GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXill.-NO. 93. FBOJI TBEKVON. f CorraiiKmdetico of tho Pl>U*. Evening Bulletin.l i TjniNTON, July 27.—The past week in this city lias been fraught witli more than thb ordinary routine of events/ First came the intelligence on last Thursday morning of the : deatfiof Mr-JohnA. RoebUug,thercHOwiiQd bridge builder, in Brooklyn. Mr. Eoehling s tood high among our business men as a, wise counsellor and man of the highest honor. He was President of the Board of Trade, and his: opinions were received with marked deference., by all the members of that body. He also car ried on a mill here, which gave employment to a large number of men. • ' ... JHis <teath .will long be felt by our citizens ,’ not only by his immediate friends and work men, but by those who have been the benefi ciaries of his large and unostentatious chart ti es. The funeral took place last Sunday. Several prominent scientific men from Hew York and other places were present, besides several of this State, and nearly all of our city functionar Ties. The funeral pageant was very imposing Besides the procession of carriages and long line of workmen, the streets were lined on cither side with citizens who took this mode of paying their respect to his memory. The interment took place at the Mercer Cemetery, amidst a dense mass of people." And thus' ends all that is mortal of a man of colossal scientific and mechanical genius; of a largo heart, the patron and friend of. labor. The last great work upon which he was en gaged (the bridge at Brooklyn) will progress, ■ inasmuch as the plans are all completed. His son Washington, wbo has been constantly en gaged on it, is ah engineer of the first order, and fidly comprehends' the designs of bis father in the contemplation of the work. The potters’ strike, which bas existed in this city for nearly five months, has been compro mised upon a basis which leads to the belief that it will be a lpng while before we are called upon to record another strike or “lock out” among the potters. A sad case of suicide occurred here early yesterday morning. A young man named Oakley S.Belleijeau cut bis throat from ear to ear, with a razor. His lifeless body was found on a lot between Warren and Willow streets. He was a quiet, honest man, about forty years of age, and had served all through the war. A too free indulgence' ih liquor is sup posed to have led him to the commission of\ the rash act. • A man named John Pool stabbed another named William Dennody, in the Fourth Ward, yesterday morning, for no apparent cause. Dennody lies in a very critical condi tion. Pool-was arrested, and committed to await the result of tie wounded man’s in juries. ■ THE FltESt'H CABIE. - Some Facts about Dux bury—Tlie Coble | In tiood Working Or<ler—-Tbe Olebrn tloa Yesterday—DhUagolidied Visitors. ■ Duxitvitv, Mass-, July 27.—This town, the height of whose ambition bas always been to : sustain a local reputation for clams-, has sud v deniy become famous through- the landing of the new French Oabie. It is ten miles from • i Kingston, which is on the line of the Old V Colony Railroad, and is reached by a stage i from that point. Not being' aware that the place was so difficult of access, the French : Minister and some other .dignitaries, who ar rived there on Saturday, were forced to hang on the lower step \of the stage-coach, which was crowded;? and. rode thus three or four miles iu the heat and dust, till their station and condition were accidentally ascertained- Dux bury is a small place, so small that it does not a hotel, and the numerous visitors who have flocked there since Thursday last have found it difficult to “put up” anywhere, as the few hoarding houses which the town boasts of were soon filled. Duxbury was selected as : the most favorable place along our Coast for the landing of the cable. Duxbury: beach is the northern arm of Plymouth harbor, and lying off this .: beach are two rocky shoals which serve as ' warnings off the coast. Between themare three . miles of soft, smooth, . sandy ground, without ; locks or shingles. The slope -of the bottom, s from the beach to the mud bed of the bay, is ,* an even and regular decline; the course to the •sea almost due east, passing between the Race Point of Cape Cod and Stellwagen’s Bank, • and clearing the George’s Bank still farther out, making a straight course almost in the direct alignment or the Cable's track. Prof. Pierce. Superintendent ot the United States Coast Survey, selected the -spot. Tlie calvarias been tested; and yesterday a speed of'4? words a minute was attained to St.: Pierre; aspevd of 8 words per minute through 1 to Brest, without repeating, and of 15 words per minute from St-. Pierre to Brest. Tho cable is now virtually ih'the hands of. the French company, but a period of 30 days must' : elapse before business will bo formally begun, as all of the terms of the contract will be t’ul i filled by that time. The cable across the marsh (as Duxbury had no telegraph before) is now'completed, insuring communication direct to Boston. ‘ One peculiarity in tlic method of working this cable is, - that it is not in any way directly connected with a telegraphic instrument. It is attached to a condenser, consisting of two metallic plates insulated from each other. The plates have a large surface, aud when the elec tric sigual arrives at one plate it exerts an in fluence upon the. other simultaneously, but does not.pass across. - This influence produces the signal. The advantage of 1 this arrange ment is, that it avoids the disturbing influences of the earth’s currents, and prevents • them front interfering with the signals, of the' opefa tors. It lias another advantage in promoting speed. The inventor, Mr. Cromwell Varley, says that “the induction of tho condenser enables oho to work by the increment and de crement of tho electric charge and not by the electric current itself;” To-day Duxbury celebrated the landing of the French cable. The residents'have 1 -been approaching a boiling heat eVei since last spring; hut last Friday they fairly bubbled over, and to-day: the result was seen. Jtwasr at first intended to. have the celebration last Saturday; out owing to the difficulty in getting the cable from the shore to the town, it was thought .best to wait until to-day, when tho attachment of the cable would probably be “an accomplished fact.” Between Rouse’s Hummock, upon the very edge ofthe shore, where / the cable was fastened 6n Friday, ..and the old hank .building in ■ the centre of the town, which has been fitted up ns the office of the' Company, is an almost impassablo.marsh, more thau a mile in width; and the’carnage of tho cabje across it has been a matter of much difficulty ; but at nightfall yesterday there only remained a small portion of the marsh' to traverse, and a quarter of a mile pf dry land. The celebration, as fares concerned the ’committee of the town, consisted of a collation* including, of cofirse, a “feast of reason,” as well as of tneatand drink, but a large number : of the inhabitants of Boston ■ and tlio towns of Plymouth county took a holiday, and visited the old town; so tliat perhaps five thousand people were present who handled the cable, inspected the instruments, f { ** f 1 r * I p*' I took possession of tlio telegraph offices, and; generally drove the employes of the company to distraction. The accommodations in ' the town for visitors are of the most " wretched description, and had it not been.', for the inexhaustible bed of clams ontho shore,which the natives kindly turned into insipid “chow der,”at 25 cts. a saucerful,strangers would have gone hungry until they got home again; The • town, until last Friday, had been dead for 40 years, but the electric current transmitted through the cable then galvanized it into a life which the residents trust will be long ! enough to insure the building of a railway. The notables of the town,' with several guests and 000 of the “great unnamed,” who Bad purchased tickets, rejoiced • over the glo rious event in the afternoon by eating a cold spread in a large tent which had been erected on the brow of a picturesque eminence over-, looking the water. The Hon. S. N. ‘Gilford of Duxbuiy- presided. On his right' were Sir Jaipes Anderson, the Hon. K. it. Sburtleff, Mayor of Boston; Mr. Day of New York, Frof, M. Birscli of France, Mr. Watson, the Agent of the Cable;Lieut. Vatsch of the Boyal Engineers, Mr. K. T. Brown, Superintendent of the Cable at its American end, and Mr. Hill of the Cable Expedition. On his left were the Hon.' Thomas Russell, Col lector of the fort of Boston: Lord Sackvllle Cecil, the Hon. Geo. O. Bras toWjHresident of the Massachusetts Senate; the Hon. George B. Loring. the Hon. B. S. Tobey, of Boston, and Dr. Chas. T. Jackson, the eminent Chemist. The French Minister, Sir Samuel Canning, one of the projectors of the cable, and other celebrities expected.were not present. Addresses in response to toasts of the usual tenor were made by Sir James Anderson, Mr. Bussell, Mr. Brastow, ' Dr. bhurtlefi; Mr. C. B. Thomas, of Duxbury, • Lord Cecil, Mr. Tobey, Mr. Loring, the Hon. James Bitchie, Of Boston, the Hun. Charles Levi Woodbury, and Mr. Day. Three cheers each were given for Queen victoria, Napo leon, and Victor Emmanuel. f Sir James. Anderson responded to the toast' in honor of the cable, and was loudly cheered at his introduction. After expressing his fear of his inability to do justice to the subject, and his delight in listening to so many natu ral orators as had spoken before him, he said that it had been his lot to be connected with Atlantic cables ever since they had been suc cessfully laid, but no rejoicing at which he bad been present was to be compared with that which he now beheld. (Applause.) It would be a ven- cold heartand a very weak tongue which did not feel a desire to say sometliing, if not eloquent, at least honest, in response to so cordial a welcome from ,the lips Of beauty, as well as of earnest manhood. He then went on to deprecate any personal claim to the honor, which had bcen conferred upon him by the managers of the celebration. He had not navigated the great ship, nor laid the cable. The uonor was due to Captain \Bhcrard Osborne and Sir Samuel Canning. He wished tliey could have been present at the celebration in order ~to see what he had often told them of—the grand welcome to the cable and its projectors, which in warmth could be equalled by no olber country in the world. »He did not envy the heart that did not feel romantic and poetical at the landing of a cable from-Europe, > o near the spot where the Pilgrim Fathers landfcd two centuries and a half ago: ’ The pic ture of that grand event of such momentous consequences in the world’s history flash ml to ids mind like lightning when Professor Pierce told him where the cable was to be landed. The voyagers in „ the little, Ajtayfldwer, great and Gou-learing men, came -from a land of political and religious' oppression, to where they could worship as they thought proper ,and their firmness, energy and’ : couscientidm ncss enabled them to conquer every difficulty that menaced them. The prayer which preceded the feast caused his nund to revert to the starting of the Cable of 1866, when off the shores of Ireland a most impressive service was held onboard the- Great Eastern, and he trusted that these invocations -of the Almighty’s blessing 1 might cause the cables to he always in the service of peaco and not of, war. [Applause.]' While speaking of the first cable, be could not refrain from paying a trihnte to his friend, Cyrus W. Field, to whom, more than any other man living, the success of the Atlantic Cable is due. i No man knew better than himself the intense energy of Mr. Field, even granting that the reports of his opposition to the new cable were ttue: it would oe strange if he did notopposo it. Mr. Field had embarked large sums of money, both his own and his .Friends, in the enterprise of tbe old cable, and it was human nature that he should desire to havesremunerative interest for them. So far as honorable opposition on the part of Mr. Field tO the new cablewentj ho did notTegard that as unfair or unjust, because he believed that if the case were reversed we would all do the same. [Laughter and applause.]- In re gard to the prevention of the landing of the cable, Sir James expressed-: little fear that anything could induce the American people to be unjust, and he felt confident that they were willing to give the new cable fair play., That was all his friends, asked. .If they. did not do their work at least as well as the oilier line they would not be entitled to the' public support, and should not expect it. But although this cable was laid on the shores of Massachusetts purely asa commercial enter prise, yet every right thinking iiian and woman would trust that it might he a great promoter and sustainer of the. peace, and civilization' of the whole world; . Sir James then referred .'to his many passages of the Atlantic (100 in ail), and liis yearly increasing respect and admiration of this country, in which he had as many friends as in his own. He eulogized the talents and labors of Franklin and Morse, and concluded with heartily -thanking the company, in the name of the projectors and directors of the cable, for the honor done them through him self. : ■ ■■ ; C. B. Thomas, an old resident,'responded to the sentiment in honor of Duxbury. He paid a warm tribute to the memory of the Pilgrim- Fathers, who landed near by. He referred toi the history of Duxbury, and spoke of the aid that Lieut. Broohs, a son of the town, had ren dered to science .by his beautiful contritance for deep ocean: soundings, bringing the first specimens of the bottom of the ocean from a depth of more than two miles. He referred in glowing terms to DanlelWehster,who might from his near residence be almost called a Duxbury man. He concluded as follows: •‘Here, then, standing 1 between the grave of ■Webster and the harbor of. the Pilgrims, we, in the name of the American people, extend a , cordial welcome to those: who. have consum mated this .gigantic undertaking, and ofl'or our heartiest wishes that this telegraphic Ware mayv he a bond of perpetual harmony between the old world ana the new. , A’ sentiment in honor of Massachusetts was responded to by Oollector-Easnell., Mayor i Shurtloif responded for the city of Boston, Which was toasted. At the conclusion l of his address, Mayor Shurtleff stated that he had received the following despatch from Paris: "To His. Excellency, the Mayor of • Boston, America :—The Prefect- Of Paris, rejoicing in this happy occasion of the closer union be tween the two countries, begs that the Mayor of Boston will accept his best Compliments and good wishes.” The Mayor stated that he had sent tbo fol lowing in reply: ‘ | “Duxbuky, July 27,1869 To His Excellency, ;> the Prefect of pans :■ The Mayor of Boston • • sends a most hearty greeting. May tho new bond of urnon between the continents be one • of peace, prosperity and amity; and .may the . citizens ot the old and now worlds rejoice in mutual congratulations on 1 the great scientific accomplishment.” •/.. . " " PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28,1869. Just as tlie speaking wasending, word was, brought to the Chairman that the cable had been brought across the marsh, and the com pany rushing out cn masse to see the joining of the,cable to the wire, terminated the festivi ties without Ony.formality. The consummiv lion of the enterprise was expected at sun down,when direct telegraphic communication nietweeii Boston was tor the firet tlmo rOri-' dered possible. The event was announced by the discharge of artillery,and the performance of national airs by the band. Mr. Boutwell al lowed tlie cable to be landed free of duty,as was. done when tlie cable . between Washington Territory and Vancouver's Island was brought to this country. It was 'thought that it would be possible, as. soon as. the cable was. joined with the land wire, for the Emperor NapO leon, in Paris, to fire a cannon in liuxbury by means of electricity. Had tbe junction been effected earlier in the' day, the experiment' would undoubtedly have been tried. A recep tion in the evening, at the house of one of the prominent residents of the town, concluded the celebration. lafajett* tollejjc Commencement. i Easton, Pa., July 27.— The staid old town of Easton has.been enlivened this week with the anniversary exercises of Lafayette Col lege. Commencement week was inaugurated on Sunday morning last by the baccalaureate sermon at Brainerd Church, by the Rev. J. B. I'.ekard, D. D., the-Professor of History and Rhetoric. Text—Hebrews xii. 1,2: ‘‘Where fore, seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight and run with patience the race that is set before us." Three leading thoughts were dwelt upon,and At applications deduced. 1. Faith in the holy, the blessed, and the in visible, is a power able to conquer sin and the world. 2, (self-sacrifice, animated by this kind of faith, is essential to all great agencies for good. 3. The great object of huihan existence is, or ought to be, to glorify God bv lives of self-denial actuated bysuchafaith. In closing, be said: “Let it be your greatobjectto glorify .God by lives of self-denial. You are compassed about with many witnesses; there is evermore present with you the invisible God; it is the, office of faith to make clear such realities. Try so to live that the world maybe better; try so to live that good men may ask: Who shall fill your place? In the afternoon areligiouscon xerence'was held at the College Chapel. The Xlev. H. W. Sproull and the Rev. Darwin Cook were the speakers, and religious culture was earnestly dwelt upon. In the evening, the Rev. A. H. Kellogg, pastor of the Univer sity-place Church, Uew York, delivered the st-xmon before the Brainerd Evangelical So ciety in theFirstPresbyterian Church. Yesterday morning the exaiiunatidns of the classes in tneir respective branches of study" took place. In the afternoon, the Kev.. Alex ander W. Sproull of Chesterf Pa., addressed the students, commendingithera for the grati fying success evinced in - their. examinations, complimenting them pn their classical attain ments, and paying to the Faculty the tribute to their faithfulness well-merited by their la bors. He was followed by the Rev. W. Rad clifle, of Philadelphia,-who brought to mind liis own collegiate course years ago in contrast with the improved method of instruction now milled to the collegiate course of study. These gentlemen, asthe Board of Visitors, represented the Presbyterian Synod-of Philadelphia, under whose patronage this institution Is more especially placed: "The eveningwas dedicated as Senior Class Day—College Campus.' The brow of the hill was crowned with countless lights, which were reflected by the stately Delaware at its base. The Germania Orches tra of Philadelphia .welcomed the attending guests, and a promenade- coxicerfjpreceded the literary services. The programme included a Poem, “The Doom ot the Ku-Klux-Klan,” by H.- Denny McKhight; the Class Oration; by Walter Q. Scott; History, “’69: its past;" Prophecy (Coniic), “The Fate of the Class of nil) Revealed f’ “Address at the Tree,” by A. Clarkson Fulton; Song—by the Class; Closing Oration, George E. Jones; Parting Song—-by jlie Class. / This morning “reunions” of the Washi. ig - filing ton and Franklin Xiteraiy Societies were had in their respective halls. Major Henrv T. Lee, A. 31;, of New York, Class of 1860, delivered the oration to the Franklin. His subject was ,•* intellectual Loyalty,” which he ably detined as “ the influence of thatcertain temper or dis position of_the soul, which, though it .is the. oflspriug and the source of many: virtues, is yet distinct from all; which is itself founded in love of truth*-in truth-and constancy.” The Kev. Darwin Cook, A. M., of Rradford county, Class 0f1842, was the orator of the Washing ton Society. His theme was “Mental Cul ture,’’ and its varied phases were ably analyzed and delineated. ■ » . ; ■ ■ ■ Tlie meeting of the Alumni occurred this afternoon in the Jenks ChemicaKHaU,and tbe session developed some interesting incidents. Mr. Wm. Kennedy, of Carlisle, Penn., was ap pointed President; the Kev. Dr. Charles E, Elliott, of Chicago Theological Seminary, Vice-President; Professor Selden J. Coffin, Secretary; Beuben Haines, Esq.,of Maryland, temporary Clerk. The Necrological Kofi of Deceased Alumni was then read, as follows: The Bev. Edward D. Yeomans, D. D.,Class of 1815, pastor at Orange, N. J.; Alexander W. Bea, Attorney, Class of 1810, assassinated in the coal regions of Pennsylvania, October 17, 1808; John M. Barber. Class of 1817, Paterson, N. J., March, 180 U; W. Hunt Budd, A. M., died in Louisiana, Aug., 25, 1868; Samuel S. Green, accidentally killed in; California, Nov., 1808; Stephen Story Yates, died at Auburn, N.Y.. November 22,1868. The formation of an Auxiliary Association of the: Alumni in Philadelphia was announced, The Com mittee appointed to erect a monument to those who fell in the War for the Union, reported, through their Chairman, Major Lee, or New York, thqt §2,000 had been collected for this object. Animated remarks in support of this movement were made by tho President, Gen. JaniesL.,Selfridge, Dr. Love, the Bov: Mr. Torseman, and Messrs. C. Salmon, J. Bur rowesand J. H. Neighbor. Many previous subscriptions were doubled, resulting.in the raising of $l,OOO additional. Tho corner-stone will be laid at the ensuing commencement. James P. Boyd, Esq., member of tho Docen iiial Class, read,an original poem, giving a re sume of college life, reflected froma ten years’ experience outside its walls. ■ This evening tile Hon. James Pollock, LLL)., ex-Governor of Pennsylvania; delivered the oration before the Literary Societies, in tbe First Presbyterian Church, in the presence of a large and attentive audience. The Governor Eloquently referred to the student reminis cences of his early life, and said to the scho lars—“ Now is tbe time, now is thebourfor .preparation.' If yon desire : to leave the im press of your character upon tho age in which you live, improve the present; mark and use WbH its.'passing’ momenta, and as day by day i n solemn Order ;■ moves, secure; from each tho; blessings that it brings.and add to knowledge truth, and to truth virtue —not that boasted thing of earth, that looks no higher than this; lower world; hut virtue, born in heaven, that rules: the life, that points the way, and leads us on to, happiness 1 and; God. Prominently marked upon tho ago, and dis tinguishing it from all others that have pre ceded it, is its mental activity, its intellectual progress and acquisition. The . evidence of this: is, everywhere, in every department off knowledge, mtke pursuits and business of common life. The tendency, of. the ago is to popularize science, to simplify its great truths, that its rieb treasures may be easily communi cated to the popular mind.' Its utilityilepouds upon its diffusion. The progressive' spirit of the present ware against every system of - ex clusive'knowledge in the few- It domaiids knowledge for tlie many, the spread of intelli genee ana science over the intellect of tbo age. OUR WHOLE CO ') jTbls demand cannot be resisted; this desired consummation cannot long be- postponed. Miudwith its wbndrous acnvities has entered 'upon this work, and, aided by the .genius of -Modern- philanthropy, success .is- -certain. -While. knowledge in its highest ilforms and loftiest thouglitshould befreC andi given' to all, we require a higher degree of scholarship 'ln the learned professions thorn they can now Claim. Young men, mistaking the promptings t>f vanity for a consciousness of vocation, un fitted and unprepared, rushintotbem, disdain ing to enter the more -humblO - but not less' honorable walks of industrial life. The result Is that the quack, the pettifogger, and the Sgertng politician in the race e the physician, lawyer and statesman. The age demands a more accurate and com -prehensive scholarship in, the professions—in lbP pulpit, the forum and the press—this last p power that gives immortality to knowledge, and knowledge to the world. But however; ;necessary or important collegiate : education 5 may be, this scholarship: may-exist without' the diploma sighed; sealed and cdelivered by professional scholars. The, self-made' man, Who, cast in Nature’s finest mould, struggles np through adversity, unaided by the ad . ventitious circumstances that make some men great, and writes liis name among earth’s hon- 1 bred ones—he is not the less a professional scholar or professional man because lie lacks the parchment certified by authority Of a royal charter or act of Assembly. The record of a noble life is liis diploma; Us seal, the impress Ofagrand and virtuous character. I nave ever thought Nature doth nothing so great,for great men, as when she’s pleased to make them lords of truth. Integrity of life is fame’s best friend, which nobly, beyond 'death, shall crown the end.” WIFE IHVBDEB IX CHICAGO. A Woman Stabbed and Almost Instantly Killed by lier Husband. y L : [From the Chlcaso Republican, Ju1y25.1 • The south side of the city, a little after noon yesterday, was shocked by the announcement of a fiendish murder having been : committed by Thomas Wilson, the victim being Ills wife, Catharine Wilson. The parties occupied the hack portion of the premises owned hy a Mrs. Duggan, No. 112 Fourteenth street They had four children—a boy of 14; a girl of 9, another boy of 8, and an infant'billy 6 -months old. At the time the deed was perpetrated, there were in the house only Wilson, his wife and baby, the other children being at a friend’s house. Police Officer John Casey, of the First Precinct, entering. by the hack way,. found MraVf Wilson almost -lifelessr-stretched upon the floor, weltering in blood from a fearful gash in the right side of the abdomen. Her bowels . protruded from the wound, and in': about two minutes after the officer’s arrival, [he woman died in terrible agony. Officer Casey immediately proceeded to the inner room; where he tound the murderer, whom ■, be at once arrested, not, however, without considerable resis tance on his part. Finally the Officer mastered him, and placing him oil a street car, conveyed him to the Twenty-second Street Police station. ,Officer Casey, accom panied hy other officers; then; returned to the theatre of the crime, and placed the body of the murdered woman on a bed, to await the Coroner’s inquest. On searching the premises a large dirk-knife was discovered, which was Wet at the time, although there were no traces of blood on it, and which is supposedto have been the fatal weapon used by the monster husband in taking the life of his unfortu nate victim. The murderer is- a man of about 40 years of age, and has lived in . that neighborhood with his family during the last eight years, following no particularbusiness. He has frequently represented himself to have been an officer in the British service, with what degree of truth cannot be ascertained. The murdered lady was, in appearance, a fine, comely woman; of about five and thirty, Irish by birth; and hearing among her neighbors a high reputation. It would appear, from the statements -of people well acquainted with the Wilson lamily, that the husband and ; wife havo been living unhappily for several years, owing to the quarrelsome and violent disposition oi the former. This same man, almost four years ngo,riangerously stabbed one Thomas Doyle, who, on recovering from his . wounds, refused: to prosecute him, Wilson never would work hard' for ~a living, and the poor mnr dered. wife _usedto take in washing to support the entire family,' including the" worthless scoundrel to whom she had the mis fortune to.be bound. She was engaged at her work, over the wash-tub, at the time of the fatal quarrel. ’ It is said that Wilson used to keep all the money, and the poor woman had to beg some of him to supply the family wants. This aroused the anger or the brute, and a few mornings ago he droveboth,wife and children out of their beds to seek shelter at' a neighbor’s house. Atfi o’clock yesterday morn ing, Mrs. Duggan, who lives in the front partof the premises, heardjMrs. Wilson at her door; she got up to let her. in, hut the woman went away before she could; speak with her. The quarrel appears to have lasted all day until noon, when Mrs. Duggan, hearing a fearful shriek, went into Wilson’s apartments and found things as previously described. She asked the wretched murderer to come and look at his victim, hut he -only said—“ There’s nothing wrong with: her; give h« r a drink of water." This was before the arrival of the officers. The tragedy,has causediimnenseexcitement in the.neighborhood, where Mrs. Wilson, al though in reduced circumstances, was honored and beloved. , Crowds . assembled around the house and gave' expression to their indigna tion in no measured terms. Had the knowledge of the fearful crime spread in the neighbor hood previous to the removal of Wilson, the exasperated people might have meted out to him “a long rope and a short shrift.”,- Happily for the peace and credit of Chicago, the san guinary wretch is nowin the hands of offended justice, audit, is to be hoped he will riifeef with condign punishment. > ; < At the inquest, held last night, when testi mony in accordance with the facts was ad duced, the Coroner’s Jury handed in the fol lowing verdict: “We find that the deceased, Catharine Wilson, ef No, 112 Fourteenth street, city of Chicago, &c., came to her death through injuries' received from a knife in the hands of one Thomas Wilsoni said to be her husbnnd.” - ■ Wilson was committed to the: County Jail, on charge of murder in the first dogree. . An Expensive fat. . A curious incident has occurred in Walker street, New -York. ‘ Nine’ days ago; while workiheh were constructing the iron front of a new building atNo;4S) Walker street, a cat by some means crawled into the hollow, part of the iron girder which forms tbo baso of tbe front. The Workmen heard the, cat, bat paid no attention to' its cries, and tho Work pro ceeded, thus entombing the cat. The fact Was reported to 1 the Society for the Prevention' of Cruelty to Animals, by whom,- it is reported; the builders were ordered to re lease the cat, oven if ,it became necessary to take down the entire, front to acaoiuplish it.. '-The front had been ejected as far as4ho fourth • story by this time, and, the matter began to wear a serious as well as an expensive aspect.' There was no altornatiye but'tp comply with tlie orders, and men Word yesterday set to ’work to release the animal. It was found 1 ne-’ cessary to removo.a small part of the side wall into which the. girder was inserted, and then (Chisels and sJedge-bflnimers were brought into, -requisition, tutu a hole suilicioutiy large-made r to enable the cat’to crawl through. The cat, .V: x CRIME . „ , which was.ivery thin and weak; as the result of its long Confinement,’seemed greatly pleased,' judging by its actions, in escaping trom the living tomb.' the ASTTI-HESTT TROrjIEEIS REVIVER. Officers or the Law Rebuffed—Tno nep. : otjr SheisUTsi Shot and Dangerously Wounded—The Sheriff’s I'osse Driven . Loir. ... The neighboring; county of Rensselaer was the scene of a serious disturbance yesterday, grotring out -of. the revival ofitheanti-ront The affray tookpjaceupon thefarm of William Witbeck, just east of the village of. Greenbush, and about li miles from this city. : From the facts >v« have been able to gather,, concerning the affair, it seems that a writ of ejectment had been issued against Witbeck, ■ and that on Tuesday of last week Deputy Sheriff Griggs, of Rensselaer county, served the process andjplaced Col. Walter-8. Church, of this city, in possession of .the farm, who, some years since, acquired the Van Bensselaer title to this and other manorial lands by purchase. Colonel Church placed three men in possession with directions to ; hold the property. On Saturday last Witbeck returned with aparty of some 23 men; drove the opposite party ofl.and again took posses* sion. Yesterday morning Deputy Sheriff Griggs again proceeded to the scene of dis turbance, taking with him' but one man.., He found Witbeck there with a dozen men, who ordered the Sheriff to leave, threatening re* sistanee in‘ cade he attempted to execute his prodess. He then returned to this city and ob tained a posse consisting of Deputy* Sheriff), Leonard Witbeck, of tins city; and William Southard,of Rensselaerville,Patrick McGraw,, Thomas Mulligan, John Woods, two brothers named Mullen, and- Gideon Mc- Menaiiiy, and ten others. They proceeded to the farm and orderedWltbeck and Ills party to leave; Witbeck thereupon drew Ids revolver, - containing four chambers, and declared that he would -not; leave unless; they carried his dead body; from the field. .The sheriff’s posse then advanced, and, as they did so, Witbeok : fired and:shot Deputy. .Sheriff Leonard Wit be.ck. The, ball took effect in the lower part of the back, on the right side, opposite the third lumbar vertebra;, and penetrated obliquely downward and inward, through the large mus cles and thnsoft part of tlieloms. It is feared the ball is lodgeain tfcti cayity of the stomach; The woundedman was placed in a wagon and brought to his residence, No. 28i South, Pearl street, in this'.'city.: He bled .freely, and the wound Is considered dangerous. He was attended by Dr.: Armsby. After the first shot was fired the. fight became general; - Witbeck and: his party tiring revolvers and muskets, and the. Sheriff’s party defending, themselves with their fists, Until Thomas Mill-’ ligah sncceeded in wresting tlic ' pistol : from ■ Witbeck’s hand, and shot him in the head, in flicting a slight wound. Tiie Sbeiiff’s parly , were unarmed,'and although he feared before starting that weapons would lie necessary, by the advice of Col, Church and others, who did not anticipate a formidable resistance, he was, dissuaded from arming his party. ; Deputy Sheriff Witbeck .hail a pistol,which he bor rowed on the way out, but it was hot loaded. The Sheriff’s partyrivere forced to retire, leav ing the .other party in possession, who con tinued to shoot wliile the foniier were leaving > and carrying off their wounded. ; Deputy Sheriff': Southard was struck with a club and injured. He aim received a scalp wound Horn apistolshot. His injuries are hot serious. John Woods, one of the Sheriff’s: posse, received three pistol-shot wounds, one m the groin, one in the thigh, and- one- upon' the knee. Ho was also struck upon the head with' a club. Although very serious, his inju ries are not considered of a dangerous charac ter; Deputy Sheriff Griggs was shot live times, twice in the thigh, once' through the shoulder, and once through the ana (the hall passing through a memorandum-book half an inch thick, and lodging in his side), and after ; he fell was shot through the mouth,the hall knock ing out a tooth and passing through the roof of the mouth towards the eye. He was also . struck on the forehead by a club after he was shot. This is the most dangerous of his wounds. Gideon McMenamy received a slight pistol wound on the hand. ; Dr. Mosherprobeeded to Blooming Grove to attend Deputy-Sheriff Griggs. All the wounded except Sheriff- Griggs and William Witbeck were brought; to tins city; and were attended by Drs. Armsby, O’Leary anti Van- 1 derveer. ; The affair created the greatest ex citement in the city last evening. All sorts of reports were circulated, and, of, course, the a flair was greatly exaggerated, and the resi dences of the wounded men “were besieged by hundreds'of excited persons anxious to learn the particulars. This morning (Jol. Church went to Troy to procure warrants for tiie arrest of William Witbeck and his two sons, Benjamin G.Dennison, and several others who were implicated in the attack upon Deputy- Sheriffs Witbeck and Griggs, The warrants will, in all probability, be executed by officers of Rensselaer County, the offence having been committed in; that county; It was rumored in tiie city at noon to-day that Deputy Sheriff Griggs had died from the effects of his wounds. The report, however, wasunfouuded. Denuty- Sherift Witbeck’s condition is quite comforta blo to-day. Every care and attention is being bestowed upon him, and the chances are that he will recover. Sheriff W. is a relative of William Witbeck, whom he undertook to dis possess, and by whom he was shot. Tho latter was also shot and slightly , wounded l>y til#. Sheriff’s posse. Farmer Witbeck claims that Sheriff Witbeck fired the first shot, and also that he tendered the rent, which was refused, and the farm defended. It is also claimed, on the part of the anti-renters, that the men were unlawfully taken from this side of the river, anil; that jmey, came the last time without a warrant.— Albany Evening Journal, Ztth. 1.1 ST OF PATENTS, Liirtof patents issued from the United States Patent Office for the weok ending July 27, 186!), and each bearing that date: > drain Drill—-J . Easterday, Frederick pounty,: Md., and J. B. Crowell, (ireencastle, Pa. , Dec Jliie—H. Filson, Monongahela City, Pa. Dorse Hay Fork— 8. C. Kelley, West Liberty, Pa. "■ ' Probang or Instrument for the Treatment of Diseased Orifices—G. S. &M. F. Lowell, Phila delphia, Pa. Broom Head— 3. M. Allison, Salina, Pa. Wafer Wheel—S. H. Barnett, Lanesborougli, S&heejr TaggingJigx— E, D. Crawford, Nfortli Metallic Keys —\V.JHill, Pittsville, Pa. - Lamp liumpr —Ante-datad July 21, IB6O—G. Hillegass. Philadelphia, ? Pai:ii> ; Jtazor Strop — ,l ..,Teukins, Philadelphia, Pa. > Attachment for U<ts Burner—J.G. Love, Phil adelphia, Pa., aligner to himself and S.. Fuller. • .■■■• : • I Meth%<s , of : Exploding, Xitro-Glyeerine —G. M. Mowbray, Titusville, Pa. 1 .Reamer—-A. .T; Prescott. Catawissa, Pa. Manufacture of Iron and Steel —J, J. Johnson, Alleghany City, Pa. EE-TaauE.—J)e«ico /or Separating Coal from Slate—Dewis P. Garner, Ashland, Pa. : Designs. —Josiah J. Ferris—.Gate—Phila delphia, Pa., antedated May 18,1889. assigned to himself, Murphy & JJrown.—Plates of a Stove, antodated June 2!), 1889, 2 to Garretson Smith & JH< Brown,Philadelphia,Pa.,assignors to Abbott & Koble. . : EXTENHiosieJ.:: A: Peabody; Philadelphia, 'Psi.—Machine for Mortising, Window Blinds. • ' FitANCis D.Pastokius, Solicitor of Patents, : Northwest corner ot'#Fourth and Chestnut streets. " ■ ' 1 " "v ■' •.. !! 1 - 11 ■- - ; p- =., F. I. FJETHERSTON. PnWisWrj » PRICE THREE CENTSfr, PACTS AND FANCIES. —All illusion—The bridal Toil. . —Fifteen to twenty car-loads-' of peaches; . leave Wilmington daily.’ —When a lover dotes, oaibis /darling, atre-* ) . iusal acts as an antidote. —-Somebody advertises “endless matoliesV' a check, probably, to divorce., j , —The latest name for matrimony! is “cont-i : muting twoeido.” - —A^ onl sang a few nights ago at Dore’s re- ; ception. ■ —FiV/oi-o says that all the heantifnl. AnMrf.'. cans in Paris have gone to Switzerland. - ~ < —The French societies oi Detroit are pro* ; ' pawiig to cclGl>rat©;tli6 hundifidtli &HQiT6rB3n r of the birth of Napoleon’Bonaparte. >': 1,— Four nieces of Whittier are mahing his Old house wake up this summer, and they do not disturb his dreams either. . / . —But little will probably be said- about ‘ at White Sulphur Springs- ■ while. George Peabody is there. > —Thebe&t.cafdof the Democrac y—the “last ' trump” spoken of yesterday by the Horn Richard Vaux. ! —Napoleon salutes the Secretary: off State tlir< ugh the French cable to-day. Strange that the first French message from the sea! should he to a Fish out of water. { —One of tiie blonde actresses is spoken of ' by.Riehard Grant White as having a velvet voice: She might have clothed herself and 1 v Sisters then. 1 —Color no longer, keeps a man out of good ’ society at the Virginia Springs. The two-col ored gentleman from Turkey, Blacque Bov, i» quite a lion at the White Sulphur. —At a meeting of the East ltiver Bridge Company held on Saturday, a resolution was- ■ unanimously adopted to place the unfinished work of the late John A. Roebling in the hands of his son, Mr. Washington Roebling. —There is a man in Manchester, N. H., wlu> ■ carries economy so far that sending messages- • by express lie requests that the envelope be ' returned fpr use a second time, should he hav» occasion to send to the same address ~ The model of the colossal bust of Hum boldt, executed for the Central Park Com mittee, by Professor Blaser, of Berlin, has . been sent to ,Hanover, where it will he cast in bronze under the superintendence of Howaldt. . —Experiments lately made in Sweden, on a large scale, upon the production of brandy from lichen*,' afid especially the reindeef moss, " have; it is said, ! proved so successful as to war rant the practical application of the process, i —At the Gong Branch ball, the other even ing, a great many strangers were presented to Gcneral Grant. “General.allow me to pre sent Sir J ohn Barrington,” said a dignitary in liis ear. “How do you do, ‘Mr. Burlington?” responded the President. : —The hiunidityof theaTniospheroyit is re ported, has been increased on the Isthmus 1 of Suez since the introduction of ; the-waters of: tlic Mediterranean Seu into the lakes. Fogs as dchse asthose of Paris have been observed in districts where, heretofore, rain lias hardly ever fallen. , • > —The Seymour (lud.) Times tells of a curious ease -wherein., bed-clothes infected ' seventeen years ago - recently communicated smallpoxto afamily. The bed-clothing- had been plastered up in a wall, and the wall bo ring recently opened, tho family incautiously handled the infected clothing. ; , .. —William and Mary College, which was lately an applicant for pecuniary aid at the , Northj is said to he in a very flourishing financial condition. After all the Improve ments are completed and all the debts paid it will have a surplus of nearly a hundred thousand dollars, v . i —A Hartford dealer in furniture and coffins lost a lucrative customer lately, who happened to natronize-a rival undertaker upon the death of Lis wife, by bailing him-orethe streetwithr “ You hny your furniture of me, hut whit’s the reason yon don’t give me yonr funeral - business?” —FoitEiox tbifx.es.—Wo borrow a little troth to-day from the brush of Figaro: —On the evening of the 10th,.three China- -' men from the Embassy took-tlieir placesin a box at. the Varietes Theatre, at Paris. The audience payed attention.to nothing else hut the oriental visitors, and theactors played at the pig-tailed critics exclusively. ' The..good ' -ncople-werb particularly stmek-by-the-'emgne. - - Each time that the artillery of applause went off, they stared in stupefaction at these fellows striking their hands together. :; .They laughed gaily.at the .grimaces of Gourdon and Leonco; lmt their most sincere explosion was at the close of rhe first act, at the moment Wlion some Chinese, armed with lanterns, .plunge the unfortunate Euce in a tea-box. The piece was Fleur de The. ; —At. tlio fair of Snint-Otien was seen lately the following legend, printed with blacking on a booth: ... •. ■■ Ecitusipn ; of five infants, twish • , of : the same mother. —llalfe’s Bohemian GiW,'so well known-on every. stAge in England and America, is now : prodijced for the first time in Paris. Thocom • poser lias never been satisfied with the singing material of the capital, but recently, finding, himself at Paris, vis-a-vis with, the exquisite . face of Marie Jtoze, the beauty of the Opera-, v Comi quo, he selected tbo fair creature for his ' Uoheinieiine, and she is now dreaming Of ; marble halls every night, amid the canvas ' Scenes of the Theatre Xynque. —Among the signatures to. the famous in terpellation . was that; of Bub tie Mouchy, which appears to have provoked some temper in high.' quarters; the Liberie, says:. f'Much', amusement is felt at. the blow of a fan. roeeivetl ' by the lingers of a young duke, just elected deputy, for having signed without 1 leave the demand for interpellation of the tiCrs-parti. Will hit.chastisement profit him?” ; • —'f he coiip d'etat has at length taken place •in the Clinmps-Elysees! , Thjre, the escaped cat gono wild, and guilty : of the death of all the little birds in the foliage of the Elysees, was brought down at six , o’clock on the morning of the eighth; by the needle-gun pf a chasseur, from the t<q> of a chestnut tree, wherein he had taken refuge. I —A conspicuous picture by Lazerges, at the Salon, represented the foyer of the Odeon on • the occasion of a first representation; among the literary groups were seen portraits of tho journalists Rochefort (of the Lmtierm), and.. , Louis tTJbach (of the Cloche). The picture was bought hv the government, hut the. Minister of Pine Arts demanded, the suppression of the two figures.. rTfiev-jiainter-refused,- and ad dressed a protest to. the Emperor, who sent , back the letter without any observation to M».: v Nieuwerkerke, in whoso province the case re- - mains. The question is, what action will the Minister now take? —A* souvenir of the Grand Emperor: ■■■■■■;■ Napoleon was one day dining alone with ■; Jlarie-Louisa at the Tuilories. Suddenly, ,in . the soup-plate just handed., the Empress, tl»e-„' hero of Marengo perceived— a fur ! Taking it between the thumb and index, tho held it out, dripping, towards the- ehambetw" lainfn waiting. ’ The great man’s faob was 1 dark, and be performed the gesture in the gloomiest silenoe.' The chamberlain wash ready man— ' -- He bent his knee, and, laying his hand on his heart, murmuredin a voice hrohen by emo tion : ' ' r ' ' * ’' . “Ah, sire.what bounty I The Empress's hair t I wUI keep it as long as I Uve!” tkesar smiled; disarmed. Tlienextday all the coote and bottle-waahero anA chwrfjermaida had their hair clipped oloa* • .j ■ Alt:-; ‘ s?; *}.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers