Pl'nT.ISITED DT liOANOKBlI'uiltianiNG (3(1, - C, V. w" Ausbow, Bcsihesb Majjageu. Fort god. jj-oit' country, and for truth, VOL. II. NO. 43. PLYMOUTH, N. 0., FRIDAY, MARCH-6, 1801. V Vs f 11 ly, I.: TAJ.MAGE: , The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's. Sun. nblecti The Gambling Evil." v .,). . . , Text "Let My people go tJiat they may terre Me; for I will at this time send all My Xlaaues.nEx. ix., 13, 14. . ' Last winter, In the museum at Cairo. . Mgjpt, I saw the mummy or. embalmed ; body of Pharaoh, the oppressor of the an cient Israelites. Visible are the very teeth that " he gnashed .' against the Israelitish' ' rickmakerB,ftB tockets of the- merciless s eyes with Which he" looked upon the overbur dened people of God, the hair that floated in the breeze off the Red Sea, the very lips with which he commanded thorn .to make bricks '"without straw . Thousands i :,of years , , after, . . when t the vfrappiugsi jot the i mummy were unroUtid; ldv Pharaoh lifted vphis arm as if in imploration, but his skinny bones cannot again clutch his shat tered scepter. It was to .compel that tyrant to let the oppressed go free that the memora : We tea plagues were sent; Sailing the Nile-1' and .walking amid the ruins" of Egyptian cities, I saw no remains of those jplagues that smote the water or the air. None of the frogs croaked In the one, none of the lo custs Bounded their rattle in tho other, and the cattle bore no sign of the murrain, and . through the starry nights hovering about the pyramids no destroying angel swept his wing. But there are ten plagues still sting ing and befouling and cursing our cities, and like angels of wrath smiting 4notv only the first bora but the last born; . ( ,': .' i - Brooklyn, '' New York and Jersey City, though called three, are practically one. The bridge already fastening two of thenn together will be followed by other bridges . and by tunnels from both New Jersey and Long Island shores, until what is true now . will, as the years go by, become more .em phatically true. - The average conditioijt of public morals in this cluster of cities as -Rood if not better than in any'other partof ' the world. Pride of city is natural to men ia all times, If they live or have lived la" a metropolis noted for' dignity or prowess. Cresar boasted of his native Pome, Lycurgus of .Sparta, Virgil of Andes, Demosthenes of Athens, Archimedes of Syracuse, and Paul -of Tarsus. I should 6uspect,taan of .base' . heartedness who carried about with him no feeling of complacency in regard to the . - place of bis residence; who gloried not In its arts or arms or behavior.; who looked..wita . . no exultation upon its evidences of pros perity, its artistic embellishments and scien tific attainments. . v - I have noticed that mn never like a placs where they have-not behaved well... Men. who havo free rides in prison vans never ' likes itho city that furnishes the vehicle. When I sea in history Argos, Rhodes;, Smyr na, Chios, Colophon and several Other-cities claiming Homer. I conclude that Homer be- .-' Laved well. Let us . not warj Against this i , pride of city, nor expect to build upoursalves by pulling others down. Let Boston have1 its commons, its Faneuil Hall and its magni- :' flcent scientific and educational institutions. Let Philadelphia tajk about its mint,, and In dependence HalL and (Jivard CoUtege,,and its ; old families, as virtuous as venerable When, 1 find a man living in-on a of those places who ' has nothing to say in avoKiOf them, I feel like asking him, "What mean thing did you , do tbat you do not like your native city?" New York is a goodly city, and when I say that I mean the region between Spuyton Duyvil Creek and Jamaica in one direction and Newark flats in the other direction. That which tends to elevate a part elevates slL That which blasts part blasts all.. Sin ' is a giant, and.be comes tO;tho Ifudspn or Connecticut, ftiver'ahd p'fisses'it 4s easily asy we itepr across m figure in the carpet. The" blessing of God is an angel, and when it stretches out its two wings one of. them hovers over that and the other ' over this. ' In infancy the great jnetroiolia was laid down by the bank's of the Hudson. Its in fancy was as feeble as that of Moses sleep ing in the bulrushes ,by the Nile; and, like Miriam, there our fathers stood and watched it. The royal spirit of American commerce came down to the water to bathe, and there.' the found it. She took it in her arms, and the child crew and waxed strong, and the '. shiDS of for eien lands' brought cokl "and , spices to its feet, and stretching itself-.up,y into tne proportions oi a metropolis, it nas looked up to the mountains and off upon.the sea the mfghtfest df the energies of Ameri can civilization, a i The character -of the : founder of a city will be eeou for many years in its inhabitants. Romulus impressed bis,, life upon Rome. .The Pilgrims-relaxed not , their hold upon the cities of New England' William Penn has left Philadelphia an in heritance of integrity and fair dealing,, and on any day in that fcityryou may see in the manners, customs and principles of its people bis tastes, his coat, his hat, his wife's bonnet and his plain meeting house. The Holland ers still wield an influence over New York. . Grand old New York!; What southern, thoroughfare was ever smitten )y pestilence, ' when our physjcians did hot throw them ' selves upon the sacrifice I What distant land has cried out in the agony of famine, and our ships have not put out with breadstuff t What street o Damascus or Beyrouth or Madras that has not heard the step of 'our . fnissionariesi- What struggle for national - life in which our citizens have not poured their blood into the trenches! What gallery of exquisite art in which: our painters have not hung their pictures 1 What department ; of literature or science to which our scholars . have not contributed! I neeS not speak of pur public schools, wherd tbo children ofthe? cordwainer and milkman and giassblower Hand by the side of the fl&ttercd sons ', of merchant princes; or of the Insane' asylums on ail these islands where the who went cutting themselves, among the 1 tombs, now ' sit, clothed and in thair right minds; or of the Magdmleu ssymm3, where the lost one of the street comes to bathe the Saviours ' feet with her tears, end wipe them with th hairs of her headconfiding in the pardon o Him who said: "Let him who is without m cast tho first stone at her." il neeJ dob ppeakof the institutions for the bljnd, tVj lame, the deaf and toe dumb, for the incw . ablet, the widow, tne orphan, and the out cast; or of the thousand armed ; machinery ', '. that ends streaming down from the reser-. voirs tha clear, bright, sparkling, God given ' water that rushes through our aqueducts, ; end dashes out of the hydrants, and , tosses i up in our fountains, and hisses in our steam '. engines, and4howws out the conflagration, and sprinkles fronMe baptismal font of our,, churches; find with silver note, and golden sparkle, and crystalline" chime, says to hun dreds of thous-ands of our population, in the authentic words- of ilim who said: "I will; : All this I pvonri.iein oxening this course of sermons orvthe tn wluguea of these thres cities, lest somestuuid roan migi.it siy i am deorecating the plff of my residence. I spck to you to-rt,r concerning the plague of rambling.- Every man au I woman m thi-liuuse ought to be interested ia this tht-iiio. -, pnrio yean n.T, when an association for w tiupi.resmon f"u;ibiii'.-; i j 'rfi!ini"e i, ' n,i -'-..t, of tli!' ' '-' i!i l-j a pr'iii. inenCC'itin nndsSrt.l I' tin ta patroniy.-i .the" l I,...' ' ' If est In such an organization. , I am in no wise affected by that evil." . At that very time his son, who was his partner in business, was one of the heaviest players in Hearne's fa mous gambling establishment. Another re fused his patronage on, tha same ground, not knowing that hig first bookkeopar, though re ceivlng a salary of only a thousand dollars, was losing from fifty to one hundred dollars per night. The president of a railroad com pany refused to patronize the institution, .saying, "That society is good for the defense of merchants, but the railroad people are not injured by this evil;" not knowing that, at that very time, two of his conductors were spending three nights of each week at faro tables in New York. Dirontly or indirectly, this evil strikes at the whole world. Oambling is the risking of something more or less valuable In the hope of winning more than you hazard. The instrument of gaming inay differ but the principle is the same. The shuffling and dealing cards, however lull of temptation, is not gambling, unless stakes are put up; while, on the other hand, gam bling may be,, carriad on without cards or dice, or .billiai'ds brf a ten pin alley. The man, who bets on horses, on elections, on bst-ties---tbe man wno deals in "fancy" stocks, or conducts a business which hazards extra capital, or goes into transactions without foundation, but dependent upon what men call "luck," is a gambler. W hatover you ex pect to get from your neighbor " without of fering an equivalent in money or time or skill is either the product of theft or gaming. Lottery tickets and lottery policies come into the same category. Fairs for the founding of hospitals, schools and churches, conducted on the raffling system, come under the same denomination. Do not, therefore, associata gambling necessarily with any instrument, or game, or time, or place, or think the prin ciple depends upon w nether you play for a glass of wine' or one, hundred shares of rail road stock. Whether youptroniz? "auction pools." "French mutuals" or "book-making," whether you employ faro or billiards, rondo andkeno, sards or bagatelle, the very idea of the. thing is dishonest, for it professes to be stow upon you a good for which you give no 'equivalent. It is estimated that every day In Chris tendon eighty million dollars pass from hand to hand through gambling practices, and every year in Christendom one hun dred and twenty-three billion one hundred million dollars change hands in that way. There are in this cluster of cities about eisht hundred, confessed gambling estab Isshments; There are about three thousand five', hundred professional gamblers. Out of the eight hundred gambling establish ments how many of Hhem do you suppose firof ess to be honest! Ten, These ten pro ess to be honest because they are merely the ante-chamber to the seven hundred and ninety 'SliaJ; are acknowledged fraud ulent. There fcre first class gambling estab lishments. Yoii'go up the marble stairs. You ring the bett. The livariei servant in troduces you.CThe walls are lavender tinted. The mantels are of Vermont marble. The Bictures are' -"Jeohthah's Daughter" and rore's VDantiYaiia. Virgil's Frozen Region of HeU"tfTOOEfc appropriate selection, this jast, for' the tlace. Thera ia the roulette tablet the finest, the costliest, most exquisita piece of f urnitur 3 in the United S tates. There & the banqueting room, where, free, of charge to the guests, you may find the plate and viand8 and wines and cigars soptuous ,b43 tfdhd parallel; - Then you come to the seconflss' gam bling establishmrt. To it you are intro "duced by a card through some "roper-in." Having entered, you must either gamble or fight. Sanded cards, dice loaded with quick silver, poor drinks, will soon help you to get rid of all your money to a tune in short meter with staccato passages. You wanted to see. You saw. The low villains of that place watch you as you come in. Doe3 not the panther, squat in the grass, know a calf when he sees it? Wranirle not for your riehts In that plaoe, or your body wi!ti qe thrown bloody into cne streec, or aeaa into me iwtso River. You go along a little further and find the policy establishment. In that place you bet on numbers. Betting on two numbers is called a'Baddle," betting oh three numbers is called a 'gig," betting bn four numbers is called a "horse," and there are thousands of our young men leaping into that "saddle" and mounting the "gig," .and .behind - s that "horse" riding to perdition. There is always bne kind of sign on the - dpor -'Exchange," a most appropriate title for the door, for there, in that rooin, a man exchanges health, peace and heaven for loss of health, loss of nqme, loss of family, loss of immortal soul. Exchange sure enough and infinite enough, . Men wishing to gamble will find places Just suited to . their capacity, not only in the underground oyster1 cellar, or at tha table 'ba'ct of the curtain, covered with greasy cards, or in the steamboat smoking cabin,, where the bloated wretch with rings in his ears Instead (0f his nose, deals the pact, and winks in the unsuspecting traveler providing free drinks all around but in gilded parlors and amid gorgeous surround ings. ' ' ' ' "' -' Again,' this sin works ruin by killing indus try. .A man used to reaping scores or hun dreds or thousands of dollars from the gaming table will not be content with slow work. He wUlay:-'V,Wlat.is.the use of trying to make these fifty dollars in my store when! can, get five times that in.-half an hour down at Silly's?1" ', You never knew - a confirmed gambler who was lnaustrious. ine men given to this viee spand their thus, not ac tively engaged in. the ,game, in idleness or 4&taxic4tion or sleep, or in corrupting new Victims This sin has dulled the carpenter's saw and cut the band of the factory wheel, sunk the cargo, broken the teeth of the farmer's harrow and ssiit a strangi light ning to shatter the battery of the philoso pher, r The very first idea in gaming is at war with all ihe industries of society. ; Thi crime is getting its lever under many a mercantile housa iu our great cities, ana before long down will come the great estab lishment, crushing reputation, home, com fort and immortal souls. How it diverts and sinks capital may be inferred from some authentic statement before us. The ten gam ing" houses that once were authorized in Paris passed through banks, yearly;' three hundred and twenty-five millions of francs. - Where does all the money come from4 The whole jworld is robbe i ! What is most sad, there are no consolations for the loss and Buffering entailed by gaming. If men fail in lawful business, Uod pities and society commiser ates; but where in the Bible or in society is there any consolation for thegamblefrf From what tree of the forest oozes thare a balm that can soothe the gamester's heart In that bottle where (lod keeps the tears of His chil dren are there any tears of the gam bier? Do the winds that come to kiss the faded cheek of sickness, and to cool , the heated brow of the laborer, whisper hope and cheer to the emaciated victim of the game of hazard? When an honest man is in trouble he has nympathv. . "Poor fellow !" they say. But do gamblers come to weep at the agonies of the gambler? ' In Northumberland was one of the finest estates in-England. Mr. Porter owned it, and in a year gambled it all away. Having lost the last, acre of the estate, he came down from the saloon and got into nis car riage; went back, put up his horses and car riage and town house and played. He threw and lost. He started 1 home, and in a side alley met a friend from whom he borrowed t"n guineT?; v ntback to tn saloon an t - -: r-j'a :riv-' ' ! hid w. s r -fy i1 - J Mr. Porter? Who nspled htm on the loss of his estate? ' What gambler subscribed to put a stone over the poor man's grave? , Not onel ... - ' " . . .. , : Futhermore, this sin Is the source of an counts! dishonesties. The game of hazard . itseif is often a game of cheat. How many tricks and deceptions ,fn the dealing of the cards! The opponent's hand is ofttimes found out by fraud. Cards are marked. so that they may be designated from the back. Expert gamesters have their accomplices, and one wink may decide thegama. The dice have been found loaded with ptatina, so that "doublets" come up every time. These dice are introduced by the gamblers, unobserved by honest men who have come into play; and, this accounts for the fact that ninety-nine out of a hundred who gamble, however wealthy they began, at the end are found to be poor, miserable, ragged wretches, that would not now be allowed to sit on the door step of the house that they once owned. In a gambling house in San Francisco a young man having just come from the mines de- posited a large sum upon the ace, and won twenty-two tnousand dollar's. .- But the tide turns. Intense excitement comes upon -the countenances of all. Slowly the cards went forth. Every eye is fixed. Not a sound is. heard until the ace is revealed favorable to the bank. There are shouts of "Foul!" 'FdulF butthe keepers of the table produce their pistols, and the uproar is silenced and the bank nas won ninety-five thousand dollars. Do you call this a game of chance? There is ' no chance about ib , But these dishonesties in carrying on of the game are nothing when compared with the frauds whiichiaro committed in order to got money to go on with the nefarious work. Gambling with its greedy hand has snatched away the widow's mite and the portion of the orphans; has sold the daughter's virtue to get the means to continue the game; has written the counterfeit signature, emptied the banker's money vault and wielded the assausin's dagger. There is no depth of 'mean ness to which it will not. stoop. There is no cruelty at which it is appalled. There is no warning of God that it will not dare. Merci less, unappeasable, fiercer and wilder it blinds,, it hardens, it rends, it blasts, it; crushes, it damns. It has peopled our pris ons and lunatic asylums. How many rail road agents and cashiers and trustees of . funds it has driven to dis grace, -incarceration ' and ruicide! Wit ness years ago a cashier of a railroad who, stole one hundred and three thousand dol lars to carry on his gaming practices. WJs nesa forty thousand dollars stolen from a Brooklyn bank within the memory, of many of you, and the one hundred and eighty thousand dollars taken from a Wall street insurance company for the same purpose! These are. only illustrations on a large scale of the robberies every day committed for tha purpose of carrying out the designs of gamblers. Hundreds of thousands of dol lars every year leak wit ' without observa tion from the - merchant's till into the gambling bell. A man in London keeping one of these gambling houses boasted that he had ruined a nobleman a day; but if all the saloons of this land were to speak out they might utter a more infamous boast, for they have destroyed a thousand nobla men a year. . ( . , Notice also the effect of tha crime upon domestic happiness. It has sent its rnthloss plowshare through hundreds of families, un til the wife sat in racs, and; the daughters were disgraced, and the sons grew up to ths same infamous practices' or took a short cut to destruction across the murderer's scaffold. Home has lost all charms for the gambler. How tame are the children's caresses and a wife's devotion to the gambler! How drearily the fire burr.g on the domestic hearth! There must be louder laughter, and something- to win and something to lose: an excitement to drive the heart faster and .fillip, , the blood and fire the imagination. No home, however bright, can keep back the gamester. The sweet call of love bounds back from bis iron soul, and all the endearments are consumed in the flames of his passion. The family Bible will go after all other treasures are lost, and if his crown in heaven were 1 into bis -hand he would cry : "Here goes one more -, game, my boys! On" this bne throw I stake my crown in heaven." A young man iu London, on coming, of ags, received a fortune of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, and, through gam bling, in three years was thrown on his mother for support An only son went to a southern city; he was rich, intellectual and elegant in manners. His parents gave him on liis departure from home their last bless ing. The sharpers got hold of him. They flattered him. They lured him to the gam ing table, and let nim win almost every time for a good while, and' patted him on the back and said, "First rat player." Butful--ly in their grasp they fleeced him, and his thirty thousand dollars were lost. , Last of all he put up his watch and lost that. Then' he began to think of his home and his old father atad mother, and wrote thus; . - "My Beloved Parents You will doubtless feel a momentary joy at the reception of this lettsr from the child of your bosom, on whom you have lavished all the favors of your declining years...-. But should a feeling . of joy for a moment spring up in your hearts when you should have received this from me, cnerish it, not, I have fallen deep--; never to rise? Those gray ' hairs that I should have nonbred and protected I shall bring down with sorrow to the grave. I will not curse my destroyer, but oh I may God avenge the wrongs and impositions practised n the unwary in a ay that shall best Eise him. This, my dear parents, is the letter you wih ever receive from mo. I humbly pray your forgiveness. It is my dying prayer. . Long before yon have re ceived this letter from me the cold grave will have closed upon me forever. Life to me is insupportable. I cannot, nay, I will not, suffer the shame of. bavins ruin3d you. Forget and forgive is the dying prayer of your unfortunate son." The old father came to the postofSce, got the letter and fell to the floor. They thought ho was dead at first; hut they brushed back the white hair from his brow and fanned him. He hod only fainted. I wish he had been dead, for what is life worth to a father after bis son is destroyed? When things go wrong at a gaming table they shout: "Foull Foul !" Over all the gaming tables of the world I cry out: "Foull foul! Infinitely foul." . ShaU I sketch the history of the gambler? Lured by bad company ,bo- finds his way into a place where honest. men ought never to go. Ha sits down to his first game, but' nly for pastime and the desire of being, thought sociable. The players deal ontj the cards. They uaaonsciously'play into Satan's bands, who takes all the tricks and both the players' souls for trumps he being a sharper at any game. 1 A alight stake is put up just to add interest to the play. Game after game is played. Larger stakes and still larger. They hegin to move nervously on their chair Their brows lower and eyes flash, until now thev who win and they who lose, fired alike with passion, sis with set jaws, and compressed lips, and clinched fists, and eyes like fire balls that seem starting from their sockets, to see the final turn be fore it conies; if losing, pale with envy and tremulous with unuttored oaths cast back red hot upon the heart or, winning, with, hystorio laugh "Ha, ha! I have it! I have it."' - .f. ' A few years have pusl aDd ho iw only the wm-u a ::ian. N - '. himsulf nt t i e namA i -,ivth' J"'1 I I'urd, h" i't-h the Ji-M- f tis wii'i-, .. 1 tnaiii'rr'.'c rinj Tha game is lost, and staggering back in ex haustion ha dreams. The bright hours of the past mock his agony, and in his dreams fiends with eyes of fire and tongue of flame circle about nim with joined hands to dance undsing their orgies with hellish cboruf, chanting "Hail ! brother !" kissing his clammy forehead until their loathsome locks, flowing with serpents, crawl into his bosom and sink their sharp fangs and suck up his life's blood, and coiling around his heart pinch it with chills and shudders unutterable. Take warning ( You are no stronger than tens of thousands who have by this practice been overthrown ; No young man in our cities can escape being tempted. Beware of the first - beginnings! This road is a down grade, and every instant increases the mo mentum. Launch not upon this treacherous sea. Split hulks strew the beach. Everlast ing storms howl up and down, tossing un wary crafts Into the Hellgate.. I speak oa what I have seen with my own eyes. I hav looked off into the abyss, and I have seen the foaming, and the hissing, and the whirl ing of the horrid deep in which the mangled victims writhed, one upon another, and struggled, strangled, blasphemed and died the death stare of eternal despair upon their countenances as. the water gurgled over them. To a gambler's deathbed there comes no hope,; He will probably die alone. His for mer associates come .not nigh his dwollin". When the hour comes his miserable soul w3i go out of a miserable lifo into a miserable eternity. As his poor remains pass the bouse where he was ruined, old companions may lookout a moment and say "There goes the old carcass dead at last," but they will not get up from the table. . Let him down now into his grave. Plant no tree to cast its shade there, for the long, deep, eternal gloom that settles there is shadow enough., , Plant no ' "forget-me-not" or eglantines around the' : spot, for flowers were , not made to grow on sucn a oiasiea neatn. . visit,t.not in the sun shine, for that would be mockery, but in the dismal night, when no stars are out and tha spirits of darkness coma down hors3d on the wind, then visit the grave of tho gambler I v SHE STRUCK THE ROCKS. Eighteen Men' Lost In the Wreck of Big Ship-Off California. The ship. Elizabeth, of New York, which went ashore on the rocks nt North Head Cali lornia, had twenty-six men. on board the captain, two mates, the -cook and sixteen snilors; also, the captain's, wife and two chil dren. Three sailors, the -captain's wife and children got oft in a small boat. TLe boat capsized, uud the ocpupants were rescued by. The captain aud seventeen sailors were drowned. The'detsils of the wreck are. hard la obtain, as the poin't where the ship went on the rocks is inat uessiblo by sea, and, to reach it , by land, a climb of several miles over the mountains is necessary. The place is called Tennessee Cove, and is four miles north of the entrance to the harbor, on the Marine county shore. The story of the wreek', as told by oue of the survivors,- is ns follows: The vessel was sighted at port and Captain Colcord decided to sail in. The wind was blowing turious gale from the southwest, and finally, the tug 'Monarch; came- to the Elizabeth's! assistance. The men sav assistance was re fused because of the exorbitant charges askedj uy the tug. lhe tug Alert then made 4ast t the Elizabeth, but her hawser soon broke and the ship drifted be.'ore the wind toward tha shore. Just as the second hawser was -made fast she struck the roek.. Then Captain. Colcord lowered the boat to take his wife and children off. As the boat struck the water it capsized. r throwing three sailors James Laken, George iinnna ana orant Johnson into the water. They clung to the bottom of the boat and were picked up bythe tug. - The captain's family were then lowered in unother boat and taken to the tuir by the mate-and two seamen. The boat returned -to the ship and its occupants J perished with (he rest. of'.. ilie ship's rrew.J i lie tugs were unable to get "ear the ship, and Jute at night returned jto port leaving the vessel to its firtev Earjy the next morning the tug went to the seene of 'thfe-wreck, and iound nothing was left of the Elizabeth. Tne Elizabeth was a wooden ship built at Newcastle, ;Mainj in-1881J, . and was -of 1,77a tmis.1 She. was owned'. by Ai Hall; of New York, and commanded by Captain Jauies Col cord, and curried a crew of, twenty-six men. SENATOR WILSON DEAD. .The Kmlneiit .Miirylautler Expire Suil ? de'aly til Washington, i ; Senator Ephraim K. Wilspn, of Maryland, died suddenly at the Hamilton House, Wash ington, at 10.10 o'clock, "T..M., of heart failure. Although Senator Wilson had been ailing for' some time, his critical illness" was very sudden, and but few of his colleagues knew of his condition. Mr. Wilson hud had a 6evere attack of t-holcru morbus, but-was much better, and hi:i iilne.-'s wns not regalnded'as at air seriou. He nail another attacfe.'however, which left him .xtremely weak, and was 'seized with heart 1 i-'inble. '" ' - Ir. Hammond. Lincoln and Bussey wera v".i;imoneil, and held a consultation, at which i was decided that he' could not live inore iIi;ih two honrs. , " Senator Wilson ilied nt 10.10 o'clock. He conscious-up to the last Mrs. Wilson .Viis overcome, and had to leave the room '1 fire he died. His death came like sleep. Around the bed were Dr. Hammond, Senators Clray, of Delaware, Jones, of Arkansas, Repre sentatives Stump and Gibson of Maryland. Private Secretary Martin was in an aujouung room. . The Sereeant-at-Arms of the Senate was at once notified, and took charge of the remains. Deputy Sergeanf-at-Arms Reed notified the rcsident and Vice-President. .x Senator Wilson, was born in Snow Hill, ; Maryland,. . December 22, 1821. lie was graduated at "Jefferson College in 1841, 1 Mudied law, was admitted to the bar, and in ' 1847 was1 elected to the Legislature. He tablished hirofielf atSnow lliil and practiced with success' in 4 the Maryland Courts nntil 1868. Inl852'hewa Presidential' elector on the Democratic ticket and four years later he was elected to the National House of Repre sentatives, serving one term. He .was .Imlice of fehe Maryland Circuit Court from 1878 till l8S4,whcn he was' elected United States Senator to succeed James B. Groonie, and took his seat'March 4, 18S5. . liis prcetit icrin of service weuld have expired Xmri-h 3, IMH, but htt war re-'eleeted by the Mary and Legislature at.it session last Winter for the ii-rm ending in 1897. , MRS. E. a Dt'FFT, a young woman about twenty years old, is one of the largest im- ' porters ot and dealers in wild animals in tin. cnuntrv. She is the daughter ot a ftrus''ist, and has a natural business. iikinj! tor t Skvatou Sroos'KK is sa nl t:i have declined nil oiler of tJV'l' ' a vea;' to ni;:Ue Chicamt hi l',"i-ie and bf'.iv.f solicitor 1 'siernl for t!"1 THE NEWS. An ice gorge caused the town of Schenetf tady, N. Y., to be flooded. Fire , at Nash ville, Tenn., causoil a loss of $25,000. Win. Drncimey, a milk dealer at Cambridge, Mass., died of hydrophobia. left jams and over flows were troublesome along the Mohawk Valley. Fire caused u los of $162,000 at Minneapolis. Colonel Chambers McKibbin die I at Cliambersbur, P.i., nge.l ninety-two. Wm. West was hanged at Washington, Pa. -James T. Myers and George Iladley were arrested nt Johnstown, Pa., for passint j counterfeit standard dollars, and Benjamin Reese for having such in his possession. Chicago's -city councils ure considering ordinance to reduce street-car fares to three cents. A cold wave prevails throughout the Sou tli. The first snew ot the seaso:i fell iu Alabama. A northwesterly gale in Jack sonville, Flu., blew fifty-six miles an hour, and did considerable damage. A little danghler ofC. A.PulIing was felon- 1 ioasly assaulted by a nero in Richmond, Va Annie Dickinsou suffers greatly from in. somnia. -The body of JobCooper was found in a swamp near Pittsville, Del. , The floods in South California and Arizona were' more, disastrous than first reported Miles of farm lands were inundated, whole villages swept away and the courses of small rivers changed by the tremendous overflow. There are twenty-fi ve uukuown cases of leprosy in New Orleans, and the City Council has been Asked to provides place for their de tention. The Dcp irtnieiit of .Superintend ence, National E luxation. Asocialioo, iu ses sion in Philadelphia, adopted resolutions de claring for compulsory schoi! laws and the pensioning of teachers after aserviceof thirty ' years. j A miner at Wilkesharre fell one thousand feet and was instantly killed. -Frank Gabel, tax collector of Texas township, Pa, has gone off, leaving a shortageof 122,000. Thomas Hale, the inventor of the turbine water wheel, was killed by a railroad train in Rahway, N.J. P. Doddridge & Co., bank ers of Corpus Christi, Tex., have made an as signment! .The operatives of the Camden Woolen Mills in Camden, N.. J., have stuck. Dennis McCloskey, the Gloucester, Mass. saloon-keeper, has been sent up for five years ti-r attempting to wreck passenger trains. In San Francisco a man broke a pawnbrok er's window, and escaped with $3,500 worth of diamonds. - During a county dance in North Liberty, Ind., Frank Eldred t-hot Al fred Wedel in the back. Chief Engineer George 11. White, U. S. N died in Philade'- phia, Negroes are flocking from Arkansas to Oklahoma. The white rquadron, Admiral Walker com manding, has arrived at Pensacola. Gen eral Robert McAllister, a distinguished volun teer soldier, died at Belvidere, N. J. The nnnnal meeting of the department of super intendence of the National Education Asso ciation was held in Philadelphia, and the sub ject of compulsory education, and other matters relating to public schools, were dis cussed. -Archibald Nichols, aged twenty five years, of New York, a member of the largest cigar mannfactnringfirm of Key West, committed suicide. James lousherty, the insane lover of May Anderson, who shot nnd killed Dr. Lloyd, the physician nt Flotbnsh (N.Y.) Insane Asylum, was sentenced to 6ing Sing State Prison for life. The North River Lumber Company of New York made au-assignment. Ploods in Lower Califor nia are destroying houses and railroad bridges Joseph Haraer, of Chicago, fatally shot his wife, and dangerously wounded Mrs. May IIomer, his mother-in-law. : Oliver Reitly, who was tynciieu by a mob at Sftlid,Col., was the innocent party, he having killed Sullivan to save his own life. An overflow of. the Missouri river carried awny the house containing Frederick Warner, wife, nnd three children. AH were .lost. -Johu Doblcr, a Chicago mail carrier, who has been stealing, has been adjudged insane. Two rivals fought a duel with knives in a village near Chicago. One was fatally hurt. CoL. W. D. Crockett, a descendant of Davy Crockett, died in Waukegan, 1.1. Sampson Heidenheiraer, a leading merchant in Galves ton, Tex., is dead;- The Clatendon, Okla homa and St. Louis Railroad Company was Organized in Clarendon, Mo. The capital stock is one million dollars.- John A. Wil liams, a notorious train robber, was sentenced at Texarkana, Ark., to ninety-nine years' im-prisonment.- Joe Reynolds, familiarly known as "Diamond Joe," died at Prescott Ariz. The body of Prof. Bancroft was found iu a pond near Providence, R. I. -The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has decided that pigeon shooting is not cruelty to animals. Sir Knight Dickerson, upon whose body a foot square of skin was grafted, taken from his brother knights, died at Chicago. Five persons were injured in a smash-up on the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad at Item in gton, Ohio. The Pennsylvania Rail road employees held a conference at Pittsburg to consider the wages question. The soap manufacturers of the Southwestern tates have formed a trust. Five of the men en- tombed in the Jeanesville mine, near Ilazle lou, Pa., have been gotten out alive after being imprisoned in the dark mine for thirteen days. The reception, tendered the Sons and Daughters of the Revolution was a brilliant affair. Mr, Harrison assisted the hostess, Mrs. Cabell. It is proposed to have a grand naval review in 1S93 in New York harbor. The National Miners Convention, at their recent session in Columbus, Ohio, decided to consolidate the general and defense funds and have a ner caDita tax ot 20 cents per mouth. 8U per cent ot which is to be used for defen nive purpose? There U a provision ; also j purpose? There U 1 'h,cn- ??lve?.0 8t.r,lct" I disposition of theiunda tli more riehts in the than heretofore. The the basis 01 ecreeneu coal ana me oiner on me run 01 ine mine, anu wiey win ue ubwmku w I the joint Convention of mvnersaod operators ia April. The as?- -od valuation of New York C!fy property this year ia 1 1. 1'M.fcTJjOtS, m'i ia- STATE OF TRADE. .. A. Decrease in the Volume of Business. One of the Features. Large Shipments of Whtit-Fillurrt the Week In the United fltatea Shew railing OtC The volume of general trade has tended to 4ecrease rather than the reverse during the feek. Telegrams to BracUtreet't from Phils. lelphia, Dulath, Omaha, and Chicago notably ?oint in that direction. Mild weathse and '' jisposition on the part of jobbers to discrlmi jate in the matter of credits re largely re iponsible, though colder weather has appeared it the West, stimulating the demand to some txteut. Jobbing Ic dry goods has not im proved, and the movement of staple groeeriea s somewhat less than last week. Theohief tctivity in dry goods is in cotton and wool" JrcBS goods. Print cloths are firmer, but rown nnd bleached cottons are quiet : 1 The demand for wool is limited by small docks ot choice at leading markets, r ull erk-es are pid for Australians, wmeh arf ietive. Rsw cotton is 3-16c lower on beavy srop movement and lack of a corresponding increase in demand. Sugar is doll after last aeek's activity. Receipt at New Orleans are ihecked, as are those of cottoa and of rice. Lumber is movingimore freely West than . :ast. Anthracite coal is in slack demand, with no sign ot prices or restriction . being oiaintained. ' Business failures in the United States tntj , week number 243, against 260 last week, and 253 this week last year. The total January 1 to date is 2304, agust 2353 last year. ' Net railway earnings lor December show . the influence on heavy operating expen upon liberal gross receipts. The exhibit ia slightly better than in November or October. The heavy uecrtase or avaiiaoi wheat on the Pacific coast lost week, 1,075,000 -bubhels, was due no doubt to enormous clear ances of wheat, which aggregated 838.111. bushels from Sun Francisco, lli0,490 bnshels from Taconia, and 283,000 bushels from Port land Ore., or 1,239,611 lushels of wheat, ex elusive of clearances of flour, aggregating iroiu Portland and San Francisco about S0.08J barrels. Heavy shipments to and from San . Francisco point to the desire of holders to get rid of wheat prior to March 11, when taxes are assessed. x . .t' Exports of wheat (and flour as wheat,) both, coasts, this week, aggregate 2,096,879, bushels, ajrainst 2,236,283 busheis last week, and 2,272,- , v?u h.Ki. in th liir week: 18!)J. Total ex ports, United States (snd Montreal) July 1 to date are 04.420,563 bushels, against as.oW.OOO bushels in a like part Of 1889-90, 60,600,006 bushels in 1888 89, and 89,920,000 bushels in 1SS7-88. , liank clearings at fifty-six cities for the week are $1,016,443,98, an increase over this week last year of .l per cent New York city's clearings, are 1.5 per cent less than for the like period last year. At fifty-fl? otnei cities, the gain in -4-tf per cent FOSTER THE MAN. - The Ex- Governor of Ohio Selected Msy Wlndom'i Sncctor. ' . The nomination of Ex-Goveruor Charles Foster, of Ohio, to be Secretary of the Treav " nry was sent to the Senate by President liar-:. rison. Althoagh Mr. Foster will be classed, as a Western man, he will be to all intents and , purposes a representative of the E.-nt, ai li views on the financial bituation are in har mony with those held in the Eist In finan cial matters Mr. Foster will probably follow t in Mr. Wiudom's steps. In itspnlitical aspect, Mr. Foster's appoint ment will have8omesiguifio'ince. Mr. Foster ' is one of the shrewdest politicians In Oiiio. . Mr. Foster has been twice elected gov ernor, and has sjrved several terms in Con gress, where he made a very good record. He . was a member of the ways and means com mittee aud other important committees while in. Congress. Since his retirement from the House of Representatives, about six years apo, Mr. Foster has not held any public office. lis Mceived the complimentary vote ot the mi nority for United States Senator at the time Colonel Brice was elected. Last Fall he ran for Congressin htsdistrir . which bad been changed into a Democratic stronghold. He. cut down the democratic innA -jonty, but not enough to get elected. He i a rich man, and m ule his start as a dry goolt merchant. Mr. Foster is classed as a million- . Hire. ' ' '' . M. Foster Notified. Ex-Governor Foster was officially notified of his appointment a Secretary of the Trean ury by a dispitoh frum President Harrison. The President wired thst he had just sent Mr. Foster's name to the Senate, and he hoped Mr. Foster would nnd it his duty to accept. The President said he knew Mr. Foster's views were in accord with those of his party, and the President would do anythina in hipwer to make it pleasant tor him. The President hoped that Mr, Foter could come to Wash ington at once. DIDN'T MIND HANGING. Min Who Murdered Ills Sweetheart. , .Harry Mar.h was hanged at the jail in Eb- ensbnrg.tPa for the murder of his sweetheart, Clara Swakeshaft, on July 5, 1890. Since his conviction Marsh had exhibited the utmost indifference to his fate, nnd declared that he was ready to die. The seaflobl on which he was executed wns erected the day before, but the preparations did not appear to affect the prisoner, who passed a part of the night in drawing sketches, in which he wns quite proficient. His spiritual advisers visited him and found him quite cool and undisturbed by apprehensions ot his doom. On the scaffold, his air of sangfroid did not desert him, and ' he died without exhibiting the slightest fear. . The erime lor which Marsh paid the pen alty was committed' about a mil from Ual Jitzin. On Saturday night, July 6, 190, h had been with bis sweetheart, Clsra K hake shaft, and had urged her to msrry him, but she asked to have the event postponed, lit was persistent, however, and would sot yield to her wishes. The girl was employed as a duinetticata hotel iu Uallitzia.and after they had yisteda fair in progress in that place, they found the hotel closed, and Clarn was Unable to get in. ' . The couple then wandered about town, and nlonii toward daylight started for the girl's home, it was 011 tue'rond thither that the crime was committed. Marsh hud secured a coupling-pin, and with th.s he struck the girl on -the head, rendering her insensible, aiter which he cut her throat with a rrtor. The girl did not ne until the folio"1 Tuesday, although she ne7er revhiiiwl con seioimmm Alter th killing Marh ,wenJ back to tiailiuut .'!, M'f'm; a roup"-' men. told them i ' ! e h:i I l; . - Ftl'