Pike County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 27, Petersburg, Pike County, 22 November 1888 — Page 1

J. L. MOUNT, Proprietor. VOLUME XIX. = County Democrat. “OtU' Mbtto is tibribst IDteYotion to JPrn cipl s bf Right;” OITIOE, owr a B MOHTGOMEBT’S Store, Mtin Street. Petersburg iNbiANA, thursw y. SoVEmBer im: NUMBER 27. -- -■'-zjam*

PIKE COUNTY DEMOCRAT PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDaV terms or niiKCRirniHd Poronnj-saur. ....fi M For iix month*... 73 Por three months...... M INVARIABLY IN ADVANC5SS ADVERTISING RATES 1 aqua re <*llne«>. one Insertion.$1 (K :h additional inaertion. M A liberal reduction made on advertisements •nnlnir three, air. and twelve month*. Leral and transient adreitiecmcnt* must be ' tor In advauco.

PIKE COUNTY DEMOCRA JOB WORK OF ALL K1NE3 Woatly Executed SEASONABLE BATES. NOTICtoJ Pernen* recelrlnir • copy of thl* !M* notice crowed in lend pencil *«H 'fee time of their uibacnption r of tht» pnper with _pencil ve noMHed l of their uibacnption htf « eipne*

I'liOKEMJtWAI. CAnni. ka.kly!~ Attorney at Lawf PETERSBURG, IND. Offlee: "Over J. R. A(t»in* ft Son'» !'i-ub Store. Be Is »1mi • member of the Urut-'.l state* Collleetinn AMoctatiou. ami,give* prompt attention Ho every matter in which ho i* employed. TR. P- RtCHAiuwoa. A. H. Tatixml B1CHARDSON & TAYLOR. Attorneys at Law* PETERSBURG, INO. ’Prompt attention akweo to atl biuinea*. A >'otar.v PublloconainnUgrtm theofllce. UflUet In Carpenter llutlillng, (till amt Main. i W. WILSON, Attorney at Law, PETERSBURG, 1N0

tVXWIce: Over J. R Young A Oo.'» Store. U. Cahi.ktos. J. H. I .A M a R. CARLETON & La M A It. Physicians ft Surgeons I'ETKKSHUKU. 1ND., , Arm practice In Pike ftml atljofnins1 counties* r<iflU*o: Hoar room of llnnk building. Ofllce hour* tiny juid wight. f I »i **»»*’» of women an«l children u tpectalty. dirtmie att<l difficult CIUK** sulu-itcti ~A ilK lT CASKH 1). Physician and Surgeon VKUK.N, ISO. Wt;: in 1*1,e ami adjoining eountle*. Call* promptly auondod to. day or night. OfBoa hour., ila\ awl night W. F. Tu» nsvvii. M vkT KLEE***. Kiioim Han H. TOWNSEND, FLEENER 4 SMITH, Attorneys at Law AND EMI ESTATE AGENTS, tsnBeeu^ - * • imhana Office, over Uu* KmnV* More. •special at •ciition given to« o1I«m tmns, liuyinc uuU >ell Inc i*an(U* L\at»mmx Titles ami Furnishing it It KJMK, M. 1>., Physician and Surgeon S PETERSBURG. IND. Office, over Itnrnii A s..n»» »t»re; reel, do,ice on seven,li street. Hirin' si|u ar'"i Month of Main. < all* promptly attended to, day or night. __ J. a DUNCAN. Physician and Surgeon PETKRSBUAO, * IXD. on Aral door Carpenter Building. asj. jt. HAnms,

Resident Dentist, I'ETF.RHBUKU, ink. A Hi WORK ^WARRANTED. 0. K. Shaving Saloon, J. E. TURNER, Proprietor. PETERSBURG, IND. I“artir, wl.hln* work Jena *1 their r> «ldinner* will leave Tinier < at the *h >p. in l>r i*kra«' now t>u Mint. rear of Adam* A Son • 4nw rto:, CITY HOTEL. Uidtr Now Mknacement. R. A. Mi'Ml’Klf AY, Propriolor, for. Eighth and Main sta^opp. Court-bouao, Pktkiisbuku. INK. Thorny Hotel la centrally located, flri-t c|as» In all Ha appointment*, and the beat and cheapest hotel m the city. Sherwood House, I'nder Now Manag, tn-nt. B1SSELL & TOWNSKXU, Pnp'rs. First and l-ocutt street*. Kvmtsi ille, : : Inti Inn a. RATES, 352 PER DAY. Sampla Rooms for Commoreial Man.

HYATT HOUSE, WuUmctu. lad. Crntr.Hy Loc-aied. and Accommodation. t'lr»t-claa* HENRY HYATT, Proprietor. NEW GRIST MILL! MAKE MEAL AND CHOP FEED. -—oGrinds Kvery SATURDAY ut A. E. Edwards’ Farm. , Benefaction ISuniUri. Tow mna.(« jialkiltd. A. E. EDWARDS. When at Washington Stop at the MEREDITH HOUSE. First-Class in All Bespeots. Mi. uru Huuu* and Atmos H omiuli. Proprietor*. HOTEL ENGUSH, Northwest >ide Circle Park. kept Hotel* *r tke pr*e*» charged la Good tceatloa, rooms tore, el*•ad all modern reptealeacet kiserO^, Y«J S»r®r»Wt rate*

THE WOULD AT LARGE, _____ Summary of th« Dolt; News,

WASHINGTON NOTES. An attache of the White House «ays that the executive mail is very heavy* and that hundreds of letter* ate received denouncing tho President* they Are Udn« signed by the secretaries to the furnace. the twenty-ninth wnhual session of the missionary council of the American Episcopal Church begat} In the Epiphany Church, Washington, on the lHth. The United 8tales Supreme Court has decided that any man may insure his life for the benefit of his family and that bis creditors can not touch a cent of such insurance. EnaMC THOMPSON. a bricklayer in the Washington aqueduc} tunnel, recently testified that a regular conspiracy existed •to deceive the inspectors. | General Kelson A. Miles has received formal notice from the War Department Of his transfer to »San Francisco to take command of the divisiiou of the pacific, vice General 0. O. Howard, who goes East, to assume command of the division of the Atlantic. The ('mean Minister bade farewell to President Cleveland on the 1Mb preparatory to his return to Gore* on a leave of absence, Cssracmt* claims to control of the House were still being made at Washington on the 13th by trading Republicans and Democrats. The President has directed the return to their reservation in Dakota of three Crow Indians arrested at the time of the Sword Rearer outbreak and sent to Carlisle, Pa. Hon. Joseph ChamrehLain, the well known English politician, was married to Miss Mary Kndicott at Washington on the 13th. The President and Mrs. Cleveland were present at the ceremony, Tiik chief of the Bureau of Statistics report,, that the total values of the exports of domestic bread stuffs during the ten months ended October ill. as compared with similar exports during the corresponding |H-ri»J of title preceding year, wore: |w. *i*i.912,Kllj; 1WC, ,«;8,M3,93S. It is positively denied in Washington that ex-Mmisler Foster presented claims for $30,0001400 against Mexico on his recent visit to the City of M-xito.

HIK HAST. Jolts M< Ki.m.av. of Albany, N. Y., ha* failed for $100,000. He wa* an unsuccessful candidate for the Slate Assembly. . Br a collieion Iwitween an excursion train aud an engine taking water at a tank at South Ration, p*.. recently, l*>ih engines w ere wrecked and two New Jersey militiamen seriously hurt, John H. Sm>i.l, asMguee of claims held Viv Corn Itli & Co., the New York lead dealer*, has brought suit against Guidon Corn ith. a member of the metal exchange, to recover i7.vi.isri damage*. The defendant has bean arrested. Watson's grain elevator, New York, wa* burned on the 18th. The total loss w as SVi'tOOl): insured. WkUUm’s elevator, Buffalo, N. Y„ was burned recently. I-ess, $120,000; insured. The wine cellar of the lato Samuel J. Tiiden wa* di*|>o«e 1 of at auction at New York on the 18th. Five hundred and twenty Isiitles of Stoiuberger lirought from fX.Vt to v.i jwr bottle, some double O Madeira $3,30 and some bluegra** wtnsky, forty year* old, $11.50 |>er gallon. In all 430 bottle* were soldi TH* prhipua Attujck* monument, dedicates! to the victims Inf the affair in King street March \ 177‘Ji, winch is known to history as the “Boston massacre," w as unveiled at Boston on the ltth Bt the blowiag down of a now ice House at lledham. Mass., the other day, three men at work on the structure were fatally and three badly injured. Tim act incorporating the Nicaragua Canal Company ha* passed the Vermont legislature. It is the same measure as wa* introduced into Congress last session. Wn.t.iAU Sbowhw, aged sixty-five, was hanged at Lebanon,] Fa., on the lith for the murder of his two grandchildren. He committed the crime because of a woman who objected to live with him while he had the children. The American Turf Congress convened at the 8t James, New York, on the 14th. with cloeed doors, [Charles Ureen, of 8t lxnii*, presiding. The business uuder discussion. it was state*, was the question of the increase of weights and the licensing of jockeys. Bt. Rachael's Church, Suspension Bridge, N. Y. was destroyed by fire recently. boss, $15,01*1. Fart of E. N. Cook & Co.’* distillery, Buffalo, N. Y., was destroyed by fire the other morning. Four hundred barrel* of whisky were also lost. Loss, $30.OJ0. John Vankokff was arrested for setting fire to the steam gauge and lantcru works near Rochester, N. Y-, by which about thirtv-Uve persons lost their lives. In - . vestigation developed the fact that Vankorff had a mania for setting fire to places. Re was eugineer at the factory at the time it was destroyed. The liabilities of W. D. Forbes, ex-pre-sident of the National Bank of Redemption. Boston, Mass., are now placed at $2.'i«,0vi0 and the creditors may not get 23 cents on the dollar. The New York Star has been sold nt auction to A. H. Sheliatiarger for$15,000. The statue of William H. Seward, Lincoin’s Secretary of State, was unveiled at Auburn, N. Y., on the 13th in the presence of a huge crowd. Bt the explosion of a lamp in Frank Knecht’s house in Plymouth, Fa., duriug the ahsence of Mrs- Knecht two smalt children were burned to death. The trial of the suit against the sugar trust commenced at New York on the 14tb. , The official count of New York gives Harrison'* plurality of 13.0U). The Woman’s Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, met in New York on the l!3th. Chari.laJohnkon w as banged at Waterloo, N. Y., on the 13th for the murder of John Waiters, a guard .in the jail in which Johnson was confined for horse stealing. It was reported at New York on the loth that the weaker trunk lines had withdrawn from through west bound business and would not take any freights at the cut rate* The Vermont House ha* defeated the Woman Suffrage lull by 192 to 37. W. P. Corr, collector for Saugustown. Mass., has disappeared with a shortage of over $23,009. C. H Birdsall, editor of the Hartford (Conn.) TeltpraM. was cowhided the other night by Alien Wyley and L. P. Smith of the Sunday Globe as the result of a long article in the Teiegnrm accusing the Globe of blackmailing operations. The PuNit■ Ledger blames the Interstate Commerce law for the demoralisation existing in railroad rates. Tt say* the prohibition of pooling forces the weaker lines to cut rate* as they are not allowed to make amicable arrangements with their stronger competitor*. Rhode Isusd adopted the Constitutional amendment in the recent election abolishing property qualification for suffrage. ■ _ N*tr« from Tishmoningo states that Governor Guy was not killed as first reported. the bullet missing hint. The Chickasaw*, however, were greatly excited. some 700 of Guy’s follow ersrnUyuig A tHSFATCH of homed off Po large Pdoti

V4fc Mnlt steamer I»ou M. Divkiisss'd ww entirely destroyed by fire tins other night, l>oss, *20,000.' The crow Ol seven barely escaped. Tnr. result of tile election held hy the Oklahomites In No-ManVLau’t Vis largely In fa von of t^rriWi ial governtaent amt fhr the ttprlhger Oklahoma bill. O.C. Chase whs elec ted Delegate to Congress, together with the entire 1'errihVrlai Council ticket f avoring the Oklahoma bill. Governor John A. Martin, of Kansas, issued his thanksgiving proclamation oh the tilth. The Knights of t»abor met in anhuhl convention at iMdiadapoUat, Ind., of the iSth. Abort 100 brnkemen on the Louisville, Now Albany It Chicago railway struck receu»iy At Lafayette, Ind., for an increase In pay to 2 ecu is a. mile, the present rate being 1 s-10 a mile, and for three men to each train instead of two. I * An epidemic of scarlet fever is raging at Jamestown, Dak., and the churches and schools have been closed in CoUse<|Hence. iM'ExnlAKiEit destroyed it,OOd,(KM feet of lumber in Weed & Co.’s yard at Black Riiver fails, Wis., the other night Lots, ■Ht.OW. Trairik fires: al-out Aberdeen, and Gary and In ?<auborn and Beadle Counties, Dak., destroyed a large amount of hay and grain and several fine tree claims. Many farmers lost every tilling they possessed. Miss Belle Bridewell, a teacher in a school near ivrestor, 111., was killed recently by a k ck from a boy whom she was attempting-to discipline. The sixteen! l annual convention Of the Association for the* Advancement of Women began i at- Detroit, Mich., oh the

As engineer; and fireman were fatally injured recently on the Burlington road, near Downer's Grove, 111. A freight train run cfT the track at a frog and plunged into the engine of the unfortunate men. The 'longshoremen at Chehov gan, KHch . have struck for an increase of 13 cents per hour in wagea-i Their demand wilt probably be granted; as the river Is full of vessels. JonS Mahomet. the notorious dance house keeper, of Ashland. Wis., who was shot by E<lw«rd ti missy recently, died leaving an eat site worth $100,000. The third annual convention of Christian Workers of the United States and Canada began in Detroit on the loth. The offer of * reward of $30,000 for the arrest of Taiccftt. the murderer of millionaire Snell, of Chicago, has been extended l>v the family until January 17. Ewe Larse;:, a prominent farmer living near Fergus Fijdla, Minn., has left forCannda with over, $,’>,(3100 in debts and no as* sets. Albert Kit voir, a farmer of Star Prairie, near New Richmond. Wis., recently shot and fatally wounded James McDonald, a neighbor, without known reason. About forty manufacturers of straw wrapping paper from various parts of the country ware in secret session in Chicago recently endeavoring to arrange a pool or trust. Thekk is a theory at Elgin, III., that the Whitechapel murderer is an escaped lunatic from the insane asylum there named Hutchinson, who had a mania for slaughtering and had murdered a woman Of the town in Chicago. The trouble im the Chickasaw Nation was settled by Guy and Byrd mutually foregoing their claims to the Governorship and agreeing upon Chief Wolf for the position. The affair wound up with a love feast. Two young sons of John Marvin, a farmer living rear Si. Cloud, Minn., were drowned recen tly while skating over thin ice. , Ed McDonald, the most famous of the Chicago boodlers, has secured a reversa! of his case by the Illinois Supreme Court and it is thought that be will never go to the penitentiary. The plurality of Francis for Governor of Missouri was 13,331; for Cleveland, 3*. 632. Three younip girls were caught on a bridge by a train at Circleville. O., the other day. Trim were killed. The third escaped by clinging to the stringers. IHK SOUTH. The Tullahouia (Teun.) woolen factory was destroyer!, by fire recently. .Loss, $100,000. Both candidates for Congress in the Fifth Maryland district claim their election by small majorities. A heavy fic*t occurred at Decatur, Ala., on the 13th, and though tire case* of yellow fever were reported, all were reported mild. Refugees were returning. tinVerror Cordon was inaugurated at Atlauta. Ga.. im the 13th for his second term. His imugural address dealt with the late election and the effect it would hare on the Snuth and on the individual States, taking l ire stand that he does not believe that Republican success means the degradation of any of the Southern States by the eunctmrjmt of force hills; Captain T. til, Logan, commanding the United States troops at Fort Hancock, on the Rio Grande, some seventy miles be* low El Faso, Tex., and his companions were attested recently while hunting in Mexico. Dr. Robert ISabers and W. W. Short* ridge, a lawyer, fought a duel with bowie knives recentliii’ in a dark room at Montevallo, Ala. The lawyer was found dead in the room. The doctor, fearfully wounded, ran into the street and in a erased condition attacked a negro. The latter felled him with a Wow front a gun, from the effect* of which be shortly afterward expired. Conley, a brnkeman, left a switch open recently on the B. & (X, ninety-three miles west of Wheeling, W. Va., causing the wreck of a freight train and the killing of seven men, five; belonging to the train and two being tramps. Six of the largest business firms In Durham. N. C-, failed ou the 15th, causing a serious finaucial crisis in Raleigh and other cities of t!he State. Jefferson Davis has declined to visit Richmond, Va.. because of feebleness and fear that travel would prove fatal. Locisville. fEy., has been chosen for the negt meetiug lot the National Board of Trade, to be not later than October, lHt®. The men from Live Oak. Fla., claiming to represent tile relief committee of that place and asking for aid are denounced as frauds, as the place needs nothing.

GKNKRAT. Paor. Wiogiss, the Canadian weather prophet, has r sceived a diploma and honorary membership from the Ananiao Clnb of Boston, the professor regard* the matter as an i nsulL Hidho.no, t ie Irish leader, has been released from tine jail at Wexford by the advice of physi siaas, he having lost thirteen pounds since his incarceration. A squab**! Peruvian soldiers recently seised the h:>use belonging to the American Consuls :» at Molcndo on the ansuiiiplion that it belonged to the railroad. The Minister at lima protested. It eras rumored in Paris on the 13th that German guilds on the eastern frontier had shot thme French sportsmen, killing <me of them. Premier Ckism. of Italy, has notified the French i lovernment of Italy’s desire \ to remove all causes of misunderstanding. •Ha-Queen Natalie of Servia has purchased an eitate near Warsaw, Poland, for 1.*00,0001 Htbles. Tub Can ad an Government has let the jract for t he construction of a canal at >te. Mirie for $1,SuO,oOO. ichaj ib Baoallay. formerly Lard tppeal of Great Britain, U vculy two years, ■

This trunk lines hare announced an open cut between New York anitj tbe West on ell classes of freight, end iodttced[, Imfee nearly one* half. .The *ails6 bf the 1 rouble #*<1 the hrigihator were not definitely known, but it was credited to the Vanderbilt lines. A report was in circulation in Vienna on the 13th that an attempt had been made to assassinate Prince Ferdinand, th* ruler of Bulgaria. v Th* Cattle Of Libenwerda, near Hu,lift Sakonyr has Been burned td the ground. The castle physician, ids wife and child And two servants were burned to death. Jasper Docolas Ptne, member of Parliament for West Waterford, fell overboard the other night from one of the steamers running between Holyhead and Dublin and was drowned. Tbe French committee of revision of the Constitution of that country Has adopted a resolution favdrirtg th* abolition of th* Senate and Presidency, Meshe.nokks who have arrived at W'adjr Haifa re|iort tljat the ttysterioUs Whitt; Pasha in the Behr el Basel district had fdught h great battle and killed many

aerfiran. Bt an explosion in a mine in Belgium recently thirty-two miners were killed. Three escaped alive but badly injured.. Exports ot the principal articles of provisions during October past aggregated in value $6,611,706, against $7,06!>,5W in f.K-to-ber. 1W. A warrant has been issued in Canada for the extradition of He Baum, the New York forger. Tbs great Herman ironclad Kaiser with Prince Henry of Prussia oil board went aground in the harbor of Copenhagen on the 14th. The Prince was taken ashore in King Christian’s yacht. Th* British steamer Black Watch foundered between Naples and Odessa November 8. The fate of the crew was unknown, Ax Irish bailiff named Lynch has been i shot and killed by moonlighters near Kll- ! I«arry. Th* Tagus, Douro and Ligo rivers in i Portugal have overflown their banks and | done much damage. A Zanzibar correspondent says the Southern mail brings news that the ports are Ailed with insurgents and that the anti-German feeling is unabated. The burning of Minengani Tunghl Is confirmed. The Governor of Mozambique is proven ed from returning to his capital by a hostile chief of the Zambesi. Miss Francis E. Willard denies that the National Woman’s Christian Temperance Union requires its members trr favor the Prohibition party. The members are left free as to political affiliations. Duke Maximilian, of Bavaria, was stricken with apoplexy a few days ago and is dead. He was eighty years of age. Th* Mexican National Railroad Company has refused to receive Mexican National Bank notes. ErroRTS to unite the federal and progressive republicans of Spain have failed. The body of the late B shop Seghers, of Alaska, has been brought to Victoria, B. C., by the United States man-of-war Thetis. Claims for over $20,000,000 against ths Mexican Government and in favor of the I estate of the late. Charles Butterfield have | been presented by ex-United States Minister John Foster. TH* people of Denmark celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of the accession of King Christian on the 15th. Thic'firearm factory at Chatelle Rault, France, where the I-ebel rifles were being made, has been destroyed by fire; loss, $1,000,000 francs. Bcsiness failures (Dun’s report) for the seven days ended November 15 numbered 237, compared with 226 the previous week and225 the corresponding week last year. Violent gales on the 16th caused numerI ous wrecks on the west coast of Great Britain. Among the vessels which met with disaster was the Norwegian bark. Hypatia, but no lives were lost Portugal has decided to send vessels to aid Great Britain and Germany to break up the East African slave trade. Th* coasting steamer Vonvairo, which left Cutch, India, November 6 with 9lW natives on board, was reported overdue and it was feared she had foundered in a recent storm. Th* strike of the brakemen on the Louisville, New Albany & Chicago railway has been compromised, the men getting increased wages. A heavy shock of earthquake was experienced at Guayaquil on the IStJli. Thousands fled from their houses. A recent letter from Port an Prince says that seven American vessels are under detention there. Anarchy prevailed all over Hayti, and the necessity for menof*war to protect the foreign residents was urgent

_ TUB LATEST. United States Treasurer Hyutt’s re. port ou the sinking (and of the District of Columbia, made publio on the 18th, shows that the principal of the District debt has been reduced from 884,092,450,. in 1878, to $30,581,430 July 1,1888. Miss Farwkll, daughter of Senator Farwell, of Illinois, will be married in Washington, in December, to Dudley Winston, the son of Hon. F. H. Winston, formerly Minister to Persia. At Dunmanway, County Cork, Ireland, on the 18th, the parish priest at each mass took occasion to denounce from the altar the murderer of Lynch, and at each outburst of indignation urged the people to ; become detectires in order to capture the ‘ criminal. Emperor Willus escorted hisi mother, | the Empress Frederick, and her daughters ] to the railway station, on the 18th, where | they took the train en route to England. Tit mammoth new iron viaducts spanI ning the flats at Cleveland, O., «t an altitude of seventy-Are feet, and connecting the South and Hast sides of the city, was completed on the 17th. Thb police of Berlin have expeled MM. La Tapieh and Ooriot, French j ournalists who have lately been engaged iin editing correspondence to Parisian newspapers. At a recent sitting at Belgrade, Servia, of the commission on constitutional revision, King Milan deolared that be would as little tolerate the predominance of the Russian eagle at Constantinople as he would countenance the authority of the American eagle at Salontca. A eoiutn exploded In the lamber-yarda of George Crawford, at Cincinnati, on the 18th. due to an insufficiency of water, probably fatally eoaldlng William Maessinger, engineer, and Peter Maguire, fireman. who are said to have bien intoxicated at the time. Residents in MilfordpMass., and vicinity felt a alight continuous earthquake, on the 17th, lasting from two to four minutes. Dwellings were slightly shaken. Is fourteen furnaces employing 1,403 men, at Sharon, Pa., the wages of employes were voluntarily advacioed by the owners, on the 17th, ten and fifteen cents per day. Ton Prinoetou foot-ball team defeated Harvard by a score of 18 to • on the 17th. Tn sale of Lord Backville’s bonseheld effects ooenrred in'Washington on the 19th. Great excitement prevailed iq San Francisco, on the 18th, caused by the severe shock of an earthquake. Thousands of people rushed into the streets from private residences and the hotels throughout the city, fearing that the build ings were about to topple down upon the n. Da. H. B. Baxds, the eminent surgeon of Hew York, died of apoplexy, on the 13th. while returning is his cairiage from a visit to a patient. Among noted of his recent eases wure thpee of General Great, ] :; £ / ;

A ROUG 1 P t SAGE.

*%* CMuHatet jfi -8t li Hough anil Oral ill I*# KUleil and Severe lajni 8m» that Swept tl * Vet N*w York, Nov 19.aud five injured Is ho r narder Etruria, W ich dotsk lost droning, aft* little bv*Sr seven day t df daring all of whirl thi valued in their cabi is', I and suffering great dis one of the roughest up Etruria’s officers hat •» e passengers express si over the fact that th s( was never slackened, an was nearly up to t :ie The officers, on the ol is this homplaint is ui re fate of s jived has udtl :n homfurl or safety of hi ing gales nud heavy t >i On Tuesday aftern o than any yet eneouu * proachlug. The seame warniug, and attempt! safety, but when the m fell with a crash up men were swept in a & the deck-houses. Wit ceded, it was found tlw an able seaman. of_ jii; ly crushed and bruised hours after. Four oti steerage passenger nar brnised ami lamed, i by the ship’s physioiac The officers of the V and the attempts of U tain particulars of the sorue exhibitions of ill Annul g the passeni Mason and Archie Sim pedestrians who come six-days walk at Madis Mason is the ’’ped”' • Rnwcll. nud much is Siguor Del Puente, the a passenger. The White Star stea reports very heavy w< cidents occurred. Shi making the trip, Her highly of the manage Among her passeuger Camtuou and family Murray and Mr. and J si per!,* iii r.C It age—One Man t by the Heavy I. ne man killed' ord of the Currived at her a voyage of d rribld weather,1 passengers reSly frightened mfort. it was •ienccs that the r known. The le displeasure k! of the vessel the time made acing standard, baud, ear that enable; as thb lo dp with the i bn board diirJ a huger wave id. was seen apnttered cries1 of 0 seek places of intain of water the vessel, the > against one of 1 the water reieorge Woruald, ‘pool. Was fatal* He died a few r seamen and a d Golt were cut, i were earei^for sel are reticent, reporters to obiji were met with 'mtieA -3 were George ir, the Euglish take part iu the : Square Garden. i > beat ChaHey r. ported of him. t ritoue. was also >r Republic also liver, but no acw s ten days in >a sengers speak e t of the vesset. ve e Sir Roderick Ici. Mrs. M. W. i. Ik'S. Appleton. LORD RANDOLP l HURCHILLi The Vou-'j} Tory State; i a it as the Champion of Hi* Wife's Coi try den—He Take* a Utile Revenge On i » L nilon •‘Staiidaril" at the Same Hu . LONDON, Nov. IS Churchill iu a speech terday, sahl that he ai importance to this c an imperturbable at towards America, ident Cleveland’s attl tion of the Fisherie but the utmost allot made for the Ameri time. Iu regard to th Sackville. though th< was sharp, the spea menacing sneers am here. “A war,” sai "betweeu England t be more atrocious * any waged since God He trusted that the I ward the uew Gove ton would be coueetvi making America one allies on all question ble frieudship be tv speaking races, and inanity the true bless peace. Lord Raudi government’s course in Irelaad, and also the restriction of the London, Nov. If 'hurchill lias at last m opportunity to re’ he Stamlanl for its towufall when he 'hurchill has never 1 Standard, whicli heai t was with the k hat on Saturday hat paper’s rec irtieles an rat the Sa ‘heapest anil most ilnster and bragadc lected the opinions losaible exception of hem. The remarks democratic leader h reneral indorsement iccepting the Nlawfci jelief that the articl lave been wiitton. Lo d Randolph Paddington, yeslohe l the greatest intr maintaining fri ndly attitude e t ought Presde ai ter the rejec* eaty unfortunate, ,uce ought to be vn pc dtlon at the distn ssal of Lord Pres tent’s action >r de irecated the sulks indulged iu Lor., Raudoiph, .1 America would ,1 dai gerous than reate the earth.” uiitr; ’s policy tomeat it Washiugwith the view of if En.:laud’s best producing a dura* su t e Englishlaran eeing to hugs o! liberty ami l>h t sproved the t repi sssiug crime trongiy advocated |uor 1 raffle. -Loi l Randolph sen provided with uge limself upou sjoii ug over his eft the Cabinet. 1 ar rlove for the ly d tests him, and sues satisfaction 19 characterized t inti-American rvilia affair as the ant parent kiud ol o, i uca they re- : nobody, with tfie he aan who wrote vtha young Tory e received almost ud .he few jiersous ’» view are of the i would better no

DESPERATI TRAMPS. A Fight with Train M qnrut I'aptiin Aflw I frror—On# Killed. Want rail Fay Bbcbbboo at Qae.. ford rai;wa troubles About 135 .tnliaas t at Parquet! i, six mil< Oo Thursdn j- night tl gincs wbicti bad bees day. They rad previ work of the steam pic is the singi ar one of for half-true work, month it asms the t that work ' as carrie time, but be men i entitled to utl pay, a cure it byi itimidatio s 'AQC H Fame In a Chicago Hot. 19.ln the Hhc ies Aveuu at a late our Saturi suppositic i that the 1 The parie* is and nui by the cry of fire, ant escaped i their nigh! was bein; made to r» when the fire depart the seem It was sex steam pi » had burst ing *itl steam. A gathers* and greats for a t|u uniII the n •U IK the fire epartamni p batp l » id Their Sub«» >:fiting h Reign o SrWSGFIELD, Mast of tramps boarded » yesterday on the Bos road, between this c chard. When the tri Orchard station they the switching was go ed to board the' true fight ensued. The U men off with couf ruffians retaliated ] until the traiu go. then terrorized the < was summoned trail train was made up * men on board. The tramps wer m diau Orchard s' die gave chase, each si Six were capture1 i in enthwas shot i.ad 1 was probably a eidei Cluue, who did be s! Yojrer to frigli ien t man is suppos'd to Ha had near! thirt son, and look.'d like to hard work i r tram dressed, fire feet ni weighed 170 pounds Voric Cityvd ted in ning “Dear Brother poefcet, and ,-u rarioi names: “Joi n McMe neberg. Ft. i/ayue, J dress, -No. 19 High a Wot. 18.—A gang 1. cal freight trait: vr A Albany raily and Iudiau Ori stopped at Indiar ere put off. While > on they attempt again, and a brisk u hands beat the ig pins, and the throwing stones it of reach. They nmunity, and help iis city. A specia i a force of police just west of Inand the officer* :liug out a man. tis way, and a sorted. The shooting *1, as City Marshal otiug, drew his reman. The deac s a bank burglar dollars on his pernan unaccustomed ng. He was fairly inches high, and A letter from Hew ,-tober and begiuwaa found in bis articles were the “August Soni;** also the adset’1 •r Half Time, tor. 18.—The Hero ave been resumed e now on a strike from the border y secured two en n use during the tsly prerented the . Their grierance emandiug full pay During the last uther was so wet m only about half asider themselves l are trying to seloapltal. 1 panic occurred Voman’s Hospital y night, upon tht lding was on fire. >« were awakened tauy of the lat tet resses. All haste tore the patients »ut arrived upon discovered that a id filled the bnild large crowd had tement prevailed ire of the trouble ug the excitement k str am of watei !•*« VHi,

TALMAGR’S SERMON. Not Alone the Brilliant Whtf Receive Reward, Bnt the Record of Heaven Will Repair* 8f livery One IrranHnf to tb.n Talent* intrusted td tMlif UnttlilJ Keeping;

Rev; t. DeWitt Talinage, in a rscetf* sermon at the Brooklyn Tabernacle, took up the parable of the ton talents is his subject, bis text being: Unto one he pave flve talents, to another two, and to another one; to every man aeoordnp to hit several ability.—Matthew, xiv., 15. Many of til# parables of Jesus Christ were more graphic in the times id ’#hidh Hh lived thaif they are ndw, because Oif* cdmstanfces have so mtich than gel In olden times, when a man wgnted to wreak a grudge upon his neighbor, after the farmer had scattered the seed wheat over the field and was expecting the harvest, Ihe avenger would go across the .same field with a sack full of the seed of darrfsl grass, scattering that seed all over the field, and, of course, it would sprout up and spoil the whole crop, and it was to that Christ referred in the parable when tie SpOkei Of the tarts being sown among Ihe wheat, in this land our ffiruid Sre fenced off and the wolves have Been driven to the mountains, and we can not fully understand the meaning of the parable in regard to the shepheiil and (he lost sheep. But the parable Of which 1 speak is founded on something we all Understand, it is built on money; and that iheanS the same in Jerusalem as in New York. It means the same to the, serf as to the Cxar, and to the Chinese'coolie as to the Emperor. Whether it is made out of bone, or brass, or iron, or copper; Of gold, or silver, it spe aka all languages without astdnintSr. T1 «p*rable of the text runs in this wist: The owner of a large estate was a!>out to leave home, and he had some mon ev that he wished properly invested, an i so he called together his servants, and said: "I am going away now, and I wish ydu would take this money dud i nit it to the verjr best possible use; dud when, I come back return to me the interest. To one man he gave nine thousand ft ur hundred dollars; to others, he gave lesser sums of money; to the least lie gave eighteen hundred dollars. He lei't home and was gone fof years, and ihen returned. On his arrival he was anxious to know about hts worldly affairs, and he called his servants together to leport to him. “Let me kuo#,’’said he; “vhatyou have been doing with my propet ty since I have been gone. The man vrbo had received the niue thousand fonr hundred dollars came up and said: “l invested i that money. I got good interest i !or it. 1 ' have iu other ways rightly employed it, and here are eighteen thousand eight hundred dollars. You see lhaVe doubled what you gave me. ” “That’s tety good,” said the owner of ' the estate) i‘thal*s , grandly done. I a-lmire your faithfulness and iudustry. I shall reward ; you. Well done—well done.” Other servants came up with smaller accumulations. After awhile I see a m tn dragging himself along, with his he id banging. I know from the way he comes in that he is a lazy fellow. He comes up to the owner of the estate and says: “Here are those eighteen hundred and eighty dollars.” “What!” says the owner of the property, “haven’t you mode it accumulate any thingf” “Nothicg—nothing.” “Why, what have you been about all these years?” “Ob, I was afrau. that if I invested It I might somehow lose U. There are your eighteen huudred auu eighty dollars.” Mauy a man started out with only a crown iu his pocket, and achieved a fortune; but this fellow of my text.with eighteeu hundred and -eighty dollars, has gained not one farthing. Instead of confessing his indolence, he goes to work to berate his master, for indolence is most alwayi impudent and impertinent Of tonrse he looses his place and is discharged from the service. The owner who we it out into a far country is Jesus Christ going from earth to Heaven. The servants spoken of in the text are members of the church. The talents are our different qualifications of usefulness, given in different proportions to different jieofle. The coming back of the owner is the Lord Jesus returning at the judgment to make flual settlement. The raising of some of these men to be rulers over five or two cities is the exaltation of the righteous at the last day, while the cast ug out of the idler is the expulsion of all those who have misimproved their privileges. Learn first from this Subject, that becoming a Christian is merely going out to service. If you have any romantic idea about becoming a Christin n, I want now to scatter the romance. If you enter into the kingdom of God, it will be going into plain, practical, honest, continuous, persistent Christian work. I know there are a great mauy people who have fantastic and romantic notions about this Christian life, but he who serves God with,all the energies of body, mind and soul is a worthy servant, and he who does not is an unworthy servant. When the war trumpet sounds, all the Lord’s soldiers must march, however deep the snow may be. or how fearful the odds against them. Under our government we may have Colonels,an J Captains, and Generals in time of peace, but in the Church of God there is no peace until the last great victory shall hare been achieved. But I have to tell you that it is

• voluntary service. reopie wv not brought into it as slaves were dragged from Africa. A young man goes to an artisan, and says: ‘•Sir, I want to learn your trade. I, by this indentures yield myself b> yonr care and service for the next four, or five* or seven years. I want you to be my master, and I want to be your servant” Jnst so, if we come into the kingdom of God at all, we most come, saying to Christ: ‘‘Be Thou my master. I take Thy service for time and for eternity. I choose it” It is a voluntary service. There is no drudgery in it. In our worldly callings sometimes our nerves get worn out and odr head aches, and our physical faculties break down, but in this service of the Lord Jesus, the harder a man works the better ha lire* it, and a man in this audience who has been forty years serving God, enjoys the employment better than when he first entered it The grandest honor that can ever be bestowed upon yon is to have Christ say to yon on the last day: “Weil done, good and faithful servant” Learn also from this parable that different qualifications are given to different people. The teacher lifts a blackboard, and be draws a diagram. In order tbat by that diagram he may impress the mind of the pupil with the truth that he has been uttering. And all t ie truths of this Bible are drawn ont in the natural world as in a great diagram. Here is a piece of ground that has ten talents. Under a little culturs, it yields twenty bushels of Wheat to the acre. Here is another piece of ground that has only one talent You may plow it, and harrow it, aid culture it, year after year, but it yields a mere pittance. So hare is a nan with ten talents in the way of getting good and doing good. He soon, under Christian culture, yields great harvests of faith and good work. Here la another man who seems to have ouly one talent, and yon may put open him the greatest spiritual culture, but he yielas but little of the fruit* of r ghtenumess. You are to uodwitwid U«* '**re are <U£*

lereu't ^aallftcatibns (or different Iff-1 tlividuals. There i« a greet deal of rffinc as comparison when a n3*w eayst {*0 if I only had that man’s faith, rtf' feat c fan's tBoiwy, or that majn's eloquence, h ow I would ?(**« God.” -Better take the faculty that God had tf»*wn you and employ It iu the right way. ' - The rabbis used to say that before' the stone and timoer were brought to Jerusalem for the temple every stone and T>ie«*e timber was marked, so thit before tHey started for Jerusa'lertt the aVcbltects fendw in what place . Unit pVticular pflteeg df timber <W Stone should fit. ACit So' 1 haVe to' tell ydff We art, al< marked for sqine thief place fol the gri'tit temple of the Lord, and do not let us complain, S&ftitgt “1 would like trf be the foundation stone of life cap stone." Let us go into the very place wlic're God intends us to be, and be satisfied with lb ft position, four talent may be in personal appearance; your talent may bo in large worldly estate} yottr mien* may be in I higli sohiat position; ftihif talent may be in d fftlft lieu or eloqffeut totfsfnej but whatever' fis <h« tiflent it huts been given only tor one purpdsd-^practicaf use.You sometimes find a man in tKS tfotad1 uswolty of whom yon say: “He has no talent at and yet that man may have a hundred bflfWts. His one hundred talents may be staoWn frt the Item of eadurnuce. Poverty comes a fid he' endnre i it; persecution comes and he on; dttreu itt sickness comes and he eadures it: i'efore men and augels he Is a specimen of Christki* patience, and he Is really illustrating the pttwSr of Christ’s gphpt 1, and is doing ns mueli ttif she church, and more for the church ttiaii mart? mars positively active. It yon have one U lent; tide that! it you have ten talents use tbeixij satisfied with the fact that we »U have different quniifleations, and thttt tits' Lord decides whether we shall have one or tfhstiie# we shall have ten.

I learn also from tbi> parable tUftt vne grace of God was iutended io f>S ae1 cumulative. When God plants an acorn, tie means an oak, and when Ho plants a small amo'tltii ttf jfraoe to the heart. He iuteuds it to be grdtftbftfl and enlarge until it overshadows the «K<J19 nature. There are parents who, at the birftt (ft each child, lay aside Ja eertaiu amount of mousy, l investing it, expecting bv aceumuiat i'/n and by compound interest, that bv 4,he time the child shall come to mid life,; this sulall affloiiut of money will be a fortune, Showing bow a small amount of money will roll dp into S vas t accumulation. Well, God sets aside it certain amount of grace for each one of His spiritual children at his birth, add it is to go on, and as by com pound interest* accumulate, until it shall become aa eternal fortune. Can it be possible that you have been acquainted with the Lord Jesus for ten, twenty, thirty years* and that you do not love Him more than yon ever did before? Can it be that you have been cultured in the Lord’s vineyard, and that Christ finds on you. nothing but sour grapes? You may dapeid upon it, if you do not nse the talent that Gotl gave you it will dwindle. The rill tfc at breaks from the hillside will either widen into a river or dry up. The brightest day started in the dim twilight The strongest Christian man was once a weak Christian. Take the one talent and make it two; take five aud make them ten! take leu and make them twenty. The grace of God was intended to be very accumulative. Again, I iearu from the text that Inferiority of gifts is no excuse for indolence. This man,with the smallest amount of mouey, came growling into the presence of th<i owner of the estate, as much as to say l ,4lf yon had given me $9,400 I would hays brought $19,900 as well as this other raau. You Only gate me $1,980, aud I hardly thought it was worth whtle to use It s,t all. Bo 1 hid it ia a napkin, and it produced no result. It's because you didu’t give me enough.” But inferiority of faculties is no excuse for indolence. Let nisi say to the man who has; the least qualifications, by the grace of God he may be made almost omnipotent The merchant, whose cargoes come out from every island of the sea, and who, by one stroke of the pen, can change the whole face of American commerce, has. not so much power as you may have before God, in earnest, faithful and continuous prayer. You say you have noj faculty. Do you not understand that you might this afternoon go into your place of prayer and kneel before God, anjd briug down upon your soul, and the souls of others, a blessing so vast that it wouUjl take eternal ages to compute it? "Oh,” jrou say, “I haven’t fleetness of speech. ! I can’t talk well. I can’t utter what I want to say. My brother, can you not qu ite one passage of Scripture? Then take that one passage ot Scripture; carry it with you everywhere; qnote it under all pioper circumstances. With that one passage of Scripture you may harvest a thousand souls for God. I am glad that the chief work of the church in this day is being done by the men of talent. Once in awhile, when a great fortress is to be taken, God will bring oat a great field-piece'and rake all witt the fiery hail ot destruction. But common muskets do most ot the hard fighting. It took only one Joshua, and the thousands of common troops under him, to drive down the walls of cities, and, under wrathful strokes, to spake nations fly like sparks from the anvil. It only took one Lather for Germany, one Zwinglins for Switzerland, one John Knox for Scotland, one Calvin for Prance, and one John Wesley for England. Dorr cas as certainly has a mission tc serve as Paul has a mission tc preach. The two mites dropped by the widow into the poor-box will be as much applauded as the endowment of a college, which gets a man’s name into the newspapers. The man who kindled the first fire under the burnt offering in the ancient temple had a duty aa imperative as that ot the high priest, in magnificent robes, walking into the holy of holies nuder the clond of Jehovah’s presence. Yes, the men with one talent are to save the world, or it will never be saved at alt The men with five or ten talents are tempted to toil chiefly for themselves, to build up their own great name, ami work for their own aggrandizement, and do nothing for the alleviation of the world’s woes. The oedai of Lebanon, standing on the mountain, seems to harnd down the storms out of the heavens to the earth, but it bears no fruit, while some dwarf pear tree has more fruit on its branches than it oan carry. Bettor to have one tateot and put it to full use than five hundred wickedly neglected.

My subject teitches me that there is going to come a day of solemn settlement When th» old farmer of the text got home he immediately called all the servants about him and said: “Here is the little account I have been keeping. 1 want to tee your account, and we will first compare them, and 1*11 pay you what I owe yon and you’ll pay me what you own me. Let us have a settlement” The day will come when the Lord Jesus Christ will appear, and will say to you: “What have you been doing with my property? What have you been doing with my faculties* What have you been doing with gave yon for accumulative There will be so eaccpe from ment tlemeut with a you. He postpones and says: “I’ll see you “1*11 see you next month.” does not want to settle. But when the great day comas of which I am speaking there will he no escape. We wCt have tc face all the bills, I haw amasedtoseel

[ It I see ten or fifteen figures in a line, tin41 attempt to adi them up, and I add them tifo or three times, I make them difj terent each timo. But I ham admired I the trsiy an accountant will t%ke a long . li ne of figures, and without a single mistake, and With great celerity, announce . the aggregate. Row, in the last great j settlement, there will be a correct ac- ' otrant presented. God has kept a long line of sins, a long line ot broken Sabbaths, ft long Hue of profane words, a long line of discarded sacraments, a long line of nlteimproved privileges. They will all be added up, and before angels, and devils, and 'men, the aggregftte will be announced. Oli, that will be the great day of settlement I have' to ixsb th£ qoestiou: “Am I ready for it?’* It is of more importance to me to answer Hiat question in regard to myself than in regard to you, and It is of nicr/e importance for you to answer it in regard fo yourself than in regard to me. Every man lor himself in that day. Every woman for herself in that day. “If . yon be wise, thou shall be wise for thy»elf|l if thou scomest, tbou alone shall bear it” We are apt to speak of the last day fts an occasion of vociferation—a gvCat demonstration of power and pomp; but there win be ou that day, I think, a few moments ef entire alienee; I think a tremendous, an overwhelming silenoe; I think it will be such a silence as the earth sever heard. It will be at the moment when all nations are listening ^ for Jheir doom.

I learn also from tan paraoie oi me text that out* degrees of happiness m Heaven w ill be graduated according to ear degrees of usefulness on earth. Several oi the commentators agree in making this parable the same one as in Luke, where on*' man was made ruler over two cities. Would It be fair and right that the professed Christian -man who haa lived very near the line between the world and the church—the man who has often compromised his Christian character—the * man who has never spoken otlt lo- God—the man who haa never been known as a Christian onlv on common iou days— the man whose great struggle has been to see how me oh of the world he could get m>4 yet win Heaven—is it right to suppose tbat that man will have as grand and glorioits a seat In Heaven as the mm* who gave alt hie energies of body, mind and soil! to the service of God? The dying thief entered Heaven, bnt not with the same startling acclaim as that which greeted Paul, who had gone under scorching#, and across dungeons, and through maltreatments mto the kingdom of glory. One star differs from another star in glory, and they who toil mightily for Christ on earth shall have a far greater reward than those who have rendered only ball a service. Some of yott are hastening on toward the reward of the righteous. 1 want to cheer yon up at the thought that there will be some kind of reward waiting for you. there are Christian people in this house who are very near Heaven. This week some of you may pass out into the light of the unsetting sun. I saw a blind man going along the road with his staff, and he kept pounding the earth and then stamping with his foot 1 said to him: j’Whut do you do that for?” ^“Oh,”he said, "1 can tell by the sound of the ground when I am near a dwelling.” And some of you can tell by the sound of your earthly pathway that yon ate coming near your Pother’s house. 1 congratulate you, Ob, weather-beaten voyagers, the storms are driving you Into the harbor. Just as when you were looking for a friend, and c<rrpe np to the gate :o! the house, and' you were talking! With the servant, whsn your friend hoisted the window and shouted: “Come inf come in!” Just so, when yon come to the gate of the future world, aud you are talking with Death, the black porter at the gate, methinks Chriet will hoist the window and say: “Come In I come in I 1 will make thee ruler over ten dities.’* la anticipation of that land I do not wonder that Augustus Toplady, the author of “Bock of Ages,” declared In bis last moment: “I have nothing more to pray for; God has given me every thing. Surely no man can live on earth after the glories 1 have witnessed. Oh, my brothers and sisters, how sweet it will be, after the long wilderness march; to get home. That was a bright moment for the tired dove in the time of the Deluge when it found its way safely into the window of the ark; NEGLECTED DUTIES. Are Tod, Bur Reader, a Member of Ton* There are some men whc need an introduction to their own child ren. There are some husbands^ who would find an a<v quaintanoe with their owr, wive# a most novel social comfort. There are tod many men who are not members of their own families ' There are many men of affairs who are practically divorced from their wives and married to their business. There is no music to them in the domestic hum of the tea-kettleor the purr of the tabby cat on her mat behind the stove. They entei their homes latent night, as a visitor enters a strange family, or as a guest enters a hotel There is no fellowship of feeling between himself and the inmates of the house upon which he pays taxes. He is a good or bad boarder according to his personal characteristics, but Is never a memtor of the family. Even if a man does escape from the out ward scenes of his businese at night, like evil it is ever present with him. A modification of Dsnte’s lurid inscription should be placed over the gateway^! every home —“Leave nil business behind, all ye who enter here.” A man who talks business at home profanes the sanctity of the place, temple Jerusalem. A business man should no more bring his business into his home than a farmer should bring his oxen into his kitchen, or a sailor should anchor his ship in his front yard. Leave the barn behind yon when yon enter the house. Ifo parlor is big enough to hold a shop; no sit-ting-room is wide enough to contain a store. By an inalienable, unwritten law as old as the Magna Charts, a man’s home is regarded as his castle. He should defend it against business cares and business thoughts, as he would defend it against burglars. When the shop or the countingroom besiege your home, poll up yonr draw bridge and plant your banners on Own Family?

me ramra wau. Bat men a -e not the only strangers to their own ’amiiies. There are some women who make a dally escape from home, as eajrerly as a convict scales hi* prison walk Home is stupid, the outside world is gaj and interesting. Such women ever sing w tb John Keats— “ Ever let the laser roam— Pleat ine never is at home.” It is a unite common thing to And brothers who are comparative strangers. There is no real fellowship, no affiliation, no fra tern i y between them. And it is one of the most uncomfortable experiences of life to live with strangers in the same household, to mingle with aliens among your own kin It is every one’s duty to become a member of his own family.— lotitoe Blade Os« man Is sometimes afraid to praise another, isst by exalting the .accomplishment of that other, he should seem to depreciate its own. But, in truth, it le often move praiseworthy in us to j another r orthily than it would he for — to have done the very thing which is doserving (f praise in that other. To praise worthily Is one of the best ways of being ———a- s. S. Times.