I IT I dad ——-—e.T.L- P. DENTS TRIP he Party on the ic Slope. ban Francisco and Places. rty arose at fi o'clock jg while their train was pi Mountains of Cali- the valley of the San slendid view of the cele at that point. The first oe day was Bakersflald, od at 8:30 o'clock, The ten minutes, The Pres. ht received a cordial welcome. He introduced to the people by ge A. B, Conkling, and was about respond when he was assailed such a shower of bouquets that he was wd to seek shelter in his car, Seeing that President did not desire this treatment the ople stopped, whereupon the President in advanced and addressed them. Tulare, 1., was reached shortly after 10 o'clock and ® President and party, which now included svernor Markham, ex-Governor Perkins r. Stump and Mr. Crocker, received 1 ovation, A national salute was , during which the party was ported to a gaily decorated stand, the of which was the stump of a mane oth redwood tree. This was surrounded y a guard of honor, composed of the local ilitia and Grand Army Posts, The Presi- ent was introduced by Governor Markham © President shook hands with all the ple who could get near him, He ns practically recovered the use of is right hand, and anticipates no fur er trouble, notwithstanding the fact at the middle finger, which was in- red near Santa Barbara the other after. on, is still in bandages. President Har gon was welcomed to San Francisco that ight by a great display of enthusiasm. The Presidential train arrived at Oakland about o'clock, and the party boarded the ferry teamer Piedmont, which steamed around he bay slowly to enable the Presi Hent to witness the brilliant illuminations, 8 the steamer left the wharf at Oakland a ignal rocket was sent up from the bow and stantly bonfires blazed from the twin peaks M Telegraph and California street hill gud a dozen other elevated points in n Francisco Long of streets, hrilliant with electric lights and red were also plainly visible rom the aeck of teamer. On rea San Franciso party entered carriages and drove out ket street to the Mechanics’ Pavilion a reception was held The President and Mrs panied Mayor Sandersor son to the First Pr Francisc k Sunday. ens remal lines fire the the Mar- where ng Harrison needed ad- he n All the | e residences of wuford io the afternoon. wrning of the President's ht and warm upon the at 9 o'clock the rom the Pa'ace ere the public ded. The chil in line, and the inspe« was onfin J n drive i other WARS reaches sen reviewed, the party oe Park A which the Presidential From the park the drive was to the where aoipt Sutro | i f tel to Vanness avenue, w school children dren were drawn us tion were nssem up ne wi the W ben Golden after both was driven stop was made at the Conserv was closed to all arty. hits barge of the hem to the Heights as sarvedd {hence wedded to Presidio tationed there urned to the sy afternoon ating breezes wv PnAng Te Was a recepta the b the foreign AYY and onal Guard Ate and em bers "rior to this Z the President ception Mrs from the ladies of San Francise elegant silver card tray tastefu The reception laste! until hen the entire party retired A reception was held at the Palace Hotel, Ban Francisco, by President before he left on his marine trip én the morning of the fifteenth day of the jou which was at- tended by over 100 clergyman of all denom- inations of that city and vicinity. Post. master-General Wanasjaker, previous to the trip, inspected the Postoffice and was introduced to the officials. The letter car riers were also reviewed by Mr. Wana- maker, who made a brief address. Ho was then driven to the steamer and accompanied the President on the excursion. Shortly before 10:30 President’ Harrison snd varty boarded tne steamer UIty of ruebio tor atrip around the bay. Promptly at that hour the steamer left the whar! and started in the direction of Alcatraz Island, near which were stgltioned the Charleston, the Hassler, the MAdreno, the Corwin and the Hush, In passing the squadron the Presidential salute of twenty-one guns was fired, and then th and the cutters fell behind the FPlueblo and sae naval pro ossnon moved sdowly toward the Golden Gate. Ten thousglnd or more persons left the shore to accompany the President on his trip. The yachft clubs of San Francisco and neighboring cifies and towne decked their boat houses yvith flags and bunting. The eraser Charifston was one of the most con spicuous ob fete, and was resplendent in her Dew dress, Toe steamer City of Pueblo hich wad to convey the Presidential party ePoursion, the steamer Havtien Re id other large vessals were deco 3 sem to stern The anes had t tirect to Golden House, tok escorted ancneon party the ao where the and reviewed I'he President and hotel from Presid much refreshed Pa oy from the nis Lt Nat twas n designed Seven oO Clock the oruiser Mrs, and sister, wtter, Eaton, saying she requesting that mx ns be made by the President on | injuries. garrison and party left San ain at ¥ o'clock in the morn- th day absent from Wash. Alto, where several hours he Palo Alto stock farm and pford, Jr, University, At3 h started for Monterey, At wok farm *he stock was in. isitors, and trotting exhibi by blooded horses, The ra. Harrison planted trees pecies, and then luncheon was sanford mansion. The return though the estates of Sen Jats J. C. Flood and others y took a train for San ere at 4:90 o'clock, After a trip was resumed to Monterey ched at 7 o'clock. The party the Hotel Del Monte, where, they retired for the night, f Nieat loft his train at Delmonte, N.. aud had a full night's rest at the Del monte Hotel. He arose early on the morn. ing of the seventeenth day of his pilgrimage to the Pacific and drove over the famous #ix- toon mile drive to Monterey. A large dele dion of people from Monterey, Salinas ity and Pacific Grove assembled at Delmonte and escorted the Presi. dent to Monterey, the Board of City Trustees of Monterey having first visited the Chief Magistrate at the hotel and given him the freedom of their city, On arrival at Monterey the procession was met by a large delegation of school children, who strewed their path with flowers and led the way to bile wore held. Mayor Hill, of Salinas. deliv. | upto the rooms | merce escorted by commercial organizations President | evening received a dispatch b at " . ’ » PAs Tro | dfers from the garrison at Walla Walla, | gence Srea Ne AGAress GX welcome, and on Denar of the three oities resented the President with a solid silver card con taining an engraving of the old Custom House, inscribed as follows: “Old Custom House, where the first American flag was raised in 1848, Greeting to our President, April 80, 1801." The President, Postmaster- General Wanamaker and Secretary Rusk made addresses and were loudly applauded. The Presidential party then drove to Cypress | Point, overlooking the ocean, where they had luncheon, neighborhood, President Harrison received an enthusias tic welcome at Santa Cruz, Cal, on the eighteenth day of his outing, while on his way from Monterey to San Francisco, He delivered a short address, The party was taken to Big Trees in a special train, and on returning to Santa Cruz resumed the jour ney to San Francisco. The next stop was at los Gatos, where the President was escorted tw an decorated stand near the railroad track, and made a brief speech, The party soon left for San Fran oiseo. A committee of citizens, headed by Mayor Banderson, met the party with oar riages at the ferryboat, and the President, Postmaster-General and Secretary Husk were taken to the Chamber of Commerce, while others of the party went to the Palace Hotel, where they had luncheon, A dense crowd cheered the President as he alighted from his carriage at the entrance, and went of the Chamber of Com: President if the city and veteran societies | Tavlor, of the Chamber of Commerce, th mn delivered an address of welcome, to whi the President responded. S TABERNACLE. Dedicated With Imposing Ceremonies The Rev. Dr. T. De Witt the corner of The New Structure Talmage's new Greene and Clin ated with three imposing services, in the mora. Tabernacle, at ton avenues, Brooklyn, N. Y.., was dedi ing, afternoon and evening. Immense crowds attended all thres The entrance in the small ton avenue was opened at morning, and the pewhol first After they spection of tick tower {ors had made a building, s were admitted in the Wore # the POrsSons SANS WAY y pass Laroug in short “tan ling back of the pews stand anywhere lock the large folding hurch per fr andi nto very we evervibing wk it was THX pe ple in the hear that estimated rs rea gain admission i= vmount will take f It was alter midnig the ast w plecsing effect was tabla wae One of the It i= constructed in docks of stone from Mount Sinai and Mars Hill, near + St. Paul preached. Before joss crowds surrounded it Talmage's Jescription of the Of CRIN f Dr Image occupied a pew aisie, and near them wers John Wood, James W, Birk- Dr. Harrison Charles M rguson, Edward H Sixty ushers the Tin na ory Dn IO ett, lavior Alexander M: James H F F. M. Trustees throng Many per doors at the ev [ean Branch and and the seating of the [lawrence looked after ns were turned away from the sing ser~‘oe, when Dr. Tal- mage prea He made special reference to the st the wall pf the church which be brought from Mount Sinai, Calvary, and Mars Hill last It was announced that £22.000 had been raised at the morning ser. vice, and further subscriptions were sought to vav off the floating debt of $50,000, nes yenr AVENGED BY COMRADES. { The Lynching of Gambler Hunt by Soldiers at Walla Walla D. J. Hunt, the slayer of Private Miller, who was lynched on a recent evening by sol Washington, was struck by sixteen bullets, four of which entered his head. Early in the evening Sherif MoFarland received intelll. that an attempt would be made lynch Hunt, and, in compan with Prosecuting Attorney Blan lf he repaired to the garrison and told Colonel Compton what they fearsd and asked him to assist them. This he promised to do by having check rolls called after taps. The Sheriff returned and engaged a number of extra guards, but all of them had not ar rived when a crowd of probably seventy widiers appeared and demanded that the officers open the doors of the jail. When this demand was refused the soldiers began work on the door with hammers and chisels, Find. ing this slow work, they threatened to use dynamite, Further resistance being useless the doors ware opened and thirty or forty cocked re volvers were levelled at the heads of all in. vide, while the keys to the oslls wore de manded, These were given them, and when Hunt's cell was shown them they quickly took him out in the Court House yard and shot him. Excitement was intense, and a crowd of 2000 people surged about the street In front of the jail until after midnight linmediately after the shooting the sol. diers went to their quarters, and it will be difficult to identify those concerned in the shooting, though omly a portion of them wern masked. The soldiers actually took charge of the town and would allow no one to pass along the streets in the vicinity of the folk They compelled merchants to put out Hghta, Hunt, who was a gambler, met Miller in a saloon, two began drinking and were soon involved in a quarrel. Hunt drew his and shot the soldier, to They spent the day in the com | THE GRANT MONUMENT. Ground Broken for It at i Park, New York, The sixty-ninth anniversary of the birth. day of General Ulysss 8, Grant, has been commemorated by the breaking of ground for the monument that will rise in Riverside Park, New York, where the body of the Federal commander has lain since the sum- mer of 1885, wrside TE ER a EE a hey £9 gs + % - or 8 - LE — THE GRANT Before the time for beginning the cere monies the posts of the Grand Army of the Republic gathered at the upper end of Riv. erside Park, and were aassed in and areund the place where the monument is to stand On the river opposite the tomb the war ship Yantic anchored orated with flags and bunting, and at 2 o'clock a salute of twenty-one guns w het I'he vatform near the tomb was filled with mem | {f the Monument Association Army of the Rep I'he Marine B $00 obhildren fi headed by + past the tomb iquet of for. MONUMENT, WAM de wx fired! by rs Grant members of the Grand lic, and the speakers played an overture, and the Sheltering Arms As fife and drum corps, mar Each child oarrie got-me-nots, which + After praver was Clark Wright, ( man's staff shorus sang “Th od Banger” hen General the tom, Rev. D mander Free » Btrr-Spang Horaoe Por D that nig Metropolitan A $200,000 THEFT. mnding Story of Robbery Told in a New York Court {f robbery was brought New ¥Y re Judge ( he firm of H , At rx City, F Brien, Toa wh pase tem and ¢ ’ to s wri n junction Hin and the Union paving £56 0 life in wim in tras at Arthur ( ie at Flushing, Long Island 15 last, had Spy as a clerk at | and said to be «d to $15 a a one-tenth From that matic course of robbery was discoversd that his 1 to $223 9094.5 I'he his life insurance poli xx), payable to his heen turned imnderstanding that rood] Gilman's steal iid show that Giiman, wha been taken int a trust week interest time he ’ Tit were money, deposited it in and awaited dev lope 2) he Arm was on the point { fails . when Holmes advanced §70.000, which He took an of the other Fanos money Upon ine Holmes claims, it was shown Gilman had paid the premioms on the with the monay he stole rom the firm Thercupon Holmes demanded the money from Olin, who refused to surrender it, and, as charged, said he intended to turn it over to the widow Henoe the suit for a writ of injunction Affidavits were submitted by book experts showing that Giiman's course had been an astounding and systematic one. He had robbed the firm from the time he became a mauber of it, covering up his thefts with narvelous skill r Company, a them interest assignment of partners in fe ins stigation, so pices DESTROYED HIS FAMILY, Murdered Wife Mother in. Law, Three Ohfldren and Himself, A terrible tragedy, in which a whole family Jost thule lives happened in Pesth, Hungary, a few days ago. A man employed in the postoffice there was seized witha homicidal frenzy and fatally attacked all the members of his household, never ceasing In his bloody work until he had murdered his wife, mother-in-law and three children, The man then started for the Danube and, upon reaching the river threw himself into the river and was drowned , cce— —— ndians of Maine i O00 | Nap neon NIWSY GLEANINGS, JAPAN has 40,215 physicians, Br. Louis has ten electric roads, Wnts wheat prospects are good, Russia claims a population of 112,842, 8, AMERICAN emmigration agents swarm in Italy. Pmacy is still rampant around China, Taxne are 12,000 Italian hootblacks in New York ( Ly ‘ Tue Argentine currency is to be placed on a silver basis Amoy, Nonrit DAKOTA promises better crops than for seven years past, Tren is an alarming increases of insanity among lowa formers, Maing shows an increase of population in the whole State of 12,150 MANY scientific Washington this summer, Acruarn work on the Rallway survey has begun, societios are tO meet in Intercontinenta’ . Tug populat on of Paris has increased 50,- 000 since the previous census Tren is some talk of laying a cable be tween England and Germany. Tie Farmers Alliance claims to have 25 members in New York State “PINKEY XR is making trouble again in the stables of Philadelphia serious CORSICA objects to the burial of Prince Pilon Plon's,” body there, Oven 750,000 000 cans are used anpually in the United States by the canning factories. Iares a marris binding in H A Huoxoanriay court de in the United not RATY Slates Oxx HUNDRED tons of Japanese curios were ntly brought to this country by ¢ fair has although no pre Yen nnd or. ; Italian Pron i this Fava, Minister to it pion KDING to the Census Burean | rtenge indebtedness « FHIA Cr w that ADE ready s the « it vi actured products IER SHIRAS AND roos i i 2) phe Te " nation anil had A RAILWAY TRAGEDY. A Robber Kills Fellow Pa gers on a Russian I'w WON Train tagonist jumped fr at full speed As soon as the cated 0 the eng The sure r was bare horrified pas amd gu happened. The train was vicinity of the spot where aciasin but ereant ox r Draie alarm o~ t rain y able . The SMEers jumped out without avail id be found, THE MARKETS, 15 NEW YORK Beevos "eats . Milch Cows, com. to good Calves anon to prime Khoo Lambs Hogw~lLive 1p ommend Flour City Mill Patents Wheat No, 2 Hed Hyo-—State ¥ Bariey I'worowed State, Corn Ungraded Mixed. .... Oate—~No, 1 White “ean u Mized Western, ..... Fair to Good Long Rye City Steam ‘as Siate ( FORMery.... Dairy, fair to good West, Im. Creamery Factory ... Chesso—Hilate Factory Bkime Light ...... Western, .. PP Egge~State and Penn BUFFALO, Westarn. . aves Sheep Medium to Good... Lambe Fair to Good Hogs~0Oood to Choloe Yorks ! Flour Winter Patent. ..... Wheat No. 1 Northern... ... Corn~No, 3, Yellow... cous OnatsNo, SWhite,..oconeee Barley—No. 2 Canada. ...... Extra AR o - Hay Ntraw Lard Butter 8655066888 66556838458 Rtoers Egg—~Near-by..... . @ Seeds Timothy, Northern,, 2 0 @ © Clover, Korthern. w NN 4 Hay Fair... esses 00 @18 00 Straw—Good to Prime. .....17 0 @17 0 Butter—Firsts...... ou oa = WATERTOWN (MASS, CATTLE MARKET Bool Dressed weight. ...... A @ Bhoep-—Live 1 TERR Ma » nw ieeenn 3 a2 - a, an PRILADSLPHIA. Flour—Penn, family. ....... Wheat—No. 3 Red, April. 1 Corn--No, 2 Mi Apel... Onate—~Ungraded ess Jukutons, suc sa sof ai SE Choos Part shuns, ooooo0s —— «XEIIEE 8888888 w— Sr mS ———" THE LABOR WORLD, Cnicaoo has Chinese balers, OARLAND (Cal) hodearriers get 85, Newanx, N. J. has 424 union hatters LOWELL (Mase) women are organizing. New York has 8000 union clock-mukers, New You has a workmen's frea school, Tuarx dispatchers will meet at Toledo, Ohio Burookryn has ao Workmen's Dramatic | Club, BROOKLYN framers got forty-five cents an hour New York bakers recently held a mas meeting New York millwrights have a tool (nsur- ance fund New York has ers’ Union, a Children's Je: ket Mak LOoXDoOX unions of sweating demand the abolishment Tug Brotherhood of Blacksmiths has thirty five union Buryaro (N.Y) teamstors want $4 a day and Canadians kept cut book binders work LOXpox's abolishment of piece Tuewros (N. J wages cut if 2000) demand the stroet car bands had their Ly ents 2 ALABAMA workers PROMINENT PEOPLE. s fifty thr regarded n the United Baltimore al manager Fonp, of il theatlr gtarted on an mn of nog Francis TRAIN has rbcycling trip with the tent . Shee src g th s |& ony offere wm? y Raxporrn CrURCOH nas 1 by the London Telegraph $50 a © for letters of travel ArTEn all their years of notoriety and ricature, Rev, T. De Witt Talmage has rificed his mutton-chop whiskers and is now ciean shaven Ar wa that extrava Washing Gesenal, Burien lives on a scale most milhonaires would regard as gant, keeping vi establishments in ton. Boston and Lowell It is reported that Michael Davitt has de cided to abandon his English career and em jgrate to San Francisco, with & view of making his home on the Pacific slope Jay Govio gets his name from Chief Jastios Jay, of New York. Mr father was a country magistrate, whose ad miration for the Chief Justice was un- bounded Nerrig Grant SArrons, aside from her domestic troubles, is said nately situated, She has plenty of money | moves in the best English society, even | J nil grat 1 ' | (IT Chiron. xxxvi., i the body was all they cared for, although | $hey had been taught that “man doth nok of the Federal army, on account of age, re | ive being entertained by royalty Tux retirement of General John Gibbon onlls the fact that his wife of ten accompanied him during his campaigaing in the late war, and came to be dearly loved by all the soldiers Horace Cuirrox, whom Governor Ho has appointed United States Senator in Mr leagan's place, is the first native Texan to hold that offloa, and, with the exception of William H. Crain, is-probably the first to go to either houses of Congress. Mr. Chilton was a candidate for a Democratic nomina tion for Congress in 1582, but got into » deadlock with Hubbard, who was afterward appointed Minister so Japan, and a third man carried oft Je ripe A CURIOUS REMEDY. Using Disease Infected Chinoh Bugs to Kill Healthy Ones, Chancellor Snow, of the Kansas State University, who last year discoverad a dis ease fatal 10 chinch bugs, has received ap plication from in fifty different eountion in Kansas for disease infected bugs. These bugs sre infected with what Mr, Snow calls chinoh bug cholera A few of the in weots are placed in a field of wheat, and soon all the bugs sicken and die, eff otnally rid | ding the Seid of the pest. 11 is nol believed that the chinch bug has vot mada be appeal « ance in Kansas wheat fields, but the farmers are making remiy for them, farmers | cloth Gould™ : to be mom forte. | SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON MAY 10, YOR Lesson Text: “Israels Overthrow Foretold,” Amos vill, 1-14 Golden Text: Luke vidi, 18 Commentary, 1. “Thus hath the Lord God shewed unto me, and behold a basket of summer fruit” In onr last lesson we heard Jehovah rearing. ing Israel of the many ways in which He had sought to win them back to Himself, Ip chapter v. 4, 6, 14, 15, they are repeatedly entroated to seek Him and live. Then they are warned of the day of the Lord and its terrors, yet they conspire against the prophet Amos and refuse to hear his words (vil, 10-18 Now in 8 vision Thu nation is shown to the prophet as 8 basket of ripe fruit, ready to be consumed: they will not warned and therefore judgement m Otmerve the title of God in this Joe hovah Elohim (Righteous bub Adonai Jehovah Lighteous) and is in this pr is always Jeb } beginning with a « speaks Lo the GF DrOmse sn to His « COUR POBIE xv : “Then UI Hi be tf come. tant verse--it is not Creator; rib ery Prec) all letter He wn (ren WOras are Faek, vil, 4 and lov win them bas patient hears nto bio day of the Lord Rev, v wid raed int i before the great and | Lake xx moon terribs Joel i 10 mourning #on ants IE iarnenle And i and all y The mourning, lamentation saci baldoess and bitterness of this verse all indicate the great judgment that would overtake them because of their sine 11. “Behold, the days come, saith the Lord God, that 1 will send a famine in the jand; not a famine of bread, nor a thiret for water, but of bearing the words of the Lord.” Mul | titudes in our day would not worry much ! over that kind of a famine, It was Just so in Israel; “They mocked the messengers of God and despised His words, and misaed His srophets.” “They despised the law of the ord and have not keep His commandments™ 16; Amos ii, 4. Broad for ve by bread alone, but by every word that procesdeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live,” and that it was their life to wet stir hearts unto His words (Deat. vidi. 8 xxii, 44 40 12. “And they shall wander from sea to sea, and from the north even to the rast; they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord, and shall not find 1t." Blessings lost Are apt 10 be prised when it is too Inte. Let us who have the word of God ask ourselves how much we prise it. If vou had no Bible, and could not get one in your town, know | what it is. how ‘ar would you go to get one Two thirds of the people on earth are suffer. ing and dying without the word of God, What do vou care! What are you doing to Five them the broad of lite! Do you pray or your pastor that be may give you livin bread, or are you satisfied with stones int of bread? 14 "The wiaria, an that swear by the sin ol Ba say, Thy God, O Dan, lively and, The manner of Beerstenn uveth: even they shall fall, and never rise up again.” In Deut. ix. 9i, the golden oaif which Aaron made ts called larasl's sin, The calves of Jevoboam at Dan and Bathel wore also lsraol's sin, and are here called the sin of Bamaria, While there is a great and glorious fature for lerasl as a nation, «ll individuals who sin against “lod and die fmpenitent, whother Jews or Gentiles, shall surely perish. Toe only way 0 have iife now, real life consisting of forgivenses of sin and fellowship with God, and be able to look forward with joy to the Christ faith in i Tore or.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers