C. F. I,EW1S. Editor. A. Newspaper for Ihe Familv and Fireside. Terms: Sl-QQ. in Advance VOL. XII. REIDSVILLE, N. C, OCTOBER 28, 1887. NUMBER 31. BBfl. CH tOABt1 Lic. Torlt. rUf z m .... r 1 fW" f 1.. M'L. RAILROAD CRASHES. .tTV'SlV I'ASSENGKRS INJUR- IN W1T VIRGINIA. DK.A1)LY- IN SOUTH CAROLINA. v "riv before noon Thursday tbe fast " 'lioK.-tncnlre and Ohio Ttn.il- llV:Jies, lining west, met witn an .vemil"3 below Charleston, W. Va i" whir" twenty-six. passengers were , if ti , . ()rl,,sS injiirc'i- iono were luueu out wv.-r.il "r severely hurt. The railroad for surgical aid. The acei -i.thfiriCK'S w"1 t was niu-'il by a defective switch, over .),i,.h the eiiii", baggage, expross and passed niihirinoJ, But mail '' the three Hie row-lies,- all well filled with pissen- 1W ai ri' lnrown from the track. Two of im.w. n' tiini.-l cornpletely over, one turn- in,: t ' ; . T!ie following are tbe sufTerera so far as known: If Ml I- Simmo cooper, 238 .West One Hlmlrl' !vl- Twenty-sixth street, v,k- rizh't forearm fractured and New body sli 'Jtt 1 V hrfiiised. ' . , ,, ft-w's linker, colored Columbus, O., bauly bruised about liodv and legs. 0 ' W;,t.ii, Taviorsvil'e, Ivy., concus s on of the brain and tcmnray paralysis. John Kelley, Indianapolis, In 1., scalp cut, wri-l lis.o--at.-d and shoulder brmsod. -Mrs. Catherine Miller, New loik C:y, bead cut oad spine badly injured. Mrs. Mil ler will soon bee Mil :? u mother. .' IV F. Jlisco k, Kansas, clavicle fractur :d,Tu ad ciit and leg bniis-d diaries James, colored, Chirleston, W. Vii rut mi I Ju-uiwvl id the bajek and body. 1 ii-. Win. Fowler of New York City, badly bruised about 'the spine and hijp joint; a met al ilnsk in his hip pocket imbedded itself in t'M- tliiuli. jirs. Kowler, had a foot mashqd anl sustain ed painful lruises. ' - '". it.t) I vi, peddler, New York City, badly liruist'l mid injured internally. On. J'.obiiisoii, tobacconist,' Maysville, Kv,, sustained painful bruises' Aiarion .Smith, United Stites Po sion .Ant, 'h rleston, AV. V., bruisod right hip ami both les. 1 - Two passenei-s whe names were not Hiiiiiil sulb ieil with broken backs, It was fortunate th t the 11 res had gone out in the stoves or the loss of life wJuld have been irreat. The train was several hours late. So hlam is atia' lied to the employees, and the company is doing ab in its power to card for tin; injured, many of whom were able to continue tneir journey. ino.se wno are worse hurt are at St. Albans, but a few hun dred yanls from the accident. A despnteh from Greenville, S. C says: A disastrous eollission occurred on the Rich mond anl Danville Air Line It ilroad between i uyjors s station ana ureer s nine nr. I 's north of this city, between a north bound passenger -train and a southbound tiniit tram. ino passenger train was luadt'd wilh about five hundred people, mostly excursionists returning from the At lantH Exposition, and was four hours behind tiiiwwlijii it pavssed Greenville. It had in stimtious hero to pass the freight train at tn-fw's. The freight train did not stop at trters, but came on, and the collision wcurrelbvo and half miles th's side of that station, both trains running full speed at the time. Xo attempt having be n made to wjffiffle uier engine, there was a dreadful Yo mien the two rushed together, and t.4 BiaiixliiHC of human bo lies and destruc tion ot projierty was done without a mo- UMifs warning. The tw o engines were completely dcmolish- i ami thrown irora tne track. Ti.e mair. rx re.'vs and baggage cars of the passenger train and the first tnree cars of the freight were totally wrecked. The passenger con sisted of nine coaches, including two 1 ull inau slicpi'is, baggage, express and mail oars. Mne of the passengers in the Pullman fltfjicrs or passenger cars were injured. All the injured were in ihe mail and express ws. The following list of killed ami wounded is asnearly correct as can bo ob tained. .I Hunt Wall, engineer of the passenger train killed. i Mrs. killed. II npton McDowell, of Asheville, J. H. Krwin, of Atlanta, express messen P'f, Mrinsl y and perhaps fatally injured, lee unit f.u.M...;.... i.'l.ii.. ' n J ' i li. Kilhan, of Greenvil.e. mail agent, Mipitly injured. . J . . u. Wilson, and S. N. Dykenvm, mail "Ki'm i ''Uy hut "(t seriously injured. ' 'ill. J,el.-. He 'l-.-i Irnin IiqiiiI linillv in. jureii. J i -on is ehster. (b arm broken and COIleussioii (1f lw. -nss iiary Erwin and I I . - K' I U 111 Nannie Erwin. of ASIU'Vllli" sei-iOnslv illinrcwl Miss yuiun, of Vashingto n, D, C , serious- v "U ii ret i. Will Krwin, of Asheville, badly injured in M'-Und chest. T. l'ai nell, of Cliarlotte, bady scald- ftl. luissencer train w.in in fIinr'A nf 'Vlldlletor I ' V XTn-cKoll T.'..-; T?Kt- "all im,i Fireman Ed Parnell. The con- l lie tor eseaiied iriltwnf " 1VI1VUV tlljUl f. 1 li'J .Vil- t'lV'ineor nf t.h friirlih trniti jumped froni ti train aiwl have not been V!1 Since. It is l,eli,.e.,l fl,w num fpi,.hf. 'lied an 1 fled Ti,.... lis.-u. i- i r "-. i.; l bliuut WlfVR 111 lirt I O ld at til-' I'lace of the disaster, mittiie tract 1: was on a level surface. "The "wr was evii ..ntl.. i. am inexcusable negiiSence, and a strict in ttgation will bo made. THIEVES ON HORSEBACK. iAbes pnaiojicouiitor in AVhicli Two t liiiws Are Fatally HurU ' 'A the summer asrang of horse-thieves '"ivi-steil Howard and ad joining counJ m Nebraska, and succeeded in running pv'ral valnal.le horses. " Their methods aliii;; wore so ably executed that theyj I'l in eluding the officers for severai '-lSrt,y established stations, and ir horses from station to station ui'. ,iWl ) : i -1 , t . . 1 x l : r 1 ... . - ,( uiuu iney were saieiy uut . m ti,- I, ill. 1 i i i i rJ. ii--if-i-ixT ami TflTflfl ima 1a ieers suspicions were fastened liist-if u ot . 'hi, a cowboy, who has made .. .. 1 i"Vci lln T li t rnnrmr hvlus KMiL'. smith' ; Mvds, and Jim Tay.or and . who lo a great deal of travel fountry without any visible 'I'litti lcarnn.1 f Via iffixon: mav Ubi'ir ftlmw. i ail,i they skipped out in a ;landen3v l,1,wtion through the sand- th uh. " 1,I1S "i .Northwestern Nebraska, olli II,.. ...... T and their iKsse in close pur- 3ol. i '.""ie rs eame uion the thieves, Hi n shelter with n. settlor who n , ,'uo"OUt. Thev wnro cluciunrr on h,M SUM. by their lorses in a stable. ' ,l iii "wy soon rea hkiud v. '.','nuntvi to d;era1 "'m!,. ' ," -v mont el the '?! ..u V?u? rush for libert rather than eir horses f huli(.Vi ' 1 Ior lltei-ty, amid a lli- . tiii-v. l- - losse. sm),-j uv a stea(y nre at the U.'h.l 1 uoie was snflfc f j. I'y."" buUett wounds. , w"vm UliUCl 'U;' S!H rZP7efataL Strohl, ;":i! f t i W hls hor?e into a ravine i-n-;, i ana was almost innfi wwvuuuj, , ,5Hi,, i " ., 1 "m oincers re T:iif'ther om! nV,e &Fm' There b,n' Joi othcers think they wiU ap- oneKl.r;"'? ore nrroin V .... i5ra & ''w Void 0t,,',1'iOtLr11 u lu Uata nf V,.... i. 101 l''lS Se.SD.i lo -vi mem bvUcs. IT- TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY. E&sterrfknd Middle stte. Henry Schafkek. of I'ottviii pmn seventy-one years old, in an insane fit of groundless jealousy shot and killed his wife, aged fifty-six yeara, ani then put an end to tuinrelf with a pistol balL A SAWMILL hnilor omlUl . itrj. Brownsville. Penn.. killin-r tvn hmti, named Kelly and wrecking the milL bENAToa Frtje, of Maine, spoke before tho Convention of the Ammran shinnin.. i dustnal League at Boston, saying tnat Con gress should "put its hand into thftfc Kir plus and pay for sailing merchant ships under the American flag." Ten States were repre sented m the Convention. ' The corner-stone of the nw rinrV TTni sity was laid at Worcester, Mass. General Charles Devens presided at tha fWPmi in imt and Senator George P. Hoar made the address. Mr. Jonas G. Clark ha given 5,000,000 for the purposes of the University. as express train crashed into two oalace cars at the Iloboken (N. J.) depot, com- pieueiy wreciung them as well as an office building. Engineer Dunn was killed. Heurt GEonoR leaders of the rival labor faction in York, had a lively Sunday night debate be thcatre S audienco in a Metropolitan. Two brothers named Cunningham were to pieces, and another 1 1 1 f 1 n liamul blown Schmidtke - uuuuni was seriouslv ininnvi kvtho plosion of a boiler on a small steam launch at New York. . Sonlh and West. The twentv-fourth the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers at Chicago, was welcomed by Governor Oglesbv and Mayor Roche. Chief Arthur, in his an - nual address, spoke strongly against strikes and m favor of abstinence from drink Tha Brotherhood now numbers 23,000 men. a he twenty-nrst annual convention American Architects has just been held Chicago. m . . of in The General Assembly of the Knights of Labor at MinneanolLs has adionmari TVTo- year the Convention will be held at Indian apolis. The Anti-Horse Thief Association of Mis souri has been holding its annual convention m the town of Mexico. 'The deliberations were secret. Governor Gray has urged the Federal Court officers to undertake the prosecution of the night marauders and whippers of men and women in Southwestern Indiana, known as the White Caps. Violent winds and heavy rain have been demolishing property in Southern Louisiaua. Colonel A. H. MoNTGOMERy,President of the Memphis Jockey Club, fell dead of apo plexy a few days -inceon the race track. Extraordinary precautions were taken to protect the Chicago jail, as an outbreak and attempt to rescue the condemned Anar chists was expected. A large body of police were placed in and about the prison. A fire in St. Louis destroyed or badly damaged a number of big stores, causing a total estimated loss of over 250, 0J0. : Mr. E. B. Wash buhne, the distinguished ex-Minister of the United States to France, died suddenly a few days since at Chicago. He was born in Maine in 1816, went West in lSI'J, served sixteen years in Congress, and was Secretary of State under Grant for a month. Perry Ackers, a shiftless resident of Maxwell, 111., borrowed a revolver, and starting out with the remark that he was goin; to "wipo out some old scoreSj" mur dered Justice Schmetzer and Mayor French. Then Ackers killed himself. Washington. Messrs. Oberly and Edgerton, two of the three Civil .Service Comaiis.jion:rs, do not agreo upon smm construction! of the Civil Service law. Tho former opposes political organizations of officeholders at tho National Capital; the latter thinks they have a right to exist. COUNSEL for the condemned Chicago Anarchists appeared in the United States Supreme Court and applied for a writ of error in behalf of the condemned men. Roger A. Pryor made the argument for the prisoners. The. other counsel were Benjamin F. Butler, of Massachusetts; ex Congressman J. R. Tucker, of Virginia, and Messrs. Black and Solomon, of Chicago. Nine law points were made in the appeal. Foreign. Severe snowstorms, accompanied iii some parts by a hurricane, are reported from Italy. Crops and animals were greatly injikred, a number of houses were unroofed at Pisa, and several persons drowned in Lake Como. The carpenter of a Russian schooner mur dered tho Captain and fivo of the crew, and then threw their bodies overboard. Heavy inundations in Cuba have flooded large districts and rendered many people homeless. The Australian steamer Cheviot has been wrecked. Many pf the passengers and crew were drowned Scenes of violence in connection with tho eviction pf tenants on Iris estates are sti'l reported almost daily. Mrs James A. Garfield and her daughter Mollie have arrived in England. The biggest steamer in the world, tho GirtUElvster11' has been 5501(1 at auction for 5 11 k), 000. The steamer Upupa collided with and sunk the German bark Planteur off Beahy Head Great Britain. Out of f ourteon persons on the bark only two were saved. SYRACUSE HAS A BIG FIRE. Throe Large Establishments Go and a Theatre Audience Frightened Lass $40O,OOO. The largest fire hat Syracuse, N. Y., has experienced for ten years occurred, when t'-reebf its largest business firms were burned out, besides many smaller ones; Loss, $400, 000, about half covered by insurance. The buildings burned were on South Salina street between Walter and Railroad streets. The rear of the buildings jutted against the Wiet ing Opera-House, which was filled w.th peo ple to see Joe Emmit. A panic was only prevented by the coolness of Mr. Emmet and Manager Lehnan, who assured the peo ple that there was no immediate danger. The house was soon cleared, but notbefora the walls near the stage were Very hot There were several explosions of Cart ridges in Everson & Ca's hardware store, but fortunately the firemen and crowds of people escaped in time. The fHmes were carried north along South Salina street towards tho Wieting block, the largest in the city, but the heavy brick fire walls saved it David R. Putman, while endeav oring to save some of the goods in the third story in the Everson block, was hemmed in by the fire and his escape cut off. He was rescued from a window by a ladder, just as the flames had reached him. The fire was discovered about 8 o'clock in Barney Lambley & Co.'s dry-gooJs store. Two young men escaped to tne street with difficulty after placing the books in the safe. The flames spread to Geirgo C. Young & Co.'s dry-gsods store, located on the first and second "floors of a four-story block. This building burned furiously and was soon gut- tea irom top to Dotcom. iu iuiiu uwr was occupied by Frank Enny, wholesale jeweller, and Dr. George E. Hill, dentist, and the fourth by offices. Eversoa & Co.'s hardware store, four stories high, was completely destroy-d. The firm, occupied two floors and over them was IL IL Warn er's silver and gold plating works The stock in every building was completely destroyed. , .. ; SPEECH BY GLADSTONE. DEMANDING A STATUTORY PARLIA MENT FOB THE IRISH PEOPLE. The British Minister Sererely Arraigned bj the Ex-Premier. The Congress of the Liberal Federation opened tho other day at Nottingham, Eng land. Ex-Premier Gladstone made a speech, in which he reviewed the situation in Ireland and denounced the British Government for the manner in which it was dealing wit'a the Irish question. His rising to speak was the signal for loud and prolonged cheering. Mr. Gladstone said he would tell them pTainly that ho wa? not there to say smooth things. It was a deplorable fact that the set tling of the great Irish question, might have been settled last year had their been a dispo sition to discuss it in a spirit of candor and fairness, had been again B3t aside and was still penning, its duhcultiei aggravated and its f prospects uncertain. He had always told tha Conservatives that the choice lay between 1 coercion and home rule. Thi Conservative! had told them that home rule was an i lls ureaiu, uut events naa snown tnat it was not A croreion bill had been passed against combinations, against the liberty of the press and the right of public meeting, and not against crime. The Irish spectacle was now a grave and serious one, and if it continued it would drive Ireland into such a state that the difficulties of the Government would be come almost insurmountable. Mr. Gladstone denied that he proposed horns rule simply to advance Liberal interests. It was doubtful, he said, whether the Tories ac cepted hom3 rule in it3 broad principle! in the same way that they accepted his proposals in 1872 and in 1-81. He wanted a statutory Parliament in Dublin, subject to imperial control. There was nothing to prevent any reasonable man from agreeing with the Liberals' Irish proposals without reference to thi3 or that particular or detail. The immediate necessity of the day was to watch the way in which Ireland was now governed. If the government persisted in their rash and foolish policy it would naturally lead to political demoralization, and render it in th9 highest degree difficult, even for Englishmen and a Parliamant truly representing their best and most enlightsned conclusions, to deal rapidly and beneficially wifch Ireland. Only one word could describle the present system of Irish govei nment . It was "impertinence.'1 The events of the hist few weeks in Ire land would n )t have been tolerated in Eng land. He condemned the action of the authorities al Mitchellstown. He admitted having used t iie words, ,lR9ra9mb?r Mitch ellstown!" Tho affair must and would be remembered. The country had an account to settle wilh the government ' in con nection with that affair. The Mihellstown authorities were undoubtedly wrong, yet Mr. Balfour, in behalf of the Government, un equivocally assumed tin responsibility for their acts. The worst feature of the Mitchellstown incident was that the action of tho authorities there had becom3 a model and pattern for the whole of Ireland. The whole system of government in Ireland required to be thoroughly reformed,root and branch. There had been a break down in the Government in all essentials. A radical change was wanted, and such a change an enfranchised nation alone could accomplish. Mr. Gladstone drew a glowing picture in defenca of his administration of tha law in Ireland and elsewhere in the Empire. He ex pressed himself as perfectly confident that i f a general election were held immediately it would result in the return of a Parliament resolved to do justice to Ireland. BLAZE IN ST. LOUIS. A Furniture Factory and Busines3 Houses Burned Half a Million ' Gone. The most destructive fire that has occurred in St Louis in more than a year broke out in the Woolman-Todd Company's wholesale boot and shoe house, 413 Washington aveuue. It soon communicated to John Martin & Co.'s wholesale clothing house, next door on tho east, in the same building, and then, sweeping swiftly through both stories, ign -ted the rear part of the large five-story ware rooms of the Scarrett Furnishing Company, which were fil ed from cellar to garret with furniture. Here the fire raged with great fury, and in the course of an hour the entire building was gutted and all its contents de stroyed. South of the Scarrett building, No (507, was the building of the Mitchell Furni ture Company, the fourth and fifth stories of which were entrely ruined and the lower floors flooded with water. North of the Sc r rett building. No. (515 jind 617 were occu pied by Ieonard Roos, extensive furriers. The stores were also completely gutted, and their contents either wholly destroyed or damaged beyond repair. Adjoining the Woolman-Todd Company, on Washington avenue, was Koerner's saloon und restaurant. This was crushed by a falling wall and after woia H,ii-nl On the corner of fourth street and Washington avenue, within the anle male by the stores of John Martin & Co aid the Scarrett Furniture Company, stands the large retail dry goods store of W7m F. Crowe & Co., which escaped the fire, bnt a part of its west wall was broken iu bV the falling of the east wall of Martin & Cb.'s bu lding, and the goods were dam red bv water and smoke to tho amount of about 10,000, which is covered by insurance. The second and third floors over k-oerner s saloon were occupied by A. Weiss & Co , manufacturers of underwear and cIohK'. Their loss is $30,000, i surance. $20,000. I he other losses, as near as they can be asc?r tained are: Scarrett Furniture Company, toss $125,000, i suranco $75,000; Wooiman, Todd & Co., loss $100,000 insurance ?50,000; John Martin & Co., loss $7.-,000to $.00,000, i nsurance $50,.0 );lieonard Roos, loss on stock fixtures, itc, 75,00 J, nearly covered by in surance. Mr. Roos also had a large amount of furs of all description, belonging to ladies, which he had kept through the summer on storage, and which w ere insured f jr about $.S0,0J0. The value of them is not known. They are without doubt entirely destroyed. Mi tchel's Furniture Company, losslOOO, insurance $12,000; Koerner's lo 12,000; in suranc et,000. The total loss will fall but lit tie short of half a million. While the above fl was raging the Pauley Jail Building and Manufacturing Company's works on Decalb street, between Barton and Trndeau streets,took fire and were destroyed. Loss SXUWOon stock $10,000 on buildine; in sured for $30,000 to $40,000 The concern has contracts for jail at Lake City and other places to the amount of $300,000. A FATAL EXPLOSION. Three Men Killed, Two More Wound ed arid a Building Set on Fire. E. C. Wilsdon left his japan oven, at Ses sions & Sons' foundry, at Bristol, Conn., in the room where a dozen men and boys, were at work, to go to his dinner. He had but just gone out when the oven exploded with fearful violence," instantly killing one man and two boys, lacerating two others and setting the building on fire. It wai some time before the flames were subdued! and then there mere dragged forth the charred remains of the three victims. Theyare John Shane, aged thirty-one; Burt Cleveland, aged eighteen, and Willie Young, aged fifteen. The wounded are Daniel Griffin and William Bonnier. No reason can be assign ed for the accident The exp osion drew hundreds to tbe scene and the excitement was great, particuJary before it was learned how many victims there were in the fmes. The damage to the building is about tl004 A BANK PRESIDENT GONE SAILING FOR FRANCE Creditors Who Thought There Was Something Crooked Papers for , His Arrest Nearly iteady-llis - Trunks Went Before lli m. Charles L. Phillips, president of tbe de funct Columbian Bank at Philadelphia, has left the country, having sailed for Havre, France on the Campagnie Generate Trans atlantique steamer La Champagn from New York. His departure was sudden and known to but very few, and the belief is general I that he left the country to escapa criminal prosecution for the part he took in the mis management of the broken bank, The Columbian Bank, which also had a savings fund branch in ftertuaown, closed its doors on J nly 80, and made au "assignment in favor of its creditors. The liabilities were claimed by the officers to have been between $200,000 and $300,000, and. the assets more than double that amount Tho appraisers, however, after about eight weeks' work, found that the assets consisted principally of worthless stocks and merchandise in ware houses on which advances ha I been made, in some cases equal to the full , value of the gooJs, and notes made and indorsed by Phil lips and his associates The saving f und de positors were mostly working people who had deposited the savings of years with Phil lips and his associates, amounting to about $N),0U0. Several meetings of depositors were held, and counsel had been retaiued. The depositors demanded the arrest of Phil lips on a criminal charge. He only laughed at the threat, an-t told them that the failure of the bank was an honest oe, and they would all receive their money in time, and declare! there was no fraud about the f ail ure, and said it could not te helped. The chairman of t he depositors' association which was formed at one of the meetings, when informed of President Phillips' flight, said: "We have been doing all we could to find evidence that would warrant his arrest on a criminal ch irge, and we were just getting matters in good shape. We wanted to be sure of having evidence enough to convict him and send him to prison before we made any move in the matter. He has no doubt heard of what was being done, and taken time by the forelock and got out of danger. A certain transaction of his canio to light, and we think was actionable, and he may have receive 1 a hint of it It was gen erally understood his tru-'ks were sent away some time ago, and his flight is no surprise to us." One of the counsel for the depositors said:. "We wore almost ready to arrest him. The affidavit on which the warrant of arrest would have been issued has been prepared and would have been p aced in the hands of the district attorney in a few days. 'The affidavit sets forth that stock was bought by Phillips in his own name for a small sum, and immediately sold to the bunk at an - enormous advance. The depositors were swindled by Phillips. "He could be extradited, but the expense would be greater than thes 3 poor people can bear." Phillips a short time ago sent his children- to France, ana gossip men saia ne was genu ine his own trunk with them, and would soon follow. An Phi f artel nhia taDer says in explanation f PresfePhillips'sudden departure for France ' Mr Philhrva nhnntsiT weeks aco Kent hia ree younger cnuaren to tne nome or tsaron e Lorme. a French nobleman and intimate personal friend, who resides near a convent 1U V ill U 11 lit? 1V19UCU .1X1.1 . X UI111M O 1.UUU1CU IAS be educated. The children were sent tJ France, because it was the expressed wish of the nobleman that they, should come and live with him while attending school. Ten davs ajro, the Baroness de Lorme died sucL denly of heart disease, making it necessary f r Mr. Phillips to sail quickly,' to provide other arrangements for his children in the event of unexpected changes in the Baron de Lorme s domestic arrangements." AN INCENDIARY SERVANT. She Stole the Jewelry, Fired the House and Has Run Away. . Some time ago Charles J. Roe, took up his residence in his fine house in the valley between Sharon and Norwood, Mass. He took as a servant a girl named Kate Agnes Gleasob. Shortly after hiring the girl, in May last, stones were thrown through the windows at night, three valuable Shetland poniis were poisoned, money and jewelry taken at certaiu timas, and finally on Juno 19. tha house was set oa fire and burned to the grou d, entailing a loss of $20,000. Some time after the fire the Gleason pirl went to Mrs Roe's sister, who lived with him brintrinsr certain nieces of iewelrv which she - o O K j said she found in the ruins. The articles bore no trace of injurv. and suspicion was aroused against the frirl. It was found that she had thrown tho stones, poisoned the ponies and stolen the valuables. She did not confess, however, to setting fire to the house. A. warrant was obtained for her arrest, but owine to th? cirl's promising to return some of the jewelry if she was adow- ed time it was not servea, ana ine gin fled. ' She was traced to Cambridge but disap peared before the officers arrived. The story hail, been kent-auiet bv the officers, who hone! to cantnre her. She is about nineteen of tall and raw-toned, with a prominent nose and red face, GQSSIP OF THE DIAMOND. talks of again entering the Southern League next season. Mike Kelly'-i salary of $4,300 will, it is said, suffer no reduction next year. Tmc KWninrr and dining-room cars of tbe Detroit-St Louis combination cost $32,000 for the trip. Those twentv-two games in succession that Bennett caught did much to give the Detroit club the pennant .: . The St. Louis club last year placed to its credit the highest number of champion vic tories ever won by any club, namely, 93. Thr Northwestern League was tbe only minor league in the country that retained its original membership intact throughout the season. iThe shortest game on record for 17 was that played at Oshkosh, September 10, be tween the Oshkosh and Eau Claire teams, viz., lh. 8m. The Detroit League champions easily showed their superiority over the St Louis American Association champions, in tbe se ries of games for the world's championship. President Nimick. of tbe Pittsburg Base ball (Club, has been in Chicago trying to transfer Anson, the Chicago first baseman and captain, to his team. It is said be offered $15,ft i0 for the player named, anl that Presi dent SpauWing demanded fJS.OOQ. The championship season of all the Leagues, both great and small, is now ended. Detroit won the pennant of the National League. In the Association St Louis has agaia had a walk-Over. Of the minor Leagues, Oshkosh won the North western Leagu championship. Toronto came' to tbe front in the International League on the homestretch; Lowell bore off the palm in the New England League; New Orleans captured tbe Southern League pen nant and Topeka walked o.T with th West ern Leagne championship. Great Britain has 13,000 , Band of and juvenile temperance s-xrietiea, an aggregate membership of 1,6 A), 000, Hope with A REVOLT OF THE K. OF L Knights Opposed to ihe Minneapolis Proceedings. Ieclare Their - - , Independenc?. The dissenters from the action taken at the Minneapolis convention have declared open war with the executive board of the Kights of Labolyand have issued their declaration of independence. On returning from the convention about thirty-five delegates, rep resenting fifteen states, stopped in Chicago and determined to bring about a reorganiza tion of the order. They elected a pro visional committee, five members, cf which Charles F. Seib was made secretary. A long com munication was drafted at Secretary Seib's office and forwarded in circular form to the Knights of Labor all over this country. It declares that it is "Our duty to reorganize the Order of the Knights of Labor on a basis which will secure tbe autonomy of the trades and the sovereignty of the districts in all pertaining to their trade and local affairs, and to prevent it from being used in the future as a machine to fill the coffers of de signing and unscrupulous men, as it is by those now in power. We afiir u the follow ing to be the reasons that have compiled this serious action on our part: The general office has become a luxurious haunt for men whose chief aim is to benefit self, pecuniarily and otherwise, and is no longer the Jerusalem I of the humble and honest Knight. There has been for more t oan a year, beginning prior to tho Richmond session, an under standing, which, for lack of a better word, we will call a conspiracy, for the purpose of holding the salaried positions, elective aud appointive, in and under the General As sembly. ' This conspiracy has used the secret channels and the funds of the order to manufacture sentiment for certain members and against others. Certain persons, some times called 'general lecturers 'general organizers,' 'general instructors' and general many other things, have teen paid extrava gant sums, both as wages and expenses, when their chief work was to 'fix' certain districts. The lobbyists of railroad corpora tions would torn green -ith envy did they know the superlative excellence attained by these bloodsuckers of the Knights of Labor. D. strict and local assemblies have been sus pended or exp. lied and deprived of a vo 7 . I 1 1 . 11 1 A-1- in the General Assembly becauso they were known as opponents to the iiolicy of the con- sDirators. The records of the General As sembly have been fixed and doctored so as to rul out or admit, as the caso might he, General Assembly representatives. Many thousands of dollars of tho order's funds l ave been illegally expended. Extravagant hotel bills contracted by the families of general officers h ve been paid out of the order's funds, as have family laundry and bar bills. Funds have been donated and loaned to officers and their families and friends for their own personal use. The boycofi has been used to injure the labor pr ss, union es tablishments and tho products of Knights of Labor and union labor for the sole purpose of 'downing' workingmen and women who could not be used by the conspirators. In spite of the decrease of membership, the have increased the annual expenditures of the general officers to half a million dollars. There is no itemized account or receipts to expenditures issued either quarterly, as had formerly been the custom, or to th0 General Assembly. HURLED TO DEATH. Two Sisters Killed by a Fast Express Train. When the engine of the fast express of the Pennsylvania Railroad thundered into the d pot at Lancaster, Pa, the pilot was spat- Ltered with blood. Shortly before the train w as due, and when Rank's station, eight miles away had been, reached, the engineer saw a whit3 covered farmer's wagon ahead. A freight train had . just passed, and the .wagon having stopped for it, proceeded to cross, the occupants not hearing the fast ex press on account of the noise of the freight, The whistle was sounded, the air brakes were promptly applied, but in an instant the train was at the crossing, tho engine struck the wagon and horse and hurled them high in the air. Tho forms of two women were hurled down an embankment, where their mangled bodies were found. They were s sters, married to brothers, and their names were Mrs. Jacob Stoltzfus, of Lea cock township, and Mrs. Barbara Stoltzfus, who was visiting from Kans .s. They are middle aged ladies, and stand high in the peculiar religious sect to which they belong. They were returning home in the wagon f rqm the city. - Mrs. Stoltzfus was hurl d fifty yards and killed instantly. Her sister died in a few minutes after being picked up. ; . POLITICS IN A CONVENT. Quarrel Anions? Nuns Over the ' Elec tion of a Mother Superior. a$3.62; Wheat Southern Fultz, 80a81ct; Corn Southern White, 57aVn t, Yellow, 50a 51 cts. ; Oats Southern and J Pennsylvania 30a35cts. ; Rye Maryland andPennsylvania SOafiOcta ; Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania 13 50a$1450; Straw Wheat, 7.50a$S; Butter, Eastern Creamery, 2Ca27cts. , near-by recei pbi 19a20cts:C!heeae Eastern Fany Cream, 12J4 al3cts., Western, 12al2ctai Eggs ISalU; Cattle 2.50a$4.00; Swine 4 tiafiicta ; Sheep ami Lamb 3a4K ets; Tobacco Leaf Inferior, la$2.50, Goal Common, 3 .Via $4 50, Middling, 5a$6.00 Good to fine red, 7a$y Fancy, 10a$12. I New York Flour Southern Common to fair extra, a25aH(Xt Wbeafc-ro.l Whit,S2 aSScta.; Rye State, 54aSf: Corn Southern Yellow, 51a52cts.; Oats White State, S3a34 eta ; Butter State, 17a20 eta ; Cheese Slate, lOalOJcta; Eggs 19a20 cts. Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania, fancy, 3.50a$4; Wheat Pennsylvania ami Southern Red, 82aS3 cts; Rve Pennsylvania 57a58cta ; Corn SouthernVellow, 51a52 cts. Oats 3Ga37 eta; Butter State, 18al9 cU.; Cheese N. Y. Factory, llali cts.; Eggs State, ITalScta. ""Thi services of General Pryor, J. Ran dolph Tucker, and General Butler it is ex pected will cost the Anarchist Ccmcaittee $25,000. General Butler's fess bare been sruaranteed bv District Aavml.l s tm ami ivt J Knight, of Labor., Convent pilitir r-yr irirf-.-ylin i amoii r me r l uiiu.i whs! IL ish ( 1 1 tV k on loo 3 Bi J m tl a. ini i H3L l 9 A FIERCE FIGHT. YIGILANTES BATTLE WITII 1IES- PEKAD0KS IN THE ISDIA3C TERRITORY. The YlgUant.es Hare Eight Hen Killed and Lhrht Wounded. A special dispatch from ;Wawolla, Indian Territory, pays: "OnTJUV v a desperate fight took place on theJnorf . fork of the Ar. kansas River bet wv o i Bmi I Trainer's gang of outlaws and a vi jilajKcorom-'ttca under the leadership of Hotari Henderson, a 8xtch half-brool, which followed them frora tDuck- worth's store,in the Creek Nation, on the occa sion of a raid there o: Wednesday. Thl ont law.flndin out the si as of the force which was following tbem, decided to risk an encounter, and made haste to reach the river pllfV where they cou'd find shelter behind trees and in ravines which line the banks on either 6ila In this they succeeded so well that when the vigilantes came up they were en tirely, for the time, at the mercy of two score of outlaws. Henderson then took hU men a short dts- tauce up the river where a fording placa could t found, crossed and to k up p.tionson the other side of .the stream from the out laws, and wherj his ni3ii were as well pro tected njs t nose ot l minor, i no river at this point is only about one hundred yards wide. and across this distance, from Thursday morning until Thursday ni?ht, bullets were ungmg on their mission or death. When the vigilantes had succeeded in ob taining tbh position they found they had tost three men and two m ire were seriouslv wounded. As Tra'ner found the enemy in his rear on the oppoute or tho river, he sent half of his men down the stream to cross and come up on tho ot ier tide, lighting under cover of the trees. In this they were sur prised by the a yvuors, who met them half way and opened f.re upon them, checking their course and driving them panic-stricken and precipitately back. In endeavoring to rally his men. Bill Chuet wan killed, and be fore the river could be reached an l forded John Leech, one of tho robber gan was shot on n s horse, but not killed. The fight from this on was continue ! across the stream, the bankaof which were lined at distances of about live rods apart with sharp shooters. No sooner was a head, arm or any part oi a bony vis u e on either side than a leaden bullet was seeking to End a lodgment therein. As Thursday night wan coming on. Hen derson called his men in for consultation, when it was found that of his force eight were killed and eight hnd received serious though not fatal wounds. The force - was in th:s way rlu'ed one half, and it was thought best to remove the wounded here and go back homeland stir up reinforcements, ihe dead were buried and tha wounded, it WAR found nffor riroaainop i their wounds, were able to return home with the rest of the party. It is thought as many of the outlaws were killed as of lh3 pursuing party, though this will never bo known. The following is a list of the killed: James Saunders, Oaks, Cherokee Nation, shot through head; F. Fourmill, Garfield, Cherokee Nation, shot through the body; Redrock Chapin, Lukfia, Choctaw Nation, shot in five places; Bushy Sakaswa, Patrick, Cherokee Nation, phot through body; Chief Parr, Oaks, Chero'tee Nation, shot in the head; Samuel H. Elleter, Eufaula, Creek Nation, shot twice in boly; Walter Ains worth, ranger, from near Mackogee; Dar ling Price, settler, from near Camp Creek, Cherokee Nation. Henry Ayres, a well-to-do man from Chero kee Nation, who was one of the party with Henderson, says tjhat Bud Trainer was killed during the fight He is of opinion that not lea than fifteen were killed outright upon bct'a sides, and thinks one-half the outlaws who were not killed were wounded. It is by no means certain that another party will be organized to hunt down the outlaws, as it is thought the severe lesson they have liecn taught will tend to drive them from the Ter ritory, or at least to put a quietus on their lawlessness. IT MEANT CONTROL Remarkable Sale of Shares Sto orth $1,000 Brings $41,350 at Auction. .Some years ago C. W. Fo da, then Cashier of the Farmers National Bank,of Constantine, Mich. , absconded. He left behind ten shares of stock of the par value of $1, (XX), which were attached by the bank and possession of them obtained by a dicision of the State Supreme Court six months ago. The bank inz laws prohibited the bmkfrom holding its stock more than six months. Bank Ex aminer Nash found the situation of affairs on Sept 1 last and advised 'with the Comp troller of the Currency ,and lie ordered a sale at public auction. As tbe stockholders could not agree on a division tbe stock was dis posed of to the highest U ders. The ten shares with the accruing dividends, had a alueof $180 each, but it was seen i s the bidding opened that their value be calculated on the basis of what it orth to have a controlling interest of k of the banlc Barry, Jr., President: John O. z. Cashier, and Mrs. Rebecca Thorn e HatKtTB. 1 uc ill Ruaro uivukuw and was captured by Scburtz. lie second at $2,200. the third at $3,001 others at larger amount, paying nor. for tax sharea C 11. liarrv.J r. .344 for four, tbe last being purchased i, giving him a majority ot au tne Thus ten khares, having a par valne sold for $41,350. A curious addi- rest was riven tbe anair from the Mr. Barry was recently defeated as te for fostmaster vy the same nun be bidding, seemed mostd terminel control of a majority ox tne oanK s CTED HIS OWN CHILD. -1 Browne a Wealthy 1 1 hod o ander, Cjumoi Excitement f n Newport. Villiam E. Browne, a wealthy resi Wickford, R, L, came to Newport, acted his o n child, which was in thecusvudyof his wife. Mr. and Mrs. Browne, who are well known, have not lived together for some months. Under the arrangement made between tbe couple Mrs. Browne wa. to have the custody of their chi'J, a girl four years o'd, and of excep ional beauty, and he was to have permission to visit tb j cLikl at intervals. For several weeks he has not been to Newport, Where Mrs. Browno has had her residence for near y a year. Ho did not write to know how the child v as doing, and bis apparent lack of interest gave the im7ressioaktaat be was willing to be es tranged. ? W ben he arrived and called to see tbe child b's wife and her friends were somewhat ur prised, as he offered no explanation of hia long absence. As usual be was left alone with bis little eirL An hour or so after bis arrival a servant had occasion to entrr tbq room. She found it empty, and at once told Mr. Browce. The husband bad taken the 'child in bis arms and carried it to one of tbd harbor wharfs, where a sailboat awaitud him. He took the child to this, tbe boat wa-J pushed off. and they set saiL ' Mrs. Brotte'n friends reported tbe affair to tbe police, bat, tkey were powerless to help her. It w no, known in what direction the runaway bus band bes got, but the wife propo es to at, ionee take such legal step as will enable ben 'to follow him. RELIGIOUS. : j! . Tb End of Sammrr. Thinner the leaves of tbe larches show. Motionless hell in the languid air; ' Fainter by wayside the swwtbrWs grow. Kie biooni laying toetr gold lioarts iar, : Languishing, one by one; 1 Summer is almoat loi rWper-hued rows have long ainre died ; SuVnt t he bint through the wh he mud fly ; Down of the thistles by hot sun dried. covers with ale nece vines growing nigh; il little brooks calmer run; : Summer is almost dono. Later tbe flash of tho sunrise creeps, Shortening the reign of the Riow-couung day; Earlier shade of the twilight crwps, UVor the swallows skimming away; Crickets tlietr notes have begun: Summer is almuet done. - - . God'a Leva. T can measure narental love. Jfow broad. . how long, and strong, ami deep it Ut It U asoaa neep ne, which parent only ran fathom. But tho love displayed on yonder bloody cross, where Ood's own Son Is jrwh- lng lor us, no man or angH lias a line in measure. The cm u nierenoe of the earth. the altitude of tbe sua, the distance of the Elancta those havelee determined; but tin oight, depth, breadth, and length of th love of uod pass our knowledge. Such is th Father against whom all of us have sinned a thousand times! Walk the shore wttere the ocean sleojis fn Summer calm; or lashed Into fury by the Winter's tefnpest is thundering on her Kauds;'and when you bavo immliervd the drops of her waves, tho sand on Iwr rounding beach, you have numlicrod God's mercies and your ains. Well tlKrefore may we en to Him with the contrition of tlm prodigal in our hearU, and his confession on our lips: "Father I have sinned againxt Heaven, and in thy sight" The spirit of God helping ua to go to God, lie assured that the father who seeing his son afar olT, ran to meet him, fell on his neck and kisiind him was but an image of Him who, not sparing His own Son, but giving Htm up to death that we might live, invites and now awaits our coming. I Dr. Guthrie. Col Manlfet. Do any ask of the divlno love! Iet them loom of it in the Saviour's love, as He kneeW at the grave of Iazarus; as lie weeps over Jerusalem; as He blesses little children; ni He heals tbe sick or comforts the sorrowful; as He soothe the dying malefactor on th" cross, would we know ot the diviuo lor- givencss? It is here in this one sweet sen tence1 of mercy: "Neither do I condemn thee; go and sin no more." Would we know of the divine activity I It is all revealed in the sleepless nights of preparation ieiit alone on the mountains in prayer; the day devoted to teaching and healing; tho tireless erralndsof mercy from village to village. Would we know of the divino patience and endurance! We have but to wat h the calm, quiet way in which He meets His tietrayer and the company that take Him; the falsi accusations to which He listens in silence; tb ridicule, the taunts, the blows dealt by savage hands, the cowardice of Pilate, tha scourge, tho thorn-crown, the cross. And so, we ask nt last, iV ould any know God the Infinite? We point to Hia humanity and say: "He who invited the weary ami the heavyi-lnden to His breowt; He whom even the winds and seas obeyed; Ho who declared Himself 'tho Way, the Truth, and the Life;' He whose spirit has inspired, comforted, ay, saved the struggling souls of men. He, surely, is. jGod manifest" i Footprints of t he Saviour. Upon Ling Font;. Aliout sixteen mils east of Ningpo, China, Men n noted mountain. Ling Fung, to which tens of thousands, frprn all itarts of Chs kiang,;goup yearly to 'worship.' The find day of the ceremonies few beside women attend. Although the path up tho mountain ( was iaved. and tho tecper awvnts were f ur nisbed with steps, still it was a tedious climb, even for one with natural feet The wonder grew upon us how the women, with llieir lit tle bandaged stubs, could not only climb tbe mountain, but walk miles to reach it Af we nca red the place we were twset by vender of incense sticks, urging us to buy. Arriving at a level Kpnee, about half war up th mountain, we found rows of wretched straw huts on either side of the path leading to a building scarcely more than a shed, contain- ' ing one large room. In it were a few small, dilapidated idols, before which theiopl burnt incense sticks ami mado pros trations. A desire to worship was by no means the only motive that lrought these eager throngs hither. They had come to make preparation for ' death. And the prefaratioti considered nceemary wan nut purity of h'-nrt and ' life, but money. Thntu multitudes had left their homes and busy pursuits to eoine hither for the special pur pose of buyingoills of credit to be burnt at death in order to anrure a large um of mon-. ey in the next world. These bills of credit, costing twenty-four rash, or about two cents, are small ntri of yellow nper, upon which are roughly printed a few diameter. Thene are supmsodto be good for., about thirteen hundred dollar after death, lb-hind tabb stood men welling thene bill Others were busy stamping with red paint pieces of cot con clothj which were carried away as evi dence that they had been to the sacred apt. Tbe more year they make this pilgrimage, awl tlio more bills of credit they girt, the greater will lo their merit and wealth in tho next life.- Woman's Work in China. How to Destroy the lilbU. First to get rid of all tbe copies In all tlw languages there are lfiO.OOO.OW copies, say, of the OH ami New Ttament in one Iwolc and portions of the bok you mut have ail these piled together into a pyramidal mans and reduced to ashes bf-fore y. can say you lave destroyed tbe Bible. Then go to the librarie of the world, aud when you have rejected, there cveryWk thnt contains a reference to the OH and New TentamenU you most eliminate from every book all such pas sages; and until you have so treated ever book of poetry and prose, exercising all Ideas of grandeur and i purity and ten derness anil beauty for the knowledge and power of which the port anl prowj writers were Indebted to the Bible until you have taken all tbeee from between the bin 1 ings ami turned them into ahes, leaving tbe emaaculated fragment behuxl not until then have you destroyed the Bible. Have you done it, then I Once more. Go to the court of La", and having sousht out tbe pandects and codes, you must master every principal of law, end study what it may have derivel from the Old and New TekUmrnU, and have all such passages removed from the code ft jurisprudence, you most then CO through the galleries of art throughout the workl, cnl you nut4 ulash and daub over and obliterate the achievement that the genius of the arti-t hat produeeil nmt until thea have you de stroyed the Bible. Have you done It then! What o-xtf You mm visit every eun-r-vatory of rom-ic, and not until tb world shall stanirl voiceleesa to it masters, not until then hare you destroyed tbe Bible. Then you1 must vfeit the Uptfcrtrk- of tbe chnrcLeii and from the Uptnaual roll you must era- all Cbrtotian name tbe name of John and Mary-for they suggest the Kcriit nres,ani tne register i stamjed w ith the Bible, Have you done it then? No, tlre is one ciy of the Bible still lirimr. T It , is the remetrry of the ChrWian. Tbe cwneteries, while they exist, are Bibles, and to suppress tle bo-4, to let xxt a trace rf it be discoveml, you must rax from gravestone to gravton and with mallet and chisel cot out every name that is tiblical, and every inM-irins passage of scripture graven tliereon. To de stroy the Bible you must blot front the mem ory of every Christian it promises and com fort. Not until you have done all thi can you destroy tbe Lublc-lDr. Guard. . .J -