'-. i J"?. . Bi!iMBairM'1swrr.3,,??,?!"'''j t.r r-. VV " 4't. f ptr-' -,; -'-;?". - . - " TRIBfe MBER. j'fT wffi bbbbV ' - ,'v ra ""' !" , ,:y;eT . r- ' -. ' -. .j-.t -. - - - - ' r- . r. -a . : 'jjya, -, -.. C4 . . v . ., 4-k' W -VamBBBBB. k faaWBBaV ' -'r 1 sbbbt K.;f r a - v 'f,MV,i xJ.B'S.-j gri : , -aJm. A.m h. ar im IfHflftGBSiHi " I 'v'ICbV. r -.MaSt jj i ui.u u Hj lHKr'H BfK. k aaai aH v aaal ' aH aaai 'H .H WLrB ' ilW $ rORTT-iX)imTH YEAB. REED WILL-PRESIDE Tlie Man From Maine to Be ' Mr. Carlisle's Successor. W THE SECOND BALLOT He Beceives Just Three Totes More Than Were Seeded. EXD OP A DIGNIFIED CONTEST. UepresentatiTO Bsyne's Figures Hot Tar Oat of the Way. 4- THE OTHER OFFICES EAS1LI FILLED. 1 .Only two ballots were necessary In the Republican Congressional caucus to select a 'candidate for Speaker yesterday. Mr. Beed was chosen on ihe second ballot, when he. received thtjee -rotes more than a majority ofthe 165 members present. Major McKin ley had but 39 votes on the first ballot, and 36 on the second. The other House offices j-were easily disposed of, McPherson being .selected for Clerk and Adams for Door keeper. s rFBOM A STAFF COBSrOXDE3T.1 Y Washington. November 30. TheBe- j. -publican caucus of the House of Eepre--' sentatives met at 12 o'clock to-day. Messrs. Seed, McKinley, Cannon, Henderson and Burrows were put in nomination for Speaker. The roll was called; 78 members Voted for Beed the first ballot and 86 the second, which was several more votes than enough. That is the simple but- fully ex pected ending of the great contest for the Speakership. Now, that it is all over, most of the Mc Kiuley men admit that they knew they were defeated several days ago. The most con servative, however, did not expect so severe a'defeat They had taken enough votes from the Beed and Cannon columns, to foot ' sup over 60 for McKinley, who at the out - -come got only 39 votes on the first and 36 on . the second ballot NO COMBINES POSSIBLE. very attempt was made to combine the "STest, the South, any plaee or anybody against Beed, but every movement showed that J the withdrawal of any candidate in fuvor of another would but give a part of the released votes to Beed. For second choice Beed Was a greater favorite, even with the supporters of McKinley. than either Cannon, or 'Burrows or Henderson. A larger vote for Beed could easily have 'been secured if it had been necessary. Che figures given in these telegrams last jiightjwoved to be surprisingly correct, and gjhow. 'how carefully " the Beed can- "2vaM,d;beeScon?uc".ea.'TBey"were fur nished by Representative Bayne from his "own private book1 of certainties, probabili ties aiTd .possibilities. PEBTTY &.OSE FIGURING. The aggregate of those figures was 90, and Mr. Bayne classed 2 oi the 90 as doubtful. The nominating Tote was 86, and would have been 88 -except for the absence of Wit her, of New York, and Morrow, of Califor nia. Add these to the 86, and omit the two votes classed as doubtful, and Colonel Bayne's figures are exactly correct.' This was a' really surprising result, and shows that in the bright lexicon of practical poli tics' there is no such word as wind. Pennsylvania cave Beed 15 votes on the first 'ballot and 16 on the second Culbert- son, of rie,.conclnding that he had better get on the.winning side. The final vote, therefore, was for Beed; Bingham, O'ifeill, Darlington, Yardley, Brosins, "Scranton, Eife, McCormick, Atkinson, fCraig, Dalzell, Bay, Bayne; Townsend, ' Culbertson and Watson; and for McKinley: ;KelIey, JIarmer, Wright, Osborne and . . SculL This is exactly the estimate of the ,;.."iBeed'men, made two weeks 'ago,' with the , exception that Yardley was then counted v for McKinley and Wright for, Beed. HE KEPT HIS rSOMISE. Mr. Wright explained his vote for Mc- .J.' Kinley to-day. He says he met McKinley -.' latt spring, and pledged his vote on account of -personal solicitation. Being a new .member, he was readier to give promises f 'than he will be after he has had a term in Congress. -.The five Fennsylvanians who yesterday voteel for Carson for Clerk stuck to Carson toay in the caucus, with the exception of i dSelll, who chancel to McPherson. He " .privately explained that he would have ''still supported Carson had not the latter given to the public press his interview 'attacking Senator Quay. Mr. O'Neill said . he' had no quarrel with Mr. Quay, and could not sanction with his vote the bitter attack made by Carson. In accordance with his announcement, xnade'late last night,3Iajor Carson insisted ointhe presentation of his name in the cau cus, and the strength of his popularity is attested by the. fact that he had 50 votes, in spite of his setback yesterday in the Penn sylvania delegation, and entered the caucus really as a defeated candidate. . ' : ETEETBODr -WELL PLEASED. Altogether the caucus was of tne most pleasant and amicable character. Not an g 'ill-natured word was spoken, and probably sine out of every ten of the members were .aeailygratified with the result It is well known -that each of the defeated candidates ! v h A supporters rho would at any time have '.- ' preferred Beed to the candidate who got j$ ' their vote, and the general feeling is that the outcome is the safest and best that could have happened. -"Ol '"the otner officers, Adams, who was b'rougHtoutand trained for the doorkeeper jace'rby McComas,f Maryland, and ac cented as the one candidate of the Southern Bepnblicans, was elected by only one Jmen&for" the solid vote given wholly volun "' arjfjjto Beed, nominated Wheat for post , mister, whwh is nearly as good, in point of salary, and elected him easily. -'i BABILT ELECTED. "ExiBeDresentatire Holmes, of Iowa, who J .."-- . , a .iL. l..t VMnn.K.- I EjlejTed; Serxeant-at-Anas, and JKev. Bams- zh nr n mrmoer in me iu- vuukicu. wui geliabyiajtood majority, waswaosen cnap BSSowBev. Chester, whcvVearsago tried gtoIcareBsmsdcll expelled from th? Presby- msjoriiy over Wheat, of Wisconsin, and ;BelM: iriends, feeling that a Wisconsin .tmanought to have something in compli- terian Church because he married a wife who was a Catholic Bamsdell's candidacy and election was- due to his being Yale alumnus. He was a classmate of Congressman Sanford, of New York, who urged him to become a candidate. Another classmate in far away Idaho took up the matter, and worked the West; other Yale alumni, among them Hon. John Dalzell, added their snp port, 'and so the majority "came, and Mr. Bamsdeli will be the best paid officer of the next Congress, considering the amount of labor performed, though he will have only $900 a year. AFEAID OF ADASIS. A deal of misgiving is expressed in regard to the election tf Adams. The doorkeeper has an immense patronage at his disposal, and as Adams was the one candidate whose election was demanded by the 17 Southern Bepnblicans, it is feared the 17 will step in and capture every last one of the 110 or 150 positions within the control of the door keeper. But McComas, who" manages Adams, is a fair man, and by no means a "boodler," beside being one of the brightest members of the House, and he will not per mit an undue amount of piggishness on the part of his Southern friends. Gossip now turns to the formation of the cem'mittees. It is thought probable that Kelley will be given the Chairmanship of Wavs and Means, if he will accept, as a work of honor on account of his long service in the House and on that committee. Mc Kinley, in that event would be second on the committee, and first in case of Kelley's refusal. COMMITTEE POSSIBILITIES. Cannon will undoubtedly be placed at the bead of Appropriations. Bingham will doubtless get Postoffices and Postroads. Bayne will be given a good place on Ways and Means, which is considered better than a Chairmanship of any other committee. He does not seek a Chairmanship, but on account of his admirable management of the Beed campaign, he will stand very close to the Speaker, and will undoubtedly have great prominence; on the floor of this Con gress, and will be called on frequently to relieve the Speaker in the chair and pre side over the committee of the whole House. If Dalzell be not given the Chairmanship of Pacific railroads,it will be mainly because so many Pennsylv&nians, older in point of service in the House, demand good places. He is the logical man for the place. No other member understands the complex rela tions oi the Government and tliese roads so. well as he, and, moreover, he is first oh the old committee of the members of the new Congress. POINTS IN HIS FAVOR. The three members of the Fiftieth Con gress who had precedence of Mr. Dalzell on the committee of that Congress are not members of the Fifty-first Congress. Be side all this, Mr. Dalzell was a devoted sup porter of Mr. Keed,.anu a general wish is expressed mat ne may ue gneu me cuair- V anship. Henderssn. of Illinois, will probably be at the head of Bivers and Harbors. Bur rows and Hendersoa will doubtlesi be welt taken care of, but in what way is not yet apparent Lightnek. AN EPIDEMIC OF ELOPEMENTS. No Less Thaa Nine Families In a Little To wn Broken Up. rSPEClAI. TEXXGXAX TO TUX OIBPATCH.l Kingston. N. Y., November 30. The little hamlet of Boscot is at present fairly alive with domestic infelicities. The gossips of the place have all ther can possibly at tend to. Here is' a briefontlineofthere- ceut TiaUehly doinjjsi .JlStejf ar) ec'ded-J to leave nis nome anojnenus, ana lating- Alrs.- H. -van wagoner with him, went over to Pennsylvania. He had "hardly taken his departure before his wile followed snit and started with one James Ostrander for the same State. 'Mr. Van Wagoner, wh had been deserted by his wife, caught on' to a lady from the West named Blackmai. He did not deem it prudent to go to. Penn sylvania, so he went down the Beaverkili a short distance, into Delaware county, where he is, keeping a sharp lookout for Mrs. Blackman's husband, in case he should turn up. The triple sensation had hardly subsided before William Brown ran off with the wife of a Mr. Conklin, and it is believed they made their way toward the Quaker City. Mrs. S.-Crait then caught the elopement fever, and fell in love with a big stonecutter at Walton. Her husband arrived at the conclusion that two could plav at the same game, and is now devoting his time and money to an attractive looking woman named Allen. The wife of Daniel Cole then slid over the Susquehanna with T, B. Summers. B. Cook then left his spouse and has gone to parts unknown, and the last to be added to the list is the elopement of Mrs. Andrew Sutton with Z. Whitney. SHE WAS BORN IN 1785. The Oldest Person In Cortlnnrir. County, N. T., Din, Aired 104. .KFECIAI. TZI.EOBAK TO THB DISPATCB.1 Syracuse, November 30. Mrs. Sarah Chaplin Bockwood, the oldest person in Cortlandt county, died on Tuesday, aged 101 years. She was conscious nearly to the time of her death. Although up to a year agojshe had retained all her faculties except hearing,she had, during the past few months, become nearly blind. Mrs. Bockwood was born on November 8, 1785, in Grnton, Mass. Her father, the Bev. Daniel .Chap lin,D. D.,was a grandson of Hugh Chaplin, who settled in Bowlcy, now called George town, Mass.) in 1639. On the motber's side Mrs. Bockwood was related to Colonel Pres cott, of Bunker Hill fame, and her child hood' memories took in the scenes and inci dents of the Bevolntion. She attended Groton Academy and had, as a schoolmate, the late Amos Lawrence, of Boston, who was a distant cousin. She be came a widow six months after her mar riage to Mr. Abel Bockwood, and long after a half century she fondly, cherished his memory. She spoke with a great deal of feeling of the visits paid her from time to time by the historian' Prescott She said that she added years- to her life by her care fulness in the way of diet; exercise and methodical habits. AK.0FL. ASSEMBLY BOLTS Became of the Expnltton of a Member From the Order. tSFZCIAI, TZLXanAX TO THE DISPATCH. 1 Canton, November- 30. The expulsion of District Delegate O'Malley, or Canton, from the Atlanta Knights of Labor Conven tion has borne fruit Canton Local Assem bly! J. A. 93, which Mr. O'Malley repre sents, has withdrawn from the order and re turned its charter to District Secretary Lewis, to be forwarded to the general head quarters. Delegate O'Malley said to-day this was the. first assembly of sevin organized in Canton, and it was the last one to go. It leaves this city without Knights of Labor organization. ' TWO TRAINS ON ONE TEACK. An Engineer Killed and Three Other Em. plorea Reeelre Serlona Injuries. "Providence, B. L, November 30. The Old Colony steamboat train for Slonington collided with a switch engine at Branch avenue bridge this evening. Two engines were smashed. George Burubam, aged 45, of Boston, un married, ensineer of tbeOld Colony train, was decapitated. Three- otherC e'ueine men", were injured and taken;tio k hospital. No" pssseafen were' hart. - "-5 - TEBEIBLE EXPX0SI0N. Hires; Ton or Nltro-Glyeerlne Cense a Conca.don Two Mangled Bodies Found nod Two Boys Are Still MIsilua- Prop erty IlOl. ruraciAt. telxokax to rai dispatcii.i Oil City, November 30. Six thonsand pounds of Wtro-glycerine belonging to the Torpedo Company, of Warren, were being unloaded from a boat a mile below Oil City-to-day, and taken to a branch magazine, two miles from the river. Twenty-four hundred pounds had been removed, when at 2 o'clock this afternoon a terrific explosion occurred, shaking" the whole city and breaking the windows in all parts of the town. The mangled remains of James Fisher and Ud ward Huffman, both sons of widows, residing south of Oil City, were found near the scene of the explosion. Two guns were found in the vicinity, belonging to boys who were out hunting, and who were last seen shooting at a mark, near the location of the glycerine. It is supposed that both were killed. Buildings in the vicinity were badly wrecked. Wm. Fairs large ice houses, near the boat, were blown 300 'feet into the air. Total damages $6,000 to $10,000. NOT MUCH ROMANCE ABOUT IT. An Engagement by Correspondence That Proved to be a Failure. flTZCIAI. TIXEOUAM TO Till DISPATCH.! Findlat, November 30. A romance in real life came to a sudden stop "here this evening. About two years ago Miss N. E. Parrish, of Cuba, Kan., noticed an adver tisement from James Hardy, Charlotte, Miah., in a paper for a correspondent She answered it and the pair have been writing- each other ever since. A short time ago she received a letter from her lover asking her to meet him at Findlay, where they would be married, and go to her Western home. Both arrived here this morning on different railroads and Ibey soon saw each other for the first time. Alter' Eaying her expenses' here from her Western ome Nettie had $3 left This her lover, borrowed and celebrated the" evening by getting drunk and disorderly. They were both arrested and now lie at' police head quarters. James is charged with carrying concealed weapons and will likely get a term in the workhouse. Nettie, who u aged 19, wants to be sent home. A PROSPECT. OF WAR Between the State Governments of Vir ginia nnd Maryland. Bichmond, "Va., November 30. A con flict between the States of Virginia and Maryland, seems imminent in consequence of the proclamation of Governor Jackson throwing open the waters of Hog Island Flats to dredgers. Governor Lee received a telegram from the Attorney of the Com monwealth of Northumberland county, set ting forth the situation of affairs, where upon Governor Xee telegraphed as follows: Captain Foster. Commanding Stato Steamer Chesapeake, Norfolk, Vs.: Mr. Lewis enjoys certain rights under the law of this State. It Is my duty to see that such law IS executed. Yon are instructed, therefore, to fully protect Mr. Lewis In his' rights. The law of one State cannot be re pealed by the proclamation. of the Governor of another. -. FXTZUVQUlXB. A MESSESGJR MISSE?2,K The tvcHiutrnuDarr ui itbicu ub Hfll "RoTibrd While Coaming Money. Cleveland, November 30. J. W". Brainard, a messenger of ihe Commercial National Bank, went to the German-American Bank this morning and was paid $2,800. There were four packages of $500 each, and the remainder in bills. While counting the' money a stranger standing by him called Lis attention to a certain check in the pile. While the messenger .was answering the question his eyes, for a moment were off the pile of money on the desk before him. When he commenced counting again he discovered the loss of the four packages con taining $2,000. The stranger had also dis appeared, and there is no clew to his iden tity beyond the meager description the mes senger is able to give. ELECTRIC LIGHT WIRES CROSSED Caosed a Fire at Cmcngo, bat It Was Boon Under Conlrol. Chicago, November 30. The crossing of two electric light wires to-night set fire to the seven-story office building,, 221 to 225 Fifth avenue, owned by Bev. B. D. Sbep hard, of the Northwestern University. Twenty minutes prompt work by the firemen controlled what threatened to be a possible repetition of the Boston calamity. The flames were confined to the upper floors, and G. L. Morgenthan & Co., dealers in fringes And lace, were the only large sufferers. Their loss was about $3,000. A score or .more of merchant brokers were damaged to the aggregate of $22,000. The building can be repaired for $8,000. Governor'Gordon, of Georgia, was an inter ested spectator of the work of the Chicago firemen. ABLE TO RELIEVE ALL WANT. The Address Iiined by the Johnstown Union Benevolent Association. f SPECIAL TELIOItAM TO THI DISPATCH. 1. Johnstown, November 30. The Union Benevolent Association, a local organization which succeeded the Bed Cross in caring for the needy here, to-day issued an official address, the concluding paragraph of which is as follows: We wish to say aeatn, and say It "emphatic ally, that the association has the moans of re lieving any case of distress among our people. It is organized for this purpose and It is un necessary for any poor person In Johnstown to bee.and it Is unnecessary for anybody elsewhere to beg for Johnstown. If there is anywhere In the bands of committees funds or stores con tributed for Johnstown and belonging to Johns town the association would be pleased to re ceive them. WILL TORN STATE'S EVIDENCE. One of the nngeton County Seat Morderer Want to Save His Neck. CSrrCIAI. TELCGRAM TO TBI DISPATCH. 1 Denver, November 30. The prisoner Isor, who was arrested by United States Marshal Hill for complicity in the massa cre in No Man's Land, iu May, 1888, lias agreed to turn State's evidence, provided he is assured of immunity from punishment for his own connection in the matter. Isor is known to have been intimately ac quainted with all the events leading up to the tragedy, and to have enjoyed the con fidence of the1 Hngeton party, of which Bobinson and Feasor were the leading spirits. ' NOT A CASE OF BLASP.HEML Chana'a Death Turn Oat to be a Murder and Not a Solclde. Beading, November 30. At Pottstown this, morning the Coroner's jury in the case of John Chana, said to have become a helpless paralytic, as a rcsnlt of blasphemy, and who was found on Thursday morning in his room hanging by a rope fastened to a bedpost returned a verdict that death resulted-from strangulation at the hands of Ills wife's lover, John Kindarosch, and that Mrs. Chana was accessory to the crime,.. Kindarosch apd Mrs., Chana were com mitted to prison this aoralag to answer the fcawe of murder. ". "',: ' "v ' ' pitsbtjr&, sttndat; SED TO-THE FLAMES; Minneapolis Ihe Scene of the Third Great Fire Within a Week, rt-- A NEWSPAPER PLAKT DESTROYED. At Least Haifa Dozen Victims to Faith in Fireproof Buildings. MAKI MEN PENNED IN i, FIRETRAP. Thrilling Scenes Attend the Bescne of Xearly a Hundred of them. Fire broke out in the magnificent pub lishing establishment of the Minneapolis' Tribune last night and in less than an hour bad destroyed what was supposed to be a fireproof building. A number of lives were lost, among them being the Associated Press agent, a brave telegraph operator and at least four or five printers. The money loss will amount to over a million. IEPXC1AL RLZOBAX TO TUX SISFATOS.1 MlNNEA3?OLIs,November 30. The eight story Tribune building was gutted by fire which started about 10:30 o'clock this even ing, and it is almost certain that at least half a dozen people perished. This number may be doubled when the facts became known, it being impossible, owing to the confusion, to get at the exact truth, ax nearly 100 people were' employed "in va rious capacities on the seventh floor where the fire broke out The fire originated in the law office on the third story of the building, about 10:30 p. ill The elevator man noticed the smell oi smoke, and called tne attention of some, of the persons around the building to it The cry of fire was raised, and several per- sons went down stairs from the seventh story to investigate, and. then returned to work. t ' BAFID SPEEAD OF THE FLAMES. Before long smoke began to fill the nar row stairway, the only one in the building, and everybody began to make leisurely preparations for their departure, no im mediate danger being feared. The only exits to the building, which was, as usual, erroneously supposed to be fireproof, were a narrow staircase, scarce wide enough for two persons to come down abreast the ele vator, and a single escape at the north end of thebnilding. ' Several persons had made their escape in the meantime, bat in less than ten minutes ihe flames sought the elevator shaft, which, acting" as a mammoth flue, conveyed the fire to the top story, and soon the editorial rooms in the same side of thebnilding where the fire originated were a seething mass of flames. In a few minutes it reached the other side, where the composing room was situated. NO WAT TO ESCAPE. The building was on the corner and the only adjoining buildings were only one story in height, bo that no means of escape was afforded in that direction. The flames cut off the escape of the Pt'oneer-JVew, force on the sixth floor; as . well as the Tribune folks on the seventh and eighth; The reporter Barnes, of, the Jioneer JVejs.had a narrow escapejrouv the lraild ..lir''leTtittfilnaadafSliIl8ii Piciett, Ifft'aitfrfdnmty e6itoriah'd cmec-f the oldest men irf (he service of. the Pioneer' Presf. Picket;-wa4 lostinthe burning building. Thereare also as yet unconfirmed reports of the death of others connected with the Pion eer Press. But the Tribune force sufiered most They were located higher in the building, and had less warning of their danger. John Olsen, the President of a Dakota college; was in the composing rooms at the time the flames broke out, looking after an adver tisement to be inserted in the morning; paper. He jumped from one of the windows to escape the'flames, and met with an even more horrible death from shattered limbs and body. A FAITHFUL MAN GONE. James F. Igos, the night operator of the Associated Press, met with a sad death, as a result of his faithfulness to his employers; He was at work on the seventh floor when the report of the fire was first received, and immediately opened his key, stating the fact to ,the head office at Chicago, and asking for a minute's time to investigate. Soon he returned to his instrument apparently tanking he was safe, and told the sending operator to continue. In a moment he said he would have to skip, and found too late that escape was cut off. He jumped from tbe'seventh story window, and was so badly" injured that he died before reaching the hospital. He leaves a family. N. E. Miles, the Associated Press agent, "Was also killed, and an old man named Pierce, a printer, Harry Colwell. J. Mc- Cutcheon, Dan Maloney and Jerry Jenkiu- sua, pnuiers la tue x nouns composing room, were killed by jumping. It will be impossible to obtain an exact list of the dead to-night, as there were nearly 100 persons employed on the seventh floor when the fire broke out THURIBLE SCENES. A general alarm was turned in, and all the engines in the city responded to the call. The imprisoned printers gathered at the windows in, the south end, and shrieked wildly, desparingly lor aid. "Blurry the ladders!" was the awful refrain that bur dened the air. "Hurry the ladders, for God's sake," shrieked with all the vehe mence and power that the anguished souls of the dozens in peril of their lives by an awfnl death was.all they could utter. The vast crowd that from the opposite side viewe"d the fire, men at work shouted words of encouragement and good spirit to them in strenuous endeavors to buoy them up. The long ladder seemed to move up at a snail's pace, but was finally rested in position, and then the crowd began to descend, the flames making steady encroachments in the corner where the frightened men had huddled like cowering animals. The life nets were brought, and some were saved by this means. The entire building at this writing, in less than an hour, is a mass of ruins. The sparks are flying in all directions, and adjoining buildings, occupied by the Ideal restaurant, Steam & Van Winkle's siloon, and McCrystie's tailor store, are' doomed. A VALUABLE BUILDING. The 2i&une building was five years old. a seven story brickr structure and valued at $300,000; it contained the Tribune newspaper, the2rt&tme Star and T7ie Journal, the Tribune printing establishment, the editorial rooms of the Minneapolis department of the, St. Paul Pioneer-Prets, the Sventke Folkets Tinina, a Swedish paper, and numerous law and real estate offices. The loss will easily reach over $1,000,000; insurance not ascertained at this hour. The ZW&uJie was founded in 186T bjr Hugh G. Green and was at first an after noon paper. In 1870, under the editorship of William Wales, it was -turned into a morning paper. Charles. W-. Johnson, Clerk of the United States' Senate, was at that time' city editor. In 1875 the Tri&une was pur chased by Colonel W.p. King, Congressman"' from the1 Minneapolis district the hero of the Pacific maiL subsidy vandal, "When he lost his fortune the'paperas purchased bv A J. Blethen, of the Kansas City Ttfees, ..jw n travail Af 4iin ..12.' ezij s It occupied 'qaarters in Maiipal .Hall. Until 1861 wbea the aamiactMw toOd- ;pegember 1,. 1889. I, tm KWIBUEIED. ; Frl afthe PIrtC&lnee Babe Bern la Aaertca East of the Koeklee The ' P eeallar ereBelee-No Ex--... erclsea at the. Grave. rCtAI. TELEQRAM TO TH DISPATCH. 1 . ' PattADELTHiA, November 30. Eyee Kwf.-th'e little 4-year-old daughter of Joe James, a Chinese merchant who died Thursday night, was buried this afternoon with appropriate Chinese ceremonies. Mr. and Mrs. James had arranged to bury their little We to-morrow,, but the doctor ad vised them to. bury the child, immediately, and they were forced to disappoint theirmauy friends in this city who had expected to attend the.fanerah The Chinese laws forbid any of the near relatives of a little child to take part in its burial 'so the ceremonies were conducted by L, E. Shew; the Chinese detectiveswell knownto the newsboys of the. city. Chen was assisted by' four Celestials and three, ladies from the board of managers of the Chinese-American Union. The Chinamen first-painted little Eyee's face' abrighfear mine, shaved the ryebrows off, except a narrow-line or 'bajiv and delicately- Shaded the forehead with "white pain. The. body- was then dressed In Chinese garments nnd ornamented with Jade ear rings and bracelets, a diamond ring and a, gold watch and chain worth $100, and was placed.'liTa nan'dsbme cloth-covered .casket with silver trimmings. Across the breast was placed a white fan, and beneath' the little one's hand a card was imt, xon tainisg , messages from the family to their'friends in the other world. Then at the head and foot of he coffin was placed a potato, hollowed out and filled with .Joss sticks, ad a bottle of oil of sandalwood was throws' about the coffin, the vial, ieing placed with the body. The soap; sponge, basin,- towel and comb nsedfn preparing the child-for burial were also placed in the coffin, add before the lid was put ,in place, Ching Woha Lea, merchant; offered a prayeBin,Clunese to thelrgods: As the -coffin was borne from tne Louse the father of the little one handed to each per sona piece f maple sugar and a quarter dollar wrapped-in a-piece-of red paper as a token of friendship and a charm for good luck; The funeral .cortege proceeded to the graveyard -at Tenth and Washington ave nue. There were no ceremonies af the grave. EyeeTLwi was the first Chinese child ever born east of thVBocfcv-'Mauntains, and was the first Chinese child" buried in this coun try whoso.pareats did not intend to remove its body to their native land. The little girl was considered abright child for her year, and was .much! "petted by the Chinese colony iifthia'citv. AN OYATION TO GORDON The Seathera, General Warmly Received by the'Cltlz-9 et CWcngo He Hakes ' v aa "Addreaa 'Replete With - 'Patriotic pBBtlraeiH. Chicago, -November 30, Cheering and shouting-. to beremefflbered for a life time, shookCentnilMusio Hall to-night Nearly 3,000 typical people of a Northern city were applauding, a Confederate General, who, carried away- by the'spirit of the moment, was, grasping in His hand the stars and stripes, and Ja burning words apostrophiz ing the flag he, fought on many a bloody field.. General J., B. -Gordon, Governor of the-.State'pf Georgia,' was the speaker. The nswaablage fiad-gathered in the in- iprtnt ftP.h.'lrtrtntiniWiat in fhft finnfodpriiiA UesiBrChi'e-Ke,an!?t!h coffers of the box J offinrJmeTUllr Oathslage Were ," scare oi ibb moat prominent prpiessionat ana.ousi ness men, of Chicago, and .presiding as Chairman, was the Mayor 'of this city. ' The familiar' strains of "Dixie"- greeted the Southern Ieaderas he first-entered the hall, and when the great audience caught sight of his erect, soldierly figure and gray-mus-tached, deep-scarred, noble-looking counte nance, a yell of delight went" up that told him he was among his friends. Another storm of applause began when Mayor Creeier introduced General Gordon as ''The Governor of a sister State to Illi nois; one of the "United States and may it be united through all time with all the States constitnting this great Union. The states man and soldier." The outbursts of cheer ing here cut short whatever followed of in troduction, but all was suddenly hushed as General Gordon, in a voice tremulous with emotion, began his address, which was an eloquent and earliest one, and received with great applause. FEIGNED INSANITY IN COURT. The Plan by Which a Morderer Secnrod a Second Decree Verdict. Glens Talls, N. T., November .30. The Harvey Hodge murder trial at Sandy Hill came to a conclusion this afternoon. One feature of - the case that attracted the attention of members' of the bar. doctors and news paper men was the' incontrovertible fact the prisoner was assuming insanityin the court room. From the beginning of the trial to its , close. Hodge , became worse and worse. He would sit in his dhair fac ing the Court witb(staring expression on his face, contracting his eyebrows and twitch ing nervously with his bands. - At first he varied this by pretending to weep, but close observers coaldn'tdetect the semblance of a tear. While there- are doubts of the man's intelligence there was no question of his sanity in the minds of persons who knew him well. The jury re turned a verdict of "murder in the second degree.". Hodge was sentenced to Danne mora State Prison for the term of his nat ural life. r BRICB HAS A L1TERARI BUREAU. The Rainbow Chaeer ! Working Hard.fer ' the Senatorial Honors. tSFZCIAI. TSLXGRAK TO TH DISPATCH.! Lima, O., November 30. Hon. Calvin S. Brice has established a literary bureau here', with ex-Chairman J. BTownsend in charge, assisted by Walter B-Bicbie, Hon. G. W. Hall and A. C. Baxter. ' All the favorable newspaper notices of his candidacy for Senator are clipped and mailed to members of Legislature and prominent Democrats throughout the State are .corresponded with. The' bureau occu pies two rooms in the Opera House block, where callers are receive'd daily. Ex Congressman Lamison, of this city, and Hill, of Defiance, Ex-Speaker Marsh, Celina, and Bepresentative-elect Cunning ham, of Allen county, are connected with the Bureau, and are nearly all the time engaged in. doing missionary' work in dif ferent parts of the State. Mr. Brice is expected here to-night, and will, it is under stood, remain several weeks. JEFFERSON DAVIS VERT WEAK. No Prospects or Recovery, and Hlafrlesae Losing All Hope. ISPXCIAI. TELXOEAM TO TUB PIgPATCIt.l New Obleans, November 30. Jeffer son Davis had no fever, t o-day, bur he is very weak, with no present prospect of re gaining his strength. He can only take nourishment in very small quantities. The physicians' say he is a little better to night, but his friends are not, at all hopeful. Another Xaakee'Dialrfea e Wea a Prince. Halifax, K. S.; November 30. Aa evening' paper ia. fespopslbfe for the. an nouncement of the"- efefras-eweht of Prince Victor DhaleSingh- ter Misa TrHlefee,.ef Tcini ...u;,Vi. wsiv Vriini v-ui v vz -r - . -.r'. . ivvr?v -"i is prioarat-mcH-eata imhm. oi u-em. ea JKeeg.thoooMaiaaaer . .mm tM; TMAES OFEOBITI . " r .; - - a f xi A Few of the DhvaBtaf-M f Mg Ubliged to Wear a ww. . - 0SE Q0AREEL PARTLTPATCflED. A Prince Nearly lraapled to Dadi-lff Wild Elephants ia India. ;. THE CZAR'S FAMILY ALL SXKMNS. . .... Sir Korell Kacteaala Eiposkff t: Fhjjfciaafc. - Itaygrty is Tejwted, asfeftvisga hard.-te of it all-around just;aow Thi .Xtikee .of Wale''sid tkeDukft of Edjafctrghare hatching up-. a quarrel, Ae ,Cr aad his family have ifliueDza,,. tW&aaVs yeeple, think he is asad beeaasA'ie toj eJeaaiag up .the sweets, and, Prifee, Albert Yietorof Wales narrowly ,e6ped w";;tafiipled.to death iy wild elepfea., IrtfcJWeMll Mac kenzie exposes IhV ,ians ijjf-. English physicians on the sabject af lopiyy. rsr CABUt.TO THX DISPATCH.! London, November .30 Copyright J. The Prince of-Vales and the Duke orEdk-'. burgh iad, a Sespe-rate quarrel over the Eife 'weeding: The protld sister of the Czardfall;thei.BnMias, whose feelings were terribly lacerated by Beatrice's .marriage with, Henry Batteaberg almost went into hysterics upon hearing of Louise of Wales'' engagement to a common Scotch Poer, aad she and her husband did their best is break off the match, which was the more galllg seeing that Louise had already refased a Huwian. Grand Dnke. The efforts failed, and thenceforth Wales and Edinburgh never spoke as they passed by. The anni versary of the death of Queen Victoria's .husband is, however, approaching, and it is Her Majesty custom at' this season of r the year to insist npon the settlement of ill family disputes. BOTH AGEEE TO BE GOOD. The Prince of Wales was samawned to Windsor early in the week, and, the Dake went there Thursday Each, was appealed to by their mother, and 'adjured by the. memory ot tneir aeau iatner. rsotn prom ised to be good boys, and to-day .they met in London, shook handa, and lunched together.. This evening, they started tog-ether for. Wales' place at Sandriagham, where the Dnke will make friends with the PriScess of Wales. The Prince had previously made it up with the Duchess, and the brotheff have now to effect a recoaciliatioa between the two royal ladies, a task ia which' they will doubtless succeed. Fortune has not been altogether kind to royal personages this week.. .Prinoe Albert Victor,. of Wales, playing the spcfisBM ia Mysore, narrowlr escaped being tamaled to death by an energetic but inconsiderate wild elephant . ,,,,. HE BAN. LIKE APKTKTBK. The Prince displayed running 'powers worthy of a recard,-beating sprinter, aad thereby averted awkward complications la connection with-the succession to taeBritatja crown, r ' ' About the time that Albeit Victer'i-Mta . taih were flying horize-ntally in the windis xuuia, uwu, relative wore, iiuviuk wj a glewBt'twe ia Btnn.grgrinaa HwMsa. ml bvinit;Beea' erw-tea ,a .onef .-raapHe rrwt dancing attendance npon.HarijMliiiit, ' wisely wentryachting, for whicn Sels ftited neither by nature nor by training. The Mediterranean received him most unkindly, not to .say ferociously, and'. it was a woe begone Prince and battered little yacht that arrived at Messina Wednesday morning. The Princess Beatrice, Henry's portly wife, is credited with the -nosession nf Considerable amount of act but she showed none oi it last Thursday, when she jour neyed to Silvertown, a wretched riverside eastern suburb, to ppen a Tory church bazaar. itOKE THAN THET COULD STAND. The people ot Silvertown are mainly em ployed at the great rubber works there, and for three months past they have been, on strike for shorter hours and less miserable pay. The struggle has been very bitter, the strikers have had little outside assistance, and they are now npon the verge of starva tion. They "were, therefore, in no mood, Thursday, for flags and guards of honor aad gorgeonsly-clad flunkeys. Their leaders had begged them to be calm, but the sight of the stout befurred princess and her well nourished footmen and majors-domo, proved too much for the patience of the starving workers, and they hooted and groaned at the royal cortege as it passed. , The Czar has for the moment ceased to think of the Eastern question, having pain ful personal and family worries to occupy his spare time. An epidemic of infl'aenzs, of distressing intensity, is racing at St Petersburg, and at thejiresent.40 per cent of the population is affected the boom in pocket fiaadkerchiefs being in consequence prodigious. - X QUEEN EOTAIi CONCEET. The infection spread to the palace aad worked its insidious way through the households to the imperial family. The Czar commenced to sneeze Tuesday evening, and although be promptly and unselfishly quarantined himself, the Empress soon found her. own normal supply of pocket handkerchiefs inadequate for the increaaiag demands. Now the Czar, Czarina, aad all the little grand-dukes and grand-dnCheases are suffering alike in an absurdly audible concert Americans who stay at home at ease should not consider this matter too lightly, for, according to eminent medical authority, the tendency of this disease is to become epidemic, and it will almost certainly spread to other parts of the European conti nent, and there is not the slightest reasoa why it should not take a trip across the Atlantic The last time it appeared ja England epidemically was in 1847 and it is computed that upon that occasion a qaarter of a million persons suffered. EVEN' THE DEAD SUFFER. The disrespect to royalty witnessed this week has.not been confined to the living. The Deutsches Theater, ia Berlin, has beea rehearsing-a new military play, said to be of great merit, but at the last moment its performance has beea prohibited because the character jof the Elector George Will iam, of Bradenburg, ir not delineated' with the, respect due. to the ancestors of the Prussian Boyal House. The German Emperor's shooting this week has been upon an imperial scale. .Ia two days- there tell to his. -pile 765 head of game, tbe victims including dee'rs, hares and -pheasants. The other evening the young Emperor, in sight of a cheering crowd, helped the aged Von Moltk'e pat on his military cloak, buttoned it up lor the old man, and tnrned up the collar. The next day some humble miners at Beckling hausen were indulging in frantic "Hochs" at tne receipt of a kindly message con veying the Kaiser's congratulations oa, the gallant rescue of a party of entombed work men. A GBEAT CBOWNING SCHEME. Wilhelm returned to Potsdam this after noon., and- next week h is to talk with the cereaaoaial sharps respecting a scheme' for- having himself crowned German JSaiperor in the JSoemerat Frankfurt-where, in the ,3ays ef the holy. RoMia Empire, before the HoheaidlleraMd.Jcnade maea. neiae in the WM,.eeaji ef Iti-wi Caraway -.'I'8pela.e BidWh , iiiiiiiI Vt. thesaiim eC -! I-- .m-li... fcaaiB-A . ta SfcaaSB': QfMMt defeat CterieWaa, wi imfAm aad BeDaUiessaeeld.she att at tewlamo iate' ahohUien, of which she baa beeeme sespected siaee a long visit of aa aateera-tie AaMnaa archduke. Tbe Peis have new ao dabt tht his Eareaeaa tear apeet the Shah's msatsl eqailihrittm. After he retaraee teTehetaa he. -went abeat tbe palaee, soifiSlag.iaTin kWdly fashion, aad. now ,he'Mvergoes abroad without oomplainiag-'of, the abomi- JMIvsQ SflsvuSa, SUBE PBOOP OP MADNESS. - ."The Sfeah has ordered hundreds of hoases. ie be palled' down, feul slums to be demol-" iehed, aad aew street to be built, while, .'the; very latest and crowning proof of his wad nees is a royal order for the commencement of the syetematio sanitation of the "Persian capital, ' Dom Pedro, late of Brazil, who ari vedat St Vincent to-day, is expectedat Lisboa Wedneeday, and the city is fining -up -with reporters' charged it) interview him'. The Portuguese Bepnblicans have beek holding meetings aaJ passing reselations of co'n gratulatioa and sympathy with the Bra zilian revolutionists, ' and they threaten, a big demoD jtratioa ia Lisbon the "day of Pe dro's arrival. Should they attempt to carry' out the threat there will probably.be blood shad, as' the chiefs of the military'and police forces have received orders to sup press, any dmomtratioa-at all hazards. IGNOBANCE EXPOSED;, 'Pbyftetaev Soate Very Hard Seals ' What" They Bon't Kmit fcealii our Weald FIH a Xlfcrary. " 1ST CABLE T3 THX DISPATCH.! London, November &), -j- Sir Morell Xaekeazie is giving the, Keyal College of Phys-iela'nsr aad Surgeons -sease Very bad cemhei Nineteenth Century as exhaustive article, called 'The JsTreadfal Revival 'of Leprosy," ia' which he goes' fe-r his brethren of the royal institution, collectively and in dividually. He'terms the committee's re port of 1868 "aal ill-starred docament, which hat done wk to' propagate the disease than any other tfag'le ageaey sinee the eraaade' Ottbis eommittee he' declares only two members' had1 the smallest practical ac quajataaee with leprosy. OHe ofthemj, Dr: Owes Sees, baviBg metoae case, aid the other, Dr. Gaivin Milrby, having Mid. a harried Visit, to Demerara, wheieae was egregionsly hoaxed, eved bylfte dall-wiMed lepers. Sir Morell support, all hta as sertions by abundant iaeideatt, aad rms Up the case tha: The c'ontaakiasaesc of tae"rieae wae never doubted till It' had nearly died oat. Men ceased tobeHevela coataio when-they bo longer sw daily laetaaeesef It Tbewkele system ot th medical police,,by whlek learosj was anally driven ont of Earopeaa oooatries; was based on tbe notion that it wae oaatectoa, aad, no measures not base on that etaciple have ever had tee slightest effect HteWekiBC Its ravagea. The atarmlac; spread at tsria leata soine pest in Tecent years la In myeajalon aae to tha facf that", for hm time the- opposite doctrine' gained ascendency aad keW eaptive the minds of men. For thi perafetea error, asd for all the disastrous eon I'qaaaaw that 1ht towed aod eoatlaaad to'tewJtaataVthe Royal CoUeae ef Fhftieuas t Leaiaa la eaieayreBfStfrMar , ' ' Siriaeaellkesiire beiwe ea ef ike meat eritsM adieai in Oveai Beitaia, at the PMtlaaaedaariaetitatini at Idiabarab. aaee; u aearir everv iaMmrtaai sowa, in the: T FB, aPaWaWpaa aat JMal aBFSaevft ,um wqgyi iisws otaaot oeai j! 2fm i - XeweH Inattoita: ka ieaia. Jhx OOkatcs, eetteaaaadaat tkat he it - voBmtaigrtvK ye preet 91 aai iverieaa fmr serionslybatbaa aet yet- arrived at a Aeal determluaMoa.- in the matter. ' . r GAMEWSQ 0AU1I3 A CKASg. . t . ... A Stock Xxeheace-eterk aV Several Me" 'MtiaelafeVreaeW ' 1ST CABLE 30 TBS. BIMATCy.J London, 'No veaW 3: 'A: Sfeek x cba&ge clerk, who gambled with His em ployer's money, found himself short recently of between JSS.OeO aad.7,W0,.aBdi a crash was the result A eeeemlMee? ot tte ex change baa been making, inqairiea regard ing the first, who had been dealing with this defaulting elerksachtraaeactioas be iag ehtirelr against theirrBle, aad as a re salt several of them have been tBependea', one firm for as losg as fire years, a seateaee which k generally regarded as beiBg rather excessive. B0ULAXGEK VAXES AN0THIK MJS1F. He Caaees JeSrle'a gle'etlea ' be Am- BODOCCK Bjr (BO CarttTvaaMavCwC -i rpr CABut to rut visti.tcanf London, November 30. Beulaager aae made-- aac4ber mistake- Learaieg that, a bareau of the Chamber bad invalidated Jaflrin's election, for Meatatartre. the General promptly telegraphed that he wast ready te centeet we seat again n ref airea. He- shoald have carded hsa impatieaee, for the bureau, at a hint from the Gavera ment.reaHembled, reversed their deaieien with cemieal' rapidity, aad ieladJTaia dalyeleeted. ' . III BiSPATfJH BI1ICT0ET, A, Table of Caatents- Hr XMa. MaaHaeth'Trlf te keae, The Dispatch, "this morning Is nnaeaslly brtaBd latef estiog from the aiet page to the twentieth. The paper, owing to its immease SIee,.is Bcaoiaanly divided into three parts, the first beimcdevotedexclativelyteaews matter, aad the second aad third parts to articles of a special character, the more bsaertaat Being as follows: Part IX. Page 9. A FoBaUr Coraer ......Walks A Hosklmt-Komanco ...;. .....LAUBXL TbeCbatelabteofBaratJade..VrHASTB Page 10. X Bleh Man's Plaee. ...,,.. W. Saomu, Bailnee Cares. Pastil. Where are HieNlne?. ....., ....GSOMI H0DOS3 The Pride of Race' , V. SC KaT Wants, To. Lets, l'or 8lfc etc. Pagt It. TSeGyldorLlfo. - Let as So the Play. The Boys of Sixty-One. Pedsaosae aad Pupil, Weekly Art Bevlew. - Kttebuss Carat; Ps ft a. Every D7Seleee.r.....,...-....STATT WRITS Late N ews. Tlaaaelat latetlleac. Bnl Ord. P0U., Aa EhxIM Seen K. F.. Walsh. ESStVNiMS Wt.- .....i....OMBALO. Acted Ja Lite Mea1...........BESa BkaKBLX. 'Natloaal Gaard Notaa; Buslkeu Cres PageO. The Law's Mettles ..,...T. J. JTrsaesALD joe's iBia nht...............-.....McrABLxsD. After the Bis Fair ..'...; Ssajhmut BosIbcm Cares. -Pees 2S" News of tkeLoeeatv AmaMoeat AaaoaassaiSats. Beslaess Ca?atV JPaetia-Srf.. s ( P(WTT Befeeetae Battle.... Wetaaa'sMealliaB, .TBADC'V; CAarBTTSB ........ tttarj. Heuua .....Paer. ttaoae Baaas ) Dtetai aatf.liaaaers... A.illi QTItAM etsU.llBLt3B a.' er esaaat'S IMly... OiStirm. tee fttattea T- .XaxseT'St. Bsaxaioss ,......J. D.Hcouas luaSasf facTaraoa.-i., WE JB.VWWMJ I..L. r. BBSISA t ..K. a. OsAacKjaa naflba CMf-1 Pa sea a r..sn;.l..,t.'Mav,i m .? '"SlsWtMllrWaiayais cstwui mmffikSSZm raaa-wasnas Two Aifry lei parried to tkn BOM.HQWC TE ff Wei Wonld Seem te SkawM saaa ' Teii'AMe-rtlonF! A mQ'HKT' flSTM MUtj - j. -?- ' .'A . jWSSl-r-. ' . Ihe Krst-Ilattaaa Sors Slw ff Imhk imSi .; Jfarrled the I A. very peealiar marital dwealtyfc'ai tatiag-Jjons'isiaaa vitr, x(,i..,xmii claim the. same woman as a-wift, aad 1 seem to have tie neeeasary peoefit ofai nage cereaaeny- One of the J -festa that the woaaanfa iaeaaityiie thai of the trouble, bat she denies that i rsraciAX, TauoaAK so rax wirAet.lj,-.ar j i- -: Nrw Yobx. Novembaf 30. A complication has been breath to, Ugaaii Long Island City, in which Charles Guimw and Eugene Dautreville each ch same woman ae his wife. Charles' ' is a traveling' salesman for a piaae t company. He owns s cottage la--, siiaTBf His bass&ess takes him awav frost homajSrg months at a time. Last May wbea Kji turned after an absenee of several- he was surprised to find Daatreriwi possession of bis home and wife. AfiTiafaia man was.caiiea in to queii a tnat loiiewea. Daafeevilk claimed Mrs. Ga wife aad refased at firs" to leave tbe He was Mally prevailed oa tOqBit,.baij .111 .2 . a 21 - - - uuHC9aittBtteu u? viii ucr uuriK; vrm absence. He also received letters fm Tha' following month Gardaer reated ajj in 'JLhtrd. aveaae aad toot bis wii. i live. Dautreville was kept Infi rival's asevemeats hv Mrs. G says he viUed .Mrs. Gardaea, Dautreville, oa the adabt W J a ner came heme early the nest caueht him tnenr. There was a i SEnaaft mTJl- rtsai-''-! DaadeyUfrsflKKi xot oppbneaJBSQPirjBa J retreat saiahim la nremises. Soon after this Oardaeri to Astefia to lr and started aerssi other traveliatr tear. Before he Mbtl ferences bstweia hist aad" bis irtsVaaitl setisiacwruy aaraeteo. Jtae .jsibishb a iwwi weeks age,. and again he fwst JaaSsiasiHi living lalkis beaae. . ,, aow mwma mmvimw imnj jwm. ass, Mrs. Oatiair is said te hart aetsaht Pe4asV tlen wssm er saMhakaas. a aasa fleet et aa,a Her OM that he au'ekf SaaajiB 4lrv STrwaaaaiv hlaif he ever UaaosibM again- Daastevtsfe, aa Mrs. Qaraaat as jjfclayal wife. oertuteate was ysasnsaaa to assertion. . Mr. Giilaats:a In says that asssm he neat to saaniaataawsMaass -wu " " --- lilaiii tlhil aaya hsHwaa jsaarried'te Mrs. ShiMasVWh-eanU: years He ssvs.tbatnehesftTtrrr that his wife is not ssae. 8i years. TJaoa her reeoveryhe aaye' hibited stm. o:iusanlty. Mrm. does set deny her mafriae wftev ille. .She says it will take Gardaer to prove her iseaae, "iPj preparaa m aaj wiu aae wutua a Mr. uaeemer sw take, lesjat against her, ItisaOeaed that she hasreawtta her'netghbecs and others that she waej married te Mr. Gsraaer. fJSajiaa villa is aalr 96' vears old. The w claims as his wise is between 4 ae4s9u old. She has a seu, Charles 24 vears eM. aad a dan aster 7 She is of.nuaism height aad risssaafl dark hair-saaeaes below her waiat w4tsaa eombs it ' DautrevSJa's fctber lives la isjwid ta aim ssaaidsrabls pMptety. uaatreruM atasaed law at as takes m ask soiae la dress. Hs ia of the fimenColf & DavbwriHs. apparently aaaair u leys wMHSke wnom ne resjaros as ats wn, a lag the diliiiasc in their saesw &. THB-aTMBB MDSWO TSfl.&MStf' 3Crs.OsWdarassarsd him thai never Mmtm. te Gardaer, aad naaera taetamviaeed bias of aha herassertise; . Oa Baasaty, Jsaasiy' aays mey went w jnewjnwm, aaa. ried by tfce Bev. 3(ti. Saepaerd. of the mlajeesrV family were Mrs. Gardaer renoeseed the aasse been known bjr for almost 3jftsnsy marneu itwsvr aer luitno Llovd. A sotiee of the ma lishedJa the aewseaaersv and a certificate is est lie ia the'osase of Clerk in JTewtewn. They UTad ia ner cottaaw.- where their hsasn broaght te seek an abrapt eeelag-by' pearaaeeot mr. waraaer. As Gardaer had threateaed to Dautreville aoes armed, aad afceeW attempt te earrr eat nis tareas, m sbts there will be ae ebild's peay buu ne says taat, navies; Met a sand dollars ef late, be is aea- present te take his, wile awsy tsssar aad give her a home, AstaWsata) stands Gardner is in poeseesie- it taze and ef -Xrs. Gardaer I while Damile lives irtth fces tSSBBBBrag iiitSHSSS uirmx to ii teraeiAS. waaaeaAjc to b assra CoLtrxsetv JTovember 39. 1 going to be ecastsssent la the Ofcss in January. - The Xeatslatare Sret'Moniav of that month, waea X. Iu T issyiis, KepablieaB, will. Be i la as Liekssaaat Governor, m Jais i be eeateeted at. oaee by Ue Be. Mrfl aafa. Demsssat Os tbe fees ef tarns, aad-. allewiae the the beaeaH, at IrreealarWes. was elected bv XI aeiority tat a Best 0e votes. SyUte advice of taSassM ocraus wessesitsse, jsaraaia wm i Lamaaea's saat, aad the Demeeraste datehaa MtaiaecL ex-uongresssaast L. Convesseaad T. D, Powell aa-1 while Laasaaoa baa employed exvj GeaeralJiasaadA.U. vooratai battle. Xaaasa inaaalsrlties' beea dleeevered te .elect SCarqah msloritv. The Sseete has ft asl i and. there are 19 Democrats aad 17; cans ta tM ao4y. It is saie te fm Lamaeoa wifl be "fired" in a ; tae aeease n ia assswa. Ia the seraasrfe for the Seassenitfa. CaJvin S.BriemJ "the lead, aad will undoubtedly aaMIheJs aesaiaated or aaaeasia Jaaaarr. JbbaH.1 odd seeeast with ex-OtsrnsaaMjgJ XeMaeaasseeMhlsaasp. waj keeafdaaa.haisvideat aa HvpC TilwtaBsV bMsseaeMtBM . a '-a . - - V. Brie baa aaa V&PqBM &m?sm g0DKII1i Uwu - - afaewriv. totae isaHis n metmisaaa BL y r -em -T -TBWBK. BBVBBBIBk BS S-aBCaBBLBBBBBaA' .- v 1',r-?'ii-.r.,---1)eWkiSE-tii;-.S , j.Wt,SK'..-vrKL- 2aaji i a-: i .- ?--j -. ..- ijf. irw-vi.. " &AlJaa3UKSL J?2.-? t .ii.?LiMtimi1--JtSat 2.L &U1 . -i - yrJaSHC 3KAaiA&TJIk