The Atlanta daily herald. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1872-1876, October 01, 1873, Image 4

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—— The Daily Herald. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER t. 1875. (UK HERALD Pl'BI I—IAU ( UMPAST, alei. st. cubmaUUks lllC.VKY W. GRAUV, II. A. ALATOS, Kdltor* and 5liin*ger« ~THE TERMS of the HERALD ere ns follow* : DAILt, 1 Yrar no 00 l WAKALY, 1 00 Ad Ires* Office cr Alibun, Street. Deer Broed. Shreveport, La., September 22,1873. ISO MORE CRJCDKT Bl'IHRElS. Yellow Jack—A Trustworthy On and after October 13, we shall cease to j Report, deliver papers to subscribers who have not paid in advance. The necessity for os to I adopt a strictly cash bosdness is imperative, j y<m h , ye reld of the vlolence of tlll , rever . it , UBU . suaI malignant form and frightful fatality. A travel ing circua and menagerie stopped ia the place a few days and was attached by theii creditors. This de. tained the company some weeks. A number of the attaches died, with very short Illness. Immediately Financial Crisis! our expenses being very Urge rind requiring a large cash outlay every week. We tirost that our friends and patrons everywhere will appreciate the motive which prompts this step. Ten days before each subscription ex- DAILY. < oo | weekly, » *r«<'h." »j piles, we shall send n printed notification to DAILY. 3 Months... 2 50 1 WEEKLY, 3 Month* £0 j t ^ e subscriber, and if ty the time of its expi- ! It is pronounced the Spanith yellow fevfr or Mexican ; 'tJeZi fit moderate rat... Sub-! ration it is not renewed, we shall stop the pa- ! vomito - « uke * ,hcm ott iD ab0 «‘ flv0 J.ye-.evoral , •criptloDS «£ .avert LraraoDifi invariably in advance. ; I bave heard or in two daya, and one yesterday, atrong | Ad lrpf-fi HERALD PUBLISHING CO., * and vigorous. In twenty-four hour*. An old physician I Drawer 23 Atlanta, Georgia. | - On and after the same date ;Oct. 15) we who p „ se d tbrougl. four araaon. of yellow lever, ! OOOtl shall most positively adhere to the system ot rays to me: •• My patients all die. Only a small yer-I Trade Still Blocked at Cin cinnati. Murderers. THE Ml'RDEI'. OP JAMES GRAHAM AT LIT1LE NECK, L. I.—CONVICTS IK THE MASSA CHUSETTS STATE PRISON CONFESS TO THE DEED—HOW THE ROBBERY AND BUTCHERY WERE AC-| COMPLISHED. MACON DEPARTMENT. H. C. STEVENSON CITY EDITOR MACON, GA.. TUESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1873 Our Ofltce. The Branch Office of the Herald is on I Cherry street, over Helfrich’s confectionery in the neighborhood m which the Clrena was located j Opening Of tllC NeW Y()l‘k J cleared npJjy thTcontessi^’ofThe ^rdM-er 8t ° Te ^ Potties desiring to subscribo lor or Stock Exchange. Correspondence New York Herald. Boston, Sept. 20, 1873. Another mysterious murder has been the disease began, and in ten days embraced tbe city. ' Mr T. J. Burney is the only authorized j cash in advance for all transient advertise- ! ceut.se recover.” I ments, and monthly payments ia advance for Tllls cit -' da* 038 l-.ooo population, , all contract advertisements. Travelling Agent of the Heeald. Our State Exchanges. The morals of Augusta are improving. Only one 1 city offender appeared bi fore the Recorder on i Monday. The Chronicle and Sentinel is rejoicing because the festive moiquito has packed bis trunk and prepared ; ior flight to more congenial climes. Only two hundred and nineteen citizens of Augusta | had registered up to the cloae of laat week. The Constitutionalist advocates the resumption of j . , , , . tho Augusta debating society a half a column strong, ject, in a case where certain .Snakers brought 10,000, two- thirds negroes, leaving whites three or four thousaud, half have left the place. We therefore have 1 SCO to All overdue accounts for advertisements ( o.oco whites; out of this number quite a large propor- and subscriptions not paid by October 13th, J tion had the fever in 1853 and 3867, and hence not so will be placed in the hands ot onr attorney for j liable to it. Now a mortality of twenty-flve to forty collection P ur ia *° COI3 template. The deaths arc diminishing for want of material, not that its ma- IlIK RESPONSIBILITY OF Dill EC- lignity Las diminished, if any change it has in- XORS. ! creased. It is spreading in the suburbs and county for miles around. No abatement can be hoped for himself. The murder was committed in Lit- advertise to toe Herald, will always find tie Neck, Long Island, N. Y., and the mur- some one in the office to attend to the:r derer is an inmate of the Massachusetts State wants. Prison, having been confined there on aconvic |. p t in tion for burglary. His name u John Green, city circulation of the Herald. rCtllllii 11 OA illlllll;. alias John McDonald, and he was sentenced Hertnft*r and until tbe night train ia again run u:ng , on the 2d of J one last, for highway robbery .. __ . . . . Tr at Springfield. A few days ago he otlled | ar ° a ,h * ““on and red the Hravia, will Louisville, September 30, 1373. j Warden Chamberlain to his cell and inform- mrrive three o’clock in tbe afternoon and te at In a recent case, the Kentucky Court ot Ap- ! until frost, and that we cannot expect for four to six peals has made a deliverance upon this sub- : weeks. Just think what distress and mourning this 1 fever has entailed. Families fatherless and moiher- — - ,i , , less; fathers left without a wife or children; seme two hoping that some light may be thrown upon a recent ^ sm t against bank directors to recover damages | ortbroecj8eg entiro fauii]ie8 havo all died . Xho liv0 issue u to tire mem ing of "boat to Loa,” and ; j or tbe nn i aw j u i conversion, by officers of the ' Howard Aeaoc ation are doing wonJera with the very nidering. ’ 'bank, of special deposits belonging to the : liberal donation from other cities and the very excel. plaintiffs. The court used the following j lent organization of the association. All the sick language: It is certainly the duty of bank directors to use ordinary dilligence to acquaint themselves with the business of the Corporation, and whatever information might be required by ordinary attention to their duties, they might in controversies with persons doing business with the bank be presumed to have. Public Some man has wrote a lialf column of poetry in praise of the Latontoa Sunbeam, and still Jefferson is not proud. He lets bis children play with other people's children as before. Mrs. Oats, whose husband waskillrd on the Georgia Railroad, obtained a verdict against the company at the late term of the Greene county Superior Court for $G,5S0. Ain’t the Georgia Railroad giving too mack for oata, hay ? George Copeland, colored, the mu Merer of Miss i and all tke comforts that money provided with will command. Tbe family with which I live consist of five mem bers, two have died. The others are yet u» take it. The book-keeper in the mill in which I am working having died of the fever, I now have charge of the books and sales of lumber. P. S. Convalesence is very blow. I havebeeu with* out fever twelve days and etiil feel bauly; not able to _ , , ’ ,1 policy demands that they shall not be heard. Richard, cl ureeno county. sentenced t g F J . reagon of tbeir gross negligence ! altcuJ 001 d “ or bu.inc,,. Your friend, on the 21th of October next. . J * ° - ° The Indian Spring Echo announces that O’Hara will walk six miles in fifiv-eight minutes, st the Rome Fair, and this information is worth a groat aeal, when we consider that the fair was over only three weeks when tbe announcement was made. Larkin Davis killed a negro known as Jim Chain, on T. T. S::r and willful inattention, they were not appris ed of that which tbe ledgers, books, accounts, correspondence, reconcilements, and state ments of the bank showed to be true. It is not necessary, in actions like these, to bring home to the’directors actual knowledge of the fact that special deposits held by the bank last Sunday, ia Sparta. The Sheriff ia looking for were being sold and converted to its use by Bxvis, so as to find out the cause of the homicide. , 0 flj cer8 having them in custody. It must ^ o w A Columbus editor has been made financially poor- £U ffi ce to show that the evidences of the prac- yesterdiv attending to some light duties er, bat musically richer, by a recent addition to bis ! ti C6 were such that it must have been ' family. i brought to their knowledge unless they were Columbus evinces the most morbid appetite for ex-, grossly or willfully careless in the perforin citement. A.ter the departure of Col. Lay, they tried | ance of their duties. to relieve the dullness of tbe town by a colored duel. ; We are glad to see that the Supreme Court Failing in this, Mr. Hendricks was called into requi- ' Q f one g^te has taken hold of this subject in sition, who, in ordor to counteract the panic, got up j marmer that promises some hope of reform. „ _ _ „ rack race. Ast .fternoon mmotg th» mull UxAotj Iq ^ commercial criaia (hat baa occurred feeing every moment to bo blown up, none aw«ta ar.ntes and Dcannts. in the i * .... danng to speak aloud to jar anything, for ', tne ^ anic nas alwa y s i fear of starting an explosion that would send P. S. 21th Skit.—Toe fever is more malignant than ever. It has attacked those who had it in 1853 and 1367. A uumbor of such have died. The negroes are also being taken. It is extending in the country with fearful fatality. It has created Red River to the east side, and doing sad havoc. I hear of the death of one in tweuty-four hours who had it badly in 1367. I am slow ly but gradually ;ecovering; was out the mott of T. T. S. Gunpowder. HOUSE WHEREIN NO ONE EVER LAUGHS. How do yen think you would like to live The savings banks recently closed were admitted to j ed him that there was a heavy burden on his tbe Clearing House, miking twenty-one banks in the , mind which must be relieved. lie theo sta- asaociation. ted that he and Michael Lynch, wh'o is also Cincinnati, September :to, 1873. confined in the prison, and another man en- In general markets a better feeling is manifested, £® re< ^ ^he store of James Graham, at Little .till bat little b.« ift been done to remove the dead | Neck ' L - L * February 1873. While there, lock in which m»tte.. have f.Item order, are here, j >“ ordet to csca P° detection, they murdered especially for provisions, but there If very little dispc- * , sition to move under existing circumstances. HE ' Ic Holder, of .lock are centrally firm, hoping that JameK birahfuu, the victim ot the tragedy, something may toon transpire to set the who,H of j a bookmaker, uud kept a shop at JUtlle commerce in motion. In New Yoik. lived entirely alone. He was also an eccen- Nlw York, September 30, ls73. trie individual, for he would sometimes work The September statement will show an increase of in one room of his house and at other times debt. Customs hava diminished one-half since the in another. He seldom—if ever—banked panic. ; any of his money, but would conceal it. in Henry J. Brooks, a leather dciler, lisa failed. ( various small sums, in divers places about the The Stock Exchsngo and vicinity are crowded, j building, either in cigar boxes, jars Members crowded aronud the President's desk once sent by carriers and newsboys &s heretofore throughout the city. I: is hoped that iu a few days the fcbedale will be so changed as to allow the paper o g t here at seven o’clock in the morning. Annual Moving Bay. Tc-morrow and the next three or four daya thereaf ter, will be serious times with many of onr house-keep ers. It is our annual moving day, or the beginning cf the rental year. What an annoyance? Two moves . are always equal to one fire, 6ays the old proverb, of retired and lonely habits, unmarried, and first thing a mau and woman should do after they get married should be to build a one-rocm house it e, and go into it, and than go to htir money will s llow. >an Association will enable tfa.-m ey have any means cf their own they can’t do any mot work and add to it a* Any building and L to do that, whether tl or not. Mayor's Court. The Mayor had two cases before him this morn.a.' Wm. Taylor was found drunk ard fined $5 and cotti. Martha McLeon drunk and disorderly, ditto. Stabbed. A negro woman by the name of Laura, a servant cf and even between the plastering the walls. The murder was planned in the house of Michael Lynch, who then lived in Roosevelt street. New York city, by Lynch, Green and a third party. Michael Lynch, whom Green states did the deed, is about forty years of age, and has a face which at Mrs. Helfrifch, was stabbed last night by her hU9fcaB-i once stamps him os a villain of the darkest The blade of the knife entered her right s de, p: hue. Green has a more pleasant couute- duciog a frightful wound. They passed for man an nance, and previous to the murder lie was a Wife, but are said to hivi never been legally farm laborer, being employed by a Mr. Carv, J jealousy was the cause of the affray. The man/h ai at Little Neck, within a quarter of a mile of uot bteD arreS tej. Arrested. ing their hats and cheering. The President said: “We are met again, after a very momentous sus pension, for the purpose of resuming business. Your action in the interim has met with universal approba tion, and has been most satisfactory to yourselves. Business would be carried on under the rules adopted yesterday by the Governing Committee, which he read, and appointed a committej to settle the con tracts of defaulting parties. In conclusion, he added: “All I ask now is, that you help each other to bear tbe burthen that has fallen upon us, and to so conduct: Mr. Graham’s shop. The third confederate, business as to enable tho exchange to carry on its whose name is now withheld, was a tramp, work successfully.” who went about ostensibly to peddle pictures, Some time ago Miiissa W»ils was convicted oi vs- Loud cheering greeting these remarks, and tLc j but really to spot places which he and his fU^' y and bound out to ^. A. Cherry. She did not i members proceeded with business. j chums could plunder. The murder was remain with him long, but ran away. Yesterday M r- | Much better feeling appears to exist, and the open- committed. Green thinks, on tbe evening of S*n Clark went down to Fort Valley, moking for other ing prices of stocks shows a feeling of confidence. I February 7. 1873, and at Six o’clock in the missing game He cams acres* Mail boys. Tbe prizes were apples and peanuts. In the I flrat race tbe Hrat prize w». won by M.n P.yne; the for tile past fifty years, = ^ »eocbj, third and lonrthby Bud P.yne, end the fifth, been increased by tbe discovery that some yon In an instant into tbe other world? sixth end seventh by Jease P.yne. large and trusted corporation, that had some In the second race the first sed second prtzee were distinguished man for President and a num- J p“ ra pr^7y’a“ d Hendrik Cbbu.i” ! *er of prominent men as Directors, and was tie.: Oae Bkinaed .bin, borne off by J.me. Brown, supposed to be, from this fact, above suspi- Witnessed and enjoyed by a number of spectators. cioD, was insolvent. As soon as the light Hendrkks says be don’t despair as long os his pea- \ breaks in and the rottenness is discovered nuts hold out. tben it is that each one ot the aloresaid prom- An attempt was made to burn Thomaaville one i . , , , , , , ^ . . inent gentlemen who have been regarded night last week by some unknown scoundrel. b * * - - - I The freedmen of the South h»ve deposited in the j by the public ns the responsible parties, un- Freedraoa’a fiaving’a Bonks since the war the neat dertakes to clear his skirts by saying that he sum of H9»tt>o,ooo. | really knew nothing of the management of The Seaport Appeal says: On Friday of lost week a t ^ e affairs of the Company which he was snj»- pretty stiff gale swept over oar city, but did no ma- J , ir ^... ... ., , teri.1 injury A few rotten fence, were prostrated. P osed *° be directing. Without the aid and ••Only this and nothing more.” ' influence of these prominent names this Com- Hawhinsville h« s junk shop and, therefore, is j pany could not have imposed on the public, hsppy. j and if they have, by tbeir carelessness and inat- Jecob Bayer, an old and well-known citizen of j tention,allowed their trusted Secretary to go on Dooly county, died on the 26th inst. . ... , . .. , ,. .. Edward Eubanks, an old citizen of H.wVin.ville, I kindling and stealing and spending, they are died on the J5th inst. to blame and ought to be held responsible. Hayes, the local of the Bainbridge Sun says. Next i This is what this Kentucky decision means, to finding tbe North Pole, is editing the local depart- when it says “it is not necessary to bring ment of a country new.p.per is the hardest thing to hQme t0 , he airectore actltal knowledge.” It You don’t think it would be very pleasant ? Well, it isn’t, yet hundreds of men live in just that state—work, receive pay, and live year alter year in the very sight of death, as it were—all that the world may have gun powder. You can easily guess that these men go about quietly, and never laugh. You know that gunpowder is very danger ous in a gun or near the fire, but perhaps you don’t know that it is equally dangerous all through the process ot making. A powder mill is a fearful place to visit, and strangers are very seldom allowed to go into one. They are built far from any town, in woods, and each of the work is done in a separate build ing. These houses are quite a distance from each other, so that if one blows np it don’t blow the rest. Then the lower parts ot the building are made very strong, while the roofs are lightly set on, so that if it explodes only the roofs will suffer. Bat, in spite of every care, sometimes a whole settlement of the powder mills will go off almost in an in stant, and every vestage of the toil of years will be swept away in a second. But though you feel like holding your breath to look on it, it is really a very inter- uo. i ^ at • a iv.i v . i ... | esting process to see. It is made, perhaps The Marietta Journal announce* that the financial 13 8Q ™ ciea ^ they have occupied positions , y 0a k now? 0 f charcoal, saltpetre, and brim- panic hasn't caused a ripple on the surface in that where they had the opportunity to know. If! stone. Each of these articles are prepared in place. This is indeed cheering news. Even the ( such men were indicted and held up a house by itself, but the bouse where they blacksmith shops continue ss usual. j to a strick responsibility for defalca- From the Ssrannh Kewe: Mr. Psge who wu Uon(j &nd mUusa of tnlst fnnd thefe burned on Thursday night by the accidental upsetting ; . T i a of a lamp, died on Saturday morning. She had, for: would be fewer to recount. Look at some time previous to the accident, suffered under oc- the developments of the past two weeks, csoionsl attacks of mental derangement. There was Carleton, a young man of twenty- The police reporters, and that portion of the general eight years, who had such entire control of tba affairs of the Union Trust Company, that he was enabled to steal nearly half a million. In public which hangs around the Recorder’s court, will miss for some time the familiar face of Mary Constan tine. For a long time Mary has been a regular attend ant at the bar of Justice, but tho by-ways that knew her once will know her no more forever. She took passage on the San Jacinto on Saturday, and hereafter ahe will browse in fresh pastures. She has furnished numberless items to the newspaper reporters; she has given weary justice the cue to many a moral lecture; and she has many a time and oft relieved the monoto. ny cf a policeman’s round by compelling him to ar rest her. It is to be hoped that she may find life in New York more attractive than the weary round from police couit to jail, which was the chief part of her ex perience in Savannah. are mixed is the first terrible one. In this building is an immense millstone, rolling round and round in an iron bed, and under the stone are put the three fearful ingredients of the gunpowder. There they are thorough ly mixed and ground together. This is a very dangerous operation, because if the stone comes in contact with its bed, it is very apt to strike fire, and the merest suspicion of u spark would set off the whole. The mate- letter gives a fearful account of the scourge at Shreve; ort. We have no doubt the malig nity ot the pestilence has been increased bv , . . .. .... .... „ — .. , . i, « T >* * fairs with the same diligence that he would the removing of the dam in lied River and M A A u . , ^ t . the Bank of the Commonwealth a director is j f™ 1 , 3 “ e 8 P rea 1 d l ^ e ® or ,0 “ r in< * es in the ,, , . , . , , i bed; the wheel, which goes by water power, allowed^ to overdraw $225,000, in a bank ; j g started, and every man leaves the place, whose capital was only $300,000. In j The door is shot, and the machinery is left the New Brunswick Bank, a cashier its terrible work alone. \\ hen it has U five hundred thousand short. In the Brook-! f. un lon 8 ‘ be “ iU is topped and , _ , , , , , , , ! the men come back. This operation leaves lyn Bank, Mills is several hundred thousand • the powder in hard lumps or cakes, behindhand, and in the City Treasury, ! The next house is where the cakes are Sprague A Rodman are also heavy defaulters. I broken into grains, and of course is quite as t_ , ., dangerous as the last one. But the men can’t In all thcac cases the responsibility shonld gQ „° way from ^ they are obliged to nttend * a «. -.a.-*. to it every moment, and you may be sure not a laugh or a joke is ever heard within its walls. Every one who goes in has to take off his be made to extend beyond the immediate par ties implicated. When it is under- W e puolish this morning an interesting . . .5 . .. . . . j m m u -iu tT ; stood that allowing ones name to be tter :rom our old lnend T. T. Smith. He I . 4 ^ ,, published to the world as a Director of an In surance Company or a Savings Bank, carries with it tho responsibility to look after its af- devote to his personal affairs, then there would be less mismanagement and probably less stealing by trusted cashiers and secretaries. Alabama on the subject, which seems to have ! | extended to Macon. the decay of the timber removed. The only visitation of yellow fever which has occurred in Charleston since the building of tbe tidal drains, was supposed to have occurred from ] our new year presents to st e epening and cleaning out one of these drains j SCRIBKRS. duriog the summer. Onr dispatches men- We publisU tllis ™™ing onr prospectn., th "* containing a list of presents we propose making on New Year’s day. The enterprise is by no means a new one, having been long Indian Raiding,—The hostile Sioux have j since engaged in by other journals, among been at work within the last three weeks, : which we can mention the Louisville Courier- thifwhiteaettlera A ! •“ ^ ^ few families having become scared, removed j which owes its immense circulation as i) Niobrara City, but on proper representation I much to this enterprise as to its merits as a of the n* tilers to the military authorities at | newspaper. Fort lia dull, thirtv-six miles away, Lieut. 1 ~ ,. . . ~ Campbell and ten soldiers were sent to scour ; ° ,,r P r,mar i' ob J ects * n offenn 8 tbese P res - the country and establish a command in the ! ents are to put in force a previously expressed district where these raids occurred—which I purpose of adhering rigidly to a cash busi- co&mand, it i.s promised, shall be increased ; to show our appreciation of the in a shoit time. A small detachment of mili- , . , , , the Niobrara Valley, Neb., P»*-«nage bestowed upon ns by the public. Later.—There is considerable pressure to sell stocks at a decline of 1 to 3 per cent, from opeuiDg prices. Brokers are indisposed to operate for customers on margin and affairs at home are settled. New York, September 30, 1873. The resumption of Smith & Scaver received with a speech at the stock board to-day. The impressioo prevails that all leading houses will pull through. Sterling unsettled but improved. At 3 p.m. the stock market was still without excitement, and closed firm. Western Union quotod at 66'; Rock Island 91 ; Lake Shore 74 q ; Union Pacific 1 OJi ; Pacific Mali 3J. Application was made in the U. S. Circuit Court to day for an order enjoining the Comptroller of the Cur.' rency and Receiver of the Baak of Commonwealth from proceeding further in matters of the Bank, and Citation to show cause why receivership should not be vacated and appointment declared nnll and void, on grounds that the Sauk never refute! to redeem any of its circulating notes. Citation was granted and made returnable Oct. 7th. New York, September 30, 1873. It Is authoritatively stated by clearing house offi cials that legal tenders were received to-day for the interior country in considerable amounts. The steamer Ailsatea, from Hamburg, arrived to day. In Charleston. Charleston, Sept. 30, 1873. The Bonk of the Union continues the payment of currency, and deposits exceeds disbursements. Three-quarters of the cotton sales to-day were paid 1873, and at six o'clock in the ; missing brought her back. THE START FOR LITTLE NECK. T |, c The three left New York city by wav of Ail our buyers ! February ening. Cotton Market. e making the most strenuous ef- Hanter s Point, and at the latter place took forts t> re-establish their communications with New tho cars for Little Neck, where they arrived York,and they fervently hope u> have either accepts* about seven o clock. They then had about ble exchange or currency in hand by next Wednesday two find a half miles to walk, and they finally , vith which l0 arousc th „ B0W ^ ao ,. „ w , Bt reached Little Neck between eight and nine . B ^ ^ lt „„ teeB ^ it „ tUn . o clock. J he night was stormy, which well inn suited the murderers. As they nearer Gra- >“= • n, ° the ‘-“ T ham’s shop, Green stales that he objected to accompanying his companions until they went ahead to reconnoitre, as he was afraid he might be recognized by some of the villagers. ing into the city at a lively rate: The lock iu the money market ia still well nigh complete, but trade is good notw.thatmding. Our merchants’ New York bills will not begin to mature for forty daya yet, and knowing that all things will b-i The tramp went to*the store, where he found by that t:me ’ are grantiD * mU the t:rn9 Mr. Graham counting some money, which ho cin - placed in a cigar box and had it under a stair case. As the “tramp’’ entered, the latter stated that he had some friends who were com ing to the store to purchase some boots. He then left and joined his confederates, and all three returned to Graham’s store. The pro- prietor stood iu the doorway awaiting their j p ^J, MACON COTTON STATEKINT Stock on hand S«pt. 1, 1873 1,39 3 Received to-day £4J Received previously 4.175—4,418 5,82“ 5 .1,823—1,828 .. 3,999 arrival. LYNCH MURDERS TH2 SHOEMAKER. Stock on hand thia evening.. On entering, some one of the party called Loss of ti5,ooo Wsrth of cotton, for a pair of boots, and after he had put them We Col. L. H. Jordan in the city yesterday. He on Graham stooped down to pass hi* hand **ys that he loat all of two hundred bales of cotton :a over the boots, when Lynch drew a heavy the late Southwest Georgia hurricane, amounting,.in bar ot iron which he had concealed about the aggregate, to about flo.OJO worth. The Colonel him and dealt Graham a murderous blow fln thinks that, with the ravages of the caterpi’.ar an i the back of the head. The “tramp” then this storm, it has been an anlackyyear for him; an 1 locked the door and placed the key in his -oit has. *o be sure. A Walk at the Fair. ttt Mr. O’Hara to-day, who intends to i the finest made and finest looking men we ever 6a«\ and bears every appearance of well developed man hood. Mayor Huff returned from Louisville last night. The Situation—The Danger Over. At the close to-day the banks were mnch stronger which firm the Vi partner. President, Lyman Scott, la a a pocket. The blow did not kill his victim ... greenbacks, instesd of exclusively In sterling, a, j rjgbt _ for ba attempted to rise; but Lynch been tho esse ever since the crisis. caught him by the throat and struck him agsmstTe,ton's tim.Tt th^'sYste in Kansas. ; several blows across tbe bead and temple, i Lkavkswobih, September 29,1S73. | the “tramp" remarking that he was the hard- There is indignation among stockholders and de. j est cuss be had ever killed. Green and the positora of the First National Bank in this city, in “tramp’ were both witnesses to the most consequence of the Vice President ordering the bank I horrible cold-blooded murder. Tbe “tramp,” to suspend, and at the same time drawing from the , '\ fte F t! f e dee , d »'is committed, stepped over bank nearly one hundred thousand dollars in curren- | an .^ back room aud ... cy to sustain tho credit of Scott A Co., brokers, ot found the e.gar boi w.th the money which he than any lime Inc. fhs psn.c. All apprehe»s:on, cl showed to his confederates. A thorough a run upon them have to'ally flown away. They have search of the premises was then made, which met every legitimate demand upon them, and with resulted in the the exception of New York Exchange, their busine s DISCOVERY OF A C ONSIDERABLE SUM OF MONEY. ' h** progressed as regnlarlv as usual. The Circular Finally the murderers quitted the shop and i,,ued by our f * clor ' h> * hld » dirpct tendency t started towards Flushing, Lynch carrying all : re * t0 ' 6 snJ strengthen confidence, and itis known the while tho iron Ur with which he commit- I 3 Bfeat deal of money is on tbe way from Nes ted the terrible deed. Finally, at the request york « d Boston to move the crop. In Iras than five of one of his comrades, he threw it over into days the indications are decided that market w... a field near the side of the road. The three * spring into the greatest activity. This of course will separated soon after this and took various i haw a direct tendency to loosen trade all around, roads, alter agreeing upon Lynch’s house in There never was the slightest reason for a panic, or New York ai a rendezvous. Here they all even stagnation in trade here. Eighty per cent, of arrived by daybreak the morning after the | our banking capital out upon loan had been advance ! murder, and began counting over tbe blood . upon a cotton crop, every bale of which was on hie i money. Each cheated tho other, and the at the time of tbe Cooke crash. People wbo knew exact amount ot the plunder could not be this, clearly foresaw that any serious disturbance to ascertained. Alter tbio Lynch ami Green our finances was next to impossible, started upon a tramp in New York xhc Be«ls*ny church. State towards Massachusetts. They rob- bed a man souh forty-five miles from 1 saw yesterday tbe plans and drawings of a very New York city, after shooting him in the neck neat ami rrettr ntt'.o Catholic church about to be aud hand. Finally Lynch promised to go to ; erocled at New Bethany, Jefferson county, about m: 1- Springfield and rob a man named Terence j WXJ between Savaunah and Macon, and immediately| tary stationed in was removed last spring, to assist in garrison duty at Randall. Until then no Sioux have for two years troubled tbe settlers. Tbe Pon cas lost eight head of work oxen about ten days ago, taken from there in the night, but as soon as the loss was discovered a party of Indians gathered and chased the retreating robbers, and gallantly drove off the maraud ers, and recovered six live cattle and two dead ones killed by the enemies and which were just about to be dished up. The Pon cas, we are told, nearly, if not altogether, “hojd their own” with the “hostiles.”—Sioux City Journal, 24th. As will be seen, there is no extra charge whatever for the Herald, the only conditions being that every subscriber who desires to chance obtaining a really acceptable present, shall pay for his paper. As a consequence, the paper will be sent to every person for the fall term for which ho has subscribed, and some six hundred of onr patrons wig receive presents ranging from five hundred dollars in money to a five dollar chromo. We need agents in every town and village, in addition to our regular travelling agents, to A correspondent of a Montreal journal, in all of whom we will pay liberal commissions. speaking of tbe lately deceased Duke of Brunswick, says; “One of the ugliest men, he was accustomed to have himself painted and enameled, and ‘made up* with all the artifi ciality of the patronesses of Madame Rachel. His bald bead was crowned with a blue-black wig, one of thirty, changed every day, and imitating the growth of the hair; wig No. 1 being cut close, to imitate a head just cropped by the barber; wig No. 2 being a trifle longer, and so on all through the series. When the Duke appeared iu wigs 29 and 30, he was ac customed to run his fingers through their long locks with the remark that he ‘must really have his hair cut.*” boots and put ou rubbers, because one grain of the dangerous powder, crushed by the boot, would explode the whole in an instant. The floor of this bouse is covered with leath er, and is made perfectly black by tbe dust of the gunpowder. It contains a set of 9eives, each one smaller tiian the last, through which the powder ia sifted, aud an immense ground and laboring mill, where it is ground up, while men shovel it in wooden shovels. The machinery makes a great deal of noise, but the men are silent, as in the other houses. The reckless crashing of the machinery even seems to give greater hoiror, and one is very glad to get out of that house. The stoviog room is next on the list, and there the gunpowder is heated on wooden trays. It is very hot, and no workmen stay there. From there it goes to the packing house, where it is put in barrels, kegs and canisters. Lastly, through all these houses it goes at last to tbe storehouse. One feels like drawing a long breath to fee tho fearful stuff safely packed away out of the hands of men in this curious house. You’ve heard of things being os dry as a powder-horn, but }’ou would not think this house very dry. It is a^jnost imbedded in water. Did you ever hear of a water-roof be fore? Instead of steps to go in, there are shallow tanks of water, through which every one mast walk to the door. In none of these powder-honses is any light ever allowed except sunlight The wages are good; the day's work is short, ending always at 3 or 4 o’clock. But the men bave a serious look that makes one think every moment of the danger, and glad to get away.—American Sportsman. An American has been misbohAving him self in Germany. He represented himself to be an officer on Gen. Grant s staff, and, armed with forged credentials, collected large sums of money from nearly ad the petty dukes aud princes to help build a gigantic monument in memory ot the soldiers killed in the war of j kilTeTeach otbeV'utT Traekc? God! I’m killed!’’ White At Chicago. Chicago, September 30,1873. The Union National Bank gaae liquidation. In Memphis. Memphis, September 30, 1873. At a largo meeting of the Chamber of Commerce this morning to consider the financial situation, a resolution was received from banks of the city to the effect that they would not suspend, but would open, in addition to tbe usual business, so exchange acccunt to be paid in the kind, for the purpose of moving cotton, which was unanimously adopted by the Cham ber. Personals. The venerable Boston po»t. Chas. Spragm, attained his eighty-third birthday on Septem ber 10. Kellogg has given $1,000 to the Shreveport sufferers. They are probably glad to get so much back. The report that Colonel Forney had sold a half interest in the Philadelphia Press to Congressman Harmer is now authoritatively denied. Hon. A. H. Stephens and the Hon. Robert Toombs have subscribed five hundred dollars each toward building a Catholic church in Georgia. Florence Nightingale believes in the whip lash as a promoter of good behavior. Florence is a good deal of a heroine yet. Wagner, the isle of Shoais murderer, dog out of his cell again last Friday night, but was secured the next morning within the jail limits. Alexander C. Botkin, tho managing editor of the Chicago Times, is to deliver the address before the Northern Wisconsin Press Associ ation at Oshkosh. Mrs. John T. Audubon, widow of the fa- O’Donneil, a wealthy farmer, but on arriving , on the line of the Ceutrai Railroad. There arc there they found that he had sold out and learn, many Catholics there; neveitheleaa, with com. gone away. One night they stopped a man 1 mendable zeal and with the assistance of othera not riding along tbe highway, and, by presenting of their faith, who have generoualy given a helping a revolver to his head, forced him to pass . hand, they are determined ere long to have a place cf over what money he had. It was for this worship that will be an ornament tj the little village, they wore apprehended, tried and sentenced to ; and where the scattered Catholics of the piney woods the State Prison for twenty years. may assemble to worship Gcd in the old faith of their While in jail Lynch made a partial disclos- father*, ure to the Sheriff, but did not proceed for Bethany i* the scene of Bishop Gross' first visit to enough to let the authorities into his terrible ; the lQt e rl or, soon after bia arrival in the'diocMi; and secret. But this has caused Green to make „ U , U «1. wbcrev „ he goe. . church or Jolloge u 1m aclean hreaet o f it f.uce his arrival at the : mediBtel T .,„tcd. So th„ bo raid to be hi. fir.t btate Prison. born The murder until the present time has been - ' F Tl»f Yellow Fever at Opelika— Eafsala (tusrastlncd — Maronltrs Fsvsi^ftarlag. The train arriving from Montgomery to-night re ports the situation no better. The wildest rumor* afloat, moat of which are no doubt greatly exog - a mystery, and a number of persons, inclu ding two relatives of the deceased, have been arrested for committing the deed, but for want of evidence were discharged from cus tody. Yesterday morning Warden Chamberlain mous naturalist, now in the oightj'-sixth year ! telegraphed to the authorities of Little Neck, go rated. The cars which left the city this morning of Derage, left New York last week on her ; and this morning two officers of that place j were crowded with refugees, who were distributed way to Louisville, Kentucky, where she will ■ visited tho prison and conversed with Given. *n along the road as lar eaet as Columbus. The i.x- pass the winter with family"friends. who made an affidavit to the facts m u- uy pr ,. HB Messenger to-night reports two coses of yellow A humorist, after writing a year, ought to tom to Warden Chamberlain. Ho aL > ana- tererst opehk» yesterday, but no unusual oiariii At become a convert to “Euthanasia;” that is, to utely described the store, the way iu which \ Kufaulo the quarantine it oUli meet rigidly enforce.!, the doctrine which teaches that it is the duty j the body of Mr. Graham was left, and made i not a nut is allowed to enter the town from M.>ut of man to commit suicide after he has become such other statements that the'Little Neck of- RO merr. a burden to his fellow creatures. fleers became satisfied that the murder was ** r ,,, James Ladd, “the oldest Mason,” for many I committed by Greeu and his two companions, years deputy collector of customs at Porls- The officers left for New York this afternoon, mouth, N. H., died at his house at Salisbury ' They will probably return in a few days and Point, where be has resided of late, on j remove Green and Lynch. They staud a fair Monday, at the age of ninety-one years. j chance of suffering the extreme penalty' of tho The newest subscriptiofl-book is George j la*’» Alfred Townsend’s “Washington Outside and j Inside,” a volume of 740 pages, with wood * According to a New York letter, Donaldson ! prosperity. H© repuJt*u* any tnta&ttou of tntrodac cuts innumerable, and maae up mostlv from J the balloonist is a versatile man. He used to ‘ ing extreme measures or of attackieg Italy. the author s “Gath" letters to the Chicago ; bave a wire in his apartments ou Bleecker Tribune. j street, and during his leisure moments he The Rev. Df. Rt.mb.Dt, president of the ! Up0n ’*“ d 10 get 01 ’ William Jewell college of Missouri, returned 1 m the world withoat the U8e of Ras. FRANCE. Basin, September 9*). 1873. Count de ChsmborJ. ia s letter to his sapporters ia France, aaya his object is tbe union of parti©* in France, and tbs restoration of her glory, greatness and EGYPT. . ., uieuiuij ui tuu duiuivin slum ju tuu wur ui Bismarck has “covered another German re b e i|j on< He was afterwards arrested The many friends of the late Hon. Anson Burlingame will be glad to know that his son , * n ‘ i is one of the rising literary workers of New .»u. 0 .,vu. (York. He is correspondent, not only of ssv- Last words of the two roughs who recently era ^ tbe leading journals of this country, ■ — - Fugate—“Oh, but is tbe Americau correspondent ot tho Lo*- Thank God, j don Athen.eum, aud one ot tho most active on the Egypt from Europe, where he has been for the last year and a half, recruiting his health and studying the methods of universi ty education. Alkxanpwia. September SO, 1873. Sir Same#I Baker and wif© sailed to-day for Krg- THE YELLOW JACK. C d S^fba“ve,!r^ Uy ' ~ .“Wf «“«•*««» on the the Prussian cross in 1866, and has been “living out” ever since, has concluded that he will give a deed of his little domain to Prussia for an annuity of $1,500,000. It is quite a aura, but his large family of morgan- arically-mothered children necessitates a gen erous revenue. The Hessians will be glad to get well rid of the tyrannous old roue, but they will find new cause for bating him, prob ably, in his opeo sale and delivery of them to Prussia. outlived him, but I suppose I new edition of Appleton’s American Cydope- j mind follow him iu a few moments. Pull off d**- Captain George, civil and war chief of the my boots.” “Myn Crinkle,” of the New York World, is Onondaga nation ot Indians, died on Ouon- i A graceless tweuty-year old son of Mr. ( very sweet ou Miss Cary. “I cau hear her ilaga reservation, uine miles south of Syracuse, j Gates, of Williugtord, Conn., by forged or- j laugh now while. I write,” he says, “and it New York., Wednesday (light, aged seventy- | ders on the Meridian Savings Bank and tho sounds os if joy were tumbling down a silver eight. Captain George was with General • Towoaend Savings Bank of New Haven, i staircase. After all, a contralto voice is the Favorable News from Montgomery. Montgomery, h©pt©mb«r 33, 1873. Oov death occurred from yellow fever to-day. Some j mild cases are under treatment A spread is Lot ap prebended. ARKANSAS. The Militia Disbanded. 8co:t at Lundy’s Lane, and was bearer ot despatches to the Onondaga* for reinforce ments. Of late years Ih has been the rtcog nized head of the remnants of the Six N i iou-» drew all bin father’s life-long savings, some ! $1,100. Hint has decamped. Mr. Gates is , L'titd Hu l unable to work for the support of hi* tatnilv. only one on a level with our hearts.” Little Rive. 8eptomb« r 30. m.3. Commodore Vanderbilt seeks relief trolu The A Homey General yesterday withdrew the suit the prevailing excitement by driving to Fleet- i a*atnrt Governor Baxter, and the Governor issued hi* wood park every pleasaut afteruoou. order disbanding the mititts.