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. Mir-: r-5 v -• - « - - f-r it • 4 NU*BEB1*96 I IT —*rtllrtiH 1880. f PITTSTON PA., MONDAY. JUNE \'l 1887. I TWO OMHT8 I T«n oanta Pw Weak. A GRAND ARMY MAN THE PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE CARDINAL gibbons. ST. STEPHEN. RCHY RUNS WILD. THE POLICE LOOKING FOR DAVITT, TERNOON SPECIAL DISPATCHE3 SUNDAY PICNIC INTERRUPTED BV A LIVELY RIOT. iVhlle n* Wu Addressing B.000 People la Another Section. Will Probably be Convened In Sped** Session in the Fall. HIS FIRST SERMON SINCE HIS ftE« Fatal rail at a Cornell l)alv«nilr stii- REV. DR. TALMAGE'S DISCOURSE London, June IS.—Tho meeting of evicted tenants and their sympathizers nmr Bodyke, called for yesterday, which was proclaimed l y tUe government, was not hel 1 as originally intended, but the authorities were not wholly lucoenful in preventing a demonstration. A detachment of cavalry from Limerick and an extra draft of military assisted the police in patroling the vicinity, and forestalling any attempt of the people to assomble at the appointed piacc of mooting. In spite of these precautions, Michael . Davitt, who was to have been the principal orator at Bodyke, eluded the police and addressed a crowd of 5,000 people, wbo had been informed by couriers where they could ptVir without being molested. The rendezvous was at Feakle. While Mr. Davitt was speaking the soldiers were searching in all directions but the right one for him, his disappearance from Bodyke having becoms known. OF WORLDWIDE FAME ON THE Hariusburq, Juno 13.—The political effect of the miscarriage of the general revenue measure threatens to be serious enough to defeat the Republicans at the next election, and tho leaders of the party are beginning to agitate the calling of a special session a short time before the election to enact the defeated measure iuto a law. A large majority of the Republican newspapers of tho state are clamoring for an extra session, as the counties would derive a revenue of about $1,200,- 000 a year from tho taxation of the judgments and mortage* of corporations as proposed by the bid. TURN FROM ROME New York, Juan 13.— Miss llary B 11.11, of Jamestown, N. Y., h member of llie freshman class st Cornell University, fell down a tavine in CascadilU Gorge and was killed. dtui At THfc TABERNACLE. ST. LOUIS MUDDLE, Be Reminds the Veterans that ths II* Contrasts the Position of the American Worklngmcn with That of the European Toller, and Pays His fte- Five Divine Raphael! Exhibited la Hli Martyrdom—Gazing into Heaven—Looking ut Christ—Stoned—Rli Dying Prayer. Asleep. Herr Noat'i Fiery Language, la Conjunction with Unlimited Beer, Makea Grand Army Men are Cltl«n« a* Well the Crowd Ugly Knough to Resist Anything and Kverjthlng. Nfcw Yohjc, June 18.—Tho Now York Anarchist* opened tho season yesterday with • big picnic, any number of crimson flags and kegs of beer, and a row at Oak Cliff Park, in Union township, N. J. Tlie picnic bad ieon postjioned lrom May 22. It* obj ct was to raiso money for tue defeuso of the Clncrtgo Anarebis*. The u.lvertjaement in The Volks-Zcituug yc«lCnCla7 d.-scribed it as a "Great family outflov. of New York workingiuen, arranged by lorty-six of tho most imi-ortunt labor unions of New York," under control of the Arbeiterbund, which, had teen commissioned to arrange it by th» federated tiailes unions. shootingand prim shooting were two of tho attractions, with lor children und a lottery. The picnickers starteii lor Jersey early in the day. They flocked Irani tho east side •venues and drifted to the Forty -second street ferry, and sua uled up the Weehawken hills, on through Guttenberg to the pork. Herr Moat, witli bis aids, went over at noon and tramped up the hills and over the dusty road, junt as liis humblo followers had. A. contiageat of real Anarchists from Chicago went aloug, and were received with cheers when they i cached the part. K veryi hi g was ready for the picknickera. A 11. •C d ui beer had tsvii turned on from tho Rn * S] i .ng brewery. John Knyder, tbo owner ol i be park, contracted for the supply, .and tuna*! it over with the perk, bencht* and sandwiches to llw managers of tho p.Cili . Tho park consists of a pretty wood three acres III • xti nt, on the Guttenberg boulevard. Tho woods ma to the brow of the hill and Hdjoin the grounds of the Monitor Baseball eluU Schneider leased the grove a few wt«ks ago and filled it with bcnches for picnic pun-os. s. It was engaged for the day by tlte S ciulistH, who asscmblod about 1 strong to hear addresses by Most and bis oolabi r. r, Braunschweig. The park was deoorate.1 with Japanese lanterns and red flags, ami a vast quantity of beer was tapped. Rich of tho Socialists invested twenty-five, cents in a ticket, which admitted him to the grou..iU and entitled him to six gassee of beer. as Soldiers, and Counsels n Cordial Re- SPORTING MATTERS. ception to the Commander in Chief. spects to Anarchy and Socialism. Tho Record of BaAebalt Gaines and Turf Hudoki.yn, June 12.—Tbis morning at the tabernacle the Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, D, D., expounded appropriate passages of scripture, after which Uio congregation sang tbe favori.e hymn: "There is rest for the weary." The reverend doctor's text was Acts Til, Stt-tiO: "Behold, 1 seo tho heavens opened, and the Son of Man standin;; on the right hand of God. Then they cried out with a loud voice and stopped their ears, and ran upon him with one accord, and cast him out of the city, and stoned him; and the witnesses laid down their clothes a td young man's feet whose name waa Saul. Ami they stoned Stephen, calling upon God, and saying, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit And he kneeled down, and cried with a loud voice, Lord, lay not this sin to their elinrgo. And when he had said this, be fell asleep." Tbe preacher said; St. Louis, June 18.—Gen. John A. Noble and Col. I). P. Dyor, prominent members ol tho Grand Army of tho Republic of this city, has received n letter from Gen. Sherman, in which lie discuwas at some length the recent muddle regarding tho invitation to President- Cleveland to visit 8r.. L:mu during the Grand Army encampment next fall. The material points of the letter are ac follows: Baltimore, June IS.—Cardinal Gibbons proached to an Immeani congregation at the cathedral yesterday for the first tima since his return from Rome. In the courts of his sermon he said that he had traveled extensively in Europe, especially In Italy, France, Belgium and Holland. He then compared the condition of the labor classes as he had observed it in those countries with that of tho working people In the United Htates. Events. The race for first class sloops at the Seawanliawka-Corinthian Yacht club regatta Saturday was won by the Atlantic Governor Beaver at first seojitel the idea of convening the legislature in extra session, and to keep tho expenditures within tho revenue has already vetoed appropriations aggregating nearly $1,300,000. But the governor is weakening, and ho will probably call a special session in thb fall. The session would cost about $300,000, while the omission of the signature of the president of the senate to the revenue bUl, thus preventing tho governor from approving it, saves the corporations about $1,300,000 a year. Saturday's ball ganioa: At New York— Now York, 20; Washington, 2. At Bohtou— Boston, 11; Philadelphia, 0. At Detroit—Datroit, 7; Indianapolis, (J. At Chicago—Chicago, 6; Pittsburg, 4. At Baltimore—Baltimore, 13; Cleveland, 4. At Philadelphia— Athletic, 8; St Louis, 4. At New York- Cincinnati, 8; metropolitan, 1. At Brooklyn —Brooklyn, 14; Louisville, 7. At YVilkcsban-e—Wilkesbarre, 22; Johnstown, 7. At Reading—Reading, 0; Wllliamsport, ft. At Allentown—Allentown, 10; Altoona, 0. At Corning, N. Y.—Bradford, 10; Painted Poet, 4. "Tho rumor of your troubles in BtD Lou« reached me by telegraph, and has lot* nothing by distance. I believe we here io New York now understand the facto thai the Grand Army of tho Republic holds ill next annuil encampment at St. Louis the last Wednesday of September, 1887; that the great fair of the Valley of the Mississippi begins Monday, Oct. 3; that the best citizen# of St. Louis have invited many prominent men to be the guests of their city on tho accidental coincidence of these two important events, among these the president of out common country, Grover Cleveland, his family and Buite. The Grand Army of the Republic 1* composed exclusively of men who served in tho army and navy of the Union, to which Mr. Cleveland does not belong, and therefore he cannot participate in any of its proceedings; but the moment the Grand Army emerges from its hall of deliberation it becomes, like the Freemasons, Odd Fellows and other societies of good men, associated for a .noble purpose, a part of tho general community, subject to the laws and usages of that community. Mr. Cloveland, tho president of,tho United States, a fair selection ol all our .people, commander in chief of the amy and pa.vy.of the Umtod States, is free to come and go wherever the jurisdiction at til is—our nation's—government extends. He inay visit any fort or ship, where tho national flog will be lowered to manifest respect to him and his office, and should a foreign shijp fail to do fcji» full honors none will be sc quick to reas«t an insult as. the members of the Grand Arqyr pf J.he Republic, who periled life and limb to make that Sag respected at home and abroad. "After all my observation" he said, "I am prepared to comnj 'nd our Amorican Institutions, The condition of our working people here is far superior to that of the working Classes in any of the European oountrios. Whatever may be tUo grievances of the Amorican mechanic, I am prepared to state as the results of ray own observation that he is better housed, better fed and clothcd than his brethren on the continent of Europe. Love the land which God has given you. It Is the best on earth. 'Sou can be faithful tp your church and loyal to your republic at tho same time. Remember that we all have a share in the commonwealth that gives us liberty without price and dispenses authority without despotism The man who is not satisfied with this is not to bo trusted. But thero is another class of whom I regret to have to spook. I refer to tho Anarchists and Socialists. These are the ungrateful men who outer tbe asylum of wr country (uifl strive by foroign artifices to create discord and dissensions among our people. Like Samson in the temple, they seizs the pillars of our institutions and try to pull down the structure that gives tharo shelter. God guard us against them and preservo our republic intact, no matter how insidnously it may be assailed by the machinations of bod men," From litis mooting he proceeded to Scarlff, whore there was another assemblage of several thousand people. In his speech here, as well as at Feakle, Mr. Davitt asserted the legal right of the people to meet and discuss grievances, and if Interfered with to meet with arms in their hands and "deal with the black coated burglar brigade as they fserved." Those remarks aroused wild enthusiasm.An investigation looking to the disclosure of the mean" adopted to prevent the bill from being approved by the governor is probable, as well as a special session of the legislature. Saturday's winners at the Brooklyn Jockey club races were Maroon, Bay Ridge, Amalgam, Guarantee, Winona and Tipsy, Stephen bad been preaching a routing ssrtnon, and the people could not stand it. They resolved to do a* men aometimea would )ike to do in this day, if they dared, with some plain preacher of righteousness—kill him. The only way to silence this man waa to knock the breath out of him. So they rushed Stephen out of the gates of the city, and with curse, and whoop, and bellow they brought lilm to the cliff, as was tho custom wheu they wanted to take away Jife by stalling. Having brought hint to the edge of the cliff ihey pushed him off. After he bad fallen they came and looked down, and seeing that he wag not yet dead, they began to drop stones upon him, stone after itine, stone after stone. Ami,I tliis horrible rain of missiles, pu'plirn climbers yp on his knees and folds Lin binds, while the blood drips from bis temples to his clicoiui. from bis cheeks to hia garment*, from bin garments to the ground; und then, looking up, he makes two prayors, ono for himself and one for his murderers. "Lor. I Jo,uC, receive my spirit:" that was for hlr.wlf. "Lord, lay not this sin to their that was for his assailants. Then, from pain and loss of blood, he swooned awuy ami fell luleep. 1 want to show you to-day five picture*— Rtoplioii gtiing into heaveurStephen looking at. Clirist, IJtoplien stoned, Stephen iu his dyiii;; prayer, Stephen asleep. THE GREAT COKE STRIKE The winners at St. Leuis on Saturday were Egmont, little Minch, Blythesome, May Ellis and Biddy Bowling, FOR SEVENTY-FWE C*NT8. Decoyed Into m Corn Crib and BlddXed Practically Ended fry the A|ti«s of thp H. C. Frjcfc Cpfce Company. At the thirteenth annual regatta of the Passaic River Amateur Rowing association, at Newark, N. J., Saturday, distance one mile and a half, the events and winners wero: Pair-oared gig rape, won by the Eureka club, Newark; time, 10:29%. Junior double scull, Schile and Mahoney, of the Metropolitan club, New York; time, 8:52. Junior single scull, B. Martin, Palisade cluli, Yonkers, N. Y.; time, 8:57%. Senior fouroared sholl, Cornell University club; time, 8:18%. Pair-oared shell, Eureka club, Newark; time, 9:15%. Senior single scull, William Geopfort, Metropolitan club; time, 9:08%. Senior double scull, Qoepfert and Rogan, Metropolitan club; time, 9:34. Senior four-oared shell, Potomac club, Washington, D. C.; time, 8:54%. Six-oared gig, Newark Instituto crew No. 1; time, 10 minutes. Four-oared barge, Actives, Hoboken; time, 9:11%. Eight-oared shell, Dauntless club, New York. with Shot and Ball. PlTTWURO, June IS.-—There is conrteraatlon among the coke operators, both in an* out of the coke syndicate, in consequence of tho Frick Coke company, otherwise known as Carnegie, Phipps & Co., ordering a resumption of work at their various coke plants, which are rated as producing onefourth of the total output of coke produced by the entire syndicate, and the granting of the advance demanded by their striking employes regardless of the interests of other producers. The operators are loud in their denunciation of the firm charging them with taking.a step that will ruin the coke business and break up the syndicate. It is rumored that J. M. Schoonmaker & Co. are also about to grant the advance. Niw Orleans, Jnne 13.— Capt. A. J- Landman was brutally murdered at hi* fAw mill, twelve miles from Satortia, on the Ril Black river, Siturday evening, by Walter and Ben CoUum. Tho particular i of the affair are ns follows: Home tiroe since Colr lum and Landman bad a small business tiunsuCyJon which had been settled except the sum of seventy-five cents, which La»(t-man claimed was still di» him. No thought of a difficulty existed in the mind of Landman until Saturday evening, when the Col Uim boys rode up to Landman's place currying • shotgun, a Winchester riflo and a pistol (*ab. Decoying Landman into his corn crib opened Are upon him. A double load of buckshot was emptied into his breast, a shot from the rifle went through his body, while three pistol bails were shot into his moilth and heat', causing death instantly. A man named Vickers, who was with Landman, was shot at three times, but escaped unhurt. The murderers escaped, bat the sheriff and a |MDwe were soon in pursuit. Walter CoUum was captured at Pocahontas. The posse is in hot pursuit of Ben, the other murderer. The cardinal described the amicable characteristics of Pope Lao. "Althdrigh he is not surrounded by any military or temporal power," said be, "yet to-day, both in the spiritual and temporal world, the pope exer. clses more lnfluenoo than one hundred crowned heads." The Frick company has issued the following:'"This is to certify that we Intend to start all the works owned or Controlled by this company at the advance of 12){ per cent, demanded, without Bnd we have not and do not intend to enter into agreement with any part of our employes to the exclusion of our other employee." The cardinal thc,n refuted the charges made that France was heretical He said that during bis sojourn in that country he found all the evidences of an old Catholio nation, and that her people retain the trus spirit of charity. Evan Lewis, the strangler, and Thomas Con tiers will wrestle at Pittsburg to-night for $1,000 a side. "The idea of his Voing insulted, much less endangered, should he be on the stand alongside of our commander in chief, Gen. Fairchild, wheu the Grand Army is passing in review, seems to me monstrous. I think I know the Iowa boys too weji to believe such a thing possible. Brave men are neyef ungenerous, and the Iowa soldiers were brave men. I know it of knowledge acquired in battle, and I will pledge my life that no Iowa soldier will do so unmanly an act, and should Mr. Cleveland accept the invitation, which I hope ho will, to attend the parade of the Grand Armr of the Republic at 0t» Louis, Sept. 29 next, I will stand by his side or march post in the ranks of Ransom post, as may be ordered by Gen. Fairchiid. Tho six days go as you pleaai match at Omaha, Neb., ended at midnight Saturday, with the following scores: Hart, 400 mile-i; Harriman, 883; O'Leary, 381; Smith, 849; Grogg, 342; HilHn, 813; Brenzae, 307; Cunningham, 171. About a dozen swarthy Bohemians were in charge of the pork gate, and closely scanned i.li C oiueis. They denied admission to all wuom l hey suspected of beiug reporters or net cilvi*. First , look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to know where you Hie going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to wlmt point tho ladder reachus. And it was right that Stephen, within a few moments of lieavi u, should be gazing into tt We would p'l do well to he fouud in the same posture. There is enough iu heaven to keep us gaziug. A man of largo wealth may have statuary in the liail, and paintings in the sitting room, had works of art iu all parti of the bouse; but lipliaj the chief pictures in the art' g*l jj-'ry, auil thene, horn- after hour, you wo|k v, i.!i catalogue and glass ami ever increasing admiration. Well, heaven is the gallery wlieru Uod has gathered the chief trcoturea of his realm. The whole universe is his palace. In this lower room where we stop there are nwuy adornments— fl(*Dr of amethyst mid blossom, and on tho winding vloud stall* ufcv stretched out canvas en which poiutpinglo azuie, and purple, und saffron, apd gold. lint h-avcu is tho gallery in which the chiof floras are Kutborod. There are the robes, There aro tin richest crowpa. Tiioro aro the exhilarations. John my of it: "The kings of the earth shall bring their honor and glory ii)(o If." And I «e the procession forming; and in fie liiici-ouin nli empires, and the stars spring u;» 1 to u:i i'roll for liiu hosts tQ march under, T»l,y sUpIo tiie sound of earthquake and the pK-If i.-1 avalanche from tliemount tin , a id t:i i flag i hey bear it the flame of a i jj i....! :g Mo. iJ, and all heaven turns out wi'.i I- rDN n id fru i:pet» and Inyriml voiced n -c :».tm;i«Dii of nugoiie dominion to welcome t!it*:.i i.i, a id -o lae kings of the earth bring I-. i' D. honor an 1 glory into it. Do you wonili.-1. u,t. j .co. i i * op'e often stand like Stephen, l,-o.., . i idlnnveuf We bavo a great many fri h1C thire. There is not a man ill this Iitj.v t ,-!uy to isolated in life but there is r,"ii • Cj.e in iK'nveii with nlioni lie onco shook ! . :i ! . A- ft mini gets older tho number at 1 i C c.'l stir I ncqiuiintaaicea very rapidly liu'.ip ios. We hate not had one glimpse of t , i since t!io lii.-lit Wo kissed them goodby iu) I they went away; but sttU wo stand gj J a;; at hearen. As when some of our fi'.cnds across the sea Wo stand on the do 'k or o.i the steamtug and watch then, n: J utter uwlulu tho hulk of tlio vcesel dienyip ai -, nuil then there is only a patch of sad on tlie 1,1 y, and soon she is gone, nod they arc n.l out ,.f sight, and yot wo atawl looking iu t..e i .kino direction; so when our friends go are' f.D.u ns into the future world' we keep 1 jo*, jig down through the Narrows, and gazing cud truing, iih though wo exited tliat they wonl.l come out ami stand on soiae The Knights of Labor have all been ordered back to work under the above agreement. Thus the great coke strike is over, and by the middle £ho week JS,OQO men will be at work. DR. ffGLYNN'S POPULARITY. A BRUTAL ASSAULT, la t..e Monitor park adjoining the Monitor uuil Dunbury clubs were playing ball. Which Will Doubtless Result In the HI* Reception at Ltwt Night'* Anti- Poverty Society Meeting Sundays ball game: At Brooklyn—Cincinnati, 7; Brooklyn, 4. At Weehawken, N. J.—Danbury,Tl; Monitor, 10. Watkrhcry, Conn., Juno 14—Mrs. John Flynn, a young married woman employed as a servant by Mrs. Kate McCauley, was found late Saturday night unconscious in her room. The woftian was suffering from two ghastly wounds in the head. A physician was summoned, and pronounced Mrs. Flyun's skull fracturod. Yesterday Mrs. Kiynn regained consciousness, but would not tell who assaulted her. It is suspected from hints dropped that the assailant was her husband, who married her si» months ago, just one month before their child was born. lie has not lCeen living with her, and the police have not been able to find him. The suspi.-iou is that be came to town oa Saturday night and assaulted her. She may recover, but the chances are against it Death off the Victim. t-JAVEMEYER'S AGAIN ON FJRE, New Yokk, June la—The Antl-Povertjr meeting at the Academy of Music last night was, as usual, attended by a great throng of people, many of whom were unable to got into the building and had to go away disappointed. W. T. Croasdaje presided, and after a brief speech Dr. McGlynn, whose appearance evoked the outburst of enthusiastic applause, waving of feandkercbieffe, etc., which never fails tp greet him on these occasions. It was shortly after 4 o'clock when Herp Most moved his squat frame and flaxen head in tlie dii-ectlon of the rough wooden structuiv from which he was to make one of his dD-*uucUve speeches. The noisy IxTud stopped piuyuig, olid men, women and children surrouml-. t the stand. Blood red flags flapped tn.ui different portions of it. Nearly 8,000 luou, women and children were present. If CI' nad flowed freely all day, and nearly 1U1 the men were in a wild state of ontbu- The SjBareh for Bodies Among the Bulns to Begin To-day. Tho standing of the League and American association clubs to date is as follows; The Baseball Record. New Yokk, Jijne 1!J.—Fir* broke put again in the ijavptqpygf sugar refinery works in Green point early yesterday morning, and when the alarm was soundod at a. m. the ilremenSthought it was a repetition of Palmer's oooperage works fire in Williamsburg, two week j ago, for which the Johnson brothers are now serving fourteen years1 imprisonment. national I#40C7B- ahkrican association Won. Lost. Won. Lost. Boston 21 It Athletio.v... SI SO Chicago IS 17 Baltimore... *1 IS Detroit 85 9 Brooklyn. ... SO HO Indianapolis.. 8 28 Cincinnati.... SI St New York.... 21 18 Cleveland .... 9 SO Pittsbur* .... 18 18 Louisville SI Si Philadelphia.. 17 14 Metropolitan. 9 SI Washington.. IS 18 St. Louis 31 8 "I notice with p»in that the president's action in certai.'i pension bills enters into thil unhappy controversy. There were many private bills, and one of a general nature, which the president vetoed. The constitution of the United States compels the president te apjSrove or veto each separate bill as it reaches him from congress. It approved it be.omes a law, if vetoed it requires an incroasod majority of congress to pass it; but the president can only account for his judgment by his awn conception of duty and to his God. We, as soldiers, must submit to it because it is the law. I do not believe tli* government can ever be too charitable to thi old [soldiers, wounded or in distress bj age anil infirmity, and had I been neai Mr. Cleveland I would not have ventured to advise him on the general bill, but as to the private cases I wou'd have said: 'Charity cntcii largely into pensions, and when any special bills have passed tho ordeal of the committees of tho senate and house, approve them, but on the general bill exercise your full constitutional power. Honest men differ widely on this question of pensions to our old and feeble comrades. We all want to do wliat is right, but differ as to the means. All wo know is that twenty odd years-after the civil war the government of the United States, under Republican und Democratic rule, pays out to our soldiers of the Union army about $00,000,000 per year and a few thD uunds to the Mexican war veterans, regardless of locality, and not one cent to the rebels of tho south, whom we fought In the civil war. Tho old soldiers of the civii war have not yot just causo to make an issuo on the question of pensions to our infirm and wounded comrades. He began his address by raying that it was dangerous to any man to receive too much applause, but their confldenco Ailed blm with a sense of such profound responsibility that be trusted it would only make him the mors careful to weigh every word he might utter and to de nothing that would bring a single stain on the white banner of the now crusade which was being waged to bring men back to tho true religion of humanity, Tho address was an eloqqgnt exposition of the doctrines of Henry Gedrge and their beneficial effect upon mankind. SlUSill. JJ u t was greeted with cheers an he mounted 1 Oh- sui.iii, uml the air (or a few moments was rJi.l H uiturod articles that were wavod at i i.u iu uoluoino. The clamor and the music ml leuched those outside of the park, m u short time a curious crowd stood V J1 '-li mirauoe. The park is a cramped it 01 "!• s .ovored ground surrounded by a otvu nc*. The big double gates open 1 nuD u»v Justy ■ oad. Only a narrow door •|XU«. It wu.-i through this that all those |i..rK i«4 jnamed during the early hours All tbaee who were invited bad iwuitKiard which secured them ad- At }3:3P flames discoyered oqting their way through the rBof ot the engine room. An alarm was immediately sent out, to which throe engines and a hook and ladder company Fesponded. The firemen quickly got to work at the Are, which was gaining great headway. After a half hour's hard work It was Marine Intelligence. N«w Yowt, June 13.—Arrived, eteamem Auchorin, Glasgow pnd Moville; Europa, Hamburg; Poerdam, Rotterdam; Reupor, Barrow; Bernard, Para; La Bretagne, Havre; Muriel, Bermuda; Lucy P, Miller, Bangor: Wilkeibarre, Boston; Herman Wintor, Boston; Amos C. Bars tow, Providence Ships Arabella, London; Karvo, London; Louis Walsh, Bristol. Barks Elgenbrekt, Hamburg; Mario, Stottin; Calliope, Halifax; Giuseppe d'Abundo, Cadiz; Angustiuus, Bahia; Elizabeth, Hamburg. Arrived out, steamers La Gascogne, from New York fi r Havre, has passed the Lizard. "BILLY" MOLONEY. subdued. The Report That He Was Coming from It is now claimed that there are two of the unfortunate workmen under the debris, whose escape was cut off by the flames. Nrw York, June 13.—"Billy" Moloney will not return from Montreal and be a witness for tho prosecution In the Sharp trial. This is authoritative, and it may further be added that the prosecution has had no intention, at any time, of using Moloney as a witness, because they knew positively that he would not confess. Canada Authoritatively Denied. v-i iiM a .y, The Chllda Cap. Speeches were also made by James J. Gall an, of The Catholic Herald, and Louis F. Pout. Philadelphia, June 13.—Alfred Ham, trainer, and C. G. Pratt, manager of the crew of Cornell university, with the members of the crew, are in the city endeavoring to arrange a boat race with the crew of the University of Pennsylvania. The clubs of the two universities constitute the Childs Cup association. The Philadelphia club is now in possesion of the cup, having won it last season. The contests heretofore have been between crews ot fonr men each. The local crew now consists of eight men and they want an eight oared race. The Cornell eldb only numbers (our oarsmen, ami they think the precodent established should be adhered to. The Cornell club is ready to contest at once if an arrangemont con be made. llukttlUi'A i i , l-road sbouUlerW committeeman /II I I. ii at tlio gato. Tbe music of the Death of Gen. Waleott. ) U i Boston, June 13.—Brig. Gen. Charles F. Walcott died suddenly, Saturday night, at Gooseberry Island. With his son and twit others he rowed down to Salem harbor Saturday, and it is thought that ho ruptured a blood vessel. Gen. Walcott was AO years old; entered the army as lieutenant colonel of the Sixty-first Massachusetts, and before the close of the war was made brigadier general. Since the war he practised law in Boston. .ui-td many persons in t,lie neigbiD.i • m.d wlieu tbe wild cheers and yell* The story tbat Moloney would walk into court on Wednesday next, published in several newspapers yesterday, was not made public by the prosecution, but by thedefenso, and was only a portion of a great scheme on tho part of Sharp's lawyers. ued Most wore heard a tew of the in' - i. v ui ."Us ou the outaile tried to gain ad- Tcey were half grown boys who u. Di w- .1 p-aying I Mill near by. But the big Washington, Jane 13.—It is understood that Secretary Bayard will spend the greater portion of his vacation at his home in Delaware. Secretary Fairchild has not decided to take any vacation. Secretory Endiccti will spend some weeks at his Salem home. Secretary Whitney will devote a month to the leading resorts, and Attorney General Garland will spend September at Hominy Hill, Ark. Wliere They Will Best. ; . .iki.v, . r w.u» obdurate, on. I kept his broad i. .u i. is in t. e entrance until he feared the ,IU„ , KOU' I V.ct the butter of him, when he I.. «'• iimD Iiioi e men to his assistance. Montreal, June 18.—William Moloney, the cx-clerk of the New York board of aldermen, is at Lachiae. He says in a telegraphic mofisugu that tboro is no truth in the story that he is goiug to New York. He is perfectly satisfied with his present condition, and has uo intention of leaving Canada. mum along in grand style, and w«iHnDi nns If up to such a pitch of exeiteiu yi hi.it ln~ hearers went wild with him, . Ij( ell eivd and yelled in chorus. Tho crowd Russia and the Aneer. London, June 13.—Russia's occupation of Kerki, on the Oxus, is rogarded in Afghanistan as an invasion of Afghan soil, and as a declaration of war. The ameer is greatly alarmed. He lias assumed personal command of the troops engaged in attempting to suppress the rebellious Ghilzais, and is making strenuous efforts to restore internal tranquilly, in order to «ppe with the foreign invader. Ale Uu» K«iii wus growing all the time. A i o. roughs had joined it, and it was Mi s.t they tried to overpower the gate- Three Children Perish. Murdered (or Uls Wage*. Evansvillk, Iud., June 13.—A report; reached this city that a meteoric stone had fallen near St. Joseph, in this county, yesterday morning. The stone fell about eight; utiles from this city. It was heralded by a; sharp sound and a slight shock, wbioh was at once regarded as an earthquake. It wai soon ascertained that an enormous projectile had pierced our atmosphere and buried itself, with great force against the earth. It was, found to have embedded itself in the earth to a depth of fifteen feet, and in descending had struck a large tree, which was shattered into fragments. Several pieces of the stone were foun 1 about the cavity where it bat! entered* the earth. A Meteoric Stone. Wunripio, Man., June 18.—The residence of James El wards, a farmer, living in the township of Menota, South Manitoba, was liurned Saturday night, and threo children, aged 7, 13 and 14, perished in the Ainu's. Mr. E (wards and wife jumped from an upstairs window, taking two other children, or all would have perished. r . ».«1 lorco an entrance. Washington, June 13.—The boCJy of a uegro named Philip Pratt was found lying ooroKi the railroad track yesterday morning near Waterloo, a station in Virginia, between this city and Alexandria, with hi* throat cut from ear to oar and his hoad battered almost beyond recognition, Pratt is said to havo bw u a peaceable. sober, industrious man, and the motive whlih can be assigned (or the murder is bis week's wagps, which ho had lb-awn the night before as a brick yard hand. The ljody, it is supposed, wa» placed across the railroad track to arert suspicion from the guilty party. •»««■ i' tiiis inay 1*3, a blow m struck l*xlD, a.DCl in an instant several men tliu uint, mill then there aroae yell* "I advise you to go right along, prop-are the way for tho Grand Army of the Republic at its session of Wednesday Sjpt. 23, 1887, a( H.t:. Jxmis, and receive them at they deserve, us honored fiesta; also, tile preside at of the United States, with ifcich other guests as muy grace the occasion." »v.i, .. 1 '«=•, sn «lMDut the stand rushed pell well for i'ri j' . -D* i*uCl wossen and children were 1 own iul he rush. Tho piekniclcers, iu £• if% ruched out to the gate to meet the mix.* wp.e crowding in. CONDENSED NEWS. The flro at Havemoyor's sugar refinery, at Groonpoint, L I., 8 iturday, caused a loss of tl,000,000. Two m.- i ura believed to have perished in the flam s. Driven to Work by Soldiers. it JJjoin.ks, Juno 13.—Gen. Tuttle, whose utterances regarding tho president's proposed visit to Ht. Louis have caused so much com: ment, is hei s, and at a meeting of the local O. A. R. explained his connection with the natter. Resolutions were adopted indorsing his action and declaring that the U. A. H. never did and never would invite the president to attend a national encampment Resolutions denouncing the president for his vetoes of pension bills were also passed. The resolutions are extremely vigorous and bitter. Vienna, June 13.—Twenty-five thousand square miles of territory in the vicinity of Saegedin is inundated. Another hurricane occurred at Mako Saturday night, causing the water to dash over the dykes. Several bridges were destroyed. The laborers repairing the dykes fled, but were driven back to their work by sok^er*. ere Diii;r cloud, uud give «s pne (limjim of their liilssful and transfigured faces. While you Ion* to join lUoir oompanitawhip,'and tiiv' yu..rs a.id lilt' days (jo with syuh tixliupi th t they break your heart, and the viper of pain uwl sorrow and bereavement keeps gnawing at your vitals, you still stand, iiko iltop'ooii, gazing into heaveu. You wonder if thy liavM changed t-lnco you saw tLom lftfct. You wonder if (hoy would recogniae your f i.ow, so changed has it been with trouble. Yoa wonder if, nraid tbo myriad delights thoy have, they care as tnitoh for you as thej' usrd to when they gave you a lielping hand oud put their shoulder under your burdens. You nonder if tlioy took any ohlcr; awl sometimes, in tl» evepwgttde, .when the houio is all quiet, you wonder if you should call them t»y tWr first name If thoy woqld pot W#W» and perhaps sometimes you do (nnko the experiment, and when no one bat (lod awl yourself ore there you dirtinctiy e.iil their names, mid listen and wait, and sit gazing into heaven. Pom on now u»d see Stephen looking upon Christ, My text says ho saw tbo Sou of man at tlio right hand of God. Just how Christ l jok d in this world, just how1 he looks fat heaven, we cannot say. A writer in the timo of Clniet says, describing the Saviour's personal appearance, that he bad blue eyea and light complexion, and a very graceful structure; but I suppose it was all guesswork. Tbo (winters of the different ages have trial to imagine the features of Christ, and pat them upon canvas; but we will liave t D w: it antil with our own eyes we see him and wi Ji our own cars we can hear him. And yet there isn way of seeing and hearing lilm now. I have to toll yau that unless you s e and hear Christ on earth, you will never «e and hear liiin in heaven. Look! Tlx-ro he lit. Boholil tlie Lamb of Ood. Can you not see him/ Then pray to Ood to take tlie scales off your eyea. Look that way—try to look that way. HI* voice come* down to you this day—comes down to the blindest, to tlie deafest soul, saying: "Look onto me, all ye ends of the earth, and be ye saved, for I am Ood, and there ip none else." Proclamation of universal emancipation for all slawsa. Proclamation of universal amnesty for all rebels. Ahasuerus gathered the Babylonish H,v % .. time tiie scene iu tho park was one tl i) " Hue i kiud. Meigt. Mere and Policemou of the Weehawken police, had •«u uUtmJ d ta the noiso and made an at•i. 'to C9.tCr (ktD IW*. But their blue uni- Annie Griffith, of Philadelphia, in a fit of insanity, killed her daughter Mabel, aged and herself with the sains raxor. An examination of the japers left by a tramp who dial at Wheeling, W..Va., five years ago, hitherto unnoticed, proved him to be worth $150,000. A bM« uptias4, An i in a Jiffy the Liram d UD »nd hold in place by a . ,'ie i ss excited pfc^fnickere. Trenton, Mo., June 13.—This town and vicinity have been infested tor the past week by an insect, the description of which agrees fully with a spades of cantbarides, a Spanish fly, as (riven in the United States dispensatory. The insects come in perfect swarms, and they not devour vegetation with avidity, but their vesicating ptwer on the human body is equal fully to cantharides. Fully l.OUU people iu an at present minting blisters caused by tuts insect, and lights iu rosidences at uight have been almost abaudonod for fear ol attracting the poisonous insect. Tulsuned by Living Cantbarides. With Great Pomp and Circumstance. London, Juuo 13.—It is the purpose of the queen to observe every detail that will add to the pomp and circumstance of the jubilee' ceremonial. Sbo will wear tbo robes of on entering Wcut-mlixitsr Aljbejr, and wi 1 be1 surrounded by all the signs of sovereignty while tbore seated on tbo throne. Eight thousand troops have been detailed to line the route of tbo royal procession to the abbey. A guard of honor 600 strong will attend tht queen. An Aetor Found Drowned. ti .til--1 • C/ 1,1 tiie rtghtiu* gfatf of people dlfc : •» |»i»to!, and in a «c*DCVd t$e uoiuau til I children were rushing wildly Cor V K.m. 'fwu more shots were fired. Then i-'i innMcjilie forced tlie gates open, and Gen. J. G. Parke ltas been appointed suparntendent of the Military academy at West Point. Gen, Mentlit Is to of the dejiartment of the Missouri.Boston, June 13.—Tha tap day*' myntery cursed by the sadden disippeanmoe of Guorge R Partis, the actor, has been c!o ire 1 up. Yesterday the police patrol boat picked up a bloated and decomposed body floating in the harbor near Bird's Island. The corpsa was identified as that of the missing actor. Found Just in Time. C • HD entered thoy saw nothing ex ; .i ludly rumpled set of picnickers all 'C■'». , IC r some way to get home and sev• y.-t Ig men staggering about with bleedCuU.Trenton, N. J., Juno 18.—Arthui Schwartz, a well known local druggist, while temporarily deranged yesterday, took gye grains of morphia. He has been unwell (or several Dyoe}ttf; .and his nervous system wot partly shattered. But fop pije pf hjs clerks, who found him lying In an apartment ovui his store, Bchwarta would undoubtedly have lost his life. The clerk gave an alarm, and three physicians were summoned. They adjninistered emetics and say that they believe WuhwurU will recover. Mrs. R. t». Cable, of Westport, Conn., was dragged by a runaway horse, roooiving serious, possibly fatal, injuries. John Taylor, of Newark, 0., wlio %u bitten by a Rnuke a year ago, was attacked with hydrophobic, - A Tax Collector's Shftrt«6», r, wen) no arrests, partly because the . r.nigi ments of Union township were qu ,vi- ami partly because it was im.i uD tell just who was responsible for Old Heads and Young: Hearts. WiLKJESBABBX. Pa., Juno 13.—M. M. William*. a well known resident of this county, aud tax collector for Lucerne borough during the past two years, is aevgr«l huuJiwl dollars short in Ma appoints, His bondwnen N.y they will pay the deficiency to-day. I' tills ia done no arreet will be made. g$4NJD RaPIPB, Mich., June la—A breach ot premise case of m/jre than usual interest, and of course double importance, is on the docket to be tried at the next term of ttie United States court in this city. The case has been transferred from the Van Buren county circuit court to the federal court, nnC] ir.vclps BqrriU A- Olkney, a man with $230,000 or more, HO years old, and Jane A. Manly, a widow, who is plump, fair and 50. Several prominent residents of Erie, Pi., wore arroste 1 for swindling the government by bog * 1 pension claims and in other ways Warren & Sherman, ot Oneida, N. Y., Inventor of an automatic railway signal, war beheaded by tho cars. Washington, June 13.—The Sunday Capital publishes the following; The president is said to have promised Adjt. Gen. Johnstone Jones, of North Carolina, during bis recent visit to this city, that all the flags taken from the southern status during the late war should bo returned to those states at an early date. This resolve on the part of the president ip mainly due to the instrumentality of Adji. Gen. Drum, a thoroughly national man, who wishes to withdraw from public gase all mementoes of internecine strife. To llatarn the Hat tie Flat*. i*"o.. on his head. He said he had been „ . »*!ih u club. Dr. Hill dressed the «rC4tu- i "id the man disappeared. This C« •...«• IlutD I'lciiic, und the entire party were ■D . in disordered sections along Lite ... . »• D'.*».■ i iDD»rard the ferry. Tbi »■: uii'ii wijli Hxijr heads bandaged came «C:..D * in 'lie List boij[ from Weehuwken to iJlcw Vork. Tucy said that they Jjud taken a tkiikl iu tlie light, and that they fy)'j |jaCJ a ' higfi old time. ••'P •, it »us n hot row, now, I'm tell la' for," *»id the oue, who was the least drunk. - KtervUi.!)' wus lull. Some one of the !«. ...« got C'j JtUbtin' over some girls, and all • a DD in. I don't want to see no j.» I 'Wu't, Xhey tbrowed bricks juu . ...ie» iiul lore up » fence for clubs and liiwi.: •nth other over the tank There yn.'1-n loor or live fellers got hit pretty had, CnD4 !D»D• of had his bead out clean open jB /ion* J heard several pistol shots fired, but i . as anybody got a bulletin him." So. « odf telephoned to the Hoboken police din.. lie. rs Woru smashing things generally In t..n Wet Hawkan depot. Word was lent to 'fiu* i* liC-e station la Weehawkeu, which is ,abou; a mile from the depot, tad the Weejbuwfrui roror, followed by a goad share of ■tit pofcuutiuu, started for the depot on • dead run. It was the most exciting event that has happened in Weehawken since the J*! ®2?. ■ D oi the injured men had a severe con- Death of an Old Abolitionist. Earthquakes have caused many doaths iz Turkestan. London, June 1:1.—Tbo pope's autograph letter to Queen Victoria, congratulating tier ujiou the jubilee of her reign, express,* tlie thanks of the church for tbo queen's action, through the Indian government, in protccu ing the Catholic missions in India and upholding their authority. The Pope to the Queen. Boston, June 13.—The Hon James N, Buffum, one of the last of the band oi Abolitionists lod by Garrison and Phillips, died at his homo in Lynn last evening at 10 o'clock. Mr. Buffum had been gradually failing for several months, and his death was known to be not far in the future when he celebrated his qpth birthday a few weeks ago. He had boon unconscious for forty pigbt hours previous to his death, and passed (nvoy vyithoyt suffering. Only his family were present. At Dibigh, Wales, while an auctioneer was selling goods se:x*d for non-payment of tithes, tho police protecting him were pelted with rotten eggs. London, June 13.—The Times, in an additional article on "Parnellisin and crime," claims to trace a connection between Frank Byrne, the invincible, and Mr. ParnelL The writer asserts that it was an opportune remittance bin Mr. Parnell which enabled Byrne to escupe to France. Mr. Parnell is challenged to contradict the assertion. Still Accusing Parnell. The body of a man with his head crushed in was found hanging from a tree in Millvale, Pa. Cfc»rg®4 with Murdering a Patient. N*w York, Jpne Two Ward's Island asylum keepers were arrested yesterday for murdering a patient. Thar were Attendants Mi Cue and Cleary, who bad charge of George Furrisli, the mildly demented Central railroad engineer, who died of hemorrhage after an encounter with three keepers, in which nine of his ribs were broken. Kx-8ooretary Manning has returned from his European trip in excellent health and ipiriU. WILKKSDAllKB, Pa., June 13.—Joh.l PollX, a native of Poland, aged 38 years, who recently arrived from New York, was killed by a fall of coal and rock in W, G. Payne & Co's. mine at Luzerne. As he had no family or friends in this vicinity, the poor directors will bury him. Killed In a Coal Mine. It Is said that the American Telephone oompany, claiming a monopoly In Venezuela, b a monstrous swindlo. At the bead of the concern is a notorious ex-convict. (Che Little Bide Door. Iluroed to a Crisp. Waterbury, Conn., June 18.—Jeremiah Bergin's skull was fatally fractured yesterday by falling down a cellarway. It is supposed that be had been drinking, and was in quest of a drink at the side entrance of a saloon. Sandusky, O., June 13.—John George, a Frenchman, was burned to a crisp in the barn of David Frohman early yesterday morning. A valuable horse and considerable other property was also consumed. The lire was incendiary. Kendall, the Boston policeman, has invented a vessel in which he proposes to make the journey through the whirlpool rapids at Niagara in full view of the spectators. The attempt will be made June 13. Drowned While Bathing, Paris, June 18.—A dual growing out of an offensive newspaper artiste took place yesterday between M. Clemenoeau, the Radical leader, and M. Foucher, editor of The National. Two shota were exchanged, but neither of the combatants was injured. The seconds interfered and declared that honor was satisfied. A French "Affair of Honor." Grxat Baiuuxuton, Mass., Juno 13.— James Loft us, aged 13 years, and Edward Rogers, aged IS yew*, while oat In a boat on Lake Mansfield yesterday afternoon, went in bathing, and both were drowned in dx feet of water. Their bodies were recovered. Heads at *000 Each. New York, June IS.—The monument erected by the New York Frees club at Cypress Hills cemetery was dedicated yesterday afternoon, in the presence of over 1,000 journalists and their friends. To the Dead Journalists. Only three of the sixty-one persons arrested for the Panhandle robberies are now in jail. San Francisco, June 13. —A special front Nogalcs, A. T., states that the governor of the state at Sonora has offered $900 for tlx head of each hostile Apache Indian. William C. Sheridan, the American tragic actor, died in Australia, aged 90. Stabbed Tom—Um Minora' 10 otnl Stick Salve. (Comoro® Cw tbodmo.}
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1495, June 13, 1887 |
Issue | 1495 |
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 | 1887-06-13 |
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 1495, June 13, 1887 |
Issue | 1495 |
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 | 1887-06-13 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18870613_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 | . Mir-: r-5 v -• - « - - f-r it • 4 NU*BEB1*96 I IT —*rtllrtiH 1880. f PITTSTON PA., MONDAY. JUNE \'l 1887. I TWO OMHT8 I T«n oanta Pw Weak. A GRAND ARMY MAN THE PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE CARDINAL gibbons. ST. STEPHEN. RCHY RUNS WILD. THE POLICE LOOKING FOR DAVITT, TERNOON SPECIAL DISPATCHE3 SUNDAY PICNIC INTERRUPTED BV A LIVELY RIOT. iVhlle n* Wu Addressing B.000 People la Another Section. Will Probably be Convened In Sped** Session in the Fall. HIS FIRST SERMON SINCE HIS ftE« Fatal rail at a Cornell l)alv«nilr stii- REV. DR. TALMAGE'S DISCOURSE London, June IS.—Tho meeting of evicted tenants and their sympathizers nmr Bodyke, called for yesterday, which was proclaimed l y tUe government, was not hel 1 as originally intended, but the authorities were not wholly lucoenful in preventing a demonstration. A detachment of cavalry from Limerick and an extra draft of military assisted the police in patroling the vicinity, and forestalling any attempt of the people to assomble at the appointed piacc of mooting. In spite of these precautions, Michael . Davitt, who was to have been the principal orator at Bodyke, eluded the police and addressed a crowd of 5,000 people, wbo had been informed by couriers where they could ptVir without being molested. The rendezvous was at Feakle. While Mr. Davitt was speaking the soldiers were searching in all directions but the right one for him, his disappearance from Bodyke having becoms known. OF WORLDWIDE FAME ON THE Hariusburq, Juno 13.—The political effect of the miscarriage of the general revenue measure threatens to be serious enough to defeat the Republicans at the next election, and tho leaders of the party are beginning to agitate the calling of a special session a short time before the election to enact the defeated measure iuto a law. A large majority of the Republican newspapers of tho state are clamoring for an extra session, as the counties would derive a revenue of about $1,200,- 000 a year from tho taxation of the judgments and mortage* of corporations as proposed by the bid. TURN FROM ROME New York, Juan 13.— Miss llary B 11.11, of Jamestown, N. Y., h member of llie freshman class st Cornell University, fell down a tavine in CascadilU Gorge and was killed. dtui At THfc TABERNACLE. ST. LOUIS MUDDLE, Be Reminds the Veterans that ths II* Contrasts the Position of the American Worklngmcn with That of the European Toller, and Pays His fte- Five Divine Raphael! Exhibited la Hli Martyrdom—Gazing into Heaven—Looking ut Christ—Stoned—Rli Dying Prayer. Asleep. Herr Noat'i Fiery Language, la Conjunction with Unlimited Beer, Makea Grand Army Men are Cltl«n« a* Well the Crowd Ugly Knough to Resist Anything and Kverjthlng. Nfcw Yohjc, June 18.—Tho Now York Anarchist* opened tho season yesterday with • big picnic, any number of crimson flags and kegs of beer, and a row at Oak Cliff Park, in Union township, N. J. Tlie picnic bad ieon postjioned lrom May 22. It* obj ct was to raiso money for tue defeuso of the Clncrtgo Anarebis*. The u.lvertjaement in The Volks-Zcituug yc«lCnCla7 d.-scribed it as a "Great family outflov. of New York workingiuen, arranged by lorty-six of tho most imi-ortunt labor unions of New York," under control of the Arbeiterbund, which, had teen commissioned to arrange it by th» federated tiailes unions. shootingand prim shooting were two of tho attractions, with lor children und a lottery. The picnickers starteii lor Jersey early in the day. They flocked Irani tho east side •venues and drifted to the Forty -second street ferry, and sua uled up the Weehawken hills, on through Guttenberg to the pork. Herr Moat, witli bis aids, went over at noon and tramped up the hills and over the dusty road, junt as liis humblo followers had. A. contiageat of real Anarchists from Chicago went aloug, and were received with cheers when they i cached the part. K veryi hi g was ready for the picknickera. A 11. •C d ui beer had tsvii turned on from tho Rn * S] i .ng brewery. John Knyder, tbo owner ol i be park, contracted for the supply, .and tuna*! it over with the perk, bencht* and sandwiches to llw managers of tho p.Cili . Tho park consists of a pretty wood three acres III • xti nt, on the Guttenberg boulevard. Tho woods ma to the brow of the hill and Hdjoin the grounds of the Monitor Baseball eluU Schneider leased the grove a few wt«ks ago and filled it with bcnches for picnic pun-os. s. It was engaged for the day by tlte S ciulistH, who asscmblod about 1 strong to hear addresses by Most and bis oolabi r. r, Braunschweig. The park was deoorate.1 with Japanese lanterns and red flags, ami a vast quantity of beer was tapped. Rich of tho Socialists invested twenty-five, cents in a ticket, which admitted him to the grou..iU and entitled him to six gassee of beer. as Soldiers, and Counsels n Cordial Re- SPORTING MATTERS. ception to the Commander in Chief. spects to Anarchy and Socialism. Tho Record of BaAebalt Gaines and Turf Hudoki.yn, June 12.—Tbis morning at the tabernacle the Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, D, D., expounded appropriate passages of scripture, after which Uio congregation sang tbe favori.e hymn: "There is rest for the weary." The reverend doctor's text was Acts Til, Stt-tiO: "Behold, 1 seo tho heavens opened, and the Son of Man standin;; on the right hand of God. Then they cried out with a loud voice and stopped their ears, and ran upon him with one accord, and cast him out of the city, and stoned him; and the witnesses laid down their clothes a td young man's feet whose name waa Saul. Ami they stoned Stephen, calling upon God, and saying, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit And he kneeled down, and cried with a loud voice, Lord, lay not this sin to their elinrgo. And when he had said this, be fell asleep." Tbe preacher said; St. Louis, June 18.—Gen. John A. Noble and Col. I). P. Dyor, prominent members ol tho Grand Army of tho Republic of this city, has received n letter from Gen. Sherman, in which lie discuwas at some length the recent muddle regarding tho invitation to President- Cleveland to visit 8r.. L:mu during the Grand Army encampment next fall. The material points of the letter are ac follows: Baltimore, June IS.—Cardinal Gibbons proached to an Immeani congregation at the cathedral yesterday for the first tima since his return from Rome. In the courts of his sermon he said that he had traveled extensively in Europe, especially In Italy, France, Belgium and Holland. He then compared the condition of the labor classes as he had observed it in those countries with that of tho working people In the United Htates. Events. The race for first class sloops at the Seawanliawka-Corinthian Yacht club regatta Saturday was won by the Atlantic Governor Beaver at first seojitel the idea of convening the legislature in extra session, and to keep tho expenditures within tho revenue has already vetoed appropriations aggregating nearly $1,300,000. But the governor is weakening, and ho will probably call a special session in thb fall. The session would cost about $300,000, while the omission of the signature of the president of the senate to the revenue bUl, thus preventing tho governor from approving it, saves the corporations about $1,300,000 a year. Saturday's ball ganioa: At New York— Now York, 20; Washington, 2. At Bohtou— Boston, 11; Philadelphia, 0. At Detroit—Datroit, 7; Indianapolis, (J. At Chicago—Chicago, 6; Pittsburg, 4. At Baltimore—Baltimore, 13; Cleveland, 4. At Philadelphia— Athletic, 8; St Louis, 4. At New York- Cincinnati, 8; metropolitan, 1. At Brooklyn —Brooklyn, 14; Louisville, 7. At YVilkcsban-e—Wilkesbarre, 22; Johnstown, 7. At Reading—Reading, 0; Wllliamsport, ft. At Allentown—Allentown, 10; Altoona, 0. At Corning, N. Y.—Bradford, 10; Painted Poet, 4. "Tho rumor of your troubles in BtD Lou« reached me by telegraph, and has lot* nothing by distance. I believe we here io New York now understand the facto thai the Grand Army of tho Republic holds ill next annuil encampment at St. Louis the last Wednesday of September, 1887; that the great fair of the Valley of the Mississippi begins Monday, Oct. 3; that the best citizen# of St. Louis have invited many prominent men to be the guests of their city on tho accidental coincidence of these two important events, among these the president of out common country, Grover Cleveland, his family and Buite. The Grand Army of the Republic 1* composed exclusively of men who served in tho army and navy of the Union, to which Mr. Cleveland does not belong, and therefore he cannot participate in any of its proceedings; but the moment the Grand Army emerges from its hall of deliberation it becomes, like the Freemasons, Odd Fellows and other societies of good men, associated for a .noble purpose, a part of tho general community, subject to the laws and usages of that community. Mr. Cloveland, tho president of,tho United States, a fair selection ol all our .people, commander in chief of the amy and pa.vy.of the Umtod States, is free to come and go wherever the jurisdiction at til is—our nation's—government extends. He inay visit any fort or ship, where tho national flog will be lowered to manifest respect to him and his office, and should a foreign shijp fail to do fcji» full honors none will be sc quick to reas«t an insult as. the members of the Grand Arqyr pf J.he Republic, who periled life and limb to make that Sag respected at home and abroad. "After all my observation" he said, "I am prepared to comnj 'nd our Amorican Institutions, The condition of our working people here is far superior to that of the working Classes in any of the European oountrios. Whatever may be tUo grievances of the Amorican mechanic, I am prepared to state as the results of ray own observation that he is better housed, better fed and clothcd than his brethren on the continent of Europe. Love the land which God has given you. It Is the best on earth. 'Sou can be faithful tp your church and loyal to your republic at tho same time. Remember that we all have a share in the commonwealth that gives us liberty without price and dispenses authority without despotism The man who is not satisfied with this is not to bo trusted. But thero is another class of whom I regret to have to spook. I refer to tho Anarchists and Socialists. These are the ungrateful men who outer tbe asylum of wr country (uifl strive by foroign artifices to create discord and dissensions among our people. Like Samson in the temple, they seizs the pillars of our institutions and try to pull down the structure that gives tharo shelter. God guard us against them and preservo our republic intact, no matter how insidnously it may be assailed by the machinations of bod men," From litis mooting he proceeded to Scarlff, whore there was another assemblage of several thousand people. In his speech here, as well as at Feakle, Mr. Davitt asserted the legal right of the people to meet and discuss grievances, and if Interfered with to meet with arms in their hands and "deal with the black coated burglar brigade as they fserved." Those remarks aroused wild enthusiasm.An investigation looking to the disclosure of the mean" adopted to prevent the bill from being approved by the governor is probable, as well as a special session of the legislature. Saturday's winners at the Brooklyn Jockey club races were Maroon, Bay Ridge, Amalgam, Guarantee, Winona and Tipsy, Stephen bad been preaching a routing ssrtnon, and the people could not stand it. They resolved to do a* men aometimea would )ike to do in this day, if they dared, with some plain preacher of righteousness—kill him. The only way to silence this man waa to knock the breath out of him. So they rushed Stephen out of the gates of the city, and with curse, and whoop, and bellow they brought lilm to the cliff, as was tho custom wheu they wanted to take away Jife by stalling. Having brought hint to the edge of the cliff ihey pushed him off. After he bad fallen they came and looked down, and seeing that he wag not yet dead, they began to drop stones upon him, stone after itine, stone after stone. Ami,I tliis horrible rain of missiles, pu'plirn climbers yp on his knees and folds Lin binds, while the blood drips from bis temples to his clicoiui. from bis cheeks to hia garment*, from bin garments to the ground; und then, looking up, he makes two prayors, ono for himself and one for his murderers. "Lor. I Jo,uC, receive my spirit:" that was for hlr.wlf. "Lord, lay not this sin to their that was for his assailants. Then, from pain and loss of blood, he swooned awuy ami fell luleep. 1 want to show you to-day five picture*— Rtoplioii gtiing into heaveurStephen looking at. Clirist, IJtoplien stoned, Stephen iu his dyiii;; prayer, Stephen asleep. THE GREAT COKE STRIKE The winners at St. Leuis on Saturday were Egmont, little Minch, Blythesome, May Ellis and Biddy Bowling, FOR SEVENTY-FWE C*NT8. Decoyed Into m Corn Crib and BlddXed Practically Ended fry the A|ti«s of thp H. C. Frjcfc Cpfce Company. At the thirteenth annual regatta of the Passaic River Amateur Rowing association, at Newark, N. J., Saturday, distance one mile and a half, the events and winners wero: Pair-oared gig rape, won by the Eureka club, Newark; time, 10:29%. Junior double scull, Schile and Mahoney, of the Metropolitan club, New York; time, 8:52. Junior single scull, B. Martin, Palisade cluli, Yonkers, N. Y.; time, 8:57%. Senior fouroared sholl, Cornell University club; time, 8:18%. Pair-oared shell, Eureka club, Newark; time, 9:15%. Senior single scull, William Geopfort, Metropolitan club; time, 9:08%. Senior double scull, Qoepfert and Rogan, Metropolitan club; time, 9:34. Senior four-oared shell, Potomac club, Washington, D. C.; time, 8:54%. Six-oared gig, Newark Instituto crew No. 1; time, 10 minutes. Four-oared barge, Actives, Hoboken; time, 9:11%. Eight-oared shell, Dauntless club, New York. with Shot and Ball. PlTTWURO, June IS.-—There is conrteraatlon among the coke operators, both in an* out of the coke syndicate, in consequence of tho Frick Coke company, otherwise known as Carnegie, Phipps & Co., ordering a resumption of work at their various coke plants, which are rated as producing onefourth of the total output of coke produced by the entire syndicate, and the granting of the advance demanded by their striking employes regardless of the interests of other producers. The operators are loud in their denunciation of the firm charging them with taking.a step that will ruin the coke business and break up the syndicate. It is rumored that J. M. Schoonmaker & Co. are also about to grant the advance. Niw Orleans, Jnne 13.— Capt. A. J- Landman was brutally murdered at hi* fAw mill, twelve miles from Satortia, on the Ril Black river, Siturday evening, by Walter and Ben CoUum. Tho particular i of the affair are ns follows: Home tiroe since Colr lum and Landman bad a small business tiunsuCyJon which had been settled except the sum of seventy-five cents, which La»(t-man claimed was still di» him. No thought of a difficulty existed in the mind of Landman until Saturday evening, when the Col Uim boys rode up to Landman's place currying • shotgun, a Winchester riflo and a pistol (*ab. Decoying Landman into his corn crib opened Are upon him. A double load of buckshot was emptied into his breast, a shot from the rifle went through his body, while three pistol bails were shot into his moilth and heat', causing death instantly. A man named Vickers, who was with Landman, was shot at three times, but escaped unhurt. The murderers escaped, bat the sheriff and a |MDwe were soon in pursuit. Walter CoUum was captured at Pocahontas. The posse is in hot pursuit of Ben, the other murderer. The cardinal described the amicable characteristics of Pope Lao. "Althdrigh he is not surrounded by any military or temporal power," said be, "yet to-day, both in the spiritual and temporal world, the pope exer. clses more lnfluenoo than one hundred crowned heads." The Frick company has issued the following:'"This is to certify that we Intend to start all the works owned or Controlled by this company at the advance of 12){ per cent, demanded, without Bnd we have not and do not intend to enter into agreement with any part of our employes to the exclusion of our other employee." The cardinal thc,n refuted the charges made that France was heretical He said that during bis sojourn in that country he found all the evidences of an old Catholio nation, and that her people retain the trus spirit of charity. Evan Lewis, the strangler, and Thomas Con tiers will wrestle at Pittsburg to-night for $1,000 a side. "The idea of his Voing insulted, much less endangered, should he be on the stand alongside of our commander in chief, Gen. Fairchild, wheu the Grand Army is passing in review, seems to me monstrous. I think I know the Iowa boys too weji to believe such a thing possible. Brave men are neyef ungenerous, and the Iowa soldiers were brave men. I know it of knowledge acquired in battle, and I will pledge my life that no Iowa soldier will do so unmanly an act, and should Mr. Cleveland accept the invitation, which I hope ho will, to attend the parade of the Grand Armr of the Republic at 0t» Louis, Sept. 29 next, I will stand by his side or march post in the ranks of Ransom post, as may be ordered by Gen. Fairchiid. Tho six days go as you pleaai match at Omaha, Neb., ended at midnight Saturday, with the following scores: Hart, 400 mile-i; Harriman, 883; O'Leary, 381; Smith, 849; Grogg, 342; HilHn, 813; Brenzae, 307; Cunningham, 171. About a dozen swarthy Bohemians were in charge of the pork gate, and closely scanned i.li C oiueis. They denied admission to all wuom l hey suspected of beiug reporters or net cilvi*. First , look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to know where you Hie going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to wlmt point tho ladder reachus. And it was right that Stephen, within a few moments of lieavi u, should be gazing into tt We would p'l do well to he fouud in the same posture. There is enough iu heaven to keep us gaziug. A man of largo wealth may have statuary in the liail, and paintings in the sitting room, had works of art iu all parti of the bouse; but lipliaj the chief pictures in the art' g*l jj-'ry, auil thene, horn- after hour, you wo|k v, i.!i catalogue and glass ami ever increasing admiration. Well, heaven is the gallery wlieru Uod has gathered the chief trcoturea of his realm. The whole universe is his palace. In this lower room where we stop there are nwuy adornments— fl(*Dr of amethyst mid blossom, and on tho winding vloud stall* ufcv stretched out canvas en which poiutpinglo azuie, and purple, und saffron, apd gold. lint h-avcu is tho gallery in which the chiof floras are Kutborod. There are the robes, There aro tin richest crowpa. Tiioro aro the exhilarations. John my of it: "The kings of the earth shall bring their honor and glory ii)(o If." And I «e the procession forming; and in fie liiici-ouin nli empires, and the stars spring u;» 1 to u:i i'roll for liiu hosts tQ march under, T»l,y sUpIo tiie sound of earthquake and the pK-If i.-1 avalanche from tliemount tin , a id t:i i flag i hey bear it the flame of a i jj i....! :g Mo. iJ, and all heaven turns out wi'.i I- rDN n id fru i:pet» and Inyriml voiced n -c :».tm;i«Dii of nugoiie dominion to welcome t!it*:.i i.i, a id -o lae kings of the earth bring I-. i' D. honor an 1 glory into it. Do you wonili.-1. u,t. j .co. i i * op'e often stand like Stephen, l,-o.., . i idlnnveuf We bavo a great many fri h1C thire. There is not a man ill this Iitj.v t ,-!uy to isolated in life but there is r,"ii • Cj.e in iK'nveii with nlioni lie onco shook ! . :i ! . A- ft mini gets older tho number at 1 i C c.'l stir I ncqiuiintaaicea very rapidly liu'.ip ios. We hate not had one glimpse of t , i since t!io lii.-lit Wo kissed them goodby iu) I they went away; but sttU wo stand gj J a;; at hearen. As when some of our fi'.cnds across the sea Wo stand on the do 'k or o.i the steamtug and watch then, n: J utter uwlulu tho hulk of tlio vcesel dienyip ai -, nuil then there is only a patch of sad on tlie 1,1 y, and soon she is gone, nod they arc n.l out ,.f sight, and yot wo atawl looking iu t..e i .kino direction; so when our friends go are' f.D.u ns into the future world' we keep 1 jo*, jig down through the Narrows, and gazing cud truing, iih though wo exited tliat they wonl.l come out ami stand on soiae The Knights of Labor have all been ordered back to work under the above agreement. Thus the great coke strike is over, and by the middle £ho week JS,OQO men will be at work. DR. ffGLYNN'S POPULARITY. A BRUTAL ASSAULT, la t..e Monitor park adjoining the Monitor uuil Dunbury clubs were playing ball. Which Will Doubtless Result In the HI* Reception at Ltwt Night'* Anti- Poverty Society Meeting Sundays ball game: At Brooklyn—Cincinnati, 7; Brooklyn, 4. At Weehawken, N. J.—Danbury,Tl; Monitor, 10. Watkrhcry, Conn., Juno 14—Mrs. John Flynn, a young married woman employed as a servant by Mrs. Kate McCauley, was found late Saturday night unconscious in her room. The woftian was suffering from two ghastly wounds in the head. A physician was summoned, and pronounced Mrs. Flyun's skull fracturod. Yesterday Mrs. Kiynn regained consciousness, but would not tell who assaulted her. It is suspected from hints dropped that the assailant was her husband, who married her si» months ago, just one month before their child was born. lie has not lCeen living with her, and the police have not been able to find him. The suspi.-iou is that be came to town oa Saturday night and assaulted her. She may recover, but the chances are against it Death off the Victim. t-JAVEMEYER'S AGAIN ON FJRE, New Yokk, June la—The Antl-Povertjr meeting at the Academy of Music last night was, as usual, attended by a great throng of people, many of whom were unable to got into the building and had to go away disappointed. W. T. Croasdaje presided, and after a brief speech Dr. McGlynn, whose appearance evoked the outburst of enthusiastic applause, waving of feandkercbieffe, etc., which never fails tp greet him on these occasions. It was shortly after 4 o'clock when Herp Most moved his squat frame and flaxen head in tlie dii-ectlon of the rough wooden structuiv from which he was to make one of his dD-*uucUve speeches. The noisy IxTud stopped piuyuig, olid men, women and children surrouml-. t the stand. Blood red flags flapped tn.ui different portions of it. Nearly 8,000 luou, women and children were present. If CI' nad flowed freely all day, and nearly 1U1 the men were in a wild state of ontbu- The SjBareh for Bodies Among the Bulns to Begin To-day. Tho standing of the League and American association clubs to date is as follows; The Baseball Record. New Yokk, Jijne 1!J.—Fir* broke put again in the ijavptqpygf sugar refinery works in Green point early yesterday morning, and when the alarm was soundod at a. m. the ilremenSthought it was a repetition of Palmer's oooperage works fire in Williamsburg, two week j ago, for which the Johnson brothers are now serving fourteen years1 imprisonment. national I#40C7B- ahkrican association Won. Lost. Won. Lost. Boston 21 It Athletio.v... SI SO Chicago IS 17 Baltimore... *1 IS Detroit 85 9 Brooklyn. ... SO HO Indianapolis.. 8 28 Cincinnati.... SI St New York.... 21 18 Cleveland .... 9 SO Pittsbur* .... 18 18 Louisville SI Si Philadelphia.. 17 14 Metropolitan. 9 SI Washington.. IS 18 St. Louis 31 8 "I notice with p»in that the president's action in certai.'i pension bills enters into thil unhappy controversy. There were many private bills, and one of a general nature, which the president vetoed. The constitution of the United States compels the president te apjSrove or veto each separate bill as it reaches him from congress. It approved it be.omes a law, if vetoed it requires an incroasod majority of congress to pass it; but the president can only account for his judgment by his awn conception of duty and to his God. We, as soldiers, must submit to it because it is the law. I do not believe tli* government can ever be too charitable to thi old [soldiers, wounded or in distress bj age anil infirmity, and had I been neai Mr. Cleveland I would not have ventured to advise him on the general bill, but as to the private cases I wou'd have said: 'Charity cntcii largely into pensions, and when any special bills have passed tho ordeal of the committees of tho senate and house, approve them, but on the general bill exercise your full constitutional power. Honest men differ widely on this question of pensions to our old and feeble comrades. We all want to do wliat is right, but differ as to the means. All wo know is that twenty odd years-after the civil war the government of the United States, under Republican und Democratic rule, pays out to our soldiers of the Union army about $00,000,000 per year and a few thD uunds to the Mexican war veterans, regardless of locality, and not one cent to the rebels of tho south, whom we fought In the civil war. Tho old soldiers of the civii war have not yot just causo to make an issuo on the question of pensions to our infirm and wounded comrades. He began his address by raying that it was dangerous to any man to receive too much applause, but their confldenco Ailed blm with a sense of such profound responsibility that be trusted it would only make him the mors careful to weigh every word he might utter and to de nothing that would bring a single stain on the white banner of the now crusade which was being waged to bring men back to tho true religion of humanity, Tho address was an eloqqgnt exposition of the doctrines of Henry Gedrge and their beneficial effect upon mankind. SlUSill. JJ u t was greeted with cheers an he mounted 1 Oh- sui.iii, uml the air (or a few moments was rJi.l H uiturod articles that were wavod at i i.u iu uoluoino. The clamor and the music ml leuched those outside of the park, m u short time a curious crowd stood V J1 '-li mirauoe. The park is a cramped it 01 "!• s .ovored ground surrounded by a otvu nc*. The big double gates open 1 nuD u»v Justy ■ oad. Only a narrow door •|XU«. It wu.-i through this that all those |i..rK i«4 jnamed during the early hours All tbaee who were invited bad iwuitKiard which secured them ad- At }3:3P flames discoyered oqting their way through the rBof ot the engine room. An alarm was immediately sent out, to which throe engines and a hook and ladder company Fesponded. The firemen quickly got to work at the Are, which was gaining great headway. After a half hour's hard work It was Marine Intelligence. N«w Yowt, June 13.—Arrived, eteamem Auchorin, Glasgow pnd Moville; Europa, Hamburg; Poerdam, Rotterdam; Reupor, Barrow; Bernard, Para; La Bretagne, Havre; Muriel, Bermuda; Lucy P, Miller, Bangor: Wilkeibarre, Boston; Herman Wintor, Boston; Amos C. Bars tow, Providence Ships Arabella, London; Karvo, London; Louis Walsh, Bristol. Barks Elgenbrekt, Hamburg; Mario, Stottin; Calliope, Halifax; Giuseppe d'Abundo, Cadiz; Angustiuus, Bahia; Elizabeth, Hamburg. Arrived out, steamers La Gascogne, from New York fi r Havre, has passed the Lizard. "BILLY" MOLONEY. subdued. The Report That He Was Coming from It is now claimed that there are two of the unfortunate workmen under the debris, whose escape was cut off by the flames. Nrw York, June 13.—"Billy" Moloney will not return from Montreal and be a witness for tho prosecution In the Sharp trial. This is authoritative, and it may further be added that the prosecution has had no intention, at any time, of using Moloney as a witness, because they knew positively that he would not confess. Canada Authoritatively Denied. v-i iiM a .y, The Chllda Cap. Speeches were also made by James J. Gall an, of The Catholic Herald, and Louis F. Pout. Philadelphia, June 13.—Alfred Ham, trainer, and C. G. Pratt, manager of the crew of Cornell university, with the members of the crew, are in the city endeavoring to arrange a boat race with the crew of the University of Pennsylvania. The clubs of the two universities constitute the Childs Cup association. The Philadelphia club is now in possesion of the cup, having won it last season. The contests heretofore have been between crews ot fonr men each. The local crew now consists of eight men and they want an eight oared race. The Cornell eldb only numbers (our oarsmen, ami they think the precodent established should be adhered to. The Cornell club is ready to contest at once if an arrangemont con be made. llukttlUi'A i i , l-road sbouUlerW committeeman /II I I. ii at tlio gato. Tbe music of the Death of Gen. Waleott. ) U i Boston, June 13.—Brig. Gen. Charles F. Walcott died suddenly, Saturday night, at Gooseberry Island. With his son and twit others he rowed down to Salem harbor Saturday, and it is thought that ho ruptured a blood vessel. Gen. Walcott was AO years old; entered the army as lieutenant colonel of the Sixty-first Massachusetts, and before the close of the war was made brigadier general. Since the war he practised law in Boston. .ui-td many persons in t,lie neigbiD.i • m.d wlieu tbe wild cheers and yell* The story tbat Moloney would walk into court on Wednesday next, published in several newspapers yesterday, was not made public by the prosecution, but by thedefenso, and was only a portion of a great scheme on tho part of Sharp's lawyers. ued Most wore heard a tew of the in' - i. v ui ."Us ou the outaile tried to gain ad- Tcey were half grown boys who u. Di w- .1 p-aying I Mill near by. But the big Washington, Jane 13.—It is understood that Secretary Bayard will spend the greater portion of his vacation at his home in Delaware. Secretary Fairchild has not decided to take any vacation. Secretory Endiccti will spend some weeks at his Salem home. Secretary Whitney will devote a month to the leading resorts, and Attorney General Garland will spend September at Hominy Hill, Ark. Wliere They Will Best. ; . .iki.v, . r w.u» obdurate, on. I kept his broad i. .u i. is in t. e entrance until he feared the ,IU„ , KOU' I V.ct the butter of him, when he I.. «'• iimD Iiioi e men to his assistance. Montreal, June 18.—William Moloney, the cx-clerk of the New York board of aldermen, is at Lachiae. He says in a telegraphic mofisugu that tboro is no truth in the story that he is goiug to New York. He is perfectly satisfied with his present condition, and has uo intention of leaving Canada. mum along in grand style, and w«iHnDi nns If up to such a pitch of exeiteiu yi hi.it ln~ hearers went wild with him, . Ij( ell eivd and yelled in chorus. Tho crowd Russia and the Aneer. London, June 13.—Russia's occupation of Kerki, on the Oxus, is rogarded in Afghanistan as an invasion of Afghan soil, and as a declaration of war. The ameer is greatly alarmed. He lias assumed personal command of the troops engaged in attempting to suppress the rebellious Ghilzais, and is making strenuous efforts to restore internal tranquilly, in order to «ppe with the foreign invader. Ale Uu» K«iii wus growing all the time. A i o. roughs had joined it, and it was Mi s.t they tried to overpower the gate- Three Children Perish. Murdered (or Uls Wage*. Evansvillk, Iud., June 13.—A report; reached this city that a meteoric stone had fallen near St. Joseph, in this county, yesterday morning. The stone fell about eight; utiles from this city. It was heralded by a; sharp sound and a slight shock, wbioh was at once regarded as an earthquake. It wai soon ascertained that an enormous projectile had pierced our atmosphere and buried itself, with great force against the earth. It was, found to have embedded itself in the earth to a depth of fifteen feet, and in descending had struck a large tree, which was shattered into fragments. Several pieces of the stone were foun 1 about the cavity where it bat! entered* the earth. A Meteoric Stone. Wunripio, Man., June 18.—The residence of James El wards, a farmer, living in the township of Menota, South Manitoba, was liurned Saturday night, and threo children, aged 7, 13 and 14, perished in the Ainu's. Mr. E (wards and wife jumped from an upstairs window, taking two other children, or all would have perished. r . ».«1 lorco an entrance. Washington, June 13.—The boCJy of a uegro named Philip Pratt was found lying ooroKi the railroad track yesterday morning near Waterloo, a station in Virginia, between this city and Alexandria, with hi* throat cut from ear to oar and his hoad battered almost beyond recognition, Pratt is said to havo bw u a peaceable. sober, industrious man, and the motive whlih can be assigned (or the murder is bis week's wagps, which ho had lb-awn the night before as a brick yard hand. The ljody, it is supposed, wa» placed across the railroad track to arert suspicion from the guilty party. •»««■ i' tiiis inay 1*3, a blow m struck l*xlD, a.DCl in an instant several men tliu uint, mill then there aroae yell* "I advise you to go right along, prop-are the way for tho Grand Army of the Republic at its session of Wednesday Sjpt. 23, 1887, a( H.t:. Jxmis, and receive them at they deserve, us honored fiesta; also, tile preside at of the United States, with ifcich other guests as muy grace the occasion." »v.i, .. 1 '«=•, sn «lMDut the stand rushed pell well for i'ri j' . -D* i*uCl wossen and children were 1 own iul he rush. Tho piekniclcers, iu £• if% ruched out to the gate to meet the mix.* wp.e crowding in. CONDENSED NEWS. The flro at Havemoyor's sugar refinery, at Groonpoint, L I., 8 iturday, caused a loss of tl,000,000. Two m.- i ura believed to have perished in the flam s. Driven to Work by Soldiers. it JJjoin.ks, Juno 13.—Gen. Tuttle, whose utterances regarding tho president's proposed visit to Ht. Louis have caused so much com: ment, is hei s, and at a meeting of the local O. A. R. explained his connection with the natter. Resolutions were adopted indorsing his action and declaring that the U. A. H. never did and never would invite the president to attend a national encampment Resolutions denouncing the president for his vetoes of pension bills were also passed. The resolutions are extremely vigorous and bitter. Vienna, June 13.—Twenty-five thousand square miles of territory in the vicinity of Saegedin is inundated. Another hurricane occurred at Mako Saturday night, causing the water to dash over the dykes. Several bridges were destroyed. The laborers repairing the dykes fled, but were driven back to their work by sok^er*. ere Diii;r cloud, uud give «s pne (limjim of their liilssful and transfigured faces. While you Ion* to join lUoir oompanitawhip,'and tiiv' yu..rs a.id lilt' days (jo with syuh tixliupi th t they break your heart, and the viper of pain uwl sorrow and bereavement keeps gnawing at your vitals, you still stand, iiko iltop'ooii, gazing into heaveu. You wonder if thy liavM changed t-lnco you saw tLom lftfct. You wonder if (hoy would recogniae your f i.ow, so changed has it been with trouble. Yoa wonder if, nraid tbo myriad delights thoy have, they care as tnitoh for you as thej' usrd to when they gave you a lielping hand oud put their shoulder under your burdens. You nonder if tlioy took any ohlcr; awl sometimes, in tl» evepwgttde, .when the houio is all quiet, you wonder if you should call them t»y tWr first name If thoy woqld pot W#W» and perhaps sometimes you do (nnko the experiment, and when no one bat (lod awl yourself ore there you dirtinctiy e.iil their names, mid listen and wait, and sit gazing into heaven. Pom on now u»d see Stephen looking upon Christ, My text says ho saw tbo Sou of man at tlio right hand of God. Just how Christ l jok d in this world, just how1 he looks fat heaven, we cannot say. A writer in the timo of Clniet says, describing the Saviour's personal appearance, that he bad blue eyea and light complexion, and a very graceful structure; but I suppose it was all guesswork. Tbo (winters of the different ages have trial to imagine the features of Christ, and pat them upon canvas; but we will liave t D w: it antil with our own eyes we see him and wi Ji our own cars we can hear him. And yet there isn way of seeing and hearing lilm now. I have to toll yau that unless you s e and hear Christ on earth, you will never «e and hear liiin in heaven. Look! Tlx-ro he lit. Boholil tlie Lamb of Ood. Can you not see him/ Then pray to Ood to take tlie scales off your eyea. Look that way—try to look that way. HI* voice come* down to you this day—comes down to the blindest, to tlie deafest soul, saying: "Look onto me, all ye ends of the earth, and be ye saved, for I am Ood, and there ip none else." Proclamation of universal emancipation for all slawsa. Proclamation of universal amnesty for all rebels. Ahasuerus gathered the Babylonish H,v % .. time tiie scene iu tho park was one tl i) " Hue i kiud. Meigt. Mere and Policemou of the Weehawken police, had •«u uUtmJ d ta the noiso and made an at•i. 'to C9.tCr (ktD IW*. But their blue uni- Annie Griffith, of Philadelphia, in a fit of insanity, killed her daughter Mabel, aged and herself with the sains raxor. An examination of the japers left by a tramp who dial at Wheeling, W..Va., five years ago, hitherto unnoticed, proved him to be worth $150,000. A bM« uptias4, An i in a Jiffy the Liram d UD »nd hold in place by a . ,'ie i ss excited pfc^fnickere. Trenton, Mo., June 13.—This town and vicinity have been infested tor the past week by an insect, the description of which agrees fully with a spades of cantbarides, a Spanish fly, as (riven in the United States dispensatory. The insects come in perfect swarms, and they not devour vegetation with avidity, but their vesicating ptwer on the human body is equal fully to cantharides. Fully l.OUU people iu an at present minting blisters caused by tuts insect, and lights iu rosidences at uight have been almost abaudonod for fear ol attracting the poisonous insect. Tulsuned by Living Cantbarides. With Great Pomp and Circumstance. London, Juuo 13.—It is the purpose of the queen to observe every detail that will add to the pomp and circumstance of the jubilee' ceremonial. Sbo will wear tbo robes of on entering Wcut-mlixitsr Aljbejr, and wi 1 be1 surrounded by all the signs of sovereignty while tbore seated on tbo throne. Eight thousand troops have been detailed to line the route of tbo royal procession to the abbey. A guard of honor 600 strong will attend tht queen. An Aetor Found Drowned. ti .til--1 • C/ 1,1 tiie rtghtiu* gfatf of people dlfc : •» |»i»to!, and in a «c*DCVd t$e uoiuau til I children were rushing wildly Cor V K.m. 'fwu more shots were fired. Then i-'i innMcjilie forced tlie gates open, and Gen. J. G. Parke ltas been appointed suparntendent of the Military academy at West Point. Gen, Mentlit Is to of the dejiartment of the Missouri.Boston, June 13.—Tha tap day*' myntery cursed by the sadden disippeanmoe of Guorge R Partis, the actor, has been c!o ire 1 up. Yesterday the police patrol boat picked up a bloated and decomposed body floating in the harbor near Bird's Island. The corpsa was identified as that of the missing actor. Found Just in Time. C • HD entered thoy saw nothing ex ; .i ludly rumpled set of picnickers all 'C■'». , IC r some way to get home and sev• y.-t Ig men staggering about with bleedCuU.Trenton, N. J., Juno 18.—Arthui Schwartz, a well known local druggist, while temporarily deranged yesterday, took gye grains of morphia. He has been unwell (or several Dyoe}ttf; .and his nervous system wot partly shattered. But fop pije pf hjs clerks, who found him lying In an apartment ovui his store, Bchwarta would undoubtedly have lost his life. The clerk gave an alarm, and three physicians were summoned. They adjninistered emetics and say that they believe WuhwurU will recover. Mrs. R. t». Cable, of Westport, Conn., was dragged by a runaway horse, roooiving serious, possibly fatal, injuries. John Taylor, of Newark, 0., wlio %u bitten by a Rnuke a year ago, was attacked with hydrophobic, - A Tax Collector's Shftrt«6», r, wen) no arrests, partly because the . r.nigi ments of Union township were qu ,vi- ami partly because it was im.i uD tell just who was responsible for Old Heads and Young: Hearts. WiLKJESBABBX. Pa., Juno 13.—M. M. William*. a well known resident of this county, aud tax collector for Lucerne borough during the past two years, is aevgr«l huuJiwl dollars short in Ma appoints, His bondwnen N.y they will pay the deficiency to-day. I' tills ia done no arreet will be made. g$4NJD RaPIPB, Mich., June la—A breach ot premise case of m/jre than usual interest, and of course double importance, is on the docket to be tried at the next term of ttie United States court in this city. The case has been transferred from the Van Buren county circuit court to the federal court, nnC] ir.vclps BqrriU A- Olkney, a man with $230,000 or more, HO years old, and Jane A. Manly, a widow, who is plump, fair and 50. Several prominent residents of Erie, Pi., wore arroste 1 for swindling the government by bog * 1 pension claims and in other ways Warren & Sherman, ot Oneida, N. Y., Inventor of an automatic railway signal, war beheaded by tho cars. Washington, June 13.—The Sunday Capital publishes the following; The president is said to have promised Adjt. Gen. Johnstone Jones, of North Carolina, during bis recent visit to this city, that all the flags taken from the southern status during the late war should bo returned to those states at an early date. This resolve on the part of the president ip mainly due to the instrumentality of Adji. Gen. Drum, a thoroughly national man, who wishes to withdraw from public gase all mementoes of internecine strife. To llatarn the Hat tie Flat*. i*"o.. on his head. He said he had been „ . »*!ih u club. Dr. Hill dressed the «rC4tu- i "id the man disappeared. This C« •...«• IlutD I'lciiic, und the entire party were ■D . in disordered sections along Lite ... . »• D'.*».■ i iDD»rard the ferry. Tbi »■: uii'ii wijli Hxijr heads bandaged came «C:..D * in 'lie List boij[ from Weehuwken to iJlcw Vork. Tucy said that they Jjud taken a tkiikl iu tlie light, and that they fy)'j |jaCJ a ' higfi old time. ••'P •, it »us n hot row, now, I'm tell la' for," *»id the oue, who was the least drunk. - KtervUi.!)' wus lull. Some one of the !«. ...« got C'j JtUbtin' over some girls, and all • a DD in. I don't want to see no j.» I 'Wu't, Xhey tbrowed bricks juu . ...ie» iiul lore up » fence for clubs and liiwi.: •nth other over the tank There yn.'1-n loor or live fellers got hit pretty had, CnD4 !D»D• of had his bead out clean open jB /ion* J heard several pistol shots fired, but i . as anybody got a bulletin him." So. « odf telephoned to the Hoboken police din.. lie. rs Woru smashing things generally In t..n Wet Hawkan depot. Word was lent to 'fiu* i* liC-e station la Weehawkeu, which is ,abou; a mile from the depot, tad the Weejbuwfrui roror, followed by a goad share of ■tit pofcuutiuu, started for the depot on • dead run. It was the most exciting event that has happened in Weehawken since the J*! ®2?. ■ D oi the injured men had a severe con- Death of an Old Abolitionist. Earthquakes have caused many doaths iz Turkestan. London, June 1:1.—Tbo pope's autograph letter to Queen Victoria, congratulating tier ujiou the jubilee of her reign, express,* tlie thanks of the church for tbo queen's action, through the Indian government, in protccu ing the Catholic missions in India and upholding their authority. The Pope to the Queen. Boston, June 13.—The Hon James N, Buffum, one of the last of the band oi Abolitionists lod by Garrison and Phillips, died at his homo in Lynn last evening at 10 o'clock. Mr. Buffum had been gradually failing for several months, and his death was known to be not far in the future when he celebrated his qpth birthday a few weeks ago. He had boon unconscious for forty pigbt hours previous to his death, and passed (nvoy vyithoyt suffering. Only his family were present. At Dibigh, Wales, while an auctioneer was selling goods se:x*d for non-payment of tithes, tho police protecting him were pelted with rotten eggs. London, June 13.—The Times, in an additional article on "Parnellisin and crime," claims to trace a connection between Frank Byrne, the invincible, and Mr. ParnelL The writer asserts that it was an opportune remittance bin Mr. Parnell which enabled Byrne to escupe to France. Mr. Parnell is challenged to contradict the assertion. Still Accusing Parnell. The body of a man with his head crushed in was found hanging from a tree in Millvale, Pa. Cfc»rg®4 with Murdering a Patient. N*w York, Jpne Two Ward's Island asylum keepers were arrested yesterday for murdering a patient. Thar were Attendants Mi Cue and Cleary, who bad charge of George Furrisli, the mildly demented Central railroad engineer, who died of hemorrhage after an encounter with three keepers, in which nine of his ribs were broken. Kx-8ooretary Manning has returned from his European trip in excellent health and ipiriU. WILKKSDAllKB, Pa., June 13.—Joh.l PollX, a native of Poland, aged 38 years, who recently arrived from New York, was killed by a fall of coal and rock in W, G. Payne & Co's. mine at Luzerne. As he had no family or friends in this vicinity, the poor directors will bury him. Killed In a Coal Mine. It Is said that the American Telephone oompany, claiming a monopoly In Venezuela, b a monstrous swindlo. At the bead of the concern is a notorious ex-convict. (Che Little Bide Door. Iluroed to a Crisp. Waterbury, Conn., June 18.—Jeremiah Bergin's skull was fatally fractured yesterday by falling down a cellarway. It is supposed that be had been drinking, and was in quest of a drink at the side entrance of a saloon. Sandusky, O., June 13.—John George, a Frenchman, was burned to a crisp in the barn of David Frohman early yesterday morning. A valuable horse and considerable other property was also consumed. The lire was incendiary. Kendall, the Boston policeman, has invented a vessel in which he proposes to make the journey through the whirlpool rapids at Niagara in full view of the spectators. The attempt will be made June 13. Drowned While Bathing, Paris, June 18.—A dual growing out of an offensive newspaper artiste took place yesterday between M. Clemenoeau, the Radical leader, and M. Foucher, editor of The National. Two shota were exchanged, but neither of the combatants was injured. The seconds interfered and declared that honor was satisfied. A French "Affair of Honor." Grxat Baiuuxuton, Mass., Juno 13.— James Loft us, aged 13 years, and Edward Rogers, aged IS yew*, while oat In a boat on Lake Mansfield yesterday afternoon, went in bathing, and both were drowned in dx feet of water. Their bodies were recovered. Heads at *000 Each. New York, June IS.—The monument erected by the New York Frees club at Cypress Hills cemetery was dedicated yesterday afternoon, in the presence of over 1,000 journalists and their friends. To the Dead Journalists. Only three of the sixty-one persons arrested for the Panhandle robberies are now in jail. San Francisco, June 13. —A special front Nogalcs, A. T., states that the governor of the state at Sonora has offered $900 for tlx head of each hostile Apache Indian. William C. Sheridan, the American tragic actor, died in Australia, aged 90. Stabbed Tom—Um Minora' 10 otnl Stick Salve. (Comoro® Cw tbodmo.} |
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