Vol. III. No. 333. Charlotte, N. O., Tuesday Morning, April 23, 1889. Price Five Cents. charlotte chronicle. BY THB Charlotte Chronicle Publibhino Co. svkey hobxiko xxcxpt mohdat. Kntored at the poatofflee at Charlotte, N. O., ' wm Hwuu iinia roao waiter. CASH PRICE, IX ADVANCE: flail v. one vear. . 17 00 IMIly, six months, - , - - 3 SO Dally, three month. - - 175 Wvml-Weekly, one year, ... 1(0 Weekly (double heet). one year. 1 SO v as Subscribers wishing their Ulre changed from one poatotnee to another, must give the old as well as the new. -Birth, marriage, death, and funeral notices. S1.00 each first Insertion, and Wots acn subsequent lnarruon. Address all communications to THE CHKONICMC, : Chakixjtte. N. V Tuesday, April 23, 1889. Weather Indications. The Bureau at Washington predicts for North and South Carolina, fair, sta tionary temperature, except in South Carolina and Northern Georgia, cooler easterly wind. Local Weather Report. U.S. RioifALOrriCE, I CBAULOTTE.N.C, Apr itt.lttt. ( s'1- B i B 2 'I a c 1 a "S3 t 0- I P 8 5 & 17 1 IK : I I 10. GO clear. 5 i0 UOYlear. 8 P. M. 30 38 61 Total Precipitation at 8 p. m.. 0.110; Max "Imiim Temperature 71; Minimum Temrer attire j. Average state of Weather, cteHr. BYKON H. RRONSON. Corporal Bi(. Corps. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. . Gold Pens Boyne A Badger. BarKlsr At:im. Uh page, 4lh column. Accordion Pleating. T. I. Helgle A Co. Hure. Equitable Life Assurance Koclely. Facts and Figures. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. FUNERAL NOTICE. Died last night about 7 o'clock Ber nard Fillmore Wall, infant son of Mrs. Robert Wall, aged 10 months. Funeral today from St. Peter's Catho lic Church at 3.80 p. m. Friends and acquaintances invited to attend. Real Estate for Sale and for Kent. J WA.VTKI) TO UKNT.-Dwellinif i I to 7 Eii rooms. AddreHs C. V., Chronicle oftice. WANTED, by a young married mtni.to rjnt two or three rooms, or u small house, convenient to the AIR LINE DKPOT. Aduress A. 11., p21,U Chronicle Office. FOR RENT. A -room house on North jy College street. Apply at np31,8t 1HKWF.LL A IH'NN'H MISCELLANEOUS. )R PALE TOMATO AN1 CABBAOE UT A MI'w ,(... LVJM Dt A vTm ..'. and MWEI'.T l-OTATO I'LANTH an the season advances. ALho a lot of line OERANirMS belonging to the lute J. It. Kooke,4l4 K. Kth street. api3,tusu It. A. HEATTIK. CAHPESTERS WANTED. -15 First Class" Skilled Workmen with tools (in good order) others need not apply. One month 's work from Monday, April 3th. lw,apsi. JOHN W. MILLER A CO. IET YOTTB PEIWONAL want be known j through Tins Chiioniclr'h 10 cent col umn. It neverfalls to bring relief. rOB PRINTING. IF YOU WANT FINE JOB WORK OIVE THE CHRONICLE a call. THE CHRONICLE has secured thk SERVICES OF AN ARTISTIC JOB PRINTER, WHO HAD BEEN FOREMAN FOR TEN YEARS OF ONE OF THE VERY FINEST JOB P HINT ING ESTABLISHMENTS IN THE EAST. THE BKAl'TY AND STYLE Of THE CHRONICLE as a newspaper, and THE BEAUTY AND STYLE OF ITS SET AD VERTISEMENTS, ARE DUE TO THK TASTE AND SKILL OF AN EXPERT FOREMAN. CHASTE ELEGANCE is the govern ing PRINCIPLE IN ALL WORK AT THIS OFFICE. ' PRICES ARE AS REASONABLE AS CON SISTENT WITH PERFECT TASTE, ADMIRA BLE STYLE, AND INCOMPARABLE SKILL. THE CHRONICLE job office is not IN THB MARKET FOR BOTCHED JOBS AT CUT-THROAT PRICES. IT GUARANTEES ALL WORK TO BE DONE PROMPTLY, ACCURATELY, AND ELEGANTLY, AWV AW IAW Wn .'. n u . r AA-A AA.iv (WbMfVlt A KE. OA I Aj&, MJLCT- NER, AND QUALITY OF WORKMANBN1P AND MATERIAL. BILL, LETTER, AND NOTE HEADS, STATE MENTS, ENVELOPES, AND CARDS, FUR NISHED PLAIN OB PRINTED. ORDERS BY HAIL, receive prompt attention; and prices are placed as tow as if contracts were made in PERSON. ' , ', ; - ', REMEMBER THIS: ' for STYLE and WORKMANSHIP THE CHRONICLE job office ts not EQUALLED ANYWHERE BETWEEN BALTI MORE ahd New Orleans. ,' 2.1 s 8 A. M. : ?j THE -OKLAHOMA STAMPEDE; BOOMERS BEGIN TO MOVE ACKOSS THE CANADIAN SUNDAY NIGHT. SCENES UNPARALLELED IN HISTORY". Traths of Today Stranger than the Dine Novel of tbe Past. Purcell, Indian Territory, April 23. The mad stampede for Oklahoma began last night. The boomers could be held in check no longer. They are now cross ing the Canadian in crowds and rushing pell mell over to the other side, and they are doing everything in their power to stem the tide. Every possible contrivance is being used to cross the river, which is still swollen. The boomers made a- dash upon the officers, and some of them were suc cessful in reaching the thicket. The rest were arrested and brought back to thiscitv. Some of the boomers have crossed the river three or four times, only to be caught and returned. An officer who has just returned from Oklahoma reports that five boomers were wounded and one killed in a tight with officers. The boomers ran into the brush. An Indian scout discovered them, and when they were found by the officers they showed fight. Those who were not wounded or killed after the first volley went deeper into the timber. Scouts are again after them. It was asserted here that the railroad bridges across the Canadian river would be burned before morning. A squad of cavalry has been stationed along the river. If the present uproar continues there will be few boomers in Purcell by noon. BEFORE THE RUSH. Fifty Thousand People Awaiting tbe Time to Move. Chicago, April 22. The scramble for the virgin soil in Oklahoma begins at noon today, says the Daily News. This1 morning, according to the latest dis patches, fully 50,000 people are waiting on the border of that small patch of ground. Fast horses, ' railroad trains, stages and all sorts of private vehicles will hear them into the coveted terri tory at the earliest possible moment. Ten thousaud or more will get posses sion of all the desirable land and then they, apparently, will have to hold it against five times as many disappointed men. Everybody is armed. No gov ernment exists. There is reason to fear, therefore, that much bloodshed will re sult from the general turmoil. Many of the men who cross the bor der of Oklahoma today will be residents tonight of large towns which have no existonce this morning. Towns and farming lands will furnish a large part of the people with local habitations. . The rest will go to their old homes or will help to locate gravegards in the new country, or win Ducoroa squatters in the Indian Territory, or settlers in Texts or Arkansas. The scenes in Oklahoma today are without parallel. The sudden turning of an uninhabited country intoacountry teeming with people, is a unique inci dent in the country's history. NOT STANDINp ROOM IN TRAINS. St. Louis, Mo., April 22. The Re public's Wichita, Kansas, special says: The first train south on the Santa Fe, consisting of 15 coaches, arrived yester day and there was not standing room in coaches. People filled the spaces be tween the cars and clung to the steps. One enterprising boomer rode on the cow catcher. The crowd cheered him as the train entered the depot. There were about 1.400 people on the train. The arrivals yesterday numbered at least o,ow. ur tnis number one-third went south to reach the line of Okla homa, in order to be ready for the wora go. ' ' uthera went to furoell. The railroad officials an greatly wor ried over the nrosDects of mo vine so many people. The side tracks are filled with fiat cars and cattle cars, and gravel trains are also in the collection, none of which will be below demand. Every thing on wheels will be utilized if nec essary. Thieves are busily at work on the trains, and many a poor boomer has benn fleeced of bis all. 1 Here are no less than fifty professional thieves un der surveillance by detectives, among them "Crooked Legged Baker," who did active business in the "lightning change act" in Pennsylvania in 1885. The mayor of Arkansas City issued a proclamation permitting the stores to be kept open vesterday for the conven ience of the boomers. They were well patronised. A disturbance took place at Purcell between rival land speculators and their adherents in which revolvers and Win chesters were fired freely; however, witnout any serious result. PREPARING FOB CRASD RACES. Five Hnsdret Ftllar Paid for a Hsrse by Teat Norton. ST. Louis. Anril 22. Srjecial des patches from the Oklahoma country say that everybody is on the qui vive to mage a grand rusn across we nne into the land of Canaan at noon today. Five hundred dollars was vesterday offered and accepted for a fleet horse at Purcell. The horse was purchased Dy Tom Horton, the man who expects to reach a claim now proposed to be taken up by a town site company which sx pcti to build across the river, a city wnicn win in future rival rarceu. As manv fleet horses are being brought in from Texas and Kansas, the race will be most exciting, as they fly across the country, the goal, a stake; the price, a claim. mere la as much, if not more, . STRCOOUNO FOB TOWN BITES as for sections. It is said that 82 town companies are going for Guthrie, about that number for Oklahoma City, and about twenty -for King Fisher, while there are applicants for sites on almost every section. This makes the average ettlei swear. XbB trouble botweea the town silks companies promises to be as dangerous as that among the claim hunters. There has also been brewing for the last day or two animosity between tne Northern fellows and the Texan es pecially, including some 'colonies from other States. There were no soldiers or officers of any kind to prevent their entering the county. Some were encamped on the banks of streams, women were cooking meals and men were shooting at either marks or game. FABULOUS FEES TO GUIDES. "Few persons know," said an old boomer who was encamped on the Oklahoma Hne, "What dangers I have gone through to reach here. My party had a cow boy guide, and when we came to Chickasaw we were compelled to pay the man 9450 to swim the stream and bring us a boat in which we could cross, and we then pulled our rig and swam our teams. The same thing had to be done at Salt Fork. We gave our guide $100, and if he gets us well located he gets $150." Another party paid their guide $250. A DESPERATE SCHEME. A scheme has just developed, the magnitude of which, and the bold con ception and daring character of the men engaged in it makes it one of great importance. It is every day becoming more apparent that the lands of Okla homa wiil be insufficient for the people who will be here to claim it. As a consequence, there have been organ ized bands or companies, the members of which are swearing to protect their fellows. The leaders of the companies have agreed that if any considerable portion of them fail to get into Oklaho ma, they will league together and take possession of the Cherokee strip. Two thirds even of these organized men will be left, and in a week from today they will have 10,000 determined men, desperate from the failure of cherished plans, driving stock out on the strip and holding down claims. The hope of the men who have this desperate enterprise is to have so many people in the strip in a short time that it will be thought better to leave them there than attempt to drive them out. Arkansas City is the headquarters of the engineers of the scheme, but auxili aries are located along the line, and the rush will be simultaneous at all points. Officers fear this, and will endeavor to hurry a patrol for the strip from Okla homa to anticipate and prevent the ex pected rush. It is well known that such a scheme has been talked of by Col. Cole and other Oklahoma agitators, and at the present time they find it most opportune to make their advance. How Wanamaker Makes Them Tired. Washington Cor. Richmond Dispatch. The "breeches-maker," as Judge Thurman, of Ohio, calls the Postmaster General, is said to be the most talkative member of the Cabinet. Indeed, it has leaked out that Mr. Wanamaker tries to do all the talking at the Cabinet meet ings, and that accounts for some of the long sessions with no apparent results. It is no secret here that the big men of the Administration are fast reaching the conclusion that they have an elu phant on their hands, and that they would not be distressed to hear that the Philadelphia!! had become disgusted and made up his mind to rotire from the Cabinet voluntarily instead of be ing ultimately frozen out, as many think . will be case in less tnau a year, it was a common rumor around W ashington when Clarkson, of Iowa, consented to take the second place in the Postoffice Department, that he knew, or at least was led to believe, that sooner or later he would have the first place. Still the "breeches-maker" has many friends and supporters, and they rather admire the way he is squelching the politicians. Cleveland Declines an Office. New York Hun. Lawyer Grover Cleveland formally declined yesterday to be a Commission er of the new High Bridge Park. Mr. Cleveland in a letter to Justice Patter son of the Supreme Court, who made the appointment, said that he did not think that he was sufficiently informed about the locality to accept so important a post. It is said that he has other reasons for declining the place. He wants to have this summer and fall entirely at his dis posal. He does not wish to feel hamp ered by any business outside of his law business. Things are slow with many lawyers in the summer, and Mr. Cleve land wants to be in shape for leaving his desk for his fishing rod. He does not want to settle down to the steady grind before late in the fall. Editor Wbitelaw Reid Resigns. New York Sun. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, who is about to sail for PariB, to take charge of his new duties as Minister to France, has placed his resignation as editor-in-chief of the Tribune before the Board of Trustees, and it has been accepted. Col. John Hay has been asked to take Mr. Reid's place, and it is expected that he will do so in the early part of the autumn. Col. Hay was for many years the lead ing editorial writer on the Tribune, and had charge of the paper during the summer and autumn of 1881, when Mr. Reid was absent in Europe on his mar riage tour. For the present the Tribune will continue under the supervision of Mr. Donald F. Nicholson, for some years Mr. Reid 's personal representative in the Tribune office. The C. F. k Y. V. Railroad. Wilmington Messenger.) Cpl. Roger P. Atkinson, chief engin eer of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railroad, has been in the city a few days inspecting the work on the Point Petor terminus. The work on the wharves is progressing very well, and by tho 1st of May they will be completed.- Over four hundred piles have been driven for the wharves on Northeast river, and eight hundred feet of piling has been driven over the rice field for the main line and the stringers, caps and cross ties put on. There will be eight terminal tracks running from a point opposite the old Point Peter Rice Mills, down to the warehouse on the wharf. The timbers are now being cut for the warehouse, and as soon as practicabel work will be commenced on the building. It will be two hundred and eleven feet in length and one hundred in width. - Yonkers Statesman: - When a man goes to work he generally takes oS his coat, but if he is a painter bs puts one 00. - COMPTROLLER DURHAM GOES. A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HIM AND ATTORNEY GENERAL MILLER. ACCOUWTS OF JOHN I. DAVENPORT, Wblrn Csuiutroller Durham Intended to Disallow. Washington, April 23. First Comp troller Durham severed his connection with the Treasury Department today. He tendered his resignation on the charge of administration, and it was ac cepted by Secretary Windom today to take effect at once. There are several explanations for this action. Ope generally accepted by those supposed to be acquainted with the inside facts is that the First Comp troller has taken a position on several official matters entirely at variance with the views of present administra tion. The immediate cause of the charge is due to a personal misunder standing between Attorney General Miller and First Comptroller Durham in regard to the accounts of Mr. John I Davenport as supervisor of elections in New York. The latter presented vouchers aggregating 83,200 for "extra ordinary expenses" incurred during last Presidential elections These were being examined by the First Comptrol ler, and he signified his intention to din allow them. He had several conferen ces with the Attorney General on the subject, which resulted in an open rup ture between the two officials; so much so that the First Comptroller on Friday last ignored two requests from tho At torney General to call at bis office. The Davenport accounts were then ta ken out of his hands and turned over to the. Attorney General where they now are. Secretary Windom said this afternoon that he had accepted Durham's resigna tion in the ordinary course of business, not because of any fault with the tat ter's official conduct, but because of several newspaper articles reflecting upon the administration which are said to have been inspired by the First Comptroller. These attributed senti ments to First Comptroller which, if true, must have made it unpleasant for him to continue in olllce under existing circumstances. FESTIVITIES IN WASIIINUTON. Tbe President, Baby KrKee and Other Amuse a Crowd of Children. Washinoton, April 22. Washington children turned out in force today and participated in the annual Easter egg rolling festivities on the White House gr junds. It is extimated that two thou sand iersons, fully throe-fourtlis of them children, wore on the grounds during the day. The day was balmy and springlike and light predominated. At one o'clock the President came down into the East Room and shook hands with several hundred grown poople and children. After lunch he came out on the rear porch of the man sion with Benjamin McKee in his arms, accompanied by Mrs. Harrison, Russell Harrison, Mrs. McKee, Miss Murphy, Dr. Scott and a few others. Dr. Scott held ''babv" McKoo, who assisted his brother in enthusing the crowd by wav ing a handkerchief. The party re mained on the porch for half an hour watching the children enjoy themselves on the green sward. Is tbe"Monongahela" Lost? Washington, April 21. The non-arrival of the Monongahela at Samoa has caused considerable uneasiness in navy circles. The ship has now been out over sixty days, and no word of her arrival has been received. The dis tance from San Francisco to Apia is 4,200 miles, and with favorable winds, such as prevail at this season, she ought to make the voyage in at least forty days. At the department it is said that there can be no question but what the ship was in the track of tbe hurricane, and when the gale came on was in the vicinity of Samoa. The condition of the Monangahela was none of the best, and it is this fact that causes so much anxiety. Appointment Yesterday. Washington, April 22. Postmaster General Wanamaker today made the following appointments: Paul Vandervoort, of Nebraska, to be Superintendent of Mails at Omaha, Neb., and Henry C. Thomas, of Kansas, to be Superintendant of Mails at Bos ton. Irvine Miller, of Chicago, was today appointed Secretary of the Sioux Indian Commission. Mr. Miller is a son of As sociate Justice Miller of the Supremo Court. Bishop Keane to Start for Home. Washington, April 22. Right Rev. Bishop Keane, rector of the Catholic University, now in Rome, will sail on the steamer Umbria next Saturday for home. KILLED BY LIGHTXISW. A Terrible Thunder Storm in Connecti cut Saturday Night. Danbury, Conu., April 22. Several persons were killed and injured by lightning during a terrible thunder storm on Saturday night and Sunday morning. While tho family of Levinda Adams, at Trinity Lake, a few miles bo low this city, wore at supput Saturday, tho bouse was struck by lightning and the entire family rendered unconscious. Mrs. Adams, when regaining conscious ness, was horrified to find two of the family dead and tbe rest terribly in jured. The house also had been set on fire. Noah Adams, a relative on a visit, was horribly burned. He must have been Instantly killed by the bolt. He was a prominent citizen of Reading and was 80 years of age. A daughter of Mrs. Adams was also instantly killed and her body terribly mutilated . by the lightning. The neighbors succeeded in dragging the unconscious people from the burn ing building; " New Orleans Picayune: A lock of hair is one that flashes its gold In tbe face of a young man and holds ' him A 8RKAT 8 ALT SYNDICATE. A Scheme ts Gala Control or All Tho Sail Predict. Toledo, O., April 22. The Blade will say this evening, on the most unim peachable authority, that Wellington R. Burt, of Saginaw, president of the Michigan Salt Association, sails on Wednesday next for Southampton, on the North German Lloyd steamer Saale, on an errand, the results of which will be felt from one end of the United States to the other. He goes to secure $10,000,000 by means of which, with a pool already formed in this country, the entire salt product of the United States will bs controlled by a syndicate, of which he will be the head. The English capitalists who have op erated the salt trust in Great Britain are interested in this project, the de tails of which have all been arranged, and which wiU all be settled by Mr. Burt during his brief fisit to Eng land. This gigantic business combination is not to be a salt trust in the usual accep tance of the word, although in many of its features it resembles one. It b simply applying to the entire salt in dustry of the United States tbe same principles that from time to time have been used in tbe great salt producing section of the Saginaw Valley. Each district will produce the usual quantity of salt, and will report to headquarters constantly the amount of stock on hand. Headquarters will make the sales and see that the stuff is shipped in the most economimal manner. It is estimated that in the matter of shipments there will be saved in the operating expenses of the business at least $500,000 ayear, even at the present ridiculously low priceof salt. It is not the purpose of the pro posed syndicate to go into the mafter with the intention of fixing up the price of salt. WEST VIReiMA COAL FIELDS. A Party ef Railroad Men aid Capitalists Visitiag Them. Baltimore, April 22. President H. G. Davis, of the West Virginia Central Railroad Company, whose chief offices are in this city and New York, accom panied by his assistant, Emmons Blaine, today left this city for Norfolk, Va., to join a large party of railroad men and capitalists of the North, who will to morrow start for Pocahontas county, W. Va., for the purpose of inspecting the coal lands in that county. The ex cursion is under the auspices of the Norfolk and Western Railroad Com pany, along whose route the lands re ferred to lie. It is claimed by geologists and coal mining experts that the veins in Pocahontas are the largest in tbe United States. Among those who are interested in Pocahontas property are 8. B. Elkins, of New York; Thos. F. Bayard, John A. Hambleton, of Balti more; and many other prominent par ties. HENRY tiEOKOE IN GREAT BRITAIN. Ills Land Leetares Attracting Great Attention Everywhere. London, April 22. The wonderful success which Mr. Henry George has achieved during his lecturing tour in Kngland, Scotland and Wales, has at tracted the attention of a great many people who hitherto have given little or no attention to the land question, and his speeches have had an immense amount of influence upon the political situation. Heretofore the theories of Mr. George have been presented to the masses in Great Britain in a way calcu lated to expose them to ridicule, but, whether they merit it or not, they are now receiving their full share of public consideration from the point of view of knowledge and appreciation. Mr. George's tour of Scotland next week is expected to be a success far beyond that attained by any politico-economic lec tnrer who has in many years sddressed the people of the territory he proposes covering. Baseball Yesterday. Louisville Louisville 0; St. Louis 13. Philadelphia Athletics 15; Colum bus 6. Cincinnati Cincinnati 10; Kansas City 1. Baltimore Baltimore 6; Brooklyn 4. Pittsburg Pittsburg 7; Syracuse it. Philadelphia Philadelphia 11; To ronto 2. Washington, D. C Washington 5; Yalo 0. Newark Newark 16: New York re serves 2. Jersey City, N. J. Jersey City 13; Detroit 14. Worcester Worcester 4; New York 8. Tbe Prohibition Voteia Massachusetts. Boston, Mass., April 22. The vote on the proposed amendment to the consti tution of Massachusetts prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors is being polled today. The weather Is clear and cool, with the pros pects favorable for a large vote. Both parties have been active in the cam paign and a full vote is expected. All recent impartial canvasses and general opinion point to the rejection of the amendment, the principal interest being in the size of the majority against it. NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE INDIANS. A CoustisKioR Appointed te Treat With the Sioux. Washington, April 22.-General George Crook, U. 8. A., Hon. Charles Foster of Ohio, and Hon. Wm. Warner, of Missouri, were today appointed by the President as a Commission to nego tiate with tho Sioux Indians for the surrender of certain lands, under the act approved on the 2nd of last March. The Commission is not expected to as semble at Washington before the first of Msy. About that date all the members will meet here and receive their in structions from Secretary Noble. The reservation now occupied by the Sioux Indians embraces about 21,000,000 acres of land. , There are upon this reserva tion about 24,000 Indians. The object of the Commission is to secure, if possi ble, from the Sioux Indians, the reltn quishinentof from 9,000,000 to 11,000,000 acres of land. Philadelphia Ledger: Tbe chief fea ture in the Armes court-martial is the nose that Armes pulled, but it is not put to evidence. DANMARITS PASSENGERS THEY WERE SAFELY LANDED AT THE AZORES BY THE MISSOURI A PASSEMCER'S NARRATIVE, ereetiug to the Missouri When She Ar rived at Philadelphia. Nfw York, April 81. The agents of the steamer Danmark received the fol lowing cablegram from Lisbon this afternoon: "Ps tsengcr and crew of the steam hip Danmark landed at the Asores! forty of the passengers are on the steamer Missouri, bound for Philadel phia. Rest to follow by the next steam Sr." Lisbon, April 21. In an interview with a newspaper representative, Peter Rabeen, third mate of the steamship Danmark, related the circumstances of the loss of thai vessel. Her engines, he stated, broke down on April 4th while the vessel wm eight hundred miles from Newfoundland. Engineer Kaas was fouqd lying dead on the floor of the en- fine-room, and the cause of the aoci ent could not be ascertained. On April 5th the Danmark was spoken by the Missouri, which towed the Danmark un til April 0th. The Danmark was set tling down, Rabeen states, and we ask ed the Missouri to take our passengers. The Missouri, as she was loaded, had room for only twenty additional per sons, but she jettersoned her careo and took us all on board 800 of us land ing us at Azores. We then proceed for Philadelphia, taking 840 of the passen gers besides the captain and the sailors. Three of the engineers proceeded to London on board the Uemerara steam er. The first and second mates are still at Azores and tbe remaining passengers and forty-two sailors sailed for Lisbon on the steamer Aoor. Lewis, Del., April 22. No commu nication could be bad from shore with the steamer Missouri, which arrived off Delaware Breakwater at an early hour this morning with the Danmark 's pas sengers and porceeded up river at VJU) o'clock this morning. She will reach Newcastle, Del., probably between twelve and one o clock and get to her dock in Philadelphia late this p. m. ARRIVAL AT PHILADELPHIA. Philadelphia, April 24. Hundreds of voices blended in a great shout, and cheer after cheer rent the air, as the steamer Missouri with her - precious cargo, which she had so gallantly res cued from the ill-fated Danmark, ar rived safely at her dock at Washington street wharf at half past five o'clock this afternoon. The passengers on board the Missouri ivturuod tho greet ing witn no less entnusiam. The passengers united in praising the noble work of Captain Murroll, of the Missouri, and his brave crew. Dr. Jesperson, one of the passengers taken from the Danmark spoke of Cap tain Murrell's action in tne behalf of himself and his fellow-passengers. In relating his experience to a reporter of The United Press, Dr. Jesperson said: "Our experience for a time was cer tainly a most thrilling ono. Un to the 4th instant our trip on the Danmark had been s pleasant one. On the latter date, however, we encountered a severe storm. We would have weathered it all night, I suppose, hsd our engines held out, but tne snait broke near the aft end of the section. As a result a hole was cut tnrough the bottom of the vessel. It appears that simultaneously with tbe breaking of the shaft, an engine pipe burst and Engineer Kass was in stantly killed. Another leak was caused by the bursting or the pipe on the side of the vessel. Thus matters grew very serious, and our vessel was left at the merer of the waves. Capt. Knudsen endeavored to keep her in the path of tne ocean B learners. The dawning of the fifth was designed to bring us relief. a sail was sighted by the outlooks, and we at once put up signals of distress. The sails proved to be those of tne Missouri. When in speaking distance, Captain Knudsen asked ii tne Missouri could take our passengers on board. The commander of the latter steainor said that that weuld be impossible as he had no where to put them. He prompt ly agreed to take us in tow. We got along well enough for a few hours, when it was discovered that the water was fast pouring into the steamer through the big hole in her stern. The pumps were kept going without inter mission, but they proved almost useless as far as saving the vessel was concern ed. We kept at it, however, until tho 0th and then it was seen we could no longer hope to save Our ships. Captain Knudson boarded the Mis souri and asked that his passengers be received on her decks. At two o'clock the work of transferring the hundreds of souls from the Denmark to the Mis souri was begun. After six hours work, at eight o'clock, on the night of the sixth, all the passengers of the Dan mark had been safely placed on the Missouri. The Missouri was then HEADED FOR THK AZORES, the nearest land, where we arrived without auy further incident on tho 10th. There all the young unmarried men, to the number of 306, including Captain Knudson, and tho largest part of his crew, were landed. On tbe llth, wo again set sail, after having laid in a stock of provisions, which, added to those we took from tho Danmark before deserting her, proved amply sufficient. Shortly after the vessel had made fast to the wharf a beautiful lloral de sign; representing a ship at sea, was carried up the gangway and handed over to Captain Murrell, with a few ajf propriate remarks. During the passage a womon by the name of Linney gave birth to a child. The infant wss christened "Atlanta Missouri. ' V A Bold Robbery. Patoxsbcrg, Mo., April 22. A mask ed robber walked into the Wabash rail road office here on Friday night, and at the point of a pistol compelled the agent to open the safe, which contained about $0,000. Tbe man made good his i escape atei securing tho wonoy.