THE TIMES NEW BLOOMFIELD, PA.. NOVEMBER 25, 1879. movement In the crowd, and a strange looking figure Approached. " There he la," tald a voice which Bounded more like the growl of some wild animal than like anything human. "Black 1IIII did It," and the upeaker laid the apparently llfeleas body of El liot Burnett on the ground. A murmur of consternation ran through the crowd. "Is he alive t" hurst In chorus from the lips of the spectators. " Yes, he Is alive; give him whiskey aud you will see," said the new comer. The suggestion was followed, and the stimulant hnd the desired e fleet. Elliot opened his eyes, uttered a faint groan, and closed them again. The men gathered around the crea ture who had drought Elliot there. lie related In his half idiotic way how Black Hill had shot Burnett and left htm for dead. " lie was good to me once," said the idiot. " I took htm home, fed him and put him to sleep. When he awoke told him the men thought he wes dead, and were going to hang Joe Knight. He asked me to bring him here. That is all." Instantly the fury of the crowd was turned toward Black Bill, who was caught as he wub trying to escape. " Hung him I hang lilm I" yelled the mob. They did not hang him, how ever, but gave him a severe thrashing nd ordered him to leave the place, -which order he lost no time in obeying. The strain upon Mary's nerves pro duced a severe lit of illness,' and for many days the lives of the two young veoile hung in the balance; but good nursing and the recuperative powers of youth prevailed at lust. During their illness Knight settled up his alliilrs and as soon as they were strong enough the three started East, Joe assuring them that nothing but the mountain air of his old home would complete their recovery. Elliot and Mary were married shortly afterward, and It was from hlB Hps I heard I he story of Mary's heroism and Knight s miraculous escape from an ignominious death. A WOMAN IN BREECHES. ON SATURDAY LAST, Bays the Chicago Times, a gentleman and lady took a room at the United States Hotel, uear the Rock Island depot, and were registered as " Manley Willis and lady, Auburn, New York." They at tracted no particular attention, although, it was apparent that Mr. Willis was at least ten years younger than his wife. A few remarks of a sympathizing kind were passed, but no suspicion that the pair were not perfectly " straight," ever entered the minds of the boarders until yesterday morning, when Lieutenant Hayes and Officer Burton went to their room and placed them under arrest. Upon being confronted by the officers, "Mr." Manley Willis acknowledged ed that " he" was masquerading in male attire when petticoats and bustles were " his" proper dress. In other words, " he" confessed that "he" was a woman. The female gentleman was taken over to Harrison street station, as was also the other party, who was a " really and. truly" woman, and both were locked up. A rather amusing episode occurred when the lady who was doing the male part was being locked up. In the cell in which she was to be locked up was a young woman charged with robbery, and when Lieut. Hayes ordered the door uulocked aud pushed "Mr." Willis In to the cell the girl set up a most energet ic "kick." She "didn't want no man in the cell" with her, and she wasn't going to have it. When she saw that her companion was in for good she changed her tactics and began to cry. It took a good deal of persuasion to make her believe that the being before her was one of the gentle sex. Shortly after the Incarceration of the parties a Times, reporter interviewed them. He found the younger one in one of the witness cells. She was tall, good looking and well formed, and was dressed in a dark suit of clothes. She had nicely polished boots, and wore a heavy watch chain, A soft dark color ed hat, tipped rakishly over her left ear, completed the outfit. She deported her self a good deal like a man and while talking with the reporter kept jingling some keys and money in an outside coat ' pocket. Her story, If given in detail and touch ed up here and there would make the - fortune of some cheap novel publisher. . ' She said in the first place that her name -' was Elleu Duglee. She came from Har risburg, Pa., where her father kept a store. Some six years ago her father died leaving her $5,000, and appointed her uncle guardian. This uncle she could not agree with because he desired her to marry her cousin. Therefore in or der to escape this she assumed a male attire and began to travel about looking for work. She took an agenoy for sev eral small household articles and man aged to earn enough to keei her alive. Part of the time she assumed her own dress and then sold corsets. She had clerked In Utica and Albany, New York. Two years ago she returned to her old home but her uncle again urged her marriage with her cousin. She again refused and went away. At Utlca she met a man named Tripp, to whom she was married. The match proving unhappy, they separated, and she went to Aurellus, N. Y where she met the party wltu ber, Mrs. Eliza White. They were on their way to San Francisco when arrested. She says she did not register herself as Mr. Manley Willis and lady, but that some one else must have done It. The other woman told a somewhat different story. She was from Ban Fran cisco and had gone East to visit her folks at Aurellus. Here she met Ellen whose first name Is Florence who asked her If she might return with her to San Fran cisco, because she wished to escape her husband. Mrs. Duglce,she said, bad only worn men's clothes for a short time, having put them on that she might bet ter attend to the baggage and like duties. In the trunks of the women were found a miscellaneous collection of arti cles, among which were ft diary, a mar riage certificate, with the name of Flor ence E. Bohall upou It, and numberless letters. Mrs. Tripp denied all knowl edge of the tuarriuge certificate, and said there were'a number of things in her trunk which she was taking to a friend in Davenport, Iowa. In the possession of the lucjy was found a small-sized 22 calibre revolver, which she said she slip ped Into her pistol-pocket because there was no room for It in her satchel. She had two tickets for Omaha in her pock-et-book. Among the letters found In her trunk was one in which occurred the sentence, " I am glad you are out of prison again." When asked as to the mean ing of this she said it referred to her es cape from the persecution of her uncle. The letter winds up by stating that "your daughter and eon join in with me in sending their love to you." Mrs. Tripp is apparently not over 20, but claims to be 23 years of age. Such a re mark to one of her youthfulness, theu, is peculiar to say the least. The letter 1b dated at Aurellus, N. Y., Oct. 14, 1879, aud commences " Dear Flo." It Is sub scribed " Your true friend, Lib." The difference in the statements and the strangeness of the surrounding circum stances indicate something beyond what is already known. Mrs. Tripp will be brought before Jus tice Wallace this morning, and will be charged with wearing male attire and carrying concealed weapons. The latter charge will probably be dismissed. A Woman's Romance. AN ELMIRA, N. Y"., despatch to the N. Y., Times furnishes the follow ing: A curious story comes from Alleghany county In a private letter from a well- known resident of that county to a gentleman of this city. In 1870 a young man named William Freeman rented a farm near Wellsville, Alleghany county. He had worked on different farms in that part of the State, enjoyed an excel lent reputation, and was known as 'Handsome Billy." Being unmarried he hired a widow of middle age who lived in the neighborhood to superin tend his household affairs. A nephew of this woman assisted Freeman with the farm-work. In the summer of 1877 several burglaries were committed in the county. Among others a store was robbed, and the goods were traced to Freeman's barn and found hidden theie. Freeman was arrested, and charged with being concerned in the burglary. He declared that he was innocent, and few people who knew him believed him guilty. By the time his case was ready for trial, in October, a speedy acquittal of Freeman was expected, as circumstan ces pointed strongly to other persons as the criminals. But, to the surprise of the community, when Freeman was arraigned for trial he pleaded guilty to .both counts of the lndlctmeut burglary and larceny. He broke down entirely in making the plea, and begged the court td be lenient with him. He was sentenced to eighteen months' impris onment in the Erie County Penitentiary and was put to work polishing buckles among a lot of hardened criminals. The Warden of the prison was given notice by Governor Robinson in March, 1878, that a petition had been made for the pardon of the prisoner, William Freeman, and requested a report on the physical condition of the convict, as Is customary when a pardon is to be con sidered. Dr. Sinnock, the prison physi cian, proceeded to make the necessary examination of Freeman, and in a few minutes, reported to the Warden with the astonishing intelligence that the convict was a woman. The prisoner was removed at once to the woman's quarters. She begged that her case should not be made public, and told the following story : Her name, she said, was Mary Ann Shafer, and she was twenty-three years old. Her parents were German emigrants, and slio was born on the ocean. Her father died soon after arriving In America, and her mother married again and moved to Allegany county. When she was eleven years old her step-father told her he could support her no longer, aud that she must go away and earn Jier own living. She worked as a servant in farm-houses for a few months, when she determined to disguise herself as a boy, in order that she could And more remu nerative employment. No one but her mother knew of her intentions. She went to a distant part of the country for about two years, did farm-work, and worked one season on the Erie Canal. She then returned to the vicinity of her home, where no one recognized her. Under the name of William Freeman she worked in the vicinity for ten years without awakening any suspicion that she was not a man. She Joined the Methodist church In 1875, and had for several years longed to assume her true character, but the wearing of men's clothing had become second na ture to her, and she was ashamed to make the change. In regard to the crime for which she was arrested and to which she pleaded guilty, she declared that she was entirely innocent. The nephew of the womun who was her housekeeper, had committed the burgla ry and secreted the goods in the barn, and had declared to her while she was In jail that unless she entered a plea of guilty she would never reach home alive. She believed that the nephew was a man who would not pause at any crime, and to save her life she pleaded guilty. When dressed in woman's clothing, Mary, Schafer became a fine-looking woman, but awkward from long use of male attire and muscullne lubor. She was pardoned In the fall of 1878, and returned at once to her mother. Last winter she went to Bradford, Pennsyl vania, and obtained employment in a shoe store under her real name, in proper attire. The nephew whose threats made her a convict, and led to the discovery of her secret, escaped punish ment by leaving the State. In the spring of 1878 the merchant in whose store the burglary was committed dis posed of his business aud went to Limestone, Cattaraugus county, N. Y. His business called him frequently to Bradford. He was a German, and a friend of the man for whom Mary Ann Schafer worked. He met the young woman at the store, liked her, and asked her to marry him. She accepted him, aud last week they became man and wife. A Remarkable Case. TWENTY YEARS ago Dr. David Crawford, of Prince George county, Md., died. He waB a man of great wealth and was unmarried, his nearest relative having been a first cousin, Mr. R. S. Blackburn, of Clark county, Va., and two second cousins, Mrs. Kearney and Miss Forest, of Washington, D. C. Dr. Crawford's brother, who died some years before him, bad cohabited with Miss Elizabeth Taylor, his housekeeper, by whom he had one child. On the baptism of this child, the clergyman, a Catholic priest of Washington Clty.who performed the ceremony, Informed the mother that she ought not to return to Crawford's house unless she went as his wife. She acted on the counsel of the clergyman and refused to return. Craw ford thereupon consented to marry her, stipulating With ber that the marriage should be kept a secret, and the priest united them in wedlock. Three other children were born after the marriage. Dr. David Crawford belonged to an aristocratic family, and keenly felt the disgrace which the brother had entailed on the family name. Regarding all the children as bastards, and the cohabita tion of their mother with his brother as criminal, the doctor broke off all rela tions with them and ignored their ex istence. He was known to be much attached to his Virginia and Washington cousins and his neighbors were satisfied that he would leave his princely estate to them. He died after a short illness, in the win ter of 1859. Mr. Blackburn attended the funeral. After the burial a diligent search for the will was made, but with out success. Mr. .William Duvall, a neighbor, informed Mr. Blackburn that the deceased had made a will, and that he and two others were witnesses to It, one a Mr. Bayne, of Prince George coun ty, and the other a stranger whose name Duvall had forgotten. The children of Thomas Crawford and Elizabeth Taylor (the name she al ways went by) now set up their claim to the estate as the next kin. Then fol lowed the bitterest, the longest, the most celebrated coutest which ever took place in the Courts of Maryland. Mr. Blackburn was aided in the fight by John Augustln Washington, of Mt. Vernon, who was his cousin, aud by oth er Virginia relatives. They went over to Upper Marlboro, the county town of rrlnce George county, Maryland, stop ped with Dr. Edward L. Sheehy, who had long been the physician and inti mate friend of the deceasad Dr. Craw ford, and who was quite sure that a will had been made by him. The contest began in 1869. Whole battalllons of lawyers were marshalled on either side. The claimants as next of kin were represented by Gen. Thos. F. Bowie and other able counsel ; Black burn by Thomas S. Alexander, William Schley and Governor Pratt. It was a bitter fight, and before It wasover,many more of the most prominent lawyers In the State of Maryland were called into the contest. The priest was finally dis covered in Rome, who testified to the marriage of Thomas Crawford and Betsy Taylor. The Virginia contestants were thus beaten. Meantime the Crawford children of Betsy Taylor got their property .spent the personal and sold the real estate and squandered their Inheritance. Now comes the strangest part of the story. The statement of Duvall that David Crawford had made a will was true. A Washington lawyer named Miller had drawn It for Crawford, and after It was signed and witnessed Miller, who was one of the witnesses, kept the instrument at the doctor's request. He placed It in a box directed to Dr. David Crawford. The war coining on, he soon went South. Before leaving he told his office boy that, in the event of his not coining back to Washington, he (the boy) should send the box and other papers to the parties to whom they were addressed. Miller never returned, having been killed in battle. The boy went away to the country, taking the box and the other papers with him. He put them away and thought no more about them. After nearly twenty years had elapsed, the boy, now a settled man, bethought him of the Crawford box, and sent it to one of the lawyers in the case last March. Blackburn, since dead, and the two Washington cousins, were the devisees of the will. Thus, after having been beaten in all the Maryland Courts aud in the Supreme Court of the United States, the discovery of the long-lost will placed the Virginia and Washing ton cousins, or such of them as survive, in the way of getting their estate, or, rather the land which third parties had purchased from the Crawford-Taylor heirs, aud the innocent third parties will now be apt to lose their money, as well as the title and all. The strange part of the story is that nearly all the lawyers and principal con testants at the beginning of the lawsuit are now dead. It is a veritable Jam dyce vs. Jarudyce chancery case, stran ger in many of its features than the wildest fiction. A Mistake that Pleased Some Person. Some years ago the daughter of a well known citizen of central New York, named Jennie, had unfortunately as the father then thought, formed an attach ment for a young man named John. To separate them the father sent her to spend the winter with a married sister, Mary who resided in New York. Spring approached, and Jennie was expected home on a certain day, but, instead the father received a letter from his son-in-law desiring that she might remain a while longer, so that his wife could ac company him on a short southern trip, and requesting an answer by telegraph ; where-upon the father sent the following dispatch : "Jennie may stay and Mary may go, if she wishes to very much." The message as delivered in New York read : "Jennie may stay and mar ry Geo. if she wishes to very much." The father immediately received this from Jennie: "A thousand thanks for your permission : John and I mar ry at once. The telegraph stupidly made his name George, but of course you meant John." O" It is wiser to prevent a quarrel be fore band, 'than to revenge it after wards. Cause and Effect The main cause of nervousness is in digestion, and that is caused by weak ness of the stomach. No one can have sound nerves and good health without using Hop Bitters to strengthen the stomach, purify the blood, and keep the liver and kidneys active, to carry off all the poisonous and waste matter of the system. See another column. 48 2t Of Lot your first attack of indigestion be the last. Rouse the dormant euergles of tbe stomach with tbo Bitters. The tone thus imparted will remaiu. This is a fact established by thousauds of wituesses whose testimony is simply a statement of their own experieuooa. Those afflicted with geueral debility of every phase will find this medioiue an unfailing agent in building up aud renewing their strength. For aale by all Druggist aud respectable Dealers generally. 4S4t COUGH SYltUPt 50 Years Before the Public ! VrnnnnnnnA t 1 1 . n K V. ... . . v..-'u....Uu j ma v w .ud muni r leaBitni and efllcacloos remedy now In one, for the i II f nf flnnwha 'UIJ. ' I .. 1 1 Tickling sensation of the Throat, Whooping Cough, etc. Over a million bottles sold within the last few years. It gives relief wherever used, and has the power to Impart benefit that cannot be bad from the cough mixtures now In use. Bold by all Druggists at 25 cent per bottle. SELLERS' LIVER FILLS are also highly recommended for coring liver complaint, constipation, eirk-hcadacbes, fever and ague, and all diseases of the stomach and liver. Boldjby all by all Druggist at 25 cents per box. 40 ij R. E. SELLERS A CO., Pittsburg, Pa. J. M. OlIIVIN. J. H. GlRVIN J. M. GIRVIN & SON., FLOUR, GRAIN, SEED Sl PRODUCE Commission Merchants, No. 64 South O'ay, HU, BALTIMORE, MD. We will pay strict attention to the sale of all kinds of Country Produce aud remit the amounts promptly. 45 iVr. J. M. GIRVIN & BON. JOSSER & ALLEN CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, PENN'A. Mow offer the publlo A HARK AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS Consisting sf all shades suitable for the seasou BLACK ALP AC CAS AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MusLinsrs, AT VARIOUS PRICES. AN ENOLEiS SELECTION OF PRINTS! We sell and do keep a good quality of SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS And everything under the head of GROCERIES! Machine needles and oil for all makes ot Machines. To be convinced that our goods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, IS TO CALL AND EXAMINR STOCK. - No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. DRUGS. DRUGS. JACOB STRICKLER, (Successor to Dr. M. B. Strlckler) PHARMACIST, NEW BLOOMFIELD, rEXN'A. HAVING tneceeded the late firm of Dr. M. B. Stneklcr In the Drug Business at his Store-room, ou MAIN HTKKKT. two doors East of the Big Spring, I will endeavor to make It In every way worthy tbe patronage of the public. Personal and strict attention AT ALL TIMES given to the compounding and dispensing Physi cians' preoptions, so as to insure accuracy and guard against accidents. BEAR IN 3IIND that my stock has been recently selected and care taken to have everything U the BK.ST QUALI TY. The public may rest assured that ALL med icines that leave my store shall be as represented PURE and UNADULTERATED. I BITE C0XSTA5TLY OX 1UXD HAIR OIL and POM4DE8 HAIR. TOOTH and N A1L-BRCSHES. bUKGEONS. TOILET, and CARKIAGE SPONGES. PUPK BOXKS. TOILET POWDERS. CASTILE and PANCX SOAPS. PERFUMERY OF ALL KINDS, Together witb Fresh and Genuine Patent Medi cines of every description. ALSO, Segars, Tobacco, School Books, &c. ORANGES, LEMONS & BANANA?, In season. Pure Wines and Llqnors for Medicinal Purposes. Terms, Strictly Cash. By strict attention to business. I hope to merit the eonndenoe aud tavor ol the public. JACOB 8TRICKLZR, Ph. 6. April 29, 1379.