The New York Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1875, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

AT WIMBLEDON. —_—_— MIOOTING FOR THE G2. LEGER STAKES— A TIE BETWEEN’ AW “AMBRICAN AND AN IRISH MARKSMAN—WIDL THE AMERICANS COMPETE YOR THE ELCHO SHIELD? “ DON, July 18, 1875, John Rigby, of the Iristteam, tied Major rulton im the shooting for the St. Leger Stakes yoster- day, maxing 35 poinis. The contest will be finished to-morr A BANQUET BY LORD WHARNOLIFFE. Lora Wharnciiffe” entertained the American team at dinner to-day at Wimbledon. Lady Wharncliffe, Lieutenant Colonel Phillips, Mr. Mild- may, Captain Peel and a namberof other promi- nent persons were present. , No speeches were made. 4 TOUR THROUGH CAMP, The American ‘party were subsequently con- Sucted through’ tne Cxmip. fs PLEASED WiTH TUE TARGET ABRANGEMENTS. They were perticularly pleased with the ar- frangemeadts in connection with the targets, and wit! probably recommend their tntroduction at Creeamoor. OAN THEY SHOOT FOB THB SHIELD? The captains of the Bnglisb, Irish and Scoten teams have petitioned the Council to permit the Americans to, shoot at. the same time with the Elcho Shield competition, The Americans concur tn the appltcation. No answer has yet been given by the Council. THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE PEOPLE, PNY ES el AN IMPOSING AND VIOLENT DEMONSTRATION AGAINST THE INDIA TOUR GRANT. Lonpvon, July 18, 1875. A meeting was hela in Hyae Park to-day to pro- test against the grant for the Prince of Wales’ visit to India. AN ENERGETIO PROTEST. Twelve thousand persons were present. Mr. Bradiaugh made a violent speech and ¢on- eluded by offering a resolution of a similar char- acter, The resolution was adopted almost unanimously, DISSENT NOT PERMITTED, Eight persons who voted agatnst it were set upon by the crowa and the police had to inter- fere for their protection. aw 1 SPAING 78". San SEBASTIAN, July 18, 1875, The Carlists are bombarding Puycerda, * CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA, psa eae irae ra THE STATE OF PANAMA RECONCILED TO THE POLICY OF THE FEDERAL COLOMBIAN GOVERN- MENT—A PEACEFUL AND EQUITABLE ADJUST- MENT, Panama, July 8, 1875, The hostile and somewhat threatening relations existing between the State of Panama and the federal government haye had a peacefa! solution, THE TERMS OF SETILEMENT. The news had been received by way of the At- ‘antic that the National £xecutive had ordered all the steamers that navizate the: River Magdalena 39 be detained at Honda, to transport a large force Kae troops to the coast. Noone doubted that these troops were destined to act against Panama in caso no reparation was made vy the Btate authorities for the insult offered to the general government in arrestng General Camargo, who had been commissioned to take command of all the national forces stationed in the States of the Atlantic coast. Holding some 000 troops in readiness some distance down the Magdalena, President Perez resolved to try the effects of con- cillatory measures before resenting 10 an armed force, Two Commissioners, Messrs. Nicoias Es querra aad Enstorgio Talgar, were apooluted to | proceed to Panama and confer witn the State anthorittes there, They arrived on the 28th or June and at once entered into A CONFERENCE with the authorities of the Sate. »A good deal of discussion took place, and for a day or two it was reported that the State was unwilling to accept the conditions that President Perez bad laid down, which caused no little anxiety and some alarm. At last Messrs, Justo Atosemena and Mateo Itar- riulde (the former had been Colombian Minister to Engiand and the latter had just returned from the Congress of Bogota), were named to act as Commissioners on tie part of the State. A TREATY OF PEACE was concluded between the jederal and State Commissioners On the 24 inst. and punlished on the sd, In consequence of this agreemen: Gen- eral Camargo Was liberated irom prison and rein- stated as chief of tne national forces on the At- lantic. The battalion stationed in Panama were to be relieved by other forces from Hogota, ana the state Weapons took upon itself to pretect the iransit untti such time as the other troops from Bogota arrived. ° VBE VEOPLE OF PANAMA MADB) HAPPY. i this was felt to be a great relief by the people Panama, On the evening of the 7th an official banqnet | Was given to the Bogota Commissioners in the Grand Hotel, attended by the stave military band. THE PRESIDENCY. In the meantime the Grand Electoral Jury met on the 186 inst. to count the votes jor the mext President of the Union, ‘The vote of the State was declared given for Dr. Mefiez PERU. The steamer International, with & part of the cable on ‘d, was at Arica, LDSON’S BALLOON. DON. THR AZBONAUT AND HIS COMPANION SUPPOSED TO BR DROWNED, Onicaco, UL, July 18, 1875, NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1875—WITH SUPPLEMENT. WASHINGTON. | GENERM. WASHINGTON DESPATCH. Wasiunaton, Joly 18, 1875, THE JETIIES AT IE MOUTH OF THE MISSIS- SrPer river. Captain Eads was rrceutly in Wasbingten on business connected with the jeities ‘which he is constructing at the moun of the Muibsissippr River, He saya he has now 400 men employed, and has projected the work toward te deep water to the extent of over 3,000 jess. ‘The water 4s about cl@ht fect deep over most.of the diiance | s0 far reached, The improvement is progressing | @t the rate of nearly 200 teeta day, ana the loxce Will soon be tocreased. Captain Eads calls what ts" now being built “provisional work,’? whigh 18 to be strengthened and materially changed as the work progresses. it is now serviug as @ barrier from the mud and water, He expects in one year to reach water deep enuugh for the largest vessels, Captain Eads ieft tor New York last vight, DEFRAUDING THE INDIANS. PROFESSOR MARSH ON THE STATEMENT - OF COMMISSIONER ‘“SMITH—A ‘“'CHARACTERISTIC TRICK OF THE INDIAN BUREAU.” New Haven, Vonn., July 18, 1875, Professor Marsh pronounces the expianation published yesterday by Vomuissioner Smith, in regara to Indian affairs at Red Cloud agency, a characteristic trick of the Indian Bureau. ‘he old report cited by the Commissioner is the only ong of a large numoer on file in the Interior De- partinent that Was favorable. and tt is now well known that tne special commissioners who made M, OWlNg Mainly iO the short time they were at the ageacy, were mistaken on several points, and some at least of these gentlemen have since in- formea the department to vnis effect, THE REPORT refers to a different set ol transactions from those observed by Protessor Marsh, und Nis investiga- | of greenbacks as | ever saw.’? tions had no convection whatever with those made by this Cominission or any other. To ate lempt to meet this evidence by qu ting an old report is entirely avolaing the real issue and mis- leading the public, ‘Phe charges Proiessor Marsn bas made are distinct aud specific, and are all Supported by independent testimony. Until these charges, which affect thé department as well as Agent savilic, are disproved the Professor thinks: Sancersh Genial by the Commissioner will aval. ut litle, CHARACTER OF THE BEEF FURNISHED THE IN- DIANS IN INDIAN TERRITORY—-EXPLANATION OF THE AGENTS. WASHINGTON, July 18, 1875, Regarding the charges which have been made through the press against officers in the Indian Territory under the agents nomimated by the So- Clety of Friends’ agent, Jonn D, Miles, of the Kick- apoo Agency, reports, under date of July 9, to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, that the cattle delivered in February, March and Apri! were not very fat, yet né could not say they were not “mer- chantable catule”’ and as good as could possibly be obtained in that cougtry at tne time and parucu- jacly at the price paid for the general average, namely, $1 64 per 100 Ibs. for the twelve montis of the year. The intlitary have been paying for beef delivered to trovps and captive Indians $2 60 to $4 per 100 Ibs, gross. Agent Hawworth writes from his agency that the winter was very severe and cold, there being an unusual snow fall, The cattle dependent upon the range would by the moarh of Maron become thin in flesn, and classed with corn-fed cattle would not be regarded as good merchantable beet cattle in reguiar marke's, but lor gross catrie he felt warranted in saying they were fair bee! and gave satisfaction to the Indians and kept them irom suffering, The cattle furnished on Slaven’s contract have been up to the average of any previous year since the establishment of his a SENATOR THURMAN ON INFLATION. HIS VIEWS OF THE SITUATION IN ONIO—THE FINANCIAL PLANK AN EXPRESSION OF LOCAL OPINION—ATTITUDE OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY. Bartrwone, July 18, 1875, Senator Thurman, of Ohio, has been for several days the guest of Senator Davis, of West Virginia, at Deer Park Hotel, on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Yesterday areporier of the Baltimore Gazette interviewed the Senator of the financial plank of the Columbus, Onle, platiorm, ana the Gazette furnisnes tue :ollowing report of the inter- view :— Judge Thurman talked quite freely on the situa. tion in Onto and nis own reiations to 1t, which he thought had been misunderstood, In reply to tn- quiries he said:— The democratic party in Onto Is divided on the currency question, The Bnancial opinions cou- tained in toe Colambus platiorm should only be regarded as the expression of local opinion, | aud pothing could be more unjusc taan the | aitemp: to Cuarge On Uns account that the aemocratic party a8 a Nationa! organizauon is animated by a spirit of inflation, In all times ot commercial depression the cry of more money is ralxed, the Present perioa Leing no excepua: Inflationists are to be found in both political pa ties, and it Is very unbecoming for republican jour- nals wo denounce tne democracy as an inflation party while sO prominent a repuolican as Judge Keliéy is haringuing the tron workers of Ono in lavor of his three sixty-five bond scheme and greenback heresies, He also reiersed to other repudiican leaders who have been first and foremost in the defence “the bess currency the world ‘Touching the desire jor repuvlican success in the present Ohio canvass In the interes esis of Gemocratic priuciples, Senator Thurman sal No man who comprehends the political sivua- tion aod hopes lor tie success Of the aemoviatic atthe next Presidentia! election should wesiie @ republican victory in Ohio in’ the toolL: belie! that such a vesuit wil contrivute te a re- pubucan defeat in 1876. Nothing could be more erroneous. Democratic defeat in the approach- ing State eleciton 18 simply suicidal, It 18 true that SERIOUS ERRORS were inserted in the platform. [ did my best to avert the threatened evil; but because others dis~ agreed with me I see no reason whyl snould bolster up the republican party. It erfurs have | been commitved in Ubio they Can be corrected, ‘they need not be the excuse for greater vnes. The repuolican party in Ohio 1s also divided on the currency question. ‘The financial plank tn Unelr platform cun be construed to mean hard or | seit money, and promiment Uhio Tepublican Con < gressmen are in fuvor ol more greenvacks, Replying to the charge that he evinced a lack IB regard to the missing balloon which left this j city last Toursday afternoon Incoming vessels give | the (ollowing statements, which seem to prove that | the aeronauis have been drowned in Lake | Michigan. Captain Furlong, of the steam barge | New Era, reports seeing, about fifty miles north- | east of Chiéago, a lifepreserver with the straps | palled out foating in the water, and something | near by which looked like @ basket. He dia not know exactly what it was, not getting near enough. He had not heard of THE MISSING BALLOON. Captain Castello, of the schooner Queen of the West, reports that on Saturday evening he saw something like @ balloon sticking ont of the water sbout four miles from Grosse Point He could not ges near 16. The captain of a Jumber vessel which arrived to-day reports seeing a dead body wearing a gray coat about forty miles from Grand Haven, Tho balloon sent up yesterday landed safely, BANRERS' CONVENTION AT SARA- TOGA, SaRatoea, N, Y., July 18, 1875, The Baukers’ Convention will meet here on | Tuesday. A preliminary meeting of the Committee | on Organization will be heid to-morrow night, | Quite a Lamber of delegates huve aiready arrived, Bnd It isexpected that there will be # thousand | bynkors in attesdance, The meeting will lost three days. Nu special deveiopments have yet been made aS to te vbjects of the Convention. THE PAPAL ABLEGATE. HALIFAX, N. 8.5 July 18, 1875. Mgr. Roncelti, the Papal Ablegate, arrived bere last bight accompanied by ali the ecciesinstics’ who ieit Quebec with him and Bishop Rogers, who jomed them at Chatham, — Portifical nigh mast was celebrated ' 8. Mary’s cathedral, Dr, McGlynn, of rk, delivered the sermon, | accumali of moral courage in not denouncing tne inflation plank of the Columous platform at tne ratifica- tion meeting, he sala:— ‘The place and time were not opportune. Itisa | great injustice to condemn one for opiutons never uttered, { Have said Or done nothing tu warrants the charges brought against me. My recora in tne Senate is velore tue country, apd on that record l yer stand. Lam to make my first speecn of the campaign at Mansfeld, Unio, July 81, and shall then annoance my disagreement with financial provisions of the piatiorm, and throug out the Campaign [shalt say nothing to digereait the convictions of a lifetime. THE PENNSYLVANIA TREASURY, REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE APPOINTED TO INVESTIGATR THE ACOOUNTS OF THE STATE TREASURY. HARRISBURG, Pa., July 17, 1875. The committee o/ the lower brancn ot the Legis: | lature of Pennsyivania, appointed to Investigate | the accounts of the treasury of the State, have made a report of their proceedings up to the loth inst. to Governor Hartranit and to the Auditor General, J. F. Temple. Altter stating that the State Treasurer retused to recoguize their author. ity as a committee or to permit toem acvess to the books and papers, they call atiention to the jact that under the authority of certain acts of the Legisiatare portions of the sinking fund have Leen used Jor olher purposes than the extinguish- mento! the public dept, contrary tu tne express provision of tie Constitution, “Again, for the period of twelve years, beginning with December , 1862, Lhe Committee are unavie to find that one dollar has Deen paid into the State Treasury on ACCUUDL of Interest Feceived on the public Moneys, though the Treasurer cannot under the law ap> propriate any such interest to bis own use witn- out suojecting iimsel! to fine and imprisonment | and removal irom oitice, ‘The ecmmittee 0180 find that the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund nave negiected wo, puoisi the periodical statement required by jaw. and to | apply all moneys in the sinking tand to the te- GeMbtuL Of AB equivalent amount of the public dev | REVENUE DEFALOATION. LOvIsviLuR, Ky., July 18, 1875. Revenus oMciais have veen closely at work in the Collector's ofice eXamining into the tate de. faication, The amonnt will be much larger than at first supposed—probably not less than $75,000, Lyiden eh Jackson's Ceath Was by suicide is ting. | Tob their eyes they soon are seen running tow- THE HERALD PONY EXPRESS, EXCITEMENT ON THE SOUTH SIDE 0! ISLAND AT THE DELIVERY OF THE HERALD NEWSPAPER BY RELAYS OF HORSES. The pudic, which has found its interest in getting the pews served up almost red bot by the establishment of a HenaLp lightning train to Niagara and the delivers of the morning editions of this journal directly from the HERALD'S steam yacat at Long Branch pier, will now be additionally gratified by learning the fact thats Long island AskALD Pony Express has also veen established, bid ‘To those who have heard of the lightning train tearing through space at the rate of seventy inties an jour, tae humble but swift HEmaLp Pony Ex- press will have but a tame significance, yet it is @ fact that where railroads have not as yet been bulit and off the great arteries of travel there are thousands of people who are just as anxious to PUrvhase (ve HERALD ard obtain it immediately alter tts issue, or aa soon after as possible, as those who d¥ell in the great cities of tne Republic. And for these people who reside in tne byways and secluded nooks and environs of Long Island the HERALD Pony Express nas been established, and it went toto operation for the first time on yesterday morging. And now, to give some idea of how the soutn side of Long Island was served with the HERALD on Sunday morning, it will be necessary to de- scribe the thing trom the moment the affair 1s placed in motion unth the last paper has been de- livered, At half-past one o'clock on Sunday morning the dark spaces around the Hxratp’ Building, in Ann street, are suddenly enitvened and made brisk and bustling by tve magical appearance of a number of wagons, thatin a few moments will be laden with thousands of damp impressions of the HERALD, which are to wing their way to the fash- jonable resorts ana watering places, First, there is the Long Island Pony Express wagon, whtch is being rapidly and noisclessly filled with wet HERALDS, and then there are the Saratoga and Niagara wagons and the Long Branca wagon, for which the same oiices are being periormed by @smail army of young men, fvlders and agents, who may be seen moving up and down from the press room with piles of ireshly printed papers on their shoulders, which they throw into the wagons with great cele ity. But we have to aeal more directly witn the Long Island Pony Express wagon ard its occu- pants, The horse is Known as Réd Ciond, from his fondness for his rations, a complaint whicn, it Is said, affects the Indian namesake of the animal, A tail young man, of jair complexion, has the reins im ms hand, and bis name ts Fritz Stegel, a native of Bremen, Fritz is a very active and energetic young man. and {8 full of business. Hts companton is Fred Morris, a young gentleman who 1s quite facetious in Bis remarks and 1s also 1ond of tell- ing ghost stories on lonely roads. In the middle, douvied up among the piles of HERALDS, ls seated the writer who is to chronicle tne fate and adven- vures of the expedition, Fritz, in his broad, Platt- Deutsch accent, gives the word ‘‘Go,’’ and we are off up Broadway until we strike Chambers street, and then down New Chambers street until we reach the East River, andin a few moments we are at the Roosevelt Street Williamsburg ferry, the policemen scattered here and there turning around in their patrolling to 100K at the horse, Red Cioud, who forges ahead with stern per- sistency. A parting cup of coffee is taken here at a coifee stand, for the ride is long aud weary before us. Now we are on the ferryboat and out into the river with the shadows hanging over the spars of sthe vast lines of shipping that belt the ola wooden docks, and at last we have reached terra ‘rma, Then the long drive begins that is to end for the first part of it at Far Rockaway. We twist and turn up Onestreet ana down another and pass by nouses tnat look ghostly. “It is ten miles to Jamatca, and then we have to go by Lawrence and on to Far Rockaway. That is nine and a half miles more, But isa butty ghountry, and you will like it.’ Now we are ov the Jamaica road, and villa alter villa is passed, and the dogs bark here and there on the lonely roads, being disturbed, and oc- sionally tnere is a red light In some bery, show. ing that the farmers are up already and looking to their bread and butter, as all men must do wherever their lot may be cast, Fred Morris telis @ sory about ghosts pow and then, or points out some’ clump of scrub oak where « mur- | der had been committed, and in this way | in the masoent hours of the morning we hasten on toward Jamaica. Ked Cloud ta aoing pobly and does nos show @ hatr to have been turned, and at lasta few white frame houses peeping from a belt of trees telis us that Jamaica jg athand, aud we drive into astabie yard anda solid and \ourh-looking man comes out and brings another animal to enange jor Red Cloud, who has done from the HERALD office his fitteen miles in good siyle, This apparition is Jack Mott, well Known in Jamaica, and he is one of & thousand Motts whose homes are on Long Island, Jack’s starnoard eye is und the weather, and when it 1s suggesced to him ti he shvuld Lave 4 drink he asks, in a sententious “Where is the drink to be got 1” ; A bottle is produced and Jack’s starboard eve: becomes filled with a deep and flashing tight aude he take: arink like a man anda brother, Ats Jamaica a large number of HenALps are dropped? to be distrivuted im the environs of that historten town, And now, with the tresn horse, a smalte but Hthe and well built little nar that ts called | aiter the ‘amous tragedienne Ristori, we are sptuning along with iresh velocity on the old Rockaway road, along which for filty years many | @ gay and happy conple have sanitered and who may now ,be numbered with the dust. Alongs toe Sait Meadows In the vicinity of Law- | rence, before we reach Rockaway, tue mo: | toes rise in hosts from the marsies, which are | here and there enlivened vy the appearance ol a | schooner or sloop in the narrow and marshy creck, | and having all the looxs of a vessel never ijeit dry jand, At last, like Bilboa, | ont with very aiferen: feelings, we look upon the | sea and the sand veaches, of a dirty lemon color, | ia Walite sails and white cottages, and the Celtic | watering place sleeping im the lap of the ocean then and there, ior it 1s only ‘‘five o’clock in the morning.” A moving speck on the yellow sands deno‘es that some of the sojourners by the ocean | are up and enjoying the salt air blowing tn from | the wide Atiantic. In the empty raiiroad cars at | the depot a number of voys are sleeping, waiting | to shout the arrival of the HERALD ut Rockaway, | and Fritz wakes them suddeniy and the HeRaLps ‘are counted for them, and as they grab them and | ard the St. James, Ooleman, United States, Pavuion and other botels, and those who buy the HERALD are left standihg in amazement at the time of its delivery. “Well.” said one rich | oid Irish gentleman who was standing at the United States taking the morning breezes, “that | HERALD bates the divil anyhow, a man may go to the ind of the world, and when he’s just getting up from his dacent hed some divi! of a boy Will jump in on him and shove the HsraLD under his nose. That paper dates the divil anyhow,’” A hot breakfast of mutton chops and tea is soun despatched at Rockaway, wod now we take the wagon again and Ristori dasves along, and we are | back at Valley min the wwinkling of a ved- | post and Friiz is twenty miles away from his base | of operations and the hoofs of his horse beat taster and taster. The next thing todo is to send the | horse back to Jamaica and take the tratn jor Babylon, and = th HERALDS are placed | oo board in the baggage car, and the agents are making them ready. Bridge 01 t, Norwooa, Hempstead, Pearsalis, jock ville Centre, Baldwins, Freeport, Merrick, Bellmore, Ridgewood, South Oyster Bay, Amity- ville, Breslau and Belmont Junction are passed in Succession, and ut last we are at Banylon, which has not falien as yet, and. we are laking a stage to go 10 the deach, the boys running trom house to house wih the eagerly sought for HERALD, and it is only eleven o'clock oud some minutes past, How glorioua the morning is cannot ve vescrived, and along the vast stretch of the Great Soutn Bay, which extends in one ditecion for seventy-five * miles and in the otber no one knows how tar, | we find its suriace covered with yachts and | salidoats, Asmal] steam launch is in readiness | to take passengers to Fire Isiand, and we take pas- sage In this frail crait, Which is only notadle as an open voat belonying to Sammis’ Fire Island [fotel and (or t(s immense dover and tte engineer, who (8 Kept constantiy baling Out water and shoveling in coal. Aiter a passage of over one hour and a naif we go aground tn sight of the Fire island ghthouse and there we stick tn the long grass Aud weeds of the Great Soatn Bay, which is a vast but shallow sheet of water. The screw of the nittie propeller has become entangled ana fnally the Saliboat Dickie comet aiong and takes the party of, and ater fh great deal of puting about 2 is made bappy by being put ashore. cre at the Note! the gucsts are mace happy dy receiving thetr Hermanns at an eariy hour, But itis discovered tuat transient guests cannot get any food here, if they are in a hurry, and finuliy the yacht Louisa is engaged, ana she plougns net Way back to Babylon In a big thunder squall, the rain coming down tn torrents on ati on hoard, And now the expedition is at its close, and we al! retura liome by rail, satisheda with | having given the permanent and transient res. dents of the south side of Long Isiand the Henap at an hour which astonished every one, and which showed the energy and activity of tne managers ofthis most timely And much called for eucerprise, RIOT AND MURDER. A Terrible and Fatal Riot in a Con- tral American City. SAN MIGUEL THE SCENE OF THE DISTURBANCE, General Espinosa and. the Men of the Garrison Assassinated. Dwellings Fired by Petroleum-- A Million Dollars Damage. “PASSPORTS TO HEAVEN.” PANAMA, July 8, 1875, The fine city of San Miguel, in Salvador, has been almost destroyed, not by earthquake, were tie cities in the valley of Cicuta, in Colom- bia, but by the violence of a mob, infarrated by Janaticism and inspired by Communism, Thts ex- plosion of a sort of moral volcano was preceded and brought about tm the following way :— THY QUESTION OF THE CHURCH—AN EXCITING CAUSE OF TERRIBLE RESULT, = * The active hositle attitude of the Roman Cath- olic Church authorities ip Salvador bas not been wanting against the government thereof as we see and hear of it iu 80 many other quarters of the world, Some time ago a@ decree was issued allowing the muntelpalities to receive a small tax for burial grounds, so as to keep them in order. The Ecclestastical Councti of tne Repubitc pro- tested against this asan iniringementot the rights oftne Church, Tne Capitular Vicar issued A PASTORAL, ordering all the curates to have it réad to the peo- ple from the pulpit. As it contained hostile senti- ments toward the government it was at once pro- hibrved by the President. A PRIESTLY PROPAGANDA AGAINST CONSTITUTED An active propaganda was at once set on foot by the priests to inflame the passions of the peo- ple against the constituted authorities of the State, waich culminated in a savage outoreak among the lower classes of the city of San Miguel. Advantage was taken of an attempt by the city authorities to compel the peopie lo make use ofa new market place which was distasteiul to them, In this state of fermentation a priest, called Padre José Manuel Palacios, assisted by a famous bandit named Tinoco, managed to get together a band of the worst characters im the locality and led them on to OPEN REBELLION, They proceeded first to attack tne Cabildo and liberate some 200 conyicts. With this additional force they then went and overcame the smull gar- Tisou Of the place, Where, secing the danger, Gen- erals Espinoza and Castro betook themselves in defence of the law. General Espinoza was cut in pieces and tne pieces thrown among the crowd. Castro was wounded tn the head with a machete and thrown over a wall, where he was picked up by his mother, but died three days after. The rest of the small garrison were assassinated. Having finished with the soldiers, the mov pro- ceeded to pillage the shops and storehouses, killing a good many honorable citizens, merely becanse they were well to ao in the community. Women that could not get out of the way were violated, KEROSENE, in imitation of the tamed Parts Communists, was then resorted to for the destruction of the best hoasés in the place. With the Cabilao, eighteen houses and other property destroyed, the damage is estimated at not less than $1,000,000, AFTER A SERMON. ‘The day of the outbreak (20th ult.) @ violent ser- mon had been preached in the morning by the Priest Palacios, instilling idea» of hostility to the government and hatred to the rich, Of the tnflu- ence the priesthood nad in this dtapolical affair we bave tesvimony from oficial, pudiic and pre vate sources, Tne Very Rev. Bistop of Sak vador had ordered the curates oi the parish churches to read on three consecutive feast days the pastoral Issued by him. This the government met by ordering its departmental ageuts to warn the curates, under penalty, that the reading of | the pastoral would not ve allowed. A SORROWFUL Fact. ; What share religious fanaticism had in this mel+ ancholy chapter ta the history of Central America is proved by another well substantiated fact, whica would scarcely be believed at this advanced | period of the nineteenth century, and wiich is this:—On the persons of dead rede! jays the Et Universo, of San Salvador, were found PASSPORTS: TO HEAVEN, signed and sealed vy the Bishop of San Salvador, which read as foliows:— Pedro, abre las puertas del cieio al portodor que murio por reiigioni, JORGE, Obispo de San Salvador, —That is, “Peter, open the gates of heaven to the bearer, who died for religion.’” It was known that some days before the out, break there were (listributed at the Eptscopa; Palace scapularies of the Virgin of Carmen and tne Sacred Heart, the former being recommendea as rendering the bearer ball prvof, Ao ultramon- tane sheet, calied La Verdad, is accused of dif fdsing @narchy and subversive ideas throughout | the lower and ignorant classes, the iruits of which are seen in the atrocities of San Miguel. ENGLISH NAVAL RELIEF, When this took place in the latier city it forta- Mately happened that Her Britannic Majesty's snip Fantome, Captain Long, was in the neignbor- | hood 0. the port of La Unton. At the request of the English Consul aud the people there Captain Long brought the suip in, and landed his marines for the protection of the place, which enabled the garrison there, in union with a force of Honduras. troops Irom Aimapala, to march at once to San Miguel, Where they arrived just io time to put a stop to further atrocities and crimes, and relieved the terrified inhabitants from moo ferocity ana | saved what was lefi of, thé city from being con. suued, A PLOT. That there was deep premeditation among the plotters of this diabolical affair is shown by thelr cutting. the telegraph wires round San Miguel, THE PRESIDEN?’S ACTION. As s00n as the news could reach tne capital President Gonzalez hurried on with 600 men, and, on his arrival, declared the country in o state of | siege, nade some thirty arrests of insurgents and | caused sixteen to be saot. The Curate Palacios was arrested and another iriar called Padre Juan, apd at last dates from tneré order was being re- stored by the energy of President Gonzalez. What his character 13 jn emergencies of the sort he showed @uring the terribie earthquake whieh ruined San Saivador, THE SCENS OF THR DISASTER. San Miguel, whose sad fate we have attempted to describe, is & town of some 40,000 inhabitants and ites forty-two inties distant from the port of La Union, It is a@ place of great commerce and has been celebrated, even im the tame of the Spaniards, for 8 yearly grana fair, to which merchants focked irom all parts of the worl to purchase indigo and other productions of the = country, That the elements | of such social a well as phys volcanoes were latent apoutit no one dreamed of Genera Barrius and the present liberal admin- latration of Guatemala have had their troubles with the Churea, but reaction and reactionists were pnt down Wits a high vand, and schools now abound instead of hostile charches and monaa& teries. lv is now the turn of President Gonzales and the autoorities of Salvador, aud the world wil struggle. A QUESTION FON THR CHURCUMEN: Afy sheet, dated fhe 25th of June, was dis Wait With curloos interest the end of the | tributed tn San Salvador, signed ‘Some Christian jovers of their country,” im which the Church au- thorities are asked, “Suppose the government had iniringed on any of the rignts of the Chureh by te decrees about cemeteries and senoels (which 1t Das 0o!), does it think the best way to obtain jus- lice Is the commission of assassinations, robbery, arson and rape, as have happened in San Miguel?” A BISHOP AND SEVEN PSIZSTS ARRESTED, The last steamer, the City of Panama, trem Cen- tra! America, brought down from Amapata tne Bishop of San Salvador and seven other priesis, Who had been a}l suddenly arrested, packed into an omnibus and harried down to the coast, guarded by one hundred soldiers, and put on board of the steamer without amy other baggage than some betties of orandy, to whicn spiritual comfort the passengers noticed they were very much addicted. They were allowed to land at Corimto, in Nicaragua, and there trey still re- iain, Ajl these priests had distinguished them- selyes by opposing the government. ‘These are, no doubt, the first fruits of the measures that are being initiated by President Gonza’ who has the pabite opinion of al! decent people and the voice of the presa in his favor, REPORT TO THE GOVERNMENT. aAsatelegram of the 24tn of June to the Presi- dent said, ‘the events of the 20th and 2ist of June have no equalin the bistory of Central America; obly. those who have witnessed them can form an adequate idea of what they were.”’ THE ENGLISH OFFICIAL REPORT. Communications from Captain Long, of Her Britannic Majesty’s steamer Fantome, to Mr. Mal- let, the British Consolin Panama, confirms the worst that has been sald or written of the atroc’- ties in San Miguel. An address, signed by a large body of the first citizens of San Salvador, has been sent to President Gonzalez demanding tne strictest justice and severest punishment of the leaders of this disgraceiul affair. OBITUARY. LADY JANE FRANELIN. Acable despatch frem London, under this day’s date, brings intelligence of the death last night of Lady Jane Franklin, distinguished above all other women Jor her devotion toa husband’s memory, and Known all over the world jor her determinea efforts to find some trace of the gallant ex- piorer’s fate, Lady Ja was the second wile of Sir John Franklin. His first wife was Eleanor Ann Porden, an English poetess of considerable merit, whose poem, “The Arctic Expedition,” publisned in 3818, led to her acquaintance with Captain Franklin and their marriage in 1823, She died in 1825, the day after her husband sailed on his second expedition to the Arctic regions, Her longest and best poem is “Caour de Lion; or, The Third Crusade,” tn six- teen cantos, published tm 1822. The first wife of Captalu Franklin may have inspired tne deyo- tion of the second, for though she was hope- lessly tll with cousumption and was lying at the point of death, on the day fixed forthe depart- ure of his second Arctic expedition she in+ sisted that the voyage should not be de- layed on her account. Captain Franklin reached England on his return, September 27, 1827, and in March following he married Jane Grimn, the Lady Franklin just now deceased, She was the second daughter of John Grifin, and on her mother’s side was of French Huguenot extraction, It has been the cusiom for many years to speak of Lady Franklin as a venerable lady, bat at the time of her death she was aged only seventy years, being born about 1805. Most of her married life was spent with her husband, whom she accompanied to Van Die- men’s Land m 1836, rewurning wita him to England in 1848, when he came back to as- sume commana ol the expedition for the dis- covery of the Northwest Passage. The expedition, which consisted of the ships Erebus and Terror, sailed from Sneeruvess May 19, 1845, and for more than thirty yeats did this devoted woman wait for tidings of the brave man who called her wife and whose memory was dear to her abové everything else the world had to offer, The tate of no explorer—not even the prolongea moved the sympathies of the whole world as the mystery which sutrounded that o Sir Joun Franklin. Tois was due in a great meas- | ure to the pathetio and pious appeals of his wife and the generosity with which she aided in the search for the lost commander. Expedition after expedition was fitted out by the | British government to find some trace of nis jate, to allot whica she centributed, ana when the government at last determined that the search was (ruitless this noble Woman still ciung to the hope of Anding him, or at least of securing some certain tidings concerning him. In response to her appeal the late Henry Grinnell fisted out his famons expedition. | Noone can tell with what mingled feeitngs of hone ana gratitude the heroic wile looked for- | ward to the results of this expedition, butin let- | ters, which were preserved as gems 01 pricele:s | value by Mr, Grinvell, did she acknowledge that geuileman’s philanthopy and muopificence. The result of the Grinnell expeditions—for there were two of them—is too well known to need comme: here, and though they were conducted with in fativable energy and rare ability and sktll, and re- dounded 10 the character of the American peopis, yet they fatled in definitely cleariug away tne Mist which still surouded the fate of the missil if expedition. But yet tne heart of the devote Wile was trae toits noble nature, and, reject- ng the reasonings and conclu-ions of others who lacked suce heart promptings as she herseli teit, she persevered, ahd with unhexampied con- stancy she succeeded in equipping the expedition, under the command of Captain McClintock, which returned with unmistakable evidences of the sad jate of the gallant and lamented Franklin and his brave companions, The discovery of the proofs Which disclose thelr fate is given by Captain McClintock as follows: On the 6th of May Licutenant Hobson, beside a large cairn upon. Point Victory. among some loose stones, Which had fallen itched his tent Lying rom tne top of tis cairn, wag found a. small tia case containing a record, of which was as follows:—"Ihi the | ames | bus and nd after | ng ascended Weilington Channel to latitude 77 ce; ds is and retarned by the west side ot Cornwallis On the 12:h of September, 1846, the: air John Fran tingle’ on the no Is and. by the tee, 1847. On the 2d ef April, Goned five leagues to the north northwest of Point tory, wud the survivors, 105 in mumber, landed here, wa- were boset Ath of Jay the ships were a! Vio~ der the command of Captain Crozier.” ‘Pbis document was the silent but too truthful witness of the deatn of Sir John Frankun, while the skeleton who had survived him severai munths solemaly attested that they, too, had fallen victims to the icy king, whose rea), eternal winter they had invaded, Lady Franklin a eller, and after her husband's nearly every wuabitaoie quarcer globe. She was in this coumtry in 1860, bemg the guest of Henry Grinnell, nis Vila on the Hudson, She naa pewiguey in America, however, hi New York with her husband oa th his overiand jonruey irom Hudson's bi jast visit to this country was in 1870, woen was returning home from South Ameri her chief purpose Ou that occasion being her wire to have an mterview with Captain v. F. Hall, lumseil ROW buried under Arctie snows, and to hear irom his oWn fips an account of the traces he discove ed of ber husband. Ludy Frankiio was always noted for her deeds of pracucal charity. Itis related of her that, white in V: Diemen’s Land, she caused the eXtermination of & very deadly pent that infes the island in g by giving ten shillings each for ail that we: While in Australia she (rave @ good ferent | Neighboring colonies, and such was the grateful remembrance entertained of her that the Tas- WaALADS subscrined and Jorw: i to her £1,709 to Assist 1n equipping one of U | in 1872 she purcnased tne Frank ser. colnsnite, wn she collected tne relics of the ‘Frankun expeditions. Tae last int- portant act of ner iile wi 5 ¢ took in providing pecan fitting up of the Pandora expecition, has so lately satied op 1s sad mis-lon of searca and orighter one of discevery to the Arctic “rhe hope that gvod Lady Franklin cher- igiod through lle can now be reulized im neaven, Thus has Pandora’s riddle been solved for her who loved so long and 80 well, NATHAN ROBINS, | Mr. Natham Robins, one of the seven sons of Nathan Rovins, of tae old firm of John & Nathan Robins of this city, died on Tuesday, tne 13th inst., at Metuchen, N. J., im the sixty-frth year of ms age. le was engaged tn bustness for many years at vswego, N. Y., Where he acquired the respect and {riendship of a large circle by his aprightness anid ponevolence. He retired @ ie Metuchen, N. J, Where de leo Won general esteem by nis hinduesa of heart and liberal beneficence, ie Was chiet supporter of the Episcopal church in thas village, and vuilt at his own cost a com- moaious Lown Liwil for pudlio use, His death is absence of Dr. Livingstone—ever so compietely forms of his companions — regretted by all, especially by the poorer clase fe bis neghborhood. He leaves two daughters apa one son to mourn his 108s, JUDGE JOHN H. WILLIAMS, OF MAINE. Judge John H. Williams, of Portland, Me., died suddenly at his residence in Portiand, Me., yester+ y morning, of apoplexy. He was former! nudge of the Municiyal Court, ana was & wel known lawyer. He was boro in Boston in 1816. AN ABDUCTION EXTRAORDINARY. HOW COMMISSIONER VOORHIS AND INSPECTOR M'DERMOTE RECEIVED THE GREATEST SCARE OF THYIR LIVES. lt was alter midnight and the huge mansion or Mulberry stree: was in peaceful repose, The watehiul sentries in the main corridors bad Telapsed irom their accustomed vigilance into & State cf semi-somnolence, and not a sound could be heard to distur’ their virtuous reveries, Even the conversation that had been going on between Commissioner Voorhis and Inspector McDermott in the latter’s office tor an hour previous had be- gun to flag, and both gentlemen were contem- plating retiring for the night, Suddenly a loud commotion outside ts heard. A puMing aod panting, with snumting of feet, a con» fused chorus of hoars® voices, in which a strong Teutonic accent predvminates, rise above the still- ness or the nigat. The sentries open wide thew eyes, and, with drawn batons, advance to meet the enemy; the Commissioner and Inspector jump to their feel, ready ior immediate acton. itis not a diabolical raia berpettared by the Assembiy lavestigating Committee to catch the Board agieep, nvitiier 1s it the ghosts o1 martyrs to the deathiy stencbes of the Harlem fats come to settle accounts with Disbecker, itis simply a delegation of eight excited Ger- mans. “Was der Poard of Bollee around someveres 7” inquiringly shouts the spokesman of the wiping, oig drops of perspiratzon trom his fo On being conironted with the Commissiot nd Inspector ali the Germans commencea speaking simulcaueously. ‘The result was naturally far from satisfactory. No denaite idea of the communication ceuld be ascertained, although it Was evident that a gre: calamity had occurred, 1h which nineteen chil dren and a horse played a prominent Commissioner Vooriis recalled to bis mind the legend of the famous wvoden horse of ancient Troy and endeavored to reconcile the two cases, while Mr. McDermoct distracteaby ‘gave it ap.’? Finaily the startling story became upderstoo It Was No less than that nineteen small ehiidrea of the Kleventh ward had been kidmapped aod fed peg men iD & ren wagon by an unknown man a few hours previous, Here was a case belore which the Charlie Rost one paled im insignificance, vl The Germans were not drunk, neither were they cr y Were alarmivgly in earnest. “Quick, a general alarm throughout the city” or dered tne Commissioner, and m two minutes tue telezrayn operators nad notified every Uap! in New York ol the extraordinary occurrence, | For three hours Commissioner Voornis and In- spector McDermott waited im hiess sus- pense, but no ttaings from the children. At snortly before three o’clock, tne followin; despatch came irom the Captain of the Llevent net i— ipa La Suny 18-230 A. M, Tol tor McDenmort :— Teer ecduoted chiiren are all home, ‘The driver pat them out at Harlem bridge, and they were sent down om a shird avenue car. “it was the biggest scare Lever got,” sata Ime spector Mcvermott, 4 NAVAL INTELLIGENCE, Advices from Panama of July'8, by mall, supply the following naval report:—Tne United States steamer Omaha, trom Callao, arrived pere on the 6th inst. She wiil recéive to-day ner reliefosew, which arrived by the Powhatan some days ago at Aspinwall, The officers of the Omens relieved and who return home by the Powhatan to-day (sth) are:—Captain.E, Calbound, Lieutenant Com. mander Smita W. Nicuols, ecb ie ha Hop. m a bard, William W. Risinger, Thomas N, Li P. Perkins; Paymaster W. Goidsborou; Assistant Eneineer R, Aston; Assiscant dames H, Perry, Assistant Surgeon Howard 9} Midshipmen J. a, Roper and F, S, Hotclikk ner M. Dutcher and Sailmaker J. C, Cheveler. ‘Tne United States steamer Powhatan, Captain Jouette, sailed from Aspinwall for New York to- BLity United States dagship Richmond atrived at Callao, Peru, June 25, THE WEATHER YESTERDAY, The following record will show the changes to the temperature tor the past twenty-four hours in comparison with the corresponding date of last year, a8 indicated by the thermometer at Hud Dus piataiety, HERALD Building — 874, 1875. ‘1874, 1875, 3 A.M. . 8 71 3:00 P, M,.., 87 a 6 A.M. 69 1: OP Mises, O28, Tb 9AM, 76 7 9PM. 6 oe 12M... + 82 82 12 P. M. 4% 65 Averago temperature yesterday .......s0.0. Th Average temperature for corresponding date last year.. steeedsevetececetecseeees 16) RELIEF FOR SICK BABIES, The floating hospital of St. Jona’s Guild, de signed for the use of stck babies and their worried mothers, which will be used to give dainty free ex. cursions on the sait water to these classes of sub ferers during the hot days of summer, complete. A trial trip will be made by an is no} Peenty-th company, starting from he foot of Twenty-' street, East river, two o’clock this afternoon: | and from the Battery at three o’clock. Next week the hospital wili commence her regular work of benevolence. HEALTH OF FATHER BOEHM. The venerable centenarian Father Boehm, whose health for several days past has Much solicitude, is now on Staten Island nat relatives. He is suffering {from erysipelas, but his attendant physician, Dr, Hadden, states that the symptoms are not alarming. oF old tleman has suffered for years from an 10D Of the eyelids, and the attack two weeks ago | so acute as to give rise to serious apprenens! | Visitors are not allowed to converse with | The excitement incident to the celebration ae | centennial affected his nervous system to be al | extent that lt Was feared he would not Many weeks. His physician speaks hopeit his case, however, ana thloks it quite prot the erable gentleman will be present at the national Centennial celebration in Pailadelpiia next y FATAL FALL. — Willlam McConnaughy, aged ten years, of No, 101 Orchard street, while fyiog a kite from the roof of his residence, fell to the sidewalk and wag favally injure: | SULPHUR AND MOLASSES, fashioned internal remedy for the itch, is obsole' ol and other obnoxious skin diseases are cured Va hat toe pot, time without disordering the stomach, by ae aasee | HOR Soay, the great extern tl anti-scorbatic, CRIATENTON'S, No. 7 sixth avenue. _.the tints produced by HiLu’s Lxstayranzous Hare Dra aire hike those of nature, TO TOURISTS AND BUSINESS MEN, THROUGA IN ELEVEN HOURS, TAKE THE HERALD TRAIN, EVERY SUNDAY MORNING, AT HALF-PAST TWO, FROM GRAN CENTRAL DEPOT, VIA HUDSON RIVER AND NEW YORK CENTRAL RAIDROAD, POR NIAGARA FALLS, THE ONLY FOUR TRAOK ALL STEEL RAILROAD | IN THE WORLD. SAFRTY AND COMFORT CoM INED WITH SPRED, ~ CONNECT! DAKE SHORE AND MICHIGAN GouNNRS a bet WESTERN RATLWAY OF CANADA POIN(S WEST AND SOUTHWEST; WAQN: SLSEPING COACHBS ATTACHED. * REGULAI | HARKS ONLY CHARGED. | TICKETS Ol | TRAIN OR AT HERALD OFFICE, TRAIN GR POUUHRE/USIE, ALBANY, | FALATING ROCHESTER, BATAVL 3 ON BRIDGE, | | THE ALL | UTICA, SYRACUSE, FALO, NTAGAKA FALLS AND SUSPENSI| | _ FOR NSRVOUS COMPLAINTS, DEBILITY, WEAK. ness, use Dr. PRorin’s NeRVvonUM ANRMON#; Testores tnt Boni street, strength. Consuitation free, 50 GOLD FISH W atte eee, TIN Pichy ee und, AQUARIAL GAl iad Wea e on. . LEON DUMAS’ EAU MERVEILLEUSE IS Not an enamel, but a medivtne for tho skin. Ladies are ity vited to test it petore parol asing. For sale, wi Ana retail, at No. S. West ‘twenty-fifth street, Homtmat House. Priee $3 por bottic. MATTHEWS’ PURK SODA WATER—“THE MOST retreshing and Wholesome beverage at til times.” Dis nsed at 200) stores in New York and vigieety, m. contamination, Mattuews Apranatos dispenses beverages fi JOUN MATTILNWa, Now Korks “TO MINISTER TO A MIND DISEASE! fe Synur; it vitaliges the brain as ” Use asthe 1 CANNOT BE GT) “The Cyclopedia * caretull MORK SUPERB PRESEN to a cultivated person than host Thoughts of Charles Div atiwily bound, Price, $4 Compiled by Fy tetneand’ paststied by ied. MALE & SOR, wt ee K. DILT, DR. QUIBT AND DR, MERRYMAN Ai XGENGH 4 Went Fourteenth streow

Other pages from this issue: