The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, May 05, 1890, Image 1
, the morning news, 1 J fctabushed 1860. Incorporated 1888. v | J. H. ESTILL, President. i A LABOR DAY IX LONDON. HALF a million toilers meet IN HYDE PARK. A Procoaslon Containing 170,000 jjen Marches Prom the Thames Embankment With Bands Playing B nd Banners Plying—Speeches From Thirteen Stands—The Demonstration Unmarked by Disturbances. London, May 4.—To-day’s labor demon stration in Hyde Park was a magnificent success, and excelled in point of numbers and orderly enthusiasm all the working class gatherings since the great reform assemblage in 1866. The splendid organization of the different sections taking part in the proces sions brought together in the park 500,000 people, who met, went through their business and dispersed without a single incident occurring of a disorderly character. The leading sections were the trade councils, which in cluded eight groups, representing the leather trades, metal and cabinet workers, and shipping, clothing and printing, paper and building trades. These bodies, in which were numerous related trades, mustered in specified districts of the metropolis early in tne forenoon and inarched, headed by their leaders, and with bands and banners, toward the Thames embanement, the oentral point, whence the marshalled array was ordered to start for the park. CROWDB OF SIGHTSEERS. At 2 o’clock the embankment gave no promise of any demonstration beyond the rapidlv increasing re =isses of sight-seers, but soon after that hour the first column of the procession was seen advancing with a brave show of banners toward the national library, and before long the embankment, as far as the eye could reach, was a dense mass of moving columns, all keeping ad mirable order. Leaders on horseback guided the different sections toward their proper places, and mounted policemen, by arrangement with trades’ councils, assisted in the formation of the ranks. The gigantic procession was timed to start at 3 o’clock, and punctually at that hour it moved off amid thunderous cheering and blending of music of many bands. The route toward the park was along Bridge street, St. James, Park, and Birdcage walk, which were lined with spectators. Masses of artisans joined the paraders on the way until on entering the park it is estimated that the number of men in line was 150,000. THE SOCIALIST WING. Simultaneous with the appearance in the park of the trades’ columns, sections of the social democratic federation began to enter. Some of them had joined the main body on the Thames embankment, while others marshalled in the distant suburbs marched from different points, con verging toward two platforms in the park especially allotted to socialist speakers. The railway workers’ union had also sneeial processions, some of the groups of which swelled the embankment columns, while others marched isolated toward the platform. The total number taking part in the various processions is estimated at 170,- 000, and these were almost lost In the vast ntss of the assemblage gathered around the thirteen platforms upon which labor-day advocates held forth. POLICE KEPT OUT OF SIGHT. Among the far-stretching dense cro’wd no police ware visible. The orders from bead quarters to refrain from interfering or co-operating with the organizers of the demonstration had caused the police to judiciously keep in the background. The tact and prudence of the organizers of the demonstration was further seen in the brevity of the proceedings. After the paraders had been formed around the plat forms the speaking commenced. Shortly after 4 o’clock resolutions demanding that eight hours be recognized as a day’s work were put and carried amid the acclamations of the multitude,'and by 5 o’clock, when the paraders hud re-formed in line, the assemblage began to disperse. Half a million is a moderate computation of the gathering, the character of which here everywhere the unmistakable stamp of the solid respectable artisan classes, the rag-tag and bob-tail being conspicuously absent. NO REVOLUTIONARY MUSIC. A notable feature was that the bands of the trade councils eschewed revolutionary music, playing only popular and national airs. The speakers included Mr. Davitt, Mr. Cunningham-Graham, John Burns, Thomas Maun, Benjamin Tillett, Mrs. Ave liug, und Annie Besant. By 6 o’clock the park was deserted, and the thoroughfares were full of orderly crowds streaming homeward. At the stands of the social democrats, at which all the speakers were socialists, there was an audienco of 120,000 people, of whom three-quarters wore red sashes. The speeches were moderate in tone. The siieakers claimed that the socialists ini tiated the eight-hour movement, and urged their hearers to regard it as the first step toward securing complete freedom for workmen. Hyndman, who was one of the speakers, apologized for the failure of their brethren on the continent to gather In greater force on Mayday. The socialist orators denounced Messrs. Bradlaugh and Morley. EUROPE’S LABOR RIOT3. T Toops Etill Busy at Barcelona and Bonbaix. May 4.—The strike continues at Bonbaix. There was serious rioting there last night, several persons being wounded. A number of arrests were made. To-day the town is cairn. Delegates from the workmen met the masters, but no agree ment was reached. ■ J Be mayor of Roubaix has asked for re “uorcoments. In response to his request , dragons have been sent. Cavalry [' rolled the streets of Roubaix all last rght and all day to-day. The employers t Koubaix announce that they are willing o agree to a demand of ten hours if other manufacturers in France content, but de ine to advance wages. TROOPS STILL BUSY AT BARCELONA. Madrid, May 4.—At Barcelona the troops ero engaged until early this morning dis i ising the strikers. It is feared that order* 1 measures w ill be necessary to restore cit t'-ge socialist meeting was held in this VttHisy. It was addressed by a number of Drin? etlc ’’Ponkers. After adopting appro ail m re ? oIu °as a procession formed, and tl](.u rC j in an orderly manner along jjL , ra do to the residence of Premier tirih u premier received the deputa rori. ° Presented a petition asking the div TDn ? ent a dopt an eight hour working In, ,'. auJ ° thor resolutions adopted by the workmen’s congress. to tl>o deputation Senor Sagasta hour. IQU3t refuse to consider the eight thah f V ro J ect ' fo this tho workmen replied their wou |d use legal means to attain <W„i t ‘ lat if these proved unsuc hil would resort to rorce. isripj _ ar celona Women’s Association has tituj,, 'nanifesbj protesting against the at ibeimrn y* e anarc hists and recommending xL““ e<llato l resumption of work. goua o„T era a M®irae* district have * 08 but on a strike. fpje IHurnina iX r ctos. AUSTRIAN SHOP HANDS QUIT. T - A ienna. May 4. —A simultaneous strike occurred in the state railway factories in Vienna, Prague, Pesth, and Temesvar. Director Riscbitze of the Vienna factory threatens to dismiss all the hands who do not return to work to-morrow. STRIKERS GO INTO CAMP. Pesth, May 4. —Fifteen hundred bakers have struck work and camped on an island in the Danube with tents, cattle, stores of lard and bread and other provisions. They have been joined by 700 gb 1 employes in the jute works. Five hundred military bakers have been sent to Pesth from all parts of the kingdom. SOCIALISTS TO BE EXCLUDED. Berlin, May 4. —The new miners’ union at Bocnum has decided to exclude socialists. A TARTAR FOR THE KAIBER. Asked Hla Opinion' a Guest Denounces the Socialist Bill. Berlin, May 4. —The Vosaiseke Zeitung says that at the Staatsrath banquet Em peror William asked one of the guests his opinion of the socialist bill. The person thus questioned roundly denounced the bill, saying it was calculated to embitter the workmen and stimulate socialism, and that it ougtit to be summarily dropped. To this Emperor William replied: “That is quite my opinion.” Racing at Paris. Paris, May 4.—The Poule d’Essai races took place to-day.- In the race for fillies there were only three starters. It was woa oasily by a length and a half by M. Pierre Donon’s chestnut filly Wandora, by Bruce, out of Windfall, with Alicante second. In the race for colts Rothschild’s chestnut colt Heauine, by Hermit, out of Bella, was an easy winner, with Pourhunt second. Franco's War in Dahomey. Paris, May 4. —A dispatch to the Temps from Kotonon says that the King of Da homey is going to Abomey, and has ordered that ali his available troops be mobilized. His object, it Is presumed,’ is either to de fend the capital or to make another attack on Porto Novo. Paris’ Municipal Council. Paris, May 4.— To-day’s reballots for members of the municipal council resulted in the election of 53 republicans, 5 conserva tives and 1 Boulangist. The new council will consist of 75 republicans, 13 conserva tives and 2 Boulangists. FLUMMERVILLK’3 RED CLOT. Sater Tells His Story of the Crime to the Committee. Little Rock, Ark., May 4.— The pro ceedings of the Clayton-Breckinridge in vestigating committee yesterday were very sensational and attracted a large crowd of spectators to the court room. During the morning two' clerics of election in Howard township, Conway county, told what they knew about tho taking of the ballot-box and the murder of Mr. Clayton. In the afternoon James Sater, the man supposed to have discovered the murder of Mr. Clayton, arrived from Jeffersonville, Ind. He was put on tho stand and told about the same alary, implicating Thomas Hooper as tho murderer, that was contained in the report telegraphed a few days ago from Los Angeles. SATER CORROBORATED. James Hooper, a young man 23 years of age, was examined at considerable length, and corroborated much of the evidence given by Mr. Sater. During Mrs. Hooper’3 examination she denied ever having heard or met Sater. Yes terday afternoon her son, while in the pres ence of Grov. Eagle and others, saw Sater, and going np to him extended his hand and called him by name. They conversed some time about mutual acquaintances in Los Angeles, where the Hoopers and Saters had lived in the same house. A CASHIER IN THE SOUP. Several Stock Companies Also In a Bad Tanarle. Norristown, Pa., May 4.—There is con siderable excitement here over an an nouncement made late last night that W. P. Slingluff, cashier of the Montgomery National Bank, and also secretary and treasurer of the Montgomery Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, had placed his resignation at the disposal of the directors of those two institutions. He also assigned his property to them. Cashier Slingluff is said to have made unauthorized investments of funds entrusted to his care. WHERE THE MONEY WENT. Interest in the matter is further hight ened by the fact tbat the concerns in which he is said to have invested heavily are stock companies organized by a syndicate at tho back of the recently suspended Bank of America of Philadelphia and the banks and institutions that went down along with It. The affairs of the trust company are said to be in a tangled state. Officials of the company were working on the books all of yesterday, last night, and to-day. The amount needed to strike a balance is variously esti mated from $25,000 to SIOO,OOO. Cashier Slingluff and his wife transferred all their property to the company. Cashier Sling luff estimates the value of tho assigned property at $75,000. WOE ON THE WATERS. The Whole Delta Country Now in Need of Assistance. Vicksburg, Miss., May 4.—Mayor Beck, having received telegrams from many points in the delta applying for aid, wired Secretary Proctor to-night that the time for rendering assistance from the government had come. RISING AT MORGAN CITY. Morgan City, La., May 4.— The water continues to rise about four inches a day. It has covered Front street and most of North and South Railroad avenues. The indications are that the water will be at least as high here this seas m as it was in 1834, when it covered most of the town. THE WHOLE COUNTRY COVERED. Shreveport, La. .May 4.—The river is now one-tenth of an inch higher than in 1854, and is still rising steadily. Above the city on the Caddo side the whole country from the lake to the river is a sheet of water. A BIRMINGHAM PIONEER DEAD. The Successful Career of Col. James W. Slosa Closed. Birmingham, Ala., May 4.—C01. James w. Sloss died at 10 o’clock to-night. He was one of the foremost pioneers of Bir mingham. He was for many years presi dent of the South and North Alabama rail road. which he helped to build and which alone made North Alabama s de velopment possible. He was the head of the Sloss Iron Company, which firtt proved iron making here to be profita ble. Some four years ago he sold this great property for $1,000,000 cash, sinco which he has lived in the enjoyment of his for tune. He gave large sums to ohurch and [ charitable purposes. THIS WB3K IN CONOKKSS. The Idaho and Wyoming Bills First on the Tapis In the Senate. Washington, May 4.— The death of Senator Beck will cause the postponement for one day of the proceeding* in the Senate this week. Upon the formal announcement of his death a committee to attend his funeral will be appointed, after which the Senate will adjourn. A number of matters of general importance had been assigned to this week for consideration, cot all of which, however, are likely to come up, much less to be disposed of. The bills for the admission of Idaho and Wyoming are the unfinished business uutil Wednesday, when the Jones silver bill, re ported from the committee on fiuauce, will be the special order. It is not believed that the admission bills can be disposed of in tw o days, and if action 0:1 the silver bill should be demanded they will probably go over until a more convenient time. SILVER BILL CHANCES. Two things may occur to prevent consid eration of the silver bill. One is the action of the republican caucus, a meeting of which will be held between now and Wednesday, when another effort will be made to agree upon a silver measure. Another thing is the reporting of the army and pension ap propriation bills, both of which Mr. Allison, chairman of the committee on appropria tions, says will be ready and which under the rules may be called up for consideration at any time, so that consideration of the silver question this week, while possible, is not probable. Mr. Aldrich, who is in charge of the Dingley bill declaring worsteds aud worsted clotris to be wooien for all purposes of as sessing duty thereon, says he will make an effort to have it considered by the Senate, probably on Tuesday. In the House. The death of Senator Beck will also dis arrange the programme of the proceedings in the house. To-morrow is ‘'suspension day,” and an offers was to have been made by the managers of the river and harbor appropriation bill to secure recognition and pa s the measure under a suspension of the rules. The [expected adjournment upon the receipt of the information of the ad journment by the Senate wili carry the matter over. , The tariff bill, according to the pro gramme, will be taken up Tuesday. The general debate wili begin at once, and is expected to consume at least one week, after which the bill will be discussed by sections aud subjected to amendment iu detail. A SOCIAL EQUALITY PLEA. Archbishop Ireland Wasrea War on the Color Line. Washington, May 4. —Archbishop Ire land of St. Paul, Minn., preached to-day in the St. Augustin colored Catholic church to a large congregation of white and colored people on “Social Equality.” He said the race problem was a great one, but could be solved and speedily. There existed some of the old-time spirit that bad existed in the days of servitudo, but it was fast disappear ing. THE WHITES BLAMED. He contendail that it was the white people who now stood in need of lessons in chsrity, benevolence, justice and religion, and who had permitted unreasonable causes and prejudices to sway them. He was prepared to say that there was no such thing as a color line except in the minds of those whose intellects were clouded by unjust reasoning. The solution of the question was that they should look one another in the face as mem bers of the same family, children of the same God, and all living under the same teachings of religion, reason and virtue. COLOR ONLY AN ACCIDENT. Because of the simple accident of color it did not follow that they were to be treated on different lines religiously and socially. They were all of the same ancestry, alike in the possession of souls and being God’s children, and it was entirely a matter of accident whether they were black, white or red. It was wrong to neglect attention to the substance and direct it only to accident, and of all accidents iu life the one of color was the least important. EQUALITY OF ALL MEN. Equality |of all men was the corner-stone of the tenets of the Catholic church. Let Catholics who had been made to see all equal before God extend the right band of fellowship to their colored brethren and say that there was not and could not be a color line between Catholics, and that, was the true and only solution of the problem. The day was near when those who were now prejudiced would bo ashamed of their action and when colored men would not be dis criminated against in the church, hotels, colleges or business pursuits. URGED TO BE PATIENT, BUT FIRM. He bid them be patient, educate them selves, and practice economy. They must stand judiciously and sternly for their rights, and in so far as party was concerned, they should find out which was willing to give them their rights, and to that party extend their franchise. In closing he said that the church had been the first to take them under it3 protec tion, and whatever else happened they must not forget their duties, and that salvation, socially and eternally, was iu the Catholic church. MISS LESTER AS A BELLE. Part of Her Summer to be Spent at the Capital. Washington, May 4.—A local paper says to-day: “Representative Lester of Georgia, and family, are now located at the Richmond. Miss Lester has returned to the city after a short visit to friends. She is one of the most interesting and attractive of the girls in the congressional circles and her friends are happy to know that she will remain in Washington through a part of the summer, though like all true southern belles, the gay season at the White Sulphur Springs is the most important part of the summer programme.” The daughter of Congressman Blount, who has been spending several weeks in Portsmouth, Va„ has rejoined her parents in this GILBOA GOBS UP IN SMOKE. Twenty-Two Buildings Destroyed and No Stores Left. Gilboa, N. Y., May 4.—This evening fire broke out in the Arcade, a large wood en building in this village. The flames spread quickly to adjoining buildings, which were soon enveloped. There were no means of extinguishing the fire and the whole vill age was at the mercy of the flames. The entire business portion was destroyed, 22 buildings in all. Not a store in the town was left and most of the stocks were destroyed. The loss is estimated at from |lso,tioo to f 175,000. There is only light insurance, estimated at about 150,000. Murder at Jackson. Jackson. Ga., May 4.—Samuel Greer shot and instantly killed Wade Yancy at the colored Baptist church here to-day. The coroner’s jury returned a verdict of murder. Greer ran, but was caught, but shot an other negro in the arm before he was over powered. All are colored. Greer is in jail. SAVANNAH, GA., MONDAY, MAY 5, 1890. LIFE’S NARROW ESCAPES. JOB’S LUCK IN GETTING OFF WITH THE SKIN OF HIS TEETH. Bolls, Bereavements, Bankruptcy and a Fool of a Wife Made the Poor Fellow Wish He Was Dead—Tal msge Tells of Mankind's Close Calls From Eternal Punishment. Brooklyn, May 4.—After the Long meter Doxology and appropriate hymns had been sung by the congregation, in the Academy of Music, and prayer had been offered, Dr. Talmage preacued on “Narrow Escapes,” taking os his text Job xix., 20: “I am escaped with the skin of my teeth." Following Is his sermon in full: Job had it hard. What with boils and bereavement and bankruptcy, and a fool of a wife, he wished he was dead; aud I do not blame him. His flesh was gone, and his bones were dry. Uis teeth wasted away until nothing but the enamel seemed left. He cries out, “I am escaped with the skin of my teeth.” There has been some differ ence of opinion about this passage, St. Jerome and Hehultan*, and Drs. Good and Poole, and Barnes, have all tried their for ceps on Job’s teeth. You deny my inter- S rotation, and say, “What did Job nown about the enamel of the teeth f" He know everything about it. Dental surgery is almost as old as the earth. The mum mies of Egypt, thousands of years old, are found to-day with gold filling in their teeth. Ovid and Horace aud Solomon and Moses wrote about these important factors of the body. To other provoking complaints, Job, I think, has added an exasperating toothache, and putting his hand against the inflamed face, he says, “I am escaped with the skin of my teeth.” Avery narrow escape, you say, for Job’s body and soul; but there are tuousand* of men who make just as narrow escape for their soul. There was a time when the partition betweon them aud ruin was no thicker than a tooth’s enamel; but as Job finally escaped so have they. Thank God! thank God! Paul expresses the same Idea by a differ ent figure when he sayj that some people are “saved as by tire.” A vessel at sea is iu flames. You go to the stern of the vessel. The boats have shored off. The flames advance; you can endure the heat no longer on your face. You slide down on the side of the vessel and hold on with your fingers, until the forked tongue of the fire begins to lick the back of your hand, and you feel that you must fall, when one of the lifeboats comes back, and the passengers say they think they have room for one more. The boat swings under you—you drop into it—you are saved. Si some men are pursued by temptation until they are partially consumed, but, after all, get off—“saved as by fire.” But 1 like the figure of Job a little better than that of Paul, because the pulpit has not worn it out; and I want to show you, if God will help, that some men make narrow escapes for their souls, and are saved as “with the skin of their teeth.” It is as easy for some people to look to the cro s as for you to look to this pulpit. Mild, gentle, tractable, knfing, you expect t iem to become Christiana You go over to the store and say, “Grandon joined the church yesterday." Your business comrades say, “That is just what might have been expected; he always was of that turn of mind." In youth, this person whom I de scribe was always good. He never broke things. He nevor laughed when it was improper to laugh. At seven he could sit an hour in churon, perfectly quiet, looking neither to the right hand nor to the left, but straight into the eyes of the minister, as though he understood the whole discussion about the eternal decrees. He never upset things nor lost them. He floated into the kingdom of God so gradually that it is un certain just when the matter was decided. Here is another one who started in life with an uncontrollable spirit. He kept the nursery in an uproar. His mother found him walking on tho edge of the house-roof to see if he could balance himself. There was no horse he dared not ride—no tree he could not climb. His boyhood was a long series of predicaments; his manhood was reckless; his mid-life very wayward. But now he is converted and you go over to the store and say, “Arkwright joined the church yesterday.” Your friends say, “It is not possible! You must be joking." You say: “No; I tell you the truth. He joined thechurob.” Then they reply, “There is hope for any of us if old Arkwright has be come a Christian!” In other words, we will admit that it is more difficult for some men to accept the gospel than for others. I may be preaching to some who have cut loose from churches and Bibles and Suu ilays, and who have come in here with no intention of becoming Christians them selves, but just to see wnat is going on; and yet you may find yourself asoaping b fore you leave this house, as “with tho skin of your teeth.” I do not expect to waste this hour. I have seen boats go off from Cape May or Long Branch and drop their nets, and after awhile come ashore, pulling in the nets without having caught a single fish. It was not a good day or they had not the right kind of a net. But we expect no such excursion to-day. The water is full of fish, the wind is in the right direction, the gospel net is strong. Oh, thou who didst Help Simon and Andrew to fish, show us to-day how to cast the net on the right side of the ship! Some uf you, in coming to God, will have to run against skeptical notions. It is use less for people to say sharp and cuttiug things to those who reject the Christian re ligion. I cannot say such things. By what process of temptation or trial or betrayal you have come to your present state I know not. There are two gates to your nature: the gate of the bead and the gate of the heart. The gate of your head is locked with bolts and bars that an archangel could not break, but the gate of your heart swings easily on ita hinges. If I assaulted your body with weapons, you would meet me w.th weapons, and it would be sword-stroke for sword stroke. and wound for wound, and blood for blood; but if I come and knock at tho door of your bouse, you open It, and give me the best seat in your parlor. If I should come at you now with an argument, you would answer me with an argument; if with sar casm, you would answer ine with sarcasm; blow for blow, stroke for stroke; but when I come aud knock at the door of your heart, you open it and say, “Come in, my brother, and tell me oil you know about Christ and heaven." Listen to two or three questions Are Sou as happy as you used to benqhaw you elieved in "the truth -Jef the Christian religion? i Would “you like to have your children tfeavel on in the road in which you arc now traveling? You bad a relative who professed-to be a Christian, and was thoroughly consistent, living and dying in the faith of the gospel. Would you not Uke to live the same quiet life, and die the same peacefal death? I have a letter, sent me by one who has re jected the Christian religion. It says: “I am old enough to know that the joys and pleasures of life are evanescent, and to realize the fact that It must be comfortable in old age to believe In something relative to the future, and to have a faith in some system that proposes to save, L am free to confess that I would be happier if I could exeroise the simple and beautiful faith that Is possessed by many whom I know. I am not willingly out of the church or out of the faith. My state of uncertainty is one of unrest. Sometimes I doubt ray immor tality, and look upon the death-bed as the closing seme, after which there is nothing. What shall I do that I have not done?” Ah! skepticism is a dark and doleful land. Let me say that this Bible is either truoor fa’se. If it lie false, we are os well off as you; if it be true, then which of us is safer ? Let me also ask whether your trouble has not been that you confounded Christianity with the inconsistent character of some who profess it? You are a lawyer. In your profession there are some mean and dishon est men. Is that anything against the law? You are a doctor. There are unskilled and contemptible men in your profession. Is that anything against medicine? You are a merchant. There are thieves aud defraud ers in your business. Is that anything agaiust merchandise? Behold, then, the unfairness of charging upon Christianity the wickedness of its disciples. We admit some of the charges agaiust those who pro fess religion. Some of the most gigantic swindles of the present day have been car ried on by members of the church. There are men standing in the front rank in the churches who would not bo trusted for five dollars without good collateral security. They leave their business dishonesties in the vestibule of the church as they go in and sit at the communion. Having concluded ths sacrament, they get up, wi; e the wine from their lips, go out, aud take up their sins where they left off. To serve the devil is their regular work; to sorve God a sort of play-spell. With a Sunday sponge they expect to wipe off from their business slate the past week’s inconsistencies. You have no more right to tako such a man’s life as a spocimon of religion than you have to tako the twisted irons aud split timbers that lie on the beach at Coney Islaud os a specimen of an American ship. It Is time that we draw the line between religion aud and the frailties of those who profess it. Do you not feel that tho Bible, take it all in all, is about the best book that the world has ever seeu) Do you kn i w any book tha has as much in it? Do you not thluk, upon the whole, that its influence has been benefi cent? I come to you with both hands ex tended toward you. In one hand I have the Bible, and in the other I have nothing. This Bible in one hand I will surrender for over just as soon as in my other hand vou can put a book that is hotter. To- lay I in vite you back into the good old-fashioned religion of your fathers—to the God whom they worshipped, to tho Hibio they read, to the promises on which they leaned, to tho cross on which tboy hung their eternal ex pectations. Yon have net been happy a day since you swung off; you will nit be happy a minute until you swing back. Again: There may be some of you who, in the attempt after a Christian life, will have to run against powerful passions and appetites. Periiaps it is a disposition to anger that you have to conteud against; and periiaps, while in a very s-rious mood, you hoar of something that makes you feel that you must swear or die. I know a Christian man who was once so exasperated that he said to a meau customer, “I cannot swear at you myself, for I am a member of tho church; but if you will go down stairs my partner in business will swoar at yon,” All your good resolutions heretofore have keen torn to tatters by explosion of temper. Now there is no barm in getting mad if you only get mad at sin. You need to bridle and saddle those hot-breathed passions, and with them ride down injustice and wrong. There are a thousand things in the world that we ought to be mad at. There is no barm iu getting red hot if you only bring to the torges that which needs hammering. A man who has no p iwer of righteous indig nation is an imbecile. But be sure it is a righteous indignation, and not a petuiancy that blurs aud unravels and depletes tho soul. There is a large class of persons in mid life who have stilt in them appetites that were aroused iu early manhood, at a time when they prided themselves on being a “little fast,” “high livers,” “free and easy,” “hail fellows well met.” They are now paying, in compound interest, for troubles they collected twenty years ago. Some of you are trying to escape, and you will, yet very narrowly, “as with the skin of your teeth.” God and your own soul only know what the struggla is. Omnipotent grace has pulled out many a soul that was deepar in the mire than you are. They line the beach of heaven the multitude whom God lia3 rescued from the thrall of suicidal habits. If you this day turn your back on the wrong aud start anew, God will help you. Oh the weakness of human help! Men will sympathize for a while, and then turn you off. If you ask for their pardon, they will give it, and say they will try you again; but, falling away again under the power of temptation, they cast you off forevpr. But God forgives seventy times seven: yea, seven huudred times: yea, though this be the ten thousandth time, he is more earneit, more sympathetic, more helpful, this last time than when you took your first misstep. If, with ail the influences favorable for a right life, men make so many mistakes, how much harder it is when, for instance, some appetite thrusts its iron grapple into the roots of the tongue and pulls a man down with the hands of destruction 1 If, under such circurastauces, he break away, there will be no sport in the undertaking, no holiday enjoyment, but a struggle in which the wrestlers move from side to side, and bend and twist, and watch for an opportunity to get In a heavier stroke, until with one final effort, in which the muscles are distended and the veins stand out, and the blood starts, the swarthy habit falls under the knee of tho victor —escaped at last as “with the skin of his teeth.” The ship Emma, bound from Gottenburg to Harwich, was sailing on, when the man on the lookout saw something that he pro nounced a vessel bottom up. There was something ou it that looked like a sea gull, but was afterward found to be a waving handkerchief. In tho small boat the crow pushed out to the wreck, aud found that it was a capdzsd vessel, and that three men had been diggl g their way out through the bottom of the ship. When the vesiel capsized they had no moans of escape. The captain took his penk live and dug away through the planks until his knife broke. Then an old nail was found, with which they attempted to scrape their way out of the darkness, eaoh one working until his band was wollnigh paralyzed, and he sank back faint and sick. After long and tedious work, the light broke through the bottom of the ship. A handkerchief was noistod. Help came. They were taken on board the vessel and saved. Did ever men come so near a watery grave without drop ping into It? How narrowly thoy escaped!— escaped only “with the skin of their teeth.” There are men who have been capsized of evil passions, and capsized mid-ocean, and they are a thousand miles away from any shore of help. They have for years been trying to dig their way out They have been digging away, aud digging away, but they can never be delivered unless they will hoist some signal of distress. However weak and feeble it may be Christ will see it, and bear down yupoa the helplerj craft, and take thorn on board; and it will be known in earth and in heaven how narrowly they escaped—“escaped as with the skin of their teeth.” There are others who, in attempting to come to God, must run between a great many business perplexities. If a man go over to business at 10 o’clock in the morn ing, and comes away at 3 o'clock In the afternoon, he has sometime for religion; but how shall you find time for religious con templation when you are driven from sun rise to sunset, and have been for five years going behind in business, and are frequently dunned by creditors whom you cannot pay, and when from Mouday morning until Saturday night, you are dodging bills that you cannot meet? You walk day by day in uncertainties that have kept your brain on fire for the (>ost three years. Some with less business troubles than you have gone crazy. The clerk has heard a noise in the back counting room, aud gone in, and found the chief man of the firm a raving maniac; or tho wife has board tha bang of .a pistol in the back parlor, and gone in, stumbling over the dead body of her bus band —a suicide. There are in this house to-day three hundred men pursued, hara-sed, trodden down, and scalped, of business perplexities, aud which way to turn next they do not know. Now God will not be hard on you. He knows what obstacles are in the way of your being a Christian, and your first effort in the right direction. He will crown with success. Do not let satan, with cotton bales, and kegs, and hogsheads, aud counters, and stocks of unsalable goods, block up your way to heavon. Gather up all your energies. Tighten the girdle about your loins. Take an agonizing 1 >ok Into the face of God, and then sav, “Here goes one grand effort for life eternal!” and then bound away for heaven, escaping as “with the skin of vour teeth.” In the last day it will be found that Hugh Latimer, and John Knox, and Huss, and Ridley were not the greatest martyrs, but Christian men who went up incorrupt from the contaminations and perplexities of Wall street. Water street, Pearl street, Broad street, State street, and Third street. On earth they were called brokers, or stock- i obbers, or retailers, or Importers; but in eaven Christian heroes. No fagots were heaped about their feet; no inquisition de manded from the u recantation; no soldier aimed a pike at their heart; but they bad mental tortures, compared with which all physical consuming is as the breath of a spring morumg. I find iu the community a large clan of men who have been so cheated, so lied about, so outrageously wronged, that they have lost their faith in everything. In a world where everything soems so topßy turvoy, they do not see how there can be any God. They are confounded aDd frenzied aud misanthropic. Elaborate arguments to prove to them the truth of Christianity, or the truth of anything else, touch them no where. Hear me, all suoh men. I preach to you no round periods, no ornamental discourse; but put my hand on your shoulder and Invite you into the peace of the gospel. Hero is a rock on which you may stand firm, though the waves dash against it harder than the Atlrntic, pitching its surf clear above Eddystonu lighthouse. Do not charge upon God all these troubles of the world. As long as the world stuck to God, God stuck to the world; but the earth seceded from his government und hence all these outrages, and all those woes. God is good. For many hundreds of years he bai boon coaxing the world to oome back to him; but the more lie has coaxed, the more vio lent have been men in their resistance, and they have stepped back and stepped back until they have dropped into rum. Try this God, ye who have had the blood hounds after you, and who have thought that God had forgotten you. Try him, and see if he will not help. Try him, and see It he will not pardon. Try him, and see if he will not sava The flowers of spring have no bloom so sweet as tho floweriug of Christ’s affections. The sun has no warinta compared with the glow of his heart. Tho waters have no refreshment like the foun tain that will slake the thirst of thy soul. At the moment the reindeer stands with his lip and nostril tarust in the cool moun tain torrent the hunter may be coining througli the thicket. Without crackling a stick under his foot, he comes close by the stag, aims his gun, draws the trigger, and tho poor thing rears in his death-agony and falls backward, its antlers crashing on the rocks; but the panting hart that drinks from the water brooks of God’s promise shall never be fatally wounded, and shall never die. This world is a poor porton for your soul, oh businesi man! An eastern king bad graven on his tomb two fingers, repre ieiited as sounding upon each other with a snap, and under thorn tho motto, “All is not worth that.” Apicius Coe'.ius hinged himself because his steward informed him that lie had only eighty thousand pounds sterling left. All of this world's riches make hut a small inheritance for a soul. Robespierre attempted to win the applause of the world; hut when he was dying a woman came rushing through the crowd crying to him, “Murd-rer of my kindred, descend to bell, covored with the curses of every mother in France!” Many who have expected the plaudits of the world have died under its Anathema Maranatha. O, find your peace in God. Make one strong pull for heavon. No Ualf-wav work will do it. There sometimes comes a time on shipboard when everything must be sacri ficed to save the' passengers. The cargo is nothing, the rigging nothing. The captain puts the trumpet to his lips and shouts, “Cut away the maid” Borne of you have been tossed and driven, and you have, in your effort to keep tho world, welluigh lost your sold. Until you have decided this matter let everything else go. Overboard with all those other anxieties and burdeus! You will have to drop the sails of your pride and cut away tho mast. With one earnest cry for help, put your cause into the hand of tiim who helped Paul out of the breakers of Melita, and who, above the shrill blast of tho wrathlest tempest that ever blackened the sky or shook the ocean, can hear the faintest imploration for mercy. I shall go day feeling that some of you, who have considered your case as hopeless, will take heart again, and that, with a blood-red earnestness, such as you have never experienced before, you will start for the good land of tho gospel— at last to look back, saying, “Wnat. a great risk I ran! Almost lost, but saved! Just got through, and no more! Escaped by the skin of my teeth.” EVANGELS OF THE GRIP. Atlanta Taken by Storm and to be Held Against All Comers. Atlanta, Ga., May 4.—The first delega tions to the second annual convention of the Southern Travelers’ Association arrived here this evening, and to-night the streets are full of men wearing many colored badges. Augusta’s representatives were the first to arrive. They came in on a hand somely decorated car, and were met by the reception oommittee aud escorted to the Kimball house. Later the delegations from Rome, Savannah and Macon reached the city. They were also met and taken to tho boteL Several caucus meetings were held last night, and early to-morrow morn ing tne business will commence with a meeting of tbe directors at the Kimball house. Later a street parade will be given and speeches of welcome will be mode at tbe opera house by Gov. Gordon, Mayor Glenn, John Temple Graves, and others. At 3 o’clock the convention will be over. Dr. Hawthorn preached this morning to the Atlanta drummers. They tnrned out 150 strong to hear him. t DAILY,SIO A YEAR. 1 < tCENTo A COFY. V I WEKKLY,I.2SAYKAR. | BECK LYING IN STATE. THE REMAINS NOT TO BE TAKEN TO THE BENATB. Congress to be Asked to Adjourn From Monday Until Wednesday. Tbe Senator’s Son In Wyoming Not Heard From Yet—Tbe Interment to be at Lexington. Washington, May 4— The remains of Senator Beck have been placed In a casket aud lie in the parlor of Representative W. C. P. Breckinridge on Capitol Hill. A large number of persons, including most of bis senatorial colleagues, called during the day to view the body and tender con dolences to Mrs. Goodloe, daughter of tbe late senator. A large number of telegrams of condolence were received. The fuueral arrangements have not been finally and definitely determined upon as yet The Kentucky congressional delega tion has assumed charge of the remains, and will to-morrow morning finally arrange all the dotails, respect, of course, being paid to the wishes of Mrs. Goodloe. MEETING OF THE DELEGATION. The delegation met in the democratto caucus room of the Senate at 11 o’clock this morning, Senator Blackburn presiding. Most of tbe time was oocupied in recalling recollections of the dead man. It was agreed that Senator Blackburn should formulate resolutions to be offered In tha Senatand that the Senate should be asked to adjourn over until Wednesday, thy funeral to take place Tuesday. Representative Breckinridge was re quested to confer with tho speaker, and if, Kasible, secure an adjournment of the uuso from about 2 o’clock Mouday until Wednesday. The delegation favored the remains lying in state tii the Senate from to-morrow afternoon until the time for the services, but Mrs. Goodloe prefers that this part of the programme be omitted, and in deference to her wishes the body will re inaiu at tho residence of Mr. Breoklnridga until just before the funeral services. It is expected that Senator Blackburn will deliver au oration during tbe services in tho Senate. TO BE TAKEN TO LEXINGTON. The remaius will then be taken to Lex ington, Ky., in a special train over the Chesapeake and Ohio road. At Lexington they will be turn od over to Gov. Buckner and tbe state officials. Dr. W. A. Bartlett of the Presbyteriau church at Lexington will conduct the services at tho grave. They will be very brief and will take place uot later than noon Thursday. Seuator Beck’s sou, who is somewhere in Wyom ing, lias not yet been heard from. He is probably some distance from a telegraph office and therefore wilt not be atne to communicate with his sister uutil he aud the courier seut to find him reach a railroad station. The list of honorary pall bearers is not absolutely settled upon, hut those so far se lected are: Ex-Attorney-General A IL Garland, Judge L. S. Trimble, formerly representative in oongross from the Padu cah, Ky., district; O. O. Stanley, corre spondent of the Louisville Courier-Journal; Col. L. Q. Washington, ex-Cougressman Philip B. Thompson, Jr.; W. R. Smith, superintendent of the botanical gardens, and tor a long time a friend of the dead senator; Col. J. Fletcher Johnson of Ken tucky. and Blair Lee of this city. The active pall-bearers will he capital police men. LOVED BY KENTUCKY. Louisville, May 4. —The news of Sena tor Book’s death was received with univer sal regret. The Courier-Journal says: Mr. Beck was a man of wonderful physical powers, and his capacity for hard, exacting labor seemed unlimited. He had a sturdy mental force which we look for in a body suen as bis. For years all his power* were given with noble generosity to an oppressed and unrepresented people. During all the years of darkness and gloom which followed tho war Mr. Beck had eleven southern states for his constituents. Combative by nature, drawing In with every breath the Bcotch love of freedom, a man of marvelous resources, of tine courage, sound in debate, and of unbounded value lu committee. Mr. Beck’s public services have rarely been equaled in the House or Senate. His mind was stored with Information, which was at all times at bis oommand. Every incident in the political history of his times was familiar to him, and he saw at once the tendency and results of legislative ex periments. He was not a man of much imagi native power and his addressesS were singularly free from rhetorical figures. Yet he spoke with such earnestness, aud he had so plainly the powers of a full man, that he was ever in popular assemblage listened to with pro found attention. The state lose* in the death of Senator Heck am adopted son more loyal to her traditions ancL more faithful to her destinies than many to the, manner born. Kentucky has always delighted to honor this man, and to-day she mourns him as a most faithful servant and most cherished leader. His career is known to all men, hi* tong public service, unstained even by the breath of reproach and rich in all that dignifies political life, Is a legacy dearer than gold and an example full of inspiration aud encouragement. Mr. Beck has outlived all the rancor of partisan; contests and died possessed of the esteem alike of hla friends and enemies. EVIDENCES OF BEGRET. There are many evidences to-day of tha general regret for the death ot Senator Beck. References were made to it by several ministers, aud it has been tha general topic. The election of Senator Beck’s successor will be made by tho legislature. The prob able candidates are Congressman Carlisle, ex-Gov. Proctor Knott, State Senator William Lindsay, and probably Congress man McCrary and Lieut. Gov. Bryan. It? is the common belief that ex-Bpeaker Carlisle will be chosen. The election will take place Tuesday, May 20. TALMAGE ON THE DEAD SENATOR. New York, May 4.—ln his sermon to day, Rev. T. DeVvitt Talmage used these words: “And yesterday my beloved friend, James B. Beck, a senator of the United States, dropped dead in the Washington depot. He was one of the most magnificent souls I ever knew; at times in eloqaenc* a Demosthenes, the foe all wrong, the terror of all political corruption, aud a friend of God. How I enjoyed his hospitalities in Kentucky when he took me aud showed me all the classic spots around beautiful Lexington, and talked of things pertaining to our beloved country. ‘Oh, my, Talmage,' said he, ‘sometimes we public men get worldly, and perhaps do not atteudour religious duties as we ought; but still the Bible Is true, and the only hope for this world is the gospel of Jesus Christ. I was brought up under Henry Duncan of Roth well, Scotland, and felt the power of his ministry, and have felt it all the way through.”* Thomasville Topics. Thomasville, Ga., May 4 Prof. G. M. Lovejoy, president of the South Georgia college, is trying hi3 hand at fruit and truck farming. The professor say* there will probaDiy be one-third of a LaConte pear crop. His grapes, of which he owns a large vineyard of Concords, Delawares and scup pernongs, are unusually fine, as they were unhurt by the oold. He says truckers have suffered considerably from drought, which has been prevailing some time, but there is now good prospect tor raiD.