TCBMSIIED BV HoANOKB PUBLTSHIKO Co. "FOR GOD. FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." C. V. Apsbon, Business Manager, VOL, II. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1890. NO. 26. .THE NEW& "William' Mortell and James McGrath were enti'iirwl to life imprisonment in Chicago for the warder of Policeman Fryer . -Bosnian's Jflwring mills in Marion, Ks., were wrecked tawl two men were filially injured, by an ex- , plosion. The Chicago Postoflice building ! a said by Inspector or Uuildings Cluss lo be beyond redemption." A call has becu issued t tor a wnveution of the retail clerks of Amer. Sea, The stockholders of ' the Nashville,. Cliattanooga and St Louis Railroad have de Tided to increase the capital Btock" of the com pany ten per cent. Mrs- Matthews, ,tf Athens, Ala., shot A negro who assaulted her lie wan afterward found (lead. Margaret barker was wnreneedjo imprisonment or lifuin Montgomery, Ala., for being an acces sory to the murder -of another woman's hus band. William T. Tennrtiill, of the New York Cotton 'Exchange killed Jilmsclf in Englewood, N. J. y William Mottling-and wife were asphyxiated by gas in their room in Chicago. Leo Heolfner, a Pole, is missing from Minneapolis. He left behind bis wife and mistress-Judge Hughes has given an opinion in Richmond that Registration books re public records, and registrars are required to permit United States election supervisors access to them. An old man named Heller dropped dead of heart disease, brought on by political excitement, at a meeting in Blooms burg.'Pa. A heavy fall of snow on the Ten nessee mountains. By the overturning of a vessel contain j ng twenty . tons of niolton metal iii a foundry at Bethlehem, Pa., six men "were horribly burned.-:7 A Hungarian wo man poured boiling water over two. quarrel ing men at Gallitzen, Pa., and badly scalded them. In a quarrel over taffy, fifteen-year-old Johnnie Am do shot his younger brother in the head in their l"! in New York. A company has purchased live hundred acres of land across the ri vor from Petersburg, Vn., and will establish a town. The steam fitters of Chicago are on strike. The Non partisan National Woman's Christian Tern perance Union has 1 sued a call for a national convention. A section of Barnum's circus train was wrecked near Macon, Ga., and eight horses killed. -W. S. Wharton, a. Chicago - money lender, and also interested in the in surance business, has disappaared, and it is reported that, hi . indebtedness amounts to 50,00(). -U-Deputy Circuit Clerk E. Ward Houston, of Pnrkersburg, W.Va., was arrested, , charged with forging certificates of pay for Mnesscs. Judge Robert L. Johnson, of Ebensburg, Cambria , county, Pa.,, died of apoplexy, aged) sevehty-six -yetts vThe legality of Speajker Reed's quorum rulings is to be tested in proceedings broughtTtty a New. York importing firm against the McKinley kill. Lee A 1 Jen, a j notorious horse thief, was captured, in thf Comanche country by: United States officerl. t-Louis Rittep house, an insane- mnn'living near St Louis, shot a neighbor and his brother, and while attempt ing to kill his father the latter split Ids skiill with a hoe. Percale and Antley, two Flat- head Indian murderers, were sentenced to death in -, Helena, Mont--; Mrs.'Rearick, of Woonsockct, S. P., has confessed to poisoning her husbaud. James Prenell, a noted Chi cago thief recently released from prison, tried to kill Miss Alice Oakes, the girl whose testimony-convicted him." He did .not succeed. - S. S. Cole, a freighter, was murdered by . Indians in the Big Bead country, Washing ton. William Watsoua Santa Fe section hand, was murdered and his body secreted in a closet in the railroad station at Fort Madi son, ' Iowa.- Williatu parnwell, an Austin Tex., police officer, shot Maggie Null and then killed himself.- The steamer Alex ander Swiitcojlapsed near El en wood, Pa. -Juiiu i Dornsipe, a son of ex-Mayor Dornsipe, of Kansas City, committed suicide in Sun Francisco. 4-Thomas Tagcart, a Columbus, Ind., farmer, confessed on his death bed to having murdered Thomas Jameson, in 1885. The steam-fitters of Chicago have gone on a strike. rA-negra boarded a train on the Houston and Texas, Railroad, killed the col ored porter, and made good his escape. Charles M. Thorlton,a farmer living near Al liance, Neb,, killed Ferd Robinson and fatally shot his sweetheart, Myrtle Kerr. Edward Hock, of Sullivan, Ind., threatened to kill his wife, and . was in turn killed by some un known men. Four persons were fatally in jured by a trail Hear Steubenville, O. T. J. Blount, of Miiuciej Ind., was beaten and kicked .to, death inthe Richmond, Ind., in sane hospital. Ex -Lord High Sheriff Hut ton, of London, was arrested in San Francisco, at the instance of a fellow-lawyer.-1 Frances Duchalk, aged seventeen years, was assaulted by au unknown man in Chicago, and then thrown under a train, but was itaved, by her sister. -A three-year-old boy, ueur Wichita, Ks., Tell iuto 'a tub of boiling water and' was completely cooked. i'hos. Roouey killed Robert Madden in Brewsters, N. J., with a tiugle blow,- Richard Doyle shut aud killed Thomas Lynch in Troy,- N. Y. Peter L&uche, aged, nineteen " years,; bf Philadel phia, deceived a fit'teen-year old girl and her mother, by palming off a marriage licenso for a certificate, and making the girt believe he was Jgaliy pjmel to her. f-Tlie Sioux Iu Jina are rapidly taken up thie new supersti tion circulated by the medicene men to the effect thai next spring all tha whites are to bo annihilated, the dead Indian-, riue from the grave and the red man's supremacy to be es tablished WITH HIS OWN WEAPON. Thtenteiqd to Kill IIU Slclt Wirt;, bat i lot Uruiued Hliuaelf. Ed warily .louck, residing iu Sullivan, Ind., went home druuk the other-night and began to abuse his wile who was ill in bed, threaten ing to kill her with a hatchet. While he was standing over the bed where she day four masKed men entered the room, touk him out ami, with the same hatchet, beat fm head into a jeily. flouck-died lrom tbe effects of his injuries. No one saw.tue nnmlcr except iiuiH'lt's wite, who tunnot describe the nieu very accurately. No -arrests have been made. . RET. DR. TALMAGB. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun day Sermon. Subject i The Dead Keaand the Itlver Jordan." , TeXTi n A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho." Luko x., 30. David the poet here pictures a volcano, and what Church's Cotopaxi does oa painter's canvas this author does in words. You see ' a hill, calm and still and for ages immovable, but the Lord out of the heavens puts His . linger on the top of it and from it rise thick vapors intershot with fire. "He toucheth the hills and they smoke." - God is the only being who can manage a volcano, and : again and again has He em ployed volcanic action. The pictures on the walls of Pompeii, the exhumed Italian city, as we saw them last November, de monstrate that tha city was not fit to live, In the first century that city, engirdled with palaces, eniparadised with gardens, pillared Into architectural exquisiteness, was at the foot of a mountain, up the" sides of which it ran, with Vineyards add villas of merchant princes, and all that marble and bronze and imperial baths and arbori culture and rainbowed fountains, and a coliseum at the dedication of which nine thousand beasts had been slain, and a supernal landscape in which the shore gave roses to the sea and the sea-gaw crystals to the shore, yea, all that beauty and pomp and wealth could give was there to be seen or heard. But the bad morals of the city had, shocked the world In the year 79, on the 4th of August, a black column rose above the adjoining mountain and spread out, Pliny . says, as he saw it, like a great pine tree, ' wider and wider, until it began to rain upon the city first thin ashes aud then pumice stone, and sulphurous fumes scooped, and streams of mud poured through the streets till few people escaped, and the city was buried, and t-ome of the inhabitants eighteen hundred years after were found embalmed in the scoriaa of that awful doom. The Lord called upon volcanic forces to obliterate that profligate city. ; He touched the hills and they smoked. - . Nothing but volcanic action can explain what I shall show you at the Dead Sea upen which I looked last December, and of whose waters I took a bitter and stinging taste. Concerning all that region there has been controversy enough to fill libraries, science saying one thing, revelation saying another thing. But admit volcanic action divinely employed and both testimonies are one and the same. Geology, chemistry, geography, astronomy, ichthyology, ornithology and zoology are coming one by one to confirm the Scriptures. Two leaves of one book are Revelation and Creation, and the penman ship is by the same divine hand. Our horse back ride will not be so steep to-day, and you can stay on without clinging to the pommel of the saddle, but the scenes amid which we ride shall, if possible, be more thrilling, and by the time the horses snuff the sulphurous atmosphere of Ashaltites, or the Dead Sea, we will be ready to dismount and read from our Bibles about what was done that day by the Lord when He touched the hills anl they smoked. ' Take a detour and pass along by the rocky fortress of Masada, where occurred some thing more wonderful in the way of despera tion than you ever heard of, unless you have heard of that. Herod built a palace amid ; these heaps of black and awful rocks which look like a tumbled midnight. A great band of robbers, about one thousand including their families, afterward held the , fortress. ? When the Roman army stormed that steep and the bandits could no longer hold the place, their chieftain, Eleazar, made a pow erful speech which persuaded them to die before they were captured. First the men . kissed their families a loving and taarfui food-by and then put a dagger into their earts, and 1 the women and children were slain. Then ten men were chosen by lot to slay all the other men, and each man lay down by the dead wife and children and waited for these executioners to do their work. This done, one man of the ten killed the other nine. Then the survivor committed suicide. Two women and five children had hid them selves, and after all was over came forth to tell of the nine hundred and sixty slaugh tered. Great and rugged natural scenery makes the most tremendous natures for good or evil. Great statesmen and great robbers, great orators and great butchers, were nearly all born or reared among mountain precipices. Strong natures are hardly ever born upon the plain. When men have any thing greatly good or greatly evil to do they come down off the rocks. Pass on from under the shadow of Masada, the scene of concentrated diabolism.and come along where the salt crystals crackle under, the horses' hoofs. You are near the most God forsaken region of all the earth. You to whom the word lake has heretofore sug gested those bewitchments of beauty, Lu zerne or Cayuga, some great pearl set by a loving God in the bosom of the luxuriant val ley, change all your ideas about a lake, and see this sheet of water which tne Bible calls the Salt Sea, or Sea of the Plain, and J osephug calls Lake Asphaltites. The muleteers will take care of the horses while we go down to the brink and dip up the liquid mixture in the palm of the hand. l"he waters are a com mingling of brimstone and pitch, and have six times larger percentage of salt than those of the Atlantic Ocean, the ocean hav ing four per cent, of salt and this lake 26 percent. Lake Sir-i-kol, of India, is the highest lake in the world. This lake, on the banks of which we kneel, is the lowest laka. It empties into no sea, among other things, for the simple reason that water cannot run tap hill. It swallows up the river Jordan and makes no response of thanks, aud never r ports what it does with the twenty millions cubic feet of water annually received from that sacred river. It takes the tree branches and logs floated into it by the Jordan and pitches them on the banks of bitumen to de cay there. 4 s The hot springs near its banks by the name of Calurhoa, where King Herod came to bathe off his illnesses, no sooner pour in to this sea than they are poisoned. Not a fish scale swims it. Not an insect walks it. It hate life, and if you attempt tw swim there it lifts you by an unnatural buoyancy to tne suriace,as mucn as to say "we want no life here, but death is our preference, death." Tnose who attempt to wade into this lake, and submerge themselves, come out almost maddened, as with the sting of, a hundred wasps and hornets, and with lips and eye lids swollen with the strange ablution. The sparkle of its waters is not like the sparkle of beauty on other lakes, but a metallic lustre like unto the flash of a sword that would thrust you. The gaselles and the ibexes that iive on the hills beside it, and cranes and wild ducks that fly across for, contrary to the old belief, birds do safe ly wing their way over it and the Arab horses you have been riding, though thirsty enough, will not drink out of this dreadful mixture. A mist hovers over paits of it al most continually, which, though natural tva portion, seems like a wing of doom spread over liquid desolation. It is the rinsings of abomination. It is au aqueous monster coiled anions the hit In, or creeping with ripples, aud stea?hful wuh nauseating malodors. In these regions ' ones stood four great cities of Assyria I Sodod, Gomorr&b, Adma and Zeboim, The Bible says they were de stroyed by a tempest of firs and brimstone after these cities had tilled Up with Wickedness. ''No, that is absnrd," crie somd ortM "it is evident that this Was a region of salt and brimstone and pitch long before that.' . And so it Was; The Bible says it was A region of Sulphur long before the great catastrope. "wellj bow," says some ode, wanting to raise a quarrel between science and Revela tion, "you have no right to say the cities of the plain were destroyed by a tempest of fire aud sulphur and brimstone, because this region had these characteristics long before these cities were destroyed." Volcanic ac tion, is my reply. These cities had been built out of very combustible materials. Tht mortar was a bitumen easily ignited, and thi walls dripped with: pitch most Inflammable. They sat, I think, on a ridge of hills. They stood high up and conspicuous, radiant in their sins, ostentatious in their debaucheries, four hells on earth. - , One day there was a rumbling in th earth, and a quaking. "What's thatf cry the af. frighted Inhabitants. ''What's that?" The foundations of the earth were giving way, A Volcano, whose fires had been burning for ages, at God's command bursts forth, easily setting everything aflarrie, and first lifting tbese cmes nign id tne air and tned flashing then! down in chasms fathomless, The fires of that eruption idtershot 'the dense smoke and rolled unto the heavens, only to descend again. And all the configuration of that country was changed, and where there was a hill there came a valley, and where there had been the pomp of uncleanness came wide spread desolation."" The red hot spade of volcanic action had shoveled under tne cities of the plain. Before the catastrophe the cities stood on the top of the salt and sul phur. After the catastrophe they were tinder the salt and sulphur. Science right; Revelation right. 'He toucheth the hills and they smoke." No science ever frightened believers in Re velation so much as geology. They feared that the strata of the earth would contradict tha Scriptures, and then Moses must go un der. But as in the Dead Sea instance so in all cases God's writing on the earth and God's writing in the Bible are harmonious. The shelves of rock correspond with the shelves of the American Bible Society. Science digs into the earth and finds deep down the remains of plants, and so the Bible announces plants first. Science digs down and says, . 'Marine animals next," and the Bible says. "Marine animals next." Science digs down and says, "Land animals next." "Then comes manP says science. "Then comes man m responds the Bible. Science digs into the regions about the Daad Sea, and finds result of fire and masses of brim stone, and announces a wonderful geologi cal formation. "Oh, yes," says the Bible, "Moses wrote thousands of years ago, The Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Go morrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven,', and David wrote, 'He touch eth the hills and they smoke.'" So I guess we will hold on to our Bibles a little longer. A gentleman in the ante-room of the White House, at Washington, having an appoint ment with Mr. Lincoln at 5 o'clock in the morning, got there fifteen minutes early, and asked the servant, "Who is talking in the next roomf "It is the President, sir." "Is anybody with him?" "No, sir; he is reading the Bible. He spends every morning from 4 to 5 o'clock reading the Scriptures." My text implies that God controls vol canoes, not with the full force of his hand, but with the tip of his finger. Etna, Strom boli and Vesuvius fawn at his feet like hounds before tha hunter. These eruptions of the hills do not belong to Pluto's realm, as the ancients thought, but to the divine do minions. Humboldt counted two hundred of them, but since then the Indian archipei-, ago has been found to have nine hundred of these great mouthpieces. They are on every continent and in all latitudes. That earth quake which shook all America about six or tieven summers ago was only the raving around of volcanoes rushing ' against the sides of their rocky caverns trying to break out. They must come to the surface, but it will be at the divine call. They seem re nerved for the punishment of one kind of sin. The seven cities they have obliterated were celebrated for one kind of transgression. Profligacy was the chief characteristic o the seven cities over which they put their smoth ering wingi Pompaii, Herculaneum, Stabiae, Adma, Zeboim, Sodom and Gomorrah. If our American cities do not quit their profligacy, Jf in high life and low nf e disso luteness does not cease to be a joke and be come a crime, if wealthy libertinism con tinues to find so many doors of domestic life open to its faintest touch, if Russian and French and American literature steeped in pruriency does not get banished from the news stands and ladies' parlors, God will let loose some of these suppressed monsters of the earth. And I tell thesa American cities that it will be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, whether that day of judgment be in this present century or in the closing century of tine earth's continuance, . The volcanic force are already in existence, but in the mercy of God they are chained in the ken nels of subterraneous fire. Yet let profli gacy; whether it stagger into a lazaretto or eit on a commercial throne, whether it laugh in a faded shawl under the street gas light or be wrapped in the finest array that foreign loom ever wrought or lapidary ever im psarled, know right well that there is a vol cano waiting for it, whether iu domestic life or social h'e or political life or in the founda tions or tne eartn rrom wmcn sprang out the devastations that swallowed the cities of V plain. "He- toucheth the hills and thw smoke." En-k t.iia ftrairnman Wft r Inlpa.1 when WU bad seen enough of this volcanic region of ior another march, around the horses which are prancing and neighing for de parture. We are off for the Jordon, only iwo hours away. We pass Bedouins whose st?rn teatures melt into a smiie as we give j them the salutation oaiaam Aieitoum. "Peace be with you," their smile sometimes leaving us in doubt as to whether it is caused by their gladness to see us or by our poor , pronunciation of the Arabic. Oh, they are a strange race, those Bedouins. Such a commingling of ruffianism and honor, of cowardice and courage, of cruelty and kindness! When a band of them came down upon a party in which Miss Whately was traveling, and were about to take pocketbooks and perhaps life, this lady, Bit ting upon ner horse, took out her note-book ami pencil and began to sketch these brig ands, and seeing this composure the bandits thought it something supernatural and fled. Christian womanliness or manliness is all conquering. When Martin Luther was told that Duke George would kill him if he went to Leipsic, Luther replied: "I would go to Leipsic if it rained Duke Georges nine days." ho w we come through regions where there are hills cut into the shape of cathedrals, with altar and column and arch and chancel and pulpit and dome and architecture of the rocks that I think can hardly just happen so. Perhaps it is because God loves the church so well, he builds in the solitudes of Yellow stone park and Yosemite and Switzerland and Palestine these ecclesiastical plies. : And who knows but that unsaen spirits may sometimes worship there "Dragoman, when Fiall we sea the Jordan?" I ask. AU th time we wire on the alert, and looiin t-Tough tamarisk and widows for tU created riv-.-r vt all tvae erth. The 111 - slppt Is wider, the Ohio is deeper, tne Ama zon is longer, the Hudson rolls amid regions more picturesque, the Thames has more splendor on its banks, the Tiber suggests more imperial procession, the Ilyssus has more classic memories, and the Kile feeds greater populations by it3 irrigation but the Jordan is the quean of rivers, and runs through all the Bible, a silver thread strung like beads with heroics, and before night we shall meet on its banks Elijah and Elisha and David and Jacob and Joshua and John and Jesus. ' At last between two trees I got a glimpse of a river and said, "What is thatf V'The Jordan," was the quick reply. .And all along the line which had been lengthened by other pilgrims, some from America, and some from Europe, and some from Asia, the cry was sounded "The Jordan? The Jordan P Hun dreds of thousands of pilgrims have chanted on its banks and bathed in its waters. : Many of them dip a wet gown in the waves and wring It out and carry It home for their own shroud. It is an impetuous stream and rushes on as though it were hastening to tell its story to the ages. Many an explorer has it whelmed and many a boat has it wrecked. Lieut. Moloneaux had copper bottomed crafts split upon its shelving. Only one boat, that of Lieut, Lynch, ever lived to sail the whole length of it. At the season waen the snows on Lebanon melt the rage of this stream is like Conemaugo. when Johnstown perished, - and tha wUd beasts that may be near run for the hills, explaining what Jeremiah says, "Behold, he shall go up like a lion from the swelling of Jordan." No river so often changes its mind, for it turns and twists, travelinz two hundred miles to do that which in a straight line might be done in sixty miles. Among banks now low, now high, now on rocks, now of sand, laving the feet of the terebinths and oleanders and acacias and reeds and pis tachios and silver poplars. This river mar ries the Dead Sea to Lake Gallilej, and did ever so rough a groom take the hand of so fair a bride? This is the river which parted to let an army of two million Israelites across. Here the skilled major general of the Assyrian host at the seventh plunge dropped his lep rosy not only by miraculous cure, but sug gesting to all ages that water, and plenty of it, has much to do with the sanitary im provement of the world. Hero is where some theological students of Elisha' s time were cutting trees with which to build a theological seminary, and an axe bead, not sufficiently wedged to the handle, flew off into the river and sank, and the young man deplored not so much the loss of the axe head as the fact that it was not his own. and cried, "Alas I it was boiTowed," ana the prophet threw a stick into the river, and in defiance of the law of gravitation the iron axe head came to the surface and floated like a cork upon the water, and kept float ing until the young man caught it. A mir acle performed to give one an opportunity to return that which was borrowed, and a rebuke in all ages for those who borrow and never return, their bad habit in this respect so established that it would be a miracle it they did return it. Yea, from the bank of this river Eli jiah took a team of fire, showing that the most raging element is servant of the good, and that there is no need that a child of God fear anything, for if the most de structive of all elements was that day fash ioned into a vehicle for a departing saint, nothing can ever hurt you who love and trust the Lord. I am so glad that that chariot of Elijah was not made out of wood or crystal or any thing ordinarily pleasant, but out of fire, and yet he went up without having so much as to fan himself. When stepping from amid the foliage of these oleanders and tamarisks on the banks of the Jordan, he put his foot on the red step of the red equipage, and took the red reins of vapor in his bands, and spurred the galloping steeds toward the wide open gate of heaven, it was a scene forever memorable. So the hottest afflictions of your life may roll you heavenward. So the most burning persecutions, the most fiery troubles, may Decoine uplifting. .Only be sure that when yon pull on the bits of fire you drive up toward God and not down to ward the Dead Sea. When Latimer and Bid ley died at the stake they , went up in a chariot of fire. When my friend P. P. Bliss, the Gospel, singer, was consumed with the rail train than broke through Ashtabula bridge and then took flame, I said, "Another Elijah gone up in a chariot of flrel" But this river is a river of baptisms. Christ was here baptized and John baptized many thousands. Whether on tbese occa sions the candidate for baptism and the of ficer of religion wont into this river, and then while both were standing the water was dipped in the hand of one and sprinkled upon the forehead of the other, or whether the entire form of the one baptized disappeared for a moment beneath the surface of the flood, I do not now declare. While I candot think without deep emotion of the fact that my parents held me in infancy to the bap tismal font in the old meeting house at Sotn erville and assumed vows on my behalf, I must tell you now of another mode of bap tism observed in the river Jordan on that afternoon in last December, the particulars of which I now for the first time relate. It was a scene of unimaginable solemnity. A comrade in our Holy Land journey rode up by my side that day and told me that a young man who is now studying for the Gospel mmistry would like to be baptized by me in the river Jordan. I got all the facts I could concerning his earnestness and faith, and through personal examination made my self confident he was a worthy candidate. There were among our Arab attendants two robes not unlike those used for American baptistries, and thess were obtained. As we were to have a large group of different nationalities present I dictated to my daughter' a few verses and had copies enough made to allow all to sing. Our dragoman had a man familiar with the river wade through and across to show the deptn and the swiftness of the stream and the most appropriate place for the ceremony. Then I read from the Bible the accounts of baptisms in that sacred stream, and implored the presence of the Christ on whose head the dove descended at the Jordan. Then as the candidate and myself stepped into the waters the people on tha banks sang in full and resounding voice: On Jordon's stormy banks I stand And esat a wishful eye To Caaua'i fair and hsppy land. Where my poweafions lie. Oh, the transporting, rapturous scene Tnat rle to my sight: Sweet field arrayed in living green , And rivers of delight. By this time we bad reacaed the middle of the river. As the candidate sank under the floods and rose a-rain under a baptism in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, there rushed through our souls a tide of holy emotion such as we shall not probably feel again until we step into the Jordan that divides earth from heaven. V ill those waters be deep? Will those tides be strong? No matter if Jesus steps in with us. Friends on this shore to help us off. Friends on the other shore to see us land. See I They are coming down the hills on the other side to S-eet us. flow well we know their step! ow easily we distinguish their voices I From bank to bank we had them with tears aud they hail us with palm branches. They say to us, "Is toat you, father?" "Is that you mother' and we answer bv asking. "Is that ou, my darliagr' 1 low near they seem, ana o w naiTow tno stream mat uiv luea us i CorM wo ba; stand, where Moses stood Arid vievr the inndscoe o"er, , K? J 'Man's ttL'-"1 i i!'t Death's cold fiOod, i. i frtM u i - i ;ds shore. Tom WoolfolkPays the Death Penalty at Perry, Ga. Ilia Horrible Crime-Hatred of Hie Step mother and Avarice Alleged the Motive Hie Trial. Thomns G. Woolfolk was hanged at Perry, .Ga., for murdering nine persons, all members of his father's family, on August 10, 1837 The doomed man slept well from two o'clock until four. He got up at eight, and had a interview with a party of newspaper men with whom he convered for half an hour, laughing and exchanging jokes. About one o'clock he Mas conveyed, undei the eseort ol the local military, to the gallows which had been built in a little valley in the outskirts of the town. Seven or eight thou sand people swarmed the hillsides around to wjitch the execution. On the gallows Wool folk was cool and composed. After the ministers had prayed, he himself prayed fervently, declaring his innocence in his invocation. A written statement, signed by Woolfolk, was read, in which he gave it as his dying declaration that he was innocent of the crime for which he was being executed. At 1.31 the drop fell. The fall failed to break his neck, and death resulted from strangulation, his pulse continuing to beat for eleven minutes alter the fall. Twenty-five minutes later the body was cut down. The victims of the awful butchery were: Capt. R chard F. Woolfolk. Sr.; his wife, Mrs. Mattie Woolfolk; their children, Richard Jr., aged 20; Su?an Pearl, awed 17; Annie, aeed lO; Rosebud, aged 7; Charlie, aged 5; Mattie, aged 8 months, and Mrs. Temple Vestr aged 84. The first alarm of the tragedy came from Tom Woolfolk, the only survivor of the mas-sacre. Tom went to the house of a negro tenant named Green Socket, not far from the Woolfolk house, about daybreak, and called to him that someone had killed his father. Hurried investigations revealed that the crime had not been exaggerated. Nine dead bodies were lying in horrid contusion in the house, everyone of them brained with an ordi nary wood-axe that had evidently been se cured lrom the yard. In the room occupied by the parents were six bloody corpses. The bodies of Captain Woolfolk, his wife, their infant and Miss Pearl Woolfolk lay on the bed in thecorner, the father and mother and babe having been struck on the head with the murderous axe apparently before they awak ened, while the eldest daughter's body had been cast upon the bed after death. On the floor were the lifeless bodies of Richard Wool folk and his younger brother, Charlie, welter ing in pools of blood. Death had been in flicted in each case by blows with the butt of an axe. Three other bodies lay stiff in death in the girls' room on the o'her side of the corridor. The corpse of Mrs. West and of Rosebud, the 7-year-old daughter, reposed where they had slept side by side in one of the two beds in the room. The body of 10-year-old Annie Wool folk lay near the window, as if she had been warned of the approach of the murderer and had sought to escape by jumping out of the window. Suspicion quickly fell upon Tom as the murderer, and he was taken in custody. In vestigation showed that the only tracks about the house, traced in blood from the blood bestrewn floor, were those of Woolfolk. Tom admitted they were his, but said he made them when he went into the bloody room alone after the murder. He was searched, and on one leg about the knee was found the imprint of a bloody hand. He had on a shirt much too large for him when searched, and after ward his own shirt was found in the well, blood-st:iined andclotted with human brains. The motive for the crime was found in Tom Wool folk's enmity for his stepmother and his desire to have undisputed possession of his lather's property. Woolfolk was charged with murder of the nine members of his father's household by the coroner's jury, and in December, 1887, he was brought to trial in Macon before JudgeGustin, of the .Bibb County Superior Court. The theory of the defense was that a crazy negro of the neighborhood had committed the crime, but the theory failed, and was practically abandoned before the trial ended. The jury found Woolfolk guilty after being out but a few minutes, and he was sentenced to death. The Supreme Court granted a new trial, how ever, and in March, 1889, he was .tried at Perry, Houston county, a change of venue having been granted because a jury could not be secured in Bibb. Again Woolfolk was convicted. Another appeal was taken, but the Supreme Court sustained the court below, and ho was finally sentenced to be hanged at Perry. STRANGE RAILROAD ACCIDENT, How Two Men Ixt Their Uvea on the Rati.. A strange and fatal accident occurred neat Beech Tree, a few miles from Dubois, Pa., by which Engineer Casey and Brakeman Laird were killed and Conductor Crawford and Fireman Fitzpatriek badly injured. At 3 o'clock A. M. train 50, with an extra pusher, broke in two on the up-grade. The accident was not known to the engineer of the pusher, who shoved the rear section over the summit and sent it down the other side to run along by gravity. Meanwhile Engineer Casey had run ahead, side-tracked the first section, and ran back to get the rear end. The two met with a crash in a deep curve, the tender was thrust through the cab, pinion ing Casey to bis seat and injuring him so that he died to-night. Brakeman Laird was in stantly killed, being crushed between the cars, while the others were not seriously damaged. MARKETS. Baltimore Flour City Mills, extra.$5.20 $5.37. Wheat Southern Fultz, 101i(q)102 Corn Southern White, 6061c, Yellow, 69tilc. Oats Southern and Pennsylvania 48(o50ic Rye Maryland and Pennsyl vania 75.(4 7(k. Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania 11.6U$12.00. Straw Wheat, 7JO$80. Butter Eastern Creamery, 23gj24c, near-by receipts 1314c Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream, 10(llc, Western, 89.lc. Eggs 21(a) 22c. Tobacco, Leaf Interior, lfw$lioO, Goc. Common, 4$5.00, Middiing, 6$8.00, Good to fine red, 9(111.00. Fancy 12$13.00. New York Flour Southern Good to choice extra, 4.25I5.85. Wheat No. 1 White 1.00 1.08c Rye-State 68 60c Corn-Southern Yellow. 5di(d8Jc, Oats White. State 4550c. Butter State, 12($lta. Cheese State, 7(3yC. Ji-ggs a324c. Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania fancy, 425($$M. f Wheat, Pennsylvania and Southern Red,1.031.03Jc. Rye- Pennsyl va nia,6657c. Corn Southern Yellow, 58J 59o. Oats 544o5c. Butter State, 232tfe, Cheese New York Factory, 10 101c. Eggs State, 22&21e. CATTLE. , .. ' Baltimore Beef 4.25(S$4. 45. Sheep 3.5tVi;$5.00. Hol's 5.00($.00. Nkw York liorf i.25('a7.00. , Sheep 4.(K'(.8.40. Hoes 4.2iW4.W. East Libkkty r;.cf 4.4');' ; ; 1.70. Sheep r . 2 r it.. . . ? - V -. i p.UV V sW.iI llVfcS T -- '' DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES. The public library building in New Haven, Coun., was struck by lightning, and a portion of the roof was torn off. Thb public schools in Oxford, Blooming Gvove, and other villages in Orange county, New York, have been closed because of dij ii theria. There was a heaw rain storm, accom panied by lightning, in Waterburr, Conn. Mucn diroage was done ia Water bury an 1 surrounding towns. - . ' A passexgeb train on the Keokuk ar.J Western Railway struck a wagon, near Cen terville, Iowa. The occupants, Isaac Bremer, wife aud eon, were killed. An express train on the Chesapeake aM Ohii. Railroad rau into a roek that had fall en on the track, near llinton, W. Va, Engineer Goodale was badly injured. Abijah Tisdeix, bir 14-year-old son George, and a man, are believed to have been drowned while shooting coots near Hanover, Mass. Their dory went ashore empty. One of the fulminate departments of the 'Union Metallic Cartridge Company at Brid port, Conn, blew up. .George Baker, aged wj years, employed in the place, was killed. A collision occurred -between a frei.?'. and a construction trsin on the Elgin Eastern Railroad, near Joliet,IlL Thomni Lawler was killed, and eight others were ia-jured- Two children of Nicholas Brandt aged 2 and 3 year, upset the stove at their homo in Dubuque, Iowa, while playing. They wtr so badiy scalded by hot water that they died in a short time. Felix Yopng was killed. James Turner probably fatally injured and several others badly bruised, by the fall of a deriick on a new building in Chicago. They were layic?; bricks on the third floor. . Whew the Chicago and Eastern Illinois passenger train was near Watseka, Iud.. a rail broke, throwing two of the' passenger coaches on their sides. Several ot the pas sengers were badly bruised, and the conduc tor wus dangerously hurt George Rhikefield, aged 9 years, died nt "Stony Lonesome," near We6t Point, N. Y., of a gun shot wound in the head. Before ex piring the boy said he had been shot by h;a sister Ida, aged 16 years. Whether the shoot ing was accidental or intentional is not known. Captain Nicholas J. Skottowe, of the Brit ish army, and bis wife, fell from the railroad bridge to the rocks, 20 feet below, at Tins Dalles, Oregon. Both were dangeronsly in jured, Skottowe, who is about 70 years ot age, perhaps fatally. . . Captain John O'Grady, a mysterious sort sf a character, perished in a fire in a Fron t itreet tenement, in Brooklyn, N, Y. - He was au officer in the Fenian invasion of Canada, and was afterwards an officer in the regular irray of the United States. Tue boiler of a shifting engine, at E!ia Furnace, near Pittsburg, exploded, killing engineer John Fiatleyand fireman Thomas McGufi'. Pieces of the flying boiler struck and injured Joseph Ferrin and John Clark, employes at the furnace. The cause of the rxplosion is not known. A BURGLARS REVENGE. lie Attempt the Life of a Girl Who Had Testified Agalust Him. An exciting incident took place on Wab&sh Avenue, Chicago, in which the chief partici pants were James Prenell, a noted thief, alias "Shanty," and Miss Alice Oakes, who resides with her parents at No. 525 on that thorough fare. . A year ago Miss Oakes, who is a handsomo girl of about 17, was a witness against Prenyl on a charge of burglary, and upon her testi mony he was given a year in the penite itiftry. As he was being led away to the jail ot the time he threatened to "get even" with her. Being released from his confinement a few days ago, he started out to carry, hij threats iuto execution. He watched the resi dence of the girl, and ascertaining that she was not at home, secreted himself in the neighborhood and awaited her return, llo did not have long to wait, and as Miss Oukf s turned the corner Prenell darted out of his place of concealment brandishing a Jong knife. . The terrifiedjgirl ran screaming down Ws bash Avenue, closely pursued by ber would be murderer. He would undoubtedly have succeeded in his vengeful design Lut for two oflicer , who hearing Miss Oakes' screams, gave chase to Prenell and captured hi in. A BAD GANG BROKEN UP. The Career of Kotorloae Criminals Checked by the Leader's Doath. The killing of the noted negro desparado, Redding, in Opelika.Ga., winds up the history of one of the worst criminal gangs in the South. Bob Redding was born in GeoriA thirty-five years ago, and in 18S7 began, his criminal career in Griffin. He had a brother, Wiley, a cousin, Emory, and an aunt, Man ly Dubree, the four constituting the Redding gang. They fired upon a party of ladies and gentlemen during a dance in Griffin, wound ing several. Coming to Atlanta, a Jong career of murder and burglary .was: piled up, for which they skillfully escaped punishment fur years. They stole, in one way And another, over $20,000. - When finally arrested Bob was sentenced to twenty and Emery and Mandy to'fitreen years each. Bob exposed a plan to free t lie prisoners, for which he was pardoned, lie then organized a new gang, the members of which have since been given long terms it the penitentiary. Wiley escaped to Arknn . sas, where he still is. Three months ago lie' was arrested in Griflin iuto '(800 in gold his person. He escaped and was not . heard of nntil killed Sunday. PLUNDERED BY TRAIN ROBBERS Fifteen Hundred Dollars Taken From Pmirnger oa the Bant Fe Hoai. , As the south bound train on the Santa I'e road pulled out of Socorro, " Jf, M, three Ken were seen to step on board. After the t- '5 had passed San Antonio these stranger en tered the Pullman sleepers and locked r, door, then drew their guns on the porter f : i conductor and relieved them of their snr; " ,i cash. They then introduced themsclv-i th- passengers," going through most of tl 1, and making quite a haul. They jump? It: -, the train on the Basque de Apache graut, ing to the hills. It's estimated that they p t $1,500. " The thing was done so neatly and qui .' that very few oa the train knew w !,..t J. happened. The robbers were drestted r boys, whose caps and mulflcrs were evui '. intended to discuise them as much e ; - sihle. The descriptions of them, ss pive.i i the train men. tallies with the rprr..' " ' " tliree very hiird characters w'io htn hanirinc around for several ' . ' ! . t c.v of the r-ad have cZ.rt- ' re';1. ' 41.000 for t..r cirttt