The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, July 31, 1874, Image 2

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    THE C&MBRIA FBEE111.
EOENSBURC, PA.,
Friday Morning, - - July 31, 1S7-I.
The Til ton air.iir aprx-ars to havn pot
ton into the hands of the law, where it
will be fairly tried ami disposed of ; ami
while every one who thinks at all upon the
subject, will necessarily h.ivo f owned an
opinion more or less fixed, no one should
avoid the result to which a fair and com
petent investigation will bring him.
o-r .
The Philadelphia Cuinmontrealth does
no credit to itself as a Democratic journal
nor service to the causo it espouses by
giving publicity to a lying and malicious
letter from Rome addressed to that bigot
ed and contemptible radical mouth-piece,
the New York Times. Wo had hoped
better from a papor which flies at its mast
head tlio narao of Win. II. "Wit to as editor
and propriotor, and even yet we are prone
to believo that tho Commonwealth will dis
avow any intention to insult very many
among its readers by this quasi endorse
ment of obnoxious sentiments which are ut
terly at variauco with truth, common
sense atjd the God-given lights of con
science. What say you, Mr. Cvmi.ion
iccalth. Queen Yjctoiua having politely re
quested Parlamcut to piovide for the pe
cuniary necessities of her youngest son,
Leopold, that loyal body, with only one
dissenting vote, promptly ;md generously
responded to hor w ish by granting this
young scion of royalty an annuity of75,
OuO. This sum outrht to enable the vouncr
fcnfldmnn tti L'non Liu lnnl .id.ii-n .-.-... 1
r ' . - 2 ' . l I'll I I, mill. 1 :
and maintain all tho state and dignity be
coming tho son of a Queen. That this is a
barefaced robbery of tho people of Great
Iiritian, as former annuities to other tons
and daughters of Victoria have been, is a
matter of minor consideration. It is one
of the curses of royalty cuo of the griev
ous oppressions inflicted on a country
which believes in the doctrine of the
'right divine of Kings and Queens to gov
ern wrong."
Commenting on tho recent terrible rain
storm in and about Pittsburgh, the Lan
caster Intelligencer says :
"Tho graphic details of the approach of
the storm as given in ourin-ws columns inili
catu that the calamity was due to a wat.-r-out,
a phenomenon which is rarely wit-m.-Sied
iu this latitude, and which is an im
mense mass of water, caught 1 y the wind
and whirled about with a rotary motion
until the fierce elemout of the air becoming
wearied as it were, t lie cloud of water bursts
and sproads desolation in the track of its
lauuing. lhey generally make tlieir
pearanee at tlv: under surfaeo of a cloud from
winch a pouch-hUe Rppendago may bo ob
herved to protrude, enlarging and lengthen
ing into A conical or funnel form; the base
always alxjve. In many cases ai'ti-r Ix-iii"
1,'l.lrl..! 1 .1. - l' r.
S , '
thoy descend in an almost s,,l;.l ,..1 ,.
water, such as was experienced at. Pitts- !
ourgu. in this ease, a ireni.l.-.ii:iii lie
ing sey-
, ' wneiu ui'-r.i was .
1 ?,.b 1 'Vaj'S 1 V1 hy ,h, n,,l!l ,! ,6l,es "f I
f ?nn3 inky-l.!aeU, ,
cny, inn narrow end being b.we.st, whilo
. u ii. ii ovi'.viuitio; Tho ;
llie dark parts gave vent to almost con iau
ous flashes of lightning."
3 B f.
Tnn conferees in tho Indiana Congress
ional district met at Kitt aiming on last
Tuesday week aud remained in session
until the following Friday morning, when,
on the one hundred and tltcnth baVot,
Harry Whito was nominated. Tho candi
dates wore T hito, of Indiana, IJca'es. cr
Armstrong, Judgo Campbell, of Clarion,
and Marlin, of Jefferson. Judgo Camj)
bell was by odds tho best man named,
but for somo reason, no doubt satisfactory
to Llm&olf, refused permission to use his
namo in tho conference. Wo have heard
it intiuiatod that tho most disreputable
means wero resorted to in order to procure
White's nomination, but as wo havo only
hearsay evidence for it, wo will not enter
into a disenssiou of tho subject. We
have good authority for saying, however, j
that in White's own county the opposition
to him among leading and influential Re
publicans is bitter and uncompromising,
and that they avow their determination to
defeat him if they can. Tho district is
Etrongly Rrtpublican, but if tho disaiTcc-
tion which manifestly exists in Indiana !
r T ,T , 4 1Li commes
in tno district ins election may not only be ,
imperilled but most likely defeated. Po
foro any intelligent opinion cau bo formed
on the subject wo will havo to wait until
tho Republican bt-ntimcnt of tho district
iu reference to tho nomination hau more
fully developed itself.
Ax the olection held in Ilariisburg last
Friday for members of thc select council,
th Democrats carried rix out of the nine
wards by a majority of 11)0,
j u. j i.ii u ami s
IT ..... .....
majority over Puckalcw in that city was
720. Tho llariisburg Ttlnyra.,, the or
gan aud apologist of tho corrupt "Treas
ury liiug" w ith li. W. Maekey at its head,
sheds copious editorial tears over the re
cult and bitterly denounces tho Republicans
who wtut back on the party. Tho Pitts
burgh Gazette, auother Republican shcot,
attributes this radical defeat, however, as
well as the corruption iu the radical poli
tics of tho State generally, to the debauch-
inz iuflueiico of the St.ito Tmmhi-t. Wn
havo only room for the two following ex-
ti-acts from the Guzettc'' animadversions
ou Roboit W. Mackey and his corrupt
King. They are direct and to the point :
"it i unnecessary to cite evidence and
prove tho universally accented fact, that
the corruptiou iu our Suite politics can be : disgraceful as that of Caldwell, of Kans-in
lOllOWed UD and tra.cn. 1 from m-nrr .n.i.,f..l. . . "-.i-,s
.ncl from every u-sihborUooi w hich iu1
niny currcut pollutes, to tlu State Treas- I
.pi tho radical party and
-ylvauia -, and like all addled uest-eggs, its I bt:ina ,,ish m ,ts councils. It is a humil
btem h ia a pollution which disgusts aU hon- -at ing but instructive commentary on tho
CBt 2lvlZU4. ! i -
Wo now warn the TJ.yrajAX tho Pi,,, j Ut?r deSiHcy of tho Republican party,
which controls it. that unless the Si.u a reca's t,J0 corrupt ago of Walpole
Tr jasnrer w ill coiuh sct-nd to f,iv ti... i l,..i it . . . .'
aud publish hisnc.t tt:l,..,n.;..r i " I
dnce with its provisious, that upon his '
ucui auu ufiou iue ne.nis oi the otber otti
cials at Harrisburg, will rextali responsibil
ity for the defeat of tlio Kcpubtii.au State
ticket in 2'o veuiber."
I The Li titenant Oorei-nornhij.
I The office of Lieutenant Governor crc
: atcd by the new constitution has not here
tofore been kuown in the politics of Penn
sylvania. In a majority of the States it
: Las existed for many years, and in some
of them is provided fur in their original
constitutions. It has been found to work
well, and has met with tho general appro
val of the people in the States in which it
has bceu the custom to elect such an offi
cer. In view of the frequent and unpleas
ant difficulties which have occurred at
Harm-burg during tire last twenty years
in electing a Speaker of the Senate at tho
commencement of the session, it has long
been apparent that in order to avoid such
t exceptional aud unseemly contests be- !
j tween tho two parties in that body, tho!
election of a Lieutenant Governor would !
speedily become a political necessity. The i
constitutional convention then fore acted I
wisely and well in creating this new of
fice. The Lieutenant Governor w ill not pos- .
sess any executive or administrative pow-
.... t ,,f ...:n t :. l t. n -i i r ii I
er, but w ill Minph- act as President of the
,. , . , !
. i ii.iiu .inn ne&uio uui lis ueiioei aiious.
lie cannot vote on any question except
where tho members are equally divided. j
He is to be olocrcil for four years anu to
receive a talary of three thousand dollars
per year. The necessary qualifications !
for a Proper discharge of tho duties nf tlm
olhce are three: lie must bo a man of
j undoubted integrity of character ; he must j
; alo be a man of ability; and, lastly, ho :
must be fiiimliarwitb. the rules which gov- ';
I .., i,,;cut;,.ni.i; . ti i .
I eiu leiMslativc bodies. 1 he latter reiiuisite
, 1 i
. cannot be dispensed with. It is :is alwu-
Juti lv iieees.saiy as I fiat a mechanic should
J
skillfully know how to use the tools of his i
trail
'f 1 -I -I 4
",,a w,u"u,: ,I,LS cu"ll: " ,
intuition, but is tho result of practical c..- ;
peiience. I
Thc number of aspirants in both politi- !
; cal parties for nomination
lo t ho office is
. . :
Ic
ion, ana coiiciuaively show s the olhce-
seeking mania with which the politicians i
of this State are alllictid. When we say
4 1 c r i ov 1 !
" 1 "l 11,1 BU ""-"-"u p.in.ois aic ,
competent, while the balance are notori-
ously unlit, we mean tho lctnark to aiply
to both part ie . The low m tsand contemp-1
... , . . , : .
tib.o devices which a.e being resorted to
for tho purpose of making political capital
for this or that candidate aro simply dis
gusting. About ten days ago, for instance,
we received a Democratic paper from an
Kastein county containing an editorial ar
ticle advocating the nomination of a cettain
citizen of that county. Tho editor, or
..,,i,,,,c. n, . i 11 ii
pnh.ips the aspnai.t wo should say, nad ,
drawn buck lines around the article, w hich j fifteen feet flooded the !;rt floors of all the
we presume w as a gentle hint that wo j houses, and in many places the second sto
would notice it. We declined doin- so .' riv- Several houses w ere swept into the
! f,
U, - , . . ... ,
.e piain leason that the editor's fa- :
vonte, although he may have a local rep-
utatioii, is an unknow n man in the Demo- i
I
craUc party,
Ino c.r. ,,i.,o ,r l.;..i. i
-estof the Allegheny mountains having
ever heard that such a person existed.
This is pccniiaily a time v. l.cn the oflice j
,i,.,,,i,i .,,i- .i, ... i . . .i i .1
,riCC' :UKl XV''C" lhu lh'-V l,f Mli:1,1 V,llt aS- I
vil:us candidates for thi or :.y otl.
... ., , , , - , , , . I
state and county conventions, as hain-
, i , , Tf . ,. .. . - . .
passed away. It is time that fools should
cease to rush m where even angels f ar to I
tread. The Democratic party demands -
from the State convention the nemination !
P , , , , . !
of au honest, competent and ui.ob)ection- I
auie caniiuiaie lor Judge ot the rnipremo
t ourt, and also tho nomination of a Lieu-
tenant-Governor aud Secretary of Internal
Aflairs whoso qualifications aro beyond
cavil or dispute, and for whom every Dem
ocrat can vote without a blush of shame,
let the result of the election bo a triumph
or a defeat.
Mu. Aluf.kt C. UA.KT, a bUoral-eonserva-tivo
member of the liiitish Parliament
from Kidderminster, was lately accused of
corrupt practices in procuring his election.
A criminal information was inndi :i on inst
him and he was arrested and hound mrr
fr tl.ial. Thc cx.,ulsion t,f a member of
the House of Commons for having resorted
to bribery and corruption in conducting
his canvass is a matter of frequent occur
rence. What was the paiticular charac
ter of tho olTenso with which this Mr.
(.irant stands eh m-i-i-pil wo feivnm.l ..ii .toft
Iliteiy ,t.t:folU). 1K,W d;.Ttl.eillly ,ve do
things in this model lie
publie, or, ?s ratli-
cal Congressmen of
tho Dick Oglcsby
stamp describe it, ''tho purest and freeest
government on tho face of the globe."
In this country corruption in some ono
of its many seductive forms is tho lever
by which scores of tnen have foisted them-
,,i . ... i
v s ini irisi-no n nn, ,,, ni ii A. i.
it,., .,niu , iiu i iiiii- ,il ii :..
on ad in the piesent st.V.e of politi- i
cal ucbancWy ,t has become tho rvk and
.1... - ..." I
.
..1 . vain a certain class of j
politicians who happen u tlussc lno.. j
iiiooej nun U..HUS. jiiueeii, it m;.y safe
ly be said that money, or its equivalent,
regulates tho radical political barometer
from Maino to Oregon. Who doubts that
on two occasions Simon Cameron pro
! cured his election to the Senate of tho
; I nited States by corrupt means? Who
wiU aKM It t!:t Powell Clayton, of Arkan
I sas, entered thc Senate w ith unsoiled hands,
or that John J. Patterson, of South Caro
; lma, did not literally lly his w ay throu-h
, " 11 u.at buto to the
I no negro legislature
! ' 7i7T. .h1 l C
....jm:, ,n tU;ii jolm 1 Joneu
' --" -oiiiiiieniiai lriondaud
financial adviser, did not strew his path
.-;.i, i .i .. . , , ini
ii.ii 'iii iu i i.e.!! inu scai no now
occu-
pies ?
These cases are as notorious and !
"ca,s -esigned for fear of
cajuusiou. .aii these men aro bright and
. c" " lual e raau d his
p,lCO'
A Carlist magazine exploded last week
at Quiza, Spain. Thirty men were killed
and a large number wounded.
JL JJisastrous lrlool,
PITTSBURGH AND AI.1.K6IIKN Y CITIES srB
AIERGED OKEAT LOWS UF LIFE A ID
nwi-EiiTv Git.vriuc details.
A flood involving terrible lossof life and i
great destruction of property occurred in I
down between 8 and 9 o'clock in the even
- .. 11 . . . 1 - . 1 . . .
iult. i or oer .in iiour me lain If 11 in
sheets which fairlv "listened as the flashes '
of li'ditninir fell upon them in nuick sueres-
sum. 1 lie water now ci down the streets
leading from the hill with fearful velocity,
-J ,J . "
.... .i . . .
the current being swollen also by water'
from the side streets,
III,, r..!., I
was inundated to
the dept h of from three j
liurr ;r,-,,.tc;ni r.... n
to lour leet, renuering ic impassible lor tho
. 0 . mnooi H1U
estern trams.
,ri damage to stukkts.
l.m l,,,,,!,- nn rolled f.n,., Tl..;r ,w; t
tions and hurled to the level below, w hile I
"ny places great holes were ploughed I
lit in tli kihcfili: Ssi ill'itfi nf I lift .i ice c i !.-.
t l III L 1 V, d.lfk . " I. ' - v. ..ivva ' 1 1 1, 1, I .1
i are almost impassible and will require largo
'l expenditures for repairs, anion t: tiiem llen-
ry, lirady and Tustin streets, in tho Fourth
ai d. an Iuran, Miltenbercer, Mercer.
i l iue auu cie ensou sneeis, in me nixin
,- ? i , 1 ,,,,
am, are also se ously cut up. here
; the new-sewer on Forbes street wns recently !
built great ditches have been opened,
In the Thirty-sixth Ward were felt the
i. , J , , . " . i
ilown the hills into Sawmill Run raised j
that stream with great rapidity, and ent j
ii cuimiiK nii ihhi f vl v iii ci uiui-ri Bwpjii ;
iv iiuinif; .iviiivuut'iia v .ii.VA
hi;ii):es swf.pt away.
A large quantity of barrels and lumber
wcru carried away and fast, piled up against
tlie 11 w non bridg.i at Maiustieet, which
did not Ionsr resist the furv of the assault.
, , n, , - , . .
I he bridge by which ( arson street crosses
. i. A suinr. irom i
.i - . .
and four other bridges were swept .w:iv. I
'. .-..."i
ffx-at was its loice that a large number
V1 V3 II llll 1.1'IU IK'tlJ 11ILU ;
f:,stei.in.rsniid sweot down tl.nrivpr. Tho
towbo.it II. P. Wood was also carried awav
At Wood's mill a tremendous slide ocenr-
ltt1' covering tho rails of the Pan-llandlo
road to the depth ot about eight feet. A
itrh
train coining to the city stuck fat there,
.n,i u-a not .bur o-it until ne n W i,,.i,
in ALLEGHENY city
the Hood was terrible. A sewer on Mad
ison avenue and Vista street burst, inun-
.i,,:..,, tbu ...lI0l0 u,,,,el. .....f of . itv
j,j omj tavern a number of 1'crsons were '
seated when the water began to rise. A !
m:in 1,rinied Hess attempteJ an escape by
swimming and was drowned. A son of
Mauvm. ;(,i,u. p.sl his life in a vain en-
by ;
f i
deaver to save the life of a babe. A young
lady, 16 years of age, is also among the
victims. For more than a mile o:i Snrinsr ;
(larilcu avenue the marks of destruction
are everywhere seen. Houses are thrown I
together iu heaps. Sonus twenty-live or I
thirty slaughter houses on the avenue were j
washed away. Many buildings that were
"J" oiK.i.j ui.-uujoi ...i. ociiuii.111 u.iui- j
d The water. lisin.- to t he heie ,t (,f !
f i .1 .1 Hir , i.ii l'i.l'f.,1 .... .1.....
IliiUUIl, I'l itiv oi:i l,v tu n i'Ull.1,-1 1,UII,U llll
. .f ....., ..., .i,,.,,,,,,,,,,:,.,,,,
A house containing two or three fanilie
- - w. ... -wv i -
at the rear of Cent re street, w as destroyed.
i : . ...1 Tl l. . : .. .
aim il is supposeu an uiu miii.ui'h wcie
drowned.
AITAbLlNC LoFS OF LIFE.
Tho h ss of life by the flood is appalling,
riiirtv-eight bodies have been recovered
in t lie l.utclier s rum listrict in Allcglmnv
i ay, and as inanv moie persons are nnss-
i"; Vbu are supposed to have been lost.
The havoc at Woods' K.iu is fearful.
'PI . i . . . . ..r i r
. in , 1 u,nl'ciance mo Ami sawmill nun
the elements made sad havoc. 'I ho fierce
tuITt.ut.s f swelled every little tributa-
i-r of Sawmill II
mi into a boiling stream.
tho accumulating waters rushed w ith j
"liul ;"k1 'iril'ti'ljlc down the valley, j
sweeping everything in iheii cj i.se. The !
ti,u.k ot- tievastati,.-., is I1Kli k,.j by tho i
wreck ot dwelling.'-., bridges. immense heaps
"l -tones, large piles ot drittwood, and ttie
torn aud ragged sides of the hills, where
the waters fcurged and gnawed into their
very vitals.
The extent of tenitoiy damaged is not
less than twenty to twenty-live miles in di
ameter, and how the main portion of the
city of Pittsburgh, lying as it does, in the
centre of this circle, escaped further in
jury, appears almost miraculous.
, The north bauk of the Allegheny, upon
wlio.-io hillsides and iu whose valleys the
upper portion of the city is situated, was
TUK SfK.Ni: OF THE OUBATlisT DISASTKU.
The work of destruction commenced at
a point about two miles north of tho cen
tia! portion of Allegheny City. JJutcheis'
Run valley at its mouth is probably be
tween -100 and 300 feet wide, and at the
point where the work of destruction com
menced it is not more than 1"0 feet wide
Petween .North avenue and this northerly
l.o lit numerous laviiins cm,.; v im,. 1! i. I
ers' P in valley. AlonirthLs run "i lo, l.on.-J
wero built directly ovei the natural water
c..i- .,i..m .,..L. ...i j
wero built directly ovei the natural water
" " " " ' v J vjtit living Hld'lC 11IVI UtTU III
part as foundations for dwellings. The
line of dest ruction followed the water
course to the, river, and involved an im-
mense number of houses that w ere not on
i the line of the culverts. When the rain
! commenced falling but little apprehension
I was entertained, b.it those who lived near
i tlm lipail iiftln. if.ll.iv ..-lofr. l.i ..,.l.l..i..
, - ... ..... ...i.i., .c.i . .... i. 01I1UIUIII
it seems as though tho heavens were oi.en- !
e(' II,1C Hie w
rater came down as if dis-T
f.i-irf ,l ,..... I..........,.,. .:. ti. i
....... 1-v.i. iiuui 1 1. line ii oioe.s. I vi mn
. . ...... ,
1... t- . i o ,
a ra nP Tho lraue dweH- j
ings, stables, and slaughter houses gave
- ... ' ts-
w:l-v line pipe stems, and tho debris from
the wrecks was swet liown along the line
of the plank road, tho weight being aug
mented ever' moment.
In the district lying west of Chestnut
street and north of a line parallel with
North avenue, the water rose to a height
of full tweuty feet.
At the cornet of East street and Madison
avenue the water s. cmed to deviate.
THH ONWAH!) ot trsK OR Tit K KI.OOD.
About a block below the intersection of
Madison avenue and Fast street the torrent
again united, and swept down with re
donbled violence to thc low lauds, embrac
ing Concord, O'llara, and a portion of
Chestnut streets. The course of the flood
was p.oo.i my .-w eot vnde, and frame and !
UlltK UUlJUlllgl
clement as thou
Dwellings, stores,
of all kinds mm
IllSeil lllfl..u IniLin
.. .1: r:. :
, u oii.7ojk-.vii; iiii Llll!
in ,omo UtZllU i
.v-ewno! muiwiii creven me street lines,
1 I . - a ,
iniueii is i! flown.
t., ,l J
.... ..liU-iit uticct, tH,e Interaction of I
iinsiood the loice better, and iu ono in- '
stance oi.iv ..,. i , f
, ' J w1' ),y serious u.uii.U'o doue. '
boil T.:,,il'"d l.uiklinf' copied as a beer !
noated dii-f-etiv Ii ...n. ,
iy obstn CM, t,?OSSt ,0S,tretIt' comIlet- !
that h, VhU d?striet I,-. estimated.
S :!,ll,dwfl,1S were i
, . -.... . L .i.illlllilLlOil
is, and
destroyed, but no estimate has been
of their value.
made j
TIIE HOT,nCAr9T.
The Coinnifrcial of Tuesday savs
No :
fju i
w ' ' --v4 vu auu-
t ho cities ot I'lttsburtrb ami Allecrheiiv on ' faint conception ol tne terrors oi inai laiai
Sunday nirht last. Durinsr tlioilavlisuw hour. Whole families have been blotted ' ing, and that lady expressing J:e
showers took place, but they proved only ! out entirely. In one ease, a father alone ness to be interviewed, the r?
ver. the mother chiscd her as follows:
..... . v... ...mjj , ,nui; nas uecn uon,jr tan work tor tho ast i It s only two weeks since a V . ut u- "Twarci. when tho tenant had been
gh they had been sand. : thrpe ,Vavk oi.orvi., r.... t;.n . y lno. wces 'ce a similar out- ; removed, bo l.oic.i ... . ., en
It'll I IU I . Ill, 1 Tl," lllll-l. -..... ... II, . , . . . . . . . ' .'.v, .1. llll, . lllllll V 11
work shops, and debris ! that obci-saw-md a " , ""1 , Z I Z "1 a 'aied woman ' iscs bv war 1 "?
gled together in one con- ! ,v.,-i A Ti ' " IT. :.J. V It ... V ... .r . "car me samo place, and .lu,..T...i ' l" ""'
it ; ;i i ., ' i ' . "-niin. iiwic ui ii-M .inn- ; mere is little doubt that tho fr o,,, ,..., ;.. I ; i-uuue opinion. i j,0 tenant
qnate conception of it. The horrors com
pressed with that dreadful hour will never
be fully told. Those who visited the scene
yesterday saw the wrecked houses aud.'tbe
long row of bodies carried from the ruins
who gazed upon the ghastly forms of the
dead and the agonized features ot the sur-
viving parents and children can form a
suid nine children havincr perished. The !
f itl.Pi- been absent duriner the nitilit, i
and thus escaped. There were scores of in-
t-idents of tho most touching and harrow-
. i r . I .
. .i . - .. . r . . I ,. ...
mg .i-iiu'-'. Pasl powci ui wuiuo w ,
portray '
tue feauful itF.coitD.
At. latest, advices the number of dead;
bedies found aud pet sons still missing foots '
,,r tinw At. r.ntclieis' Itnn. fili dead and :
ur
ill - - 7 -
147 missing; Woods' Run, 0 dead, miss- ,
ing: Temperance ille, 10 dead, 3 missing; ,
C1,vnnl dnvs vet before the full matrnitude ;
(.'liai tiers- i icck, i missing, it win m
of the disaster can be ascertained, and to ;
record all the incidents connected with tho j
torrible calamity would require volumes.
If ELI KK.
Tenqxu-ary relief for those who lost their ,
all bv the Hood is jiouring in from every i
ouarter. .CO.OuO having already been real-
v . . . ... . i
The damage to proierty cannot yet j
lzeu
be tno!
than guessed at, but it will mi- j
doubtciHv run up into the millions.
1
A FonTY Milt. ton Law suit. The great ;
c-tn (uu ml aA Uwmiir. 4)f Turulmll t
? ? . . . . , , -
vs- Pardee and others, which has been j
pending in the Pennsylvania courts for two ;
- ' . . . . , j
ieuu.i.i., uuue. me v. . ..... yl ... ..... ...
Peiinsylvania governing the gaming of title !
taxes. 1 he question at stake was tlm title (
to several thousand acres of laud in lower j
Lu.erno county, rich in depos-its of coal, ;
held by the defendants, and claimed by
James Turnbull. as the heir of Al;xaiiner
Jmo 'J'lii iiPuii, ilcceaseit. l lie lana
. .i ... .... ...... ... 1 1 ..
. II T....,i.i.,.l I 1... l-ll-l.f
1
was me p.ope.ij oi . i ,....
I ""I O
it was known to contain coal
The last Turnbull in whom thetitlo rest- j
ed was .James Turnbull, deceased, father
of the claimant. He neglected to keep the
taxes on it paid, and it w as sold at treasur
er's sale. The property subsequently came
into the hands of this Paidee and other
capitalists. The fat her of the plaintiffdicd :
in Philadelphia about forty years ago, be- ;
f. in tlio nrc:it. vnlne nf flip livniifirt y was I
- u ... r- --- 1 1
plaintifl, then a mere child. Soon after
Hie death of his father, young Turnbull ;
went to sea. ills moiner, in im.-, Doiiev- j
ing that her son was the rightful owner of
the land in Luzerne county, made e (forts .
to have the claim substantiated. Mie found ;
a friend and adviser in . II. Wheeler. Fsq., j
then a lawyer in Manch Chunk. He shared!
i r :.. n. r .
uei oenei in me jiirsnue oi mi mim . i.;un, ,
and recommended an ejectment suit to ie
cover. It being necessary to find tho miss
1
ing heir before anything could be done,
they commenced a search for him. For
( n'lilili' Vfi'l l- l.,-c...inr!ifOll.li,.ifrn.loilv
.... t .... n. , r..,i,,ni, ....I. .........
iousl v tohear of his wbe. eabouts. Finally, i
in ISil, they heard ot him 111 ?.lazatlan,
Mexico. He was summoned home and ai
j rived iu Philadelphia eaily in 1S71.
' His career has bec-n or.c of const ant dan-
ger and hardship. Cm his lirst voyage he
j was shipw recked. With eight companions
j he floated for nine days on the ocean in an
j open boat. It was picked up near tho 1s
! land of St. Thomas, with all of its occupants
dead but Turnbull. Recovering from this !
voyage lie went, to central .America, and,
I in N4!, to California. He remained there
j a jear or two and made considerable inon
I ey, adhering to a resolution he made when
j hi; left home to touch no intoxicating drink
I and never to gamble. Leaving California
he went to a canal at Mazatlin. While
there he was robbed several times, and was
once left for dead, with twelve daggers
sticking in him. by a gang of Mexicans who
robbed him. On the way from California
lo Mexico he was in a steamboat explosion,
in which over a hundred wero killed, he
being one of a very few who escaped. Ho
was several times shipwrecked, but lived
to answer the summons to come home and
prove his claim to immense wealth. He
worked faithfully in his caue, but takes
his great defeat philosophically.
The G heat Scandal. There arc no new
developments in the Peecher-Tilton case.
'llltllOl llinil tlio lilllilipiltinn in full r ti,.. I
cross-examination of Mr. Tilton before the '
committee. This is uuitc lengthy
tMigthy and una
evidently searching and severe. We pub
lish an abstract of its contents and a ver
ba(iiti account of its most prominent fea
tures. It contains little rrorc than has al
ready leaked out through loquac'ous mem
bers of the committee, or the friends of
the cuileront parties to tho rreat senuda!.
The committee however has acted wisely !
in furnishing it thus in full to the public
so that there may be no charges ot garb
ling or misrepresenting any port inn of it.
As the case now stands, public judgment
upon the merits of it seems to be suspend-
"f'o l,,u "'i-"is in u
i,l,d availing Mr. Peecher's statement
, IS ar"IU,',1,nccd t,,:lt
who of all men or w
, ls :'"niiccu mat .Mr. 1 rank Moulton, !
ill- . - ,
le!uI,nS 1'"? seems m ha
I f"vu,'sl,'it w1 the details
I concluded not to give in
"i o inuit or women, save tne three ;
to havo been most!
of the affair,
his tpsl.im.iiu-.
The committee of course has no urover L
command his appearance, and upon his
refusal to appear its labors will conclude
with the forthcoming statement of Mr.
Jieecucr, which, it is promised, will reit-
il -r ,
1 ,,ao his iormer ciefonse and comprise a
,n.l:;' n" ol Mv- '".tons statement
-.iiii.ii ii ni no l, v. l Main ill T sri 1 1
. - . . - ,
niiieu ii, win
. i" .1.. 1 1 - i ,. ...
f t,lC nU i-ub- I
JCct tor11"C,at,,-U a,i, I'ar,:,kes a do-
.n.,,,. ......... I.1..,. , I
uti iuii ui llie oil uuc. 1'eiKImrr 1 1, w oon I
i gnu oi pieiuuice. i.ven alter such con
ol.ision of the labors of the committee, it
is doubtful whether tho public will be
satisfied until the matter conies before the
civil court. As there is a prospect of this,
ooui in .nr. niton s mieat ot a suit for di
voice and in tho
course of Mr. lieeh.-' !
friendsiu urgincr A libel suit ainwt. i,k!
aiuisi-. th xUi.Ti.. ,o i" ... .
j - - ..w .......w. ..i.i , uujvieiieii )
to a court of law, wherein all parties know- i
ing aught of it may be called to tell the i
truth, tho whole truth, and nothing but
tho truth, regarding the greatest scandal
of the age. Lancaster Intelligencer.
Iii:iAUKAni.K Sawino Ftat. The Min
neapolis Tribune of the 10th inst. says that
the Pacific Mill (Dean & Co.'s steam saw-
lil'l 111 n umi
anxious to see what, thob- OKt-,hlibm.mf.
" V"J
.?:f,.T ".n !
. . ""'' Kiv nine, ami gelling ,
.i - - ,. .. "
, , f '," ,,L'K", ".v S
r, l- '
da vs. and not ,-n,-,i n ;.,,o ...;... !
a-nu not, running a moment over time ,
to m.ik-o Tiki' tnnnicu-'ii'v .1 ..1 -1 .li
alwayswill occur iu the best re-ru'lated niills. I
.naix r. .m. ratura ay meir thirty fionrs' j
was finished, and their record was I
BM32 feet of lumber, board measure, ac-
""'ey "ix the platform! More than
At six p. m. S:tn?-d n v tb.str tiiir-t,- l.inisi' :
203,000 feet of lumber per day of ten hours,
j lor tnree consecutive days, to which must j
) be added the profit ionate amount of shin-
cles and lath. That is bv f-.ir U.n r.illosr i
alld - a eye-opener for
,,1 .." r .... r
iue saw iui:i3 oi mo neighborhood.
'
i
. I . - i - ,1 o r.4 I 1 ....... 1 1 : 0. 1 i . - ' ' -I " , IIIS CI 1 1 ,1 . . 1
.w,.-,,,. liiu . 11111; .nin i ci u ! voivfll upin pnnAi.A. I ;,. : .
The All-Ahsorbiny Scttntlal.
TIIE STOKY OP BF.F.fUKU S CHIME AS TOI.l)
UY ELIZAHETII CAIIY STANTOX MRS.
TILTOIi'S DENIAL OK THE STOUY.
A retxirter of the IJrooklyn Aran called
on Mrs. Kli.abeth duly Stanton at her res
idence in Tenalfy, X. Y., on Monday morn-
r willing-
-porter cate-
"Can you tell me when yen first learned
of this alVair. Mrs. Stanton?
"I think it was a year belore Mrs. ood- j
hull published her statement tlia 1 knew .
ui mo i.i.m...., ..v.. .... - , -
derstand, which have since ; come to light,
, f il -....., . , . O
... .1... ......im. ii.-ti n t in i tin k. vo.i 11 n
but the story in suusiance.
"And are you wining io ten in w uat
manner you came assessed of this knovrl- j
edire?"' '
-oeita niy. wme unie, i ia:..n " ;
in the fall of the year, though I won t be
. . T.1'1 '
jnimu t, """ . ' ol V :
nected with th Jtcrolution, Susan H
An-
thony, Mr. and Mrs. Tilton, Mrs. Rullard j
and myself w-ero in Lrooklyn i together. It ;
was initio aiicrnoon, auo a ei caning ,. j
tnc oince OI llie Jx roniuor, .nr. i mou umi
myself accompanied Mrs. Ihillard to her res- ;
idence and remained to dinner. Through i
some misunderstanding Miss Anthony went ,
r.. . rr,:n... ...i i;.w.t ;n l..i. i
with Mrs Tilton and dined it.h her ni- j
stead of u
U. lliere was some lee.ui on inu ;
j.art of JMiP. liiron in regain io mis, ai- ;
i . ... ., . I : I
iiu.ugu it was quae uuiuiemioinu o.. ,y ,
tXecptMi-s. FuilariLMr. 1 ilto.i and myself. :
'ri.irt
uore to:a uie wnoje story oi ins wue s ;
faithlessness. As I before observed, he
tlii ,H)t RO jMto details, but the sum ami ;
. . j f
U10 nean.ig oi jns. i.iui.mi j
Wo were reformers. He gave us the story
This was the lirst you had heard of i
it
'This was the first. The next evenr.ig, j
hearing that Miss Anthony was a little i
pipucd at me for leaving her on the day be- j
r.... i ...., ......I ..... r...... i.w. "r.... :
ii'iu, 1 louuau IU in) iiiiiui; 111,11; ill . ell 1
,r ' ... r 1
u 1 1 v 11 nur M'Tir :.(i tn'i 11 .Smviii ;nv;i .
. . . . .. ...
ing my arrival. i nai, evening, wneu we ,
1 , T a; 1 1 . 1 l.,.,,l.l.l '
w ere alone, 1 said lo her, I hcooorc related
. . . i. 11 i i i
a very fti-ange story to Mrs. Lullaid and
, . J n-, i . i .
me la-t evening. Then I recounted to I
i.er a;i tl,at he had told u
Miss Anthony ;
listened attentively to the end. Then she
said, 'I have heard the same story form
Mis. Tilton.' We com pared notes, and I
found that by both man and w ife the same i
story had indeed been told." I
J1HS. Tli.TON'fj CONFESSION. j
"What were the particulars of Mrs. Til- ;
ton's confession ?" j
"I will tell yon how it was made. When j
Mr. Tilton returned home that evening I
some angry words growing out of the sop- ,
niatiou in the afternoon passed between j
him and his wife. Uoth became intensely j
excited. In tho heat of passion and in the '
presence of Miss Anthony, each confessed.
I1 . . - . . . .
IO Uie other ol having broken the marriage
vow. In the midst of these startling dis
closures Miss Anthony withdrew to her
room. Shortly after she heard Mrs. Tilton
come dashing
stairs, and Mr. Tilton
lrfll 1 . .-li,
loiiowing ciosc airer. .ne iiung open ner
i1(..i,on,n ,l..o,- aH T.,vi..i i
'pi10 j0,,r was then closed and b..ltel. Theo-
dore unded on the outside and itemand-
ed admittance, but Miss Anthony refused
to turn the key. S intense was his pas
sio'.i at that moment, that she feared lie
mifiht kid his wife if he gained access to ;
tlm room. Several times ho returned to
the door, and angrily demanded that it be I
opened. '.Xo woman shall stand between
nieand my wife,' he said
Put Susan, who
is ns r-oiira"--iiij n -bf. i n.il.le niisvvi.n.il i
him with the words. 'If vou enter this room !
it will be over mv dcad'body,' and so the !
infuriated man ceased his 'demands and
withdrew. 31rs. Tilton remained with j
Susan throughout tho night. In the ex- '
citenu nL of the hour, amid sobs ami tears, i
she told all to Miss Anthony. Tho whole !
story of her own faithlessness, of Mr.!
Peechcr's course, of her deception and of
her anguish, fell unon the cars of Susan P.. i
Anthony, and were spoken by the lips of !
Mrs. Tilton." 1 110 1 awneo Indians are totally destroyed.
"Py Mrs. Tilton's cross-examination," ! Without additional help from' the goieru
observed the reporter, "it appears that j mcnt l1'0' must sufl'oi sct rely.
Mrs. Tilton was far from fiiendlv to Miss j c Jiavc t,,c '1 story of Damon and
Anthony. How could she have mado this i Fythias from Ohio. Hugh Dougherty was
confession to her?" j sentenced to be hanged at Lancaster on
"On the contrary, Mrs. Tilton thought a ! 'll0 ;lt't- Patrick Lynch, of Circleville,
grat deal of Miss "Anthony, Mrs. Dullard ! w:in'e to net as a substitute for Dougher-
! and all those ladies. I was very intimate
w,t her before Mrs. Woodhull s thunder-
bolt. At the time of our lirst knowIediT. i
tiie a"air .Mr. llkcson also heard of
't- He besought the ladies not to make it
pumic. i o bun it was a matter of money, j lent storm of rain and hail was reported on
He was a stockholder in Plymouth Chuicli, the border of Moravia. Several lives were
in the Christian Union ami in 'The Life of j lost, and a large number of cattle drowned.
Christ.' Now, tho destruction of Mr. ! Fifty houses were destroyed and many
Pcccher would be the destruction of all j vineyards Hooded and ruined at Asamara
these. As Mr. Wilkcson expressed it. 'It where it is rumored only fourteen ,.f
would knock the Life of Christhigher than ' inhabitants escaped.
a kilo;' hence his concern in keeping the j Mr. and Mrs. Price Haves, of Dela-mattei-
secret." ware county. Ohio, aro the pioud parents
.-villi. JJl.ll'.- 1'h.MAL.
-Mrs. I lllon was interviewed on Mondav
evening regarding the truth or falsity of i
Afi-c s;,-,.. .... i -r , ,
M
- -.nuiiu .7.iiiui;ii:ilt lllill uyui .-Jli illlll
niton bad, m the heat of passion, i
yniusseii naving tuoken tha marriage vow. ;
" """oi in mosi uosmvo words mat
-Ils- Stanton's story was utterly without!
i mill aim fabricated fnjin the most mali
cious motives.
TII.TOX AIUti:STKI).
Theodore Tilton has been arrested and
held to bail on the charge against him for
libel. He w ill have a hearing on Monday
next.
Snoc KiNc; PAnn.vniTY. An OUlWomnn
Outrayrd. Tho annals of crime in New
T - -
I j.i-.1. .. . . , 1 .
'-parous and fiendish act than that pcr '
f1 on n -dnesday n.orning by a gang
(ll RtY T11PII iiftni- ll. 11 ..1... I f .
- j ' out eon r:il 11 l no re.-rn l ot n
-".i3 1 1 ten. in Ken ieri v. .v
woman named Anne Dealing. sixtvears
i age, crossed over at an eai lv hour from
her home in New York to visit 'her niece in i
est I loboken. She had proceeded a quar-
r . r."
'" - Is izcd her, dragged her off M. bl.I !
lu " " ,Illle i'om me lerry when the scoun-
way, after which each of tho ran o.m,
led aciime. lm,n,,,i(;..(,. :
, -.".i.m iu iniriiLioii. ine
ne"ls 'en partially stripjied the fuintjng
wom:ln and found in her pocket a pocket- i
oook containing 3.75. This they appro- j
pi lated. '1 he poor woman was able to an- i
pear before a justice on Friday and make I
affidavit to these facts. Tho scoumlmh
implicated a;-c George Davis, Hartley Kir- !
wan, ,ioni Kirwan. Wil ham Lnwl-sK .T..i, ! .
Henry and Richard Davis. The first two
I Alirv 1:,. II rr. . rt ' .
V f ?overu,ent in Weaken has
The seni-
oeeu called to account so finnnnKlifi..,..
fi.t ,i,. .... . . . :.-..i " '
SVn",'0,'1 C,"'J,t f'' "''f
. :
Many persons suffer w:
aild "crvous headache
u nervous headache, i
on imck ueadacno
;ii t .
o, usually induced by ,
--...s, .nuigesiion,
fous ' fiud relief, if n
'"S th towels open wii
1'nrgatire Pill.
fineness, indiL'est ion
eic. Micli ter- i
not euro, by keep-
ltn small doso of
' II Ay
stiff p,int or 1-,,, " imoar,
whatever?' n, "-a"y c
llave "'euiiiatic or other
John,.n
. ... "--Jl-.m, ui I no Hod y V 1 f so. n
f,o..,.., r.---.- i
am rtiu. ii.. ...w.. .......
. JL.C11J tir inT,rn i If
weie ill restoil nml IoiIit..! 1. ... ;..;
..iiiuaiiv, i .
bt
2ei'.i anil I'olittcal lt ms.
An eight yea old Lancaster girl issnid
to weigh one hundred and tl.iity-l.vo
pounds.
A mad dog nt Fort Montgomery, New
York, bit a family of sevcu pel sons a few
days ago.
A little daughter of James Harnett, of
Fayette county, was killed on Thursday
last by an open window falling down on
her, breaking her neck.
An automatic teu-piu alley, which sets
up its own ten-pins, it-turns tho balls to
the players, and dispenses with the usual
African small boys, is creating a,
l ne nouv oi .uiss .Marietta .. Hall, a
sctoo teachei, was found in the wo..ds
.... . . ,.-,- -.. . . .
near Rutland Yt., on Sunday, and an out
rage had been comuiittcd before her luur-
u i
hc election in Han islurg. on Fi i-
dav, the Democrats elected a majority of ion. Flvm.MUh r"
tl,e membets of select C-ouncil. One branch : s., h;,st!ie Iv.ear.-'i:
- vjviiw,. ii hihii. .-in-, 1'n il- it UI IJi'ltl' tl
is now Democratic and the other Kcpubli
F.lili u Spears killed Charles Davis in
West Sunlt.idi C onn., last Thursday nigLt.
can
Sueslr8 a(fci.wai.,is cut his own throat. -
Sl)0a..s wa u.-nfnr ,vif., IV.vi i-
te,fe,e(
fpmor i
tf) f,.jepfen tl 0
G
in England hun up a cat
1 1 1 1 f 1 iw-nv r iiiim 1 . ? fri i ! f
tr(.PS am-, n f,.w (. ;,fter f0,Hl that a
whole 1)
brood had been hatched in one of
lI)C pOC.:,.ts.
workman were di-r-Mi,- a well
,.,.c.h t ,i,,tt of k r-r.f ti,, ,..t,
,m tU, t. - , , ,v
quality
,n V."olford county, Ky., on Friday
lliyi!'-, 'il. .'illMU.IJi rtim wm:, .UJ. Ji,H.K,
ife and daughter, and a colored man liv-
jn tl0 S;,lll(. l1(ls(, wc,.e ;i:il.d Lv tho
same stroke of liht ning.
The Philadelj I.ia police have arrested
two men and two women, alleged Fnglish
criminals, through !iuni it is believtd a
clue can be obtained relative to the abduc
tion of the boy Charlie Iloss.
. . - . , fir . .
"a tor Ormsby, of fliiKorv tow !i -hi;.,
. - ' . - ' '
Mej.
cer county, thie-heil one day last n k.
"umu'imiii nm'i , l 1. 11 -.1-1 I ei.l IIOIM I lie
, , - , ,, ' ,
thresher, which all present agreed would
. . , . . " , r .
weiirh out till' bushels the product of tix
- f. , i,...!..
on,) 1 1 . . .1. . .. ? . l e.. ... .1 .
,Vilie rorlt, r st A11,ailS. y
j and her two children were gathering ber-
lies, o:i Frid.iy, one of the eloMien fell into
; a creek. The mot her immediatel v ? '.mined
iu to rescue the child. foil..wed by the other
child, and all three were di owned.
Some stiperM itious icop!e will av that
comets biing innumerable calamities in
their train. This year we have bad fn-e-J.
fogs and floods, murders, suicides, child
kidnapping. Indian butcheries and a host
of other troublesome and unpleasant th ings.
The New Peiifoid Mercury says:
"What the Republican party has accomplished"-
a sentence placed conspicuously
at the head of the Republican address to
the people of the I'nited States. Put this
kind of molasses will not now attract a i:i
gle fly.
Mrs. Tilton is of medium hight, per
fectly and voluptuously developed, modest,
not very vivacious, witli beautiful eyes and
a soft, charming voice. Sheisiuth prime
of life, er.joys good health at least looks
although slie uM), alui Jier ,!Klll,-lcrs ai0 j
; iiiosL w inning. j
! A terrible land .-.lip occurred at Alarr.v '
in 1,10 r'r'vi:i-o of Navarre, Spain.
Th
overu.V.lgtng ir.C:C
ft.!! in-on aud uttc-rl-.-
destroyed the village.
I'lie disaster was so
sudden that few of tho inhabitants es
caped. Two hundred corpses Lave al.eady
been recovered.
1,10 au FrancisC ) Pulletin snys tlmt
"bile two years ago there were ne.-.rly two
thousand houses to rent in that city, there
ovy a demand greater fhan tho supply.
S:l" Fraici never had any but a sj.eci"
currency, never deuiatidcd inilalion, and
ji steadily prosperous.
1 ho grasshoppers have proved very
destructive Nebiaska. Iu Daw.-on com:"-
tv 'hero will haimy be coin enough for
sccd- lie cr""" ,K'a" a"r' I-'-tato crops of
1Ic submitted his offer to iov. Alien,
compromised by commuting Dough-
orty s sentence to imprisonment for life
A shock of an earthquake was felt at
ienna, Au.stiia, ou Sunday last. A vio-
Ol ll ooy WilO, tlHH"ll lull fotli tCOll
of age, weighs -in ) poui-ds a stio
yea is
1-roportioned and unusuall intclli-cut l.id
'I'l,-.. .1,. ..... i...
well
I'v J iiw urn, 1KHH V11, V. 1WJ1 'S Ic.l ve tllO
same luck, tor one of their children is sin-
gu. tny constructed, his feet pointing in the
ou n-isac :"neciiou irom ins lae.
Two s-;:all children, G forgo and Marv
Atwood. aged respcc'.'vclv f.'iir and fivo
rears, havo been carried a.v.iv fiom near
Tunkhannoek. A band of Publish gypsi. s
was recently encamped near by vrhero the
little ones were stolen, and it 5sj thought
that they aio tho transgressors. Pariies'
.neon me-.r track, but so far havo gained
no clue a to tlieir whereabouts. -
Andrew R. McKahan, of Wavnc.-d.nr.
had just finished building a hay srtack, Y?-
i ,ir nit nnH i: ... t.z i . .
. .
or chain ith a fork .Tis hTnd ZVtX
fork fail, and then slido down ou the end
. . .. . i.iviiiv.
oi me iia.iu.e, which euteied under the
scrotum, and passing through it entered
the abdomen a few inches above, intliciin"
a terrible wound, which may prove fatal.
A, dispatch from Seneca. Kansas, savs:
,.P O.- 1 ... ii ...
Ua' 108 1 'k' Yno.re!,:,'t I-"" -'ity. s-
- ... " 1. li' wl,,,,as l,pfM' deranged for
r,n. n,ne P-
past, tlnust t in l.iirtf. r,r !.;..
Kline mrougti tl-.e brain of his infant child
last week, and then beat his ow n head with
a hatchet, breaking his skull, aud intiict
mg mortal injury. Pecuniary trouble is
saiu ro nave been tlio causeof hi
They tell of a landlord in Newport. R."
?'lsh"F Sot . ide of a sick
T J V, ' """" "-' p.-i- oi water upon
n'Ji'l 1
iuu inrougii upon t Iio poor co
Whoever has bound i ats, rye, w boat or
' . , "'of rt 1"'la '' a h,,t 'U,Iy self, died ma, ,v r :s
-, , ,L.J(,It.(i ,,, Jieui. ft h re.nark.ii.ir i.-ci
IS 111 Unncic ! n .
i ... i . . " ' ,,,M"U " automatic Lod. v senses ui;i
o. nner, which can follow and keep up with pai.ed up to th
a icaper, and do the work of half a tUy.cn was occasioned by a
binders. 1-arming will presently become t lie fool, from ivl.vl,
loli.v....;..... i - ., ..
ousines? me work be . ei,;..r
y mechanical, and the farmer only nccdiii"-
lu" w un ins mai lune.
.,vP:l' o must rule at a low figure
ic . iiuoio i it y. )nce it contained t wonty
hve thousand jieople and a daily paiier.
-Nownine familie- remain of all i U.L, , .....-
amis. It was not desolated bv t
h billed by a i.ine linebin I, r e m
l. .
-o o-'HiHl. or run. lo th laib-nn.l
no eighty thousand
dollar hotel, tho Citv
ii.ui anci lli.- wn)..i- ,. ... i.
.11 , ..
. .n-iKs
had at a very W price.
Could doubt losa
A dispatch f:
a terrible w .v,vi
tains on Fi iilii . ..
town, killing .
great d.-tir,i i.
d:palh I'n.iii !.!
cr-se'l 1 lie; f'r :.t :
llunil. :.lt V( ;
the travh. Tl -
was wr ked a:
d
An atieni'. v.
evening by a t. -.- ,
MUs., to lynch .i ...
fi w w ei !.. .-iiicc, k :".
action .f t!:e ;
' Sinilli i:i i.ii!. l.e -, .
Since then the !'i -'.
the jn i I, r.nd tli ..j
may yet lynch
: troiiops to protect ii
It will neer
J n. wu n a c
C' .loicd pa-t.'r.
dick. The K,
i.
church '.nil'.' ti..:
aceu.sed b oci '.a i
ing the chinch .;,!
to his own iix... a !
timacy with ti:c- w ;i
1 1 .!. i . . 1 .. i , .r . ;
er Piundiel: itenli.-- :
misses the ai'.cga-i.r
There is sot:-.. ;
the f . lner ami j ; ,.
::.'!u ! l a:iT t -, .r. t
Kansas 7", ". . . - ;
ci'-ntita::.-.- that
lie.'.! I'll t I . t i ' I -
f iiiihies, f.r tie- c
5 ii--!. il .. , ,.,i: - .
ever. ' Irrmt r-r-.l !,'.
of t'.-e o-ul;e; u c'o
a: pear that i!.e i
ch-tirn.:..;, oft!,, v.,
pct-buggi r and t he
A i.-.r..a'.:::e
; . , .. . . '. . .
r-
J:;ckso;i alui ;he .
tl..-..g!i tl. v iu-.l- !
soiiall v '.;!::t ;. o .. i,,-,
their gwlh.c! y
. a cert ain v :!- -
w as n w n: e r f t ('f . . !
nltanooiislv th.-y ('
tb(.-n:si Ivt' to a-r 1
Was c ,. j: ji t 1 1 'g :
'-. tl-i-lll !":;,''. I T. :.
1 tin other ii.H! b.'.-ii
either c f the gen-':..
Pecent cable
fraught w ill: ii;-.-.
p. pu'.aied iua: tei -
' , r . : : i .
o .1 e ii u ; :i e i; t i i ie;
simv LiM-s are if
. ...... t i .... .... .
. ui-ai i.-'iioeii. e-iio:
i.iiCs passing into tl
is the far.!'.;;, ; ,., ;.,
. '1..1. 1 ...... .1.. ..
I llll' . lil I : i ' 1 1 I
a year to w it :i -ss
, I il'llli 1 IO . IIJ -...!..
' .. I.. . 1
pilCHllOll 11. l.s 0:1. ii
, c 'il . e: l i. lie g i .iiu :
into a hospital. T
ileed gieat when
sorted to.
MY trnni; IV
wlii!e st :v!i:r!g tl.
farm of tl-.e f.:-n"?r.
ship Chester cou-it
l.err'u-s. says the:'
i.tl 1 1 i'lgc. fi;; :;. -.hii-'w-r-
(V'.-v :
tpl an
be
ca
tmuu.-er. Tii
iiaced in tie.
1
but left, a!
hot lit-te. ;iv!
v heii' b--h . '
(jiierlly heard :" b-
pari i :dge-. b-;t '!.:
l. ;,.i, r, l.... .. l .
turning the otv.; ':
lo.ph T. T:i
l. - . ,i .......1
ILLS j,lt C- ll-'ll .1.1 I i l
i:i" knife, wlcch f
c
coming the diii -!
with ST-ioothness p.
..:.l'i.. "l-i : . :. .
Itl-'lllilj.- lllls oi'-
T 11,1 1 11 1 .T-.-ll-O. 1 Hi.",'
kei f upon sawn ;
ti.m cf sawing, by
holes near the cue:
w liicn t !:ey arc re. e;
planing kiiiv.-s, ha
i ... , .
n nil i r, ii -ey . i : I- : i : .
of the saw inst far
tho kf i f w it ho'.u v
, Saiil knivus bi ing i
SUlcs so lual li.eV
rever.seii w..cu '.-i.i
biunicd.
. ... i .. .
.i i, e.i! o;. se i
brought suit .-.g.ii: -
siding near '...w i
' paper i f thai c '
o .... .....t . .r
advanced to hei s.
promise vi ma: i i.tt
a young w id- v.-, 1 :
.i iT.ilt i iv. !' I n :' i '
rival meat : b -.t
b'lti.i .-in 1 1 r I- mii'i i
off without res; ! :
ey. Tho 7..:u. s.-::
three il ivs de; i
l'oi o tio-a; ies t -icre.
I-seuted bv Ilal'im
I-.-.... ,, -ti.i .,.;.! t.
the defer. dan' ii:is :.
t nt li r.. band in ; .
g.1!l. was curs ,!.
women who came fi
ie pulsed angi il - - i
t ion w ith scornf-'1 1 '
tliougiit i:o more .-i
W'llll.l ll'L' IU " '. . '. i
t scream and sho-r
ciferous hin.it ic. i
-nossesio-i of i;:-;.
vocal o; g.'.'is. P . .
thus to bell 'W a:ul :
silence wneu li is l
him. At last ri p : :
dying from sheer wi
unable even whi-;
rose and fell like a ;
friends, knowing flu
mail s cr.iso. are .is
is insanity, have mad.- -eve.
to beg or biibe a '
she is not to be 1" ' Um
Mary Suilivan,
great age of oue bin
clied on Monil.iv of
.1 v.. ; ii, 1. .
Tho date of he; !;:t!
JSllO was b rn in t i i
County of Kerry.
Sho was t he cl i:--' i -tel
s and c!tc s :i. a..
ing for tiie p.i'-t tn .
she was .-! i ic: teie;
ulauts except U :
in any form. Hit' 1
until attacivcd bv tin
her 1'X.islenC''. iferi;!
her to this c ;::itiy
i Iia lcnion-t ranee 1 "
tlie voyage v
vears. t-mce re
iiad regal.iriy w:
1 iu- Cat lio-ic chili
oUd lU'llll'il',