Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, July 27, 1888, Image 6
Tiie Democrat. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY DY CLEM. C. MOORE, CRA WFORD VILLE, GEORGIA Entered at the poitoffiee at Crawfordville, Georgia, an second-ciasci mail matter. SAM •M i.» ' I II SCHOOL 1\1 / It V.1770\ I /. 1.1, SSI is ion ■II I. V I’ll, I, <*•*■« tin Taxi “Tin* Tabernacle, ‘ I'.x. xi-, l-IG Loldrn Tex I : Ifev. xxi., 3 * (iiiim.’iiiary tut the Lebt*on> * nd the Lord pa ike unto Moses, flow .'t tve I i 1 f hi ipcneo and how little we to think of the meaning of it or of 1 hu .. fch the Lord” of the prophet oi Hie 1 a\ unto you’’ of Jesus iliniKclf, who w,iU;.' j Ol d 1 •od of the prophets. We '•ftiinot :;iv too mu h l ee 1 t > the word of ~ id, le herd it too reverent.. and unless > hear God sneaking tons in His $ t, , ..dl not nr < Ii:-:. Jn the first e of the first month. it was the : •mild year ve : i! and a .1 a year since* t - 'eat I >v« r n d:t on which t i»* y left the laud < ^ r l jml iaontii v/a.i - t m 1 month to them be' ante. A 4 hoi - it Wit vent Ill *; * til of their 'ivii \ -J they v. !• In :s ! fi Ol'lJj to count it tb<‘ first month, ! r it- was the first inc ut ii of I h •ar of the:i 1 1 .story as a n d mu d l ’ ", very < 'hristian lms t wo birtlubi . , iho • lay of In birtdi as a child of < 0(1 lie his life C.TllV bi'gnri, for up to that time lie had i o rwil li • ills first or natural birthday h • eau 1 .ioiiliv., Lb surely ted. but the e ■t, time of his new birth, aithoii _di ho nia not know, <>od knows, “The taberm of the lent of meeting.” («od hah do! . < r< d t h nut in from t he bon 1 age of 1-y pt. and brou el t! unto Him sell that Ii v might be unto Him a peculiar fre/emre nl ,. ■ ft I! f i “<> e, a ’ . n edoni of priest'. a holy ir. ,i •. i t o Mjak«* liirn a name (11. e'.eui. vii., • e and now }.,• ,y, 1 dwell an on ; I (net by zz vi ib!e |i; e: « i; • ■ in this tabernacle s; ■< ■■ .illy i ,i e ] for 2 i i hi < v., h). The t i . r i i after onie >00 years gave place to the Temp o ot : iloni'in, which, with homo rebuilding, continued until Christ eftine.tho ti lie t di rnaclo (Hob. viii.,2); but He, being rejeet4-*d by t!i nation, re j«‘cted thorn a for a time, and their teinp'e and eft y an 1 land b e a ruin and desolate l-ei an • of their rejection ol tneir King. \V he tin r u e studi he t iberuario or the tem¬ ple, the past, or future history ol Israel, or the history of t In* present gst.li'*ring out from the ir ti n * of a p ople for Hi name, or the |M‘i i onal <h Jilin ; ol < o l with an individual, we find that .)• -us, flu* Christ, ilia Son of Man. tli - ,*on of 1 bod, u always in the midst, the tiiv, and the lust , the foundation and Urn head corner sloe •. the center and ciremnfcr eifee ol all th * work of redemption from be ginning to end. ;>. “I lie ml; ol the testimony. ’’The nrk,table and altar of iucen «* wer e.i h nm*io of aeueia Wood, covered with gold, reminding us of the incorrupt!i»le Immunity and divinity of Christ. The . rk was the only v«»ss«l in the Holy wide of and Hole high, ■>, a three room sides t| n cubits of which long and were boards covered with gol l; the fourth was the veil, a type of the bo ly of (fiirist (Heb. xfiOi; the ceil in y, w.s the beautiful curtains, and ‘the floor was the earth, The cover of the atk, called t he mercy seat, or propitiatory tlb-b. ix., 5, U. \ margin), was of fitiregold. and out. of it was beaten at each end n cherub overshadowing it. ()vor the mereV seat, letween the cheiubim, in this Holy of Holies, was the place of the manifest pres rtcoofGod. (Ex. xxv. 17 22.) The ark was made to contain the tables of testimony, and there they w< r<< kept. The people could not keep that* holy law, but Christ, the true ark, kept it peVfeetly. and of Him it is writ¬ ten; “A body has Thou piep.ired Thy will. for mo. ” fileh« x,5.) ‘d delight to do heart ‘ O (Ks. my God: yen,Thy law i-. within my tl, \) l or us He kept the law, and then died to atom* for our iie by llis piveious blood propitdating or •dfoetmiliy eoveriug all our traiis. i • •■-.sinus; bet ruing “the end of the law for i ighteousnep- to everyone that be lieveth’’ (Mom. x, 4 >, in ord«*r that as His ro deeiruHl ones we may delight to keep His commandments. I. “The table,” Sabbath on which was twelve placed every week every day eakes of bread in two rows, with I ranki i<-oils * upon each row. (Lev. xxiv., 5-1)). 'The table and the bread and the incense all speak of Him. He is the bread <>l life, the true bread whieh eunio down from Heav en; there was no leaven in Him, and all His thoughts, wonts and deals wore ns sweet incense to God. He G the living word, and the Scrip tures vvhi - h are H.c written word heeotne a living word to .ill wholly the spirit see Him and eat Him as t lvir bread of life, lie him self sai l: “Het.»iatoatoi.n Me, even lie shall live by Mo." i.lohn vi., 57). ‘•’The eandlest'o U” was made of a talent of pure gold ix v., :»v‘s, and vvou d therefore be worth about ^> ooo. It was more like lamp-tan 1 than what, we understand by candlestick. Radiol its saven branchedield ti lamp which everyday had to bo trimmed mill fblc l with oil s * as to burn - ontiimally before tlui Lord Christ - the light of the world, the true light, and 16* js pleased to pay tone* Ye are the light of the world.” As bread corn was < rushed, and gold beaten, mid incense burned, so Christ was made a jierfe t eavioui . our bread and light by IBs Mtilorm s for us. and only as we are willing 1 o be bi n: e l ai d suffer with Him can we be « light to others. There could be no light •wAUmuV oil. and that too was obtained by beating. l.e> wiv. ,1 I.) Kvery word and work of Christ was by the Spnrit and only by the Min * Spirit can we do anything ac¬ cept a* le. Hu> altar of iiu-ense.” On this til* !>n« st u« 4 ti . burn im-pn.'O ovt-rv m„rnm K wnd e\ « ning while he trimmed tin* lamps i iwx.. ti a fling us that although notn- 1 ing that we do ean be acceptable in itself | I . of ur sui fulness, vet whatever is I in artiiv dor in His name with a sun vie de- I ►ire for His glory is maJo a 'ceptable by the 1 iucvU'O of His merits, which is owra sweet jH*rtuine to God. Tins should greatly oneour ► g>* ns in all our work lor God not to look at eur imporfe.-t s rvi •*. but at Him who is all ! cur rig S.vr.r.e.thecnnd.e- I TI x ■■ mconse, were in the 1 ' ! I pt ■ ■ ‘it - Inch »n.wt went every day, but into the holy of h' - h<; ».-nt . r v ,n ,• a *'• ' ' r t ring and the I tJ:«* outer *urt of the tabernacle; the first w -I- : ot "1 vov rv 1 w: a fribv. and i>t \ii • " * 1 • it ^oe.-iks to us , ?h man. our suenfl I r and teds i that we arc \mwil r.g t * ac cept the bio d o o vi i, there is no p.-s- ty ->t our *-tmiing to The l-»v**r was m i * »>;t IN*rs t he w :11 i \\\vi! . and contaimvl watvr with wh h th l'ri t> wash.nl their hand" an t. r. : i r. tv ling us th .t he that is washed »i i iff -vi mvioth no? saw t * w ash i ith the w:\Tcr of the world . but i< ch ;i in every ? > q oh a and that it s U t: r to - *'k * the • fe< ? law of!iU*n% :uu ”• t. ;in to look a' on 's M i Jiin I gateU Curtains of fino linen ha- *l» If w iiot n pillars u m and Ly jr»is fas.tont.Hi to br a fence 1 *>. cul•;: < ’> g. an unO the * curt •which w ion, teat Oncvii Iti-IS l he linen 'ourt i* pillars with their eras-, socket s. Impiter-' and books, th> yin? a st*t»ak to u> of t THE DEMOCRAT, CRAI DVTLLE. ?»towmcnt ami power of our Lord Jesus, and h /'.v may become partakers thereof. ' ll. "The tabernacle and all its vessels ano»: tel. ’ A full description of the holy a .'Entra nt oil is found in xxx., 22-33, and us of the varied graces of the Holy Spirit ound in divine fullness in Christ, l. ; v <■<'lifirniing that every v* -•> -I and every v. jut of the taljornade uttereth if is gory. 1 ' 15. ‘‘Aaron and his sons anointed." Ibr-t was he 1, then< lothed and then anointed: our ns forgiven, then clothed with the gar¬ ments of salvation, and then anointed with j, , r to minister unto Him. If we realized our ri<*e 1 of this jxiwer and waited upon Him mor ■ earnestly lor this anointing we would b<- hoi.-r and happier people and more used by Him. If}. Notice the seven Moses fold or the perfect of obe¬ this dience recorded of in rest fhapter, and then notice how in verse 34 It is s:s id 'lie glory of the I>ord filled tb<* taber mi' ■ ; (oily let u s be w:Jiing and obedient ai.'l if-- will fill us with His glory even now. - Lc 1 on Helper. CONGRESSIONAL. Senate Proceeding*. ay. Mr. Edmunds introduced a bin tat the establishment of a Council of Ordnance to conduct examinations into all such questions relating to the fabrication and use of ordnance, projectiles and explosives, the as may be referred to the it by Congress M. <-yorge or Secretary of War or Navy.... r. delivered a speech of seven hours duration in favor of the adoption of the Fishery Treaty, When he finished Mr. Dolph spoke briefly against its ratification. pier ii Ray.— The fishery treaty was again considered by the Senate in open executive M .-sion to-day. Mr. Pugh spok“ in favor of its ratification and Mr. Chandler made a speed? against P.,000 the for treaty... monument .The bill General appro¬ priating George K. $ Clark a passed.... The to Senate was devoted thirty minutes in executive session to the nomination of Melville W. Fuller to be Chief Justice, which was called up by Senator Pugh, of the Judiciary Committee. No decisive a- tion was taken.... Mr. Mc¬ Pherson introduced bills to increase the limit of cost of the public building ut Paterson. N. J. ,to $150,000, and to provide for the erection oi a public building at Perth Amboy, N. J. 13)nr Day. The bill which provides for an adjustment of tip* accounts of laborers and mechanics employed by the Govern¬ ment, arising underjthe eight hour law’, By was passed after considerable discussion. • - • a vote of 20 to 21, the bill to place John C. Fremont on the retired list of the army, with the rank of Major-General, was passed. * 131st Day. —The Senate considered all day the bill for the formation and admission into the Union of the State of Washington- to be CO I nposed of the present Territory of VI ash ington and part of Idaho Territory. When the reading of the bill was finished Mr. < nl lom offered a substitute for it, confining the area of the new State to that of the present 'Territory of Washington. Messrs. Stewart and Blair addressed the Senate on the sub¬ ject. Without action on the bill the con siderat ion of executive business was begun. Hons© Proceedings. 161st Day. 'There was considerable debate Indulged in by Messrs. Dingley, Holman, Felton and Bingham, on the foreign mail s r vice in connection with Mr. Bingham’s amendment reducing the Senate appropria¬ with tion, and increasing the mail facilities South American countries. No action was taken, however. 162d Day.—'T he Bingham amendment to the Post Office Appropriation bill was re jeetod by a vote of V 5 to 156... .'The confer ees were instructed to disagree to the Senate amendment appropriating »>oO,()(H) for for eign mail ser\ioe.. .. The House then w<v..t into Committee of the Whole (Mr. Springer, of Illinois, in the chair) on the Tariff bill, the pending schedule being that relative to wool. Speeches were delivered by Messrs. Outhwait, La Folletto, Breckinridge ami Ford. Committee of 16:;n Pay.— The House, in the W hole, resumed debate on the'Tariff. 'The free wool clause was discussed till one P. M., and then by a vote of 120 to 102 the House re¬ fused to take wool from the free list i w - den (Pennsylvania) and Wilkins and Koran (Ohio), Democrats, voted in the affirma¬ tive, ami Anderson negative (Iowa), the Republican, Democrats. voted in the with 'I he date on w hieh the free wool clause shall go into effect was fixed as October 1, 1 - 8 S; and the dap* for the taking effect of the woolen schedule was fixed as January 1. Iflsi). The consideration of the internal revenue sections of the Mills bill was then begun. Mr. Johnson, of North Carolina, offered an amendment providing for the repeal of the tfix on all distilled spirits made from grain or fruit, This was defeated by a vote of 27 to l a. An amendment was adopted fixing Octo¬ ber 1, 1888, as the date upon which tin* repeal of taxes on manufactured chewing tobacco, smoking tobacco, and snuff shall go into ef¬ fect. An amendment was agreed to striking out the clause imposing a duty of 30 per cent, ad valorem on cm jvets and carpetings, ! aud inserting a clause imposing a duty of s»x cents per of\o s {uare yard on hemp and jute floor car p : tin s; per cent, ad valorem on matting and floor mats e\-e.lusivo!y introduced of voge table substances.....Mr. (kites a bill creating the office of Assistant Attorney GVneral, at a salary of $5;ioo. who is to be charged with the duty of editing and com piling the Unitoff States statutes and treaties. lffTm Day. The House in Committee of the Whole continued the consideration of the revenue sections of the Mills bill. Numerous i amendments reducing or taking the tax off of cigars.tobaccos and liquors were defeated. • Air. MeMillin, of Tennessee, offered an 1 ' amendment providing that the bond require l to lie given by the cigar manufacturers shall | bo in mi h penal sum as the Collector of in- j ternal Revenue may require, not loss than 1 10 K w i Hi an addition of sh) for every per¬ son proposed t o be employed by such manu¬ facturer. It was adopte 1.... At the evening session a bill establishment was passed appropriating lightship f ,: i 000 for the of a at Sandy Hook, N V. .Secretary Fairchild called the attention of the Congr s> to deficiency. the need j of appropriations »or Customs an dun* enforcement of the A lieu Contract l.abor ia ■. 165th Day —When ti e House, w ith Mr. Springer of Illinois in the chair, went into | > "mmitnv of the Whole on the Tariff it!!. I'r on motion of Mr. Tra.vy. yas stricken trom the free list, and then a long discussion was startl'd hoops on tin* the paragraph free j i placing cotton ties or on list, An amendment steel placing hoops on not the thinner tree list than all j iron and j number 20 wire gunge was agreed to- » to 71 . The existing rates of duty were restored an cement and on whitinr and : on Paris white. The duty on P iris green was fixed at i. per rent ad valorem- The duty ( »i t'fl. .;i iKiivolain, < art n. cone, or crockery was that ri'litinj to «rwn ami i-olorel clasS . Mr Hr, ..nr viov.-.l t . rrik the duty one cent instead of threesmarter* of „ . , t ,, r ; run l, wlucli was ndofU-J. lAcellent Ihmsi'kftpC?’. | \\\ -WeiM.t. • JT, they , v . tell , (1 me you vnn are . xrf > b*v : icd. v-s, l ::r. Dr.C't YYi.o in the . ' ' 1 ' *V* 1 ^ eve:> _ niurve*. uoo. i ;n Never hu ■'tc eat any adamantine orviid or celluloid pics. Perfect bauquet three j : il ,'. , ,. .. VlU ‘ a coo*, _ , , ... *• > . ' Nv. but -he buys everything at tue bakerjf."—A e.$ka >■ -itr Jcntrn tu What Canthe Vommotion. ; > the cause ot that crowd ver there— fire he w ■ a: lives *w i o . a hair and led « d named like the house was e all over. — at Jtmrwip STOLEN HONE?. Over Two Millions Embezzled! Six Months. Array of Defalcations by Trusted Employes in Ten Years. The New York Herald says that during the half year of 1888 there were twenty-nine ’ vases, the aggregate amount embezzled or appropriated being $2,340,005.68. This sum e lded to the $48,513,466.81 inyolved during the previous ten years makes a total of $50,- 753.472.41 in 126 months, or at the rate of t h>2,78 j. 53 per month. Df The leading embezzlement for 1888 so was that committed by Charles H. Pitch? toiler of the In ion Bank of Providence, I., who carried off $818,644 in cash and t curiti \(‘H. He was arrested in Canada a) impudently proposed to “compromise” f >150,000. The following is a list of the (J falcations and embezzlements during theft half of the year 1888: Cir leville, Ohio, January 2.— Jacob H. Delaplaine, clerk in Milford, paper factory..... ........... 3,000 Mass., January 6.— Arthur H. Ball, clerk in Hope- 2,000 ( dale Machine Company....... Troy, N. Y., January *7.—Asa \V. Wickes, cashier Central National Bank.......... .... 9,000 ( Birmingham, Frank Ala., Irwin, January register 18. — M. 10,000 o City Court.................... 23.— Auburn, N. Y., January and Charles O’Brien, cashier, of Elmer Moore, bookkeeper, Bank, the First National car¬ ried off all the cash and availa ble securities. Escaped to 180,000 0 Canada...................... 1. Philadelphia, Penn. J February 4 — Isaac Henry Roberts, cashier 10,000 of Whitehall, Tatum & Co.... Middletown, N. Y., February 2. n —Charles S. Starr, reported County l Treasurer. Books 29,028 t-3, Philadelphia, missing....................... February 8. h Penn., cashier for —Henry J. E. E. Reese, & Co. (In 1875 1 embezzled Kingsley $60,000 from >7 an¬ other firm and compromised ■8 for $17,000.) Plead guilty to ■e last offence February 20. Sen¬ tence two years and a half im¬ 00 prisonment....... 5,000 Philadelphia, Penn., February 21. Oram N. Ingram, clerk for Johnson. Higgins & Cur¬ tin. 8 aid he intended to com¬ 3,000 00 mit suicide................ Harrisburg, Penn., March 5.— John of Dauphin S. Longnecker,Treasurer oiinfcy............ 38,000 00 < .................. March Battle ....... ( 1QD reek, », Mich., Mich., March 20. 20. Joseph H. Whipple, alias S.T. Mather, president Pembroke Knitting Mills; arrested in 5,000 00 New York.................... Daviess county, Ind., March 20. ~ H irhard H. Green wood, Coun- 14,108 00 ty 'Treasurer... 21— F rank fort, K y., March James W. ... Tat State Treas¬ 00 urerof Kentucky........... 404,065 Ki;w Orleans, l.n.. March 33.— Fernand i’onpart,clerk in Cot¬ ton Exchange, arrested at 20,500 0? Wichita, Kan ............... Willimuntie, Conn., March 22. —it. !•’. Royce, treasurer of 0T savings bank. ) N. C MuVcU and ! lent Charles E. Gross ! < 'ashler Samuel < •• White, ol j {State National Bank; arrested m Canada and now under bail for trial; carried of 200,000 Newbu money.. N. Y.. April T.-Ar thur rg, V. Wiltsie and John M. Pollock, ban kerb.......... ••• 100,000'00 New Albany, Ind., April Weir, 10. ab- - County Treasurer 70,000 :oo scondcd Y., April 2->. Keneca Falls, N. N. I*. B. Wells, secretary Sav¬ in ;x Bank; excused himself b« causc his salary was only $400 10,000 100 per annum... 2.». Philadelphia. Penn., April for John H. Murphy, clerk 1 >r. 1 )aniel Bray. • .......... 25,000 Of Columbus, Ohio, April 27.—F. AY. Corzilius, cashier South End Bank.................... 15,000 to Scott County, Kan., April 28.— 0,600 00 U. P. Grant, Treasurer....... New York 2.—C. J. Do Baun, cashier Park Bank. 05,000 f»C Paterson, N. J., Juno 10.—John \Y. Benson, treasurer Exempt 00 Firemen's Association........ 5,000 Lambertv'lle, N. •)., June 10.— Major Libbie, City Tax Re ceiv or................... 5,000 00 Providence, R. l.« June 27.— Charles A. Pitcher, teller in Union Bank............. ..... 818,644 00 Jersey City, N. J., June 29.— John H. Van Loan, bookkeeper 00 in Second National Bank..... 20,000 New York city’,June M0.—Albert E. Krahe, cashier for Ilirsch & Co ......................... 4,000 00 Total for six months of 18S8. .$2,240,005 63 recapitulation for ten years and a half. 187$...... ...... $3,784,805 «£» 1879...... ...... 2,755,!«il W 1SS0...... ...... 1, *s 1.437 00 1881...... 2.887,395 2,318,575 80 55 1882...... ...... 2,3:14,4*1 87 1883 ...... ...... 22,154,301 1884 ...... 11 ...... 1885 ...... ...... .'1,477,530 44 1886 ...... ...... 8,780,505 00 1887 ______ ...... 4,450,408 !to 1888 <iv '* >nth; ...... 2,340,005 83 Grand total...... ......$50,750,472 44 In 126 months—from the 1st of January, 1878, to date—the total of all discovered de falcations above >2H) > is $50,753,472 44, or equal to $402,781 53 per month. SIX THOUSAND MARINES. \n l-Nt imarc of Kcvrub * Wcdei For Our lleconst ructetl Navy. Th** Secretary of the United States Navy has just sent a communication to the Senate in answer to a resolution introduced by Mr. Hale show ng the full complement of officers "hieh wil, ^ -juimi forth* fol lowing new cruisers, gunboats and mom tors It shows as follows: enlisted Chicago, to- 31 and 406 men; tali., Boston ami Atlanta, each 2. offli-ers and • men; total. 42. Dolphm, 31 10officeri officers total 1#3. Newark. and 35U men; total 390. Chari ston. -’*0 o:fivers and "’.4 men; total 844. Balti mo:v 3; oflivers and 410 men; total ,,, Fhi i ade i phia anJ Snn Francisco, each SI officers and 340 men ; total 37L Wrktown, Uoncorvl and Bennington, each 17 officers end T*4 men; total 211. Petrel, '*i; t -tal 145. Dviiamite cruiser Vesuvius, 6 officers and 70 men; total First-class torpedo boat, 4 officers and 18 ^en: total 22. Puritan, 25 officers and I'M nen; total 221. Mlautonomah, Amphritrite, ind Terror, each 23 officers ani 177 men; :otal total Monadnoek, Texas, 23 officers and 4t>0 180 nen: 2" •. 30 officers and nteu; total v 0. Maine, 30 officers and 444 men; total 4 ? 4. Active arc to lie taken by the Iowa State Board of Health to prevent immigra¬ tion of persons tainted with leprosy. >nsul a* Chri-uania, Norway, has been that if any more victims of the dis¬ ease come from the district of Stavanger will be sent back. LABOR NOTES, Tenn., will soon have a roliing rinneapolis labor temple will be fin year. vvN✓Bla,. furnishes employment cigar makers. : are 0134 journeymen carpenters f apprentices in Scotland. /coxa Trades Assembly of Clerks mien ■ in course of formation, i bef' • n the history of the country ouia uring establishments changed . mum as at this time. ; of Associate l Carpenters of ■ re been in existence twenty-six : i >wt:s a membership of 8877. oo*r, Penn., there are three cork zrie annu al production is 150,000 * one-half of this country's manu- 1 s of the Seaconnet Mill, at Fall , are being prosecuted for viola . ten-hour law in overworking i >lliery, Shamokin, Penn., ii idle since 1883, has resumed mployment will be given to jkfjn, sash and blind manufac oj*< ester, Mass., have just de imong their employes as their rofits of 1887. ers’ cramp, a deformity of the •ed by continuous grasping, as ML. Poncet, is an affection of glassblower. er of 1600 persons says: “The re more faithful than the best average record of the men is ; t of the women.” the stone cutters, which has trouble in the building trade . xi as terminated. The cutters ac ) terms offered them by the masons. keeping on the Continent is a 1 like most trades learned iti Europe lire at least seven years' apprentice under a most accomplished teacher pacity of the Findlay (Ohio) natural spurting already is 50,000,000 feet, claimed that if all the bads were de sufficient oil could be obtained to sup vorld. ’•ganized labor of Rock Island, Ill., ned for the purpose of building a devoted to labor me tings and s in connection with the iurther the cause. irding to the report of the Depart of Agriculture the present average monthly wages for farm labor in the t i states is §18.24 without board, and $ with board. Bethlehem (Penn.) Iron Company has gtj u up its rail mills under a new scale pep yA \ reduces the wages from five to twenty ent., and guarantees continuous work nil I January. The men accepted the reduc i i i jction of ten pAr cent, in the wages of 2500 hands employed by the Reading Iron W Effect. or ks> All at Reading, the Penn., has gone into wentwork, under employes except fifty protest, at the reduced wage s - Ao ORDING to the investigation of Mr. E<y|-(i f Chadwick, the average life of the g T f sh wageworker is twenty-three years. ^ ( ss than forty-eight in every 100, nearly laY, of the children of wageworkers die »r fi ve. • i cding to certain statistics the cotton d Nashville, Tenn., now affords em to more than 1500 persons eSrlv aTrdut 187>I'd dra . v -> ffnished product is double the value raw material. oxbury, Mass.,is a big factory having ..or&tely constructed fire-escape, deep which jinates ten feet above a stream of er. Thus the choice of death by fire or nr would be neatly set before the opera a ease of a conflagration. .ark’s machine shop,at Pittsfield, Mass., recently purchased one of the largest lathes in New England. It weighs 5000 pounds, has a face-plate bed thirty-two with a wing feet of long, seven and a half feet, a and the dis¬ tance bet ween tlm centers is twenty-two feet. A certain car. No. 14Y of an Indianapolis street railway company, has had so many persons killed or wounded in, on, or by it, that the drivers have signed a petition asking to have it taken off and either demolished or generously presented to some other com¬ pany. Twenty-five employes in the Louisville (Ky.) office of a New York life insurance company went over to another company the other day because the firm sent men from New York to take the places of the superin¬ tendent and his assistant instead of giving the Louisville men a show. LATEST NEWS. The great strike of the Amalgamated Iron and Steel Workers which commenced on June 1 has terminated in the uncondi¬ tion, surrender of the manufacturers, All works have resumed operations. Henry C. Ebert, the wife-murderer, has expiated his crime on the gallows in Jersey City, N. J. Richard Kfi ARNETT, wfio murdered Margaret Purcell, Jffie aged Irish house, keepei* of Mrs. Daniel R. Lyddy, at Long Branch in February last, has been hanged at Freehold, N. J. After a deadlock of three months the Re¬ publican Congressional Convention of the Twenty-fourth District of Pennsylvania has nominated J. Warren Ray, of Greene Coun¬ ty. Over 200 ballots were taken before tiie break occurred. A girl sixteen years old was burned to death while attempting to escape from a crowded New York tenement house that was on fire. In order to exterminate the chinch bug the farmers of Crawford county, Ill., have agreed to plant no wheat, rye or barley for three years. A cloudburst at Vincennes, Ini., caused a train of oars to be derailed. Jacob Daucher, charged with the mur¬ der of Louis Shoenberg at Denver, Col., Inis killed himself in jail at !8ati Bernardino, Cal. THE-five stor}’ piano warehouse of Julius Bauer, in Chicago, was destroyed by fire, causing a loss of. $400,000. Samuel Yf. Hawkins has been nomi¬ nated by the Republicans for Governor of Tennessee. Assistant Secretaf.y of State Rives has issued instructions to our Consuls abroad to collect all statistics as to assisted pauper immigration, for use by the special House committee just app anted to investigate this subject. The Consuls are required to report within ninety days. The village of Grafton. New Brunswick, bas been destroyed by lire. Three boys were drowned at a picnic near Johns, New Bruns wick, and.f our compan¬ ions narrowly escaped. A volcanic eruption has occurred at Makmats, in Japan, by which 40j persons were killed and 1O0U injured. A company has been incorporate! in I iinois to build an underground railroad for Cucago and the surrounding country. NEWS SUMMARY. Eastern and Middle States. b ’ lSK pITZJSZ ur^ot powder, P Wby killing exploded with terrible force, third. two men and fatally injuring the The simple request for credit for one glass of rum le i a liquor dealer at Bridgeport, Conn., to murder the would-be imbiber. The manufacturing town of Avon, Mass., has been totally destroyed by fire. Fire destroyed the shops in the Erie 'Penu.) Penitentiary and the convicts will remain idle for some time in consequence. Three men were drowned while fishing off Elizabethport, N. J. William Stauffer and Jeremiah Reiss were fatally burned by the explosion ot c* ■ ladle of molten iron in a foundry at Allen town, Penn., and four others were severely injured. A bride anl Ki-oora, whfle spending their honeymoon at New London, n., were t cidentally drowned in feunapee Lake. A CRIPPLE woke up John GusUannon at Bennington, \ t. and asked for a drink of wh.sky. Fading to get the liquor he mar dered him with his crutch. Patrick Kelly, seaman on the Atlantic steamer Erin, for New York, stabbed two of his shipmates to death in the vessel's fore¬ castle while on the high seas. Michael Duxphy, of Brooklyn. N. Y., while in a drunken rage, murdered his half¬ brat her John and then killed himself. The Democratic National Campaign New Com¬ York mittee met at the headquart *rs in city, and elected Colonel Calvin & Brice, of Ohio, Chairman. Two women were burned to death and three of persons lamp injured Buffalo, through Y. the explosion an oil at N. South and West. Erenezer Stanford, an Englishman, has been hanged in the Columbus (Ohio) Penit eii tiary for the murder of his former sweet¬ heart, Alice flancox, at Youngstown, March 24, 1887. Four lumber dealers were drowned in the flooded Kanawha River at Parkersburg, W. Ya. Chief Piah, the once notorious chief of rado. renegade Utes in the North Park, suicide of Colo¬ has ended his career by on the old Navajo trail. He had lead some of the most barbarous Indian massacres ever known. George M. Rider has been hanged at Mar¬ shall, Missouri, for the murder of R. P. Tallent about three years ago. While assisting at Ke nton, Ohio, in rais¬ ing a Harrison and Morton pole, 2 .0 feet long, Zelestes Musgrove. aged fifty, was killed. The rope broke, letting the pole fall, striking him and breaking his back and both legs. Death was instantaneous. A cowboy walked into the bank of La Junta, Kan., and covering Rufus Phillips, the cashier, with a revolver, ordered him to drop all the funds of the bank into a bag he placed on the counter. The cashier complied with alacrity and the daring robber at once mounted his horse and escaped with $28,000. A battery of gas tanks exploded at Lud¬ low, Ky., injuring fifteen persons, four mor¬ tally. Six persons, colored, were drowned in the Arkansas River while returning from a dance near Fort Smith, Ark. Joseph Soup, an insane Bohemian, mur¬ dered his wife at Columbia, S. CL, by driving a sharpened file into her head. He subse¬ quently killed himself by cutting his throat. A frolic at Axton, Va., ended in the murder of two young men by a drunken ruf fi&u. Fred Gleason, aged twenty, John Will¬ iamson, aged eighteen, and Louis Burnam, aged sixteen, were drowned at Wilke’s Lake, Mich., while bathing. Gleason got into deep water and the other two were drowned while attempting to save him. A Mexican boy, Pedro Jones, aged 15, shot and killed George Stevenson, post¬ master and station agent atGlamis, Arizona. Conrad Waco, Jackson, colored, has been hanged at Texas, for the murder of John Talley, Jackson, a prominent who white planter, one year ago. was nineteen years old, made a confession on the gallows. W. A. Potts, who was to have been banged at Washington, N. C., escaped the gallows by committing suicide on the day he was doomed to die. Put.tam Dakdek, Gt-atiii Master of the National Grange of the United States, died recently at his residence in Fayette, Miss. Washington. The President has accepted the resign ition of the Hon..GeorgeV. N. Lathrop, United States Minister to Russia. The State Department has received infor¬ mation of the death of United States Consul J. Harvey Brigham, at Kingston, Jamaica. Speaker Carlisle has appointed a special committee, consisting of Messrs. Ford, Spinola, Gates, Morrow and Guenther, to investigate the subject of contract and pauper immigration. The President has approved the joint reso¬ lution extending the provisions of the joint resolution relating to the disposal of public lands to the States of Florida and Louisiana. P resident Cleveland lias sent the fol¬ lowing Tree, nominations to the Senate: Lambert Minister of Illinois, to be Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States New York, to Belgium; Robert R. Roosevelt, of to be Envoy Extraordinary an.l Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States to the Netherlands; Rufus Magee, of Indiana, to be Envoy Extraordinary ami Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States to Svved n an 1 Norway; Charles L. Scott, of Alabama, to lie Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States to Venezuela: John E. Bacon, of 8-out.h Carolina, to be Minister Resident of the United States to Paraguay and Uruguay. The President has vetoed four more pri¬ vate others. pension bills and signed a number of The Police Department has just completed a census of the District of Columbia, its re¬ port shows the total population to be 218,157 —white population, 145,685; colored, 72,522. Foreign. An imperial ukase just issued in St. Peters¬ burg, Russia, fixes the number of the con¬ tingent recruits at 250,000 as aga ; nst 2 5,000 In 1^87, ami places the perio-i of acti ve ser¬ vice at five years, but at thirteen years lor the Landwebr. All able bodied men under forty-four years of age, who have not already been in active service, must join the Landwebr. The Debeers diamond mine, at Kimberly, South Africa, was destroyed hundred by fire, natives and twenty-four whites and two perished therein. ! Sir John Henry Brand, President of the Grange Free State, is dead. Six men employed by the Eau Claira {Canada** Lumber Company were drowned while driving Io:s. Pope Leo XIII has addressed another en¬ cyclical letter to the Irish Catholic Churches disapproving of ‘ha boycott an l the plan of campaign, I see sometimes in the street, ssys a city newspaper man,a re.iliy pretty girl, or one who would be, were not her face state of mind she is in—ft gn- Avho •ook.-> ( as if she had just got off some “hard : words” with her mother or sister, or ! somebody else, and is still sioing through with it all and giving them ail a piece of her mind. But keeping tiiisup docs her a great deal of harm. It is bring¬ ing on ugliness. It weakens the stom¬ ach. It poisons the Mood. It drives the be-t people from her. It attracts and brings the w rst. It ruins the com¬ ; plexion. ¥EWST GLEANINGS. Cleveland, Ohio, has a plague of fish flies. SOM : Florida coast peop,e are talking of a turtle cannery. There are 127 dividend paying gold and r-ilver mines in this country, A mining claim on Douglass Island, Alaska, has just been sold for $2,50J,000. Dr. a. Y. P. Garnett, ex-Surgeon General of the Confederate army, is dead. Caterpillars are doing great harm in Blaine towns oa the upper Penobscot, Twenty-five bushels to the acre is about t j ie average of Kansas wheat this year. g 1R p R ovo Wallis, just Senior Admiral his 100th of Great Britian, has completed y ear . General Sheridan’s prettiest cottage, at Nonquit, . g one G f the on the Massachusetts coast Al)VICES f rom Havana, Cuba, state that murder and pillage are running riot through out the is | an q. Thomas Perfect while eating dinner at I & f , ( , ohi choked t0 death on a , of potatoes, A French six weather prophet has been cold sent to jail for mouths for predicting a .1 illy and loss of crops. The annu 1 cop prcdutticD cf i'.iz world is 275,000 t ins, and the French syndicate is said to control 215,000 tons of it. Near 500.000 parcels of vegetables were shipped from Charleston, S. C., to New York City between April 1 and June 1. The Metropolitan Cattle Market, London, and is the largest of its kind, covering three one-half acres and costing $1,000,000. David Asiiley, of Plattsville, Neb., has jiut died of hydrophobia from the bite of a rapid dog received twelve years ago. An aline, placed in some caused lemonade by young Robert Chenault, the death of James George, aged seven, at Lexington, ky Glasgow, Scotland, having taken in vari¬ ous outlying suburbs, is now the second city in Great Britain, with a population of 780,000. Acres and acres of melons in Georgia rotte l on the ground on account of the ina¬ bility of several railroads there to transport the crop. Ex-Governor Houser, of Helena, Mon¬ tana, says this year the Territory will pro¬ duce gold, silver, and copper to the value of $ 10 , 000 , 000 . At Chicago the mercury recently dropped from eighty-six degrees to sixty-four in live minutes, and seersuckers were quickly ex¬ changed for overcoats. Crop reports from ail parts of the country indicate recent favorable conditions and the promising state of all sorts of crops, North and South, East and West. Sum feminine ability in finance as that shown by a sixteen.year-old girl in Detroit is fortunately rare. For the past six weeks she has been forging checks and sending swind¬ ling telegrams. She said her mother thought she was earning $6 a week and she disliked to disappoint her. William K. Vanperilt, of New York, lias bought over one thousand acres just be¬ low the city of Ashvil e, N. C.. at the con¬ fluence of the Fr«-n°h. Broad and Swajaz-no** r. vers. fine land lies m one tract, which was held by over twenty persons. It is said to be the finest property in Western North Caro¬ lina. The cattle epidemic fears in the Philippines entertained still of continues, and grave are giving rise_ effluvium to Jseaso amongst mankind, number ow ing to the from the large of corpses of an finals, while it is almost cer¬ tain that in the districts where the epidemic m< »re esj -ygr'ivaUs. there will be a scar¬ city of food owing to the want of oxen to pi < » .V the fields. In one instance the owner of 1260 head of cattle lost them all in a few days. FROMINENT PEOFLE. General Harrison smokes but never hunks. Queen Natalie is going to live in Flor¬ ence, Italy. a* Sitting Bull is living a life of laziness Standing Rock Agency. Congressman Roger Q. Mills has a pas¬ sion for the collection of odd walking sticks. The father of the new Duchess of Marl¬ borough is a native of Garrard County, Ky. Qn a : Victoria is said to be inordinately fond ol pearls, of which she has a fine collec¬ tion. Kojiro Matsaga, one of the Yale Law School graduates this year, is of Japanese ro 3 r al blood. Miss Isabella Darlington, daughter of the Pennsylvania Congressman, has marked oratorical ability. Miss Rose Ctxtei.ajjd is en¬ gaged on a new novel. At present sue it rt siding at Asbury Park. E'.ipebor William II. is the first Russian speaking King of Prussia. Prince Bismarck speaks Russian fluently. Bret Harte is a social lion in London. He rarely dines alone, and is in great demand at receptions and soirees. Robert II e. the printing press man. spent a fortune on his library, his taste running to rich and valuable bindings. Oliver F. Rah me. who made $250,000 out of the invention of the self-scratching match, had a dream which suggested the device. Prince Jerome Napoleon and his son Victor have been reconciled. They will have a meeting with the Empress Eugenie very soon. The Duchess of Marlborough had seven waiting maids ami occupied five of the Au¬ ra nia’s state rooms on her trip across the At¬ lantic. Ex-Minister John M. Langston, of Virginia, is one of the best educated men of the colored race, lie was a Mahone delegate at Chicago. After leaving his office m New York, Jay Gould goes to his library and studies out the questions of the day from a historical and literary standpoint. The King of Sweden, who has been visit¬ ing London of late, has but two subjects upon which he cares to talk. One is music, the other is his dyspepsia. Benj amin F. Shively, who represents the South Bend, Ind . district, is tiie youngest member in the Fiftieth Congress, having been born on March 'JO, 1857. Perhaps the youngest Rev. Warren college president Candler, in the world is the A. wno at the age of thirty-two has just been put at the head of Emory College io Georgia. Edward George Washington Butler, of Iberville, La., is the oldest living graduate of the West Point Military Academy. He was a m •mber of the class of 1818, and re m fined in the army until after the Mexican War, in which he participated. Commissioner Fink, the railroad man, is worth about $2,000,000, which was m 3d He e largely from patents on railroad bridges. is now sixty one years old, and has a dis¬ tinctively German cast of features. He entered railroad life in his twenty-second year as an assistant engineer on the Balti¬ more and Ohio Railroad. Mr. Charles Df.jiachv. one of the great indemnity to whole Germany as ti;e price for not marching the German army through Paris. The money was to be paid in gold, ® ni wh« Bisiaarek saw the signatures he P ost P oned his uemaud for V* “**• The Brewers’ Organization of the United ■ ites has 6^8 members. The total quantity oi beer made last year was 22,460,335 barrels, or one barrel for every three people in the country.