HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1890-1-9, Page 2ten
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The Sad Romance liteshlent iterho
BUMMART VEdiNtEilatTOR.
.
SPREADINGIRAILS
THEngsws Imp.
poln Pedro Lome His Nellie inewe
a as ()maw *n quit, and a uard
Woreer, and. o Hamilton Roy.
Washingtea deep Jitoli says ^ Ille moat
trine tienettor le Mr. lioMillan, of
(mow statement of the Setelatioaeeletere.
,or Lem Unrest Itteteting,
; despatch of Thuraday
A Ilie &mean .
night eaye : The Gevernment has teemed a
deoree that all fettle*
of re Wen
to Runt* k'nrtuue.
A johnetown Pa., despatch pave . An
, , , , ,
Almost heart-breken men etood today in
the tip ot where Wes Onee located Me little
Eight Colored Bbrderers Taken From
Jail and Sint.
---.1.—....—
a Oadaed a Terrible Railway Wreek on.,
the 0. & 0.
Kingdom.
A. Lisbon cable says: When ii
evideet thet the end esete rapidly a
frig; the ex•Emarese was advised
hig n a native of Hamilton, Ontario.
4nn'e
Providing,. , Paeans
mon a confeesor. Although in gr
ist oftthet few Very rich men in
-ee who have learned how to live at
erazame time that they were amiseing
tines, Senator McMillan not only /emcee
, to tie° al royally, but to do that and
,orod'Oeuil amount of work. He
ne
im thn-v eszeteretaties constantly em
Tea, and not one a them has any time
Be away. 0,3e a the secretaries at.
Is to the aenator's railroed, lumber ard
aerations affair. These are very exten-
, There is not much of importance he
/Austria' way in the State of Miohigan
; Senator McMillan is net in, and
jay. some years ago a queer sort of
nership was formed, Mr. McMillan
one of the famous family of New-
y, of Michigan, being the contracting
tee.
ie two men were together in every.
g They bought railroads, salt mines,
lines, lumber mills, oar shops, street
mtfie, everything whioh seemed to pro.
, returns. Both grew rapidly rich. Nor
they dose together in business alone.
a families were intimate. They rode,
ed, dined together. If McMillan went
ew York, Newberry was his compare
Of one of the oemPanies they were
eading spirits in, McMillan would be
ed president and Newberry treasurer.
se next one, Newberry would be presi.
and McMillan treseurer. Bach fast
,dship in buainess and sooial inter-
3e is rare, and it is a pleasure to record
the ties were never metered by quarrel
endeavoring .or. proposing erey. me.a. sures for
eotive eliPeentiou to the RePublee shell be
tried'hY a militerY tribunal. An oPPosition
journal watt tateliendedlen Tuesday*
The Brazilian Minieter at Washington
lime reeeived the following eahlegram,
dated to -day, from. Ruy Barho.za, Minister
of Finance at Rio Janeiro: .' The report
about the mutiny of a corpe of artillery is,
Mise.1 here was only a mutiny of a few
soldiera! which Was immediatelY repressed.
The circumetanee has increased confidence
in the Government, whioll shewe itself
strongly. We are prepared with prompt
and deoisive means tto put down any die.
turbance of pablic order. Theaggraeation
of Gen. Fonseea'a illness is not true; on
the contrary, he is reoovermg speedily
from his former complaints. The assistant
dootor believes his recovery to be certain.'
At any rate the fate of the revolution, DOW
accepted by the whole country, does. not
depend on the contingeney of any one
man a life, however precious it may be. In
the army iteelt the revolution can rely on
other chiefs of great prestige and DO leas
devoted to the cause. All the different
political parties have espoused with enthu-
slum the term fixed (Nov. 15, 1890) for
the meeting of the Constituent Assembly,
they considering by this aot the stability of
the Republic is assured. Beware of news-
mongers."
Private cables reoeived to -day from
Brazil state the markets for exchange at
both Rio and Para are in bad shape, while
the rubber supply on hand will only last a
home. Ile maid gee nothing of the dwell.'
ing, and his wife and five little ohitdren
Were nowhere to he found., He WaS EMile
•tleitie, a rrenohmen, wlao had left Cam.
brie "CitY about a week before the flood to
go to bie native teW11,04@°livillet in Alsace-
Lorraine, where a little fortune of $10,9.00
had been left him by a deceased uncle, Ho
returnedyesterday, but Whell hQ gatOff the
treia he did not recognize the Piece. 'Dna.
tug all iaie travels to and from his native
eountee he had not heard a word ahout the
terrible calamity that had wrougtkett retieh
ruin end death in May last,
Said he to -day : "When I got off at the
Pe:met/hank, Railroad etation I turned
baakte One of the depot men, and inquired
eetbee how far 1 had yet to go to Johns•
Wain ae I had got off at the wrong
atatient and how soon the next train left
fer ,that ffewn. The man looked at )210, for
&moment as though he thought I WAS not
an -4,440K in my mind, and milted me
wheficeer or net I could read the sign on the
station house.
"1 looked up, . and there it was plain
enough. While I looked at the sign in a
dazed sort of way another man stepped ap
and said: '1 epees you're a stranger here,
or have been in Johnstown before the &ea;
it's quite changed now; I wouldn't have
known it rayeelf if I had been away for .itta
menthe.'
," As the man spok e I felt as if some one
had punctured my heart with a eharp
knife, and I fainted dead away. When
consoionsnese returned I went out to find
.
OUTRAGED PUBLIC OPINION.
., A Charleston, S.C., deepetch of Satur-
'they SaYS : A mob of Oeveral hundred men
raided the jail at Barnwell Cm:at Hon" at
2 o'clock thie Morning, overpowered the
tiler and took out eight negro pri.soners
charged with murder. These were Ripley
: jOhnston and Mitchell Adams, charged
with murdering a man named flefferman,
and eix others ohaeged with the murder of
.young Martin. The Pr/Boners were taken
out of town and shot to death. The jailer
was tied and forced to accompany the
lynchers. The whole thing was conducted
in a very skilful manner, the citizens of
the town not knowing anything about it.
A great many negroes A re collected at the
scene of the lynehin and trouble is an-
g,
tioiPated•
The following statement, signed by Robt,
Aldrich, Mike Brown, George H. Bath,
William MoNah and James A. Jenkins,
some of the most prominent and influential
citizens at Barnwell, has been published in
the News and Courier, in explanation of the
horrible betchery of defenceless naen at that
piece lest night:
HISTORY or THE TROUBLE.
" In coneequence of the lynching which
took place here last night, the undersigned
were this morning requested by the Sheriff
to act as an Advieory Committee to coma-
eel Buell etepa as may be deemed best to
secureWe at first proceeded to in.
. order. .
rjmw xaeweeeatee.re tgeteraxteatet
.
A Charleston, W. Vs., deelnetch a !awl...
day sari; ; A terrible aooiclent accurred this
morning on the Chesapeake ca Ohio Rail.
road at White Sulphur Springs, 120 Miles
east of this place. An account from an
eye -witness says: Vestibule train No. 3 on
the Chesapeake &Ohio left the track two
Miles west et White Sulphur Springs at
7.20 thimorning, deneolisbing six oars,
killing eleven people and injuring about
twenty-five. The accident wae °Lamed by
the rails spreading. Hale Morrison, of
Charleston, was killed instantly, also
flaggagemaster Barksdale, of Profile Va.;
Newsboy Thompson, of Portsmouth; O.; J.
D. Wed, of Howardeville, Va.; Thomas
-
Kareeoh, of Blackstone, Kan.; Kidder Kidd,
f Hannibal,' ••
0 Mo., two colored men from
Allegheny, Va., and three others unknown.
Among the injured were: 3. R. Karesche
Blaoketone, Kan., internally; Conductor
G. E. Sahweiltert, Huntington, right leg
broken ; R. L. Blanton, Farniville, Va.,
cut under the eye; Gus. H. Kline, Chicago,
leg broken; William Dell, New York, coin-
pound fracture of the thigh (the two latter
were members of the Gardner Theatrioal
Company, and were to have played in
Charleston to.night) ; J. A. Clark, train
despatcher, Clifton Forge, Va., arra broken;
John woodfolk Allegheny,Vet section
- , .,
hand, right leg crushed, had to be ampu.
tated ; W. D. Clarke, Nelson County, Va.,
scalp wound ; Louis Karztb, Blackstone,
Kan, oollar-bone broken; H. F. Gregory,
ehe mplied : " Yee ; but we mu
thetEtuperor. He will give instr
Hee•laet words were: " I egret
children and grandchildren are no
me, that 1 might bless them for
time, Alas !Brazil, Brazil, that :
wintry: I cannot return there"
Soreness Japura and two mina
the body during tae night. The fe
dead Empress wore a peaceful ex
When Dom Pedro arrived at th
of his dead wife yesterday he k
kissed her forehead. He appear
unable to move, and did not s
twenty minutes. Then he said:
experienced the most bitter trial •
could inflict upon me. Her' fait
,
affectionate companionship: has e
me for 46 years. God's will bi
• • ' , •
Then, noticing his wife e eyes still
lost command of himself and ex,
" Is it poseible that these dear, 1
will never again brighten when
nee ee Having closed the eyelids
verently kiesed them. He then
be alone, and SO he remained 1,
time, after abide he became e
asked the attendants to keep 1
until the Lisbon fetes were endl
news had already been sent eve:
Later in'the evening Dom Pedro 1
patehee announcing the death of hi
the vario a monarchs
u : He also sei
gram to King Carlos; in which he e.
a desire that his wifele remains be
in the Pantheon.
Idnees.
was one member of this Newberry
ly who as a young man sterted a most
l sort of speculation in Detroit. He
heir to considerable property, but
l not come into pot:session of it till an
few weeks. Rubber baa taken an upward
jump. At Para exchange ie denaoralized,
while at Rio the rate has declined 2 per
cent to 24. This makes a total decline of
8 per cent. eince Dom Peero'a expulsion'. alt
my wife and children, but eomethine told
-
me that they were dead. The part of
Cambria City where stood the house in
which I left my family wae completely
swept away.
"1 made enquiries for forty-eight hours,
t t d d t right to put the
yes iga e, an eem 1,
public in possession of the facts of the
occurrence and causes whioh we believe
led to it as far as we have gathered them.
On the 30th of October last John H.
Hefferman a prominent young merchant
t . . . - . .
Cliff Top, Va., arm oruehed, internally in-
Capt. Burch, Supervisor, bruised
jured ;
on right aide and otherwise hurt. It was
a fearful wreck, au d. the damage the
railroad c .
cannot be estimated Luckily tae
°ere did not take fire, the care being heated
THE PARaram. SENSATII
—
The Irish Leaders' Entangleme]
Mrs. O'Shea.
A London cable sa • Th
ye • e Beni
or some other aged and inconvenientand
ive should be out of the way. He
id with as much patience as possible
eadisappesrame of this living obeta-
int finally called upon a number of
thy men, of whom I believe Senator
:111an was one, and said to them: "1
Low a young man. I will never be
g again and I want to have a good
while it*is possible. I may be oom-
1 to wait twenty years, or thirty, for
fortune • meanwhile I am compare-
7 poor, bound down, repressed, wearily
ng. You men guarantee me $5,000 a
till I get possession of the property
is coming to me, and then you shall
'one-half of that, whatever it amounts
lTISTWITTINGLY 11I &DRIED.
—
Two Couples Get Married For Fun and Find
it Sober Earnest.of
el6
A Wilkesbarre, Pa., despatch of Wednhaving
day mys : A double wedding, undertaken
in a joke, but now realized as a sober
reality, has created no little consternationinhabited
here. John Morrell, a well-known restan.
rant keeper, stepped into the office of Alder-
man J. F. Donohue last eveningto transact
some busineee. Tnere he met James
Murtie, a clerk, and Mary Logue and Sallieth
Cook, with whom the young men were
slightly acquainted. After some laughing
conversation one of the young men sug-
during which time I had not a morsel to
- •
eat or a wink ot eleep, but all in vain.
Nobody knew what had become of my
-
family, and the people could hardly under.
stand my sorrow and grief, entte„d
lyee
Bo much theme .
0 Ns ot
T was told that nearly all the eo
" - .
that - t•
Cambria City, who . aec ion
where my house had stood, periehed. 1
am not going to remain in this country.
th t 'bl I
Everything reminds me ofe ern e ose
I have suffered. I am going to New York
to•night, and from there acrosse ocean
i
back to my birthplace, where shall live
the rest of mdays in solitude and mid-
Y
ness."
brave public.spirdea extizen, was shot
' - •
down and killed m Barnwell by negrops.
. . . . high.Th
Public inclignetion ran very nets
lynching were freely made, but tide was
elveer e b et cooler counsel. At the last
' t d
term of the Court the Grand Jury found
• ' derers and acme -
true bills against Ine mur
series, but the cases were continued. The
white people were disappointed, and the
ne a it is thought, were emboldened
gr°e t
by this dieposition of the matter. On
the 19th of December Mr. James S. Brown,
a prominent planter and leading citizen
of Fieh Pond Township, wae shot to death
on his own premises by negroes without the
slightest judification or excuse. The mar-
darer has not been arrested. On the 18th
by steam. The engine did not leave the
Mile, but the tender's trucks were knoolted
oat. The rear sleeper had front truoke on
the ground and remained on the rails.
THE FATAL SMOKER.
The train whioh was wrecked left New
York at 3.30 p. m. yesterday and was dna
at Cincinnati at 5.51 p. m. to -day. It was
behind time, and running 40 mile per
hour. The wreck °conned on the Mover
Jary's Run, 'whioh is 190 feet high, and
said to be the highest fill in the United
States. All of the killed were in the
smoking oar, which was telescoped by an
other oar. Every person in the car was
killed, except the conductor, who was seri.
th d f - th d' '
e ay o course is e rvierce suit
by Wm. Henry O'Shea, familiarle
as Capt. O'Shea, against his wi'
Charles Stewart Parnell as a o.res
Capt. O'Shea gives Ms address
Victoria street, 'Westminster
his occupation as justice of th
County Clare, Ireland. The
alleged b Capt. O'Shea is th inti
h• 'if y • e
le w e with Mr. Parnell, at Elth
York t erraoe, Brighton and Al
Accord'
ing to an informant, Mr.
bee lived for a considerable time• 3
at Eltham with M S . 81
re. O'hea, and
place both live secluded lives
O'Shea b aboat th *
as a on e Dame reputat
as in America. In both countries
The rich men put their heads to.
T and concluded that would be a good
, to do. They guaranteed young New-
the five thousand a year till the
1 of bis aunt, and the young man at
stamen out to have the good time
a he had been pining for. In a few
he the aunt died, and after a contest
s courts the coterie of rich speculators
sath were rewarded with e decision
a gave them all that had been 3:tomb:a.
43, the bond—a comfortable fortune for
of them.
a Senator's second secretary is his
cal manager, and one of the shrewdest
oians in the State of Michigan. There
may of importance in the State that
as not know, no . trick in the game of
es with whioh he is not familiar.
gested in a jest, that as there was just the
rieht number they should join hands and
have a double marriage. The others con.
muted, and after Morrell had taken Miss
Logue by the hand and Murtie had done
likewise by Sallie Cook, the alderman pro-
ceeded with the regular marriage servioes.
Before one of the four had time to realize
what was going on they were married by a
ceremony as binding as any that could be
performed. When the alderman proceeded
to make out the certificates they began to
understand what had taken place, and their
consternation can hardly be described.
When the newe of what had happened
became known in the city, it created no
littleexcatement. Mies Cook was engaged
to another young man, who is wild with
anger. He started out to find Murtie, and
THE GEORGIA RIOTERS.
JeeenP Enjoys a Lively Christmas—Count-.
ing the casualties.
A Jessup, Ga., despatch of Thure-day
night gives the following later particulars
of the race riot of Wednesday and Thurs-
day: Midnight—The situation ie somewhat
quieter at this hour, but an onasional shot
is heard. The streets are still paraded by
armed men. A negro was found dead in
the e
an alley a few xnoments ago, and two o r
of the wounded are reported to be dying.
The following has been reoeived from
Jeasup, Ga. : A posse of twenty men under
command of S. White left by the East
Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia train to -day
for Lumber City to intercept Brewer and
of December, while going from his store at
Martm's Station to his house, a mile away,
Mr. Robert Martin, a young men of the
most exemplary character and of the high-
est standing as a man and citizen, was lot-
lowed by a negro and shot in the back with
a gun loaded with slugs, on the publics road
which passed through hie father's plants-
tion, in hearing ot negate; whose houses
were all around the epot where he was
shot, and who admitted that they had
heard the shot and hie cries when ehot, and
none of them went to his relief, and none
of ,them went to hie body, although
.
IT LAY IN THE ROAD ALL NIGHT.
and for eeveral hours after daylight in
plain view of them all. It was eatiefectorily
established that his mth
murder was e result
onely injured. Dr. W. P. Caldwell, the
only physioian in White Sulphur, repaired
to the scene, and did all in hie power to
alleviate the enffering, but could only aid
one person at a time After some time a
number of doctors from along the line
arrived, and worked long and faithfully
among th ff ' L d' t d t
e en raring. a tee urne ou an
masse,and too much cannot be mid in praise
of their noble efforts. ' The cause of the
accident is not definitely known. Some re-
ports are to the effect that the rail was
worn out and that the ties'
were rotten.
One noteworthy feature ie that no women
or children were injured. Great excite-
ment prevailed in this city all day se no
o .
accounts f the wreck could be obtained
Senator Kenna and Congreeernan Ald tenon
were on the train.
been supposed that he has long In
the intimacy between his wife e
Parnell, and also that Mr Parnell
seat for Mr. O'Shea in • * Parli• ament
count of the unremitting blindi
O'Shea to the coned nt • Ifid lity
anadia 5 n e b
O'Shea. Cne willre mem er
I • h '
re in Ireland were on the point c
against Mr. Parnell's leaderehip whe
sisted that O'Shea sheuld be given i
Peir ml' ment. Perhaps because it wi
unusually annoying at this juncture
has brought the suit. O'Shea has he
quarters in Victoria street, where
with his son. He admitted last nil
the reports that he had brought a et
correct, but wondered how it had
public.
his servicea are of the greatest value it is reported that the latter has bit the
i Senator is witnessed by the salary city. The parents of tbe girls are deeply
i he receives. The Senator turns over inoeneed, and state that they will take legal
n precisely the eum which the United proceedings to have the wedding annulled.
its
his gang, who, it ie rumored, have gone
there for reinforcemente. The firing along
the picket line keeps up, but it is prinoi-
pally by boye. A crowd of armed men
havejust returned from a trip t. he
of a conspiracy to remove him in order
that their license upon the plantation of
bie father might be greater. The mar-
derer, that is, the negro who fired the shot,
and his &memories, six in number, after
HORRIBLE SCENES.
Perms who were in the wreck on the
Chesapeake dc Ohio Railroad at White
Selphur Springs horrible
A FIENDISH mama.
Five Villains A —
ttack a Lady—Her
Attempts No Defence.
s &flows each of members of Con.
te The political expert private secre. PRINCE " EDDY'S " SLANDERERS
2 one of the necessary appendages of
Had HaMI Object in Circulating Their Vile
tele Senator, who is likely to have a
at for re-election. A number of Sena- Reports.
hire such men and pay them snug A special to the World from London says:
es. In some cases they are abler "In the prosecution of Newton, Lord
n every way than the Senators them. Arthur Somerset's solicitor, the Govern.
:. A third secretary is employed to ment shows an indication to -day
1 to Mr. McMillan's extensive cor. that it means at last to take vigorous steps
in regard to the West End scandaal. The
swamp, and report that four colored. ‘..
were found dead, but they gai5 no name:,
and said they did not know the negroes.
The jell wae broken into early this morn.
ing, and two negro prisoners were riddled
with bullete. Another negro was found at
home ehot through the heart, and one with
a &eh wound in the shoulder. It was
reported that others had been killed, but
the officers had not found them. A march
0-ing 'Clearly identified by the coroner's
t . re, .^E're, arrested and lodged in tail.
These several brutal murders of prominent
white men by negroes caused a state of
indignant resentment among our people
that can be better imagined than described,
but can not be imagined by any one not
preeent in our midst. This morning about
2 o'clock a large body of armed men in die
guise celled at the jail, overpowered the
yesterday report
scenes. It is now said the conductor was
not in the smoker, every occupant of which
was killed. One man was caught under
the timbers, and parties worked over an
hour to extricate him. He was rescued
only to die Within a few minutes. It is
understood the rail was worn and the ties
decayed and unable to bear a heavy engine
and train going at a rapid rate.
.
A special frons Harrison, Ark., to
Louis Republican gives the following i
of the brutal treatment of a young I
five drunken man: On Tuesda,
Bellefonte, Boyne county, an awfui
was committed. Miss Mate, dang
John Mate, attended a dance wh
escort was taken ill, and she aocep.
company of a young man namec
Dees on the way home. Dees
adence.
Milan is a man of remarkable cepa. charges against Newton are, in brief, that
for work. You wouldn't judge him he assisted Hammond and other guilty
ray by taking a look at him as he site parties to get out of the country, and that
seat on the floor of the Senate. He he also contrived to get important lettere
ra more like an exquisite, a diplomate destroyed which incriminated influential
iety knight than like a man of work, permits. There is no donbt that thismove 1
ness man who has forced his way on the part of the prosecution will result 1
poverty to affluence, and an executive in the direct interference of the Prince of 1
irects, and ably directs, the efittirs of Wales. When the Prinoe came back to
en large corporations. Like many town he thoroughly Edited the sources con- i
er Senator he has a favorite pose on neoting Prime "Eddy " with the scandals,
or, one which he assumes quite un. and he found that the reports emanated
Duly. Resting easily and gracefully principally from Somerset, who thus hoped
for bodies will be kept up all day. The
negroes are quitting their homee and mov-
ing to other towns on the line of the rail-
way. A large number of negroes were
taken from their homes thie morning and
many of them whipped, many of them
being Prostitutes. A crowd of white men
went to several housee after breakfast this
morning and compelled the negroee tO
leave. If Brewer's gang are found in the
swamp lynching will probably follow. The
coroner is holding an inquest on the dead
bodiee.
jailer, took out the six murderers ot Mar-
tin and two of Hefferman, took them to the
limits of the corporation and shot them to
death."
THE LYNCHING CONDEMNED.
This explanation of the causes which led
to the lynching does not in the opinion of
law-abiding citizens in any way justify the
atrocious murder of eight defenceless
baneen beings. The greatest indignation
is expressed here at the brutality of the
deed. All is quiet at Barnwell late this
evening, although trouble has been antioi-
A HORRIBLE DEATH.
A Helpless Paralytic Boiled to Death in a
• Bath Tab.
A Kokomo, Ind., despatch of Sunday
says: Geo. Tykle, an eccentric character,
has been running a bath houee here for
several years, and claiming a wonderful
effioaoy in his bathe in the oure of all kinds
of maladies. Among hie patrons was
John Clarke, aged 70, a well-to-do hamar
of this section who waa affected with par.
alysis. He had been for some months
Enka
way, and though she protested, he i
the road he hed taken was the short
After travelling a few miles the cone
overtaken by five drunken men, whi
an assault on Min Mate, dragged he
her horse, and compelled her by 1
submit to them. Her escort made n
to defend her. She wee kept in the
at the mercy of theee men until de
It is feared she cannot recover Inc
injuries. The injared girl enema a
any of her aesailants, but it is thoui
?f them will be captured, and Btu
it e side of his chair, in order to to silence the police and stave off punish-
on
he stiffness out of his spinal column, ment. Some other persons in exalted
-
SHE GOT HIM.
pated and ;may yet come. •
taking one or two baths a week al Tye le,a
justice will probably be visited upon
Young Dees' conduct is the muse o
turned a trifle out of perpendicular, stations believe that the reports about them
hole body in a state of relaxation cisme from the same source, and they
it lack of dignity, he site by the hour have exerted pressure to save Somereet's
dly twirling in the Angers of his faotottim from being arrested. The evi-
hand a pair of eye glassee, while denote adduced by the Government Counsel
lr pair sit upon his nose, yesterday against Newton is very exhans.
le his the Senator finds time tive, and serves to indicate what the
1 E —
mma Found a Way to Wake the Parson
Keep His Promise.,
'
An Orange, N. J., despatch nye : The
Rev. L. B. Goodalt, temporary pastor of
the Oakwood A.venue Baptist church
here, was married to Alin Emma
He Used a Razor.
. A Dover, Del„ despatch of Tuesday
D •
night says : Fred. Maas and Alex. i n
'Il i
e wheelwright and blacksmith shop at
Hartley, were carousing there to -day with
several friends, among whom were George
room. Last evening Tykle put him into a
bath tub, and left him to himself while he
engaged in revelry with some companions.
Tykle finally went to bed and forgot his
patient, whom he had left in a hot water
bath with the gas burning beneath the tub,
He found Clark e t h' is morning dead in the
indignation, and it is freely charge,
wlaile he was guilty of no overt act is
he noted as a deo th th
decoy f r
o e o ere.
the son of a clergymen. The nide>)
.
girl is highly respected andbears
blemished reputation.
all work, police
, horseback two or three boors every heve in reserve if Newton's trial gets be.
y, and often to drive an hour or so yond the bonnde intended, and some of the
He dines like an epicure, with Plitt' Parties Squeal under the screws of
of leisure and appetite. The dinners the law and tell all they know."
Bell, of Charleston, S. C., Wednesday.
It is reportedgy that the oler -
man was foroed into the marriage. Goodalt with
and, Miss Ball were engaged over a year
ago and were to be married next February.
Peterson, also a blacksmith, and John
Honey,of Dover. Peterson taunted Mau
th e aseertion that he did not know
hie bueineee. This angered Maas, and he
struck Peterson. A fight ensued.A
water, with the skin all cooked off his body
as well as portions of the flesh . Clarke was
literelly boiled to death, being powerless to,
help himself out of hie awful situation.
y e se Seen
T kl h karrested.
HE WAS COOL.
Finishes Two Desperadoes, Dims
takes his Leave,
Se gives are among the richest and
utast in town. For many years he Three Were Drowned.
ade it a rule to wear a dress met at A Yaquima, On., despatch of Wednesday
. seven times a week. POW of our says: The steam schooner Farallone, after
ade millionaires pay so much heed to being towed across the bar yesterday, was
rms of the moat polite moiety. au. struck by a heavy sea'which oarried over.
; dresses like an exquisite. The fineet board Chief Engineer Pageley, a cabin boy
made of silk and satin and far is not and three sailors named Frank Johnson,
e to touch his skin. The most per- Charles Diokineon and William Brown.
itent leathers, bailt by a celebrated The sailors were drowned. Pageley and
sn maker, are alweye to be seen 012 the cabin boy caught eome wreckage and
et. Every day he appears in the were rescued when nearly exhausted. The
3 Chamber in a white waiscost, and see shipped put out the fires in the schooner,
e of these coats is worn more than and the assistant engineer and two firemen
narrowly drowning in
The engagement ie mid to have been broken
off. Three months ago Mies Bell returned
south and tbe clergyman made love to Miss
Eliza Smith, organist of the church. A
few weeks ago it was reported they were
engaged. Somebody notified Miss Bell,
and she came north with her brother, in.
aimed that her engagement was not
broken, and ,threatened to institute legal
Proceedings. The deacons of the church
advised Goodalt to marry Mies Bell. As
he was about entering the church Wednes-
day night to hold servicee, it is said, breaoh
of him. A
general
Peterson out Maas in the side with a razor,
the blade passing through his left lung.
Peterson than slashed Dill's throat in a
fearful manner. Maas died in a few
minutes and Dill is dying. Peterson
escaped to the woods, and it is thought he
is now in the forme on the Maryland aide.
Scouting parties with torches, dbge and
shotgune are scouring the woods to•night,
and the friends of the murdered men
swear they will shoot Peterson on sight.
Honey was badly hurt during the fight, and
has mysteriously disappeared.
Collision and Loss of Life.
A Portland, Ore., despatch of Friday
sap! : At half past one this morning -the
-Union Pacific steamer Oregon ren into and
sank the British ship Clan McKenzie at
Coffin Rook, on the Columbia Hirer
Charles Austin and Mat Reid, colored
sailors, were instantly killed. They were
aeleep in the forecastle of the Clan
McKenzie, and when the bow of the
Oregon struck, the sharp plate of. 'iron ran
into the bunks, cutting the men in two.
Charles Fhb, coal -passer of the Oregon,
St. Louis despatch says: Two
ions Indian desperadoes named Red I
and Choctaw Pete, heavily loaded
tenglefoot, took possession of the te
Tishwawa on Chriettnee day. After
killing the town marshal when he at&
to arrest them, they emptied a drtie
and tried to ride their horses into thr
At this juncture a well -armed strang
tip to the hotel and dismounted. Th
laws ordered him away and out the
of his horse. The stranger remons
whereupon Choctaw Pete covered hit
his revolver and ordered Lendall to i
efore being sent back to the laundry. escaped the fire.
lid that the Senator has a greater room. The Farallone's starboard side was
er of suite of clothes than any other stove in, the rails carried away, and davite
2 Washington. His tailor bill ram and lifeboete washed overboard, and the
$1,500 a year. ' hatohes torn up, filling the hold with water
; winter, when be first appeered in and damaging the cargo of wheat. The
3as, Senator McMillan boarded at the schooner was towed in.
Hotel. There he
promise papers were served on
hurried consultation was held with the
deacone. Miss Smith relinquielaed all
claims on tbe clergyman to save him from
disgrace. Rev. Mr. Hunt was called in
and the ceratoony was performed between
Goodalt and Mies Bell. Goodalt is young
and and had call to a
It Surprised the Passengers.
A Monday'l despatch from Andover,
Mass., says: As the Portland express from
Boston was passing a freight train on the
Boston & Maine road neer here this even-
ing a heavy piece of timber became un-
faetened from a freight
was injured, but not Wally. The Wood of
the two men killed flew in every direction,
beepattering the walla and broken timbers.
The McKenzie is a fine iron vessel. It is
thought ehe may be raised. She is
valued at $80,000, and is said to be fully
insured. The lose to the Oregon will be
him. As Lendall approached the at
he shot him through the heart. 1
then occurred between Pete an
stranger, and Pete was shot throw
head and killed. After, eating his i
the stranger leisurely rode away.
euppoeed to be Winchester Fran
eon paid for his
A the rate of 01,500 a month, and Riotous Christmas Celebrants.
gifted, accepted a
Georgia demob.
oar and struck the
front end of the rear oar of the express.
$10,000.
crack shot and scout.
that
The express was running forty
3uspected A was a pretty large An Atigneta, Ga.,despatch of Wednes-
I donbt if be is living as cheaply day says: OfficereWilliame and Crawford
bough he is housekeeping. Seeing went to °met some drunken negroes to -day.
:mont avenue kat spring a house The latter resisted, disarmed theA
police.
pleased hint, he aeked a real estate men, and beat them badly with their clubs
to buy it for him and, like the The police were reinforced, and half '
a
1 business man he is, limited the dozen negro ringleaders were looked up in
3 a figure which he was careful to the engine house. A. large -number of
writing. " To him that bath shall citizens, white and bla k II t d d
o co eo e , an
n" appears to apply to rich men, great excitement prevaile, The prisoners
to but a men of wealth would have were removed later to ja' . When the offi.
Some Pistols Do Not Albs Fire.
A Wedneeday's Newton Ill. despatch
1 - ' . .
Bays: rthur Creig, of Indianapolie,
err' d 1 t ' t d M' Ef te
ive as evening o we Mie e le
Sutton, a pretty, tear:bet, :Her father,Grace
Detective John Suiten; whO bitterly o
posed th t h I' drevolver- PA.
e ma re , ...p see .a
'a
Ortug's head and said, " Git, or I'll kill
yen." He pulled the trigger twice, but the
weapon mimed fire. Critig then fired two
at miles an
hour, and the timber oreehed through the
-
oar, raking it broadside brea mg ever
k' y
h ' '
window sae on that side and covering the
passengers with glass and eplintere The
osre were heavily loaded with peesenger s,
and a member of ladies fainted from fright,
while fifteen or twenty of them were more
or less out about the face and ehoulders
0 • •
no woman was uncomic:wee for several
hours, arid is reported to be fatally injured. is
Don't Coddle the Throat.
timShe—How
Th a th ' e f rth h
i is e o year when e so co
boy end girl tie silk handkerchiefe or
mufflers about the throat. One should
•
not do this if it can possibly be avoided'
If the habit is begun in early winter it
must be carried out through the whole.
season or else sore throat or severe col&
. -
will result. Binding or tying up the throat
apt to roak,e „it very sensitive.—Detroit
The Rhode Island Variety.
carious are the we
Providence!
He—Yes?
--- ow eorge Hilton propce
She N G
Darling at seven I A 'eht 1
her father died. 55 51 —16
g a y G h •
e— es, George ecomes rich. I :
She—No, Grace hi provided for,
father died insolvent.
i good lack to buy a house in that cers started for the jail ith the prisoners a
than he
bullets into the deteotive'el brain, killin g
Upon the arriVel of the train at Lawrence
the injured
Newt. ' _
Tapering 'Off.
e 1111,000 cheaper had ex. difficulty marred between a negro and
10 buy it. Yet that is what Senator several whites. Virat clubs Were need, then
an did, and he could now eell the ,pistols. One negro was killed ,and another
him 'natant! 0 e If elf
A jury 7. _ rti/g gayII1;aa UP'
y acquitted him. BeHreturned to te„„,.,,,u
I d3' 1' f • bl ' f S ' ''"""
n ianapo is, oaring trou e from utten e
passengers were cared for, and
most Of them were able to continue their
.
An Apt Definition.
Kitty is eonetanily asked by her younger
Harry—And detrest do you think
I . t
11 01 day bong?
a-- --e ,
Dgetreet—I did, Harry; but the do
1r at least 820,000 more than it coat hadly wounded. 'Allis quiet to n* hi
,.. - ig .
f ' d Th ' lady' 'd t
rpm 0. e young is eel o intone-
' Thunder and—van:1
brothers to define hard words bemuse she is
•
never at a lose for an answer, and Ilan
ettin n
g- g lo ger now, • and , of course-
•
Money in Literature.
rate her lover,
Wife (to hubby who bee been ont tbe
always find reasons, sometimes more ingeni.
you knot that that must make
A edieer.abie End.
,
Pablieher--011
night before)—Why, my dear, what ' making
one shan true. "What . is it to have
difference'.
yes indee y'
righatatort, N.Y., despatch of Wed- . , , a. Moue oan
____, , „....._ T,,,,,,.„,,,•,, . „„,,,,i,a, be ma in literature. Why, sir, / never
rid° iow="ortre'ugri;i "Jar A saw live more 'uxoriously than MSG
"'" Brig' 'and MI nizil all
tear Isere, committed suicide hy °,0
. Eel Name Against Him.
"My man," said the contractor, " What"
is your name ?I, , last
,
" McGinty,
yen look so sour this morning ?
Ilublg—I drank three glasses of milk
night and got caught in a thunder
dorm coming home.
versatility?" asked Teddy one day. "It's
tobe a petit," returned Kitty without heat-
, '
ation. " To Make verses, you know,"
. ,
Legal Advice.
a -
" What o they do with a man wl
' -
gets full and is arrested? "
.,,,--a ..,..„,= 7,--.,_'?----.• . , .,
his throat this. owing to ."'Y =',!•49.1"r tOnn1/-4"0'00 pal int/
sor."
"How
----41—'—
-
"Why,treat him to they do boats
•
afternoon;
id of going to the poorhotiee. After married tlieir pubfilibers.
.
would you like so go to work dig=
' ' '
ging a well for me." ,
. -
Chrietmee oar& are th' g of th t 13
. _in 5 , epee , but
There are between 500 and 600 China.
: Sunday , .. .; .
men in n00n00111 vino irroseions in
h i
t ey'ra full—bait him out, of course.
...--.....—
lartitnote were circulated. that he ''''',,-. . .,
. , ' The inserted Wins if lade which at e
ney conceeled ,,in his norm. The . . . ; , = 0 0
1 wore tears:bed and in old tin Oarai ant° some ot fine imported table olothe giro
" An' go iti the bottenn ter the hole ? the
- h ' , - -• •
Devil a it, Bor. Me name s agin me.'
boa*,
walla have been loaded down with
r o r • I
abort° ms l emembraimes,ca endars.and
sketohes emelt packsges of a thou.
New York. They are there chiefly to learn
to tit Haigh , for th re are only fi y,
lk .*sh e ft
three of the number wbo are out-and-out
in the Wrong Room.
Caller—To ' deoide a.bet;swill you
- 'one the sensation of dining at a 'At' t
slier were found- Koos in gold and ., p loos .
000 in 1611100 . Iffin spite of the colored novelty clothe for
. tables, dressers and buffet's the ideal spread
teettenatee Bearman, of miohigoo• le ono /Mid
Of the eon' t 6 " th S 1 Et glIone
w , uni 10 n in a ens 8. e
roploys three ,secretaties to *rennet his *dig,
- ' • ' ' ' '•
varieties of loving handieeork. It. ie a
oustom, thie giving of tokens of
d t thi ' 11 4
r a r !mon, which tide most
' '
ohristians, that isonembersof the obtirobell•
A reli ions worker among the Mongolians
" § h • I,
•NMI t e o uroh have to reit Ite
tell me where the familiarquetation,
about is fair play," originated ? '
Man at the desk (impatiently) Tali
leans damask fie white as driven snow,
I Only walking meta Paris has . /
hi immi ittim la anittiloaL , la ered With a stnoeth, Wit finish. :
Z - a - . .
'awnless' an. apends $1,600 .4 year an We g
clothed. ,
.ts
it it a h r i • • r
moons n cart est expression in the
Atterlean republic. . iia
people got ...,.,
12- h Chinaman - - bard ' h. s
t at t e ni a prettyon pio
ehrietianize.
, .. , ..., ,..,—...
Dime questions to room us —me
i i , 0 A 1
riding Glifinsmlialti
ili as wok
beoame
pproaoh.
to emu.
at agony
et await
otions.'"
that ray
around
the last ,
°outdid
watched
oe of the
premien.
bedside
nelt and
d to be
peak for
"1 have
that God
ful and
ustained
done."
open, he
laimed :
ind eyes
they see
he re -
asked to
r a long
aim and
ll quiet
d. The
y where.
ant, dos-
s wife to
t a tele.
pressed
interred
N.
t With
ation of
brought
known
e, with
ondent.
se 224
and
o peace,
ground
maoy of
am row,
ington.
Parnell
oe 1886
t that
Capt.
on here
it has
own of
nd Mr.
found a
on ao-
ess of
of Mrs.
ow the
f revolt
n he in -
seat in
11 prove.
O'Shea
ndsome
he lives
ht that
it were
become
Escort,
the St.
coount
ady by
, near
crime
hter of
re her
ed the
John
ok the
mistea
or way.
le were
made
✓ from
°roe to-
o effort
woods
ylight.
m her
entity
ht all
miry
them.
great
that,
imself,
Dees is
tun ate
n un -
an d,
notor-
endell
with
wn of
nearly
mpted•
store
hoteb
r rode
e out-
halter -
rated,
o with
isarm
anger
duel
the
h the
inner
He is
k, the
$ of
ed to
eight
ee.
Her -
please -
Turn
your
the,