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Synopsis of the Evidence t7ifiris TritiL ,Vt.',7l' • :.OP WS Air,. :Scenek* - li4el ri4 "liiiE*.SiOroli. 110 W HE WAS PREPARED' FOE DEMI+ AND- / VW DIED- "Atter residence,-No. Wylleatreet, ion. Saturday .raoraing,, May 4th, 11368 , Henrietia, wife of Louis Lithe, a Colored barber, whd bOreCOD vary enviabin itatipn, died suAdisniz. and in such manner akin give rise to Vie wrill-founded sus . plelon,that•she had_been poisoned. She had been' in the ' 'enjoyment of good thealth np MVOse evening preeedingher death, when she was suddenly seized with - a violeisfedoltnass arid. continued to .grow worse till death relieved her of agony; The bad character of hei hits band, who had• tile reputation of having disposed in a Summary manner of four witis before her, led the neighbors to , stuspoct that he,' ' blaik iodne.ixdirdi had caused the death of his wife by ad ministering poison to her. Alderman Butler was called npbh to hold an in quest on the bodrof deceased, and in /he ,_Pieanitind 'Lane Was arrested and committed to jail to await the result of the inquest. Tht,stoniach of the de ceased was removed and handed to Bra MoNary awl Black emical analysis of the contents. A few prelim inary witnesses were examined and the inquest was adjourned till Saturday, May 16th. The main (ivldiiithe adduced was to tue effect that deceased had informed several witnesses that her sicknessfitrose from drinking Some whis key out of a battle given her that day by .her husband. ()uncolored woman heard the deceased request/ 'Lane to' go for med ./nal amistanee but. he would .nnt consent -tolio .sa~.sireoxd What' thaprasoner was being conducted ' ethrongh the office to fluVjail;by Warden /Smith, bs suddenly.trew from his coat : pocket a small phial, which he dashed with much force into the_flre place. 'The phial was broken into a thousand fragments, but a portion of the liquid it luiacontalued was splashed on the back wall of the grate, and with admirable presence of mind was scraped there dram as it was hardening, by Warden Eltnitb, and at the subsequent trial was 'Droved to be arsenic. The prisoner se ..connted for this circumstance at the time by stating that he had been suffering with a loathsome -disease, which was arktbad desired to conceal the fact by_destroying the medicine he .was tak ing, ficience, however, refuted this faliehood, and in his • effort to destroy •evidence against himself, Lane oply Sae teased his guilt and furnished a damning link in the attain of testimony an which • convicted.' ' ACCUMULATED EVIDENCE. &Atte 16th of May the adjourned Res .sion of the inquest was held. It was proven dist the deceased was married to Zane just one yearprevions to her mur der; that she was in delicate condition alt — the'llme of death. In her stomach Prof. Wrath found, by close scientific in cvestiklition, enough arsenic to poison half-s dozen persons. Several small hot. ties found in the prisoner's carpet bag on arrest contained various kinds of deadly poisons, which went to show that he was an adept"in the art of poisoning. TEE ARRAIGNMENT. On Saturday, Tune 18th, the prisoner w4s belimaht into the. Court of, Oyer and Terminer And was arralgne(on the in ,dietinent, charging him with') murder. He pleaded not guilty; and yi reply to a 'question propounded by the ( Court !. sta ted that he had secured the services of Joan C. McCarthy, Esq., as oonnsel. MoCaithy staled that ilnatunach • as the : prisoner wait Poor lie had'volunteered to defend him, but asked that the Court as sign him legal' assistance. His Honor, Judge Stnwo, willinglyacgniesced in the request atid appointed W. T. ilaines,Esq. as additional counsel in the case. TILE VIRST TRIAL. -On Thursday, rnerning,.JunelBth, = the f jiruidner wali.brotight into Clout% for trial, - Judges Sterrett and Stowe presiding on othirbench. The Oommonwesith was rep• resented by Dhariet Attorney Daff and_ Leggate, Esq.; the defence by 411.+Mrs. Haines and McCarthy.: , The .original plea of not guilty was permitted , ty the Court to be withdrawn in order ittiat anew arraignment might be made. At this juncture Mr. Haines moved to 'quash the indictment on the strength of STe technical reasons submitted in wri ting to the Court. The motion to gnash Win Overruled and the prisoner was re-, stirldirttlid, pleading not guilty and ask -14 to be tried -41 13y God and his country." - „ The jury was scion obtaineirandAft, Haines opened the isase..- Fleming _Kenney, a near neighbor, was sworn--Deceased was vomiting In the yard on the Thursday aftermiclti preced ing her death; wiled witnessf to get:het whisky to stop thOomi4- witness would not do it, fearing Lane would maig:is fuss. - • 2dra. Grace AZlen was ' sworn;=At eleven o'clock on Thursday, May 7th;the deceased was very. well, and at NW past one o'clock that afternoon she;q!„o3 purging, and vong / tlng; while ahe' 'Was sitting at the tabli4gave her a glass of water, when she: said her insides were bdrning i t.Lane was .ixann to dinner" that day; saw no one else about the Mrs. Mary 'Kenny testified that Lane would not perinit -nny one to go into hittroonn he forbade spy -of, the geighr boriiloin associating With Emily Reed testified as to the nature of the sickpess . of ' deteasod q 4 symp toms, corroborating previous witnesses in those respects. Onee,heard prisoner. threaten to burn his wife and her bastard up when he was quarreling with her. .Racliel Kenny - datr through the win dow on Friday morning that Mrs. Lane was vomiting and ptirging. Could not get into her house, as the -door was lcicked; . Dr."; MONary and Btackand Prof. Otto Wufh gave evidence of; the presence of polsOn in 'the deceisees- - stemacii; of the fact that the bottle thrown into the, are place in the office of the jail contatried arsenic, and also of the fact of the small bottles found in his carpet:eack contain-, ing deadly polsois. Mr. Kenney, sworn—Lived above pris oner in rooms of the eameihouse. Lane and wile quarreled nearly every night. On the'Friday nightlidrs. Lane was sick. Heard them quarreling,'when Mrs. Lane itisiste4tluit her hnsband should go for a doctof.' Heard Lane rehising, saying he 'would give her medicine himself. She asked him about a dozen times to go for a :dOeto - f. ' Heard, her groaning all• t rough the night. - Szivi Lane on Thurs day come and go at, dinner and supper time. After Lane left on Friday morn ing he soon came back and locked the door with a padlock, saying alend to himself, "I'll keep all you damned nig gers oat." He was about backwards and forwards to the house on Friday. Mrs. Lane was locked in the house alone. With several other corroborative wit noises theComrnonwealthelossitend the ' 2ifi-s. Kiel aWorn—Never knew of any quarrels bet Ween Lane and his- wife; saw them nearly every day; ' 'lain in the front house'of the court with them. At half.paist MX -o'clock on the Saturday morning on which deceased died Lane ask me to be so kind am to come n il itiAnd" see is wife as she was very ill; this was afe minutes before_stadied. I asked her f she took herself or got anything fro 'Laze that should cause' her death; she replied_"no nothing that I I - know of." Saw Mrs: Lane at Aye o'clock on T ea i t ursday evening sitting at her own door and sewing a calico dress; saw her no ore till she was dying. D . Black-sworn—On Saturday morn ing ne wanted me to go and see his d wife. He said there was a good deal of talk; I told him that a Coroner's Inquest t wou d have to be befit - when he left me. He as quite anxious that 1 should go; offer . motley to have me go. T case rested after offering some re butt ng testimony, when . &Reaches were mad to thejury on both sides, and Budge Sto delivered an able — and impartial char, . Th Wry returned a - verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, after a de liberation of but fifteen minutes. A mo tion for a new trial was at once made by the defence, and reasons filed. &NOS. A SECOND TILLfiL. The new trial was granted, and on Jan uary Bth, Lane was again convicted of murder in the first degree. He Was duly sentenced, and his death warrant was promptly signed by the Governorl r Louts LANE'S Little ie known.beyond what we have already published of the life of tha man who died yesterday to - vindicate the ma jesty of the law. He was born between fifty and sixty, years ago in Waterlbrd, London county, Virginia, or free parents. He worked on aatation till he was of age, an married h a cousin, /Isobel Lane, when about twenty-two years_ old. He lost a situation he held because of attempting to - tame a horse by the novel method of cutting off a fore-leg with a scythe, cad fled prosecution. He went to. Wellisburg, ran on the steam boats awhile on the Ohio •river, and in 11148 took up his residence in Washing.. ton. Pa. His wife joined him there, and, uite - 1111 - ding with her a short time she died suddenly. A son by this wife now resides in Cleveland, and would not come to see his father in ids distrees, as it is i c said he entertains th idea that his moth er was murdered by IM. A second wife named Mcßee was t en to his bosom in ) Wheeling, and she ed suddenly, and in such manner as direct suspicion towards the hustled . The third wife was Ellen Bonier, o Washington. The couple came to Pitts nrgh, and Lane ob tained employment at the old Perry Hotel as a waiter. he died suddenly. A.. fourth wife was se ured in Pittsburgh, and Louis took her t Washington to re side. She died suddenly. Lane refused Danorcit OPENED. .OTT . ??..pc - RPH .iPIII.L 186.5* . to admit ...body in. to see her body after - death. A: fifth wife lOW imp.% Lewis, .7ho he :; married Be Oditk in the "Wiishingtott county Court, and sentenced to the Viratttoriit4hijeatiaryhtlibrilarn 1860, lin ts ,the: toini of mix years for at tempting to 11604 the life of nerlbr He attempted to 'Min her up while` she was sick in by looking the door and setting fire to the house. She Jump ed from a ascii:4ld story window to - skew her life. nowtn. ,Brow.ns ville, and the ..city yesterday. Lane served fits term out in the Peniten tiary, and in 1867 married Henrietta, the woman fbr whose llfe the law caused ,him to.likfeit hisown yesterday,.:. . Tan - menus The scaffold onwhich Lane WBB , ()lie euted wag etecied on WediniadaYt Lu thp ' southern yard of the jail. It- was built with much care by Mr. - Samuel Thornp. son, of Hazelwood, on a plan submitted . by Sheriff Maley. In 'obr c:ayacity'afra reporter, we have:B43°li several styles of scaffolds andunhealtatingly pronounce in favor of this One, as vastly superior to any we ever saw performing the • awful work for which made. The plat form of the engine of death is made with two doors resting on a letter T brace, and hinged at either side, each section caleß lated to fall in oppositedireetiOri, (oink ing a sort of open square-into which; the dangling . body of the. felon dropped. The brace imderneath had a thick rope tiedebout it, andbonneeted with &heavy beam located about ten feet from the scaffold, and held in an inclined position by a rope tied to the trigger, ready to fall as soon as - the foot touched the fatal spring. The beavy . beam falling by its own weight drew out tiavritipportfrom. beneath the scaffold and down came the unfortunate, man so far. as the rope about his neck permitted lan. The fall_ .was :about eighteen ittches,-, but the scaffold is more , than , usually high, • thus guarding against the poll sibillty .of the . murderer's feet touch ing the ground. The scafflld is ap proached ;from the eastern side of the . yard by means of a broad pair of stairs. The uprights in the centre, from which the rope will depetal, are in the pint jof, • but with sharply defined angles. On either aide there are wilily working pulleys. The rope passes up a groove in the inside of the upright and over the pulley. - .ltl the aide \ therkii. are; ltrialiglk" : meals fin regubia4 the:- iength of the 'Tripe to suit , the occasion. Altogether, the scaffold is a model one, and the'care with - which it was prepared-reflects the largeat credit to • Sheriff blitey, and those . en- - trusted with its erection. Striding alone in all its ghastliness, it seemed a silent mocker of, humanity, and an, awful:Com mentary on the wickedness of mankind. We hope it may never again be called into use in our: county; bnt - if it is, we should like very much to have the selec of the individuals to enjoy a sling from its cross-beam. Our discrimination would be lauded by tbe tc ' i n in u nit7; • TBB ROPE. -The rope used was an extra %nality of hemp, made expressly tor the'oocasion". It was not stretched previous to use, as Sheriff Cluley wisely abandoned that old. and' should—be explodid idea A rope, no matter. how well made, will stretch. and stretch .until It breaks. It is quite stxupon thing forropes to give away just as the man falls through the scaffold. We take large stock in the theory atNanoad by the Sheriff, that in placing heavy weighta upon the ropes to take the spretolt Duty they are weakened and,when nem:lon- the felon, give way, often entailing painful . scenes at the gallows. This place of information may prove niehil to any of our readers enga ged in cheerfully contemplating to what their present courses of living may lead them. TrrE NOOSE The noose through which the head of the wretched mati'vniSpacell, was aa:or dinarily tied sliding one, such as any school boy would tie to catch a pigeon by the leg.--The hangman's knot was , carefully tied to come under the left ear, to secure what is terrnedneck•breaking, bat which, In reality, is merely the sev ering. of a link in tho vertebras. Oa the precise location of this knot depends largely the succif-th - e - hanging. It every murderer. oontemplatict • the Ter petration of a crime could 1 agine that his.throat was encompassed w th such a noose as that now idly ban'. ing to the gallows awaiting the , hes. • of , the next ' cidPrit, -- there would be less crime committed. But mur • erers sel dom tOnbliti thatfisetcpt.. h such. thoughts and are content In t inking of the multitude of loop tolet in the law through which they - Warier:di sitio 'into the 'NI •,,toifoptlent :At ape v ,rather ° than the minions noose thro gh which agulltYieloaltreattgibity. flees td lkaindr _ _ '^':- troabln - ouitroarry. n6"-pleasant thing 'to be/Wther hanged or' present when a fe tping is expressed by swift carriage into eter nity to satisfy. Justice. There is some thihg so Wicked and terrible tton that people with correek nerves and fine seriSibflitles should prefer traveling a thousand miles away from such a scene rather than wear out their 'boots and faces In efforts to be selected as one of the small party to witness the legal mur der. 8o depraved., however, are the tastes of mankind, that hundreds, nay thousands of applicatiods forth.; pleaSnre of 'seeing Line switetiea off from the gallows, were made't* till yesterday morning, and we dare that the oaar teens Sheriff has secured many enemies hem l ine he found it impossible to gratify the morbid curiosities of all who ; wanted to`pack the jail yard with their presence. An it was there were none Leo many in the yard and no confusion ensued, and those who weieicept away,have the con solation of knowing that they were -not asked for by the condemned felon or any other MGM. irlriXiNTlearrlATlLD 11114811110ENT. The act of ushering an immortal reeking in sin and Iniquity, into the pres ence of God, althOugh eccomPlished in the name of justice, is not calculated to inspire - any reverence for the wittdom, • charity and good will of man, nor does it prove that we have-advanced so °foie to that refifredient Wand perfection we 'aie vain enoughto imagine, attained.' It is' not ticr_province here to'discuss whether: it is in accordance with . or egainst the Creator's pletteure that man should de prive a felloW being of the life which be lunge only to -God and himself; but the cruelty atid- awful wickedness of aveng ing law, when carried to its extreme de tdands, cannot fail , to staitiloubts as to its divine, origin. ` The torture which a.crint ,euffers. on the scaffold is a\ re lief when compared with the pain and mental anguish he experiences from:the moment the death wairant is read up to the drawink doWn over the; eyes of the cap which forever shuts out is wicked world from view. Ile tandem:Ks in the dreadful counting of fast fleeting- Moments, hours and weeks which-re - nen the distance to the gtassra agony so exquitsitively painful that none who have never been similarly situated can imag ine:: The mere- physical suffering, a mo mente unpleasantness Xbout the throat, a gasping for breath. theca dash of brilliant pyrotechnic displays before the eyes,and unconsciousness, all experienced in the twinkling of an instant, are:mere trifles_ to the greater' punishments not conteM plated by the law, nfantitioil, of wait ing, of mentally undergoing death every minute until the final end is accomplish ed.: Lane, incapable in a large measure of realizing the dreadful place • he occu pied, was a frightful eXample of the truth thSt the law of capital punishment inflicts a severer penalty than the mere taking 'awey of life i .,or the 1919x!gippile,9tajoa. for 'better or for wont, etstrattlst lie up to the-last hail been failikig and falling away, both In mind and body 'and the mental torture • he endizred 'cannot be expressed. Religion may soothe the nerves and direct the soul heaveuWird for hope and consolation, but, It eanbot tear from the inner sight the horrors of a felon's death. It is not human- nature to be fearlese of defith or ;to brave and defy the dark messeriger when It does come in reality; all the possible religious non= 7 *elation administered to an actively working mind, does not lessen the terror which creeps over the physical .body. in anticipation of the taking off, escpecially when the precise moment for de parture and mechanical inetteds adopt ed for the shifting, are settled menthe in advance. • Lanesuffered greatly in the terror. of anticipation. Ile feared death, and it was only when the last few hours crow ded ,upon him that he felt' capable of staring fate in the face. He was so cheerful, pleariant and buoyant yesterday morning, and so full of hope in the flier- ay of God that we cannot but believe that his heart was truly cleansed in the waters of repentance. Re died game, but exhibited none of the disgusting braiptdocia and swagger which so often mark death on the gallows. Not a nerve quivered. although previous to yesterday his spirits had given-away and his whole frame shook with paralysis. `He was en thusiastic in his religions faith, and felt that the drop through the scaffold was only the momentary torture and prelude to his admittance in heaven. He died bravely and firmly—at least so far as tholie terms can be applied to a man who keeps his nerves up to squarely face the masselager cannot help dreading. i ~ THE LAST. NICHIT'ON EARTH. Rev. Father Kerr, a good hearted and zealous priest was with the prisoner all Wednesday night and up to Thursday morning at two o'clock, when he retired and the wretched culprit took. a brief sleep, awakening at elx in the morning. Nothing happened-, ,durimt the' night worthy of record , save the exclamation of the prisoner, as the full 'toned alarm bell pealed ' . forth•, the. hour of mid.: night unheard by thousands ,of calm and peaceful, tleePets, sins mid night. This time to-morrow night. I will eouipany with engele Ohaut ing praise before the.,,thrOne of God.", He laid down to rest at two o'olook and slept soundly till six In the morning, when - he awoke witha tremor, and Wok -14130,0 iduk affrlghied caned for Father. Rerr. .When.teld that ids' apiritual.ad visor had gone, but would loon again be with him; Lane Iternarked, "well the poor elan must be tired He has been faithel to ni4, and knotile much wor ried THE LAST BREAK AST. • . , I,..dainty breakfast was spread before the prisoner by , Warden Soandreth, and everything calculated to coax the appetite was upon the table. The prisoner merely tasted of the *tuella, +laying that , he had no appetite. He.was very Oheerftil 'and good natured and conversed freely with . . e 'his cell.' '.1:1. ire. qMMtly,. Arirted 'to kindness of S4riff'Ciuley - and the liVrardenry' Messrs.' Seshareib and by.-whom be said hellailbeen made eci comfortable. 711..E.DRESS POR DEATH. After , partaking of his breakfast tha prlsopar unlocked . his trunk and drew tberefroch a suit of fLne black clothes, White dross shirt and paper collar; in whialihe?eFrayed himself for death. Ere caretully ,Witalled : himself from neck to Cheek' imd, when' he had donned his. clothing' and combed his hair looked like a new man. His coat was of supe rior broadcloth, made intndress style, paitia of line clualimere broad and full, and his peat of black silk. Hewee a pair of bright polished little , slippers. One wonld•have thought from, the' neat ness of his attire, that he was dressed for a party rather than for a coffin, so &slid lons did he appear. THE BITERS or MERCY.. At: eight o'biock two good Sisters of Mero; from the Webster street Convent,. v,hdted the Cell and:were cordially met by the prisoner. They knelt down and prayed with him fatly k quarter of an hour, *hen, after affectionately bidding' . him adieu forevei,"they took their de nal tote. As they tett, the prisoner trim-. eifiM the jailor and said, ' , l'll see angels like them c ,very soon 1n _, heaven." The Miters were very fir.fthinl in their atten- Lions to the poor black culprit, and oon tribufad mach by theLe zeal and piety to.. wards preparing him forthe future state. Theyvielted and prayed . with him'every daelnce the death warrant was signed; and'atrove earnestly to impress with the awful soiemniw of his position. God `Lass' such women! THE "FINAL PREPARATION. A few nunutee after eight o'clock Fa there: Kerr, Dfraill and O'Rourke entered the'_ Prisoner's cell. They found him cheerful and bioYant, and ready for death. Father Kerr introdumd Father O'Rourke to Lane; where• Vet:the murderer remarked, "I am glad to kriow yon, Holy Father. Had it not been ; for my good - Father here, (Rev. Kerr) 'I should have gone to hell to-day. Six weeks ago I made his acquaintance. He has pointed oat the road to heaven. I ain!going,to travel soon in that direr- tion.l I know 1 have been .wicke4, but my forgiveness hat been recorded above, at leatit4 pray that God„.will pardon .me. Thalia Intela (Father Xeti.)l am indebt ed far lifanffitir Ina the means of my tioul's salvation, but oh ! pray lbr me when all is Father O'Rourke' assured .the prisoner of his belief that all was w_el and that God would'forgive him, wlere upon the prisoner said, "my time is short but God is merciful, and will take me home." Fathers Kerr. Devlin and O'Rourke theUeuMred into prayer with the pris oner; reciting the litanies of the Saints and of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Lane was asked whether he. firmly and truly believed in the 13atholic religion. Be responded firmly,."l believe in no other faith - , Vivant to die ,in it." The priest then ba e him kneel, down,' and Fither Devlin tending .as . God-father, the. cul prit Fs baptized in the name of the Fattier, Son and Holy Ghost, and made a member of the Catholic Church, Fathers Devlin and O'Rourke retired, when the prisOner made a private confession of the Sins of his life to Father Kerr, recited an ant i of contrition and-was_ absolved He imbsequently partook of the Holy Saml,amerit, and at eleven o'clOCk was ready ft death. , I. PARTIZia INTERVIEW. 4 . 1114 f past eleven-o'clock we were permitted to enter the cell of the.pris one!. He arose and cheerfully welcom ed and took tho writer by the hand in a manner to impress the cordiality intended. He was 'cheerful and 'pleas. ant,' and . 'was decidedly more buoyant tha# we had ,ever noticed him. ,We tol4.himil l iat we had called to bid riruit'end long good bye, when he readied ,forth his hands, and with a genial smile said: I sin -soon to go homed , Angels wilt keep Me cOmpany. I hope to meet yoi, all In ' the better land." We said, Mr. Lane ,;it is painful to say good bye, butt we must do. ; it. . /12 !a.;few Minutes all will be aver, may God re-' ceive and have mercy on your soul". He' replied, 4.1- am happy and resigned, I am gotn home. All will be well: Hope to meet you gentlemen above this skies." PAherKarr, here apoke and said that 44 18, 1aa ready to die, and waited hil -1 patiently, for meeting his kather in Heaven, and•ll3lt - •not only resigned to !bliii' fate bit prepared 'for the Ithange . 11'0 1 31116 to 'deatli. He - did not dread IheAnoitientsry'Pain on the scaffold as he 'tat ante `Of Iminedlitely entering Into the " •happintiss cif eternity . "Oh, , yee,,asid Lane, "I. tun happy. I 04 gointheme, and don't dread the pain of death, that is nothing. I wish to meet you lid Heaven. Good bye." Wti retired; feeling in our belong that tog % t hehign %influence must have wrought a change in a heart that we had PrevihßelY thought incapable of en tertaining a noble sentiment or hope for forglieness. ••• • ; irlsioNiato YOB rptant., 4t the stroke of the great bell..an ' nouncing twelve o'clock, noon,the priests who hadheen engaged in religiorie exer cises with the prisoner; threw' open the doOr of the ea and awaited thocoming of sheriff Cilutei to lead thio culprit to death. That officer soon 'made hill ap appearance, accompanied by "Deputy Sheriff Fife. Lane advanced with a pleasant smile upon his taw, to wel come them, 'and said, "Time's up is it? lam read r i." Deputy Fife proceeded to tie with a linen bandage; the arms , of the prisoner.--While this was progres sing Sheriff Coley spoke kindly to the prisoner telling him that the binding was for has own good, and to prevent his pain on the scaffdid. "Oh yes," said Lane, "I understand that, Sheriff, I am thankful. , This left arm hurts." "Yes," replied the Sheriff, Hit hurts now but it is all for the beat." "Now Louis, try to more your arms as hard as you can." The prisoner tried in vain move, his arms, and wady remarked "I am fixed." The Sheriff bid Win good-bye, as did 'also the spiritnali attendants. Lane was wholly composed; and smiled pleasantly as heleft the : cell, after kiss ing the crucifix tor the . The solemn cortegG moved slowly through the jail to the yard Iff - which was erected the scaffold, as follows: Sheriff puley,-Loule Ex-Slieriff Retorters of the Press. Warden Seartdreth and Jail Officials and In the jail yard there had assemb led ' about forty , persons as witnesses of the . ' last sad "scene, including jurors, pbysi— clans, officers of the court; journalists and privileged visitors. Every hat was raised as the pr . oliessi9n reached the yard, and the utmost silence reigned. The clergy men; recited prayers set apart •by the Catholic church for the departing souls on' the marebto the scaffold, the prisonerre sponding in a clear, firm voice. • He marched tip the stairs leading to . the platform without a tremor, and stand.; 'ing, squarely hi the centre looked ap pealingly towards :heaved and then -firolind the jail yard. He was, asked by 'the Sheriff if he had anything to say and; replied I ‘.t have nothing to say." The priest's and Sheriff took theirleave of the: prisoner, and Deputy Sheriff Fife drew' down over his face the white' cap which shut out forever his view of things earth- c .Iy, and fixed the noose about his neck. In retiring from the scaffold 'the Sheriff stewed oelhektrigges tun the drap failed r to fall as the wet weather had swollen the wood work._ With remarkahle pres ence ofmini4 the Sheriff advanced to the timber connecting the main stay of the latform and gave it a push; apd Louie Lane was dangling befween heaven and earth. In ninety seconds the pulse ceased to beat. In forty seconds thereafter it re-, turned and the small frape of the cul prit shook in oonvnisions. Inside of fif teen more sicxmds the soul departed and the cunning wife poisoner was no.morn. Death might in this case be termed in stantaneotis. At twenty-iive minutes to one o'clock the body*ms writ down and placed in an imitatiOnrosewood coffin, furnished by W. IT. Deirore, ' Undertaker. The do . ceased looked very natural, not being the least disfigured. Drs. Mei:Cebu and Gilmore decided that. death resulted rixim strangulation, an opiniod to which Dr. Kern dissented. A postmortem ex amination was held, and It was fOuud that the heck was dislocated.' Lane-was anxious that he should be properly buried after death, and was inueh pleased when the priests assented to take charge of his remains' It ap ptrs, borieviir, that the medfcal gentle men claim, under the law, the corpse for dissecting , purposes. We i t hope Sheriff Cluley will not permit the body to pato -into their, possession. Lane, when Ilv ing,willed hie remains. to his Spiritual A.dvieorsi and they alone should be per- Witted tomcat,' the final disposition by interment in the eethetery,as was faith fully, Promised the unfortunate man be fore death. Lait'night the 'rigid ,corpse, dram. mutilated „by, the, knife, of sclenCo;i was kept in a.dark corner of the jail, and there it still remains as a mark of vindicated law l • THE AILHANCIENENTIL Sheriff-Cluley, his deputies. andWer dens Scandieth and Smith cannot be awarded too inuCh credit forthe manner In which they conducted theexecutlon. Notwithstanding the great. , presattia ibrntight to.becir on the Sheriff for liaises, only some fbrty-three were leaned: and node without cards were admitted.. Diehl, the .oourteons arid obliging chief clerk eftbe Sheriff, kept the Fifth aye .nuct geteituk 4 BiernlY robised as many as a hundred proininent .genclemen admit tance on -sealant of , their haying no tick ets.. Alerge force of rolice under Lieut. Seth WilMot were stationed about the yard to prevent disturbance and Intim. sion. Altogether, the airangenienia were moat: complete, and the exeCutien was one of the. best conduCted and Most orderly everlield in our county. „ Rev. 'Father 'Kerr, of the, tathedr4l,'; Rev. Father 'Devlin and - tile:Sisters of mercy were 'untiring tfistr. - efforts to prepare the infoitneeteldetini for desth. Father; Kerr. ape/3101ln who iNee chief spiritwil adviser, won the golden opinion of all throgh his ratuielesa andd-devoted attentions • to , IthS poor -,:and'-!friendlesa • . , -.'*•-..")#,1,V,i...,1-‘4.ai.4.cf-sc,-...zl:At-,-1;:;44%.1-.Fikt,-4, • NUMBER 105. MARCH TO DEATH. Stewart. Vathei Kerr, Father Devlin. Deputy Sheriffs. ' Visitors. ON' TEE SCAFFOLD AFTER DEATit. DISPOSITION OF THE If QDT. , ZNALOVS AND DDV(MTD. (Conthmect on Eighth Pa4e.)