Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 42, Petersburg, Pike County, 8 March 1888 — Page 1
VOLUME XVIII. PETERSBURG, INDIANA, THURSDAY. MARCH 8, 1888, ♦ NUMBER 42.
KE COUNTY DEMOCRAT PUBLISHED EVERT THUKSDaV f£r£?» or Htu-sCRirnox ■ Vtor three month*.... INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE f1<* n M ADTERTISINC. BATES < <* oae iti'edkm. •ddiUonul inaertlM. .n n >9 A liberal reduction mailt* on tannin* three. Ax. «ml twelve__ Lev* I and tranfient sdvcrtiactncnU m paid (or in advance. matt*
EEAS iff ABLE BATES. NOTICE! ITerSon* rec« vln* a copy of this UHs notice c:t saed in lead pencil „, .. Uat r fee UaMt 11 tbetr autacr.pUoa has expired are noHtied
nrarnnosn cum. t.»■ rorar. „ *.) lomcvn. POSEY * HONEYCUTT, RNEYS AT LAW bl, lea la all tbaoourta All tn>a*neea attended to. A Notary Public conthe oflice. Ofllco over Prank A • drugstore. ». ». untnwu. a. i. Mttoa f RICHARDSON * TAYLOR. Attorneys at Law PETERSBURG, END. Prompt attention given to all business. A Notarv Public constantly in tbc olllcc. Office In Carpenter Building, tab and Main. "nTaTiit. J. w. wilsok. ELY & WILSON, Attorneys at Law, PETERSBURG, IND. •Offic.1 in the Dunk UuiMina.-M i T. S. A K. silTH, } (successors to Doyle A fhompaon) Attorneys at Law, / Real Estate, Loan ftlasnrance Asts. Office, second (toy Bank Building. I’eternburg. Ind. I The k»jt Klre and Life Insurance Comimtsles represented. Money to loan on Brat tsortmui a at seven and eight per cent. Prompt attendm to collections, nnd nil buyfu cm Intrusted to us.__. _ Mr. y. Tu»«tlM>. Ma«t ri.ttsaa . . Epwt* sun H. TOWHSEKD, FLEEHER * SMITH, Attorneys at Law l AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS, HNTEK8BUKU, • • INDIANA. Offlce.orer Gas Frank'* store. Special attention given lotollect.ona. Huy ini and selling uanda, KisBiming lltlcaand!urnlablng Abstracts. . R. R. K1ME, M. I).. Physician and Surgeon PETERSBURG. IND. Oflice. over llanin A S b*j store; residence on Sevcuch.Strectj tbree s-juarc, -otub ol Main. Calls promptly attended to, day or night. _ J. B. DUNCAN. Physician and Surgeon PETERSBURG, - IND. " Office on Brat floor Caapenter Building.
C. B. BLACKWELL, M. D., ECLKCTIC Physician and Surgeon, Offlw, Mum •trtM'i, flth And 7th * opposite Mo ld Drujt More. PETERSBURG, : INDIANA. WUi pnrtlc* Me-Urlne. Surgery nul Ohidatric< la town ami o-.untry. and will vlrlt any part. f tn>. o .untrv In eonnultatkm. < bronio ■llaeawit auccerefuli? treated. Jtu. JT. 6 AH.jm.IS,
Resident Dentist, PETERSBURG, IND. ALi WOlt K WARRANTED. 0. K. Shaving Saloon, J. E. TURNER, l“ropri«-or. PETERSBURG, - IND. Pmitif. *|Ain( .nri done at tho.r r ml4«ncre will iemr.. o~dcr at llw rh >p, .a l*r. Adam' new l u . 1.n< roar of Admau A boa t drug More • • k __ CITY HOTEL Oaltr Maw Mau|*n*at. XjBWZS tcatt., Prop. rdr. Eighth and Main Ma.opp. Coart-hooaa, PETERSBURG, IND. The City Hotel la centrally located, lotclam. ;a all tt» appointment*, ami Ilia beat and cheapest hot. t in the city.
Sherwood Hou&e5 i'ndfr Now ra nt. BISS ELL & TOWNSEND, Prop’ra. Fin* and Lodu*t ftrceta, Etansvillr, : t Indiana. RATES, £2 PER DAY. Samplt Rooms for Commorcial Mob. HYATT1 HOUSE, WukU(toa. lad. Centrally Located, and Accommodation* Fim-claa* HENRY HYATT. Proprietor. PXEUD HOTEL, j PkTEBsBLKG. - - INDIANA. CHARLES SCHAEFER, Proprietor. Dated la the twain*** part ot town. Sap reasonable. A rood lUr. choice nor*. Totwcco and Clear* Corner Setrti and VFalnot *uwla ‘ Whi n at Washington Stop at tha MEREDITH HOUSE. . First-Class in All Respects. Kta Unu mun aad Albion Hobbau Proprietor*. Gao. E. Rintmt, Ja**a J. Moma*. Late of CtactanatL Late ot VTaahlngton.lnd. HOTEL ENGLISH, ROSSETER A MORGAN. Lwceaa. Indianapolis. Ind. - Bouse Elegant.Table. Serrioe aad Genen Kaapgaywrlor. Wat ton test la the ettpGreat Reduction I aa t*e prioe,Q« SADDLES, HARNESS, ETC., ETC.
NEWS IN BRIEF. CwnpUrt frmm v«rlctts brams. (OSliRESSIOXU I BOCSKDOTM. lli the Senate on the Mth the bill to raw the Maritime Canal Ompanjf of *vIcaV»gua wat passed. The hill yrihtffig pro*ion* to exscUtierw e«d srtifbfs who are incapacitated for the performance of manual labor, and providtog for pensions U> dependent relatin'* of deceased soldiers and sailors, was taken up and amended, but without finishing * the bill the Senate went into executive session. and subsequently adjourned In the House the adverse report vpofe the resolution directing the Secret ary of the Treasury to iowtnwte hn Investigation into the New York Shgttr Trust was considered, and the resolution laid on the table. A resolution directing inquiry into the Issuing ty the Commissioner of Talents of the "one hundred day circular" was tabled. A testimony 1 of , respect to the memory of the late W. W. Corcoran was ordered spread upon the minutes, and the House adjourned. In the Senate on the *Mh the session urns devoted to s very lengthy and very heated discussion of the dependent pension bin, without bringing the question to a close ... The House, after considering the Oklahoma bill, took up the public building bills, and after the adoption of a number, including cnc tor a building In New York City Involving the expenditure of »l,S*.0np. ad;our«ed. * Is the Senate, on the »th. the Dependent Pension bill was taken up and warmly dis-' cussed from a partisan standpoint, but without taking a rote on the bill or the pending amendment. the Senate went into executive session. ..In the House the resolution authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to pur. his* bonds with the surplus w as thu occasion of a | lengthy and warm debuto. Ix the Senate on the 1st. Hour* bill to amend the act to restrict ownership of real estate in the Territories to Anwncaa ctuxent reserving legation property In the District of Co lumbia. was pa»v-d. A resolution was adopted ; requesting the President to negotiate a treaty ; with China providing that no Chinese laborers shall enter the United States. The De pendent Pension toll was then taken up, and was stt.l pending when the Senate,# at S:» p. m . adjourned until the Mh. j In the House the joint resolution accepting the invitation of the French republic to take part in the ibteraationel exhibition to be hold in Hans in I-W was adopted. The joint resolution authorizing the President to arrange a conference to be held in Wash ngton la IBS for (he purpose of promo log arbitration and encouraging reciprocal commercial relattonvbeiween the United Slates and South American republics was agreed to. The Senate w as not in session on the 9d. In the House a number of bills were reported from commutres and placed on the ealendar. and the House went Into committer of the *1 ole on the prlrate calendar, resuming eonvaeration of the "OmnlbusV bill, an amendment to whirls prunning for the relief of the Protestant Episcopal Theological Seminary and High School of Virginia, led to a long debate on the propriety of establishing aprecedent involving an expendb ture of hundreds of millions of dollars, The .amendment was adopted. A night session was held, at which a number of private pension bills were passed
PERSONAL AM) POUTICAX. Ok the 2Dih unexpected opposition to ho nomination of Mn Ratbbene as Con-*U!-General to4 Paris developed in the se■yret session of tbs tiponto. Ok ths 28th Chief Slcnal Officer, General Oreelv, issued official notice of susI ension of a large number of (Ignat offices because of want of funds tosustain them. The manifesto qf General Master Workman Powderlv to Ibo Knights of Labor engineers and firemen created a sensation among the Brotherhood men, who denounce it as a stab in ths back. Ok the 1st Mr. Kirkpatrick introduced n bill in the Dominion Parliament to allow American vessels to render aid to vessels wrecked in Canadian waters. Ok the 20th.the President signed an order placing the Civ. I'.Service employes on the classified department list. This action will be followed by an order p'.actug also the Inter-State Commerce Cora - mission and the Indian School serv.ce within the nvil-serv.ee rules. Ok the 29th' the grand jury of Hew York City dismissed the case* against Jay Gould and Russel! Sage. ’ Whhji the Prince of Wales, says the London Cfrnraic/r, was yachting at San P.emo, he was pursued by Kenians in a steam yacht bearing the American colors. A British gunboat saw the Prince’s danger, and went to the .rescue. The yacht hoisted the Irish Sag, and after a long chase escajwd. Ok the 29th the will of the late W. W. Corcoran, of Washington, was offered for probate. The greater portion of the ev tat*, which is valued at SCt.OJO.OV), Is bequeathed. to bis three grandchildren, George P„ Louts E. M. and William C. Kustia, to be held in tru:t for thsm for tea years. Several legacies of $1,000 or $T>,‘bj ar> left io other re'ative*, and * milar amounts to various orphan asylums in the Dist ic\ The su n of $100,000. is 1*0 to the Corcoran Art Oxilery. the will stat ng that $1,5)0,0OT had already been given to tb* in dilation; $00,990 to -the Leu'se Rom*. $010,00) baviug already been devoted to It. Os the 1st the fi m of Seckvndorf, Levino & Co., hop merchant*, haring bouses in New York, London, Sara, Bohemia, and .Nuremberg, Bavaria, faded tor 6,0)0, • OHO mark*. O.t the 1st the credit of $82,5)0 for expeuser of Mr. Cbamberlan’s mission to Washington was a-.provod in the British Uousa of Comraou-. Ok the 1st a d spatch from Ban Remo, Italy, said that owing to ths depression exhibited bp the Crown Prince hit Physicians now taka a gloomy view of |ds case.
upun idv w»n»un iuo official bullet ns regarding th> condition of th« Crown Prince, th> London Loactt regrets that it i* forc'd to the conclusion that the royal patient la proceeding from bad to worts. ' r Ox the 1st the Miile Tariff bill was reported by the sub-committee to the commutes on ways aud menu*. It add* between two and three hundred articles to the free list, effecting a redaction of revenue of $Li(JV),00'), and redacst the duty oa other articles to the amount of ISilM,00\ argregat ng a total redaction of (36,* 000,000. Ox tha 1st U. Wilson, ton-in-law of exPresident Grety of France, wasconvicted of complicity in tha Legion of Honor decorations swindles and sentenced to two years* imprisonment and to par a One of S,0MK. 5-Taxhope. tha British Secretary of State for War, inaists that England’s rcast defense* are insecure, and that Urge appropriations of money are needed to properlr remodel them. RgCJtNTl-T the famous swords belonging to the late General Shields were sent to Washington for the inspection of the committee now considering tha bill proriding for their purchase Ox the il, in a t interview with U. De Steel, Russian Ambassador, Lord Salisbury gave notice that he would oppose the deposing of Prince Ferdinand from the Bavarian throne unless the Powers iron'd first agree upon his successor. Ox the hd news was received in London tbnt the ma'ady of tha Crown Prince had assumed an alarm ng aspect. In consequence, the Queen directed the postponement of nl! levees and festivities. A* the Rational capital the Rills Tariff bill continues to tarnish the chief topic af conversation among t ie statesmen of nil parties. As a role, they are loath to commit themselves, desiring mote time, in which to study its prov isions in comparison with existing duties. Ox the 2d a concurrent resolution was adopted in tha legislators of Hew York appointing a committee to attend the removal of the remains of tbe.lats ex-Presi-dent Antonio Does of Veuexmla from ,N*» fork to the Pantheon at Caracas.
A rutmno report is mide by Mr Joseph Chajr.be> lain of the gr»t fying results of the fisheries con fere tics, highly complimenting the conferee* cn (heir moderate bearing and voluble efforts. O* the *1 Charles Dewitt Clinton Wilkinson* a widely-known comedian and KUuiAger, difd In -Worcester, Mass., from heart disease. He was fifty-eight years old. O.t the Sd Garret4. Roach, a son of the late John Reach, the ship-build »r. died of pneumonia at his resid -nee in Ns w Vort. Jcpos PAinenaos. of New York, on ih# SI. granted Pr. Mcttiyrtn a p-rrnan»rtt m j and on res training It >n.y Gowge an J hik followers froth incorporating an AntiPoverty 8oc:ety. Th* Home committeo oil post-offices and post-roads will make a farorable report on the Bloupt bill, increasing the salary of the general superintendent of ths railway mad terries $5W; creating the office of assistant-general superintendent at a sa'ary of f3.rt*>; increasing the salaries of chief clerks $1M) a year, aud reducing tbeir trareling expenses | from four to three dollars a day. Os the id Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain ] was dined by the Can ad an Club of Saw York. Os the 2d of Hay the Iowa State Democratic consent on will meet at. Dabnqne. CRIME! AND CASCAl.TIK*Os the 28th fi e broke out in Sanborn’s block. Great Fa Is, N. H., resnitipg in a complete destruction of the Pates, Sanborn, Kilpatrick and the Marston buildings. The loss ie ebiut ♦R5.000. Two firemen were seriously injured by falling * aU.v the 2Sth a terrible boiler explosion occurred at Last Chance colliery, near Shamokin, Pa. The fireman. Israel Star- | thel. was asverely and perhaps fat ally, in- j jured. The build.ng and machineiry were much damaged. The boiler wa* one of a j battery of six. Os the SSth Zspb Deris, the twenty- i year-o'd negro b->v who assaulted and ! murdered Msggie Gangnan. at the shoe ^ factory of Green Bros., Chicago, on the j 30:h', was arrested at Forest Hill, llln and j returned to Chicago. Os the 2)ith the Union Square Theater, I of New York, with all its contents, was j destroyed by fire. inrolring a loss of oxer I a quarter of a million dollars. The Mor- | ton House, adjoining ths theater on two j sides, was badly damaged, and the Star j Theater was to immediate danger for j some time. Several firemen were injured ! by falling walls. Os tbe 28th a non-unionist engineer, who was running a Chicago, Burlington & Quincy engine in ths yard at McCook, i Neb., was requested by Brotherhood men ] to quit work, and upon bis refusal to do j so, was dragged from his engine and I beaten almost to death. The engine was j then killed!. His assailants were arrested ! and bound, orer. Thi* so incensed the | str.kers that fears were entertained for the safety of the towh, and a request was telegraphed to Lincoln that the militia be i ordered out ’
Ov the Alice Curdlff, a mamed woman, of Memphis. Tenn., *« Cound dead in her room. While la a drunken condition, the had fallen to the floor, and her face lodged in a large basin of water, and she had drowned, being unable to extricate herself. Is the ralley of Morobidda. 8wltEerland, an avalanche k illed ten person* and many head of cattle, and destroyed n large number of houses. Os the !S8tb three arcades In the side of the Castle Capnno, Naples, used by the Court of Justice collapsed. Serious dam* age was done, hat nobody was hart. Os the 29th an avalanche overwhelmed the Tillage of Bterpbone, Italy. Thirty bodies have been recovered. Os the 29th Fred. A. Hale, a Denver archive:,, shot and instantly t iled M. F. O’Reilly, contractor on the court-house in that city. O’Reilly was the aggressor, and the coroner exonerated the architect and gave him his liberty. Os the 1st. a fatal affray took place at Culpepper. Vu., between Edwin Barbour, editor of the Piedmont Advance, and Elias R. Williams, editor of the Culpepper Expen ft. Williams was killed and Barbour was seriously wounded. The trouble originated in a journalistic controversy. Is Reading, Pa., Mrs. Wm. J. Miller, a young married woman, was brutally assaulted in her own home, on the 29: h, by an unknown man, who choked and kicked her into insensibility, and then robbed her of her beautiful brown ba!ir. RtcksTl-T four colored men were drowned at Oidtpwn Creek, Miss. The first to lose his life was one who attempted to foird the stream and was drowned. Three hundred negroes were searching fur his body, when a canoe containing s x of them was capsiisi and thrse of its occupants were drowned. Os the 1st ratrick Fo ey and Michael Radley were kilted by the premature exrloiion of a blast in a New York City query. Os the 1st a millicn dollar lire occurred in New Yeik. Whips drawing a beary freight trass between Pittson ami Pleasentvde. Pa„ on the I’d. a locomotive on the Delaware & Hudson railroad exploded. Tarn entire front end of the boiler was torn off beck to the bell, but fortunately no one wae hurt and the engine did not leave th* truck.
UN the Ul two mn were ratany ana tvootlwri wt«r(ly injured by a fall of rock i:a tha Quiaey m.ue at Hancock, Mich. Ox tha Sd it wu rumored that two train* on tha l’an-Handfe came into collision near Em- gettstewn, fi., killing twentynine persons. including tha crews of both anginal, and wounding ssvitn. The accident was caused by tha failure of a talagraph operator to deliver a train order. ■RClLtAXlOl’S. On the 26th tha h| aaish Senate passed a bit! providing for trial by jury. The Knigbtu of Labor of Colorado, it is stated on good authority, will give the Ir moral support to the striking engineers on the Chicago, Burl ington & Quincy road. On tha 38th tha officials of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy road issued a notice to their striking enginoersand firemen that unless they returned to work by the 28th they would be discharged and only re-employed as individuals. This notice was denounced by Chief Sergeant as gratuitous impertinence on tha part of the company, inasmuch ns tha strikers %ad already severed lh*.r connection with the road. He said they would return only in n body. On the 88th the .second rale of procedure. reducing the majority necessary to enforce closure to one hundred, was adopted by the British Parliament. A Vienna newspaper, the A!i«7emain* Zf-tung. says that tha Cossack Athieff has stored! a quantity of munitions in the Russian convent at Galatia, preparatory to making a great raid into Bulgaria. On tha 8#th the case of Fred Strobe, held for contempt of court in assaulting Prosecuting Attorney Holing, at Columbus. O . was called, hot the defendant secured a continuances On tha 1st an appeal for aid for the striking railroad employes of the Readies system eras seat out to every assembly of organised labor in the United States. On the 38th the Post-Office Department began payment of additional compensation doe to postmasters under what is known as tha Spalding act of Ma-gh % 1883. The amount to be d isbursed is $140,W. Qn tha SMh tha Rena committee on Territories agreed npoa a favorable report on the bill app ropriating $30003 for the development of the pat«f resources of Ansooa.
iH* deficit St thd Norqu*y-H»rt»sod Government of Maditobe, It is saidj will reach $t.S30.0)d Os the 28th the Bar men of Southampton, L. I., made a descent On the watch: man guarding the work on the canal id process of construction connecting Shiftnecock bay with the ocean, drove him away and undid all the work that had been done on the canal. Ike Bre in the Union Sqoare Theaters New York, it hat been discovered, was Caused by the Joists supporting a gallery of the theater intersecting the partition wall between the theater and lift Morton House at a potnt where a tue existed. This serious defect has existed for years, constantly endangering the lives of the patrons of the theater and guests of the hotel. i Os the 2>:h it was reported that a Cincinua’i, Hamilton & Davton poo! had secured the contra! of 21,000 shares of the stock, and would keen Ives & Co. out of the management. Those named in tho transaction are Messrs. Dexter, Ramsey, Hooper, Waite and Winslow. Os the lrt, in the trial of Flynn and Squires for conspiracy to corruptly manage the New York Department of Public Works, the jury were instructed to bring in a verdict of not guilty, the only evidence aga nst the defendants consisting of admissions made hr them after tbs alleged conspiracy bad baen effected. Ox the 1st Count Ds Lssseps reported to an extra session of the d irectors of the Panama canal that the increased cost of the canal was due solely to the ill-will of their opponents, which caused higer rates for borrowing money. The canal will not be completed before 1303. Pending the decision of the government regarding the lottery loan, the company has decided to Issue <M),OOJ,OO0f. more of bonds. Drtuxo the night of the 29th by for tho worst storm of the present winter at Duluth, Minn., set in. High winds prevailed, and a tbick.whirling snow re misfed it impossible to see across the street. lx London financial circles the opinion prevails that Rn«s a’s heavy purchases of gold are for 'war purposes. The days of bull-fighting In progressive Mexico are numbered, say* the Partida Liberal, of the capital of Mexico. A petition for the prohibition of the barbarous pastime in the feddhat district has been signed bv nearly 5,090 people, and will be presented to Congress next month. During the past ten vears Mexican mines have produced Jf*.818,000 in gold and $298.827.000 in silver, and last year’s product was the heaviest of all fn silver and second heaviest in gotd. Sax Diego, in Southern Ca’ifornia and Ensenada, Lower California, will soon be connected bv rail. Ox the 2d the Senate committee on military affairs agreed to report favorably the bills appropriating $100,000 to extend the quarters at Forts Niobrara and Robinson, in Nebraska, and giving telegraph operators who served three months in the military serv ice during the late war au honorable d sobarge with a simulated rank. The House committee on military affairs has also agreed upon favorable reports on similar bills.
is u» ocntiViK.li vauey ivu IS at oi kbbar co-operative stores hare proved a failure. , • Dcrixo the month of February Acting Land-Commissioner Stockslagsr held for caucelation sevenj^five laud entries and canceled outriglitlfilS entries upon tiiii ground of Land, rwftoring to the pabl to domain sixteen thousand acres of land. Dnring th* same period he recommended the criminal prosecution of sixty-one timber trespassers, and forty fc.vll suits to recover $71,000 as damages for timber depredations. Ox the Sd Michigan’s new Liquor law was held by the State Supreme Court to be constitutional in tbe main, thoughcontaining some minor provisions of nn unconstitutional character. Ox the 3d a delegation of thirty Chippewa Indians chiefs from Wisconsin and Michigan called at th# White House and had an audience with the President, in which they urged tbe payment of $118,000 due them under o'd treaties. The President promised to aid them in every way •a his power to see that th$y received their just dues. The matter will be called to the attention of Congress. * Ox tbe Sd the tenth anniversary of the coronation and the seventy-eighth anniversary of the birth of the Pope were celebrated. Ox the 2d efforts made at Chicago to end the Western freight rate war failed. JCgxr May a bill to abolish slavery is to be introduced in the Brasilian Legislature. It is reported that King John of Abyssinia is holding a conference with tribal chiefs on the Italian war situation. CONDENSED TELEGRAMS. Th* Senate was not in session on the Id...In the House Henry C Seymour, successor to Beth C. Moffett, deceased, of Michigan. fresented his credentials and took the oath of office. After disposing of some minor matters the House resumed consideration of the Pacific Railroad Telegraph bill. Mr. White, of Sew York, took the Boor in opposition to the measure, and was met by Messrs. Bel.len. Byrnes and Dochery in advocacy of (he bill, which was passed With but four dissenting votes. Ihs Roumanian Cabinet resigned on the 4th.
K C., on the 4th. He was given • military reception and delivered n lecture. Th* Emperor Fronds Joseph hos muninoted the Prince of Wales to the Colonelcy or the Twelfth Austrian regiment. Mb- Fuasx Abhylo, Gladstoaian Liberal Member o( Parliament, died on the 1th. At a meeting ot the Hear York Central Labor Union on the 4th, it was resolved to ask the State Legislature to pass a nine-hour law, with stringent provisions for it* eofarcemsot. A striking Brotherhood engineer was shot and killed by an employe ot the Hannibal & 8L Joseph railroad at Brookfield, llo., on the 3d. The murderer, who had been sworn in as n deputy shuriff. was held by the coroner for the grand jury. Gkxiuai. UasnsnWonxMa* PownttnuT issued an argent appeal on the 3d ink behalf of the striking miners ot the Lufcigh valley, whose claims, ha say* have been overlooked since the inauguration ol! the strike on the Reading system. Tbs chairmen of the grievance committees of the Western, Southwestern! and Northwestern railroads met In conference in Chicago on the td toeousiderthe question of the great strike on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad and ths best means of securing a victory tor the 14k. Rameau. of Pennsylvania, announced oa the >d the completion of his Tariff bill, upon which he has been engaged tor two years, and of which he says •"itwill not Ik- a hop-skip- and- Jaasp measure! ike the one recentlv presented to 11» ways and means committee.” Ir Russia’s attitudi oa the Bulgarian queston is pcoparty understood. tha prophecy is male from London t hat a diplomatic deadlock is certain. anxiety is fait m Europe, more especially at Brussels and Vienna, as to the fate of Stanley, the African exudorer. There is talk of sending another expedition to find the one he is heading in hu search tor Emin Bay. Is Imperial circles at Bsrlin all hops hat been abandoned for the recovery ot tbs Crown Prince. Tub attitude ot the Powers regarding Bulgaria is reported as irritating military and public circle* in Russia.
TALMAGtfS SERMON A Discourse on! lithdTianS | tod Place to Sing fhonl. fieaveuty Choir and Everlasting mild nu I. > Thrnc -“M >1 lf«h l' ltat Into Thy Sam r T VerR«r. T. Da Witt Talning-, in a reoent. sermon at the Brooklyn Tab i-naole, look His hf* subject “A Soar; Ci'incaming My Be love t,” bis text being! Sow will I sstu to my well-bol tved a sang of toy beloved.—[Isaiah, s. t Dr. Talma ;e said: The most fascinating the, i no Tor a heart proiierly attuned is the Savi mr. Thera is something in the morning light to sagpest Him, and something lit (ha evening shadow to speak His pra:s:i The flower breathes Him, the star slums Him, the cascade proela:m: Him. a'l the voices of nature chant Him. What? rer is grand, bright and beautiful, if you will only listen to it, will spotlit H s | raise. When I come in the summer time and pluck a flower I think of Him who i t “the rose of Kharon and the My of the Tilley.’* When I see in the fields a lamb I »nv: Behold the Lamb of God, Mint; taketh away the sin of the world When, in very hot weilier, I come under a projscting cliff I sn:: t Rock of ages, cleft foil nte, Let me hide rnvsef It, thee. Over the old-fashioned pa pi* there wnt a souud-ng-board. The voice of the minister rose to the si umling-l anl, ami then was struck buck aya n up in the ears of the people. And^ so the ten thousand voices of earth, rising up. Hud the heavens a sounding-bonni which r'lrikoi back to the ear of all the nation! the ) raises of Christ. The heavens tell tilis story, and tba earth shows His b* ndiwork. The Bilde thrills with ono grunt story of redemption. Upon a blasted and faded paradise it poured the liglil of a glorious restoration. It locked n >on Abraham from the ram cnlight in 1 he thicket. It spoke in the bleating of tin herds driven down lo Jcrusu'm for sin rifle-. It put intlnite pathos into the speech of uacouth fishermen. It lifted Taut ;; to the seventh Heaven, and broke spoil lie ear of St. John with the brarau trumpets and the doxo'ogy of the e'ders, and the rushing wings of the seraphim. —Instead of waiting unt il you gist sick and worn out before you spiak the praise of Christ, while vour heart is happiest, an l your step is lightest, and your fortunes smile. and your pathn ny blossoms, and the over-arching headms drop upon you their benedictions, speak the praises of Jesus.
1 ue oiu urees orators, wuoa (any sm their audiences inattentive ami sllumb >rin -, hail one word with wb ;h they would r> ate them up to the greateut enthusiasm. In the midst of their oration they would stop and cry out “Marathon!” and the people’s enthusiasm would he unbounded. My hearers, though you m ay not have been borne dowu with sin, and though trouble and trials anl temptation may have come upon you, and you feel hardly like looking up, methinks there is one grand, royal, imperial word that ought to rouse your s ml to infla te rejoicing, and that word is “Jesus!” Taking the snggestion of the text, 1 shall speak to you of Chris!, our song. I remark, in the first plain, that Christ ought to be the cradle song. What our mothers sang to us when I hey put us to sleep is singing yet. We m ay have forgotten the words, but they went into the tiler of our soul, and will forever be a part of it. It is not so m :ich what you formally teach your childre i as what you s'ng to them. A hymn has wings and can fly everywhither. Ono hundred stub fifty years after you are dent!, and “Old Mortality” has worn out his chisel in recutting your game ou tbs tombstone, your great-grandchildren will be singing the song which this afterno>: u yon sing to your little ones ga’h-rod about your knee. There is a place in Hwitserland where if you distinctly utter vour voice there come back ten or fifteen d.stinct echoes, and every Christian song snngliy a mother in the ear of her child shall have (ten thousand echoes coming hack from all the I gates of Heaven. Oh. if niotfcisrs only knew the power of this sacred spell, how much ofteuer the little oaes wouhl bs gathered, and all our homes would ch ime with the songs of Jesus 1 We want so me counteract ing influence upon our children. The very moment your child steps into the street he steps into the path of temptation. There are i fou -mouthed c lildroa who would like to be soil your little ones. It w II not do to l keep vonr little boys and girls in the boose and mnke them house-plants; they must have fresh air and retv ration. God I save your children from the scathing, I hasting, damniug influence of the | streets! I know of no c-uni teraettag influence 1 ut the power of Christian culture and example. Hold before your lit* i tie;ones the- pure life of J<«u>; let that name be the word that shall exorcise evil from their hearts. Give to vour instruction all tbe fascination of music, morning, noon and night; let it be Jusus, the cra- ; die son;. This is important if your children grew up, but perhaps t hey n»ay not. \ Their pathway may be short Jesus mav i be wanting that child. Then there wilt
be a ioandltn step in end the youthful pulse tire dveiling, •will begin to v ill be not help, pinch at flatter, and little hand* lifted for help. Yost ca r And a great agony will your heart, and the cradle m ill. be empty, and the world will be entpl y. and your sool win be empty. Xo little feet standing on the stair*. Xo toys scattered on the carpet. Xo quick following; from room to room. He strange an 1 wondering questions. Xo upturned fact, with laughing bine eyes, come for a kiss; bat oaig a grave, and a wreath of white blossoms on the top of it, and bitter d isolation, and a sighing at nightfall with no ooo to put to bed, and a wet pillow, rmd a grave, and a wreath of white blossoms on the top of it The Heavealy Shepherd will take that lamb safely anylrow, whether yon have bson faithful or unfaithful; but would it not have been pleasanter if you could have heard from those lips the praises of Christ! 1 never lead anr thing more beautiful than this scout a child’s departure The account sai< l; **She folded her hands, kissed her mother good-bye, sang her hymn, tor ned h *r face to the wall, said her little prayer, and then died." Oh. if 1 could gather an> in one paragraph the last wards of line tittle ones who have gone ont from these Christian eirc’es, and I could picture the calm looks, and the folded hands, and sweet departure, methinks it would tia grand and brant if nl us on® of Heavr ’« great dozologles! 1 next speak of Christ song. Quick music 1< the aged ear. The seboii-glrl asks for a schottiseh or a glee; batlitirgsandmother 1 ? i tha 1*1' #■ old mam’s charm for “Portsiguese trouble have keys of the tiolemn treed, tremulous, ec irt* trust it in II ii et i :;lh a,ks lor “tlalerma” o Hvtnn.” Fifty years tamed the spirit, arid music-board must have Ti.ougb the voice may that grandfather will church, still he has the |.i -aim-book open before him, end he sings jj« his soul. He horns his grandchild aslrii pi with the same tone he sang forty year - ago in the oMl meeting-house. Some du r the choir sings a tune so old that the -Mag people do not know it; but it starts Urn tears down the cheek of the aged mi t, tor it reminds him of the revival scour lit which he participated, and of the r i Mint faces that long sipcf went to dast. ul of the grsv
haired minister leauirgover tka pulpit and so trading the tidings of great joy. I was one Thaiifcsgiving Odv id niv pa!* pit) in Syrae no, ». V.t ami Ref. DadiSi Wa'do, at ninety-eight Vefirs of agbj stood besidti die. The choir sang a tune. I sa d* “I am sorry they sang - that new tone) nobodv seeuis to know it.** the graves of the r departed. Biessed the B ble in which spec'ac e 1 old age reads the prora'se: "I will never leave you, never forsake you!” Biessed the staff on which the worn-out pilgrim totters on toward the welcome of bis Redeemer! Blessed the hymn-book in sh’o'i the (altering tongue and the failing eyes find Jems theoid man's song. Ispeaktoyo.i again of Jesus as the night-song. Job Speaks of Him who pivoth songs in the night. John Welch, the o'd Scotch minister, used to put a plaid across his bed on cold nights and someone asked km My he put that there. liesa d, “Oh. sometimes in the night I want- to sing the piaiss of Jesus, and to get down and piny; then I just take that plaid and wrap it around me, to keep myself from the cold.” Bongs In the uight! N gbt of trouble has come down upon tunny of you. Commercial losses pot out one star, slanderous abuse put out anotket star, domestic bereavement has put out a thousand lights, and gloom hat been added to gloom, and chili to chill, and sting to sting, and ou» midnight has seemed to borrow the fold from another midnight to wrap itself in mere unbearable darkness; but Christ has spoken peace to your heart, and you can s'ug: Jesus, loverof my soul. L- t to3 to Thy boson fly. While the billows near me roll. While the tempest still Is high. * Hide me, O, my Saviour, hide. Till the storm ot life is past; Safe into the haven guide— Ob. receive.my soul at last Bongs in the night! Bongs in the night! For the s'ck, who have no one Ho turn the hot pillow, no- one to pun the taper on the stand, no one to put ice on the tempi?, or pour out the soothing anodyne, or utter one cheerrul word—yet songs in the n'ght! For the poor, who freese in the winter’s cold, and swelter in the summer’s heat, and munch the hard erupts that bleed the sore gums, s ad shiver uuder blankets that can not any longer be patched, and tremble because rent day is come and they may be sot out on the sidewalk, and looking inks the starved face of tbe child and seeing famine there and death there, coming “Bless youi my sob,’*,, said the old matt, •*1 heard that seventy years *g !” There was a sang lb-day that tohebed the ii#9 of tbe aged With holy fire, and kihdlbd a glory iii their Visiou that car younger eyesight can not se \ It was the | sou; of saltation—destisj Who fed ttiotfl all their lives long; Jesus, in whose name their marriage was consecrated, and whose resurrection has poured light upon
borne trora toe oase v an i saving, in i;ne presence of the little famished ones:: "OU, j uiy God, floor has gone up!” Yet songs in the night! Songs in the nighl! For the widow who goes to get; the bach pay of her husband, slain by the “sharpshooters,” and knows ill is the last help she will have, moving call of a comfortable home in desolation, death turning back from the exhausting cough and the pale cheek, and ihe lusterless eye, and refusing all relief. Yet son ;s in' the night! For the soldier in the field bcspita1, no surgeon to bind up the gunshot fracture, no water for the hot lips, no kind hauds to brush away the flies from the fresh .wound, no one to take the loving farewell, the groaning of others poured into his own groan, the blasphemy of others plowing up his own spirit, the condensed bitterness of dying away from home among strangers. Yet sonja in the night! Songs in the night! “Ah!” said one dying solder: “Tell my mother that last night there was not on* cloud between my son) and Jesur.” Songs in th9 night! Songs in the night! The Sabtath day has come. From the altars of ten thousand churches has smoked up the savor of sacrifice. Ministers of the Gospel are now preaching in p'ain English, in broad Scotch, in flowing Italian, in harsh Choctaw. Clod’s pe< pie have assembled in Hindoo temple, and Moravian church, and Quaker meet-ing-house, and sailers’ bethel, and King’s chapel, and high-towered cathedral. They sang, and the song flouted off amidst the spice groves, or struck the icebergs or floated off into the Western pines, or was drowned in the clamor of the great cities. Lumbermen san ; it,, and the factory girls and the children in the Sabbath class and the trained choirs in great assemblages. Trappers, vr.th the samel voice with which they shouted yesterday in the stag hnnt, and mariners, with throats that only a few days ago sounded in the hoarse blast of the sea hurricane, they sang, it One theme for the sermons. One burden for the song. Jesus for the invocation.' Jesm for the Scripture lesson. Jesus for (he baptismal font. Jesus for the sacramental cup Jesus for ihe lienodiction. But the day will go bv. II: will toll away on swift wheels of light: and love. Again the churches will be lighted. Tides of people again setting down the streets. Whole families coming up the church aisle. We must have one more sermon, two prayers, three songs audl one benediction. What shall we preach tonight? What shall we read? What shall it bs, children? Aged men and women, what shall it bs? Young men and maidens, what shall it be? If ncou dated to break the silence of this auditory, there would come up thousandsof quick and jubilant voice*, crying ont: “.Let it bo Jesus! Jesus!’’ ®
mesne circle on earth shall join that <*yea* harmony: Jerusalem, my happy home. Name ever dear to me; Whert Shell »jr la bom save as end fit joy and fCaef t# thee? On earth we shag tartest snags aa the what came into the liar'll and thebef* racks aero filled. Yon knot? there Is ho such tyiu on a tarm as when they get the Crops ini and so In Heaven it will bo a harrest song oil the jtlit of those who on edrth scared id tears and reaped Sn joy. Lift up your heads, ye everlaa tin* sates, and let the sheaves come ini Angels shout alt through the heavens, and multitudes coma down the hills trying* “Harvest hornet harvest home l* There is nothing more bewitching tc one's ehr than the song of sailors far out . at see, whether in day or nl; h», as they j pall away St the ropes—the anisic is i weird a-id thrilling. Bo this soag Is j Heaveu will 1>3 a sailor's song. They j were voyagers once, sad thought they could never get to shore, and before they could get things snug and trim the cyclone struck them. But now they are safe. Once they went with: damaged rigging, guns of distress boOmlog through the storm; but the pilot came abmrd an l lie brought them into the harbor. Sow they sing of the breakers past, tha light-houses that showed them where So sail, the pilot that took them through ti e straits, the eternal shore oa which they landed. , Ay, it will be the childem’s song. You know very well that the vast majority al our race die in infancy, and it is estirai ted that eighteen thousand millions of (he little ones are standing before Cod. Whn they shall rise up about the throne o sing, the millions and the millions of t ie little one-—ah! that will be music lof you! These played in the sheets of Babylon and Thebe'; these plucked lilfios from the foot of Olivet, wh'la Christ was preaching about them; these waded n Siloani; these were victims of Herod's massacre; these were thrown to Croocdiiss or into the fire: these came up from Cbri -- tian homes, and these were fondlings o# the city common;—children everywhere.1 in a l that land; children ia the towers, children on the seas of glass:, children tin the battlements. Ah, If you do not like children, do not go there. They are n vast majority, and what a song wh»u they lift it around about the throne! The Christian singers and composers •! all ages will be there to join In that son;;. Thomas Hastings wiU be there, Lowed Mason will be there. B-adbnry will 1« there. Beethoven and Mosa.t will be there. They who sonnded the cvmba s and the trumpets in the ancient temple = will bo there. The forty thousand barpe s that stood at the ancient dedication will be there. The two buud.-e l singers tb. .t assisted on that day will be there. Pat, archs who lived amidst thieshing Boons, shepherd; who watched amidst Citaidein hills, prophets who walked with lor,a beards and coarse apparel pronouncing woe against ancient abominations, w I
111071 (U7 UIUI7 IU«I IJ IO »» ««»-» »* ■ op with leaping cohorts cf 8re, and somi will speak of the Jesus of wham they prophesied, and others of Jesus for whom they died. Oh, what a song! ft came to John upon Patinos; it came to Calvin in the orison; it dropped to John Knox in the fire; and sometimes that song ha* come to yoor ear, perhaps, for lrea!ly do think I* sometimes breaks over the battlements oi Heaven. A Christian woman, the wife of a minister of the Gospel, was dicing in the parsonage near the oid church, where on Saturday night the choir used to assembl e and rehearse for the following Sabbath and she sai 1; “How strangely sweet the choir rehearses to-night; they have been rehearsing there for an hoj.” “No,” said some ona about he', “the choir is not rehearsing to-night” “Ye*,” she sa d, “I know the.- are, I hear them sing; how very sweetly they sing!” Now It was not a choir of earth that she heard, but the choir of HI -aven. I think that Jesus sometimes sets ajar the door of Heaven, and a passage of that rapture greets onr ears. The minstrels of Heaven strike snch a tremendous strain the walls of jasper can not ho'd it. 1 wonder will yon sing that song? Will 1 sing it? Not unlass oar sins are pardoned, and we learn now to sing the praise of Christ, will we ever sing it there. The fi.-st great concert 1 over attended was in Hew York, when Julian, in the “Crystal Palace,” stool before hundreds of singers and hundreds of players upon instruments. Some of ydu may remember that occasion;* it was the first one of the tied at 1 which I was present, and 1 »b« !l n«Te» forget it. 1 saw that one man standing, and" with the hand end foot w; Id that great harmony, beating the time. It was to me overwhelming. But, oh, the grander scene when they shall come from the east and from the west, ait 1 from the north and from the south, *n great multitude that no man can number." into the temple of the skies, heat beyotrd host, rank beyond rank, gallery above . allery. and Jesus shall stand before tbs great host to conduct the harmony, w th hit wounded bandt and bis wounded feet: L ke the voice of many waters, him the voice of mighty thundsringa, they shall cry: “Worthy is the Lamb that wi: - slain toreceiva blessings, and riches, and .ionor, and glory, and power, world without end. Amen and amen!” Oh. if my ear shall hear no other sweet sounds, may 1 hear that! If I join no other glad assem stage, may 1 join that. I was readme of U» battle of Agin court,iu which Henry Y. figured;an 1 it is said after the battle was won. giori susly won, the Kmg wanted So acknow ledge the divine interposit ion, er.d he ordered the chaplain to read the Psalm of David; and when ho came to III* word, “Hot unto [ us, O Lord, but onto thy name be the praise.” the King dismounted, and all the cavalry dismounted, and all the grist host, officers and men, throw themselves on their faces. Ob, at the story of the Saviour's love and tike Saviour’s datmftrance. shall we not prostrate onrs4ffies before him new, hosts of earth aud hosts of Heaven, falling upon oar facei and erving: “Hot unto us, not unto us, but unto Thy name be the glory !w
FACES OF THIEVES. CUimi He Can TeU a Batumi at a Qlwta The Boston chief police inspector was ushering out a very queer little old couple the other day. “We haven’t got evidence enough to hold your wife upon this tuna,” he was saying to the little old mao, “but sooner or latershe is bound to go to priso n. Kashin; y on can ever suy or do will keep her from picking pocket* If ehu had ^<1,000,000 a year of her own to spend site weald con tinue to ■tenl just the not* “Tint is a fanny thing to say.* remarked the writer, as the little old couple hobbled o"* of the room. * Wliat did yo u mesa by “Just what I said," remarked the inspector. “Did you look *t that woEMtn’s f»oe » She can no moss help stealing titan she can help breathing. The teidteet la marked the student or orlmimaii physiognomy. ’ “Pray wh*t ire the Burn which f the weakness you speak of f" “It is not powibe, l assure yon, to describe them hitoBif.wiitiy. To the eye of the expertaneud puivs otlioer. however, they are perfectly familiar. How o&hsrw s» on occasions of public rt j'J.dng. like the Fourth Jl Jriy.jjotrid my_ wbtudtoatos go of crooks whom they hairs never seen
THE C. a * Q STRIKE. p»w«I*tty» Mnwtfe*** c**»**e »- Among the tMvUtoF*' '**• ^rw#>* **••* pectofAay fhltfB Wi.» ArbHr«tH»-R*-Sntoreemc-nt Aitl»IW ^rom **!? ft1* mm) «ra<ln* ly Manning *“• ™“- Mom Cii Ro< iio. Ckscago, > srch 1.—Powderly'* “•“** festo, Chief l rthor’s expression of Opinion ooncernin; arbitration and th« headway made by llu company as a result of the mcnrsioi of new hands were the Chief features of the Burlington ioibrogUc yesterday, i»s for the Brut, the reception which It enc mistered was any thing but complimentary to the invalid grand master workman of. the noble army of Knights. It was almost more than a news] «per n>au dared to broach the subject in the pr itense of Chief Arthur. A tare reference to it was enough to cause a knitting if Iho brews n gritting ot the teeth, followed by a sharp, peremptory notice from the bead of the Engineers* Brotherhood to the effect that he didn’t want te hear it mentioned, and wouldn’t discuss ifc Chief Sergeant, of the Firemen’s Brotherhood, was a little more conservative, and candidly confessed that, read in the proper light, the letter was nil right and that Powder! y meant well; but down at the hal! on Fourteenth slreet, where the str ikers assenbte to discuss the situation, a very different view was entertained. Figuratively speaking, both Powderly, his totter and the Knights of Labor were ripped rsp the back. “It’s a diplomatic letter,” saidone graybaired, grizilsd engineer; ‘‘diplomatic in tbs sense that; it stalls us Sn the back and offers ns the hand of friendship at the same time. To my mind, he simply mops the floor with us. AH the grievances which the knights lavs against oor organisation are re hear led in vigorous language, audition a demand is made for the exorcise of Christian sharity and forbearance. If thrt isn’t tearing open the wounds and »sen commiserating with our condition, then I can’t understand p‘ain English. The pen that wrote that letter was dipped in gall, and the animosity 1* so transparent that he may read who runs.” This is nn indication of the general concensus of opinion expi-ested bv the strikers. It to very certain that the antagonistic relation) already In existence between the B otherhood aud the Knights are not likely to be modified as the resalt of the Scranton letter. Chief Arthur’s statement that he troald. be willing to submit the cr.se of the men to a board ot arbitration composed of practical railroad men, provided a proposition to that effect came from the company, was first communicated' io the railroad rflk-ials by the United Press. Apparently it took them by surprise, although, accosd ug to the chief, they uad known nil along that the representat ives of the men were willing to submit t Mir cause to the jnogment ot an unbiased tribunal. At any rate it furnished n justification for a prolonged
General Manager Stone, General Passenger Agent Morton and a npresentative of the legal department, and it was several hoars late" when the following was Issued as the reply of the Company: In reply to the suggestion that the road should make a proposition to arbitrate. President Perkins says: "Unfortunately there Is nothing to arbitrate, because the demands' msde up r us are ot such a nature as to make It Impossi >le. We must eontrolour property, and can t ,ot submit to any body questions which rel ate to the best exercise of the skill and experience of the management in the eon,, at duct of t he road. No other questions are involved. b i ause the managers have offered in their an wer to the demands to adjust and equalise rages, and they are ready to take that question up nt any time." This reply was generally accepted among he men as an ultimatum that the company was disposed to light to the bitter end; that no hope for a compromise remeinf d, and that nothing now remained for the Brotherhood but a prolonged strike c r unconditional surrender. The birty or more engineers that arrived b're from the East Monday night were taken to tb# general effleesof the railroa d at an early hour yesterday morning ant put through an exhaustive exuraiaa ion. According to the officials, one an ', all came off with flying colors, and w we at once dispatched to various points, on the system where their eervices wjre most needed. How the road, lured i luring the day, from the officials* standpoint, con best be told in the language at Mr. Morton: “We sent ont eighteen suburban trains each way,” he said, last night, “against tow on Monday and nine yesterday, while oar 8 s. m., 1:3! p. m. and 5:80 p m. mail trains went through as though nothing nnnsaai had occurred. The early morning and late night trains, both of which have but little | assengor patronage, were abandoned. The in-coming through trains arrived in good shape. From Slnpertntundhnt Hoidridge of the Burlington & Missouri in Nebraska, with headquarters alt Omana, we have a dispatch saying that be is clearing np what freight there U now on the lines of most of his divisions, atid that he expects to move all freight offend to-morrow. 6uperintecdeEt Duggan, at Creston, I*., wires us that he sent this afternoon two frights west and ons south. Reports from the South are to the effect that the prospects an good fer the prompt movement of bath freight and passenger traffic. We are not yet at liberty to aasert that the back bore of tfco strike is broken, bat we do think: that we have both feet on its spinal column, and that the column is slowly gi ving way. ~l . A large number of dispatches wan nceived at tea offices of the company during the dny offering the services of firemen. To .ill nplies were returned that the read had more than it would need. Other dispatches stated that a batch of seventy sngineer* from New York, New England, Pennsylvania and Michigan; another bacth of orty from Pennsylvania, and a third batch of thirly-flva from New York would be hen lo-mcrrow. Bammed up, tbs third day of the greatest strike in the history of the twin brotherhood* of engineers and firemen closed with the company satisfied with the headway it had made and sanguine as to the uture, and with its sx-employas good nattred and confident that in their game of waiting and watching they hold the trump card. ._
Win Arbitral a. Conditionally. Chicao x Feb. »—“Any statement that t ban ax pressed, either of anxiety or dasire to ha 7e this trouble sattlad by arbitration, it equivocal and misleading,said Chief Arthur to a United Frost *•>, !“ porter this afternoon. “WhatI did say to some of our men who wars here last night, ju t as I hairs said more than once since foa - o’clock Monday morning, was that if tha Burlington came to us with a proposition to submit the questions at issue ton soard of arbitration, wo won Id consent, nth the proviso that such board should b composed of practical railroad men, jus to show that wo are honor* able man.A Wiwnlag to the Union Faside. Dmvxt, Col., M arch 1.—The Burlington road sac needed yesterday in securing an engin ierto trike out the mail train. Although tha strikers labored kindly with him, he n fused to join them, and shortly after one o’clock ho pulled out to maks tha run t< Akron. There are reports current that tbs Union Pacific has boon aid
