Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 31, Number 31, Jasper, Dubois County, 19 April 1889 — Page 6
"WEEKLY COURIER, C. DOAJCIC, ruhtiMhn
JASPKU. IJCUIANA. CURRENT TOPICS. THE XEWS IK BRIEF. , Ex-Sbnatok Platt's soa has eatered General Tracy' Uw rm la New ork City. p Thk Bank of France, on the SHt, delrl r dividend of forty francs per share. t ..imats place the. losses by v.u r. at Savannah. Ga.. OH the th, at jwi one-half the amount first Stated, i rvi.ii r. k. Mm. i. k.n". the Irish lttor, ilietl at his residence ia New York Citv ou the i(Hh. He had latterly been an ..attache of the New York Herald. The Knights, of St. IHtrickf Nw York Citv. oa thefitb. forwarded to Mr. Parnell the sum of 2,Q00, tn receipts ot a rme - taiuHit-ni giveu " " ...... Day last. - 1 11 A grand dinner was erven on the night of the 10th. at the Merchant Tailors- uau i n.in,, t.i Mr. William Henry Smith, the government leader in the House Commons. of t. K-.riarv of War has issued au I.,.' -nfarritiv. tlV direction of the President, the State of Wisconsin from the Department of the East to the De partment of UaKota. the 150.000 bond of Mr. Huston, the nw United States Treasurer, was re ceived by the Solicitor of the Treasury on the 8th. After beiog approved the bond was seut to Secretary u indom. The National American party of New Y.irb tm twtitloned the Legislature to prohibit by law the use of any other than k A.i.orlrn and municipal Has: over schools and other public buildings. The Loudon Time- correspondent in that Prince Victor Napol'wi vittd General Houlauger, and that, on the 7th, the two held a long conference in a restaurant in the outskirts of the city. Careful students of European politics f4 to see nrobabllities of a Eu ropean war that will bring Uttssta and the Triple Alliance into the field against each ami involve one or more other powers. Bcffalo Bill's Wild West show will be rwt on board the chartered steamer i erci.u vnnarrli. which sails for France on the 24th. and the show will be opened in Paris as one of the features or tne great Exposition. Savannah. Ga., was visited by a destructive conflagration, on the night of theftth. A large number of stored and Jtrn!nf. (Nucrin? an area of four or five blocks, were burned, the total loss being estimated at $1,.VW,J0. RnstwBs failures duringthe seven days ending on the 5th number for the United Ktata and for Canada 3.", or a total f a onmnared with a total of 2 JO last week, 240 the week previous, and 22" for the corresponding week of last year. The legislative memorial exercises for General Sheridan were held at Albany, N. Y..on the 9th. General Wager Swayne. of Ohio, delivered the oration, and General Rborniin n.l General Alger aiso maue appropriate remarks. There was a dis tingaished audience. it hii Kun discovered that, owing to a faulty construction of the'' law receutly nassed in regard to the city government Trenton, N. J., will be without a mayor for three week, and that the newly-authorized fire and police commissioners can not be appointed. Cardinal Gihross, on the 10th, mailed tn the Catholic clergy of the Baltimore diocese a letter calling attention to the olflbratlon ot the centenary of the inau miration of Washington as the first Pres ident of the United States, and enjoining an appropriate observance ot tne uay. The United States Supreme Court bar held a meeting, on the tUh, In memory of the late Justice Matthews. Senator Everts presided, and addresses were made bv General Mitssey, representatives jicKlnley and Breckinridge, Ex-Governor Hoadley and Judge McDonald, of Indiana. Herrkrt G. Stout, a railway mall clerk oh the route between St. Paul, Minn., and Council bluffs, la., lias been arrested, charged with stealing letters containing money from the mails. His stealings had been going on for nearly e ight months, and amounted to several thousand dol lars. TiiieAVoman SofferagUts are rejoicing over the action of the United States Court of Claims In atlolntlng one of their aunt ber, Mrs. Mary II. Seymour, of New York City, a court commissioner for the whole eountrv. The members of the party claim that the court has thus settled that a woman can legally bold office. It was brought out in the proceedings of the Stewart will case lu New York, ou the tub. that mourning goods for the H1I ton family were charged to Mrs. Stewnrt's hotel account: also that her bills were not rendered to Mrs. Stewart In time to allow her to take advantage of the dis count by paying within thirty days. Prof. Holpkn, of the Lick Observa torr at San Francisco, stntes that accord ing to computations of the orbit of the comet discovered by Prof. Barnard, the comet will become seven or eight thou Baud times as bright as at present, with a dhtanre of alront LOiW.OQO miles from the aun, and It should bo carefully observed en May 36. Heckxt developments leave no room for doubt that a branch of the wiug of the Italian Camorra, known as La Mafia, Is now in working order In Boston. Its meeting are held almost nightly, generally in a North-End bar-room, having a large room In the rear, or in one of several tenement houses. Its members are active in passing counterfeit mouey. A sknsation bus been created in Glesseu, Germany, by the trial of a noted merchant of that place for adulterating articles of fowl with narfrpn. The disclosures at the trtarwere such as to ere ale consternation among the people who had eaten f the spurious articles. The merchant wa promptly found guilty aud
sentenced to pay n Hue of n.WJ marks.
PERSONAL AND GENERAL aw vcOarthv. dauKuterof John Mc
Carthy, of HtMbMtr, N. Y., a little girl of twelv years, fll orer the rivr bank at tn lower falls, on th ijth, a uwianw nearly tw hundred feet. She was conscious wheM picked up, No houes wer broken, and her physlaiau expre th? opiuioa that sh ecapnl internal lujurles, and that her recovery is prolmbW. l.K.VKRAU 1UWKNMAUH, UOVtTM'N " t..Hu. is ou his war from Kerkl, ou th Afghan frontier, to TashUnd. as the reent iiwuiruances nave ihh sruni, Ameer of Afghanistan's forces are also retiring. Wm. Dunn, agwl twenty-seven, of U est Chelmsford, Mass., was found, ou the 7th, ick and helpless iu the barn on the Nummi farm in Uoxford. He snld he had been there aloue since March ft. suffering trom typhoid fever, and subsisting uism tipples and corn husks. . The remains ot tne late JaIne,'.." tie. afhUtant do)r-keeif r of the United States Senate, were taken to Dover, N. 1L, ou the tth. The fuueral nerviees were held iu the Kpiscopal Church iu that city on the 9th. Tmkrk is considerable iuterest taken in a proposal that the present Legislature of Florida elect Senator Call's successor, in stead of leaving the election to the Legislature of Is'Jd, as the latter will not convene until thirty days after SeuatorCall's term expires, March 4. 11. The will of the late uongreasman reier Paul Mahouey, which leaves all his prop erty to his widow, whom he married four mouths ago, will be contested by his sisters, who'olalm to have in their possession a will in their favor, und who allege that the subsequent will in favor of .Mrs. Mahouey was signed while the testator was Incapacitated by Illness. Captain Couch, tne UKianoma ienuT, arrived at W infield, Kas., from Oklahoma, on the 9th. He says the soldiers have made a clean sweep of the UKiauoma country, and have driven out every body excepting those who have authority to remain. Sydxby A.Jonas, of Mississippi, confi dential secretary to the First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, has resigned, to take effect May !. It Is reported that a hotel is to be erect ed in Washington for the exclusive use of colored jeople. The Democrats won tne cuarter elec tion iu New Brunswick, N. J., on the Sth, electing their mayor, seven aldermen and four freeholders. The various social clubs of Caroline County, Mil., have susjwnded operations and surrendered their charters to the clerk of the County Court. These are some of ta clubs against which the Goverr or directed proceedings on the charge of violating the Local-Option law. Count Pape.nheim, formerly adjutant to the late King Ludwig of Bavaria, has ab sconded to America with the funds which he "obtained by the sale of his estates, leaviug a large number of creditors to bewail his flight. The United States steamer Essex, from China, via the Mediterranean, is expected to arrive about May 15. Empress Elizabf.th of Austria wtu shortly take her departure for Ischl, where slat will make a prolonged stay. The Russian Government has ordered the extension of the Sebastopol railroad to Theodosia Kaffa. on the Black sea. The intention is to make of the place a first-class commercial port The Bank of Guthrie, I. T., witn a capital stock of $50,009, was organlied at Wlnfield, Kas., on the Htb. It will open tor business at Guthrie on April ami ex pects to be the first bank iu Culauotua Territory. Ernest II., Duke of baxe-uoourg-Gotho, has written a denial of the statement that he is the author of the famous immphlet: "Another Programme of the Days of 17ti," which deals with the poll tical Intentions of the late Emperor Frederick. fiiE house of Meyer te kauffman. of Breslau, Germany, have set apart 101,000 marks for the purpose of establishing an insurance for their workmen who may become incapacitated for duty by ad vanced age or Illness. Three months ago the house cr Jonn Riley, of Wllkesbarre, Pa., was robbed of eight hundred dollars. On the evening of the 9th, the money was returned to Mr. Riley by Rev. Father O'Hara. The thtet had repented, confessed and made restitution. His name will not be, revealed. The United States steamer Pensacola, which was sunk during the recent storm while in the dry dock at the Norfolk (Va.) Navy Yard, has been pumjwd out. n examination develops the fact tnut she has hen damaged to the extent of about $V),000. A large force com menced the work of repair on the 10th. John O. Hudson, Democrat, was elect ed mayor and I. L. Elliott, Jr., Republican, recorder, of Bordentown, N. J., on the 8th. The Republicans gained three eouncllmen. A memorial of the battlo fought nt Wurth. Alsace, between the German aud French armies, on August (, 1S70, will be uuvailed on that field with great cere mony on the next atmiversny of that en gagement. The memorial is erected by the united bavarian war societies and the Bavarian Government. the men who a month ago roooeu a train at Canyon Diablo, N. M., have been captured. I'eoplk are fleeing from the town of Nantleoke, I'a., to escape the smull-pox epidemic. Thf. boy Krullsch, on trial In New YorkCity for the mimW of Dru? Clerk V lech mug, was acquitted ou theDth. Recorder Smyth of New York City, on the Oth, decided that the indictments against the Electric Sugar swindlers are valid. The Republicans carried tho entire ticket in the Trenton (N. J.) election on the Mth. Four Russian military officers have wagered that they will cover tho distance between St. Petersburg and Paris, on horseback, wlthlu forty-five days. The wager has been accepted, and the officers will start on their journey Home time uur ine the month of May. The Austrian colony in Buenos Ayres has sent a golden wreath, valued at 10,000 francs, to be placed ou Prince Rudolph's tomb. Almost thi entire flro department of Milwaukee. Wis., was temporarily laid liWl. 1... u,,w.t'. f.tm n ttttint. 11111,(111 lllfl ivm, wj ....... derlug nre in tne glazing rooms oi uie Sanger & RoekweW sash ana uour rac torv. !Wk hundred and twenty men and boys employed In Clark's O. N. T. Thread Works in East Newark, N, J. went on btrlke on the 10th, against a fifteen ier cent, reduction in wags, Anew mountain railroad neni Bonn, Germany, will be owued on May U TH Cologne Onxettc, In hh article on the future of Luxemburg, ayt It trusts that the German habits, languages and inUuences that now1 prevail iu the Duchy will coatiiitw t-j io so HMder the Duk of NaskHU.
SttvKK.M, aectdHta occurred at the Charlotteuburg (dermany) races on the (Hh. some of which may prove rtou, and one probably fatal. Count Helurlch Dohua was thrown from his horse In hurdle- raw, aud injured Internally. Thern Is liltte hope of his recovery. Thk. Spanish Government has purchaMHlasltw ill ltorlltt and lias beguu bulldtdga tmlatlal embassy for hrreproseutattves to Germany.
THKcoronwr s jury, imiulring into tue cau,e of the death of Willie Berg, who was shot lu Buffalo, N. Y, ou the 8th, by his playmate Charles Nuse, returned a verdict, ou the 19th. o( awldental death. Thk anniversary of thn birth of Klwrtl Hahuemauu, the founder of houuvopathy, was celebrated, ou the 10th, by the promoters of the new Hahnemann Hospital in Roche-dor, N. YM by tho formal oiwuing of the hospital. The Secretary of the Treasury ba awarded the contract for excavating, cucreting aud uuderpiuuing the Philadelphia Miut t Faitl .1. Eslck & Sou, of Philadelphia, for.Stl. The corouur's jury that Inquired luto the death In London of the American suicide, Itev. Sydney Huut. rendered a verdict, en the 10.li, Mating that Mr. Hunt wns temporarily insane when he committed the deed. All save the technical evidence In the case was suppressed. James Lamkv, a foreman In charge ot the Iron work at tho new post-office, tinder construction nt Brooklyn, N. Y., fell from the second tory to thu basement, a distance of fifty feet, ou the 10th. nudsus tallied injuries from which ho died shortly after. Du, Chas. Pku.kokivi, Vice-President of tho Argentine Hepublic, and Mr. W, K. Vnuderldlt ,arrlvd lu Paris on the 10th. Thk Ilallottu Society of Great Britain has bestowed a gold modal upon Mr. Williams, of Ctucluunti, who has given numerous exhibitions iu England of his skill In the use of the parachute In descending from balloons. Six English boys, betwoeii sixteen aud nineteen years old, who wore brought over ou the steamer Wyoming by a man named Hew, under au agreement to work on his ranch In Iowa a year for their passage uiouev, wore detained at Castle Garden, on the lOtb, aud will probably bo sent buck. Thk special National convention to con sider the question of consolidating the two systems or Sons of Vcteraus met at Albany, N. Y., ou tho 10th. Commaudor-iu-Chief George Mark, of Brooklyn, presided. A second attempt was matte, on tho night of the Oth. at Loulsville.O., to wrecs the vestibule train ou the Pittsburgh. Fort Wayne Chicago railroad, by strapping trls to the tracK. timeiy warning was giveu, and the train was stopptHljust as the locomotive reached the obstruction. Thk New York Stock Exchattgo will be closed ou Gmm1 Friday, April 20, aud ou Ml 211 and 30. A sap accident orcurreu on me uui- . f- f.lii I.. Id...... ... cago, oanta re iv uauioruiu rnnwuj, n. Lorenzo, fifty-seveu miles south of Chiiigo, Ou tue moruiugoi me iuih. uuriug a fog an extra freight tram ran into me rear of a passenger train, smashing to bits a private coach, not a single one of the occupants of which escaped. Four people were killed and four seriously wounded. Amoug tho killed was a young lady on ber way East to be married. The iurv in the case or .miss i.iouie lleecbler, on trial ut Omaha, Neb., for the killing of Harry King, of Chicago, re turned a verdict, on the lutn.or not guilty of murder. King had lived with the woman as his wife, but never married her, aud man led a lady at Omaha, Miss Beechler going from Chicago to kill him. The schooner Carrie A. llucKuam arrived at New York on the 10th, and report ed that when off Saona island she was , chased by a Dominican war vessel aud fired i upon. The schooner was nytug tue Amer ican flag at the time. Nathan F. Dixon (Rep.) was eiecteu United States Senator by the Rhode Island Legislature on the 10th. Reau-Admikal Thomas H. Patterson died at Washington on the 10th. LATE NEWS ITEMS. William Wharton, of Massachusetts, the newly-appointed Assistant becreiary it State qualified, on the 11th, anu asjumed tbe duties of the position at once. Paymasters J. R. Carmody and F.J. Henman were, on the 11th, placed oa tho retired list of the navy. Mrs. M. L. Grasty was found ueau in her residence at Danville, Va., on the raorningof thellth, with au empty chloral bottle beside her. The coroner's jury gave It as their opinion that she took an overdose of tbe drug, but not with suicidal lutent. She had been separated from her husband for several months. They were one of the prominent families of that sec tion of the State. The annual oratorical contest, ou 11th. for the Yale junior exhibition prize, was won by John Crosby, of Minneapolis, Minn., who had seven coiuiwmum. subject was "John Wlltnot, second Earl if Rochester." , , It is alleged that the steady advance ir. i...r for the vmst two uionih, has been a combination among with a view to securing beuer he Sugar Trust. ... ,i.iiti, ... ... v...v Vanht Club, on the lltn, voted to accept Earl Dunraven's chalISS for a maich for the America cop A committee was jiiu"-.. ... meTcUn narles which are to determine what yacht shall be put foward against he Valkyrie. t The Planet miiis mcwii v for the manufacture ui juiu ... twine, jute carp ls, etc.. was totally dentroved by fire at one o'clock ou tho morning of the wtn. i'""' v"". Insured. Of tho awEirw wi.iuKu. iwn wore badly burned. The mmm ,-. - , , othors escaped arum great imuiu uu usion. .... Twrr vk families were evicted from tho Olphert estates in ireiauu on urn wui. No resistance was m. William O Brien was returnoa io uaiway irnlBii1l iail on the 11th. He was surrounded by a strong guard of ofncer3,wlio would not allow any one io converse wiui their prisoner. Several of the t(vn commissioners approached to talk to Mr. O'Brien, but the police refused to allow them near, ami struck- mem wiui uieir swords. Ono of the commissioners was ierlously wounded. Four children of Sebastian Merdam, a Minnesota farmer, found sonic roots of wild parsiiip which their father lmd plowed no. ou the 1 1 ill aud ate of them. Three of them died In great ajfouy, and wore buried m on grave, nm oiner, though terribly ill, gave pronilsu of recovery. TiiKfuneralof Renr-Admlnil Patterson took place from his lato resldettca iu Washington on tho llth, A large num ber of army and tiavy officers and friends and rtcqualnlcjices of the deceased nt tended this fmteral. The remains wre luterretl iu the Congressional Cemetery
STATE JKTELL1GEN0R A pirTKRN-YKAH-otf tmy'i week wm hraken by a ailing tre near New Albany. Uko. Tai.ton eommltUd auleldt by tk lag parls grean, at Welvllls. Chas. Houai.vciKR was fatally Injured near Lagrange, by falling uixwi a rapidly revolving circular saw. Thk Wabash railway tlcfcet-otrle. at Wabash, was raided by burglars and tho money -drawer rlrlod. Wm. Hk.vkon was found guilty of murder In the Hist degree, at JunVrsonville, for the killing ot Jacob Mottweiler. Haven St'iiKi.u dropped dead whtla playing pool iu a saloon at Elwood. James Cook, a workman in a plnnhutnlll at Columbus, had his hiiii jisrtl illy severed, by letting It accld'mUlly strike a band saw in motion. Wm. I'iuy, a jealous lo?se jockey, shot and klllel hli wife, at Frankfort, and tlie it killed himself. James Montgomery, of Chicago, president of the Montgomery Palaee Stock-car Company, the other day selected a site for the-locaMoti of the shops of blscouipany in Muncle, which lias a capital of s.,O03,00 , mid will employ 1,5 W hands. The Muticle Natural Gas, Lttndaud Improvement Company, of whlcii Ex-Governor Leon Ablutt, of New Jersey, is president, gives the coin-"' pany lifty acies of land, free jrai und
$50,000 lu ens , t map jit'l.t. made, a dasli at lvter Draper, near Alexandria, and threw him through u rail fence. Mr, Draper's leg was broken. Rev. Rudolph Randolph, living near Andrew, Was thrown from a wagon, a few days since, and fatally injured, Uo is sixty-live years of agv Wsi. Benson, convicted on the Oth Inst, at Jeirersoiivllle, of the murder of Captain Mottweller, hai made a full confession of lils crime, i At hokomo, tho Inrge oricK oouer worK3 i . . ...... . oi l.yncn Jros. was purueu io uie Krou. 1.0SJ. 10,00), motly covered by Insurance. Three firemen, Captain John Conklin, ot Iloie Company No. 5; Joshua Brown, of Rosa Company No. !!, and Marshal Bennett, of Hose Company No. 4, wero probably fatally injured by a falling alL HtTNTI"OBL'K(l, Dubois County, hns a population of 2,0ft. there baiug 1,001 males and the sanie number of females. It is probabiy the only town In this co.mtry where tho lexes are equally divided. Seymour Is onj jying a steady growth. Its latest "business gain is a prised -brick mauufuctory, with a capacity of 2),0JU a day. A very large and old gray oagb was shot near Seymour the other day. It measured forty -one inches f rom tip to tip of wings. . Ben Scott was convicted of killing Con. Crowley, In the St. Joieph County courr, and sentenced to tlve year1 Imprisonment Miss Ida Scott Is the choice of the Republicans of Dublin for postmaster, having secured a majority of the votes In an election held recently, John Wright, the tallest man in Madlon County, aud probably the tailed one in the 'State, died the other morning, at Anderson. Mr. Wright was a little over eight feet high. , Pnor. E. C. Palmer, ot Columbia City, was elected president of tbe Northern Indiana School Superintendents' and Teachers' Association, at it sesdon in Warsaw, recently. The nxt nieitlug will be held at Columbia City, April, WJQ. Flandkr WilMams wa arrested at Princeton on a charge of burglarizing the jjeW Harmony pott-otllce, Hhelbwji.le will sooi toon hive eiectr.o lights. Thk prospect for a large fruit crop ia Southern Indiana ia excellent Joel W. Kei.i.ooo, of Elkhart County, a convict In the Prison North, was pardoned the other day that he might reach home In time to attend the funeral of his wife, who has just died. He hud but a short time to lerve. Some miscreant who was evidently tn hard luok, the other night removed the corner itoae of the Baptist Cnurch from Its place In the walla, at Cambridge City. The church was built tn 1874, and butL53 in mosey was known to have been deposited In It Poor pay for such a trick. Thk other afternoon James Pounds and his elster-ln-law, Miss Kate ltutchln,who resided near New Washington, drovj to Charlestown to make loras purchases. Abut fou? o'clock they started to drive to their home, and wera defending a hill wh-sn Mr. Pound, who was occupying a Mi Hutchlns. turned to ineak lo her. He noticed that she sat per fectly quiet, while all the color seemed to have suddenly lert her lace, as no answer cam- he took held of her anl fouud that she was dead. He droe to a reddeuce near by. and, leaving the bIy there, returned to Cbailestown to summon a physician, but his service were of no avail. The young lady was apparently ia perfect health, and Mr. Pound had been conversing with her only a few moments betore the fatal summon came, ami slie seemed In the best of spirits. JosKi'ii Pa XI on wai convicted of inur dor at Jeireistmville, uud sentunced to 11 fo imprisonment lu the penitentiary. JaCOH Hoununo, a leading brewer ot New Albany, committed suicide wna a revolver. Jacob Stupebakkr was lodged tn Jsll at Lozansnort and will be placed iu tho in lane asylum. SludoVaker Imagines that the White Caps are going to kill him. aud his condition Is pitiable In tho extreme. Jaspsr N. Watson, of Jonesboru, baa been arrested on seven Indlctmuts.cUat'g log violations of the liquor law. In default of 1, 400 bail ho was committed. John W. Tate, of Indianapolis, while nt work In a rpiarry at RSwona, had his ankles so badly crushed by falling timber, that It It doubtful if his feet can be taved. John J. Hawkins, of Indiana, hai been promoted fromafLSJO clerkship to be a Chier of Division iu the oflk'e of the First Auditor of the Treasury. CJkowik Wilson, Frank Wilson, George Smith and George Williams were arrested at Frankrort for burglary at Vsn Boron and placed in jatl at Marlon. A complete outfit of burglars' tools was found In their possession. Durlno an altercation between William Atkinson and John Banta, at Logansport, a bystander named Drutnmond was shot accidentally by a pistol llrod at Atkinson. The wound is not fatRl. The belligerents were rival candidate for sheriff last fall. Six trumps wore sorlomly Injured in a railroad wreck near Harvey'j, Foil the year Justended Postmaster Hir nett reports that the receipts of the Mad Ison post-office exceeded ?10,I'X), which Ihtures the free delivery system there.
REAR-ENDED. MinalttHg Disaster hh the Kaate Vr Koail av I.ttrHio StwtluH IlliNitU Pour I'ttrsoas Killed hhiI Other Injured uy a Kear-Hstl ChIIUIhu Ohmpi1 ttr Muhim UlHHiler lu Ihh HSH4llllg Mr TmlH-KMH KHHfl t H riraHreTrli. CHtcAOo.April It, Anaeoidentoccurml or the Chicago, Santa Y t Callfrul railroad, near Jollet, yesterday inornlng. The regular east-bound train was just leaving Lorenzo station, which is fifty miles from Chicago, at half-past four o'clock, when the accident occurred. Attaehstl to tho rear of the train wa a private car occiiped by Mr. J. F. Hnrt, mayor of lirookllne, Mass., and a director of th California Central railroad. Tho party in thu car consisted of Mr. Hart and his wife, his sou, Henry Robert Hart; his niece, Miss Winslow; a porter known only as Harry, and a cook. Jusfc as the train was pulllug out of the station an extra stock train following rail into the rear of the passenger train nt a good speed, demolishing the prlvato car and damaging the freight engine so 'that largo quantltios of steam escaped, scalding those who had escaped from the effects f the crash. As soon as the wreck could ho cleared to allow of the removal of the dead and wounded they were fouud lo be as follows : KILLED. Miss Winlow. Ileury Hart. Harry, thu porter. ', Thomas Smith. SCA1.DE'.. J. F. Hart. Mrs. J. F. Hart. The engineer and firemau of the freight train jumped and escaped injury. Noue of the cars, except that of Mr. Hart, wm seriously damaged, and none of the passengers iu the other coaches were hurt. It Is imjiossiblc, as yet, to locate tho blame for the disaster. Tho dead and wounded were put uiou tho train aud ,. , J.i'o ..ln Tliu lunUiw nt tint
IIIUIILUI .v. v.... ww....'. ... ..w . ,., ... ,, 11,Hi.,rI.i.tl,, s. tublisliment and thw wounded were conveyed to Mercy Hospital. ! Tho passenger train was running on time, and the extra freight, through some) inexcusable error of the train-dispatcher, ' was allowed to follow. At Lorenzo tho I grade is very deep, aud the engineer of the extra saw that his traia was unman ageable just as he perceived tho tall lamps of the passenger. He whistled for brakes.. It was too lato. His engine crashed into the private car, driving it upon tho stop of the Pullmau car Santa Anna. In addition to being scalded, Mr. J. L. Hart had j both legs broken. Henry W. Iumh, also In the private car, was scMueii about tuo face and body. Palmer, the freight brakctnan, was hurled over" tho freight engine into the mass of debris, aud escaped with a bad .scald o? his face and both hands terribly Inirned. John Bynder, engineer of the passenger train, was severely hurt. The wrecked conch was tho private car of General Manager McCool of the California Central railroad, a Western branch of the Santu Fe. Tho occupants were a party of Mr. McCool's friends from Massachusetts who had been spending a few weeks with his family at Los Augjles aud were returning home. It can not be learned that Mr. McCool was lu the car. It was stated by oue of tho train men that a number of wounded persons were left at Lorenzo. MOST JUST AND FITTING. Cardinal (Millions Calls on the Clergy or tha Ilaltlmorn Illorrse tn I'lltlnicl.v unserve th Washington InauKural Centeanlxt. Baltimore. Md.. April 11. Cardinal Gibbons yesterday mailed to the Catholics clergy of the Baltimore diocese a letter calling attention to the celebratlou of the centenary of the inauguration of Wash ington as the first President or tue umieu States. Amoug other things the Cardinal says: Tn Wnthltietnn will remain the imperishable glory ot leading this people out of tho bouse of bondage and oppression Into the clear URht of freedom and National prosperity. The history of the United States Is the History or tne graaual rising from the foundations of liberty and tavf and order by him so deeply and so broadly laid, of that stately fabric or our .-sanonai intltutlont, which has become the admiration of the world. Moit Just anil Httmg it is mat una Nation, so touml!, rising o magnificently upon the tines which he laid down, should honor, with especial and grateful commemoratlnn. ihn hundredth anniversary of tbe taking by the great Captain la war of the chair of orllcfl la peace, a the Chief Magistrate of the land. In erder. therefore, to give expression to our heartfelt thanks for the civil ana religious blessing thus far vouchsafed to us. and to pray that tho spirit of patriotism which burned In iho heart of Washington may continue to animate tnose to whom tho destinies of our beloved country may be Intrusted, you are Invited to announce at a seasonable tlmf Isjforehand a special nervlce for the mornimi of April 30. You are requested at such service to make an address suggested by the occasion, closing with tho "prayer for the authorities," As an additional expression of joy and thanksgiving, tho church bells will bo rung from ten to half-past ten o'clock the same morning. The SiiinoHn Aiereenient. Washington, April 11 There was no effort made at tho State Department yesterday inornlng to deny or evuii to evade nn answer concerning the report that an airrcemeut bad heun entered Into by the United States and Germany respecting the tiresetico of war vessels ill hamoan waters. After a consultation with his father and with tho German Minister, Count Arco. who was at tho Stale Department, Mr. Walter Blaine stated that au ntnlenlile understanding between tho Germnu aud American governments had been filtered Info. "England," said Mr. Blaine, "will undoubtedly follow the ex amtilu of the other two nations. Tho three treaty pffwers will each keep but onu vessel at Samoa until tho termina tion nf tho conference at Berlin. Tho Alert, tho small American gun-boat, now at Honolulu, will represent our uoveru merit nt Aula, while the Sophlo. tho Curmnu corvette, recently ordered to Samoa, urlll r..iir.mMit GuriUllUV." It Is probable that the Calliope, will represent Great Britain. JKffOri to KrcMirM Xeflie's I'ardnu. Audi 11. Louis Neobo leftfoi Bprtnufleld last night, and will to-day lay before Governor Fifor the papers and documents which he has prepared, asking for a pardon fur his brother, Oscar Ncobc, ima of the convicted Anarchists now ta.fvintf n. nenMentlnry sentence In Juliet The petition which ho carries with htm hears the names or unicago-s hosi-kuowu eltistens. among them that of Senator Harwell, who Hot otlb' signed the petition but agreed to go to Springfield himself and liwke r personal plea witn tne uover nor for the imprisoned man. wnuio Farwoli left yesterday afternoon fo Springfield, where he will be joluetl to
day by Mr, Neeuo.
LONG CHASE.
The Hunt tor the Casyoa INsbte Train KhMixi- ia ArlsoHa sad IUhh - Tw W-t.k nf II KMlHir.wllHtt-leHHd tlant. are ot the ItMhbiH-s I ke Penalty lu Arl. iHiia llrutlt, Halt Lakk Citv. Utah, April 12.Th four ArloRa officers who arrived hore Wednesday with four traiu-rohhers in custody tell au Interesting story of the long chase. On March 21 an Atlantle Pacific train was stopped ut Canyon Diablo, Yavapai County, Ariz., for orders, when four men boarded the engine and persuaded the fireman --with revolvers--to order the ex. press messenger to open his car. Tlin was don'. The robbers then broke open tho strong lsix, and, after securing all tbe money in It, struck south towards th Tonto Basin, and proceeded as far in that direction as Sunset Mountain, when they headed for Utah. Sheriff O'.N'eil of Yavapai County was atone notllid, und, with Special Agent Holtou, Deputy Sheriff James Bluck aiid Ed St. Clair, started la pursuit They trailed the robbers nearly three hundred miles north from the Hue or the road through us wild aud depute a country as can bo found in the Wot. It wus a dangerous trip, too. for the region Is infested with desperndoes, whose, sympathies wore nil with the pursued party. At last, after a hard journey of three huudreci miles, crossing tho Mule and tho main Colorado, aud over hih mountains and pnrehed plains, during which the Pincers suffered many privations, the robbers wore sighted on April I, nearly two weeks after the robbery, m Wahwee Canyon, about forty miles east of CanonvilK Utah. The officers called m the men to surrender and were itnswvrf 1 with a volley from tho revolvers w.Mi which they were all armed. Tho c iu ry being heavily timbered, luth parti. we o well protected. A battle ensued, during which one if tho robbers bad his cartridge box slut from his belt; another hud a luJM-ho'o put through his hat, and ono of tlitdr horses was killed. After about tl ty shots had been exchanged, the robb tj concluded it was getting too warm f ir them, aud, leaving their horses, tliy beat a hasty retreat ou foot. The couurtry is covered with a dense growth of un derbrush, vralch made pursuit very diftlcult, but Iho officers persisted, and -uia overhauled Bill Stineau, a noted desperado, probably the b:il r of the gang. Next day Charles Clark and John Smith were captured, and on April 4 James Quince was gathered in. The officers had now succeeded in their object, but another difficulty presented itself. To return with their prisoners over the road they had come would be no small undertaking, and after consideration it was decided to press on to Milford, and then go t Denver by way of Salt Lake, and take the Santa Fe road to Prescott. It Is notknowu cven.by the officers, just how much money was stolen, but that found on the men, together with what has been accounted for, amounts to over $1,000. On the way up ono of tho prisoners made full coufession, so that there i. not tho slightest doubt that the right parties have been captured. A funny incident is related lu connection with an attempt made by the citizens of Cauouville to arrest the men. Shortly before the arrival of the officers eight armed men, with a small army of followers, undertook thl job. The robbers waited quietly until the citizen- were near enough, when they suddenly covered them with their guus and made them stack their arms and deiwrt. All of tlrt prisoners were well-educated, and Smith Halms to be the sou or a iiapusi minister. Officer Holtou said he formerly knew Stliteau In New Mexico, where he trained with a hard gang aui was generally considered bad. All the robbers are under thirty years of age. They were quite oily when first arrestee!, out are oemnlng to realize their position now, nun show signs of drooping. Traiu-tObuing was made a capital offense by tne last Arizona Legislature, and as court convenes on May 1, they are In a fair way to recch tho reward which their villainy merits. AN IMPOSING FUNERAL. White IVnple and Itlark Tern (let tn Do Honor to the Memory nr i.ewu liny, dett. Boston. April 12. Probably no colored man who has passed away in Boston has been honored with a more imjmsing demonstration or greater evidence of esteem thin that which took place In connection with the funeral of Mr. Lewis Hayden at the Charles-street African Methodist Episcopal Church. The Initial exercises consisted of a private service at the residence. A procession was then formed, comprising tho following organ izations: First, the Priuce nan uranu Lodge of Masons and subordinate lodges ; ,ewis Haydou Commandory; several divisions of Knights of Pythias, tmuer command of Brlgadler-Gcneral .n. iu ftlley: the Fraternal Association; Wendell Phillips Club, uoocri . Shaw VeteratrAssoclutloii, aim coioreo citizens In a body. All Iho surrounding space about the church was throng'd with people or all classes, anu it w;i iri" Impossible to admit to the church more thau a fracttou of those who desired to enter. On a platform near the pulpit Hat prominent participants In tho scrvic-". Including Governor Amos', A bllani Lloyd G-irrlson, Dr. H. I Boudltch. Colonel Higglnsoti. Geo. r. uowning, Eunlfor. Rev. Then. Mould and Lucy Stone were also present, with Hon. H. I Bird, Mayor O'Brien anu ouior genucmen. The Prndili-nt' Mull Arreted. Krw York, April 12.-ltusscll B. Harrison, hou of the President, was arrested yesterday afternoon cm au order Issued In a civil suit for damages for alleged libel, tho prosecutor being Ex-Governor Crosby, or Montana. Stephen B. Elkins and W. J. Arkoll furnished tho required bond or i,0(K)for Me. Harrison's release on bull. Tho alleged libel was published lu Mr. Harrison's Montana paper, mid consisted of a story that stolon jewels wcro found In the possession of Mr. Crosby. The amount sued for is ijdOO.W). A Host ou a Wrerk. Nkw York, April ll-The Mnllory Mat steamer San Antonio, which arrived hw yesterday, reports that on Sunday, about twenty-tlvo miles north of Frying'!'1" Light-ship, she overhauled a wreck n which were five men, who mado knoffn their desire to bo taken off. but Wo was so high that thw steamer could d nothing hut cruiso around until tlw wave abated. , Meanwhile the steamer Stato nt W of the game line, came up, and the Si" Antonio proceeded, leaving the State . Texas to watch over the Wreck. The d. ablod vessel seemed to be an Italian bK. and as nearly as could h understood, U hailed from Itostre, Gurmamv
