The New York Herald Newspaper, November 26, 1874, Page 6

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NEW When se the young man.of the | | Hitsay muse a0-ae-lie ater dio nator bie-—make | * the leading Provenant and Colo oN eren THE 'LONGSHOREMEN. @ | Bs own way im tie werd Be leaves tmecid Rev. 1. atmage Preach at eleven | Reme, therefore, sometimes without a and o'clock, Rev, Meury Ward Beecher. Rev. J. Be a = a goes ‘where be thinks his prospects be | Thomas, Rev. A. P. Putnam, Rev, H. J. Vandyxe, , WBSt Yesterday Developed im Refor~ | Prumnsent, auct dimtance only lends enomantmens i) kev. W. Ty Fitch, Rev. Mr. Porteous, Rev. Dr. | emee to the Strike. Ho id Be Cele ~y 2 etn 24 aly Rev, J. | There were smaller crowds of the unemployed | ¢ome defo: hought of §' , Rey. Justin D, Fulton, 3 , Rev. J. Ww the Day will o heme makes hitapanapaee alee ee fe compels bem Mo paceisy, tev. Ge Babe i ee Thomas FP. | longshoremen about South and West streets yes- brated in the City inti targugh a aumcatics theaimecomey Delaney, Key’ Be Magerolt br Toni fey, serday than had marked the previo days of te : | Ory . ‘v. . X ¥ the ‘pone, it oiten' th ‘among the least | Schenck will preach appropriate sermons at the *rike, Whether the word has been passed to re- ws TURKEY AND py. sound, that startles him sees the oli bright green window blinds; from old age even when he swung | Ung child; | The Way the Festival Will Be Enjoyed in the Public and Private Charitable itutions, raged without, the famuy seated themselves in a to it that the inmates are Dot stinted in the supply. the subsistence of their families will be endan- Tastitutions; at the Churches | hal! circle and, while the Ore crackled and Foared | Hven the convict¥at the Penitentiary will 8; gered, which mill be but poor Fequital for obeying | f as if in defiance of tle win pat el e| joy & ol rest irom labor shoe shop, and and the Fairs, | through every chink and crevice, listened to the joy be punished with poultry and pies, Tuey will the orders of the organization of which they are |. ghost stories of ‘old granny,” aad then Leste mS also nm re a receive, vis from = Members, Atthe meeting on Tuesday evening | Youngster climbing Up stairs and peering friends. Keeper Sheviim and his assistant, Mr. in full accord with the soe mone fearful lest he may be conironted by one | Crumunie, wi ide upen. te.occasion and leck | M0Fe then.one of those in. full a THE FAMILY GATHERINGS. in then tumping over nis head with @ shiver that belheve the ghost had touched him If the turkey gobblera that regulate the domes- tie economy ef every turkey housebold in the cr }have to travel. jana, even where the female suffragists claim | 'Aace he will ha My equal rigats on the highest roosts, had much to | ber the — ‘ y home circle mg! way about what presidents and governors should time. “A custom, then, like tis good one of the and should not do, the American people would certainly never bear of @ proclamation for a na- tional Thanksgiving; but it so happens that as yet universal suffrage bas not been made to apply to all the animal creation, and to-day, therefore, the big politiclans can enjoy their Phanksgiving @inner without fear of being deieated at the next eleetion by the solid turkey vote of the rural cis- tricts. In fact, to-day will be a day of much feast- ing and probably of some praying throughout the jength and breadth of the Union; for it is undent- able that of Jate years Thanksgiving Day has come to be looked upon by the people generally as A HOLIDAY OF MERRYMAKING rather thana holy day set apart for the exclusive | benefit of jong-winded preachers who while de- jivering their sermons are all the time wondering within themselves whether the turkey is being overdone at home, and who once upon a time con- #idered the day and ail its appurtenances as a sor of special property of their own, THE POFUL. | To-day everywhere, trom out the | which will take place young will meet for the first time; in thousands of families, bieuded i prayer, | _ Yet, happy as whe day will be to ‘Will haye its DARK SHADOW ofthe loved one whose voice has ever ia the stlenve of the gra | What have they to be thank/al ip thé long ago New England alone celebrated @ | will huddle in dark and damp basements, supper- less and cold and coverless, when a if general SS Ep Oh SE Me ye eaving the theatres, wrapped iu rt thanksgiving, the people of the other States not | eonsidering tt worth tneir while to go to church for any porticular purpose more than once a week, but during the past few vears Thanksgiving Day bas become, next to New Year's Day, the greatest and the most génerally observed holiday of the whole year. ite religious character in the days of the Puritams made it as sacred in the eyes | cuarity of those whom God has of the God-fearimg followers of Bradford and great deal of tuis world’s goods th his successors as Christmas Day has always been with the Catholics, and, indeed, if the statements Of some chroniclers of the ‘truth and nothing but | the truth’? can be relied upon, one of the chief mo- tives, if not the priticipal motive, which led to the establishment of the day as a religious holiday by the Purusang was to ‘deter the unwary from fall- ing into the .superstitious practices of the Papists,”’ one of which was the observance of the 25th of December as the day when the Saviour was bora into the world. Be that as it may, Thanks- giving Day has a bistory peculiarly ite own, and it may surprise THE STRAIGHT LACED KEW ENGLANDERS Who may regard the merrymakings now deemed At the Five Points House of In inseperable trom @ proper celebration of the day Worth street, tnere will be exeret @8s0 many unpardouable crimes, and who may dren in the chapel at twelve and & qiing to the fotion that it spould be & day of extra. religious practices alone, to learn that the very first Thankegiving Day in New England, 0! which there 1s record, was cele- brated With all sorts ol merrymakings—that in fact it took the celebrators over three days to get | Wrough with their jollifications. This thanks 9 ona it is ‘expected that ite enti giving wok place, 0/ course, in Magsachusetts, be used in making the tea to be di when Bradford was the Governor. It was in 1621, | Der. , The Cnildren’s Ald Society will He ana bis had sofflered much, and had gor ji) poys at the Rivington worked hard in tue fields and had prayed as hara as they had worked, and gs @ result they were blessed with a goqd harvest. So one day four men, by order of the Governor, were sent out on &@ shooting expedition, “so that after a special Mannei” tocy “might rejoice togetuer”’ alter they “nad gathered of their labors.” In those dasa there must have been spleudid shooting, for the ‘our sportsmen succeeded in bagging enough game to last Bradiord’s company almost a week. ‘ } Itis true that it is recorded as historical fact | that there was ‘a little help aside,” besides the dtie secured by the huptsmen, but as to whether 18 Consisted Of patés de Jove gras veuison s:eaks or quail On toast, the veracious historian preserves #@ Must ommous silence, and this sueuce 48 ail the more to be deplored in view Of the circumstance Wluch he rejates that while the Governor and his Irlends were enjoying the feast they were Visited At the Newsboys’ Lodging Hol by King Massasvit and binety o! his wen, Whom | New Chambers street, srom 400 to they entertained for three mortal days. The imev- given a dinner of turkey, bam, Wabie conclusion is that either tne four mén o'cjock P. M. Most have been Irisli riflemen of some ancient put the Children’s Ald Society will Rugby school or the Indians had deticlencies. VERY POOR APPETITES, A bilious historlan o! the present day has.crueily | ner to the 280 children at the Asy Sugvested that “the little nelp aside’ was ablg and Boulevard. @emijohn of whiskey, but every one who knows anything Knows that Massasvit was a Good Temp- lar in bis way and @ memberin good standing of the church, apd that Bradiord bad no stomach for €vi sports of any Kind. Three years after this little Jestivity of the Bradiord company their Thanksgiving occurred. It was unlike the first in many respects, jor there 18 BoO mention mude the mere foot-rog of which would Surely tt will require ail the stre! for “God's to say, “Not my will but Thine cared for to-day. “The uufortunates at the Tombs ber of tarkey aud mince ness of Superintendent check for $100, wuich secured 430 key and 150 mince pies, and that will make the prisone: for one day. | Boys, at No. 38 Warren street, to dread poor boys, ner will be “first clags,” as usual. ana children who apply will receiv feast. The supplies will imemde turkeys, 200 pounds of other mei provisions, A chest of tea nas be Tne atiendant expenses will bi promivent merchant of this city, | avenue A and kighth street, at be present. followed by @ dinner at three P, M. About 300 poor children will be ard Mission apd Home tor Lituit No. 40 New Bowery. The dinner from eleven to one o’clock and will sipging and recitations by the chal o’ciock. 1p addition to the cilldre: With the remants of the ‘east, to nine P.M. E: Twent and o| some of the outside schoosi o'clock. Dinner will pe given to s children at one o’ci0c religious services having been held by the com- pany, Whereas on the second occasion there was quite a revival. Instead of making too merry from the start the Governor issued @ prociamation tbat the people should humble ihemseives beiore the Lord “by jasteng and prayer.” This, by the way, was considered necessary, a8 the crops had been poor and a drougnt bad prevailed. The fasting and praying had a good effect, itis salu, and when the showere oO! rain came, a¥ au answer irom on high, the Goyernor appointed the day following the general wetting ax @ day O! thauksgiving, When they: “returned GUORY, HONOR AND PRAISE, With all thanksulness to God, who bad dealt so g@facious!y with them,’ aud feasted splendidly afterward, It will thus be seen that the Idea of some people bowW-a-Gays, that Thanksgiving Day, if observed strictly 19 wecordance with the old time custome, ongnt to be a day a! lasting and prayer to the ex- clusion of ieasting is au erroneous one,.aud that Wie originators o| the Thanksgiving Day practice Thanksgiving dinner provided at sco) rooms. A dinner willbe given to the Wilson Industrial Scnool at the corner of avenue A and Eighth str tweive o'clock, Preparavions to ooserve tne day and dinners will be given at the Children’s Ald Society. Cuarities and Correction will also to the ordinary fare in the charita under their charge. Services wiil be held tn all uration, when the members of the will be in attendance. In the churches the usual morning servi i be hears the meigh- | y} thoughts during the year. Thanksgiving is near by aré MINCE PIE, | "talk about going away to SPEND THE DAY WITH THE OLD FOLKS in some far off State the scenes of his childhood f the word home is to him | American and Scotch airs will fol! crowd in upon bim and ti > emagenenr : the gate that creaked | the huge fireplace where, during missioners of Charities, Messra, the long wiater evenings when of the ghosts he had just heard so much about and if into bed and puiling the clothes — ip. No wonder, then, that he too makes up his mind to see the oid folks, despite the great dis- _ such au he remente | day like Thanksgiving vo make such as ° z + vings of ms boyhood many & | adi remain broken for years ata gathering together of all the family is @ holy one, and the hold tt has of late years — upon HEA! | must continue to grow stronger rather than weaker through the course of the time to come. (and where wi take place ?), Where the very old and the very | purst of generosity, pure! and daughters and graudcnildren will assemble from far and near about the family table once more, there will go ap from loving hearts thanks, sweeter in the sight of God tham all the formal services of ail the ministers in ail the churches put together—the thanks of the young and the aged for Many a home, where the vacant chair will tell the miserable puor, without work, and with their little ones wan and haggurd, crying piteously for t | a crastofbread, when there will be feasting acrosa | | the way—what will they do to be happy to-day? and whisked off to their grand nouses In carr! provisions for some starving mother and ¢ oor’? who are in want and desolation them the rich to-day, then, by their xifts, ] as God's meseengers; their visits to the apodes of poverty will be as angeis’ visits; and if by the | suffering Will be relieved, to rich aud poor alike the day will be a real day of thanksgiving. THE DAY AMONG THK CHARITIRS. Owing to the geverosity of the cnaritably In- clined all the boys and giris in the various charita- bie institutions who every year depend upon the pubic for a Thanksgiving dinner will ve well lnaustry, who yesterday sent Warden Quinn a A dinner will be given at St. Vincent’s Home for Father Drumgoole saya the dip- sisting of singing, recitations, &c. about five hundred children will be given trom .tnrday evening the ladies in Mrs, Judd’s employ, one to two o'clocg. after which the doors will be a opened to the outside poor, and alimen, women vegetables, 400 mice ples and a ¥ House to-morrow, at hali-past seven o’clock f A dinner will be given to the children of the Wil- | 80n Industrial School, at the Mission House, corner o’clock, Al) friends oi mission work are invited to | money for it without uttering a word. She Tue inmates of the Ladies’ Five Points Missi some time during Sunday night, No. 61 Park street, will celebrate their twenty: §, fran. jourth annual thanksgiving lestival, and exercises in the chapel will commence at two o’clock, to be fons belonging to their iamiles will be supplied The contributions have been smuil, ‘The Irieuds of the colored orphans will ‘Yhe Home for the Friendiess, No. 32 East Thirtieth | street, will be open fo visitors irom eleven A, M. Bxercises in the chapel, No. 29 East ninth street, by the children of the Home, and evening. Hours, hall-past two aud seven New Haven. She lived unh } The Home industrial y the faititul cbronicier, Winslow, oO anyextra gchools, not convened at the Home, will have a nile Asylum, the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, the Seamen's Home, in Cherry sireet; the for Friendless Women, in East Fourtn street, and the various lodging houses under the care of the The Commissioners CHURCH AND OTHER SERVICES. churches and bigh mass will be celebrated in St. Francis Xavier's and the Church of the Transfig- YORK HERALD, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1874.—WITH SUPPLEMENT, But When forenoon services in their respective churches. irain from large gatherings along the river fronts F tie aetae a2 oe Heights, ‘previous to me or whether the seceders are endeavoring to make | Seesak Loania Ue meetin ie Galle Will ve the steamship men feel they are beyond caring for “Praise God, trom Whom Aji gael Flow.” anything they may do cannot yet be determined, 1 low. One thing is certain, however, that many of the DINNERS OF MORE THAN ORDINARY HIGH FLAVOR d house with 13 | will astonish the palates of the unfortunate o brawny shouldered laborers belonging to the union pants of the Kings County Almshouse, Norsery, and who bave now been out of employ- Lonatic Saylum and Hospiral nes “a Be Com- ment tor ten days are painfully conscious wogham, | stom Wuoeeler, Raber and Midas, wil! be present, a Bel that unless they are soon allowed to go to work ' t upon it, a prat- 1 | union felt constrained to intimate that they were beginning to be tired of the starvation decrees which the privy council had vrescribea, and, car- rying out a resolution evidently wet fixed in their winds, went to work yesterday at the best wages afver the welfare of the guests, The young inmates of St. Vincent's Home for ve him half . 7 Popiar street, will celebrate the day as ne crawled | witn’ more than usual festivity, Mr. Edward Rourke, who is well known for his benevolence, authorized the Board of Trustees to order a first ahaiieioemminaial |THE WASHINGTON CONSPIRACY, | %ie3, yk tactics a ast rington and counsel aru 'e 13 no eviderice You are @ deters 4 ne frou the evi- soot tint as to hin “Ifyou dnd that he did what e he in the exercis® of viet he;thought wes | Close of the Government Address | }'s, eee ne ee eo secicn of placiug Benton | the J ay, then he 1x not tote visited with the cop. sequences of the act. If you dod ‘het be was linpo: % tae Suny. | inorect ioe and (sat oe wes toa ns of any one as to ihe respousibility of iiman to bring Benton ‘he trial, Shiite’ to that Rnging, and Wy a dud vom the evidence ction had no connection th kk JUDGE HUMPHREY'S CHARSE, | + ink in the chain of #v ence cng whatever error en Th yon tind from o# pase ii his etlorts in escaped Wall: Neel! wottid hy ‘quid have been crimina!t, there might have been in the evidence that connection with yes, Lirrtisl ws 4 ; jams or Benton, ‘ah i a was. seeking The Jury at Last Retire -for {odo Alexander is reat tar ty vagina false against him, is vind we the law Deliberation. ora wrong; and if You'ting from fs eviene: ne con. bined with any one chargediin the icciotment to commit thas wrong then he would be guilty, beiher. that one is on trial or not. Any or either of ‘iiose aelendunts, toge- ther with any one ¢ise charged in ihe indictment who 5, ., . jy. | the evidence satiate, vi ge « A Cool Suggestion as to Theif Thanksgiv to ruin atexaner or yogegse Ina ins ol concerved in burglary, i would be guilty. When Wd COME to Cons the co og Festivities. ection of Arthar Be Williams wich. saelafteged von poke spiracy you are to ji of it to the lwhtof human asse- — cations and of legitir Tn con-pirac they could secure, Such men are worth knowing and no doubt will be appreciated. At pier No, 20 East River, Measrs. C. H. Mallory & Co., there are or will be to-day three steamers loading and discharging. The non-society men | were working satisfactorily, and their vessels | would saiion time. The same state of affairs ex- isted at the Savaunah pier, No, 16 East River. He The agents of the Anchor lime had pot been | class dinner, and supplied the cash requisite. Several prominent citizens will be present and ess the banqueters. The attack on the breastworks of turkey will be made atong the line of the testive board at hall-paat seven o’clock tnis | evening. The iounder of the ‘Home,’ Mr. Bernard | Bogan, will as usual lead the assaulting column. Last evening the mmates of the Newsboys’, at the Poplar street house, under the auspices of the Children’s Ald Society, Were treated to an oyster | visited by the ‘’Longshoremen’s Comuittee of supper in lieu of vee to-day, | Conierence,” and 1% was the impression of the At the jail, Sheriff Williams, in an unwonted out- | former that they would not spend their time so & iarge amount of | joolishly, a8 Would prove to be the case i! they poultry jor his uniortunaie boarders, who will be took that trouble. “They pretty well understand feasted to their heart’s delight to-day, uur positiop,’’ said one of the gentlemen, “and At the Catholic and Protestant Orphan Asylums, that 1s, that we'll not make any arrange. the Helping Hand, the Home for Aged and Indi- ments with them, and more, would not allow nt Femaies, the hospitals and other insiiutions them to work jer Us at We have now ten @n “extra” dinner will be furnl vessels in port, six sailing and four steamers, In the evening there will be a yet our work is going along nicely and could Talmage’s Tabernacle, the ‘Ht hardly be improved, A general strike, which the | Mary’s Academy, and amusements at ail union threatens, will not annoy us in the least; - theatres, and the sooner they doit the sooner wili the de- » PARADES TO-DAY, struction of their organization be complete.” During the day some thirty target com- The conference committee, up tu a late hour in panies will parade, marching through the streets | the aiternoon, was nut met amony the steamship to the number of over 1,560 men, and take their | companies, yet they were expected in some quar- reunions they not jam! if ‘where the sons ei. rand concert at rnicon,”? at St. the in one unspoken | most people, it been stilled for- And the poor, | annual day’s enjoymemt shooting for prizes and ters; but the opinion was that the making a day of genial relaxation, with funand woret of the battle was over and the , Wirth and music, | temporary success at Orat achievea { haa beed more than Gounterbalanced by the | Bard knocks the union men have received the past few days, The Queen, of tne National live, will | sail on Saturday; the Gaelic, of the White Star | Mne, and the Utopja, of the Anchor line, likewise, | all of which are being loaded by non-society men. The Maas, of the Rotterdam line, and the State of | Nevada, ior Glasgow, will leave port to-day, to- gether with two or three coastwise steamers: whose cargoes have been stowed at the reduced , wages. On the other hand the Pommerania, of the Ham- | burg-American Packet Companys the Fraace, of , the General Transatlantic Company, and the , | America, of the North German Lioyd’s, will leave On Saturday, stowed at the old prices, Tne Walsh Brothers completed the payment of the “green” hands yesterday, and are unxious to + continue their acquaintance. These stevedores ; @Xpress the greatest indifference and contempt | for the anathemas hurled at them by tne umon | | men, and say that the new hands do the work just as well if not better than the former, who had be- Thanksgiving in Nowaxrk. The day promises to be celebrated in Newark with unwonted nnversality. At all the churches of the various denominations services will be neld io. | in the forenoon, and im the evening there will be niid} | numerous balls, parties, theatrical performances, ngth ol religion concerts, &¢. Business will be entirely suspended, and the people o/ all sorte and conditions will carry out in their own way and as heartily as they | can the recommendation of both President Grant and Governor Parker. The celebration, indeed, began last night and was continued long into the morning ours. There were pienty Of raffies, &c., but very few rows, and none of a serious character Up to a Jate hour—so far as reported. | | ovhers wilt be | ch, Warm robes, for ?—they who a buy @ mol be done.” To cap be blessed witn a e lowly and the The Day in Chicago. CHICAGO, Nov. 25, 1874, | _ To-morrow will be generally observed as a holl- day. ‘There will be no session of the Board of come careless about their duties, feeling sure of wit have adin. | Trade. | their position, pe aADe ies, thanks to the kind- | } Longshoremen’s Meeting~A General jarnard, of the House of | SUICIDE OF A NOTED WOMAN. | Wtrike Agreed Upon. pounds of tur- nen imntion { The convention of delegates from the several [wag EApes tat ase | Tragic End of an Unhappy Life— | unions of the ‘longsuoremen’s organization as, | i Domestic Infelicity and Finanetal | sembled jast evening in the St. James’ School- | house, James street aud New Bowery, Roger ; Burke presiding. Reports from the committees that | had been appointed to wait on Mr. San_ord, secreta- | ry of the Merciants’ Union, were to the effect that. Embarrassment the Cause. Norwatx, Conn., Nov. 25, 1974. This community was shocked this morning by dustry, No. 155 | the announcement that Mrs. J. A. Judd, a well ses by the cbil- | ynown Parisian miller, bad committed suicide, | wo o'clock, con- A ‘Gipner jor Thecircumstances are nearly as follows :—Last Sat- about two hun- suggested by the men, namely forty cents an hour | for day work and sixty cents an hour for night work. Several brief addresses were mude by delega'es, touching upon the propriety of having a ageneral strike. After jong deliberation it was finally resolved that ali ‘longshoremen belonging as they were about to leave, observed that she looked sad, as if something was preying upon her mind. They spoke to and made an effort to cheer e a share of the 700 pounds of aretyof other Net She thanked them and tried to | to the several unions go on strike to-morrow ire contents will ‘his wi ‘ Cou auithastin. during the night, This was impracticable, and the | ladies leit at about ten o'clock. The last time that Mra, Juad waa seen out of the rooms was sailing Vessels the men have been getting forty and eighty cents, the old wages, but this action of last provide dinner evening is intended to compel the steamship own- Street Lodging | Sunday evening, when she went to Prowitt's drug | of sailing vessels ana the merchants who fe deirayed by a | Sre, corner of Wall and Main streets, and pro- | — Sane the ser tale a Vd the | cured two ounces of laudanum. The clerk thought | ign "a delegation. trom the Taore Pe as he received the order that she had evil de- | tective Union was admitted, whose object. was to signs, but her well Known character dispelled it, offer sympathy to the men on strike and mat and he handeu out the fatal drug aul took the ie “/ aterial ; aid whenever the ‘longshoremen might need it. A committee was appointed te secure the co- operation of the Bag Sewers’ Organization in the ending struggle, and the Convention then ad- half-past tweive SWALLOWED TRE ENTIRE DOSE as the empty bottle afterwards found in her room showed. On journed. Monday, owing to the storm, the employés did not ee oe go to the store, but esday they tried | A STEVEDORE MURDERED. - to enter, and found the door locked. Sus- | me fed at the How- | pecting something wrong they notified Mr. Weed, A Blow em the Head Resulting in je Wanderers, at pyoprietor of the building, who forced the @oor Death—What Grew Out of a Disc ussien will be served open, proceeded to the sleeping apartments and tr ot Joljawea by iound vite unfortunate rotua dying upon on the ’Longshoremen’s Strik the et wit her clothing on. She lt hi ‘own it of th | n about 200 per- was unconscious. Dr. C, P. Unie was called Benenden ig Lise soem of rao Jongshoremen, and though the strikers are not directly implicated in the death of a fellow man , they are indirectly concerned therein. The victim im this instance ie @ very respectable man, who | pursued the avocation of a stevedore in New ¥ork and Brooklya, employing gangs of men to hoist cotton and other merchandise on-and of vessels. His name was James Bartley, he was tfty years of age, @ native of Ireland and lived at No. 137 St- Mark's place, Brooklyn, From the meagre facts elicited by Coroner Whitebill, who is to hold an | inquest in the case on Friday morning (to-morrow), it appears that on last Saturday evening Bartley called at the liquor sore of John Murphy, coruer Stone and Broad streets, took several drinks and eiftered upon @ discussion of the strike. Murphy, the proprietor of the piace, took the side of the strikers and Bartley advocated the other side of the question. Hot words were exchanged, and the liquor dealer, losing control of his temper, seized & smail, neavy club and dealt Bartiey a blow on the head. Soon after this Bart- ley made bis way out of the store and cro-sed by. the Fulton jerry to bis home, te told his wile and two children that he nad been injured by a vale of cotton falling upon him, On Suuday mornmigg early nls wife called in Dr. | Gleavy, @ neighboring ee piescrived jor Bartley and left nim comparatively | easy. At three o'clock on Monday morning, how- ever, and a ter the physician had seen him twice, Bartley breathed fis last. The Brooklyn pvlice were Soon alter apprised of the tragical occur- rence, but kept the above from the press, Cap- tain Cherry, of the First precinct, New York, in | which the ufray oceurred, was duly nolified and sent out his officers to arrest Murphy on charge of | Murder, but without success. Murphy is still at large. It is said that a iriend.o! his, who resides and applied restoratives, but the poison had taken | such strong hoid that efforts to revive her proved unavailing, Ste diea at seven o'clock last night. Ob @ table bear the bed Was @ note, as Joliows:— Nonwatx, Ct, Nov, ax, South Norwath a ott NOM AEM Pater v—Th living i nse, Duane and 000 boys will be tea, &c., at six To M Di make good the | me end my existe cept an Goa by. Yours, een No inauest was held, tbe anthorities deemin; upnecessary, and the remains were taken to Mil- ford ts Morning for burial. ‘Ihe deceased was once the wile of the Rev. Orrin B, Judd, D. D., a former pastor of the Wooster piace Baptist.-chureh, appuy, and some ten years ago obtained a divorce trom him. The suit at law Was protracted and expensive, exhausting ali ihe means. Three beautiful children were taken irom fer and given to the care. of the hus- | band. All these things tended to make life a + children of the urden, and hence its tragicena, Mrs, Judd was Mission House, | @{ty-two years of aye. eet, at half-past | —-- + SULOIDE OF A BROOKLYN OFFICIAL, have been made New York Juve- | James Fitzgerald, Steward of the Kings County | Hospital, committed suicide by shooting bimseif yesterday. Deceased was tound lying on tne floor of bis sieeping apartment by one of the hall men at an early hour in the morning. He was satur- ated with biood, which flowed from a wound in | the mouth. Physicians were summoned and efforts were made to resuscitate the unhappy man, but they proved univailing, and death ensued a few hours After the discovery. Fitzgerald show himself in the mouth With a smail revolver, which was found by bis side. The bali passed througn the root of the month and pierced mis brain. He give din- lum, 1434 street | = 0 the afternoon evera) hundred their respective Home make attultions ble Mstitations the Protestant Catholte Union other Catholic ices will occur. took good care that there should be merrymaking | At St, Stephen's church, however, high mass will | Was a prominent Wilhamsburg politician, and for | 12 Brooklyn, imormed him of Bartley’s death, And general jollitication, even li they nad toret ® be celebraved aC tha ttn Deu ein be bung, | Dine years filled the office of srewardin the How. | thereby enubing bim to make bis escape. Yew special Gay for itaster the prayer aud jasting was atanend. From Bradiord’s time down the idea fourth street synagogue at eleven of one day in the year being designated asaday Nineteenth and of thanksgiving was faithinily adhered to in New Engiand, and gradually, im years, * 1} became the custom of the governors programme on Trinity church chimes, commenc- of States, ouside of New England, ball past ten AM, _ ' s me to call on the people of their respective States Ang the dhauies én eight tds, ; eure L. Ring’ 10 me in their Cuurches on a certain fixed day | 1, Hatl thi . abu return thanks to God Jor His blessings during | “itor elma Happy Day. the year. It oiten bappened, however, that the | 4. “There isa Beautiful World,” Gay War not the same in the Various States, and, | 5. ‘Thanksgiving L te 6. “IT Now Believe.” 7. “Merrily Ring the Trinity Bells.” The new St. Patrick's Cathedra’ indeed, some States never knew what tt was to have @ Puanksyiving Day at aif Bat the war of the rebellion, Which brought about #¢ many iges, brougnt about a change In this par- r, and since the year when President Lincoln ed hid prociamation fixing @ day which tie peopie of “all the States’ were requested to observe ae a day of thanksgiving, the Governors, TARGET EXCURSION, There will be a genersi turnout ‘Thanksgiving services willbe held in the Forty- Thirty-lourth street synagogues and the Temple Emanuel at the same hour. Mr. James BE, Ayliffe announces the jollowing:| quest over tne body on Monday next. Will be Open for inspecuion during the day. target companies, that of the messenger boss of the American District Teiegrapi Company among ital. He served one term as a member oj the joard of Commissioners of the Poor, He was forty-five years oi age, and leaves a widow and five children, Coroner White ill! will bold an in. the body of James Bartley by Dr. Snepherd and otier surgeoas, when if Was lound that death was caused by concussion O1 the brain, the result.of a biow on the head. JERSEY POTTERS IN COUNCIL, Anotiier iarge enthusiastic meeting of pottery- Men was heid last night in Trenton, at which reso- lutions were adopted setting iortu that the work. ing list of prices adopted In 1869 are now in force, the same being a reduction of tlve per cent upon | the scale of prices paid before tae war, and that Operatives receive little benefit from nigh tarim, having worked at less ratee than when tari! was low, because they did not want to create embar- ovolock, in the THE SUICIDE OF MR. SCHEEIDER Despondency the Cause—A Letter to His : Wite Coroner Kessier yesterday held an inquest op the vody of Mr, Frederick G. Schneider, late of Union Hill, N. J., Who committed suiciae at the | Grand Union Hotel by shooting himself through the head, Frederick Michael, brother-in-law of the de ceased, who also lives at Univn Hil, N. J, tesvified 1, Pitth avenue, of half a dozen even Oo) tue New Npgiand States, bave come others, jhey bave organized among tnemseives rassment to Manufacturers in their tight gard itae a aational bulidsy instes® of local | & company of VYoinuteers,” and will hold their | that deceased had been drinking to excess, WICh | gains, sree trade. “It was resolved that iey one, aud only Issue their prociatnations after the | fretexcursion at Myrtle Avenue Park, brooklyn, Saree wouter eishout piviae cae onteor oe would uot submit to any more sacri- dresiaent has issued his fixing upom the day to be 5 ee bove bave practised in drill, he. would be bac! five minutes; that was the | fices, and if empioyers resist id making & prizes for mar A# hae already been gald, Thankegiving Day Is been contriputed by their friends, They will as- now, With but one probable exception, the best semble av No, 649 Sixth avenue at observed holiday in the Union. This is certainly A. Me HO} because of its religious character, tor apart Leng roy Irom the. me services held in the churches, as Thanksgiving Day in Brooklyn, @ Matter oO! torm inore than anything else, it can- Yesterday through the principal streets of ti could not fail to impress even the Dob be-considered & religious day; but the secret fos observanc $ in the fact thavas Micceeds year tb becomes wore and more #ACred 1G the eyes of the people as afternoon and evening 8 walk ksmanship have reduction the operators will take it as proof that bigh tari meany monopoly and that iow tariff means competition and high wages. A committee O/ One from each brauct was appointed to ascer- Jast of him; deceased Was bookkeeper for witness and periectly honest auc reliable: witness believes that the deceased oecame despondent, that bemg lhe only cause 0¢ can assign jor (he act. Beigw wilt be found a copy of a leti | to his wife, whicu Was found in posses ceased aiter his death, Ihe letter wa: German Ne Poor, Unnarry, Betowan Louise ha'i"past seven addressed sion of de- 3 written in | order to make @ reliabie average jor the purpose Of using the same in connection wrth tne petition iv favor of reduced tariff, suould thé action of the Manufacturers heceasitate such steps. The Presl- | dent, William Bennett, remarked that be would he charchy city caspal observer | Yorn, Nov, 2% 1874. A Pinitt poeta | With the fact that there was something of more | | I would. iudeod, like ty write to thee t deal, | pip tn ahh fod Wa0d than submit to > th RS Le ) Dat Tl caunot-—my heart is overtuil a bre . FF e CJ reduction, pivuat had veet Dutthe pruciive Om Thanksgiving | ‘a0 ordinary moment distarbing the equantmlty | Bon int my own try ‘to ionget titaeat. | New York importers were combining, ana tain reed ALM ‘ambien whe members were scat- of the domestic mind, and a giance et the poultry Benny Fete, rarer ei any dear goo Lite. Wile, a money to influence Congress upon tue tariff law come the prac ee of overt AY, at ray mae stands hore out the correctness of the assertion— | pie aie PY Ones more, Tee ee sole bo tajure American manuracturers. | The aay Of revimivn, when the’ grandiather and graud- | ‘ere Were on ail sides premonitory symptoms of The jnry found that Mr. Schneider committed | franuracturers had agreed to ineet tue operatives rite a on en and their children’s fowl play. Thousands who crossed the ferries | the act wnule suffering irom a tit of despondeocy. | next Friday night to make fnal propositions. Two ot unde saine rool, and sit at | from New York in the evening carried with tt — potteries out of tourteen in the city of Trenton dc the game table, ana gather avout om Ne g carried with them } y ‘on do fireside and thank God tat He ua alowed Cue | eplendia specimens of the American favorite dish LIPE-SAVING APPARATUS, Rot favor reduction. Abous 1,000 operatives of ali alter the dreary separation of a ea 0 Upou one aootiter’s faces once Seid aa eeaes, that the love which bound them all 0 closely to gewer in the loog ago, wien some were mere children, has only been made ail We stronger and deeper by the separation ttsel!, 1 tuls feature ofthe day Chat makes it @ holy one in the eyes of the great majority os Lhe people, ond isis this that thatthe study of the geography become a favorite, Sage and tim given to the calinary department plan of introdneing improvements iniproving (he ways ol Greece, Sau for thanks, and everywhere the Indications were branches are interested in this movement, Able- rant, Which | bodied meu average $15 per week when ou full of Turkey nad | hasbeen lying at anchor for several days pf Com- tume. ely advice was | munipaw, N. J., weighed anchor, carrying ten life. as tothe best , boats, for distrivation between Ourritack Inlet into Turkey and | and Beauiort, N.c., at the new life-saving sta- | cy boysandgiris tions, for Which houses have been built ducing the | Yesterday the revenue steamer ©) OASE, Coroner Ejckhof yesterday held an Ingnest in makes ine ord und the young, ema sN Ard to its discuseed the pleasurable emotions of devouring past summer. The boats are of the Jersey sari. | the case Of Thomas Quinlan, who was fatally in- 0) jonging of the chil: ee t 4 K Suet iy bathe fat awed irom home ap taney the red and julcy cranberry sauce, and laughed at Baey, Deitae wien fay e Xeeption of having square jured nearly four weeks ago. In their verdict the seen the Vacation draw within « Jew days oi being the visions ot pampktn pte after dinner which Steered by along car aut have no edder, ‘tue JU sayi—"We Gnd that deceased came to his at hand. And ed aho teeta tones arose before the Javentie imagination, Itisfairto lve-saving Stations in question have been con- @eath ou the uigut of November 2, 1874, in at- be rere ihe ‘kg together A the family every fo bed assert that not only was the domestle larder well ftfucted ubder (he supervision of Lieutenant tempting to cross the excavation near Fourth ave- he go f , - e 3 stored with i Walter, ang the stations have been ocated oy Cap- nue and Fity-seventh street, in the uight time, at 1s of itseif sumicient to inake Led &@ Sacred day in the h palatable provender of the moat ap- | tary aunce, of tie Revenue Marine, and Mr. a@ place vot assigned as a public crossing place — olthe nation, Could he? ots J Fl More proved thankegiving order, bat the charitable ja Saville, ¢x-Chic/ Clerk of tue Treasury Department. where he nad no busmess to Atteinpt to cross, aud exutitul, more wholesome iu its effects than (08 etitutions we e 9 red by the . The Grant carries ten ile cars, capable of carry- | that his death was caused by bis own rash yearly family reunion? We are but @ nation of romombered by tbe'ener i on 1 0 yr ation olent. Ing jour people each, to bo raa between stranded | and Was accidental, and that no person is to RASPLOTABLE VAGARONDS . vessels and tne shore, and o/ whieh a description | blame but nimeelt. Deceased was a laborer, Bi the best, aud the Lee Of Nome bind us ROME 00 | Jb We {orchoom where Wik be services at pearly bas alicady appcarcd in the Henan, Murty (hree Years of awe. aud a Dative of Ireland, the merchants were opposed to the compromise { ers to yleid by bringing the pressure of (he owners | The doctor | terday & post-mortem examimution was held on | | tain the rate of Wages proposea by the bosses, in | —_——____. | ANOTHER FOURTH AVENUE. IMPROVEMENT WASHINGTON, Nov. 25, 1874, sists of the proof of many -acie by ¢ > < c vy dinerent parties, and In the Criminal Court to-day Mr. Riddie resumed | Ping el ae y pers one snow to the Ju me bis* arguwent to the jury. He read several by the jury, the law Lvs you mane an AGE despatches, one of which was from Solicitor pease op node hie: Pine ORCS ae Cae Wilson, May 18, asking Whitley to loom up Mike | fo hold one person reyponsiblo ior SRNR eittuer, jowever intimate they may be » ci ra Rayes, Whitley asks the Solicitor fora warrant Daricipation in the deed iiself, 1 th CS for his arrest, and by this means obtains a delay of a day or two, Meanwhile Nettleship goes to | existence of friendship, the faith « | person in another, and that trie must never be construed to in see Hayes at Toronto and obtain an aMdavit, say- | another, unless the. evidence shows that this friendship ed the accused tof ing that George Carter did it all, and the Secret | f acting geen on Wath his friend., However d ‘ vith his friend. However deep ile irienaa) y however close the association, tha fa will not seuss the guilt of him who follows lus eud 'o an unlawtul Service had nothing todo withit, The despatch which Hayes refused to send to Boston was sent on. f afterward by Nettleship from another town further | Mtimata avaclation between Hervinglon wed Anite wt distant on the railroad, It reached Boston on Williams, and that Williams was (9 company with Har- rington on the night of April 23, still voa the 24h or 28th of May, and Whitley writes | Grier evidence, of trom ail takea four vier, thar he Kaew @ letter to Newcomb, saying he had just | what he was doing, and thal bo was ing in ir mspiracy to injure ‘Alexender b heard that Hayes was in Canada and asking New- by ag nny laid intl he Todiciment, on yo mn ae 4 comb to go and see him ana get an amdavit trom | sataned Was ney lent Ret OL conver Hat 0 galt, whe! at re him like the one which Netfleship went after. | Tight be, for in thatevent he wonld be responsible, If How did Whitley find out that Hayes was in on ne Boahato Caaada but by that telegram? But he new it long before, and the telegram was a key to let him upon this you have a reasonable ¢ u resotve (hat doubt in favor of With The mere tact that Whitley was the chief of tue tive foree would Not of itself’ justify even a pre: ‘on that he knew ot, or consented to, a combination. A ieval suspicion can: know about the aMdavit of Hayes. The testimony Bok. be ae th rom the act ah ae of Newcomb was reviewed and his contradictions You “must hot’ start out e presumption on your ininds that because he ead of this shown in order to prove that his statements re- garding his visit to Canada were not to be be- lieved, On the 28th of May Whitley sends a tele- gram to Senator Allison, the chairman of the Investigating Commitree:—"“Have just found | Hayes, Wilt come on to see you to-morrow.” This | stand approved idea would ruin © no gradation force theretore he must have K2ow what his subordinates were dotug. ‘I the best of men and we could thority. You must go to the tigation of his ¢ that of all the others. It nis hority 1s shown to have existed, however, then it may be presumed to have con. tinued ‘on the line of that authority. He recited the nts of tue evidence at length, pro and con.. and told h boch sie termonts well being they mus. wei was sent five days aiter Whitley had sent New- | Sees ye hie were vit ane, _ then comb to see Hayes in Canada. Why did he not in- | organ Suanton ae cal le uring t q jorm Allison immediately that he had found | of doubts. You have been tn.i reasonable doubt exists upon any ng it ase the de‘endants, or either of them, in whe ts, are entitied to the ben from the e t Hayes and had sent a trusty agent after him? FAITHFUL DETECTIVES, | savor d All this time the Solicitor had a standing order | most grow out of the conside to all the detectives to arrest Hayes wherever | [0 all the evi defendants are guilty or not, or whether either o! | them is guilty in connection will any one charged in the indictment, If the evideoce when taken together leaves no reasenabie dubt on your ininds of guilt, Your plain duty is to say “Guilty” v4 to those you may find, You are to deal with probabilities, not posst- | biities. You cannot properly determine that possibly the defendants are or either of them is not guilty, nor that possibly all are or either is gpilry. You muist sa the Bleecker street office (Bauer) saw Hayes on May 11, and took a note from him to Cunz and yeu did not arrest him, but helped him out o/ the way. Hayes afterward appeared unexpectedly at Net- tleship’s house, and, when Nettlesiip should have been mourning in his deep afilction, he went ee tig iorth Among his friends to borrow $50 tO | what is the rational conclusion to sviuch the eviden send Hayes away. He and Hayes went into the brings your minds. If this reasonebie doubt exists, dining room and took a drmk together. But Hayes arising out of ali the evidence, every rule of law required did not leave the country. He came on to Wash- | of you to solve that doubt, so tur as your act ington, and communicated with the committee. | Gat BD Re Bi coset hana ercate a witb Alter he nad testified he was arrested by Harrig- | tect the honest citizen from the calamities ot couvic ae sue jodued ee But was he ever prose on. cast by something that ites Biatien Teo the cu Nota | mind, as disclose ¢ ev: en e " WHERE WAS BENTON ‘but the tae faye that nufmat clbwiolseannot Henotrate A mysteries thatexist. Unless pateries can ty Se ae ee Te Orit ihe Grand duty ‘had | by testimony consistent with Anian reason, aul that 3 | prosecuted ? Not.a bit of it. q , . een in session JoF weeks, and not a Witness had | sonata, Unsed oF Hoe. Oepingey ky aa been sent before them. Isay that the District | tained to exist among men, i charge you, and instruct Attorney did not dare prosecute either one of these | you, that, according. 10 the ovidence in this case, men, ! you’ briug in a ve: 01 guilty or not ullty, |. Mr. Riddle then gave a history of Benton’s re- | ‘our minds may be each one satisted from that evidence. Do not forget or omit to invoke day by day that memorable petilion, ‘Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil,” which no combi- | nation of thought or language has yet been able to improve. Let me instruct you that the laws of your country are intended to protect and guard the tendernesses of the »~2or1 tions of lite from the mere friendship of that closer boud that makes, by lease by Harrington at atime when he hau no business to touch the case at ail. It was done | late on Saturday nigut, and the District Attorney busied himself runming avout trying to bunt up the onticers of the Court after they had gone to their homes from the labors of the week. Nota Meee eee oe ee ao rctcgreph would | weuaweot Jehovah and His son and the jews of Your coun A wo rs i 5) a order bis fmmediate arrest. Tney released Ben- | forms” 'of ‘awe niuse, not be to prostrate | his bi to the defen canse they had agreed to do lt, and they in- | hepes inthis lie or pring im to the defen- | Sontaaiy aol it Tong vefore they aid. Ie wan, ar- | dante wife or child. To guard e#geinst all this ranged that one ol the burglars was to escape by | the, same laws, Pa eter ae nee the back way oi the office; but when Richards | others, either singly or by conspiracy oF comb! thwarted that, taen A, B, Willlams hustled him out of tne city privately, and it now became neces- | injure another. doubt from the evidence, the law says. that former good | Mhein UeLae Oe. Coa | the whole evidence. Will admit, it: but evidence Mr. Riddie then briefly took up all the links In gia circumstances which wust carry conviction the chaiu of evidence, and set them forth in @ few | toind cannot be permitted to be 076: looked and words. He closed bis argument witha direct ap- yauht, and it these tacts and cir’ nees arising out peal to the jury to find a verdict of guilty. He of the evidence leave no reasonadie dont, n vour | then turned to the Court and said:—* it pe plain and this character m>' yield to stubborn evidence. please your Honor, the government now solemnly | commits this case to the jury, in the foli hope that | @ just verdict Will be rendered.” j A recess was ordered, and a(ter it had elapsed, | The charge occupied two fcars in the reading, At its close he told the jury to go to their room, in charge of the marshal, and to allow no one, not i ; Judge Uumpireys took his seat on the bench, say- even the bailiffs, to listen to ‘heir discussions of j ing that he believed he had imcorporated in nis | this matter, and to indicate 10 no one what their | charge all the prayers of the counsel for the de- | decision was uutil they came toto court. The fence excepting the last one and if Mr. Davidge court would not be adjourned, but would | wished him to rule upon that one he would do so, | be kept open until it heard thet report. He ' and Mr. Davidge might read it, | would come into the court room at ten o'clock Mr. Davidge 1 he thought it would be better to | to-morrow, and if they had not agreed upon a hear what the Court said upon that point, aud be | verdict by that time they migis dismiss from thetr | might then be satistied with it without any turther | minds any fnrther deliberation ov discussion of the modification. case until Friday, and mighi ta%e the rest of she | Judge Humphreys then said that he would ad- | day to enjoy Thanksgiving, Whith It was propor | mit the first five prayers, and in regard to the | for them to do, and they cou'd do it in their room sixth he would admit it with some modification. together. They might now retire, and he would The following is the sixth prayer, as offered by | keep the court open and himself svithin call of the | Mr. Davidge:— | Marshal until this case was closed ap. | ‘That in estimating the credit due to any witness, it | At three o’cloek the jury retired, \ te jury. believed Hat such rere ane faba, testimony a ae 4s to aily one particuiar, material to the issue, he it ar 310 bo arated ‘uti any giner mauer concerving | DOOTORS’ WIDOWS AO ORPHANS, which he led, and in sueh case no amount ot evi- : | dence as tohf general reputation tor veracity can ex. |The Thirty-Second Annet Meeting of tablish him as a person worthy tobe believed. the Society for Their Reliet—Treas- | _ The Judge said to the jury that they were tojudge — | Whether the witness had told a probable ator. cheba tor bert tres ahs and when other witnesses were put on the stand The thirty-second annuel race'ing of the New to impeach him they were also to take inte con- | York Society for the Rei+: of Widows and sideration the story Of the persous who sougnt to "i impeach the witness, whether their story wie, Orphans of Medical Men was beid last evening at provable one, and whetuer the circumstances un- | the College of Physicians and Surgeons, | Sarin uenineron oiece eens goo bf Twenty-third street and fourth avenue, bad testifies ed. The minutes truchiuily themselves, and then determine w Dr. Jomm 0; Stone presided. one was 10 be believed, te f the last meeting being revd, Dr. J. W. G. Judge Wylie sat on the bench by the side of | Clements, the Treasurer, submitied his annual Juage Humphreys. The court room was more gtatement, as follows:—Ihe meraders of the so- closely crowded than at amy other time of the ciety now Dumber 123, of whom 9% are for life and trial, very many distinguished citizens, who had | 28 annual subscribers, The beneiectors number not been In the court room beiore during the trial, | 27, of whom 2 are laymen. ‘fn society extends being present. aid to7 widows and 6 children of decea THE CHARGE, bers, five of whom received their The Jucge said:— ment of annuity January 1, 1374, GENTLEMEN OF THe Jony—We have come in the pro- | condition of tne society (as audited) jor the year | ress of this trial to the point when it is proper that you | ending September 14, 1574, is as 1» lows:— shull be ins:ructea by 4he Court, and itis of gouse ence | =a RECEIPTS. | your proper action that you give attention. When- Se 17, 187 ever we have betore us anti our Kesping motions in. ealance in Treasury, September {', 1873 volving the rights of others, eimer of property, liberty | Tues of memvers. or character, at once it becomes altogether ot the first importance to act carefully aud with due regard to first | easential principles You are charged with the facts ot | the case: you have nothing todo with the lenlencies af | | the iaw—ihey 3 a | e belong elsewhere, ury, inust leave | annuitants Incidental income (preiniuui on Zoids Total. .ccreee er eeveeerse G7 s720 BE “DISBURBEME the consequences of & finding ‘to socie: 5 cements | Will protect itself by annexang such punishment to the Wadispensable expenses (vrintin, Miolation ol.the: rules tor tis-protection. as human im, | Balance in treasury... firmities demand, These considerations soviety has lett |, to that department of iwelf which it has called the law- wan RReRh Loge making department, That same old in our country | | -The invested junds are :—Bouds and mortgages, has constituted and institutea another department of it- | $66,500; United States ‘81's, conpon, $1,000; self for a special purpose, for the ascertainment of the | go,’ igiis, registered, $19,000; do., 5:2 rogis- | fats i any given case, aind that departinent is Jury, tered, $12,000, with baintice of $4,108. 34 which department you compose. 1 know ft 13 ed) noon rant Gomihiue, widk often waid that jury of twelve, promiscu. deposited in United States Trast Company, mak- | ously chosen imen, is not competent to deine their sphere, but my experience teaches me that they are. Kewember that you throw all society out of order, out of symmetry, out of regularity anéintocontus on and disorder if you tindertake to dual with any other office than that of finding the facts. The maén fact for you to ing of total assets $102,998 34. ie society then went into the election of Officers, with the following reswli:—President, Dr, James R. Van Kleek ; Vice Prosidents, Dr. Iauac E. Taylor, Dr. J. Lenox Banks, Dr, Samue! T. Hub. fina, connecting all the facts given to you in theeyi. Dard; Treasurer, Dr, J. }. Clements; Seere- je is—has it heen proved to your satistaction and tary, Dr, Gouverneur M. Smi enegers, Dra, O, beyond a reasopable doubt that the defendants, or any White, J... Taylor, E, Krackowizer, ©. D. Smith, two of (hem, or either of th trial f " Dee whether one trial of ne a arta, and some oue Bdward Delatield, R. Watts, &. A. Barry, dared i charged in the indict. Linsly, J: Oo, Smt a ti "i ment to be guilty, has ail Linsly, James 0, Smith, Edward | Boadle, Gouver- OF taw ‘ae thay Maw "ean ye OM ote® near XL Smith, J. Foster, Thomes F, Cocn, William youn thischarge? Atter saying the punishment of the Cockcroft, William Detmold, +Y TE. Re crime did not belong to the jury, he gave the substance , Peasiee, R, G. Remsen, J. H. Hinton, John’ G, of the Indictment and told the jury that whether these | Adams and Jonn O. Stone. defendants or any two of them did these things Was the | issue they were totry, and they must appeal alone to the facts they had before. them. eluzon, Alex- ander, the governinent says, was conspired against | By othier good citizens—namely, Harrington, Willams and Whitley—and they had a TROUBLE AMONG THE LUTHERANS, Troubles of the Rev. Pasior Neuman— rious business before them, that of ascertaining irom the evidence | Hie: Resignation Temdered and Ae» it meet Neate as berg specponhle ad | cepted. was true, and he remarked :— | eld eis Wy BH a A jd oF, more It has juat leaked out tha! chergos ot a most ¢ 101 © Polroey. “act tae aut tas mrehee ssthe charger | Serious nature have been preferred. against Pastor ne roe! Jaw ainounts to a high misdemeanor, that you are to find, f the facts prove abie doubt that ae be igpretd chart Ads i J seives together for the purpose of doing that which Inw forbids, that which wound bea soel when doue be | one person became a conspiracy when done by two oF Robert Neuman,.for many years Li heran mission- ‘ary among the emigrants at Ces! Garden, and | Whose omice was situated in Bios) way, near the ; Washington Hotel, It appears the’ vue reverend more persons,” The inct was not coptrovert screed | tafeof the District Attorney's offlee was blown Opes ‘On, | Sentleman in question ts accused of making com- the 25d of April last, He defined the methods of proving « | missions out of the Erie, Pennsylvania and New conspiracy, and said "The government and the detend- | York Ventral rallroads on emignins .) On Tues. auits were entitled to have the whole law, applicabi to | day evening, at.a meeifig o: ‘al Council alland each one, given to them in this’ obarge. poe deciarations of any party against niniell wat th Lntberan churen. presides. cree be beware a our it w no oviden ules thera was the mba ol a chureh, chargoa were ‘proterred ny to establish ve Pe 5 able Woubt that one or more of these diene fons IFoin Fallrona compatioy (io eae a @ reason- nts merely 810N8 Irom Fraliroad companies, t19 said committee knew that such things were to be ! shee y die iol ness” then Bey Ware to, me Y a tag dl ATS at Shs request of Pastor defendants the benefit of that doubt. If they found Neuman. At its conclusion charges wore avons thatany two of them sid this thing, then it was a high | tO be preferred against tne said clergyman b, misdemeanor in Jaw.” He recited several ta pout other complainants, when Dr, gaperti remarked, which there Was no controversy, told them they | “Gentiemen, we do not wish 4c | thos had certain defined pointegiven to them. Is they | plaints, as ‘the Rey. Pasior Neuman ‘does 1 found that Whitley had given hig assent to the acts of Nettieship, then be became responsible tor those acts, Tn tik nef he would be responsible for the of sand Zirrath, | He told them w take ail the evi- eof Bayes and Zirruth and sift itand to give cre. dence to so nich of their evidence as may be broaght Within the rules of reasonable belief, Witnesses had been introduced belonging to the secret pervic Wileh the government. hag fouad ‘pecessary too 4010 lorrel oul the misdeeds of others. It was vot tu sy that their verdict would correct the oxist- is, The ciass of witnesses was What the Jaw oulig tl belong to the Latheran mpjtry any longer.” The Chairman of the committee in favor of Dr, Neuman was appointea by Dr. Kurharut, of Harlem. ‘Tue venerable Dr, Gel solnhalmer, | of Foarteenth street, is understood to be in favor of | Mr, Neuman. Most serious charges have been | preferred by Mr. Jackson, Voy saperintendent | of Castle Garden, against (map, and ree feried to Commiss.oner Starrs, end the matter Will douvtiess avon be acted upon, coomplices, aad they were to decide whet oy " | “+ * oO mecemiling ihe truths Sach witnewowcate beiore he | panei ta hia nauge waalag ro) eDONne eleee Court with a mark whieh the law recognizes asa stain, | | +8 all joining tho Broome stree but the government undertakes to relieve such from tha , Lutheran chureh, last night, ro@ learned that penaity itthey will tell the trath; bat their statements | Pastor Nenman’s resiguation mnat ba sunported by olor eyideace, Ihey piust mot | And accepteds eG boom received

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