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Liberal rates made with contract advertisers.
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publication in a particular place can he given,
all advertisers must have equal opportunities.
The .Horning News linn the largest city
and mnil circulation or any paper pub-
11,bed in Savannah. .
Affairs in Georgia.
A Coweta county man proposes to run
for office on tlie platform of “No Fence.
Good heavens! if the fences are to be
abolished, what will some of the leading
papers do for something to straddle ?
The Atlanta Daily News is bringing
out some very damaging facts in relation
to Kimball's connection with the Bollock
ring. Why will the News continue to
worry this great and good man with facts
that ought to be drowned in a beaker of
sherry ?
It is said that Fatty Harris’s libel suit
against the correspondent of the Aagnsta
Chronicle., is for the purpose of allowing
a jury to decide whether he has got
character.
Kimball has thought it prudent to re
turn to New York, though it is said he
will return in September. The articles
in the Atlanta Daily News have evidently
convinced Hannibal that he stands on dan
gerous ground.
Wm. Bassmore, of Macon, a shrewd
little newsboy, lifted one of the adifaw of
the Columbus Enquirer out of
cents the other day.
Tbe Radical Ordinary of Itussell coun
ty, Alabama, was picked up in the streets
of Columbus the other day, too drunk
to tali; about.
Berrien county had cotton bolls open
on tho liith.
Hr. Joseph Dickson, the recently elect
ed Ordinary of Pierce county, has not
yet been commissioned. There were some
irregularities iu tbe returns, and these
had to be sent to the precincts for re-
sion.
.Mr. D. S. Cope, of Jesup, in endeavor
ing to throw a mule down for the purpose
of extracting a wen, broke the animal’s
back.
The Jesup Georgian comes to us in a
new outiit and otherwise greatly
proved. We wish, the Georgian much
iccess.
Abrams, of the Atlanta News, seems to
have a sneaking notion that Kimball is
not as truly honest an he might be.
Wavno county is already chewing on
ripe sugar-cane.
Three colored burglars, who have been
operating in Atlanta, were arrested in
Griffin tbe other day.
Hr. J. F. Walthour, an old and respect
able citizen of Valdosta, died very sud
denly one day last week.
Captain George A. Cooper, of Atlanta,
who has heretofore acted with the Re
publicans, can’t stomach the civil rights
biU.
The cotton caterpillar has made its ap
pearance iu Lowndes county; We hearti
ly agree with tho Valdosta Times that the
farmers might as well recognize them as
a permanent institution in this country,
anil prepare themselves always for the
post by planting cotton early, and large
crops of other products to fall back on for
sustenance.
The Rev. W. J. Hard, a Baptist minis
ter, died iu Augusta on Friday.
Hr. Ilezekiah Brown, an old citizen of
Brooks county, is dead.
Ware county has 151 acres in cotton
■aal 3,700 iu com.
•Jesup Georgian: We were shown
model of the “Georgia” stove at the store
of W. H. Whaley & Son, last week, which
was patented June 23, by Mr. J. B. Wil
liamson and Rev. J. L. Williams, both
residents of this county. The “Georgia”
is intended for a fetovo or a range, being
so arranged that the back can be taken
ol and the stove'placed in a fire-place, or
with the back on con be left to stand in
the middle of the room. A very impor
tant feature of this stove is that victuals
can l,e allowed to stand in the stove when
nwkcil, without danger of burning, as
By a simple arrangement the fire can be
almost instantly extinguished.
•Quitman Independent: Whether or not
tie charges made against Mr. K. it
’nought now by him to be vague and in
definite, it is very certain that when the
Legislature began to investigate his con
duct in reference to the bond question,
they were to liim then of sufficient im-
Portance to excite his fears and precipi
ce his flight from the State. But now
. jamdholders’ need is assistance to
manipulate soft shell Georgians and feel
tea warm throbbing pulse of the best citi
zens of the State, colQred, we presume,
or they gave him e warm reception in
ebruary last. The spurious bond hold-
"rs, it will he remembered, made an effort
trough CoL Sneed to have the State to
Jgree to pay these bonds or -a part of
upmi ami failed signally, and now in con
i'?^ 1 . 0 ' 1 with Kimball they propose to
Mulish his innocence by laying the
th5 D fi S01ne,rIloro else and make it appear
i™ L- 1C y were iuuocent purchasers and
L himball to manipulate the uew Legis-
a. payment of the bonds, but
foil iu that. The people of
,i„. r » la going to elect a Legislature
won t manipulate worth a cent.
Atlanta CommnwcaUh: We are glad to
batin I, pres . s o£ Hz' 5 state are de-
. 8 the question cf biennial sessions,
miggesteq by us some two months
red V ** tlle y would also approve of a
U °H Of OUT* Spnof/tro and Panveueii.
'
gattfeis mi grafters.
Banking, Exchange
AND
Collection Office
OF
C. Anderson,
& Co.
SAYANNAH, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1874.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
bolted
crowd
BY TELEGRAPH
THE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
TEMPEST-TOSSED TI1TON AND 1IIS
TECHNICALITIES.
Eccentricities of French PoHtics.
THE ELECTION TROUBLES IN VICKS
BURG.
A Village Destroyed in Navarre by a
Landslip.'
around Ferguson’s comer,, tho
increased, and the race ’ was
exceedingly lively till Mingo passed the
next comer. All the way one or two men
were close behind him, and such everlast
ing shooting hasn’t been seen or heard
since the days of freedom. Bnt Mingo
escaped. He is the same negro a special
policeman knocked down on circus day,
and over whose head a round hickory
batoom was shivered to pieces. Even
after this terrible lick he was shot several \
times, and chased by a large crowd, bnt
yet he got away. Saturday last Mingo I
again ventured into the suburbs of town.
A scheme was instantly pnt on foot to
effect his arrest. One of our citizens in- I
forms ns that he met fourteen men with
double-barrelled guns, and not far off,
under a shelter were six more men heavi
ly armed. Nevertheless, this grand army
failed to get Mingo. In our opinion the
only way to catch him is to build a twenty
foot brick wall round the county, then
get ail the nigger dogs and drive for him.
Mingo stands charged with stealing a
raft of timber from a Laurens county
man. He sold the raft in Darien, and
got away with the money.
The Emjnerson Case.
St. Minx’s, Ga., July 24, 1874.
Editor Morning News:
Report came from Femandina to-day
that, in addition to being suspected of
robbing his office, Postmaster Rev. J. C.
Emmerson is a defaulter to the govern
ment to the tune of nine hundred dollars.
Eltdjtebo.
Kemper’s Trade with Grant.
The New York Sun publishes some in
teresting points connected with the polit
ical situation in Virginia. It calls atten
tion to the fact that, while Governor
Kemper’s alleged conversion to Grantism
is strenuously denied by his friends; they
admit that negotiations have been carried
on between the President and the Gov
ernor; in the course of which the latter
intimated that under certain conditions
he would be willing to support Grant not
only for a third but a seventh term. The
publicity given to this expression has se
riously injured the popularity of the
Governor, who has by this time no doubt
become fully convinced that if such are
his sentiments, they are not those of the
Conservatives of Virginia.
One of the most interesting eontribu- ,
tions to the controversy which has grown I she was pure, unless a technical ineamne
out of tins affair is an article in the was applied to the word purity She
Alexandria Sentinel, the reputed month- sought consolation of her pastor and he
pioce of CoL Mosby, in which the charge took advantage of her orthodox views to
is made that President Grant has been I make them a net and mesh in which he
very badly treated by the Conservative ensnared her, and for which witness held
party, as there was a distinct understand- I the same contempt which no other Eng-
ing between Grant through Mosby on the I fish words could describe. *
one side, and Kemper on the other, that if I Question—You say, for a year after
tho President would refrain from inter- what you state, is Mrs. Tilton’s confes-
feting in the contest between Kemper and I sion, she insisted she had not violated
Hughes, at the last election for Governor, her marriage vows ?
then Kemper would agree that the Con- Answer.—Yes, Elizabeth was' in a sort
servative vote of Virginia should be given of vaporous cloud. She was between light
to Grant for his coveted third term. The and dark. She could not see it was
Sentinel shows much feeling over the luke- wrong. She mentioned it to her mother
warmness with which the project has m my presence that she had not done
JOHN MITCHELL IN IRELAND.
| Terrific Rain-storms and Water-spouts In
the North and West.
TECHNICAL TILTON.
New Yohk, July 27.—The following is
a portion of the Tilton cross-examination
before the Beecher investigating commit-
Question—Have you not frequently as
serted the purity of your wife ?
Answer—No. I have always had c
strong technical use of words. I have al
ways used words that conveyed that im-
pression. I have taken pains to say that
she was a devoted Christian woman. That
necessarily carried the other. I do not
think it covered the whole. I have said
that Elizabeth was a tender, delicate,
kindly Christian woman which I think
she is.
Question—Have yon not stated that she
was as pure as an angel ?
Answer—No. I have not sought to
give Elizabeth a good character. I have
always wanted to do so. I think she de
serves a good character. I think she is
better than most of us—better than I am.
I do not believe, in point of actual moral
goodness, barring some drawbacks, that
there is in this company so whito a soul
as Elizabeth Tilton.
To the question as to his wife’s devo
tion find purity of life, witness said
SPANISH AXFAIBS.
Madrid, July 27.—A terrible landslip
occurred at Along in the Province^of Na
varre. The overhanging rocks fell upon
and utterly destroyed the village. The
disaster was so sudden that few of the
inhabitants escaped. Two hundred
corpses have already been recovered.
A Carlist magazine exploded last week
at Ziza. Thirty men were killed and a |
large number wounded.
‘ THE VICKSBURG TROUBLES.
Vicksburg, Miss., July 26.—-The |
Timas, Radical, of yesterday says there
is no further apprehension of trouble and
no need for troops. An officer of Gen.
Emery’s staff.arrived here to-day and is
interviewing the leading members of both
negro and white parties.
FROM AUSTRIA.
Vienna, July 26.—A shock of earth
quake was felt here to-day. A violent
storm of rain and kailis reported on the
border of Moravia. Several lives lost,
fifty houses destroyed and many vineyards
flooded and ruined at Zagra, where it is
rumored only fourteen inhabitants es
caped.
CAME DOWN.
Saratoga, July 27.—Prof. Donaldson
and his balloon came down abont eight
miles north of this place at 6 p. m. Satur-
day.
[From the Chicago Tribune.)
The Beecher Explosion.
Theodore Tilton’s statement of the re
lations heretofore existing between his
wife and the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher
is at last given to the world, and is so
much worse than . anybody hod antici
pated that it can best be characterized in
the words of Hamlet:
-Such an act
That blurs the grace and blush of modesty;
Calls virtue hyjxxaite; takes off the rose *
From-the fair forehead of an innocent love
And sets a blister there; makes marriage vows
As false as dicers’ oath. O, sueh a deed
As from the body of contraction p’nrtra
The'very soul; and sweet religion makes
A rhzpsodyof words: Heaven’s face doth glow;
Yea this solidity and compound mass
With tristful vision as against the doom.
Is thonght-sick at the act.
Reduced to the cold form of prose, Mr.
Tilton charges, and supports his charge
with: a most'formidable array of docu
mentary and other proof, that Mr.
Beecher, in the-year 1868, deliberately
seduced his wife, Elizabeth R. Tilton,
and maintained criminal relations with
her for the period of some two years,
until the act was discovered by * Tilton
and confessed’by Mrs. Tilton, and after
words by-Beecher himself; that Mr. Til
ton, to shield his own family, condoned
the offense, and absented himself from
Plymouth Church; that Mr- Beecher
wro'te a letter to be shown- to Tilton ex
pressing the utmost apprehension that he
(Tilton) would not keep, the secret, and
revealing a state of utter despair on his
own part, saying that the effort to main
tain an outward appearance of serenity
while accusations were multiplying against
The Apaches have had many a chief—T him, was destroying his life,and that death
COCHISE’S DUEL.
His Startling Revenge on an Interpreter.
been received, and indignantly asks:
“Shall the Virginia people, who pur
chased Gen. Grant’s neutrality by their
professions of friendship, now repudiate
their pledges ?” In answer to this appeal
the Bichmond Enquirer says that whether
Governor Kemper pledged himself to
Mosby or to Grant is a matter for his own
consideration, bnt if one Conservative in
twenty thousand had had an inkling of
wrong.
A
She cannot bear to do wrong,
s of having done wrong
is enough to crash her. She naturally
seeks for her own peace a conscientious
verdict. She never would have had these
relations if she had supposed at the time
they were wrong. Elizabeth never does
anything that at the time seems wrong.
For sueh a large moral nature there is a
lack of a certain balance and equipoise.
the fact that any sueh pledge had been She has not a will that guides and re
made, the present Governor would be
practicing law at Madison- Court House
instead of occupying the office he does.
It is difficult to see who is entitled to
the most discredit in this transaction,
Kemper dr Grant.—Nashville Banner,
strains, bnt Elibabeth never does at any
time that which does not have the stamp
of her conscience at the time upon.it.
Question—Do you say that she did or
did not insist that she hod never violated
her marriage vow ?
Answer—She always was saying that it
Two Women Cut to Pieces bt a I never seemed to her wrong, and “Theo-
Reaper.—Mr. Wm. Lawder, the gentle- dore, I d° not see that I hax’e now wrong-
manly and courteous railroad agent and I y° u -” Tilton described in detail the
of our Senators and Represen.
' vou l<l be striking at reform in
•np, ect ’ on - Instead of saving
r , ,~ed thousand dollars per tinnnin,
iol .Si save over two hundred thous-
bodim “ ? re better and more wieldly
n 0 t ' j e Senate of Georgia should
? {feoty-four, and the House of
Limit u ltt,tlv ‘: K seventy-five, members.
iav „< , e sessions to sixty days, and the
lotild ,“ CW ’A ers *° Pez diem, and we
®ent \v °r t le ri Sbt road to retreneh-
0a r j,,j„ e J 00 many salaried officers.
Ifflnaron? 68 ?p, tlle Superior Court are too
ad ,, e , circuits are too small,
?’ 3 ltIi one or two exceptions,
not ,illl L in some instances,
told taau , one-third, of the year to
salaries yet tbe y are P aj d lar g’-
41s. ^ P eo pIe have to foot the
- “• luere
are many other officers in
whose services could be dis-:
Slate"envo and man y expenses of the
8| uiild1?p ? meut that eould be and
Elation T^jensed with. By judicious
Mtc- rjovr.,,, P r esent expenses of the
and Sf ent com be reduced one-
^T'fesoutnt; P e ?P le should hold their
‘ 6 L !n ‘he next General As-
ne. a stnet account if it is not
®ciit piov'Jra,] Great excite-
&ut8da V inn. ■ u i )ou onr streets -last
^P-Ii m ^ 8 ' Z 4 causqd by the
bt Uy colored T* ° £ ' Mingo Baker, a
“' ter Kill be a^ 8 i°j W ’ 10 1228 swom be
^ a warrant fAAm 1 Sher!iI Lancaster
him when's and attempted to
140 ot Common 116 -5?* down the south
? toe officers botl y Pursued
along the babs w ent whiz-'
V*ll 1 n ate as) thickly as in
Confeds and Blue
l °n a skirmish line. As Mingo
telegraph operator at Anna Station,
Shelby county, informs ns this morning
of a most horrible and fatal accident that
occurred three miles south of Minster,
about 9 o’clock this morning. Mr. Law
der was unable to learn the full particu
lars, owing to the intense excitement that
prevailed, but the facts are substantially
as follows:
That Mrs. Bergmonn and her married
daughter, Mrs. Vanderbrok, had prepared
a lunch for the harvest hands, and after
taking it to the field, where they were en-
lmproper caress which occurred in the
parlor while looking over engravings, say
ing that. Beecher slyly touched Mrs. Til-
ton’slower limbs, and said of the bed-room
scene that he went to the room door,
Elizabeth came. and I was surprised.
The door was locked. She was surprised
at finding me. Beecher was sitting in a
red flush rocking-chair, with his vest un
buttoned and his face colored like a rose
when I saw him.
Question—The explanation was satis
factory to you on that occasion.
Answer—Entirely so. I should have
joying the luncheon, the horses attached . ... ...
to the reaper, which had been left stand- I “bought nothing of it had I not wondered
ing near by, took fright and ran towards I ■ door being locked,
the group. The clothing of the two | ’. Question—What was the explanation
ladies .was caught in the machine, and
they were thus dragged for a consider
able length of time before the horses
conld possibly be checked- Finally,
when the horses were caught, it was
fonnd that Mrs. Bcrgmann was dead, her
body being cut and braised in a most
sickening - manner. Her body was so
completely entangled in the machinery
that it required the strength of two men
to extricate her. The fate of her daugh
ter was not instant death, but her in-
j-ries are such that not the slightest hope
o, i.er recovery is entertained. The sad
affair has cast a gloom over the entire
neighborhood, as the parties are of excel
lent standing and highly respected.
[Dayton Herald, July 18.
Crime in the City or Brotherly
Love.—The Quaker City of Philadelphia
is experiencing a plethora of crime. The
kidnappers of the boy Ross have not yet
been, traced to their hiding place, al
though a reward of twenty thousand dol
lars has been offered for their capture
and conviction. Bnt Philadelphia has
her bioodier record. A Mr. Herring, a
carpet dealer in that oily, has, or rather
had, less than a year ago, two sons-in-
law. They were named respectively ^
Schustericter and Wagner. Less than a I publicans in Clerken well' to-day. The
A ATA C AllAlf4A«1 a4a-M All 4 Lift IT-1 f/i’ll I * %V-At V * 1 _ T I * _ V ■ -
given which you fonnd satisfactory?
Answer — Annoyance. My wife said
ours and the neighbors’ children were
making a noise. She wanted a quiet
talk with Mr. Beecher, and so she locked
herself in.
Question—That satisfied you ?
Answer—Yes. It was entirely reason
able.
bain-storms and water-spouts.
Philadelphia, July 27.—The follow
ing is the heading of the Pittsburg pa
pers this morning: “Tremendous fall of
rain in the city—Streets dripping and
honses flooded—Great destruction of life
and property—Sixteen bodies recovered
and others missing—Union depot afloat—
Reported fifty lives lost.”
Geneva, Lake Wisconsin, July 27.—A
tornado passed through this village thia
morning, doing considerable damage bnt
causing no los§ of life.
San Francisco, July 27.—A dispatch
from Echo says the loss by the flood is
$150,000. Several more bodies have been
recovered, and a number are still miss *
ing.
ENGLISH NOTES. •
London, July 27.—An. extensixe open-
air demonstration against a money-grant
to Prince Leopold was made by the Re-
year ago Schustericter cut his wife’s
throat and then killed himself with a dose
of corrosive sublimate. ’ Last week Wag
ner, the other son-in-law, fabricated an
infernal machine and sent it to Mrs. Her
ring as a present. Its contents were
three pounds of powder and a number of
matchesfco ingeniously arranged that their
ignition in drawing the lid — which
worked in grooves—would have destroy
ed the family. Happily for those who
were looking on, the matches failed to
Ignite, and Wagner was arrested. On
Tuesday last George Hoffman, an English
man, and a skilled workman as a carriage
blacksmith, being put of employment and
rendered desperate by poverty, killed his
wife and followed up the act by cutting
his own throat. Sorely this catalogue of.
horrors is calculated to give Philadelphia
as bad an eminence in the criminal, as
she had before in the political chronicles
of the day.—Baltimore Gazette.
A New Orleans Romance.—Every day
at one of the recorders courts in New Or
leans is to be fonnd an elderly lady neatly,
even elegantly dressed, apparently watch
ing with intense interest each trial as it is
called, and when the court has adjourned
quietly moving away with the crowd.
She has a painful and singular history.
Childless and alone in the world, she was
onee the centre of a happy family circle;
but a series of misfortunes came and left
her hopeless and aimless. The epidemic
of 1^55 deprived her of her husband ana
two children. ' Of her remaining sons one
was killed in the army, and tho other,
abont a year since, was arraigned before
this same court for murder. Before this
awful shock the mother’s reason had
reeled and left her a harmless maniac.
Since then she each day imagines her son
on trial and watches there for his coming.
Day after day she prosecutes in the court
room her tireless watch. Disappointment
never affects her, for- she thinks she will
him to-morrow. Those who have
charge of her gratify the harmless delu
sion, and thus morning and evening she
is found at her post, influenced by an
affection that defies the flight and wreck
of reason.
Here is a Japanese receipt for keeping
meat fresh iu hot weather : “Place it in
clean porcelain bowl, and pour very hot
water over it so as to cover it. Then
pour oil upon the water. The air is thus
qui
Nationalists, of Limerick, propose to give
a dinner in honor of John Mitchell,' who
recently arrived from America. It is re
ported that a home-rule member of Par
liament will retire in order to give
Mitchell an opportunity of being returned
to the vacant seat. Detectives krewatch-
ing Mitchell’s movements.
Abraham Brewster, formerly Attorney
General, is dead.
foreign notes.
London, July 27, 5:30 a. m.—The morn
ing papers announce on official authority
that Prince Leopold is seriously 11L Al
though there is no cause for alarm, his
recovery will necessarily be tedious.
A special dispatch to the Daily News
reports that a majority of delegates to
the Congress have arrived in Brussels.
The session opens to-day, but the sitting
will be devoted only to the exchange of
credentials and other formal preliminaries.
Sir Alfred Harsford is the representative
of Great Britain.
. FRANCE AND THE CABLISTS.
London, July 27.—The Imperial, in a
strongly worded article, denounces the
avowed complicity of France with the
Corlists, and declares that if diplomatic
representations prove ineffectual, Spain
most adopt a cool attitude towards
France, and seek a more congenial alli
ance. The French journals assert that
the Spanish frontiers are well guarded by
tho French authorities and that contra
band of war which reaches the Carlists is
imported by sea from England.
THE FRENCH ASSEMBLY.
Paris, July 26.—In the Assembly to
morrow, on the' presentation of the re
port of the Committee of Parliamentary
Initiative on motions for dissolution
offered bj Leon de Mallevillo and Duval,
the Left win move that the Assembly do
not separate until tho question of disso
lution is decides. . The Conservative
journals to-day earnestly appeal to absent
deputies of their party to return. Fears
that dissolution will be carried are preva
lent, and tend to flatten funds.
.MISSISSIPPI’S NEGRO COYEBNOR.
Washington, July 27.—Adjutant Gen
eral Platte, of the Department of the
South", writes the War Department in
reference to ordering troops to Vicksburg
and expresses tho opinion tint acting
Gov. Davis will not be able to make out a
case sufficient io warrant
none as desperately wicked as Cochise.
When I saw him last h6 was fifty-two.
Six feet tall, with delicate feet and hands,
sharp, angular features, a piercing dark
eye and great Roman nose, wide about
the nostrils and thin where it curved.
If his sonl passes after death into any
thing that has a face akin to his own,
instead of the Indian 'there will be the
bald eagle.. He hated the Americans so
bitterly that if one of his tribe learned
a word of the English language Cochise
expelled hint or forced him to forget it.
He succeeded Red Sleeves, a great giant
,of. a butcher, who took his name from
the fact that every time he killed
an enemy he smeared his blood
over his arms from the wrists to the el
bows. And thoroughly and terribly in
keeping with his character, too, was
Cochise’s initiation or instalment. There
has been a feast in the village. Amid the
general revelry he refused to drink.
While others got dangerously- drunk and
helplessly drunk, Cochise stood firmly by,
watching the furious orgy-with a look of
sullen and supercilious irony on his ex
pressive face. Finally a young brave, too
far gone to be discreet, went np to him
with a coiled riata in his left hand and a
cupfull of whisky in his right. He press
ed Cochise to drink, but the newly made
chief refused abruptly. Some words were
had, and as an end of it the warrior smote
his leader twice or thrice with his heavy
rope. The unpardonable sin had been
committed. It is safe to knock an In
dian down, ponnd him with a dub, beat
him with a stick, brnise him with a blud
geon: but it were better to beard the
grizzly bear than lay over his shoulders a
cowhide or anything that savored of the
lash.
Chief as he was, Cochise sternly de
manded that, the young brave should fight
him at daylight the next morning with
rifles. The duello is not much in vogue
with any of the Indian tribes, and it is
but rarely that individual qnarrels pass so
far beyond the point of settlement that
an exercise of something of persuasion or
resolute authority will not serve to re
store good feeling; bnt in this instance
Cochise would agree to nothing short of
the actual combat. They met and fought.
It was early morning, and the measured
distance was thirty paces. Probably three
hundred warriors were in attendance, and
these, clad in full war costume and form
ed upon the flank of the dueling ground,
presented a picturesque adornment to a
scene otherwise pitiless and unforgiving.
At the first fire Coohise’s bullet found the
heart of his antagonist. He -leaped high
into the air, -and before he reached the
ground he was dead.
In every way more notorious was Co
chise’s next feat of savage bravado and
would be the most welcome of friends to
him; that nevertheless Beecher allowed
Tilton to suffer under the imputation of
a slanderer, a liar, and a dog, causing him
to be loaded with public opprobrium and
social ostraoism; that further, he con
spired with Mrs. Elizabeth R. Tilton, his
wife, to complete his ruin by perjury and
subornation of perjury;« that finally
Mrs. Tilton broke down n ~ r the stings
of a guilty constien-. - • confessed that
the testimony she gave the other day
before the investigating committee was
false, bud that it was given at the in
stance *‘2 itr ®Beeher’s lawyer, in order
to save til* u-uiof religion (!), and final
ly that nothing conld have prevailed upon
lnm (Tilton) to make this statement ex
cept Mr. Beecher’s public challenge of
the truth of his letter to Dr. Bacon, by
calling for an investigation.
Such is the substance of Mr. Tilton’s
sworn statement. It bears the-impress of
truth, and iJ* fortified by a chain of cir
cumstances which - tally with each other
and with what has gone before. Of
coarse it is only one side of the story.
The other remains to be told, and it will
be only bare justice to wait till the other
side is heard. Mr. Beecher has been a
long time in coming to the point, but he
can wait no longer. If he confesses the
substantial truth of Tilton's charges, he
thereby acknowledges that he lied when
he published his general denial last June,
and that he has been a hypocrite and a
scoundrel these many years, for Mr. Til-
ton’s statement requires us to believe not
that Mr. Beecher fell in an unguarded
moment, bnt that. he studiously planned
and accomplished the seduction of Mrs.
Tilton in the garb of her religious adviser,
and that he continued bis foul intercourse
until discovery made it no longer possible.
This statement, whether true or false,
will emry dismay not merely into religi-
Beecher.
New York, July 24.—It is stated now
that there is a strong pressure upon the
committee making the investigation into
what is known as the Beecher scandal, to
throw open its sessions and have the ex
amination public day by day. It seems
likely that the scandal will drift into the
courts. The connection of Gen. Butler
is said to have been brought abont i
follows: Mr. Butler has been counsel for
Mr. Frank Moulton for some time. When
tho war on Mr. Beecher was reopened,
Moulton went to, Gen. Butler with all of
the letters and documents in his possession
and laid them before him. Mr. Bntler’s
comment was, “Theodore Tilton has a
. ffortete and jfrstattrattts.
BRESjVM’S
European House
, IX REYNOLDS' SQUARE,
(Formerly Planters’ Bank,)
SAYASSAH, GA.
On Monday Butler went to see General
Tracey, of the counsel for Beecher, and
told lnm that as counsel for Mr. Beecher
he conld not afford to have the committee
meet Monday night. He must arrange
to have one or two of the members away,
that there would not be a quorum. The
committee insisted upon hearing Tilton’s
charges and he read them. Their belief
np to Monday night was that Tilton was
a slanderer. Then it’s said they thought
more gravely of the question, and Tues
day evening talked with Tilton of a re
conciliation.
Beecher remained in his residence yes;
terday and saw no visitors. Gen. Tracey
called on him in the morning and in the
evening, and says that he was jovial and
in good spirits, and at work on his com
ing- testimony. He will testily before
the committee very soon, and Mrs. Tilton
is to testify again at length. Then Moul
ton is to be called on. There is a pros
pect of reaching an end next week, when
all the testimony that is then taken will
be made pnblic with the verdict of the
committee.
The Brooklyn Argus this afternoon
publishes a supplementary statement
from Tilton in the form of an interview
with one of the reporters, in which Tilton
says all the accounts of his cross-examina
tion by the committee have been incor
rect. One-sided and half-malicious mis
representations of him have been fur
nished to reporters by the counsel of the
committee, for which the committee
themselves are not responsible. Thelatter
have a grave case on their hands, and are
wise enough to acknowledge its gravity,
bnt their counsel are full of tricks and
stratagems to belittle and distort They
will in the end be the two worst beaten at
torneys who ever conducted a case.
They have made a hideous blunder
in diverting their examination from the
facts at issne to an inquiry into the
names and characters of his (Tilton’s) fe
male acquaintances. This gives him the
right to institute a counter-inquiry into
the standing of ladies of Mr. Beecher’s
acquaintance. He informed the committee
-yesterday that he deprecated such a plan
of battle, but if forced upon him by the
committee’s counsel he conld draw a
sword with two edges to their one. If
this new aspect is to characterize the re
mainder of the controversy, it wonld be
better for Beecher he had never been bom.
Replying to a statement printed in this
morning’s papers that he told the com
mittee that he had no other evidence of
Beecher’s adultery except what Mrs, Til
ton told him (Tilton) said to the reporter,
“I wish you would do me the fa-
for to say through the columns of the
Argus, that though I have hitherto de
clined being interviewed concerning my
appearance before the committee, and
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ons circles, bnt into family circles bave steadfastly remained silent in regard
PROPRIETOR.
throughout the United States, if not into
every country where the English lan
guage is spoken. Mr. Beecher is the
foremost preacher in the world. We are
inclined to assign him the most eloquent
tongue that the present century has pro
duced. He belongs to a family of gifted
men and woman, among whom he is
facile prinoepe. That he should now be
shown a seducer, a liar, and a hypocrite,
is not one of those things that can over
come us like a summer-cloud without our
special wonder. It is a fact (if it be a
fact) of most grave import, and yet it
should not cause any right-minded person
to lose his respect for religion, still less (o
doubt the existence of virtue. There is
nothing in it all to take anybody off his
feet. The same divine laws' exist now
that existed before, even as the some son
gilds the heavens, and the spectacle of
prowess. A Scotch interpreter named Beecher’s fall from the dizzy height he
occupied should enforce with tenfold
strength the lesson that crime ever car
ries with it a- punishment commensurate
with the offense. If Mr. Beecher is really
a guilty man and Mrs. Tilton a guilty
woman, what man or woman, high or
low, would exchange places with them ?
to the proceedings of the committee, yet
the above report, coming as it does from
the committee’s counsel, is an absolute
fabrication. I tcld the committee dis
tinctly that Mr. Beecher had confessed
his adultery to me; that he had confessed
to Mr. Moulton; that he had confessed it
to other persons whom I named, and
furthermore, I gave the names of sev
eral persons who for the last four
years have been perfectly well aware
that . Mr. Moulton’s entire connec
tion with this case from begin,
mng to end has been based on the one
and only corner-stone of Mr. Beecher’s
criminality. I asked that all these per
sons be produced before the committee.
I asked furthermore for tho privilege of
being present to - cross-examine Mr.
Beecher and other witnesses. I still fur
ther suggested that as the case hnd come
to he of such magnitude that it wonld be
better^ for the committee to dismieg
this informal examination, in which
no one but myself has thus far spoken
nnder oath, and adjourn to meet
in court. I expressed a willingness to be
sued for libel, or to be pnt in any other
way before a tribunal which conld compel
febld-tf
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IN STORE AND TO ARRIVE
Harrison Englehart had •fallon under hi«
displeasure, and he received word from
his desperate enemy that the feud was
mortal and that he meant to kill him
whenever and wherever found. Engle-
hart affected to laugh at the threat, but
he prepared himself for the worst, never- , w ^
theless, and went about warily, without, I What man would accept Beecher’s genius I witnesses to testify under oath, and which
however, meeting with an opportunity I and position if coupled with the torments cou id punish the perjurer with State pris-
to kill or be killed. which must now amain and gnaw him ? on - If this case were now before a criminal
One day news came to Tucson that Co- What woman would exchange her peace [ cour t» instead of a voluntary committee,
chise, at the head of a small war party,was of mind, her honorable home, however an ^ ^ ,Mr. Beecher’s printed statement
humble, and her children’s reverence, for 1 J
the so-called “religious love” in which
Mrs. Tilton so long participated ? Surely,
no more powerful and pointed injunction
was ever conveyed to mankind, teaching
them that the paths of purity, and they
only, are the paths of peace.
500 Bbis. No. 1
Refined Petroleum
in camp thirty miles to the southeast. A
Federal captain took thirty men, ’an In
dian agent and Englehart as interpreter,
and went ouf to have a talk with the
Apaches. It is supposed that the captain
was ignorant of the feud existing, for
upon Englehart making some objection
to the proposed expedition the officer in
sisted and finally prevailed upon him to
go. The meeting was most friendly and
lasted several hours. Neither Cochise
nor Englehart referred to the subject of
KEROSENE OIL !
THE LOTNOW IN STORE
Stands 114° Fire Test,
Got. Hendricks, of Indiana.
In his address to the Indiana Demo-
. . cratic Convention, Gov. Hendricks, its
the soldiers of the escort and the Indiana dead Democracy :
of the war party were getting ready to Tbe gentleman who presided over the
march mid to separate. Qf a sudden, and Republican Convention felt it his duty to
with, a wild yell that had hatred and ven- | say that two years ago I had proclaimed
THE SAME HAVING BEEN INSPECTED BY |
THE STATE INSPECTOR.
V. L. STARR & CO.
Successors to Wm. 91. Bird & Co.
geance in it, Cochise leaned from his sad
dle, seized Englehart by the collar, drew
him np clear from his stirrips, and over
upon his left leg and thigh, and
then dashfed off at a furious rate, par
tially dragging and partially carry
ing his struggling victim. So instan
taneous was the attack, and so nn.
prepared was the escort for any imme
diate rescue, that some distance had been
;oined by Cochise, followed by his entire
nurd, before the Captain’s presence of
mind returned to' him and a charge was
ordered. It was too late, however, to
save the poor Scotchman. Taken at the
terrible disadvantage he was, he yet
strove desperately and tried to draw his
revolver and make the best fight he conld
for his life. Once he nearly succeeded,
bnt, with the strength of a giant and a
rapidity that almost defied calculation,
Cochise stabbed his victim seven times in
the neck and breast, and even while hold
ing him up upon his horse, and that horse
rushing along over broken ground at the
top of his speed, managed to tear the
reeking scalp from the still-breath
ing' yet dreadfully mutilated inter
preter. Waving this three times in
the face of his pursuers, and dropping-
the gory corpse like a log in the road, he
easily baffled the detachment of soldiers,
and made his escape without the. loss of
a single follower.
For.this deed the price of §2,000 was
pnt upon Cochise’s head, and many was
the borderer and the plainsman who en
tered into his domain to look for him,
and to lie in wait upon the road that he"
sometimes traveled. They did not find
him—certainly none ever returned to
claim the blood money, and many there
were who returned not at all.
In a report made to the War Depart-
the death of the Democratic party. Oh,
no! I had said that we turn our backs
upon the past, and stand in the present,
and look forward to the great future; that I vestigation.
the future is ours, and that in-it the peo-
pie should achieve that full measure of
prosperity and happiness which it is in
thoir power to secure. The dead issues
of the past do not furnish bur
animating sentiments. The princi
ples of free government and the
usages essential to preserve liberty are
of the present, as of the past, and must
be of the future. It is interesting to
hear their orators assuring their follow
ers that the Democratic party is dead.
It establishes one’s genins for originality.
It has not been repeated more than one
million times, and each time the follow
ers laugh and cheer. They are so glad
the JDemocracy is dead. They wish it,
but feel that it is not so. The laugh and
cheer are hollow and without joy. If
they were sure of it, they would say kind
and generous things of so great and pow
erful an organization. It is not brave
or noble to strike even a dead lion. But
a few years since they boasted that
the Democrats had no Governor in the
Northern States and but few in the Sonth;
bnt now there are Democratic Governors
in New Hampshire, Connecticut, Dela
ware, Maryland, Ohio, Indiana, Wiscon
sin, Oregon, Kentucky, Missouri, Ten
nessee, Virginia, Georgia and Texas.
Arkansas may now be added to the list of
Democratic States, for the bonds who
corrupted the ballot-box are broken and
scattered. Organizations may be broken
and pass away, but Democracy cannot
die. It is endowed with the immortality
of truth and right. Wherever, in all
lands, men aspire to higher, freer, better
governments, and purer liberty; wherever
had been made nnder oath, subject to
cross-questioning and overthrow, he
would indeed be compelled to step down
and out.
I feel at liberty to speak freely, be-,
cause Mr. Beecher’s counsel have falsified
me to the world, and I have no recourse
but to smite them in the face.
_ Henry W. Sage, chairman of the Beeeher
investigating committee, had a long inter
view with Tilton this morning. It is re
ported a complete, change of front is to
be made, and that Sage’s visit to Tilton
is full of significance.
The Beecher examining committee re- | -»T Cl* • .
sumed its session this evening at the resi- J\ ftW XftAO H S I
denee of August Storrs. Mra. Ovington I JJUUJVO .
was examined at some length, with refer
ence to the statements made by Tiltoii to
her and her husband. The committee
refused all information relative to the in-
Enqtrire prices in the store.
julyl7-tf
JWtO0l §0060.
Hunting Koachks with a Lightwood
Touch.-—A colored wonian by the name
of Vena Lomax, living on Seventh, be
tween Bladen and Brunswick streets, was
very severely burned yesterday afternoon,
about four o’clock. It appears that she
had taken a small lightwood torch and
gone into a closet to kill roaches, which
had become very troublesome. In the
closet was a can containing from a quar
ter to a half pound of powder, which by
some means became ignited from the
torch, followed by an explosion which
startled the neighborhood, setting fire to
the closet and' to the woman’s clothing.
The neighbors roshed in and soon suc
ceeded in arresting the flames by throw
ing plenty of water on the person of the
unfortunate woman and into the closet.
The woman was badly burned abont the
face, side and' arms, the skin- in some
places peeling off. It is also feared that
her sight is injured, as her eyes were
closed and apparently badly scorched.
Persons who were in the vicinity at the
time represent the report of the explo
sion to have been about equal in sound
to the discharge of a cannon. The affair
created considerable excitement in the
neighborhood and drew together a large
crowd. It is hoped that her injuries will
not prove serious.— Wilmington Star.
THE LEADER!
By IL R. Palkkb, assisted by L. O. Emerson.
Choirs, Conventions, and Singing Classes will I
welcome this new Chnrch Music Book, filled with
new tunes, snthems, chants, &e., &c., all ot tlie
best quality. Price S1.3S or $12.00 per dozen.
The Song Monarch
By H. R. Palmer, assisted by L. O. Emerson. „
Especially for Singing Classes. First SG pages I
contain tbe elementary course, the same as tnat
in the Leader, which course is followed by more
than 100 pagaS filled with the most interesting I
Secular and Sacred Music for practice. Equal to
the Song King in interest. Price 75 cents, or
$7.50 per dozen. 1
and doctors’ billa.
After over Forty Years’ trial it is still receiving
the most unqualified testimonials to its virtues
from persons of the highest character and re
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OFFICE
American Cotton Tie Co.
New Obleaxs, La., Jnnc SI, 18T4.
Notice to Dealers and Bujers or Cotton Ties.
W HEREAS, certain parties are now making
and offering Pieced Arrow and Open Slot
Tics for sale without authority or license from
this Company, all persons arc hereby cautioned
not to purchase Arrow or other Open Slot Cotton
Tree, except from our duly authorized agents,
who will be kept folly supplied with new ami
Pierced Ties. Onr attorneys are instructed to
bring suit against ail persons violating onr patent
titles. AMERICAN COTTON TIE col
R. W. Ratee & Co., General Agents.
mox COTTOX TIES.
meat, there is the spirit of Democracy
that will endure and yet aehieve man’s
enfranchisement and elevation.
ment some three Dr four years ago the ac- there is the sentiment that government is
tnal statistics were given of Cochise’s own made for man and not man for govem-
killing, and from the figures there pro- 4 ” * v " ”
sented the almost incredible total was
figured up of twenty-seven Americans,
four Apache Indians, three Germans, two
Englishmen, one Frenchman and forty-
nine Mexicans and half-breeds who had
come to their death at the hands of this
monster alone.—St, Louis Dispatch.
A painful impression has been caused
in Paris by the suicide of the young and
handsome Captain Hemanl. He was aid-
de-camp to the chivalrous Gen. Bouches,
whom he accompanied to the races on
of bfe and joy. He lost-
00,000 francs ill - 5 OT muu house, and fail
ing to obtain the money from i»;<= friends
shot himself.
We understand that the teller’s cash of
one of the prominent Boston banks is
short §10,000. As yet no trace has been
discovered, but so far as we can learn, no
cion attaches to any officer of t]
The.English papers note the claim of
a Dutch chemist, who professes to have
discovered*what he calls “the successor
of steam,” which he gives the scientific
name of carboleum. It is a form of car
bonic acid, and Mr. Bemis, the discoverer,
says it can be made to perform many of
the duties now performed by steam, be-
sides being much more portable and more
quickly available. The beauty of the
discovery to the English mind, supposing
it to be of practical importance, is that it
will lead to the utilization of the chalk
euro nji(l lime deposits of Englaud, so
that as the ena coal mining draws near
a new resource for fuel win he available.
President Tejada, of Mexico, has refus
ed the application of Santa Anna to be
restored to the rank and pay of general of
" ” army.
A Tbade and a DraTT One.—The Man
with tho Branded Hand bids fair to be as
notorious for a few days as tbe Man with
the Iron Mask has, been for near two
hundred years. They held a ‘ ‘Itennion of
the Old Time Abolitionists” ot Chicago iu
June, and among the people there or
mentioned there was one Walker, a Cape
Cod hero, who drove a thriving trade m
the “underground railroad” about 1843.
He vfas caught in Florida, convicted of
slave stealing and burned in. the hand
' S. S.” -
The Chicago Convention made a pro
digious fuss over him and contributed the
gigantic sum of sixty-five dollars*and ten
cents to his relief, for it seems that he is
now an old man and poor. Of the knav
ish and silly folks who met at Chicago no
more was to be expected than that they
should praise this old pirate and give him
a little fractional currency; but we are
just a little tired of tho sentiment that is
thrown away on these underground rail
roads. For the fact is notorious that they
made a trade cf it and charged the high
est kind of prices for the risks they ran.
—Norfolk Virginian.
AMERICAN SCHOOL
MUSIC READERS!
Three Carefully Graded Song Books for CWunon i
Schools.
By iw o. Emerson and W. S. TUden.
Book 1st. For Primary Schools.........Price 35c.
“ 2d. For Lower Grammar Classes. “ 50ci
“ 3d. For Higher “ “ « coc.
The Course is easy, progressive, interesting,
and has been thoroughly tested in schools near
Boston. 1
OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston.
CHAS. H. DITSON & CO.,
jolylS-W,S«twtf 711 Broadway, N. Y.
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TAKE NOTICE! I r
TNG fully deck
of CARRIAGES, BUGGIES and WAGONS
in Savannah, we will, on the 1st of October next,
take possession of the large Repository now
being built comer of Montgomery and Bay
streets, and will fill it with a choice lot of work
from our extensive manufactory at Wilmington,
Delaware. We will be prepared to "give the citi-
*zens of Georgia better bargains than ever before
offered. For the present we will offer our stock
now on hand and arriving by each steamer lrom
Philadelph : a.
GREAT BARGAINS for cash, or approved
paper. WE CAN AND WILL DO IT.
McLEAR & KENDALL.
ALEXANDER FINLEY, Agent.
jy25-M, W ifcFl m&w3m
THE CELEBRATED
ARROW TIES
WILL EE SOLD
In lots under 500 handles ....8c. 3? tt>. net.
In lots of 500 bundles . .Sc. y &. 2y. off.
In lots of 1,000 bundles ana over.Sc. 9 lb. 5 off.
Pieced, 2c. t? tt>. under new-Ties.
HOPKINS & WOOD,
BATES & COMER,
jnn29-2m Agents at Savannah.
<£!y (traits.
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but in lt>4G a man was charged by his heirs
with insanity because he paid £2,500
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Price
.$1 25
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Also, cheap editions of Dickens, Thackeray,
Bulwer, Byron, Shakspeare, Scott, Milton, Moore,
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YTE7HY IS IT that Printing can be done to the
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