbfeV Were kept from the Sibleya, . A BUFFAtO INVESTIGATION. Father *ud S»» Killed, bgr U«*tal»sk Manufacturers Aeoased of Defrauding Pktersburq, Va., April 19.—During a terrific storm at PIkeville Section, N. C., the house of Taylor Eastman, a prominent farmer, wfts struck by lightning. Mrs. Eastman was sitting aear obs window sfnd Eastman and his son at. another window, while a daughter had a sept upfront of the fireplace. Eastawi aijd hty son werp killed, outright and Mrs. Eastman and, her daughter .were wo badly stunned as to'render them unconscious. ' Buffalo, April 11).—-Prison Commissioner Gteerge Hair has comnjenyed an investigation i of jhl 4omf laifl t of thfc prion eOaftnmee of the Central Labor union against the board of supervisors In the matter of the Erie county penitentiary. The complaint, which was made .,|o" (iomrmft -Hill, and by evident conspiracy existing between the Su-' pervisors and ex-Prison Contractors Pratt anfr' convicts expired on Jan. 90, but that an unlawful deed was made whereby these ex-cOntractors allowed to oocupy th# premises , ,fpr, three or and. that they are now in actual possession, and employ 300 people in title prison and 'thai the coudty receives a» pay for all this.'1 the County. TwWnljr. Yeare'at Hard U^or. Exetir, N. H., April I9.r-Patrh* Bhrte, of Portsmouth, indicted for the murder of his wife on Christmas nigbk_.l£8S arraigned and iDloa3ed eullty of manslaughter. Evldfinp9. was tendered hiaLta.be a man ot ggpd character, H« came homo and found his wife (Jrunk, whereupon he threw her out of tlie room. She fell down stairs, from the effects of which she died. The judge sentenced him to twenty years' hard labor in the state prison. An Hereditary Suicide. Philadelphia, April 19.—August Rotks, an old Oortnau, In a drunken, ipslancholy mood, said to bis much abused wife: "Oh, veH, rot matter? I'll bang myself like mine bruddei; unt fodder did in the. old country." He was so drank that his wife was afraid to let him Indoors. He was breakiiig in when an officer arrested him and took him to the district station. Considerable money was found upon him and he wns locked up. Shortly afterward the turnkey discovered him sitting on the floor with bis bock to the door of the cell. A handkerchief around his neck was tied to one of the bars andsjjp was dead from strangulation. There Was a deep gash in his neck and a wound on his wrist which he bad mado with , a penknife bafore strangling himself. C Miv asfced Mitj,. Saunder- aSserfl»ns regarding Mr. Healy. •*"D 1 ' show a sad state of affairs, being mutilated and changed.. Shortages amounting to many thousand doJJpre heeo fpunl. J -v- JJui.. J3iuDndecn»i. remaining silent, Mr. Gladstone jiyt tp, littu, . tjip question whether .he way prepared to render the house aHjL"' assistance by' tlie wit&draxfrai 6t his offensive expressions. A DISTINGUISHED AJJDIENCE The matter will be fully gone into by the commission. - u Attend* tlie Performance of "Jim the Penm»iirt at Washington. CONDENSED NEWS. The Qqosertfati *efc eriod put: "No!" "No I" had never alluded to Mr. Healy directly or -ipdiractlyt because he had regards Mr. Healy, substantiate tlie charges soas tooHhg conviction to the minds Of members of the house. Washington, April 19.—The performance of "Jini the Ponmau" in Washington last night, for the beneflt of the Actonf fund, true a remarkablafinirnctiil uucoeWjJM high. as ?l6 Apr-neat being fafused bofdw the performa))ee began.- In the lowcc -right hand bo* was the president, CoL and Mrs. Lamont Eiml "Marshal and Mils. Wilson. In the ad- Joining box were Secretary and Mr*. Whitney and; .tho Hwedm minister and. garty. Tlje ojpfHSkQ boxes, occupied by ifr. W. party and Messrs. Primer and Bapley arid ladies, inoUifflng Jlra. Crofy, "Jeiinio June.'' the box above- the Wire aedtod' Secretary Bndicott nn\ j#;#: ,ttr«v(the adjoining box vyero Jttr»-. fieorge Hearst, wife of Senator and party, and in tho boxes' facing them Sert-etary Faircmid and ladies and Sen- Attempt to -Kill Marshal Hauls*. At El Paso, Tex., General Manager Hutchinson,' of the Galveston, Hnrrisburg and San Antonio railroad, issued an order confiscating the salary of any employe discharged for damage to the company's property through negligence. The freight brakemen struck, the obnoxious order was withdrawn and the inen returned to work. Madrid, April 19.—Marshal Bozaine was assaulted by a Frenchman, who attacked him with a poniard, exclaiming: "J'ai venge ma patrol" The marshal was dangerously wounded about the head., flis assailant is be-, liovod to be a correspondent for the Paris newspapers. ; The Frenchman waa- paying a visit to Bazaine, and stabbed him after a short conversation. The'would be ■m™'" was arrested. It is now said that no fatal rerand. He declares that he came with attention of killing Bazaine, and that the dagger was poisoned. Marine Intelligence. Mr, Sexton Inquired if it was competent for lWlh-'i»m8v« tlDo rescinding'of Mr. suspension. y.. • The matter was thon dropped. New York; April 19.—Arrived, steamers Furneesia, Glasgow and Moving Polynesia, Hamburg; Cojamon wealth, Philadelphia; Sylvan Glen,' Jacksonville; " "B&*iel, Rio Janeiro; Ripon City, Newcastle; State of Texas, Fernandina; Anita, , Jacksonville; Critic, Dundee; Xjotrisiana, New'(Means; Benefactor, Wilmington, N,- Oi Arrived out, steamers City of Richmond, NewYork for Liverpool! hAs passed Pastnet; witra, from New York, at Southampton; Ijb Gascogne, from New York, at Havre; from New York', at Plymouth. ▲t Greenville, 8L C., a gang of train robbers flbvo been at work on the Richmond and Danville. One of the gang would serrate himself in ft car, select available goods and throw them out, whan they would be wised by a confederate. Goods to the amount of - $50,000 have been stolen In this way. Three airesW have been mad«, and others will follow. : . - " .'iflpaalMT Peal replwd that no motion wymjd bo competent unless it tkpjloarftdW tlie pajieps of the house. ' Mr. Sexton said that he was authorized to say that if Maj. Saunderson withdrew .Hi •*" wJuqU-Mr.. Hpply i tons \va3 in*rejCy, Mr. HenlyiiwDtml withdraw the ulIi;US»VB and moved that Mr. -HiifctyT* hrartt wt tho bar of the house. —t OmD Killed and (tareMl Injured. April's SaawaMnn Delays Trains. O., April severest snowstorm ofThd y(»r Is raging hen and along the lake. Snow has fallen to the depth of' eight inches, and is drifting. Trains are de, fayed, wires are prostrate and a genepd sus' pensibn of business is the result Passenger train No. 5 on the Lake Shore road iir IfcVSandusky and cannot move. The trackmen report a bad washout at Venice, O., which cannot be repaired until after the storm. April , fcirioiis 1m««1 end collision between a wild freight and a work train on the Chicago, Burlftfettoi? and Northern road occurred two miles north of Staff, which, wyt-doehtiass result in insh- BfcnrilVothers are seriously injured. Reports state that the co use of the coilUwa was in orders. The Injured ore: Mart Fogerty, fireman, seriously injured about the fape and rocctitipd, D0tj6xpec|ed Jo JIvp) Humphrey, brakeman, right lag fractured; J. Fahr, in charge of the train, both legs and an arm brbken, besides internal injuries: T. Donahue, engineer of work train, ankle broken. All but Fahr were injured by jumpinR. ; He was in the JWrk.Oar, whkih was telescoped by. the tender* . Dispatches from central BUnois, northern Texas and Indian Territory report heavy rains, the first in many weeks, and farmers rejoice. tor Mitchell and party. Among the other distinguished people in tie audience were Secretary Bayard .qpsL daughters, AssUtftUt Secretary of Stat* Gelt- done , ,Th» siwakcr declared tiuit. that could not be Maj. John E. Blaine, brother of the exsecretary of state, is lying at the point of death at Hot Springs, Ark. Rome, April 19.—Cardinal Gibbon* left for Florence, accompanied hy Secretary Dpnohue. At the station to bid him adieu were Archbishop Carr, Bishops Hcane and Chatard, MonsignortD Q'Conneli. and Bryan, and many others. Cardinal Qlbbons Ltntn Koine. Mr. S&tton, f&uming 'tfie debute on the coercion bill, said that Maj. Saunderson's attack on Frigpy ili£lDV;WS.^Wv!qSd cow- eral J. A. J. Cresswell, Mr. L. E. Roessle, ('apt.. Pembroke Hai-stalL-CoV Jtoljert ; J Fleming, Col. J. H. * Hilly'er, Commodore Schioy, 061. S. C. KeUngg, Mr. John Tw»et|- lle, ex-Secretary William- £. CthmdlAr an8 Mr. Hcaton, the artist. Near Seven Mile Ford, Va., two girls, Aged K and 21, respectively, were burned to death by their home taking flro. Throe others were burned so severely that they will die. ardly. He did not njako direct and explicit charged that conldQfi -s^usirely'MB, but confined himself tu Xpunded upon scandalous rumors- Ttfe-itnly ay to argue with calumnies was witli aBoraowlup orby action at law. The Marquis of Hartington sai(J ifrdMS ■i&ysirikkftM&'ttib fartittnoftfte LifeAfcf »• Grumbling Allowed. r.rn rvircnfi «ri»efcticfr. Belfast, April constables, employed in protecting the erapjpyes and property at Castle Istami, finding their position awLdutkft hateful U) tjuw on account of the personal abuse and ostracism to which they were subjeabad, would resign if matters did not soon improve. A few hours later they were removed from duty and summarily dferuisaod from police service. Carter Harrison, after serving eight years as mayor of Chicago, stepped down and out last night, MUSIC HAUL. Washington, April 19.—The president has »pointed 0»lr Wester Monart, of tho -Fifth pnwen* sajfctbiAmk-nt D•& the iier general, rice Wilcox retired. The following named gentleman were appointed as a .bqard Qf. Mi}iteK^a4amy MrWtfet PdnjkGkta. IfflnbtB; Cfcn. Anderson, Or TjOorgttt; Wrorfeo W. Childs, of Philadelphia.", TV.' A. Courtcnay, of South Carolina; Rev-: John Brown,(Jf ffew York; Charles 6t Wynn* of Maryland i .William tarett, of Massachusetts; Senators Dolph and, Cockerell" and ReprtAentatiVf*! Wheeler, Abisrsoa and The "Resident also appointed William i. Allen to be . United States district Judgefer the southern district ' sf Illinois, " '• " THURSDAY. APRIL 21st. Fifty grocers in Weir York pleaded guilty of selling oteomargarwe for hitter, and near: ly all paid fines for the .pri vilege, . ■■,4. . 0 -f.-part: The CtetiaeulB6MLJfrjglj Comedian . sod nounced in jjpst.Jritter terms. These gentlemen had heard the only answer which :'fe. fcJcXton thimght was qocessarv, aiid suffl«ent to'nyjettV charges aga ill in .and jiis friends, charges made chiefly not within the hotM#, btff%dWfe of H. Gould they accept that Answer ae.Jwfflcjeu.tl, Was a bare, unsupported denial any proof? Was it any kind , {i +espSiisd at aA to the evidence which thft*efci»tttiohs made! lhpn iaDJse "ainid prolonged .C 'C[ tgJm and in t masterly speech exposed tBetMlaelSS of MlL Ho maintained tiiat It was more fl(Wre"tnan w® necessary in the present state of Ireland. nf the Parnellits was cowEgsfiU. gf thn fiiuna A rumor in New York that Jacob Sharp had gone to Canada is denied. Itis said that he is visiting his farm aft'Eome, N. Y. Joseph Murphy LonBO*, ApFil 19. —TEB ffiMJHfflr" &SB6M oft Bonifacio, Corsica, is the Tasmania. She belong* to the Peninsular aild" Oriental' Steam Navigation company, and is of 4,488. tons. She was boutod from Bombay for Marnefflas. ojj tha. Moiwhi rocks, to the: south of Corsica. She half 180 passengers on Wxurt.- Severity-four have bWn loaded, including all the women and children. Two - Vlfeuch stramors are near the wreck; assisting in the work of rescue. It is reported that "the captain and two other officers and twentytwtD stokD'4-s were drowned. AJU ot tbp .latter «Mra lAsdam■ ui Ciu.it -iitit iiOfi Bittai-O, April lO.-nTh* jury iu the cue of f. H. wtd shot at Amherst lyTQeorgeTeter*, ren3ered~a verdict that the shooting mu done under the impression that (Irtswofil was a Knrgfiir, tot not with the in. teotian of him. •, i - -/ i - i No Ialnt KD Kill. Lake Erie navigation ha* opened for the season. .. . ..... . Jerrard Tlmson, of New York, has secured a verdict for $6,000 damages against the Manhattan Elevated railway for a dislocated knee. t* In Fred. Msredeii's of 1 Irish Dramas, Assistant Secretary Maynard instructs the collector of custom* at Glouoester, Mass., to seize nets pf foreign vessels landed for repairs without payment C4 duty. KERRY DOW Th» Sapmn* CKhirt to Adfourn, Flared by him with unparalleled success for aigh t consecutive seasons In all the principal cttiea and leading theatres In America. "A Comedy-Dtama Without Equal." Presenting net only HeaHstto Pictures at UFBAM0 LOVE IS..THE EMEBAU) ISLE, But an every-dax tfle In erqry land. , April 19.—Chief Justice Wait* announces that the supreme' court of the United States will stop the call of cases on the docket on Hay IS, uDd that on May S3 the coAt wtH adjourn antil next October. Tbe national bureau tDf labor statin tics will shortly issue its second annual report, which wW be soati followed by tbe third. Il'« Mn* well Laid Gfnwt Case Mat (led Washington, April 19.—A decision was rendered in the supreme court of the United States in what is known ns the Maxwell land prant case, thus settling finally a matter thut has tDeen in dispute before the interior department and the courts for nearly twenty years. The court., in. itntfecistcui ccpifl/nM the decree of the United States circuit court and establishes the validity of the granfr-for- 4,?0Cl,oob icrefl of lahffotAMS W'CtMrado and New Mexico.' Jtr.y TVant More Ply for Nlrli( Wnrh. Chicago's Building Trades OQuncil has effected a permanent organisation. Larry Donovan, tbe jumper, was arrested while about to dive from the Brooklyn bridge. He was ordered to furnish $3,000 bail or go to BlackwelTs Island for three months. -Balfour, the chief secretary (or Ireland, tried -tojuittfy tho measure. .Mi itaras not so bad as the Gladstone coercion measure. - rnrSBruo, April 19.—A widespread move was luaile t.xlay by. the machinists in Vrat-1 era ■ Ppnflsv+rania to secure an advance In' wagfS for sight work.' Thejf haro submitted :'wr5t«i.Clcmand3 to ovtrj prominent man u-1 factoring Arm is this city . asking tbe* 'the 'wnfccVfor nfgfet worlf per day work. Tfcty ask fafrther that the new : awangenwnt go .into effect o»i May. L ---t • Arrival of Q«. Boothj New YpRK, April IB.—Among the passenger*; on ttl* stewner Sarvia were Gen. Booth and HjiDv Boptb, leaden of the Salvation Anuy,, iutoaj . to start ..a revjr«l in , America of tike anay\ —Tire wcond reading of t(ie •rtrues WIT was agreed to withfcStftroiifMdn. Supported by the lead'nu-Ao A Bohemian paper has bees started in New York. 43. -JJi-j - A Maw Fabrieatloa,... i,!.. • ■fcWfrbmyWob. r-Apr 11 III.—In re fatten to-the letter which appeared in The LoniloiLTimes, - The body of Frederick Worth, whose mysterious disappearance baa been the subject of police investigation at Chicago, has been found. Bells Melville, Londos, April 19.—Earl Codogan and Right Hou. Charles T. Ritchie, member of parliament for Tower Hamlets, St. George's, have been invited to accept place* in Uie caEinct. . •;, . .. ■ — - Offoro* Cabinet Ttwttlorrt. purporting to have been addressed by Mb. Parnell to Mr. Eagan in 1SSJ, apologizing for Jbsriag doionsced. the Flscoix park miirdor, ors, Mr.-Engan has addressed the following t MHtgi ■in'to Mbrtrf LaboBehere: "Ba undersoil's statements in referent torinp areuiD- mitigated and wilful slanrtbrif wrote me any such letter as that quoted in WitOird OverhoJrd In n Hnrrleaiir. MDot Down With IU* Unditldc. T April 10th, . , „• -Xuv Vokk, April* in.- Tfie ship". "John Mann, of tk»'cfemo in from AmrteixJiiru 3rC*tw#ay»r! Ojj -iiirvU 30, it) latitude 15, sin epeouototasUa hurricaiffi It laK'-s-l six hour*. On March 10 Albert Hews, an ordinary legman, a native of Sweden, was washed over- U»rd and lost WATimnjuir, Vfc,sfcp»rttl9.—'The engine of the «irly. morning freight trtiju on the Centra Vei'inontreqaIsft the *« Slip HiH, Middlesex, and Mid dowB- thct.tiank.iato.thii Tho tender aiid airs kopt to the rail Both the engineer and fireman escaped unhurt. The Bdston mail was delayed pearly twelve hour*. More than three-fourths of Chicago's striking carpenters hare gone to work at $8.80 for eight hours. I'll* runtralMfrVMttsOanAii) Qulnn. —-ftrtiHi, A£rd'l9.—The funeral oerricw overtime remains of the late Vicar General Quirni, of New York, were held at tbe tburch of Um Jacob Y. Cottrell, a prominent shipbuild* aL Belfast, Me ,dhdj—C«dar. ag%d-au. - T.can furnlahJOOOJadu*trious 1/tdiee with per-1 npinkmewMsDiwirMit -Ho fraud or humbug. Hundreds of testimonials from ladiej made independent through this work. MBS. H. F. 1ITTLE, OUmco,U, John Lord Hayes, LI. D., died at Cambridge, Man. He had held many important ooaitious in sducstixmsl institutions. Lawilon Times, The whole tiling is a bw»
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1450, April 19, 1887 |
Issue | 1450 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1887-04-19 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1450, April 19, 1887 |
Issue | 1450 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1887-04-19 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18870419_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | IBEU . «0«rD aC 1 5?i •• f % | TWO0HBTS ' | Ten 0*nt» n* Week. NTTMBEB 1450 '"*"1 Weekly Established 1850. J PITTSTON 'A., TUJESUAY, APRIL 19. 1887. V/ NIAL FKOl^FMNELL. )ID NOT W£1TE,fWE LETTER N THE LQiWMJjfii TIMES, *of Uad&Ur Secrr ryjtoio*® 1 *i Vl&nftz Cs»fcj«i Heat topic ha! sunk in the aqmStfou p»*ir the printing le London Tifflfljftil 6W fac simile of thC alleged to halve W»n sent UjMHr. Par jo Mr. Egan Aerttfifefter thorriyrder ol il Frederic C*r«U(U)fli and U mler vSocre Bourke in tiw ISifrsnix park, Dyldin, ir rse open the crime; ill;', fretted tlS , killing of Cavetid&b,, hjS ;ht BourkofatK no more than Ui* ticsei-ol ignaturo, •Cities S. PfirneB," which' top.of. one page, tho bod.y ot- the lcttt tut tlxD: other,- defers- from lEarnWi1 DE NOT A VIOLATION QP* LAW,* i TWO SAILORS PERISH WHILE TRYING TO SAVE THE SCHOONER. 1AT SEA. A -TT , WHOLESALE EXECUTIONS MR. JACOB SHARP - - ■' . :.r.VHVI AFTERNOON. SRECIAL* DISPATCHES. coH©C * C 4 ■■ j—*-v T 4 D. Dx;'fidtkn»t»l|. 1D'M»r¥ prdered by a Native Premier at the Drnnmlio Hjiploilon. an Interesting Point. San FbancisOO, April 1ft.—Advices received from Sydney, N. S. W., per steamer Mariposa, give the latest particulars regarding the. attempted assassination of Premier Bftkor, of 3th* .'Conga Island, by converted Wesley an natives. The correspondent'of The Sydney Herald at Suva, Fiji Islands, writes that Mr. Baker believed that an organized attempt to kill him and to overturn the government was to be made by the Wesley tins. Ho sAnt for soldiers and a large number of indiscriminate arrests were made. Ur. Baker put the prisoners through a form of trial, condemned them to death and the sentences were executed the same night. Tonga Islands. THREATENS TO TELL THE TRUTH WHEN HE IS PUT ON TRIAL. lCKRRms CoxiNEBSy ,N, Y, April 1» —\n explo-iii.u of » (lyBktni'e uarlricjge at shaft 1 01 the dw aqueduct tlila n.ofmng!(UleCI John Coyue and seriously injured six otheiS. " % "r Boston, April 10.—Collector Raltonstall. after a hearing, authorized tho landing of tbe eight English women who arrivod on the steamship Pavonia, under contract to the Crompton establishment at Providence. Their landing wajs at frst their ivnu portatyn %raa bWievdil 'In tHolailon oft1 th# statute to prevent the system of bringing large numbers of pauper workmen or women to this country and also to guard against the overcrowding of the labor inaiket in case'of s(xiko3. The Story or One Night Told by Mie ; 8*rvlvor*r-Fortjr CfwUe ofGa«ollne In 3t& fiofa JKlA »iril from $fce It oiling of the Teasel. ■Humor* That Sharp Will Zmplloato a Number of Prominent Politician*—"If Tlicy Go On and Persecute Me, I'll A Panrafcr Train Kucouiitera a Landslide. Make it Hot for Them." St. Jobksvillk, tJ V., April 19 —Passen- Passenger train Me. 14 with eight c«i«, on the New York Central lUiiriad, encountered a laudtlide at Fly Creek, twDD mile* west of thia place, about midnight. The engine and seveu cars were thrown from tho track. Eugioeer J»n-aar was killed, tho tiremau's leg was broken, and the passengers were shaken up and several slightly injured. 1 beei. New York, April 1ft.—Five men who had escaped from a burning wreck in which two of their shipmates perished, and who had been pickod up after drifting about for many hours in an open boat, arrived on the steamship Benefactor, Of-Clyde's They were «opt. M»j. D. Steward , HenryjUdMBi jin* gBf|uno% &a&el Smith, Charles* Anderson and Charles Thompson. Their vessel was the three mastod schooner George S. Marts. The men who went dowjf' with her were thimafie/ James Nute, and*. . sallcfr- knov*i (yjjtes f Bpfc." Thompson was so badly biiVnod about the face that he had to be taken to the Long Island hospital. Albany, April 19.—Thero is a definite rumor hero that Mr. Jacob Sharp has threatened to confess in case the district attorney does not let up on him. It was so stated in political circles of New York, and the assemblymen and senators who came up last evening brought the story up with them. Mr. Sharp has been represented as saying that he would tell the truth if he was brought to trial, no matter whether or not ha were to convict himself by so doing. lettoi inTI The Crompton company showed that the statute ..skillod operatives, who wouldnot compete any tataWiShod i?\- dustryf#ifiCl pre-sttiMfl aflldavitg to Ch£|Kv -that the liqe ot woi& 4»r %hiclj tluft) tyirijn&fip ensagtsa coul(tDiOt b6 done at present in this country, and that instead of taking away work from any American operatives they would be the ijiems of wakjng work M about 100 otlifrs, ):eCjmDso JV necessary to sonff aDrOiut for fife cutting and finishing of the ends of velvet. John Fretwell, of Manchester, a textilo expert, testified that it had been found impossible t*D secure skilled operatives here to do the special work of cutting and finishing tho ends of velvet, and that tho work of those women would no$ compete with any now existing in tho country. Thia is tho first caso of the kind that ha» arisen under tho new law. tary British Vice Consul R. B. Loofe arrived at Tonga, and after an inquiry decided that ha had np power to interfere. The storm again burst forth with redoubled fury. The WeC- Jeian . Mission college was invaded by an JMnett'nJDb.*! \V#sley$n« Were brutally'beaten and their houses Wrecked. Mr. Eeefe was again appealed to, but again refused to interfere. Among the earliest persons arrested and condemned to death was an ordained Wesleyan minister, David Finan, a man of the highest position and repute. whi he r SPORTING MATTERS. The ' , ..at tlie n - genuine signature in many respects, but is a clear attempt at imitation. thou; When the boodle trials first began Mr. Sharp had no fear of personal molestation. He knew that neither jaehne, McQunde nor O'Neil could well implicate him, and in this knowledge he felt safe. Ho didnt even object to being tried, if it would give the district attorney any satisfaction. It was only recently that he became alarmed. The same rumors that refer to his threatened confession say that the district (ittornegr has evidence that connects Mr. Sharp directly with the bribery of the aldermen. It is well known that he looked after the market here direct, though as that is for the district attorney of Albany county to look after, he dH not bother over that, but the business with the aldermen was done through agents. Within a short time Mr. Sharp has had cause to fear that one further in than the aldermen has peached. It may be one of the exiles. Whether it is or not, the rumors do not say, but something come to Mr. Sharp's ear to cause him alarm for his personal safety. He is reported to have Baid to a friend within a fortnight: "If they go on and persecute me, I'll make it hot for them, and they'd better understand it." Death of » Trainer of College Athlete* at New Haven. The celebrated stallion Buccaneer, 3i years old, was shot at Vienna. In 1808 *100,000 was offered for him, and refused. His hide will be stuffed and placed in the musoum at Pesth. The George S. Marts left Baltimore for Charleston with a general cargo on April II. Ckpt. Henderson left the loading of the vesBel entirely to agents.. When ha went on board the vessel just before she sailed, he. did not Wen know tB&t stored'near the mainmast were forty casks of gasoline. His crew, all colored men, ware shipped-on the day of departure. -.C■■■■■ During thp night of April 16 it Wew a gale, and the veesel rolled heavily. Squalls were ' frequent, and flashes of lightning at intervals lit ap.-tke -which seemed to shake with the peals of thunder. At 8 o'clock on the following morning the storm increased, and the captain ordered sail to be shortened. Lota# nefes 'were then heard in the hold, fjome of the cargo, had shifted. The captain took the wheel, anil the. lqate, .frith the Tfiompsou, and Bob, " raised the hatch and entered "the HtlRT ttf secure the qargo. Smith And Anderson, who had been called upJjQ shprtea sail, .returned to.the forecastle. . A moment later the captain felt a terrific shock. The top of the cabin flew into the air and a sheet of flame burst from the deok (ynidetypa, • - Flaipep seized the sails abd itoared swiftly up the mainmast. Jt seemed as if the vessel had been fctrt Into halves separated by a sheet of fire. Dropping the wheel the captain called loudly for the mate. The roar of the. fltupep drowned his cries. SCd" Orally he saw two figures burst out of the wqll of flange. Tfaey jygroJtoi.Uk ftwj Afldbrson. An instant later Thompson emerged from the fire and staggered toward the skipper with his face frightfully burned.* Then the. steward wis seen crawling along Hie port 'falling, just out of reach of the flames. In a moment he was clear of tho tire. Springing up he Joined the terrified ■ «COUP-. .,,u»T.«v :• -» " ' »•-. • "What shall we do?" cried one. "Tho fire will biTICtt Mb ltk A mintite* said1 another. "We must jump overboard to escape it," and he rushed toward tho railing. He was by the steward. the taate, with the steward, Thomp«in, and Bob, entered,the hold, ha found that the cargo was rapidly getting loose. The mate and Bob pished forward among the casks - containing gasoline. Thompson was within twenty feet of the casks. The steward had Ventured but a few feet from tile hatch. Then came the explosion. The entire starboard side of the vessel was blown opt. The steward sprang "Tip the hatch. As zmtt he wafoaMsed by j/Bhomps^'i ,wjj(Ilyr,over his face, which seemed to "be covereawith the burning . the mate and Bob, who were among the casks of gasoline when they exploded, and who doubtless had already perished. The steward was joined by Smith and Anderson, who had rushed up from tho forecastle. The dries of the captain were faintly heard aft. Tho steward crawled along thejaort railing, pttier three, in thei£tA-**y* phmgSp iitoa thJ&mes and emerged in frqnt of the wheel. When tB6 stewai i held batik the man who was about to- spring overheard, the captain remembered tho boat which hung from the stern. Tho men hurriedly lowered it into the water. Thompson, although badly burned, wu& tho first to sjujar 'into tba t)?at. The otbSR. bV3 of the wreck. Day soon broke. The three masts blazed like huge' torches until shortly before 7 o'olocjf, When they fell into * TEe sea had gained entrance to the hold. Another minute and tho flaming bulk disappeared beneath tfae surface. ■ All around the wave* were strewn with, halt burned wreckage, The wind and soa Jiad .gone 4Cnrn. Reading the little boat towartluindthenierfpulled at tho oars till nearly noon. Then tho smoke of a steamer was seen. " This was the Benofactor, rapidly them. The men stoCxl up in thirbqat' and waived their hats.. Tho steamer, and was soon hove to. Thompson was carefully lifted to the steamer's deck. . . - Nothing else was discussed and vehement denials of tho authenticity,of the letter were heard everywhere, oven Tory papers hesitating to attach credence to it. Mr. J. J. Clancy, Nationalist member of parliament, in denying it, said that a member of their party had goiio to Dublin to try to ferret out tho forger; whowasfciispeotted. -' George Siddons and Eugene Atkins, featherweights, fought a drawn battle near Danville, His. Many persons were under arrest, and six executions were to take iDlace the day after the departure of the steamer which brought the above news to Suva, and thirty the day following. The French and Germans have sent for men of war, and urgent representations made to the governor of the Tlji IilAUds to fnterftiVafcd depose either Mr. Baker or Mr. Moulton, a Wesley an missionary.The storm yesterday prevented the games at Baltimore, Cincinnati and Louisville. The Boston's trip has resulted in six victories out of seven games, with a profit of $2,600. Mr. Parnell, in an interview with a newspaper correspondent, pointed out that, although at first sight some of the letters composing the signature to the frc-sirttilA letter published in The Times appeared to resemble those which he habitually formed in writing lu* tvuU)S-"':)U,a,clpse mppwitimi and comparison c£ the I'orgery with his genuine signature showed a deaidod and striking difference in man}- important point). SEVERAL CHINAMEN HANGED The Cleveland Skating Rink and Baseball association has recovered a judgment for $2,555 against Henry V. Lucas, of St.. Louis, in the circuit court at Buffalo. Lucas bought out the franchise of the Cleveland club in tho National Baseball league several seasons ago, agreeing to pay $25,000 whenever his St. Louis club was admitted to the league. He guaranteed to pay $2,500 in any event, and of this amount handed over $500. By this deal he secured McCormlek, of Chicago; Glasscock, of Indianapolis, and Briody, of Detroit, which was always referred to by baseball people as a steal. Lucas tried to have the case tried in St. Louis, but the Cleveland men succeeded in bringing it to Buffalo, and Lucas did not put'in an appearance. The Cleveland management secured their judgment without any contest. New Haven, April 19.—'WiflianiC; bole, for fifteen years trainer of Tale students in athletics, died yesterday, aged 65 years. Nrw York, April 1#.—Mike Boden, the "Kanuek," and Jim Glynn, of Philadelphia, fought ten terrible rounds at Arlington hall, Long Island City,' under E. F. Mallahan's management About 500 prominent politicians and sporting men of New York , and Brooklyn witnessed the fight, Which was hard fought and ecieiltifio throughout. -No blood was drawn, however, and bot£ men quit in good condition. Glynn got the decision on account, of Bodante foufe. !D .iThi • '• For An Alleged Unprovoked' Murder Which Wbi Canst*C1 by Cruelty. "Further news from Tonga states that Wesleyans are being mercilessly plundered and maltreated by the king's soldiers. The premier does not anticipate any difficulty about French Interference in Tonga, and is cf.the opinion that German jealousy would 1 By tfce appeara*6e Crf the French so close to Samoa." San Francisco, April 19.—Hong Dye, the Chinaman, who murdered Mrs. Billiou in Colusa crtttnty several days ago, has not yet lieen captured, but facte havo leaked out concorning tho cause of. tlieJpj;uciui w.lii(:h put a new phnso on the case. It was thought that tlio murder was entirely unprovoked*; tliat Bye had always been treated kindly, and it was -also hinted that tho Chiifcunan wos in loye. with Annie Billiou, and shot Woaver because he was jealous of him. It was, however, when the-houseiof cojnr mons met that the excitement leeched fever he»tt „ X've reading of the Ir;ish coercion bill was before the house, the sequel to the Healy expulsion incident of Kritlay was awaited with eagerness: but most of all the question of what would be said or done in rofoiience to the "assassination" letter was uppermost as tho house fllied up with members.CINCINNATI STOVE MOLDtRS Kefuse to Handle Doycotted Patterns This conversation was repeated here this afternoon, but the gentleman who gave it said he could go no further. The nunors go further and give the names of several prominent politicians whom Mr. Sharp threatened to expose. How much truth there is In these tales none of the interested parties here will frankly tell, but, that, .there have been new and big developments in the Broadway business there is no doubt, and the assemblymen and senators who -were here observing Mr. Sharp's ministrations in times past, are taking great interest m the matter among themselves.Now. however, it appears that Weaver was in the habit of kicking Dye, and that on the day of the murdor ho gave tho Chinaman a beating witth a whip. Mrs. Billiou saw the wluppiug. administered, and hence the China-, man shot her, after first killing, a* life sappoowly Weaver. In addition to the three Chinamen hanged or shot for the crime, it is saiH'ttidt another Chinaman was killed at Jacinto by ,a party in search of Hong Djre, and" there is also a report that still,author has been haflged'In thi mountains by searchers. and Are Oat on Strike. Cincinnati, April J?.—The tabooed patterns sent here from St. Louis were offered to tho molders at the Favorite Stove works and Red way & Burton's foundry. Acting upon the advice of President Fitxpatrick, the men in those establishments refused to handle them and the lockout was inaugurated at 11 o'clock. An urgent Tory whip had brought out all tho available Tories and Unionists. Tho Liberal party was present in force, and the Nationalists were on luuid early talkihg excitedly. Mr. Parnell's entrance was greeted 'Isy tho'latter With a round of cheers. Ho seemod perfectly cool and took his seat in that quiet way which has marked him. No trace of ngitation was on his pale face as he folded his arms and talked in a low tone te those about him. Mr. Gladstone's entry brought out a great Liberal and Irish cheer. Hartington came in quietly onjl planted himself not far from Gladstone. Bolfoui- in amid a few Tory cheers. Smith was loudly cheered by the Toried. '" Nearly 1,000 men are affected. The indices tittns are for a long and stubborn struggle between the manufacturers and the molders. Preside* ftfefttrfcte WUd this itfternooni "This introduction of the patterns of a firm whose men are on a strike into the foundries in other cities is a combination of capital and might to crush labor and right. By trying to force the union molders in all the foundries ip the "country to work upon these , pat-' terhs tile' 'empld^m-a1 thhit 'tHejf toll' destroy the union and .prevent our demanding an advance to get living wages. The union is not only a powerful organization itself, but it is.bagked by the confederated trades pf the United States and Canada. However, it is : ««*•D♦'■ ijurfip* oC w«r» .hero uojrvto* of principle, aad they will find we can stay as long as they can." -The, Chinaman who was hanged several £imes to ipata him confess is now in a precarious condition and not expected to live. At Magnolia, Butte county, a Chinaman was caught by a mob last week, a rope put around Jiis neck and he was threatened #fth"diMith W he did not confess. He had nothing ■ to tell;' and after frightning him half to death the mob Jet h|m jjo. Gladstone's Oritltnle. - Pa., April 19.—Governor Beaver, recently presided at an ranti-coercion meeting in Philadelphia, which sent a message of encouragement and sympathy to Mr,- Gladstone. The' governor has received the , following ■from- G. W. Spencor Dyttletoni "J. am deslre4 by M*., .to acknowledge with his cordial thanks the receipt, pf the resolution which y6tf Have done nim tho ■ hottortt) transmit -t*J him on'behalf of the 5,000 people at the meeting presided' over by the governor of pCamsyl yoftia. jswid ex-gov- Ws." A Mliilfctnre Kebolllonbeared. ApeU 1#.—.A Pfcrra, D. T., The galleries were filing an/1 front one of them Mr. Healy looked doym, with, eC .yuift smile, awaiting tho coming up of the matter of his suspension. D• • ' ' A LEGAL FIGHT FOB THOUSANDS. special to The Evening. Journal soysi Qom pony Bf, Elevetith' Infantry, stationed at Fort Gully, baa receited orders to prdoeefr at • once to the Winnebago and Crow Cf»efc reservations and drive the settlers from the land. The company, under ootnmand of Cnpt. Myers, is on its way to Reservation,- The military orders are reported 't6 be strict, calling for the destroctioft olD property, if necessary, and the use. of flreiC7n* The greatest excitement exists, and it'would not be surprising to nee a miniature Riel rebellion inaugurated on these lands.. Those reservations were thrown open "by the Arthur administration Feb. as; llifM, and thousand of % built and the work of improvement coo tinned until Cleveland revolted, Arthur's proqlftmation and made hundreds of the settlers paupers. flfhiey 8ny» slio Signed a Release Col. E. R. King-Harman made his debut in the house in tho capacity of under secretary for Ireland by rising amid the cheers of the government party an4 the grpaus and hisses of the opposition to state that since t March 1 only two tenant hhtl'bteeA evicted frain the estates of the Marquis of Lansdowne, the expulsion of whom had involved the eviction of sixteen «ub-tnDnauts. uAtr iVxUrn Cjnke4l_wjbtther tljpl povero- Jnei. woKa conint to rafecind the sujpeusion; ir. HiSly. Sr. W. A. SmittfWflied W the government that the dttty they had to disc most disagroo- Able. The goveniment were sorry they were forced to ask that Mr. Healy bo named for transgressing the orders of the house. It would bo utterly out of question, however, when no apology had been given for this breach of the dei*ucieo of deliate, to rescind tho suspension. No motion that might lDe ' initio, tv D that oftsdt could be entertained without the general concurrence of the house. •C '. - I ' Tltrotifh False Statement*. j - Worcester, Mass., April 19.—Thq Sibley- Knowles case was opened before Master in Chancery' Hon. George R. Richardson, "bf Lowell) in this city, ex-Representative Rioe and his associates representing the Sibley hens, and Senator Itoar and tho Messrs. Hill the executors of the estate of Lucius j. Knoirtos. Tfilsfcuif invohes tffcmgand dollarf, t6 haVoioonf friud- j tHenMy keptiipjiax thf' Si|loys»yKno*lsBC' the two being the inventors of the noted Knowles steam pump, as well as the manufacturers of it. Sibley was forced out of the firm through business reverses, he having built a t2,00(1,000 cotton mill at Warren, and was forced to fail in consequence of the Boston fire' 0t . 1172j HftJ&MnC0rJt£. hieJinterest in tho pump works to his wifo before the failure, and later Mrs. Sibley was induced through through faWj statements to sign a release to Knowles-that be might sell the estate. The WbfeV Were kept from the Sibleya, . A BUFFAtO INVESTIGATION. Father *ud S»» Killed, bgr U«*tal»sk Manufacturers Aeoased of Defrauding Pktersburq, Va., April 19.—During a terrific storm at PIkeville Section, N. C., the house of Taylor Eastman, a prominent farmer, wfts struck by lightning. Mrs. Eastman was sitting aear obs window sfnd Eastman and his son at. another window, while a daughter had a sept upfront of the fireplace. Eastawi aijd hty son werp killed, outright and Mrs. Eastman and, her daughter .were wo badly stunned as to'render them unconscious. ' Buffalo, April 11).—-Prison Commissioner Gteerge Hair has comnjenyed an investigation i of jhl 4omf laifl t of thfc prion eOaftnmee of the Central Labor union against the board of supervisors In the matter of the Erie county penitentiary. The complaint, which was made .,|o" (iomrmft -Hill, and by evident conspiracy existing between the Su-' pervisors and ex-Prison Contractors Pratt anfr' convicts expired on Jan. 90, but that an unlawful deed was made whereby these ex-cOntractors allowed to oocupy th# premises , ,fpr, three or and. that they are now in actual possession, and employ 300 people in title prison and 'thai the coudty receives a» pay for all this.'1 the County. TwWnljr. Yeare'at Hard U^or. Exetir, N. H., April I9.r-Patrh* Bhrte, of Portsmouth, indicted for the murder of his wife on Christmas nigbk_.l£8S arraigned and iDloa3ed eullty of manslaughter. Evldfinp9. was tendered hiaLta.be a man ot ggpd character, H« came homo and found his wife (Jrunk, whereupon he threw her out of tlie room. She fell down stairs, from the effects of which she died. The judge sentenced him to twenty years' hard labor in the state prison. An Hereditary Suicide. Philadelphia, April 19.—August Rotks, an old Oortnau, In a drunken, ipslancholy mood, said to bis much abused wife: "Oh, veH, rot matter? I'll bang myself like mine bruddei; unt fodder did in the. old country." He was so drank that his wife was afraid to let him Indoors. He was breakiiig in when an officer arrested him and took him to the district station. Considerable money was found upon him and he wns locked up. Shortly afterward the turnkey discovered him sitting on the floor with bis bock to the door of the cell. A handkerchief around his neck was tied to one of the bars andsjjp was dead from strangulation. There Was a deep gash in his neck and a wound on his wrist which he bad mado with , a penknife bafore strangling himself. C Miv asfced Mitj,. Saunder- aSserfl»ns regarding Mr. Healy. •*"D 1 ' show a sad state of affairs, being mutilated and changed.. Shortages amounting to many thousand doJJpre heeo fpunl. J -v- JJui.. J3iuDndecn»i. remaining silent, Mr. Gladstone jiyt tp, littu, . tjip question whether .he way prepared to render the house aHjL"' assistance by' tlie wit&draxfrai 6t his offensive expressions. A DISTINGUISHED AJJDIENCE The matter will be fully gone into by the commission. - u Attend* tlie Performance of "Jim the Penm»iirt at Washington. CONDENSED NEWS. The Qqosertfati *efc eriod put: "No!" "No I" had never alluded to Mr. Healy directly or -ipdiractlyt because he had regards Mr. Healy, substantiate tlie charges soas tooHhg conviction to the minds Of members of the house. Washington, April 19.—The performance of "Jini the Ponmau" in Washington last night, for the beneflt of the Actonf fund, true a remarkablafinirnctiil uucoeWjJM high. as ?l6 Apr-neat being fafused bofdw the performa))ee began.- In the lowcc -right hand bo* was the president, CoL and Mrs. Lamont Eiml "Marshal and Mils. Wilson. In the ad- Joining box were Secretary and Mr*. Whitney and; .tho Hwedm minister and. garty. Tlje ojpfHSkQ boxes, occupied by ifr. W. party and Messrs. Primer and Bapley arid ladies, inoUifflng Jlra. Crofy, "Jeiinio June.'' the box above- the Wire aedtod' Secretary Bndicott nn\ j#;#: ,ttr«v(the adjoining box vyero Jttr»-. fieorge Hearst, wife of Senator and party, and in tho boxes' facing them Sert-etary Faircmid and ladies and Sen- Attempt to -Kill Marshal Hauls*. At El Paso, Tex., General Manager Hutchinson,' of the Galveston, Hnrrisburg and San Antonio railroad, issued an order confiscating the salary of any employe discharged for damage to the company's property through negligence. The freight brakemen struck, the obnoxious order was withdrawn and the inen returned to work. Madrid, April 19.—Marshal Bozaine was assaulted by a Frenchman, who attacked him with a poniard, exclaiming: "J'ai venge ma patrol" The marshal was dangerously wounded about the head., flis assailant is be-, liovod to be a correspondent for the Paris newspapers. ; The Frenchman waa- paying a visit to Bazaine, and stabbed him after a short conversation. The'would be ■m™'" was arrested. It is now said that no fatal rerand. He declares that he came with attention of killing Bazaine, and that the dagger was poisoned. Marine Intelligence. Mr, Sexton Inquired if it was competent for lWlh-'i»m8v« tlDo rescinding'of Mr. suspension. y.. • The matter was thon dropped. New York; April 19.—Arrived, steamers Furneesia, Glasgow and Moving Polynesia, Hamburg; Cojamon wealth, Philadelphia; Sylvan Glen,' Jacksonville; " "B&*iel, Rio Janeiro; Ripon City, Newcastle; State of Texas, Fernandina; Anita, , Jacksonville; Critic, Dundee; Xjotrisiana, New'(Means; Benefactor, Wilmington, N,- Oi Arrived out, steamers City of Richmond, NewYork for Liverpool! hAs passed Pastnet; witra, from New York, at Southampton; Ijb Gascogne, from New York, at Havre; from New York', at Plymouth. ▲t Greenville, 8L C., a gang of train robbers flbvo been at work on the Richmond and Danville. One of the gang would serrate himself in ft car, select available goods and throw them out, whan they would be wised by a confederate. Goods to the amount of - $50,000 have been stolen In this way. Three airesW have been mad«, and others will follow. : . - " .'iflpaalMT Peal replwd that no motion wymjd bo competent unless it tkpjloarftdW tlie pajieps of the house. ' Mr. Sexton said that he was authorized to say that if Maj. Saunderson withdrew .Hi •*" wJuqU-Mr.. Hpply i tons \va3 in*rejCy, Mr. HenlyiiwDtml withdraw the ulIi;US»VB and moved that Mr. -HiifctyT* hrartt wt tho bar of the house. —t OmD Killed and (tareMl Injured. April's SaawaMnn Delays Trains. O., April severest snowstorm ofThd y(»r Is raging hen and along the lake. Snow has fallen to the depth of' eight inches, and is drifting. Trains are de, fayed, wires are prostrate and a genepd sus' pensibn of business is the result Passenger train No. 5 on the Lake Shore road iir IfcVSandusky and cannot move. The trackmen report a bad washout at Venice, O., which cannot be repaired until after the storm. April , fcirioiis 1m««1 end collision between a wild freight and a work train on the Chicago, Burlftfettoi? and Northern road occurred two miles north of Staff, which, wyt-doehtiass result in insh- BfcnrilVothers are seriously injured. Reports state that the co use of the coilUwa was in orders. The Injured ore: Mart Fogerty, fireman, seriously injured about the fape and rocctitipd, D0tj6xpec|ed Jo JIvp) Humphrey, brakeman, right lag fractured; J. Fahr, in charge of the train, both legs and an arm brbken, besides internal injuries: T. Donahue, engineer of work train, ankle broken. All but Fahr were injured by jumpinR. ; He was in the JWrk.Oar, whkih was telescoped by. the tender* . Dispatches from central BUnois, northern Texas and Indian Territory report heavy rains, the first in many weeks, and farmers rejoice. tor Mitchell and party. Among the other distinguished people in tie audience were Secretary Bayard .qpsL daughters, AssUtftUt Secretary of Stat* Gelt- done , ,Th» siwakcr declared tiuit. that could not be Maj. John E. Blaine, brother of the exsecretary of state, is lying at the point of death at Hot Springs, Ark. Rome, April 19.—Cardinal Gibbon* left for Florence, accompanied hy Secretary Dpnohue. At the station to bid him adieu were Archbishop Carr, Bishops Hcane and Chatard, MonsignortD Q'Conneli. and Bryan, and many others. Cardinal Qlbbons Ltntn Koine. Mr. S&tton, f&uming 'tfie debute on the coercion bill, said that Maj. Saunderson's attack on Frigpy ili£lDV;WS.^Wv!qSd cow- eral J. A. J. Cresswell, Mr. L. E. Roessle, ('apt.. Pembroke Hai-stalL-CoV Jtoljert ; J Fleming, Col. J. H. * Hilly'er, Commodore Schioy, 061. S. C. KeUngg, Mr. John Tw»et|- lle, ex-Secretary William- £. CthmdlAr an8 Mr. Hcaton, the artist. Near Seven Mile Ford, Va., two girls, Aged K and 21, respectively, were burned to death by their home taking flro. Throe others were burned so severely that they will die. ardly. He did not njako direct and explicit charged that conldQfi -s^usirely'MB, but confined himself tu Xpunded upon scandalous rumors- Ttfe-itnly ay to argue with calumnies was witli aBoraowlup orby action at law. The Marquis of Hartington sai(J ifrdMS ■i&ysirikkftM&'ttib fartittnoftfte LifeAfcf »• Grumbling Allowed. r.rn rvircnfi «ri»efcticfr. Belfast, April constables, employed in protecting the erapjpyes and property at Castle Istami, finding their position awLdutkft hateful U) tjuw on account of the personal abuse and ostracism to which they were subjeabad, would resign if matters did not soon improve. A few hours later they were removed from duty and summarily dferuisaod from police service. Carter Harrison, after serving eight years as mayor of Chicago, stepped down and out last night, MUSIC HAUL. Washington, April 19.—The president has »pointed 0»lr Wester Monart, of tho -Fifth pnwen* sajfctbiAmk-nt D•& the iier general, rice Wilcox retired. The following named gentleman were appointed as a .bqard Qf. Mi}iteK^a4amy MrWtfet PdnjkGkta. IfflnbtB; Cfcn. Anderson, Or TjOorgttt; Wrorfeo W. Childs, of Philadelphia.", TV.' A. Courtcnay, of South Carolina; Rev-: John Brown,(Jf ffew York; Charles 6t Wynn* of Maryland i .William tarett, of Massachusetts; Senators Dolph and, Cockerell" and ReprtAentatiVf*! Wheeler, Abisrsoa and The "Resident also appointed William i. Allen to be . United States district Judgefer the southern district ' sf Illinois, " '• " THURSDAY. APRIL 21st. Fifty grocers in Weir York pleaded guilty of selling oteomargarwe for hitter, and near: ly all paid fines for the .pri vilege, . ■■,4. . 0 -f.-part: The CtetiaeulB6MLJfrjglj Comedian . sod nounced in jjpst.Jritter terms. These gentlemen had heard the only answer which :'fe. fcJcXton thimght was qocessarv, aiid suffl«ent to'nyjettV charges aga ill in .and jiis friends, charges made chiefly not within the hotM#, btff%dWfe of H. Gould they accept that Answer ae.Jwfflcjeu.tl, Was a bare, unsupported denial any proof? Was it any kind , {i +espSiisd at aA to the evidence which thft*efci»tttiohs made! lhpn iaDJse "ainid prolonged .C 'C[ tgJm and in t masterly speech exposed tBetMlaelSS of MlL Ho maintained tiiat It was more fl(Wre"tnan w® necessary in the present state of Ireland. nf the Parnellits was cowEgsfiU. gf thn fiiuna A rumor in New York that Jacob Sharp had gone to Canada is denied. Itis said that he is visiting his farm aft'Eome, N. Y. Joseph Murphy LonBO*, ApFil 19. —TEB ffiMJHfflr" &SB6M oft Bonifacio, Corsica, is the Tasmania. She belong* to the Peninsular aild" Oriental' Steam Navigation company, and is of 4,488. tons. She was boutod from Bombay for Marnefflas. ojj tha. Moiwhi rocks, to the: south of Corsica. She half 180 passengers on Wxurt.- Severity-four have bWn loaded, including all the women and children. Two - Vlfeuch stramors are near the wreck; assisting in the work of rescue. It is reported that "the captain and two other officers and twentytwtD stokD'4-s were drowned. AJU ot tbp .latter «Mra lAsdam■ ui Ciu.it -iitit iiOfi Bittai-O, April lO.-nTh* jury iu the cue of f. H. wtd shot at Amherst lyTQeorgeTeter*, ren3ered~a verdict that the shooting mu done under the impression that (Irtswofil was a Knrgfiir, tot not with the in. teotian of him. •, i - -/ i - i No Ialnt KD Kill. Lake Erie navigation ha* opened for the season. .. . ..... . Jerrard Tlmson, of New York, has secured a verdict for $6,000 damages against the Manhattan Elevated railway for a dislocated knee. t* In Fred. Msredeii's of 1 Irish Dramas, Assistant Secretary Maynard instructs the collector of custom* at Glouoester, Mass., to seize nets pf foreign vessels landed for repairs without payment C4 duty. KERRY DOW Th» Sapmn* CKhirt to Adfourn, Flared by him with unparalleled success for aigh t consecutive seasons In all the principal cttiea and leading theatres In America. "A Comedy-Dtama Without Equal." Presenting net only HeaHstto Pictures at UFBAM0 LOVE IS..THE EMEBAU) ISLE, But an every-dax tfle In erqry land. , April 19.—Chief Justice Wait* announces that the supreme' court of the United States will stop the call of cases on the docket on Hay IS, uDd that on May S3 the coAt wtH adjourn antil next October. Tbe national bureau tDf labor statin tics will shortly issue its second annual report, which wW be soati followed by tbe third. Il'« Mn* well Laid Gfnwt Case Mat (led Washington, April 19.—A decision was rendered in the supreme court of the United States in what is known ns the Maxwell land prant case, thus settling finally a matter thut has tDeen in dispute before the interior department and the courts for nearly twenty years. The court., in. itntfecistcui ccpifl/nM the decree of the United States circuit court and establishes the validity of the granfr-for- 4,?0Cl,oob icrefl of lahffotAMS W'CtMrado and New Mexico.' Jtr.y TVant More Ply for Nlrli( Wnrh. Chicago's Building Trades OQuncil has effected a permanent organisation. Larry Donovan, tbe jumper, was arrested while about to dive from the Brooklyn bridge. He was ordered to furnish $3,000 bail or go to BlackwelTs Island for three months. -Balfour, the chief secretary (or Ireland, tried -tojuittfy tho measure. .Mi itaras not so bad as the Gladstone coercion measure. - rnrSBruo, April 19.—A widespread move was luaile t.xlay by. the machinists in Vrat-1 era ■ Ppnflsv+rania to secure an advance In' wagfS for sight work.' Thejf haro submitted :'wr5t«i.Clcmand3 to ovtrj prominent man u-1 factoring Arm is this city . asking tbe* 'the 'wnfccVfor nfgfet worlf per day work. Tfcty ask fafrther that the new : awangenwnt go .into effect o»i May. L ---t • Arrival of Q«. Boothj New YpRK, April IB.—Among the passenger*; on ttl* stewner Sarvia were Gen. Booth and HjiDv Boptb, leaden of the Salvation Anuy,, iutoaj . to start ..a revjr«l in , America of tike anay\ —Tire wcond reading of t(ie •rtrues WIT was agreed to withfcStftroiifMdn. Supported by the lead'nu-Ao A Bohemian paper has bees started in New York. 43. -JJi-j - A Maw Fabrieatloa,... i,!.. • ■fcWfrbmyWob. r-Apr 11 III.—In re fatten to-the letter which appeared in The LoniloiLTimes, - The body of Frederick Worth, whose mysterious disappearance baa been the subject of police investigation at Chicago, has been found. Bells Melville, Londos, April 19.—Earl Codogan and Right Hou. Charles T. Ritchie, member of parliament for Tower Hamlets, St. George's, have been invited to accept place* in Uie caEinct. . •;, . .. ■ — - Offoro* Cabinet Ttwttlorrt. purporting to have been addressed by Mb. Parnell to Mr. Eagan in 1SSJ, apologizing for Jbsriag doionsced. the Flscoix park miirdor, ors, Mr.-Engan has addressed the following t MHtgi ■in'to Mbrtrf LaboBehere: "Ba undersoil's statements in referent torinp areuiD- mitigated and wilful slanrtbrif wrote me any such letter as that quoted in WitOird OverhoJrd In n Hnrrleaiir. MDot Down With IU* Unditldc. T April 10th, . , „• -Xuv Vokk, April* in.- Tfie ship". "John Mann, of tk»'cfemo in from AmrteixJiiru 3rC*tw#ay»r! Ojj -iiirvU 30, it) latitude 15, sin epeouototasUa hurricaiffi It laK'-s-l six hour*. On March 10 Albert Hews, an ordinary legman, a native of Sweden, was washed over- U»rd and lost WATimnjuir, Vfc,sfcp»rttl9.—'The engine of the «irly. morning freight trtiju on the Centra Vei'inontreqaIsft the *« Slip HiH, Middlesex, and Mid dowB- thct.tiank.iato.thii Tho tender aiid airs kopt to the rail Both the engineer and fireman escaped unhurt. The Bdston mail was delayed pearly twelve hour*. More than three-fourths of Chicago's striking carpenters hare gone to work at $8.80 for eight hours. I'll* runtralMfrVMttsOanAii) Qulnn. —-ftrtiHi, A£rd'l9.—The funeral oerricw overtime remains of the late Vicar General Quirni, of New York, were held at tbe tburch of Um Jacob Y. Cottrell, a prominent shipbuild* aL Belfast, Me ,dhdj—C«dar. ag%d-au. - T.can furnlahJOOOJadu*trious 1/tdiee with per-1 npinkmewMsDiwirMit -Ho fraud or humbug. Hundreds of testimonials from ladiej made independent through this work. MBS. H. F. 1ITTLE, OUmco,U, John Lord Hayes, LI. D., died at Cambridge, Man. He had held many important ooaitious in sducstixmsl institutions. Lawilon Times, The whole tiling is a bw» |
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