Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, June 13, 1885, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -UBrP ---
HP
'V'v ?''
. . -
,
v'
r
VOLUME XXI NO. 21.
LANCASTER, PA., SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1885.
PKICE TWO CENTS.
ErMEZE
eh
Bfl9ilyT' j fr
I'H '
l
SAM JONES, REVIVALIST.
K. "'W
n& JS
Vis! .' APSin
THE MAX WHO EXCITES 1NTE11EST
tueouuhevt the nuarit.
A ltedoubluhle Preacher In Heugh (Inrh, AVI Hi
ii Itmle Vernacular rirtceu Years tn the
I'ulplt-llls l'lrnt tight With
All Irhhm.in.
The lNTr.i.buu:sci:H recently published
seme specimens or the homely pulpit style
of Sum Jenes, the rough-and-ready religious
rovivallster tlie Seuth, who is new cieatlng
a sensation In that section or tlie country.
Frem a variety "of sources, particularly a
Macen, Ga., correspomlont of the Fhlladol Fhlladel
phla Times, are gathered seme further details
of his llfe and romantie career. It appears
that he was born In Cartersville, Bartow
county, Georgia, In 1819. His lather was a
soldier In the war, and afterwards practiced
law. Several of his uncles and his grand
father Hhare, or did share, with him tlie
preacher's vocation, with preferences for tlie
Methodist denomination. Ills mother us n
sensible, Intelllgeiit and excellent woman.
Sam was a precocious boy. He was always
ready for a lively time, a deg light, allstlculi',
ti Hulling frolic or a spoecli. When he was
llve years old he was boekod for a Hpeecli at
a school exhibition. He ended his Hpeecli
Willi the prophecy :
Seme day you'll hear In thunder tones
Thu famous nuuiu of Sammy Jenes.
He went te the best schools and took hi
what he learned by absorption. Nobody saw
him study, but he knew mere than any of
his fellows. The teachers loved him, laughed
ut him mid lathered him. He was full of
mischief and was about Hixteen years old
when he began te fall Inte bad ways. He was
no vagabond, nover a gambler, a thiofera
coward, but he would get en sprees, much te
thogiicfet his geed mother and father.
, A iiiiii:pi.i:ss lawykii.
His lllthcr took him into his oftlce and Sam
was sejn "S. 1. Jenes, cm., atteriiey-at-law.'
He had no practice and no uiouey, but he
met a bright Kentucky girl and married her.
He ran an eiiglne and dreve a dray te make
a living. Olie day Sam, wliile employed in
running an engine liih was connected
with an ero crusher at a furnace, he was
much annoyed by these who fed the cruslier
putting pieces of rock into the hopper and
throwing the whele of the machinery out or
gear;. Sam declared very emphatically his
intention te knock the head oil the next man
who did It. Itwasdone directly, and by a
burly Irishman. Sam seized a hammer and
knocked the Irishman down. Ne.xt day
Sam was coining rrem his cabin and in an
open space, seme distance from every ene,
steed his antagonist of tlie preceding day.
" Ye struck me ylsterday," said lit ; " no
moil evor stilkes moenct who docs net strike
me turaiu."
"New, l'at," Kild Sam, "we are about
even. Yeu did v hat I told you net te de,
and I knocked you as 1 said I would ; I
don't bear mallce ; let's drop the matter."
A T1I11EAT THAT I'ROVlin IlI'I'KlTt'AI-
I5ut the Irishman declared his determina
tion te have a light then and theie. The
Irishman had only ene oye. Sam looked at
him with j-erfect coolness.
" Pat," he said, " I don't want te light you,
1 can't ; you could whip me in a minute; but
1 tell you what I will de, yeu'ie get hut ene
oye and if yen lay your hand en me, sure as
your are living, 1 will gouge your eye out,
and you will be as blind as a bat."
That settled it. l'at knew his man, and
muttering: "The moil that will geuge is a
coward," loll Sam alone.
One day Captain Jenes fell sick, and in a
llttle wliile the prodigal Sam steed by a
dying father. He was broken with remorse.
The lather died and ii groateliange eame ever
Sam. He gave up his bad habits and in two
woeks he was getting ready te preach. He
was a sallow, thin-faced, sleiichy llttle lellew,
with a keen black oye : hocauie te the con
ference ter a circuit, He get ene. He went
te it. He did net knew much about theology
tlien in truth he doesn't knew much new
but he knew men and he knew their needs,
and he began te preach what he knew. He
made men lautrh and he made men cry and
he made men angry, and ene day he lest his
temper and eame very near whipping a
blacksmith who angered him. He was rather
uninereilul te men whose religion was all
mouth or all tears.
IN TIIK COM'KRKNUi:.
In two years they took Sam Inte the con
ference, and settled It that he would de.
Sluce then he has wen his way. He can
draw a larger audionce in Atlanta te day
than Oeugli could, or Kdwin lloeth did. He
went te Memphis, te Huntsville, te Knox Knex Knex
ville, te Hroeklvn and nt last te Nashville.
They built him" a great tent there. They
abused lilm, placarded him, threatened him
and rallled round hlui. The result of three
weeks meetings was 1,000 new members te
the churches and 2,000 conversions. They
ellered him a f 10,000 heuse and he declined
It.
Ulb MANNUII OF Hl'UKl'll.
Sam is an ell'ective speaker, courageous te
robuke and terribly outspoken with regard
te w hat he considers wrong. He Is earnest
in teaching the outllne doctrines of pretestant
theology, but nover spends llme in theologi
cal hair-splitting. As a preacher he deals
with his heiiers Individually, and gives
everybody something te remember and te
feel, overcoming prejudice by hla-ejrnest-nessand
miuurest sincerity. Howieldaqvory
weapon of avallable attack en aftliat he bo be bo
Uevcs Is evil-deing, and Is always at the same
tlme earnest and in command.' of all the re
sources of a rough-and-ready style ."of peecli
which has niore pith hi Itftum the nhallew
critic may iKircolve. "'" '
Ham Jenes' savings luivu.iwcuuie oeiuuion
proiierty. They are his 'own. They are
gathered from all sources, and they alway
have a point. " Urether Jones," sdU
nervous brother, " w hat mahOH you Wiew
toliaccet" "TogetthoJulcooiltiVSiiIdBam.
Sam Jenes Is like no one and no epe la like
him- He Is simply Sain Joneswholoven
thojgeod, scorns the mean and helps Ui
weak.
A Terrlble Threat.
llore Is another and llterally true oxample
r the awful thluus small chlldren will khv.
On Meiidnv. en ene of the nvenues of tlie
w est side, liull'ale, whlte crape at the deer of,
a pretty home told that a sunbeam had been '
called away from it. A little further along
the street llie observer passed a bevy of gh Is
of tender years. Some ipiarrel had evldeutly
arisen. Kild ene, nml'erybliarily, "If you
IhiIuimi se horrid you shan't ceme te our llt llt
teo Uiby'a fuiuind. Se thore new,"
A Narrow Katief
A ouce famous circuit preacher, being In
sulted by u brother, felled htm te the earth
and jumped en hhn. As he plucked hand
ful after handful of hair he muttered between
his clenched teeth. "If it wasn't ler the
grace of Ged that restrains me, hew 1 would
wool you."
W1NN1KO A V11AOT10E tlAXIE.
The llnrrlsburg Club Easily VaiiqiiUhed by the,
Heme Train.
Having n dny eir tlie Lancaster
club went te llnrrlsburg yesterday
aiul had a game with the soinl-pre-foHsloiml
teain or that place. Alwut 300
Ijople wure present mid the visitors were
cesy winners. Smith, whose arm he net
recovered, pitched for the Lancaster nud the
llarrlsburgers wero unable te score until the
Kevcnlh inning. In the latter part of the
game Smith "let up" and the home club
wero uble te make a geed showing at the bat,
The Lancaster played the better Helding
gaiue,but according te llnrrlsburg Hoerorslho
opponents led at the bat, llore is the way
they have It :
HAllltlRBUHU, It 11 I- A B LAMCASTKX. II 11 T A K
McKce, J., 2 1 "I "5 7 0 Parker. I.... "t 1 e "e
llousche'r,3 1 2 1 I Oldflcld, c... 1 I te 0 0
Drnuby.inii 1 a 0 ft 0 inland,-.:... 3 3 is I e
llelllns, c. II 2 ft 2 1 M'Tam'y, 111 3 I 0 2 0
Muheii, I.... 2 11 U 1 lleiiiilil. ... 2 2 .1 (I 1
McDonald, 12 0 2 2 Smith, p.... I lulu
MoKce, i'., 1 1 2 2 II II Tourney, H.. 1114 0
Keller, p.e. e :i (i I e Heed, r l n l e e
IIctturin'n,v 1 e e e 0 Wrtzcl, 1... 1 1 4 1 1
Total 8 10 Ww "ft Total. , Ift 13 91 15 2
IHNlHtlg.
... .0 0 0
....8 2 0
IhirrlalHirg
Lancaster .
0 II
II II
2 1
1 4
58
x-15
SUMMAIir.
Karned riinn llarrlsburg, 4; Lancaster, 1.
Twe base hltn KelIVr, Smith. Oldtli.lil, McTiiui
any, lllluiul. Three bane hlt .F. MnKee, Mo Me
Donald, Tninney. Left en Iiium's llnrrlnburg,
II; Lancaster, 3. Struck out Un Hnilth, 7 ; en
Draw by, 4. IMmcs en balls On KrllVr, 1 1 en
Huilth.ft. lilt by pitcher lly Smllli, 2. 1'aHncd
l.alls-Itelltns. 2; Oldllcld. 1. Wild pltrhes
Kt'lt'i'i', 'i ; Hnutli, 1. Tlmuef gamu Twe he ill's
and .VliidtiuU's. Uuiilre Kd. (Jre-wnnin.
I. McKcu declared out for net viuinliif.
IiIAMO.NI) HOTS.
Norfolk icleased MoKlrey and Stratton
yesterday.
Johnsten, el the Virginia, hud anether
home run yesterday.
The Active club of this city went te
Christiana te dnv.
At Haverhill, 'Mass., the Philadelphia, with
I-'eccrty pitching, wero dereated by 2 te 1.
Nava has been rolcased by Ilalthnore and
Kvans aril Dennis Casey are llkely te fellow.
Caruthers, the St. Leuis " phenouienal,"
was hit for se venteen singles, with a total of
twenty-soven bases yesterday.
The Virginia people are delighted ever the
su -cess of the club, and yesterday upon
their return from Norfolk they were given
a banquet.
Hveiybedy has the base ball fever hi this
city and there are lets of clubs. Yesterday
two nines of colored men, calling themselves
tlie Uptowns and Downtewns, played a match
gatue en grounds which have leeently lieen
dlseoeied en Oreen street. The Uptowns
wen by the scere of 111 te 9.
Other games played yesterday At Bosten :
New Yerk fl, Ilosten ! ; at Chicago : Chicago
0, Detroit 4 ; at SU Leuis ; liutlale 2, SU
Leuis 0 ; at New Yerk : Mcts 17, SU Leuis
8 ; at Ilalthnore : Pittsburg 3, italtlmnre '1 ;
at Newark : Newark 8, Jersoy Cltv 3 j at
Norfolk : National 3, Norfolk 2 ; at Wilming
ton : Virginia 10, Wilmington 3 J at Trenten :
Brooklyn 10, Trenten 1.
a vur.MATies auevmi:nt.
irCulunibuH' lteiiinln Had Heeu I'rned, There
AVenlil Ilaie liecn no Troiible.
Fiem the New Vetk Sun.
The advocates or cromatieu have often ar
gued that the graves of the dead are forgotten
after a generation or two have passed away,
mid that a few centuries sulllce te blot out of
memory the exact resting placoef the greatest
ofthe world's horecs. They may new add te
their stock of illustrations tlie f.ict thai Dr.
Sciilieliiaun is about te begin a search for the
gr.ivoefAlexanderthoUro.it, and that Cuba
and Sante Dominge both claim te possess the
Imnes of Christopher Columbus.
Until 1877 no ene ventured te doubt that
the body of the illustrious navigator was re
moved In 1700 from the eathedral of Sante
Dominge, whero It had ropesod for two cen
turies and a half., and transferred te tlie
cathedral of Havana. In that year, bow bow
ever, it was announced that the pcople el
Sante Dominge had discovered indublhible
proelslliat the gemilne relies of the great
discoverer still lay In Dominican soil, and
that the body which had been conveyed
with great pomp te Havana was net that of
Columbus. The authentic boues, se
called, wero lutorred again with im
pressive coremonies In the cathe
dral at Sante Dominge en Soptembor 10,
1S77, and a considerable sum or money was
raised te erect a monument evor thorn. The
Spanish government, howevor, and tlie His
torical Academy or Madrid still decllne te
admit the authenticity or tlie Dominican
relics, and assert that the body el Columbus
lies hi the Havana cathedral Te sottle the
interesting question, IT posslble, the govern
ment of Sante Dominge, It is announced,
has Invited a large number or savants te at
tend an International Congress, which will
open hi the capital or that ropublie en SenU
10 nexU The government will submit te the
judguient of this Congress Its proofs that
Sante Dominge possesses the genulue re
mains of the great sailor.
i .
JI.I r IWTTKli Jit A VIU JIA3T.
Jacob Peters I'liiya the Gentle Shepherd and
(ieU I.Hft.
Jacob Voters was badly battered and
bruised en Friday, by being butted by his
big buck ram. Mr. Peters went Inte the
sheep pasture te oxamiue his Heck, and net
suspecting the old ram te be either vicious or
jealous was mentally calculating the weight
of the wool and the value of the mutton,
when the old ram quietly made a Hank
movement, and advancing en the run gave
the shepherd a torrible butt In the rear,
llorere he could recover lreni his astonish
ment the nun gave him a second shot no less
stunning than the first, and having failed te
kuezk hhn down, took a dlstauce almost
twentv feet away, se as te add impetus te the
third assault. Hut by this tlme Mr. Petera
fully realized his critical situation and made
a buck dart for the fence evor which he
scrambled pell-mell just In tlme te avoid the
llorce assault of Arles. Te-day Mr. Poters is
bandaged almost from head te feet. He Is
able te walk about, but net te sit down.
Hey Murdered by III Uncle.
Last wcek a boy living with his undo,
Jack Hiill'mann, a mouutalneer, of High
county, Va., died, It was alloged, from the
effect or a fall, and was burled. Suspicion
was areused and the body was exhuined.
An autopsy disclased the fact that death
resulted from knife wounds ofthe Intestines
and spine. Hutl'inaiin disliked the boy, and
It is thought he murdored him. Soveral
years age a llttle girl inystorleusly dlsap
jieared from the sjme heuse and has net
sluce been heard of. The community Is
greatly oxclted, and threata or lynching have
lieen made.
Charufd Willi Kmbezrlrinent.
The ease against Frank Nowberry, charged
with otnbezzlemont, prol'errod by Loven H.
Kote, has been dlsmlssed by Alderuian
Spurrier.
J. H. Lutz ban been held by thosamoaldor thesamoaldor thosamealdor
mini te answer at court the cliarge or omboz emboz ombez
riomont. prorcrred by S. M. Kpler, or Eliza
town, ltseems that Lutz was an ageut or
12pler Ter the sale of sewing machines, and
itla ulleged that he sold soveral andfalled te
turn eyer the inoney te his ompleyor.
JV Omnia Who Drives the Iren Hene.
r'reui the Kutteii Argut.
Miss Jennle Dunlup.im adinlrer of engines,
en Wednesday last, ran her father'a englne,
Ne. 63. from Haokettstewn te Phllllnsburc;,
with the bravery of en oxperiencod cnglnoer.
She slilfted cars at each place, and brought
In uheavJly leaded, pre train. On arriving
1 Bt rhlUipuburg the train was put In Its proper
pjace and the cnglu.0 placed safely In Its stall
w line unviur ucr wiuruu
1 .,-7,. . .....
(y. t'olleo C1'K.
JehH Bnnlir, who wan drunk and nbuseil
his wIIV,wks urrmUMlbyOIIlcer Klcheltzycs.
turday an.il 'Alderuian Bpnrribr, Hunt liiiu te
jail for 0 itey . ...
Martin Jvwh, cliargeil with Irtrjuiy, was
committed by Aldernim Doea te answer at
ceurU The allsged perjury vr n the testi
mony given by'KUi lit eertalu charges of
assault and battery, iad by Ultu Kgalnst
Grant Lindsay. V ' .
KILLED IN A COLLISION.
A VMUHTPVLACCMKNT UN THJSJ'JC.Vy.
Hl'LrANtA HCUVrLKILt, 'ALLKY.
A Market Train, tlelne At the Date or Thirty
Mile An Heur, DiMiiea into n VrelKht,
Three Men Killed IW Id Wayne, or
Columbia, One ofthe Victim.
A wreck occurred at Spring Mill, near
Consliehockcn, en the Schuylkill Valley
railroad, shortly ntler two o'clock Friday af
ternoon, resulting In the death or two men,
the Injury or several mere, and the demo
lition efn lncoinetvo and a number of freight
cars. The details, as learned from train ineii
nud wIliiPHses te the occurrence, are as fol fel
lows : The local freight up was shifting care j
tlie caboeso and four cars wero left en the
main track, whlle the remainder or the train
was te be backed In upon the siding Ter sev sev sov
oral cars there. A down freight occupled the
main track down at this point and hid the
cars en the main track up from the vlew or
the engineer or the approaching mar
ket train, which wan rounding tlie curve be bo be
lew at the rate or thirty miles an hour. The
engineer or tlie train en the down track
whistled down brakes te warn I he approach
ing train and the llagmau or the local Irelght,
who, It seems, was with his train, rundown
the track signaling. The engineer or the ap
proaching train applied the air brakes with
such force as te burst the tillies. The loco
motive crashed Inte the caboeso ahead with
such a tar that It was denilled and
thrown diagonally across the up track,
the rear end resting en tlie freight train en
the down track. Twe cats, laden with fruit
and previsions, mounted the tender and
foil In a cenrused beat) lielween It and the
locomotive, The engineer was hurled bo be bo
neath the locomotive. Ills body, crushed
and mangled out or nil somblance or a
human frame, was gotten out about llve
o'clock. The head and legs were separated
from the trunk. The face was uurecogulza uurecegulza
hie. The engineer's naine was David Wayne.
He was a resident of Columbia, was rorty rerty rorty
llve years old, nud leaves a widow and six
children. The conductor, Jenes Cleaver,
was mangled and Injured Internally. He
was carried te the waiting-room at the
station, where, under the Iwlluf that he
would die, made it will, disposing
or his estate. He was a resident or Downing
town, was thirty years old, unmarried and
wcll-te-da Tlie Ilruman, Samuel Drink
house, or Philadelphia had an arm broken,
and was otherwise injured. He and the con
ductor were en a Heading railroad train ler
Philadelphia. The conductor died before
the train had geno ten miles. A. W. Heitz,
el Syracuse, a railroad empleye, who was en
his way home, riding en the locomotive,
was hurled te a plle of debris and wits
Injured about the head, but net fatally. He
says the train was only -100 feet from the eh.
structlng cars when the dauger was first no
ticed. All hands en the engine get down
upon the steps te Jump, hut they were
hemmed in byicars, and their train was run
ning se fast that te leap would hae been
death. The wrecked train was only placed
en the read a few davs slnce, terhauling por per por
ishable goods. The wrecking crew reached
the scene about Iialf-iKist roil r, but the track
In still closed te travel and cm net be opened
for soveral hours.
The fireman, Samuel Drlnkhouse, died
after being taken te the Presbyterian hospital,
Philadelphia.
It Is claimed that the disaster was caused
by ncgllgence, as a lhigman was sent back
only te the station house, which was net far
enough togle the market train tlme te step.
Thore urn no hlix k signals en the Pennsylva
uia Schuylkill Valley read, anil Ihigincer
Wayne, who was exactly en sohcdule time,
supposed that the track ahead was clear.
The wrecked cars en tlie market train eon
tallied fruit, llsh and vegetables, much el
which was destroyed or rendered unlit Ter
use. The daiuagQ te the rallroadceinny'a
preperty will reach 5-10,000, as engine 730 Is a
completo wreck.
TIIU I115AII COI.UMMA KNUINKKU.
Cei.umuia, June IX A gloom or regret
and sympathy has been cast ever Columbia
by the death or David Vayne. His remains
will be brought te his sorrowing family, who
roside en Cherry street, near Fourth, this
evening. Deceased was aged 45 years, and
has been an empleye of the Pennsylvania
railroad cemtiany slnce lfeOil or '07, when he
entered the llfe of a railroader ns a fireman.
A Tew years after he was appointed an en
gineer, ami manipuiHieii me lever nctwccn
Columbia and Philadelphia, until about nine
months age, when he was appointed a pass
enger engineer, and was transferred te tlie
read which te him, proved se ratal. During
his resldenee hi Columbia, he for MiMiral
years was chief engineer ofthe Columbia llre
company, Ne. 1. He leaves a wife, six child
ren and a host of friends te mourn his sad
and terrlble death. His Mineral takes place
rrem his late rosldenco at 2 p. m.
lie I'erMMik Her
Frem the Ilosten Transcript.
"Matilda!" he exclalmcd, the perspiration
irrigating the rootlets or his tawny locks;
"Matilda, 1 leve you." " Henry," slie re
plied, clubbing with her ran the mesquite
who was dining oil tier damask cheek ;
"Henry, It does you crediU" " And," ro re
su med Henry, with a voice far lielew the
middle stud of his immaculate shirt front :
"and doyeu, Matilda-de yeu-cr leve me?"
"Ne, Henry," replied Matilda, witli a Chris
tian humillty-and-raslgned-to-tny-let lrank
ness ; "no, Henry, I de net leve you, but I
osteemyeu asa- "in, stew inati" vix'iier
ated Henry, "none e' your esteem you as a
brother; that's tee hoary a chestnut for me."
And Henry en that same hour the lady for
sook. True, he had te ; but never you mind ;
he forsook her, all the same.
Contention of UnltenuilUtK.
The Pennsylvania UniversaUsU met in con
vention en Tuesday last, In Manstleld, Tiega
county, and was called te erder by the pres
ident, Rev. Mr. Shrlgley, after which prayers
and ether religious services wero held, and
sevcral committees were appointed. In the
afternoon a sornien was dollvered by Kev.
Mr, Boardsley, and the observance of the
Hely communion followed. In the e veiling,
Kev. James Shrlgley, of Philadelphia, deliv
ered the annual discourse, treating or "Our
Faith, our Mistakes and our Needs." The
dlscoursewas followed with a brier address
by Kev. Mr. Nye, and this ended the first
day of the session. A large number of dole delo dole
gatos w ero present.
The Kind or AngeU Fer Scudder.
The Kev. Jehn W. Scudder, of Minne
apolis, preached te young ladlesSiinday, and
seld: "The daughters et Amerlca are as fair
as any en the glolie, and In my opinion seme
el inein are tee lair, j iiiiik-wiuiv tuminoi tuminei tuminoi
Ien may be artistic, but it Is also a sign or
weak bleed. Noneofyour whltc-faced dam
sels for me, nor ene wliose face Is red with a
consumptUe'or hoctle Hush. Give me tlie
nut-brown girl who adaudens her sun bon
net, who can climb a troe with any boy, who
profers geed bread te chocelato caramels, and
baked beans te angel cake. The kind of an
angel Ter me weighs 110 pounds."
ijulte Anether Mutter.
Frem the Texns Sifting.
"Themas, you have disobeyed your old
grandrather."
" Ne I didn't, ma."
"Y'es you did. Have you net been In
swimming ?"
" Yes ma."
Didn't I hear him say te you net te go in
swimming ?"
" Oh, he didn't loll us that ; he only eame
out and said: Beys, I wouldn't go In
Hwlmmlnir.' and I shouldn't think he would,
un old rheumaticky man like him ; but he
didn't say nethin' about our going In swim-niing."
Oeergla Teuipeninre Contention.
Tlie Georgia teniporance convention
llnlshed its session in Atlanta en Thursday,
ltoselutlous wero adopted petitioning the
legislature te pass a general local option law
at its session next month, se that In overy
county bi the state thore can be an election en
prohibition. Or the 133 counties in Georgia
20 have restricted the sale or liquor and 80
have absolutely prohibited IU It is thought
that mere than half or the 38 counties whero
the sale of liquor is aew unrestricted will be
carried for prohibition if the legislature
lHes the law a&ked for.
r
JlET.lt ON EWItTJSKN VllAllOKS.
What Oeorge Ham-it Mint Answer Heftire lie
May de nt Liberty.
Some tituonge, it will be rcmembercil, that
Oeorge Hauck was arrested In Lobaueu,
brought te thlsclty and committed by Ahlor Ahler Ahlor
inanSpurrlertoJull. It was known at the
tlme that the prisoner had been engaged in
qtilte it number of croekod transactions, but
It was net dcoined advlsable te make It pub
lic then. Slnce that a large amount of uvU
dence lias liecn secured against llmick, mid
ir hels convicted en hair tlie charges which
have been brought against him befere Alder
man Spurrier, he will have a geed elmlice of
spending a long tlme In prison. 1 latick, who
Is ii young man, comes rrem a family bearing
n bad repuUitlen en the Welsh mountain.
Soveral el' thorn have served terms In Jail for
larceny, Slnce childhood Oeorge has been a
been companion or Abe Buzzard, the eullaw.
and they ure known te have ilmie itgreat ileal
or "work" togethor. He has always been
well acquainted with the whorcabeutsiind
doings or Abe, and ir he would tell all he
knows conslderablo would be learned of the
oiieratlens or tlie gang.
Some tlme last fall Jehn Beets and Jerry
Oreen, two darkles, wero arrested en the
mountain en numerous charges of burglary,
larceny, .te., and wero afterwards convicted
and sentenced te long terms ofimprison efimprison ofimprisen
menU It Is almost certain that eung Hauck
was a companion or theso inen en seme or
their thieving oxedltlons, and when they
were captured he was hi the Baine house, but
made Ills oscaiie. Finding that It was rather
het for him, Hauck went te Initiation county
for a time, but often returned tollie moun
tain mid kept himself well isted. Pre
vious te the arrest of the men charged wilh
the Lfiivllle burglary, he had been en the
meunutiii for a short time. He Haw
that numerous friends were Ix-lng picked
up, and he returned te Lobaueu, wheie
his capture took place. It Is beliuvcil that
Hauck Is ene of the men who robbed the
Jewelry stere or D. B. Sliiller, or Bowmans Bewmans
vllle, and that ids accomplices wero Alx
Buzzard and Jehn Llpplncelt. On ene or
the thieving oxpedltlons or tlie gang a small
Hoiulngteti rllle was stolen and It Is ixissible
that this is the same which Abe Buzzard
carried for se ljng a tlme.
what Tin: ciiAitnns auii.
The charges brought liefore Ahlermnn
Spurrier against Hauck ure as fellows : Steal
ing a gun rrem Peter P. Will, orPenn town
ship ; felonious entry orthe htore and dwell
ing of D. B. Sliiller, at Bewinaiisvllle, and
stealing gcHHlsthorerrom ; felonious entry el
thu shop or Tobias Mesner, at Bewmunsville,
and stealing a pair or gum beet, brace, bit,
Ac, the piojiertyeri. M. Sliiller ; receding
stolen goods, which were taken rrem the store
of 1 C. llohinsen, lu Chester county;
felonious entry ofthe Htore and warehouse of
Hershey it Hess, at Buyerstown, and stealing
dry goods. Aft. ; felonious entry or the store el
Jehn It. Wilsen, or, Ciernurveii, and stealing
nlwixorseap, trunk and ether tilings; ac
cessory utter the laet te the robbing el I C.
ltobiusen's stere; felonious entry of the
stere or Ti. M. Wlest, at Sha-ncck, the mill
ere. S. Hershey and the paint shop of B. M.
Robinson, near the mountain.
These chargirs cerUlnly am many (num
bering In all eighteen) and very serious. The
elllcers stale that they have strong evidence
in nearly overy case, and they will be uble te
show that Hauck is ene of the worst men
that the mountain has ever produced, and
that Is saying considerable. All the bur
glaries, witli which he Is charged, occurred
during the past winter nml are fresh in the
minds el the people. Scarcely a night i.s.sel
that seme ene was net reblKsJ, and the coun
try peeple almost reared te close their oyes
in hIceh. It Is net lielleved that Hauck com cem com
mltted many ortlu-se crimes alone, but that
he liolengcd te a woll-erganizcd gang who
had a very systematle mede or weik. The
principal men r tlie parly are new in tlie
Lancaster all. 1 1 the stories told el Hauck
and his operations are net greatly exagger
ated, it is certain that in bis arrest ene ofthe
most important captures ofthe year has Is-en
etlecled.
dr. axtiiu.w's l'Aiiimi hvueih
l'leuKiut l.nlrrlalninent I'arllrlp itrd In
l.iilrrlaliiiuent artlrlntecl
by
I'recurluiM Lltlle One.
Last evening an entertainment was given
in the school room er.SU Antheny's chinch,
F-tst Orange street, in honor or the feast day
et tlie jiatren saint of the church. There
wero 100 or &00 persons piescnt, and about
CO pupils orthe school took part In the exor exer
cises, which consisted or addresses, vocal and
Instrumental music, and the presentation efii
drama In which alieiit 20 orthe children leek
parU The address of tlie day wits
dollvered by Miss Bentley, ene of the elder
pupils of the school. The Knglisli address
was glven by Miss Bube. Beth addresses
were well written and well delivered. A
uumlHir of Herman and Ihiglish choruses
were rendered by the school, and the young
men's endiestra played two line selections.
Father Kaul, pastor of the church, made a
timely speech te the school, complimenting
the teachers and the pupils upon the great
,,rr,..r..KS madu durhiLT the ses-sieu. Tlie en
tertainment was in every resiiectcreditable
te the pupils and the sisters who have eharge
of the school. The closing oxercisos or tlie
school will take place en the 2M InsbinU
AT ST. I'Alfb's m. i:. ciiuncn.
The children erSU Paul's M. K. Sabbath
school have been specially prepared in a
lengthy and choice pregramme) for their
Childrens' Day celebration.
The scholars are quite proficient as
speakers and singers, and under the careful
inanagemeiiU especially in me inner accom
plishment erMiss Cera K. Urban, thu patrons
and friends or the school may expect a rare
treaU The muring pregramme will consist
or singing by Sunday school and church
choir, together with an address or two; and
In the evening the children will deliver a
pregramme of songs and recitations. Tlie
decoration of llowers, designs, bird songsters
ami children very tastefully arranged, will
be quite elaborate.
Children' Day " at the U. IS. Church.
Te-morrow will be " Children's Day " at
the Union Bethel, corner of Prlnce and
Orange strceta. The exorclaes will le con
ducted In the Interest or Findlny college. A
very oxccllcnt'pregrammo has been prepared
by the beard or directors of said college, and
sent out te all the Church or Ged Sunday
schools in tlie United States. The church is
being suitably decorated for the occasion.
The exerciso will begin at 10 iu in. All ure
cordially luvlted te attend.
THE COLZEVTOJtSllIl'.
The New Appointee llu the Ilospect et
All
Turtle,
rrem thu Lancaster Inquiicr.
Of course the appointment or a Democrat
te the collectershlp was only a question or a
very short tlme, and In Mr. MacGonlgle the
party has round a man te whom there can
he no sorleus objections. He Is n thorough
gentleman, of unquestioned integrity and
entirely coinpetont ler the duties et the olllce.
A better man for the place could net have
been found. Whlle he Is a pronounced Dem
ocrat he has the respect or men or all
parties.
Sllll Harping en My Daughter.
Frem the Yeilc Age.
ir a covernmont iipnointment should get
lest and stray Inte Yerk, the tire bells will
beat ence rung te warn the peeple se that
they may get out In tlme te catch en te the
curiosity, bolore it is captured by soine orthe
Lancaster peeple, who are always prowling
around en this slde or the rlver, hunting up
cyclones from Washington.
N. It. About the only thing that Is likely
te be sent te this county irem v asumgien,
that Lancaster county will net want, will be
the cholera when It euicially arrives In this
country.
Seem te Knew Him.
Krem the IlouTeiiI tlazette.
Mr. MacOoulgleisa man or high character
ami tlie appointment is eminently preper.
Itelurn or the IJberty Hell.
The train bearing the Liberty bell will leave
New Orleans te-day via the Loulsvllle fc
Nashville railroad, for Philadelphia. The car
en which the bell Is placed is handsomely
decorated. The escort will be as follews:
Mayer Qulllotte, n delegation of tlie city
council, policemen, a detachment of Conti
nental guards and a detachmeut of firemen.
BLOWN FROM TIIK TRACK.
A Wr.STV.HN TltAlN UEllAlUVAt WHILE
tWIXU AT EVI.T, WEED.
AC)iloneKwoo!on'iiOnnTrnlii Near Sioux
City, Iowa, ninl Thrown It Inte a Ditch.
Seventy Terrllleil I'nMcngerK None
Iteierlcil futally Injured.
Sieti.v Citv, lit, June 13. A ittsscnger
train en the Sioux Falls branch (if the
Chicago, MllwaukceitSU Paul railroad was
blown from the track west el' hore last night.
Twe passonger coaches, the liaggage and ox ex
press cars mid tender are en their sides in
the ditch. The accident occurred near Me
Cook, a small station across the line hi
Dakota, nlwutsevcn miles northwestor Sioux
City. The train was going at nearly full
spced when a cyclene struck 1U The wind
seemed llterally te have lifted overy car from
the track and te have turned them about In
the air and dropped them In the ditch. The
onglne was only partly derailed, hut the
couplings wero severed as clean and com
pletely uh though cut by a chisel. Nothing
was seen of the approaching slnrm by any any any
ene en the train until It actually struck the
cars. Thore were sixty or seventy persons)
en the train, and when the shock wits felt
thore was n inomenuiry tumuli or yells,
drowned in the rear or tlie wind, but fol
lowed as seen as tlie cnisli was evor by the
shrieks of women and crles for help of these
caught hi the wreck.
The engine crew and soveral pisseimers
who wero but slightly bruised, at ence began
chopping nt the wieck. A brakeman was
dispatched te McCook for a physician and
another man te Sioux City for aid. A pirtlal
list or the Injured Is as follews:
Conductor McCall, or Sioux City, head
badly cut ; D. T. Hedges, Sioux City, head
slightly cut; A. J. Kockweod, bruised about
the head and sheulders ; Hxprcss Messenger
L. M. Scott, Injured Internally, seriously II
net fatally. An old man and his wife, whose
name could net Im learned, badly bruised,
ami at first roiierted killed, but will probably
recover. A wrecking train iv.m Immediately
sent with surgeons as seen as word was ro re
eelxid by two men who dreve In fiem the
scene ofthe aivident I if' Muggiest
It Is shiteil by a tmvellng'lnan.H passenger
en the train, that theKtnrni wasoneofliio
regulation cyclones with a 'combined
cylindrical and centrifugal motion. This he
says was e idenl from the iosltleii In which
the wreckisl iwrs lay. 'The wind" he says,
"seemed te hat (T turned the cars half around
whlle oil th ground, dropping Iheutlun
direction nlmrrittttriAhlanglestetljelrnckR"
Ne ene could give any Idea of theappcnlaw
ofthe storm, but It was evidently ene ofthe
fimuol-shiiped clouds which commonly ac ac
cemiiany a northwest, cyclone, The miracle
is that no enea far as could be discoverod,
was killed entrlghU The storm was overy
sovere ene and telegraph wires are prostrated
In many directions. These along the line or
the Chicago, Milwaiikee&StTTaul railroad
are tlie only ones working. Along the North
Pacific six miles or wire are lying HaU Ho He
eoris brought In by trains en the various
reads show heavy wind Southwest and WesU
Se far as burned, howevor, thore was no
serous damage te crops or buildings. There
was no hall un-empaiiyiug the storm. Nearly
every one el tlie ether ivasMingerH escaeil
injury beyond slight cuts. It is remarkable
that none wero kllhsl outright, as the train
was overturned iKihire it was jiossible for
any one te leave the cars.
WKATIIEIt IWIHAHII.ITIEN.
The Condition of the Ilnremeler and Ther
mometer mid Indication Ter the Merrow.
Washington. D. C. June IX Fer the
Middle Atlantic hhites, lair, warmer weather,
followed by local rains, southerly winds.
Storm or slight ouergy is new central in the
Upper Lake region. I.ecal rains have rat rat
Ien in the Fast Oull' skates, Tcuncssee and
Ohie valley, the Upper Luke reglen.Upper
Mississippi and Missouri valleys, elsowhero
lair weather prevailed. Southerly winds pro pre
vail In all districts except the Seuth Atlantic
and FastOuirHUiloswheie they are varlable.
The tomperatiire has remained nearly sta
tionary In the districts Ixirdering en the At
lantic and the OuirorMexIco, and in Tenn
essee und the Ohie valley; It has risen
slightly In the Lewer Lake region and fallen
slightly In tlie Upper Lake region.
Feil Sunday Lecal rains are indicated for
the New Hngland and Middle Atlantic
states; clearing weather in tlie i,;ike region.
Our Specie.
Washington. June 13. The special
report or the director or the mint en the
production or geld and siler, will show that
the deixwlts or domestic geld bullion at
tlie United Shites mints and assay offices
rrem July 1st, ls73, te January 1st, lbS5,
amounted te $115,000,000; that tlie produc
tion during tlie same period amounted te
$12?,000,000, and that the geld coinage at
United States mints ler the last 12 fiscal years,
ntler deducting United States geld coins rc
nielted, amounted te?5l.r,10t,ll i.
Important I tall read Humer.
Nr:w Yemc, June 13. A dlsjiahii from
Philadelphia slates that A. J. t'assatt, late
vice president of the Pennsylvania railroad,
who has, it Is said, been ellered the receiver
ship of West Shere, has decided te aceepU It
is also currentlv reported that the result et
his acceptance will ultimately be the control
or the West Khere by the Pennsylvania com
pany. Methodist Church Humid.
Middi.htewn. Conn., June U.
The
Methodist church was burned this morning
at Tour o'clock, causing n less of $20,000.
Soveral ether buildlnirs caught llre, but were
net greatly damaged.
Te the Victer lieleuga the Spoil.
Washinoten, D. C, June 13. The pest-
master at Sllngerland, Albauy county, N. Y.,
has resigned, stating that he is un " ollensivo
partisan," and that he bollevos that "Te the
victor uoiengs me Jumna.
The Hanhrupt Ilimten Hoekeller.
Bosten, June 13. It is stated that James
IU Osgood Is te go te Ungland ns the ropro repro ropre
senUitlvo or Harper Brethers at u salary et
? 10,000 a year.
Illg I'lre In Knextllle, Tenn.
Knexvili.1!, Teun., June IX A disastrous
llre breke out liore this morning In the City
flouring mills and Is still raging. It la
thought that the mills will be wholly de
stroyed. They are valued at ?500,000.
A Well-Known Turfman' Dancer.
Frank L. Herdlc, a well-known peel soller
or the national circuit, had a narrow eacape
rrem death en the track en Friday at Old
Oaks park, WllliamsperU Afler the races
woreovor a large number of citizens In pri
vate, vehicles drove en thoceurso, as is me
custom. Among them was Mr. llerdle, with
a black herse, wlilch he purchased in Phila
delphia last week. He speeded the animal
and was going down the stretch at a 2:25
gait wnen, m turning out iur u raieagu,
wagon upset Mr. llordie was thrown out,
and his feet caught In the Bpokes of the rear
whoels. The herse ran away uud In this po
sition he was dragged llve hundred feet en
his back, when a iiorseman very plucklly
,lulul mil. irrnnned the herSO llV tllO IlOHO
mid checkod his vinlent career. Mr. Herdlo's
escaix) rrem a torrible death was almost ml ml
raculeus and peeple who witnessed the ulhilr
say that in another moment he would have
been dashed te pieces against the rence that
surrounds the track. His shoulder was ills,
located and two ribs broken.
Seven .Men Proivned.
Seven men were drowned at Qulnge
Rapldf, in the Ottawa river, en Thursday,
zyd
While trying te reniove n "K wuicu
caused a timber drive " at that point.
TIIU CENTltAT. TnANSVOHTAIlUN.
Dlncetery of fraudulent Otrr-lMun of Stock of
the Company,
Heme days age tlie eirtclals of the Central
Transjxirtalleu company made the discovery
that thore had been an over-lssuoof the sleck
of the company, but the "Irregularlty " was
net known en the street until Friday, when
ii great excitement was caused among l'liila l'liila
delphta stock-brekoni. The over-lssuo oc
curred during the administration of n
former beard of olllcers, of whom Jeseph F.
Uottrluger was secretary and treasurer. He
has for two woeks pest been absent from
home.
As seen us the over-lssuo was known yes
eorday, thu president of the cempiny James
S. Stovens, who was at Atjuutie City, was
telegraphed for, and Benjamin P. Obdyke,
the present set-rotary and treasurer, was In
terviewed by jiartlcs Interested. Itappears
lreni the morning jiapers that Mr. Obdyke
was very reticent, merely saying that the
first Intimation he had of thu rumor being en
the street was its being told te him when he
was about getting en a train at three o'clock
te go te his factory. He had, he said, upon
assuming Ills duties as an olllcer of tlie com
pany, employed an exjiert te go eer tlie
Ikhiks te ascertain the amount and kind of
tlie cemjiany's proiierty that would efllclally
come Inte bis bauds, but he could say noth
ing further upon the subject until he had
first told the president what he knew. He
had telegraphed te Mr. Stevens, and he
added that he had net himself issued a war
rant for Mr. Celtriiiger's arrest, and did net
knew that any liad lieeu issued.
It was further ascertained thai the former
president of the company. Jehn C. Bingham,
Is nt Sea Olrt, and inquiries as te tlie whoro whero whore
nboutsorMr. Collringer dieted the Informa
tion that several weeks age he bad geno trout
fishing anil was netut home.
Information received by Lancaster brokers
this morning is te the ell'ect that the ovor evor over
lssuo of sleck was made by Secretary Cott Cett
ringcr ; that it will net exceed 3,000 shares at
a par value or ?e0 per share ; that the
selling price of tlie stock lias been i'li
per share; that about 2,000 shares are held in
this city, and tlie over-lssuo cannot depreeiate
the stock mero than fj or M per share. The
value or the surplus in tlie treasury el' the
company, according te Mr. Ontlringer's last
report, wasthlle.Til The amount of stock
legally issued Is 41,000 shares, and If only
.'1.0(H) shares have lieen euir-isstied by Cott
ringer, the surplus of Jnl,l lu.75 will have te
he divided between the holders of 17,000
shales Instead or 11,000.
Mr. Cottringer, who is said te have geno en
a llshlng excursion some weeks age, Is puy
nuuster of this division el' the Pennsylvania
railroad company, and lias been heretofore
regarded asa man of high character. He
ihrsl lu a $10,0il0 heuse in West Philadelphia,
but It is found te be mortgaged and he is sup sup sup
pesed te havd skipped. Tlie supposition Is
that he Issued the bogus sUnit from time te
tlme niul appropriated the proceods te his
own use.
It will be remembered that this was the
suiek which sold soiue tlme age a-5 high as
Hern fw uj ftii, necause or a contract tnocein.
pany had with the Pullman company, whlclt
paid It a lartre rate or interest, and the stock
was considered a geed holding. When
Pullman sought te make a new and mero
favorable bargain, with the old or the old
management, 'the stockholders resisted and
elected a new beard. Since then Pullman
has lioen trying te get control or a majority el
the stock in erder te ellect his purpose, ?nd
It was thought he had succoeded, but thic
discovered ever-issuo makes It doubtful what
the value of the stock Is and even what
amount of it thore Is alleaU
Between the demand for It te supply Pull
man's wauUs and the uncertainty alieiit tlie
future of the company, IthaHbecii lmbblng
around in the sleck market, uud during thu
last few days they who had a Juisplcien ofthe
disclosed irregularities have licen quietly un
loading. With nearly S;700,(ix) in cash en
hand which Cottringer could net get ut
lit) l'lillmau cars ami seme vauiaiuu irnn
ehises, the stock seems te have an intrinsic
ralue er-aHeast-?20 te ;2yif-lhu. fraudulent
ever-issuo is net greater than reierted.
tiii: ivti:st en tiii: sTiicnr.
bpecl.il te the lMTi:t.uaEj,cER.
Philaiuh.imiia, Pa., June 13. There
have been no further sales of Central Trans
portation stock. It rates 2I'(3,2S. There
was an ever-issuo of 3,00S sliares. It Is
thought, when it is generally known, it will
bring seme stock en the market. Ne arrests
have been made as yet.
m:ws rite.M ai:ak i-lacks.
Burns T. Krduiau, has been appointed post
master at Lilians.
The Seus or Vcterans encampment in Shen
andoah has adjourned te meet in Hhaniekln
J imeO, IsSii.
It Is proposed te light up Pottsvitle wilh
electricity, using fifty lamps for that pur
IKwe. Mr. Neah Glatfelter, en the Willow Street
turnpike, has our thanks ler a line box el
large cherries. Next!
Smith's " Primer " and " llcmenhiry "
phvsiolegy, pushed bv W. Uiddle, have been
introduced into 600 el the iKa) school districts
In this county.
David Kiuiirman's bam, in Ueckland
township, Berks count v, witli the contents,
wasdostreyod bv llre Friday nfternoen. Mr.
Kaullinan's 0-year-old daughter was fatally
burned.
Win. Laudsdale, colored, a resldent of the
Welsh mountain, was sent te jail en Wodnes Wednes
tlay by 'Squire Pleam for stealing a let of
smeked meat from Frederick Schuupp, of
Ixiaceck township, en the night or March
lath.
The New Helland Ctitriun thinks the peo
ple of Iiancaster county In goneral hae
nuise te rejolce that a Lancaster man has
been selected for internal rovenue collector,
se as te retiiii the olllce in this county. "11
would have been quite an Incoiiveiiience 11
the hundreds or cigar manufacturers and
ethors who have te pay rovenue te the na
tienal government, weuiit nave neeu euuguii
te go te another county te pay tribute."
Death of Clan. C. Deltrlrh.
Charles C. Deitrieh, seu or the late Adam
Deltrlch, of Maner township, died at his
home en the Columbia pike, three miles
west or this city, this morning. His death
was caused by typhoid fover from which he
had lioen siill'erlng for alieiit three woeks.
Mr. Deltrich was 31 years old and died en the
anniversary of his birth. He leaves a wire
and two children, the eldest or whom is new
lying serieusly 111 of the same complaint of
...i.t.Vi. I.,.- r.,tl.n.. .Itn.l rrhn fnenrnl will tnln
place Tuesday morning. Thore will be ser
vices at 0 o'clock at the late rosldenco of
deceased and at 10 o'clock at the Millorsville
Monnenlto meeting heuse whero Interment
will be made.
Arm And Teet Crashed.
Thursday niernlng as Win. Leland was
driving a six mule team, a nille or two from
Coderus Hint mill, opposite Marietta, he
tripiieiland fell and the wheels of the wagon
that was leadod with 12,000 pounds of stene,
passed evor his right arm and right loot,
badly crushing theiu and causing tlie broken
benes te pretrude through the skin. T he nc nc
cldent occurred en a lonely read, but llttle
travoled, but rortunateiy uis cries ier ueip
were heard by Dr. Ellis P. Townsend, who
was msslugaud who hurried tohlsusslsumce.
A spring wagon was procured and the injured
man was takeu te ids home, near tlie Hint
mill, where the broken bones wero set by Dr.
Townsend.
Held Fer Malicious Mlsclder.
The six boys charged with maliciously
running a freight car oil' the Charlette street
siding and ditching, It had n hearing before
Vhlermau McConemy Friday ovenlng. All
were discharged oxeept Sanderson Shaiib
e.,.i Tnennii iinilriL who were held te answer
atceurU The accused acknowledged that
they wero en tlie car, nut ueny uiai myy poi pei poi
lxisely opened the brake, They say it accl
ilently oiened us they jumped oil' the car, uud
that they did nil they could te step the car by
placing bricks and stenes In lrent of the
wheelH.
He Would Net Marry Her.
Ihnina Shcet. has brought u suit ngalnst
Charles II. Seller Ter brencli or premise. A
suit for damages for less el' sorvice has also
been brought against Seller. A capias
was issued and the ball fixed at $3,000.
Seller Is new In Jail for fornication and
bastardy with the plaintiff.
FLASHES FROM TIIK WIRE&
THE LATEST
VATVItES IN
TET.EuiiAt'itw am-
CONDENSED tOHlt.
What IIiih llccu TreimplrlnK Up and Iku
the World During the Lrut Tnrenty-Feur
Heur, Culled nud CenileimeU Per
Hualy Ocnernl Heading.
In tlie Steele murder case at Norrislewu,
Pa, the Jury returned a verdict of man-
Biaiiguier. , j-
A ti Itillltif.llm, linu l.n.,. mwtilml lAjlatt m-' J I. .
straining tlie authorities from Interfering - r
...III. I.r.nlr.nl,l... &....A,.t.AA.t lH ,-
tutu iv.n,,itiYiu t,b ,iii:uR11IUilu ,KIjr, V S 3
Tlie president te-day apiiolnled Frank Oer-; Ksfij
cieii. ei iieercin. liriiiciinii r.inric ni tun iiiir- T.
veys or the general land olllce, vlcoHehirich,
romevod. ' -
Jehn lUslgers, or Kansas, was te-day'
appointed chairman of tlie iMiard or ponslen
nmicals, secretary's olllce, vice Aaren Brad'
shaw, removed.
(leneral (Irani passed n Talrly gewl night
and Is reeling well this morning. He ex
perienced but llttle pain during the night.
Charles I-X Oiliiioreaud Jeremiah J. Sulli
van, Indicted in Chicago for perjury in the
Macklu-Gallagher case, wero arraigned bo be bo
feio Judge Bledgett this morning and plead
ed net guilty.
The steamship Ktruria, orthe Cunard line,
from New Yerk, arrived oil' the l'astnet light
at I o'clock this morning, having made the
run In six days, ten-hours anil llve minutes.
Information from Tombstone, undordate
or June 10th, shows that about M Indians
near Blsliee killed Customs Iuspocter W. A.
Daniels; that the citizens or Illsboe hoaded
them oil' and that LleuU IMchard's and a
squad or 20 inen went te tholrasslstance.
Hen. Frank 11. llurd, or Ohie, Kays that
the testimony In his contest has all been ta
ken and placed In the hands or the clerk of
the Heuse. Mr. Hurd feels confidentthat he
will be allowed te take his seat in the next
Congress.
In the trial or Win. A. White, charged
with the murder orSamuel Preper, In Dever
Plains, N. Y., the Jury brought in a verdlct
shortly before 11 o'clock finding the prisoner
guilty of manslaughter In the first degree.
Tlie judge at ence sentenced White te filteen
years Imprisonment In the penitentiary.
Tlie latest news from Pine Level, Ma, la
that Frank Jenes has turned state's evidence
and swcais that Charles Willlard shot Abbe
and that Bacen cut his threat. Tills is net
yet verified. The oeplo are very much ox ex
cited evor It, and if true, thore is no hepe for
tliem. A man named Barlholeniow, tosti testi
lled that Willard acknowledgodjklllltigAbbo.
A Philadelphia Jury rendered a verdlct for
f.',IOS.33 nr tlie plaiiitill'iu the United SUateS
ehcilit court this morning, in the suit of
Margaret C.irrigan against tlie Massachusetts
Beuellt association, liehig the amount with
interest era jHiliey or Insurance en the llre
or her sister, Mrs. Mary McCall'rey, whedled
in August, 1S.SI, payment or which had been
resisted en the ground of alleged fraud.
In Osgood, Ohie, Turner Orahani and wife,
colored, were killed by a mob armed with
shotguns shortly after midnight Graham Is a
barber, and both he and his wife are addicted
te drink and wero quarrelsome. They were
harmless te ethors. They had been away
during the forepart or thu night, and when
they returned the mob riddled thorn with
sheu Tbe coroner begae. an inquest yoster yester
day, but no arrests have yet been made.
Mr. Charlei Zacbarlas and Miss Adelalde
March, of Newark, both clfldtn blcyeUug
costumes, he mounted en a MJ. ahe''Om-iiteSrj&
a trievcle, rede up te the resideBr te?p
Kev.V. Ii. Pullen, In TTast Orange, OBTVapH.
nesiiay. There Uiey leunu a cmnpMij
rrleudk, hi wlioae proseuco they were
nod, aim me y
seated trloycle
weildiiig tour
JIIUJJ pOOpiO IIIUUIUWU m"-,-.
andstated for a toil dyVj
IwnfV,
vor IhogeoiJ roauaei rauu
Five crews are onterod feV ,l """"SfVl
rogelta'erUio Ititorcellcglato retgj'la
iieu v) iase pince en jjaKe wuiusqm'' v
MiiW.. .T,llv 111, flntltr.lt- lltllvnrulBZ P'v
l',,,,iui,7a,.l, x.'I.ImI.....,. Irtcf rn f.mn..
'.... .j a ,...,., iitiivii nvitl.vi.jvai, vv.nv.H ...J
vjiuiiiuui, nnnru nun uowueni, iHe iztqi .n
three will meet June 10th In the annual ceM- ,&!
test Ter the Child's cup atPhlIttdelnhia,r.?Jct afel
ei tee crew nave yet arrived, nut jvqw;UJi .,'
e.)ecU)d te-morrow. The race i.i lef mHe
una a Halt straight away ler um wiwaft vjy
ehamplenship in fours with colors, and. lud(- j
vidllal lirizcs. "yk
Kenneth A. Skinner, of Bosten, who held
the roller skating records in United. SUtes
iieiii uiiu ui uvu nines, nineu aril -jw wiuv
ueorgeT. Harry, eruiiathaui, cenn , yester
day afternoon, ibrasoriesoflivo nule rfc'es,
in heats, host threo in live, at tlie Inxlitufe
rink, beginning June 17, nndcoutli.alnr'eRch
e ening until the serles is docided, for 5')) it
side and the championship of Ue World.
Berry has deleated A. J. weed, he chain,
pien of Michigan ; U. C Gale, .i Albien,
Mich.; Bice, el Chatham; Dell, or Cleveland,
and wen the championship of Ohie freiiti,t
Held of twelve.
THE SUT.LirAN-ltUEKE
J- WITT.
Tim Chicago I'eeple Quite CenfldenF
of Their
Man'a Victory.
I'liii.viie. June 13 Crowds eJ s
sporting
men lreni New Yerk, Philadelphia, Cincin
nati ami SU Leuis arrived last nlgtit anu una
morning te witness the Sulllvan-li irke light
this afternoon. Sullivan occupied nbex nt thfi
Standard theatre last nlghU Alter the, pex pex
ferninncn he went te lied in cliartri of Nun.
Murphy who eame all the way iron Botflen &
te aiienu me cuainpieii. eiuiivauium rm
met yesterday aftornoen at the drhiag parlt.
The contrast Ibotweon the non was
striking. Burke's flesh was Hard and
linn and his ove was bright There' was
also oxcellent co"ler hi his cheeks. The men
shook hands and took a drink of ghigur ale
together. Sullivan seomed somewhnt Im
pressed by the oxcellent shape h whicli he
found Burke. The Xews te-day miys : ' The
goneral impression is that Burke will no;
only stand llve rounds bofeio Sullivan, but
will, In all preliabillty, best him." Burke
lu in w,n!lnn! trim. havbiL' tralnfsl iljlelUV
gently and Ukcn care of hluiwlf. Witlt
Sullivan out or condition it is prolable that u.
torrifie onceuntor will end In the oewnlall of
the champion.
Salisbury Hat Net Made up Oil 3Uud,
T ..nn.. T.t.,n 1 T.rtril Snllabl.rv hjIM liefc
as yet slunflied hlswillingnosste s,wept the Vl
respensiuiiuy ei iui"s ,':","1 v,
Tiin ',n. imsisls inai ar. uiuonienu chuiaiu -
net have resigned. There was no fped reason,
why he should no se, anu it is iiiouupunrniiie t p
why he should have felt impel) jJ te take J$l
such a step morely because or the ma;, niir
jutrletlc and altogether unfair ac. in el the
Tery party. ,
Lord Salisbury, whom the quoeu lias asked
te form a new cabinet, left Baline d te-day
and isoxiected te urrlve hore late wilghu.
Humors et n Great Ilallread A "Ideht.
Ilmir.TV. .Tnnn 13. A ronert lus rflaehett
..xw.. rntu tllftw ti (lin nflect thi, the nib-1
iiA.-nKrln.rllnnlllir hntWOOIl tlllli VXACO Urllr,V'a
and Tralee breke down uear the ter plaeeffi3
this morning, while running at a ilg rate or jm
spoeil and that a numuer. ei ijasscmsusn j
been kllled and injured. yf
A later Ulspatcn suites uiui no ew niiiuyr.
.. . 1 .i nr.l.n .....II ,ml,1 -llt,..
by tlie ureaKinguuwiiui iue mm. ... ...-tw-nlng
liotweon that city and Tralee Jii morn-
inif, the pussonger coaches all cwiIug Jn.'tfft
Jury. The oscaiie is regarded as i ilraouleua.
A Civil Service Declaration, Qyri
Washinoten, D. O., June 13. -ThOelTtt
sorvice commission, in repiy w '' ";jr:
.,.., i,t. elatna Hint, n nlnrlr 111 ill . cla.SSllleU.tf J
aorvlce mav he nrometod wltheu- examlua- , m
tlen oxeept suh as the dopartmeti hi wlikjh JU
1,,. mrveu marr rermlrn. Rllll thai l cblOl OtiCV1
division who occupied the place i ler te Mw An
promulgation of the civil Borvlce rules veixyS
be appointed toether places wlthb. ujecian-''
fled service without examination. , -j-
a nimt KfTectual 8ulchU. . .KV'.tl
Uiohmenh. Va,, June 11 This merulai --
an Italian cook, named Adelph talltan, op-1
251 Deau street, rmiaueipui ,xumuiw"i0.,
....ii.i.. i..,n,,iiiiifr ins threat nml aflerwm : j
liiiiiplngfrem the tldrd story of heiHtJM.V
'Franklin street botweon lllh and UUj '?
Tlie man was nueumi yuuraui ,U , ',4-T,'
been drliiKing veryiiuavuy, imuiu "wr"
had lest all his inoney. Jffe J
(-
Hnly One Whale. v
i. .Tntivn. V. 1.'. .Innn 13. iha'bnrk
tlne Chieftain irem Dundeehas rtiiUlWk'l
mil eftnr n fmv mnntlis whallllir eXrWltliW
during which she secured only n whiUe.K.-J
Fer30daya she was trozen m w evuuvfg
rocks, uer new is eauiy uauiBw.
-l
'm
"?i
--11
tik
-M.