Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 27, 1869, Image 1

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MEE
MAN' ppm Faiiir
.r: . r)l4l.f4' .. .lilit'O - iis,
Otfit CllllllvAem,
thle.sso 30arnallsta—fiketehes of the
Editors and iPsopeletors•
(Correspon4ance of the Phile.Avenlne Halloliq,l
UHWAGO, August 24, ,1869.--It has become
quite the thshienwith 'our newspaper press to
recenimentgour Lake Citrl*llo 'place above
all others on this contine4;ti, Ue,selected ae• a
summer resort. But the heat, which .today
knows no limits, the population ; of the entire
west division of the city famishing for water
by reason of a clumsy and a careless
main, sinflllA airlUled With those insinuating
sand.flieriborn •at eight o'clock to , die:at five I
and-Lbeia;4l4:•to dieLtogether - -suggeft -- to
.zonr . ; contsOcritdint that it• might' ho better,
to Write of otir journals theinseivesi than
the With* onl'4iditch "they treat. Of material
•lehlesge otkr (idiots. 'may justly be proud. Of
their.,pUblie preds they quay boast r3Vitb: uft
pr literature, strictly so-callekb,
we havP.Virftlitifeelfle,.and I judge profitless,
beginnings.: 'BLit' the' journals of ChiCago, in
4..ntei prise, character, • (lignlty and some of
them' hi .financial and political , ludependence;
are rivalled by the prefer of feirecitieff.'
THE Tintlux*. ; . , :,, : Va.
Fist in ability,:tercelition,'ltillitettco',and.
wealth, although" not the first in yearit, : athe
Tribne, Before the war the Tribune had a
very' feeble, tenure of life. • Its stoek,:nomi
nallytwo bundred sharers of a thousand dol
lars etch, was Very low, if, it had arty market
valise, At. that time one of the leading pro -s
prleters was anxious to raise a loan of live
liundr# • I dollars,and offered as security therefor,
thirty shares , to , a gentleman of my acquaint.;
once, who refaaed the loan, on '
account of in ,
sultielent 1;e-entity. , Had he accepted it he might
perhaps. , now control the Thtunierer of •the'
Northweat. Rut the war, bringer of evils
ip ,
so many, brought only in c rease of cirealati l
i'
and idestings to the Tribune. Its present ro
prietore, with the aedstanee, it is said, of the
profits or certain successful speenlati.ons,
spend no pains to - make , their journal a
thorough ftewepaper, and their, tsuccess Ls
witnessed by tho new paladd . marble Walle
t tire, known, as IltetTribitut Railding,tandhy
° their princely disidenda-s4racesists 'with which
the,lnted euthesiastie devotee of the "main!
' chance ''', , corild - , not ; Complain. • . The'
pi isn- 1 1 41 t•WolthOltient and directons are five :
Horace Whitoi4osepli "Mediti; stfloV." Bram,
Alfred GowleSaOd William H. , Hata There
are two hundred c ortideates. ef z slims, of a
- •
nominal value of one thous and dollars each ; :
of which, it is currently - reported amotignetia
,paper men, "Gov," Bross' holds lifty,';Me.
3fedlll fortyriive, liir. ;White: ' - thirty,' Mr.
, ,
t !owlet, forty-liee, and Mr. Rain) thirt y. As a
property-, the Tribune is yalued Ist a million
dollar. The; is reportedtoPay,eighty
per cent: on 'ita '.. stamina] value, or
one • hundred . and sixty thousand del-,
hies each ' year. The advertisizig is'
sttpposed to average one thousand 'dollars
a day,,and the etretdatien is about thirty-five'
themes/4.. Naturally, there has been a contest
tor the control'of this
.ixtagniticesit property.;
a corded which is sometimes known , among
new men as the " young men's and the' ,
old men's war." The' stockholders compose I
two cliques. "Gov." Bassi and Mr.. Medill
form. one ; the remaining three the other,
The contests have sometimes been very close
# # # , # hough - with increasing pros=
peritY the proprietors are becoming less in
imical and more comfortable—and corpulent.
It is alleged that - the vote on the
position of the " paper' concer ning the
Impeachment was ninety for and one Ann
dred and ten against the young. Men, &when"
Hemet. White, editor-in-chief, is leader,carry
lug the day. Fora;number of. years Horace
White has •been editor-in-chief, the political
dictator, and doubtless will be as long as he
wishes or us his health , holds out He is the
youngest of the live, and, I should judge, the
youngest of the tritunvirate which controls
the policy of the paper- Like Most newspaper
men, his rise has not been unattended with
difficulty, but it is to' be presumed that the
largo honors of the eminent position he :•
now holds haie caused 'him to for
get the severe struggles of • his ' youth
and earlier. manhood.._. 'l'ime was when,
the alelolute dietater of the greatest power in
the Northieest was living as best, he could, on
a weekly - stipend no larger than a stone
cutter's daily wages. ' Mr.'White doesn't write
ns much as formerly, although the editorial
columns- i bear frequent evidence of his terse
and vigorotis style.. '.;The editorial; on the
administtation of Grant, which was the occa
sion of so much comment throughout the
country, was his. ' Mr. M.edill does
,a good deal
of writing, and is the only one of the proprie- m ,
tort:hes:Cep; .Mr.White,that does. " Gov."Bress
writes very little; and little, it M supposed,'!
seldom "gets in" anywhere except at the
waste basket. '''An old Tribune man, the head
of an elmosition joninal, recently stated that
the Governor's "copy " for a year would not
till the 'editorial page of the Tribune.' -'of the
rest, hir.Goiviel is , business manager t anifMr; 1
Rand manager of the 'Job Office. The Meana
of the Tribune permit. 'it ,to employ the most I
experienced and talented assistance. • Sidneyl
H a ward Goy, formerly "massaging etlitor"ef
the ,New ;York Tritku,nes ' is the "man aging" .
man here, subordinate, of ' gour . se, to Mr.
White. , The , principal !i.rltnts;t of ; the,
editotiei staff' , " ' tare ;.James W. Sheahan.'`
and V,l]..ponsl* oW. ;, The former le one of f`the'''
oldest, MoSt#experiettocd and :skilful . jattrual
ism in the country, and, • except for the want of
business tact—so frequent in his. nationality--
would have been a proprietor of f it4ournal in
stead of a'snitiried ),irritesi V. B. DenplOWlMV, 7
ing formerlY left the Tribune. its tratisti,itt the ,
establishment ef ;the RePuldieati, anclinnire re.,
cently still etthe NateKork reffittne;'wlfere lit
is said' he could' not' itgreievilth . ..Mr. GteeleY,t
has atlaSt,`,Conte baoktO i .the'Odoig6 rstittitne,
where lie earned the reputation Of'ajorlinaltst '
he so:justly deserVes. ThaieiWriters.. have an
annual salary of near-ki t 1 11; 7 9:,*4i5•iilealict'4 61- '‘ ' =There `l4,,it, we a r or d u , ,ip roe , in - the,
lays', ettelt. ' The Tributle '... ; ifif,,, no longer sanctum of the Portage (Maine)Reeider. . The
looked Upon .as . a strictly ' party journal, ,editor.eaye ,his "piscatarialopmeltvities" in
t to , exchange papers tor
and In State ATO Inuni6 t l * / 411 4 ra it h ad frogs d iC i tX , balt. , Rut thre boyrovedit4tricreultuel.
beaaid to retain the flume it-onee.l but ‘ nest; and forced , ther ollicelnto
as far as our elt,y,politicaare coneerned, they The sanctum is full of frogs--a veritable;
have eecoute,so corrupt , that to have lost con # Frenchman a Paradise- _with hundreds of un,
liqUidated due bills' outanding. ... ~ .
trol of,them is to have parted company with -
dishonor. 'AlWaYeindePendent#lree."uently die- ', l ' 771 .1 . 1 irnP0ve.. 1 : 1 ,9 1 1 fellaiv.in . par's gaie ldtt
Is n .o„.e r . , zly t ,3 o( ll7 t v i a s t e e „:1 11 3 , i n t i l l 7 r i:s h t i i n otfery., It., won
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dEn=lll
The Evening Port, also Republican to the ex
tent that a very able Independent-writer- can
stick to his text, is a thorn in the side of the
Ertning Journal, and a fresh, spicy ; lively, in
teresting visitor to everyone else. The years
of the Post, Ibelieve, now number three. The
central figure of the Poal—a centre of no phy
sical insigniffeanne•- • -is Dr. Charles A. Ray,
editor-in-chief. One of the founders of the
Tribu ne,and one who contributedperhaps more
than any other to its early reputation, he left
that, journal some years ago; amassed a for
tune, let it slip through one'of those oily holes
in the ground lb Pennsylvania or. Cinada,
and has returned to his old trade. Finding it
difficult, 'doubtless, to bo a servant where once
be bad ruled, he Could ,not work on the Tri
bune, and joined his vigorous auff 'Versatile
pen to the forces of the Post. The Post is now
established, and on the road to a fair pros
perity. Its political, position• is somewhat .
anomalous. It is a "rabid" free-trader, and
quite inclined to all the Omits which seem to
afford anopportuuity for eccentricity or origin
ality. It has always been Independent, but, •
for some strange reasorglas tif, late taken
sides with the “Ring," which has the support
of no other journal. •
. TheG enemas are represented hy'D is Stoats-
Ze&mg, the organ of. the German clique that
controls the City polities, a wealthy, influential
journal; by the ...4bend Zeitung,i an opposition
Republican 'skirmisher, and by Die Union.
Democrat; weak and feeble. .
Of weeklies and monthlies there is no end;
but with the thermometer at 98 degr e es and
the usual , tool brCezes of ' the lake become si
'l2loollllfora nothing ought to be
said of Chleago, litirary - or 'otherivise—and I
7111641 e. •• • • • .
filnnbxx DEATH, IN Ocionr.--:-On Friday of--;
• ternoon last Williara Gould, court crier, after
. calling the Sheriff's sales.in front of the Court
House, appeafed in the court-room and Madui
the usual problaminton as their Honors took
their Seats. , _He seemed to Ifeingood health,
and from his hig4 seat `listened attoutiviily to
the opinion ofothe court in the Schooppe case.
The 'sentence,of•the court was'. pronounced , ,
and' ide Think Judge Graham'hadjust•Con
eluded the customary proyer,'"ll4 06d have
2 mem ypnritcyd,','...w. .Gouhl At:
forwaideinte the' arms of • : some of the; by-4'
standers--n . corpse. , He Nrski corntte
into, one , of , the, retiring rooms,' :and every , .
eflbrt Was 'made to restore cotisciousbestq • lfut';
all in vain. 4 He.never.spoke after-lei fell froin
!i bis chair. The physicians in attendance were
41 . • opinion that hl'death was caused by apo
plexy... Mr. Gould flva4 about, seventy-three, :
. years of :age, and by an exemplary Christian .
life and courteous detneanor had endeared
himscif,hosts brfriends.---:Corlilse Volunteer. , .
" 1
power finite poesifilifenr:Mda are more
confident) than fte penman)* ,*
" ( * .it VIA '1011.014.10144:: • t„'
The . 6ther •Itepalfcati moioing jouinai is
the Repulgfert, early daye hie a azOnunient
of the 'inuatceeis';it Chailee rittf!a:i ffd'w- .
*everbrillant tlie i , s,an, thatehines for all," hir•
Dana's career liere„wait a., magnificent failure
He hercl„ !fallen pairfes;wiken . ite ehmild have
been at his iiesk at' work.' 'The Rtpubllccrn has
been eignflorly_llieterre4 in
.Vtiendb of fte:ufaitniX
gen'aitice./ ;Four gentlemen, for a longtime.
7-7 ne r weret.- . ,
and with much sounding of trumpets in type
and otherbrike;tiiittblitiaedibeiiedeteilitinatiou
to destroy" the jiiiirtiar Of the quad
rumvirs, one, Denslow, after a varied expert
enet!,,fp• bag! opitle..,Tribtfne‘ eatingruTbread
of the biAbylie -l cias to ; and "or Ihe
pest, tut.' only axe connected with the Republi
cap. In ppita of the great losses- it has experi
enced, this journal seems now to be on asolid
footing. 4 new tpanagement has recently beep
eletudolimtseenia to.ititveltapiii l / 4 1 it Witlinkiw
life.
.. .
...7the ,rtimors ercorrttption, , 'width had be;
come painfully pptolic and • prominent, . have
ceased,'lnd the paper has turned its batteries
UP9l: l the . f r aluir with which it formerly bad
such close affinities. It has passed the citryl.;
salliperied or newspaper life, and with -put
• dent :management may be a final success;
[Politically; ft is more truly the organ of the
Itepttbilcan party than the Tribune and sup.
ports the interests of the Protectionists, while
the Tribune is an earnest and consistent wive:
, iate of free trade.
I, ,
TEE TIMES,
,
the' Vin Is es this wily dallk Pernocrtitlejour r
nal. Its "Autociat, of all the Et 1811.113" iaWilbur
F. Storey, a reherablelpiiiheadaik A 'son of
New England, pi, has - forgotteirot. repudiated
most of the princiPies of the land of his oti
gin—and,is glad of it. .The journal tis::yery
ably -edited, • arid,' more than any other in
Chicago, bears the impress of one mind. It
has always been claime.d the ; sensational sheet
of this city, tnoich of .late :the -"Tribune has al
most outdone it. ; Ai a ,pioperty, the Tinges
.pays a 'fair profit; but It ilisidetids scarcely
cqual its.reputation. It his, it. large circula
tion,.and,can alykayshefourul :rhers, elf ;
peejde do not - resort: editorials . ire' racy,
ntis.eldrgi.PrPrOadd
gliel4p6l4llcan party :Ls its . nightmare, , sus( the memory of the goodlild daya "when erety
man bad aright to lama? 'lds otitis . tnigger"
and , •
TM!, ingprlNG JOV INA( '
The Evrnbay Journal in
.. t4e 'Nestor of, our :
ps
journals, and, as frequent, shows evidences'
of the weaknests' 'as well* Cottlie venerable
ness of age. This journal was born when our
worthy pioneers were.not snre'of their scalps.
Aad it struggled and struggled on from those
rude days until the war. The war made its
proprietor: riches . made its proprietor
earelts and unambitious; and c.irglestines:4 and . .
L:cli of. enterprise make'' a' very poor paper. '
Its editorials are feeble:l:echoes, a cobwebbed
mirror of those of itsmorningcqptemporaries.
But it lives, is read in the oldest parts'of the
Northwest,' where even the Trilnnie is consid
ered a youthful upstart, is radical of. radicals
in politics, conservative as a butdnes'S concern,
and has Mends and patrons who swore by it
when .there was no other divinity, and who.
will swear Ityttluxmover_itinteroMr_the gods.:
THE EVENING POST
-;-
.:piwtiNit.flim . . - r4f#:/ky,: . •,4perikTpqi';:oop,' . :i...:
011111118.
THE CAR 1.:19 et l ii l U46 ER
A NEW TRIL DEFUSED
DR. SCHOEPPE sprwjggp TO DEATH
z I iv.,• •••••• - i - •
flewtrial for I r. Paul Schoeppe, convicted of
1, the murder of %feria M. Steinnecke, was ar
-1 gued before Judge Grahiniff-hut Ithefraotionf
Tivaii overruled on•Fridayr •a r.
1 District - Attorney,Maglaughlia . then moved•
the court forjraignientin favorer- the Co
m
' monwealth, and that • tlie 7 tiehtence/of ,the la*
ho pronounced upen the prlsorter.';' 7 . • •
The court asked the prisoner if he had any
thing to say-Why the court ought not topro
f ceed to judgment and execution against him.
Dr. Paul Behoeppe then arose, and, amidst,
breatblesh sileneeonado the following remarks .
in a clear and distinct voice: , ;
"The jury can take my life, lintthe jury cari'n
' not make me a criminal and a murderer. •I•
have been convicted of , a crime which never. has Mien committed. ' That is - not only my
• opinion, which by itself would be worth
nothing before this tribunal, but this hi the
opinion of all the eminent 'and experienced
phyvidans of this country, who, free oCpreitt-1
dices, carefully and attentively examiried-my .
' case, and who are alone competent to answer
the question: 'What was the '• cause of 'the
• death of this lady 7' And, therefore the right.'
and the truth are on my side,and the right and
• the truth.cannot be killed by-taking my Ilfe;,.
If people just 110 W do not see this, yet tim e '
will come when every people will see ite-pet.
haps when my bones. will already long•
have mouldered in the grave."... , •
The court th en addressed: ' the prisoner as
follows:, • , • • - , •
• • .
Schofeppe :—After a patient and pick,
traded trial before itjury of, your .own--selee
!ion,' and defended'by able and- 'zealous a.citui
sel, 3;611-Lave been found guilty of manlier -in
the first degree: • • . ; - •
"Out law s require. that the crime of wilful
and deliberate . murder be punished; With
:death, and this is in aecordance with the ; Di-,
vinemtuulate which declares 'that whoioever
'theddeth.man's blood, by man ehall-bis blood
be shed: • • - • • . • •
•
. .
"We will not detail or x•ecariitulate the evi . -
. &nee' which satisfied thejury of your.gui/t,
Liu the arguments of your learned and zealous
lei:gin:gel have' failed• to satisfy the court that
the verdict is not justified by the evidence.
• "You, area ,man of :education and iutelll
pence; and• can fully apPreehite, and realise
the position in whic.h your crime has . placed
you; and we do not consider it ilecessary.to
address you iu the langinge of adinonition
warning. • , • •
'Your victim was Maria M. riteinnec.ke,..aii
old lady 'of sixty-th'e years of age, frieridleiai
and unprotected, and at the time a hoarder in
one of ourhotels, who was poasessed...of; an
estate of about $40,000. You gained her , con
fidence so far as to corres_ p o nd with' her, and
obtain from her $l,OOO. Emboldened by your
success you determined to possess her entire
estate, and to effect your purpose .you wrote.
a paper purporldng to be the will of Maria
Steuinecke, and purporting to be signed. by
her, In which you are the sole legatee, and to
this paper your name and the name of your
father are attached as witnesses. That this
paper is false and, forged cannot be doubted,
for your father, who was examined as a wit
ness .by your counsel, was not even asked,
'whether the paper was- genuine. Slit to con- -
summate your purpose the death of-Miss-Stein
, necke was necessary. This the jury have found.
you, soon afterwards effected byadministering.
to her poison. The -arguments of your -
suasive and eloquent counsel, on.the motion.
.foie. nwW~mThaving -failed- ta•-saLLiisfyt
Court that the verdict of the jury is not sus--
tainedky the evidence • it becomes our solemn.
but imperative duty evidence;
pronounce the sen.
tence of the law upon you, which is:
" That•you, Pau] Schoeppe, be taken hence
by the Sheriff of Cumberland county to the
jail of said county, from whence you came,
and from thence to the place of execution,
within the walls or yard of said jail, and that
you there be hanged by the neck until you are ,
dead." • . •
The Judge then 'addressed the usual pray er:
s , And may God have mercy on your sou"
We have received the following:letter from
Schoeppe, with the request that we give it
a, place in our columns, and do not feel ilia ,
posed to dent the request of the unfortunate
man. We must, however, take occasion to
say that -his comments upon the remarks 'of
his Honor Judge Graham are entirely uncalled.
for--:as the willitself wai•given in. evidence
-and his assertion that • his Honor manifested
any feeling against the prisoner, or endea-.•
nik
vexed to excite any; Prejie • against him; is
entirely unsustained - by the facts, as every
unprejudiced personwho Witnessedthetrial in
all its stages will be willing to testify. We
give the letter for what it is worth :
CARLISLE, August .21, 1869—Win. Kennedy,
Esq., Attoroey at Lau--•DEAn Sin.: His Honor.
Judge Graham made ; before '.he pronounced
the death sentence upon me, some- remarks
concerning the' will ;to which my father id a
subscribing witness. He said that • this will
is a forgery was-beyond a donbt, • "because we
had not ezarnined F. *hoeppe,the subseribing
wit
ness, in regard to his signature when he was on the
witness Stand." I hereby protest against such
• proceedings of the Court. it is not for the
court to decide. whether the It.,
lin forgery
or - not. The decision 'of 'this "fact be
longs •- to July. Sedondlti;:*, the, ;reason.
why this will in the opinion ot Judge Graham.
is a forgery, is too ingenious to make a long
remark necessary.' That we, in a case of nun
"der, - did not examine a witness iu regard to:
his signature under a will, shall be evidence
that this will is a forgery. . Thirdly, What:con-.
nectionhad the question of the 'genuineness
of the will with the sentence of death to be
passed upon-me ' I cannot but believe that
his Honor, Judge Graham, by the Words
which he wade use of in regard to ithis will,
. Omiy . wanted to give the prejudice which ex
ists motertain circles agmastinezl3,.pretended
legal basis. •
I am a man under sentence of 'death, *Wise
life is forfeited if lie vannottilrilftistiee before
a higher tribunal,Wild•lhereforeri .zero and a
nothing ‘ agaiat,.Judge Graham—. Aut such pro
ceetlingi of,the juge...loo :41.414.rrie , shows too
clearlrs feeling " against me to allow me to
omit ta;•;tVery3,..honest
mat co judge whether I tu m . td'ong or not.
You would obligoarie vertAntich, Mr, :Edi
tbr, if yon *Would please publiSh these - few
words by y our
_ paper.
• "•• Yer . 4 l "fisPVetftillY,Youts;_ . ..` • •
. • !.....Dri:Soriorior.u.
A RACE FOR, :41V A, RAILROAD. •, . •
An 'ma gineer chased by Fire at7o Miles aa
Narrative.
rcorre9pondonco Grim). R#phis (Mlck.) gl;tl3lo.]
* *. * To make it an intelligible matter
to the - reader, let me say 'that the 'Buffalo,
Corry and Pittsburgh road intersecWthe Lake
Shoreiroad-at this pla'ee. The "station sitthe
junction - is called 13rocton. - No'w let It bPtin
derstoOd that from this hlayville, at'
the bead of-;Chautauqua- Lake, a distance,of
only about ten n110.,' a traiti,i4rearried,p,i-er an
elevation-of, 700 teet. Front the station:to the
snminit the .gradelw , about eightrfeet to, the
with curves Which' 'lnereaau:thi di - stance,
by four mile 9, 'it is, , OVer ',Hag 'rnatl. that the'
immense quantities of. petrkgeUia'are brought,
tin Tuesday ev uin
ening, about, o : wolook,
. ,
~011,1 EL 13'43011TICY
•
train Consisting of Mitt and ltwerpna
seriger cars reaeluxi the stunMlS en ite wrry‘to!
thoJetiction. Here, by some saw.' as yet en
explaincd, one of the oil tanks 'Seek fire:-' Tie
passenger cars were at once detached and , tile'
brakes stopped them. Next the sil• Aura were
out-oft and the Wei:motive, terideranif.'box
car containing two valuable horses 'and•twc
men passed down the road,•the engineer aup.
peeing that the brakemen on the oil earwonkir
arrest the course of those, but what was his hor-'
ror onlooking back, to see six_carsinpursult of
i
him down the grade; enveloped re flames.
They• not only nurerted• nem:tea( titm ..
zetrikiyiytliiThox- car With _ltitonbeitraWflifte,
knocking the horses and. mere flat upon. the.
,floor, and yet almost nfirautdcitibly not tbrpw--
frig the engine -from the track.,---- •
It was now with the exigineeri4aiie for
:Med het gave the engineevery ounce of Minim
'Lookieg south from the place 'Ofniiresidence
at that terriblejuncture, one of the4tiost Mag . -
nithierit spectacles •was witnessed that 'Zioniall;
Beet, in a lifetime. A sheet of ivitexisely bright.
flame; sixty feet high, was seen.ooniingdowu
that southern slope,apparently with the speed
er a meteor, and really very nearly the speed!.
of a hfirricaneleighty miles inhour), fOrtpur?
fatted and pursuer flew over" the °mime or'
Maher down it, and around the curves , the
rate! ef• more than seventy miles aril:miry:,
as engineer. declares, and as evorybody?
•can :believe who witnessed the 'spectacle:,
The . - whole heavens were' illuminatedk
and:the landscape was lit up as by the noon* ,
daylight. Onward and downward ffrvi thir:
engine,'and behind it flew and thundered•the.
Inge; fiery demon. Twice' its prodlgiona
weight 'Was driven against the fhgative, as if.
Lftanit.with a purpose to. drive ittrotti the
tirack.•,- It seemed as if to the heroic-. engineer.
andfiremanthere was a perfect environment.
'of'peril. Tlje-speed of the engine was such.
tht'Ae,astd to pump, then again, the Chi,
einoWexpiess was due at the junction at tills
time. The engineer of the oil train whistled
"Open switch , ' and shaking hands with the
fireman, they bade each other farewell, knoW
ing that their lives depended on the opening
of the Lake Shore switch by their friends
below, and this was 'to imperil the express
train coming down from the West with its
living human - freight:. The engineer on this
train saw the fire when it fi rst broke opt at the'
stimmit, and supposing he' could. clear the
junction before the flaming terror reaehed it,
he, too, put his engine to the utmost speed on.
a level grade. A mile short of the junction he
saw that the effort was a vain one, for the tly-,
'l_neonflagration had rushed out uppn the
I ke Shore track: and was roaring onward in
the direction, el Dunkirk.. He checked the
onward course of his own train and brought
it- to a standstill. Is did not proceed until 3
o'clock in the mormug.
The case took in another danger, and it was
imminent. A heavy freight tram WWI coming
up the Lake Shore road. All X will say ef the
escape of this is that it did escape to the,
track, mid only escaped by the last Minute 'of
possibility.
'Running on to'a safe distance from the
depot-tire engineer of the oil train detached
his engine and left the six cars to consume.
He says his situation was fully rearzedby him.
Ile expected to lose his life. At every mo
ment he expetted the . engine to leave the,
track. He saw he was going at aperilous rate
of swed, but there was no. 'help for it.- 'The
deniable was behind him, and he declares that
it looked like a demon. Withthat kndness or
real affection for his engine which these men
displky he said: "I thttught everything of my
engine, and was determined to stand by it to
the last" The,fireman made one attempt to ,
escape by jumping from the tender, but the
..engineer restrained him. .Altogether the oc
currence WLLY a remarkable one, and' in part
remarkable for this, that no lives were lost.
The brakemen °nth° oil cars had' gone back
to the passenger cars,and it was well they did.
Unless those rear cars bad been detached and
.atappect therimnatiiti would have been burned
-to death.
The Horrid-BWe* liepeated by “The Na
tion.
studm the sec atio comegust 26.1
It is that allets to light at last.
The Iron •Mask may. yet drop from .the phan
tom face of the victim of Louis XIV., and Ju
nius may issue forth into the light from be
neath the shadow of the great name under
which he has lurked for a century. The time
has come when 'the secret of the separation
between Lord and Lady .13vron has been given
up to the world. Ana what a secret! The
raising of the veil of Mokanna. revealed a tem
revolting spectacle to his expectant hosts.
' And how marvelously was the secret kept !
MOre'tlein fifty years it had perplexed the cu
rious world, anti no hint of it had ever, got
into print until Mrs 4 Stowe gave it .to .the At-
Eolith: Monthly. Whether the truthshould not
have been folever buried in darkness is a;
question which will. be discualediand .pro
nounoed upon according to. the different points
of view and the different ways of looking at.
things of the disputants.
There can be no doubt of the sineerity. of;
Mrs. Stowe's purpose to justify Lady _Byron.
before mankind, nor of her belief that she has
effectually done so ; but we are compelled, to.
say that she has made a fearful mistake, if. the
facts she tells are indeed as she states them.
That we have some reason to think that this
is not the case we shall presently explain,
though without any imputation. on, Mrs.
Stowe's truththluess of intention. But if the
story be as,she relates it, it would. have been,
better if it had slumbered forever, in dark
ness, and been an enigma to the end, of, time.
As it seems to us, Mrs. Stowe's narrative places
Lady Byron in a, position only less revolting
than that of her husband and his. incestuous
paramour—in the position, to , wit, of an an
eeksory after and during the fact to their
hideous guilt.' Her'expression is somewhat
clumsy; but, as we understand her,
Mrs. Stowe means to say that after Lady
Byron was fully informed of the incestuous
relations existing between Byron and his sis- '
ter, "she would neither leave herhusbandinor
betray him," and this during," two,years of
convulsive struggle!" That is to. say, Lady
Byron continued to live with her husband as
his wife for two years after knowing of his
incestuous intrigue; and, of course, in rola
lions , of friendly Intercom/se before the world
with his detestableparamour ! We. believe
this to have been impossible. No, woman,
not herself infamous, could have doue such, a
thing. But that Lady. Byron, who inipra.sSed
every one who approached her as being all
purity mid' igoodness—whose Character and:
appearance 'Mrs. Stowe herself . sordeseribes-:--
-thatshe could:have been-guilty of- condoning
such a crime for two years, ta.about Mincer an.
impossibility 'on its face, as we can easily, con
ceive of. It there be no error in ,the revela
tions made by Mrs, Stowe, she has done—un
intentionally, of course--what will send her
friend's name down to posterity covered with
disgrace and • ridicule—disgrace for having
condoned this infamy for so long a time ? and
ridicule for havingdene so in the hope of con
verting her hashand--aud Byron , of all men!
—from the error of his_waysA, But we, think
that it will be 'found that Mrs. 'Stowe must
have mistaken' or misrenteinbeied some, of
Lady Byrim's statements, and; 'in her desire
;to make as striking a picture as she cotild of
her friend'ssufferings duzin,g, her inarti.age,
overlooked the influences so damagi»g to her
memory which the world would draw front
the story as 'it stands:-
And we have these reasons for thinking so -
In the first place, part of Mrs:Stowe% state- ,
merit of the case is manifestlp impossible
Lady B'rein could not have bad " 31.10 - tears ' pr
coevulsree Aruggle"„With 'this, horror nitlee-V
we SuppOse • that: Byron told ifier of it six
months before ho was engag(4 to her. The
TUE STOWE-BYRON SCANDAL.
MEE=
' • to o k — tii'e •• 'ilt . • - (rite; ie x '
separation p e'/13 e -Mt o Attu
ary,-1818,' add the engagebient was entered
tato in the middle of . Septernher,lBl4--only six
teen months before:.•-The Marriage was per
formed—lye can harldjy, say :solemnize& or
celebrated 0p..3110..• 2 2d '7.,E . a.: ,- January, 1815. ,
Ada - was born on -
lhe'''nekt ' Desember following, and laid y n yronief , her It haud,
~neVer to retrirn-in the middle, of Jaatdry,
1 ink 'we ''have - Just said. Their' . married '
Rifeitherefore, covered lint a few days more
?Wan one ye.arrto which Lady Byron's satliv-
Ings frdm this cause must. have been limitted c
' 109$11110hat - Alyion--suadx thiriwznfiftik.Was--
: en on the marriage-day. This, however,
'doei not go to the 'oottem of the matter; fora
:day's condonation ofilizetili , crime would her,.
?in the - eye oftheHwytottokl : common sense, a
guilty consenting to it: .But there is anotheo
version of the story which,: while it does nee
change the central :infamy ; West honorable
Leo Lady. Byron's character and memory, and
which we itel sure will be ultimately eStab-
I fished as the • true one.- We were told 'the
main foot, oir.tbis history something more
tbau ten years ago, and ,this, wgs how, it was
told tOuts i Al - ' whatever' thno the incestuous
connection bettween l %mon, and his 'sister
May have 'begun, Lady >Byron knew nothing
`of it, as:we heard the etory, until , ' after the '
birth.of her ohildt Seme,lime after that event, •
probably about, the 'beginning ',of January,
1816, Byron told , lier Of the intrigue,,saying
that he had never hived any other womn than
the partner °fhb+ guilt.: She'' , naturally,. slip.
posed it to be udbluition of insanity, and, it •i
was under this harp:l'm-Won. that she 4s:insulted
Doctor'nainte about him, which is one of his
~
main 'Charges against her In` his letters' and In
"Don Juan.", , :lowan while; 'tinder - this 'belief',
that she wrote the playful letter toßyron,after
leaving him, whioli ht one of the taunts In the
indielmentagainstriler. After reaching.Hirkby
Mallory, her father's tunige she had- certain
proofs of.the truth of what ! her hmtband had
told her, front' whioh time she': le ft him for
ever,
'Now, cedo notathr,n that :this' version of.
the story is absolutely authentic. „We tell itas
it was told to us; but most certainly kis inhe
rently more probable than the onegirmi by
Mrs. Stowe. It is a key to the whole.myetery,
and the solution fa greatly honorable to Lady
Byron. It accounts for her silence as to the
cause of the separation. 'Her lips were sealed
as long Os Dirs. Leigh lived. It ' aceounts for
her consultation with Dr. 13aillie; ' and for her
letter after leaving Byron, and before know
ing that a Separation was Inevitable. It ac
counts, too, for Dr. Lushington's statements
confirming her•own, saying that "areeoncilla- ,
ton was impossible," and that -"if suck an
idea should be entertained he could not, pro
fessionally or otherwise, lake , any part
toivards' effecting it."' Of eourse 'he
could'not, as a man; of honor.' It May 'b'e
doubted, however, whether he would have
considered it as impossible, though equally he
could have taken no part in it, if he had been
tc,ld by Lady Byron that she had continued to,
live with her husband as his wife for months,"
weeks, or a single day after knowinghis gni&
We are not , sure • if Dr. Luahington is - ..5t111:
alive; we believe he is not long since
fi aatip
bat we trust that, if he is ,livingrlie will. now
make a brief, elear, lawyer-like statement.' taf
the facts in the (ase,with which he is better
acquainted, as Lady BYron's counsel, than any
other person, such as will put this matter for
ever at rest in the solid foundation of truth.
Indeed, it is due to'Byron,-his wife, and'to the
public that everybody 'who can .throw any
light ou the circumstances should- now tell
everything in relation to the,attlair that- they
know. And this burden rests with peculiar
weight on Mrs. Stowe, who is responsible for
the publication of 'the charge, and who is
bound to produce'the evidence which seemed
to her a sufficient justification for making it.
It is clear, from Dits. Stove's account, that
Lady Byron intended that the facts Should be
known at a proper-. time.' We know that it
was not to Mrs. Stowealone that ehe confided
the • accusation,• but' that.. ye:irk
Ueiffb --- = - - - tbe v..-
lath, iant ".407 — very :least, of her familiar
acquaintanees had:ileac fully informed of
it, and had thought lelf at liberty to make
talk about it, and not without mentioning'
Lady Byron as her authority. We wish Laly
Byron could have entrusted its full reveLatiott
—if the revelation of it was absolutely ucCes
sary—to a more judicious hand than that
winch has now_giveniit to the werld.• We at
least hope that Mrs. Stowe's article will have
the effect of twinging the whole truth anther'.
daily to light, e we are equally sure will
exonerate. Lady Byron from • the faintest;
shadow •of complicity with the hideous crime
alleged against her husband. •
PDXOTICAL.
•
A Look Disnkstifird mad Forward.
• (kren) the harrleburg Telegrapl . 3l
For a period of thirty years—from 1890 to
18W4-With Llie exception of • three gubema
tional terms, the. Democratic party held the
Executive power.of.the State, and with the
exception of three or four years, perhaps, en
tire control .of the Legislative branch of gov
ernment. During this' period. including the
light debt contracted previously under Demo
cratic administration, the State was saddled
with a d'iiht of 00,000,000, 'and a State tax of
three mills on real estate ,producing annua ll y
about $1,800,000 ,.. was „levied in -1844 to
•
pay the interest.• . This was purely' Democratic
policy. That party is fairly : chargeable with
the $40,000,000 debt and the $1,800,000 tax.
And this is not all. They are responsible for
the war of the rebellion ; and being responsible
• for the war, they are responsible for its con
sequences, among which. we may reckon $5,
. 000,000 extraordinary expenses which the State
was obliged to: incur to:enable her to enact her
part in the war, and sitbsequeutly as= which
will probably reach $10,000,000 to house,
feed, clothe and educate .the orphan - .children
'of brave . Soldiers and sailors who perished in
combat, prated of disease i r exposure in the
service of their country. With these $15,000,- •
000 the Democracy are, therefore, also charge- !
able, them expenditure being the legitimate
result atilt° rebellion, and the rebellion being .
the legitimate fruit of Democratic doctrine.
Carrying out these ideas, .a cotomporary ob
serves : .klly the close of Governor Geary's ad.-.
Ministration the regular State debt will have
beintrittlaced fully teirralllions, and the , war•
debt acid soldiers' orphans' education expenses:
about eight millions, and there will remain in
• the . State Treaatiry, railroad bonds:. of .. the
:Yeinisylvaida, • Company, or guaranteed
:by it, tome twelve millions more. .Let. us re
capitulate,: . :
State debt, c reated liy DeMociats..s4o,ooo,ooo
War debt, created by DeirloOratii... A 1,900,000
-solgiqoe..9eptetusiereated by-Derri ~
.1. . . .. 10,000,000
: T0ta1.... • •
Paid" off .by .tgik yeart, !
• Reimblican 418:000,0 1 50 ••
Itidlroad i . 12,000,000-30,000,000
Debt uutrovided for—. . .... . . .$25,000,000
The einecratie party, by the act of April
:29, 1844, had fastened upon the real estate of
the tax-Inver a Stan) tax from which about
$12 8 0Q,000 Annually was realized. This was re
pealed ,by the Republican administration of
February,23, 1t364. The thirty yetun' policy of
the Denmeratie party may be slummed up in,
tightkug•corporations and taxing thntuasses of
the people. 11.6 Republicans bave repealed
the taxupon the masses Ott anti put
it upon the great corporations tb.at have grown
tip. • Railroads, batiks and manufacturing cor
aioratlntarnow pay the tax Q$ which sustain the
State, government. If Asairacker should ha
eleettliA 4c, 9f 9Qupe, will not , like Ids coaland
railrand„corporatious,to be taxed a they now
dire under a,Ttepublican,'Legislature. fire will.
insist on the repeal of all tills, and that the
• •
tk35,1 1 00,000
„ .
F L .
Ptthlisbtw
•
PIZIOR.TH . 4:E G. E 4. 0:.:.,
. ,
" tit -1844 # ng' Lett ‘•
yeti
Dellocratie gthlatxotti •
estate, sherd& tie l ettl!tirfeeti!" . ' '
. anters *am
(them els; Overland itosttifsr for
: 11341111147.
,Coward-of heroic size In , . •
Whose lazy muscles lieffl- •
.1; .-
"Strength fearand yetfdespise
E l avngewhoserelentless•thaft • •
Are content. with acorn Intsibp,;_-
• obbeft.,--*lrotieentloWiSiVer 7
er fife bee's' or squitiers tionird ; r.
".:Virhisliesed chin, andreebblttose, OJaws
offsteel on baby. taeswn -7.711 F
Bere;iti Seliftide and ehtute;.,
efilbatablifig, shuffling,
• Be thy coarser' tindisrhayettlf: • .
•n ere; ere' Nature ntake's tlfirined,
Letethy. rude, 1/.31f-human -trezdf
• Point to iiu hh fndiau
• :tiligt terms and fragant grassm•
. .Efoitered o'er by timid - u - Ings / •
larb ‘ ore tlio,vrood-ducki, lightly Osseo;
.:N ere the wild boo holds her Lwow:kr
•Eigeureanrettoats,
-Fit for thee; and betteithati , '
_Foarfplspoils of dangerous rtnieu,'
tble iht-joivied devility
. . .
;Friar .Tuek, shall live in. thee ; • •
_Thou inay'st levy tithe and dole; ,
Thou shalt axeadthe, woodlaudiblieer,
' , From the pilgrinr taking toll ,•
: Match thy eanagnevith his feavr: -
Eat, and drink).and have thy fill, •
'Yet remain an ocitlav still!
• .
•
—Astor repudiates , monumental iittigrrtteits. •
— Chaiiette Triloonplion. , has marital; her:;.
—A l'ilirinaseta 'Yule has• been bitteu,by a. .
rattlesnake, %atrium 'hisses andotties ta-ratcle.
—Elephant plows are a nagriculturat export
from Englapil to Tudim , •
—The Jews look atithe Suez Canal aiolikely •
to hasten' their 'proshilbsied return to Paibetine. •
—The son of Mrs: I3etnana Wit° beeaura a -,
Catholic has rejoined,the English Church!. ; •
—The. split , amotig•„the Cincinnati Qualtete'
has given thar meeting-house to be .reada a
bOer salaon 4 and their graveyard a beer garden. •
--Epes Sargent la . eoming,out this.falluith • -,
al)eem, "The Worsen , Who Dared,' , in of woman'irrights... • •
—Hannah Bligh, af-Evanatille, Indiana,flue
swallowed twelve percussion caps,and is aft:ad
to sit down. • • , •
.—Bulwer has writtana llfabfPahrierstonAii
which ~he has litulthe assistance of -a ,diaty_, •
kept by the late Premier, from the year . teri- ,
•
—An electrical metronome has • been 'bled •
in place of a condustat lit' the orchestra or , the
Paris Grand 40Pera., ; -..; . • , ,• ~
—The blue-nose girls: are:, ht love *idt,
Prince Arthur's "•light-broWn ,cttrling •
Somebody Ought tii . .be eniployedtO protect •
• the Chicago,' policemen. One
..pr them
been kidnapped, - .. ' •
—Cong . reismau Ytaa ' Truinpi 01110,11 s-
week had a' narrow. escape from. drowning
• while fishing.in. the Scloto.river.
-In
caaelbe Hasvards 'Erie beaten, the Now
Orleans Times proposisilo send over a crew. - Ot
American dentists, to sheiw what milling :
—The "improvement" of . the Falls of
Anthony, Minn., for commercial purposes;!%,4„ ..
will: utterly destroy. their sfatuotts natty*
beauty: •
—Work has been resumed on the greats'hipip,
canal which is to connect Amsterdam with the:
North Sea. The canal will be fifteen miles id'.
length, and is to cost :twenty-seven milli*
'waders.
—An Indionapay• dawri on
the rafiroaiLtra and would have I .:1
• - :* - e - e - es --- b - ar - i - 10 sr og run atom
couple of polleemen.and dragged them totha
—Louis IL and Wagner are converting
varia into A permanent musical jubilee with
the anniversaries of Gluck., Mozart, Beetho-
vets, and Weber as a base for, the operations;
of the Munich Gilr' nores. . • •
--The house in the Rue d'ArgenteuilLArt,.!••.
, which Corneille ; and where. • his. bast :'-•l
crowned with lararels LS still enshrined lea
kind of cbapel,ris about to be demolished, to,
make place for the Avenue
—The freight eompetition between the.west
ern lines halt hrouglit the tariff doivn soklow •
that the.6therllay a pianoforte wee delivered
,in Evansville, Indiana, the charges on
froth New ,York.were but two dollars. • •
,-Tbere is a great hominy factory in Terre I •
Haute, 'lndiana; from which .a consignmankof,:,,%:;
maixone was lately shipped to. Glasgow•-.Beot,
landi, to partly fill an order for live hundred
bushels
• •
=Sip far as` is champion clat'reint...:.
of age is an o ludian lady named Pee-tracame,.,
of Sioux City, lowa, who wishes tobe re
garded as one himdred arid seventechk,yeare
old. She has had thirty-five children-
me •
said that she is.not remarkably hancho,nor ,
does she loot as if she hail ever been,, exqcl ,
aitely beautiful. t.•
—The sixth 'ascent of Mont. Mane:this year.: ..,•!*
was made by the Comte: de Boziemand • t•._
consort. The latter LS the tenth female, the - -•;.?
second Ertmehwornan, and the first 1 3.1togientie IP'
who has Accomplished this feat. She: is also
the first woman who. ever ascentlett / 3 3! # 1 . 42 ' x.
perilous Bosse du Drcmalaire. • - ••••• • ,
—A monument hi ! , lionar - of• Lmlizs, ' XVT. ist..
about to be inaugurated at ..Bortlemila t which
might be suitably_ followed. by ' t wm conk, .
mernoration of Marie A.ritoi n ette, whose •fate •
is so deeply mouructi by .the •",
and by - one, in remembrancethe,Xlithe.
d'lL'iighlien, Who was -So treachirouslypet to ; . ,
• death by the first NAPoletn, • . • • '
.
—Qin the booksk of the- .11cralk or England •
' there are 5,421 Smithy who .reeeive,dividentle:' '• • •
on various sums iu the' publiot stooks." ,, ' There; •
are also 2,474 Brtmrus, and 2,108 beae•llm•ruuno.
'of Jones.. In ,ccuisols alone there are,l4,l4lime-., •.•
comas on Which the bait-yearly titarklead 4i, 1 „ . ; •
less than Gs: • There are 7T, 4raeotuit4..rara.which.,.
• the dividend deem not exceed; 2r)' on .`t
which it is
—A Belgian has lately hrad Astelitrafr, ofd • •
ininutive proportions constructed iat 40g.utatt.
This craft is twentT-fora.-.430t lon and ttix..feettt •'
wide.. Her boiler is ebiratt the size: of. a • tea-:-
kettle, and the .engino might- be , put - ln;the.
pocket of great coat. : •She is said tobe attiner- ,
-sea boatf•ttleillatumade - two or. titioettiP4-rutiii
ning'freta, Cowes to Qatenti,jwithgeat
The owner intend§ te, - esti
for coasting on the.Baigtaii 'docst. • ".• •
—The (lisposseSsetkatral Wad .I,llt offf...oAtkzf.;,,
tier bite published 40 ll'Axttphlet'' en , •
Mission of Prance in G . ertnauSV
coolly requests Louis _Napoloontall, ado
• many,i to cripple 'fruitsin, •..
.•
Austria by restoming StlesiCte,,,Vrautistii.evel4:l
who will wonder after this . ; the§
should lose all patience witi..htlik•Alan,ONVrlAN =•'•••• •
••• iplt,--121.1•;••.•; ; • • .
The operAtions: Of'the , woo , " •
for the, Suppression of Ciale*:ttiAniimAls 1.1;0
sharply criticised 10:8 , 'the vuiibt6..ll,fer e t irm , --• •
which says.that the-PrONirtee'LAS:: . intut-' •. • •
dated with handbills% , `:frorat.
,"‘ttito_. • 'M entreat • •
humanitarians ;orp-philekiiraioiimii i . o o. w hi c h ,
contains suggeStiona, t`-tty.oryoce. Of, WiliCk
~ p art of that. coneealiti:•,lnit . cruel warfare. , l;'.:•-•-,;
agaiust reart,Vish'e4aid bYpevert, - ,andagAin.st
:the food of - ther::•'fiee'pleoyhteli
,this_Fkusety,;,
;under the preteifec of••proteethig.the inferior
aninials t itut;i tito litogt • ruercilt.,43`
•• l i l t e i r t) i 44 ,?P:loe, ,tint . most malignant • iuge
' ~.'~.. A ' l C. •f': :.
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