The Buena Vista Argus. (Buena Vista, Ga.) 1875-1881, May 22, 1878, Image 1

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W A. SINGLETON, Editor and Proprietor. YOLUMEIiI. grijfrssiimal (Sards. Hi#i 1 jaeaiMß ' " - - -‘•• BH?r - : - EM. BUTT, attorney AT L.A.W, BUENA VISTA. OA.. IVMORS & SIMMONS, attorney at law, AMKIUCUB, GEORGIA. lUarcti IH- 1 Jfr. m and RED RONE, GA. Bgjt, Patronage solicited. Calls responded to promptly* W lIjLIAM B- HINTON, attorney AT I'aw. buewa vista, ga- VV ill practice in UlO Court'- of tlii State, an.t the District nud Circuit Courts of tlie United States. „ „ .. Vju. Special attention given to Collections, CoriSevuncmti and Bankruptcy. tebb-iy r. L. WISDOM, M I> BUENA VISTA, GA. B®*Calls may bo loft at my resi dence at a hour* of the duy or night. J. W. BRAD Y, attorney at LAW, A M KUICUSi QKOBGI A. Office on Umar Street. Prompt attention given all business. Col loot ions made. Will practice in the count of Lee, Macon, Marion, tSchlcy, Sumter, Web ater, Dooly, Tem-11 and Worth. dental'work W VOC W A NT— X G oo'd Den fc al |W 0r k CALI, on Dr. DP. HOLLOWAY m kl offl.-e over Davenport & Smiths' Drug Stoi'u, Aineneus, C*a. 1 1 l-ljr __ _____ AKC K. RMXnrD. LeiS F Q v p r Ari) BIANFOSD & GARRARD, ATZOHNEYBA COUNSELLORS AT LAW Office JTo. fit, Bruad Street, (v.*t Wieticli A Kimtil's Jewelry Store, COLiniilS, - - CLORCIA w 1L py ireial attention do-all ca.-ee'in kaakroley lI'UJ oWnln dircliargee for Bank rupt., and reenre liounr.tead. iu Bankruptcy under the Ono.t tution ot IMS. Will nuike f|re i3 •ontract. with per.uu. deairin); t> arnil the™.wire, of the b mefit, ot lire Bank upfc act, eonditionerl an the reeulta ohtuiued. jZSBr All letter, an.wered. ' J. A. TIIORM’OM & SON, BEMTSBW* BUENA VISTA, GEORGIA. Tender their professional services to the oitixens of Buena Vista and vicinity. All work, warranted, and satisfaction {.uarauteed. . Ugi, Office up stairs above Harvey & Story’s old stand. T. G. OKENKET, DENTIST, ELLAVILLE, - - - GEORGIA -WW—V TENDERS Hts professional ser vices to the people ot Marion ’DTJo3r7aud KUirounding counties. He will call at the residence of all parties desir ing dental work done, when notified by in .il nr otherwise. All wtrk warranted. Terms, W. P. BURT, DENTIST ambbicos, - a a OuntinUM to solicit the-patronage of tie good people of Marion. Satisfaction guaranteed, and ut reasonable prices. Special inducements offered tt> those yh o vri 11 arrange ‘to visit my office to have their opera *l*iti performed. iny22-t JAB. Il7b A SI N CTO Ny TAILOR, KUKNA VIST A. G a No Hid respectfully announce to the publU and Itie drieude that he i* etill at hie post I ,* ready furxUkinds ef tailoring—Cutting, Muk i-.g Repaying, Cleaning, ete. Tlioae want mg mousci'Oß to send for suite can get them cf him. MT Latest styles and fashions al vsys Ml hand. J.IS. L. BKASINGTON B. B. Hinton, Attorney and Councel'or at Dst7, Americus, G*., is now prepared to pro aiii'.i pensions for the widows ot soldiers of £<. war of 1812, as well as pensions lor sol- B. B. HINTON. DISCOVERIES IN THE MOON, There was an old woman Who lived in the moon; She made rice pudding, Aud cut it too soon. When she found 'twasn’t done, She gave it a throw; It came to our planet And we called it ••snow.” When her little boy saw What his motbei hud dmio. He scowled and made faces That clouded the sun. He'd lost liis dear pudding, And to wish was in vain ; Hi, tears fell in torrents, But we called them "raiu .” The man in the Moon, who Had been off to town, Heard his ltttle boy cryinp, Which caused him to lrowned. Ho gave him a nice sweetmeats, And told him to dine ; Cj then there was smiling ! Wj called it ‘moonshine,” [Wide Awake for May. CAPTURING /TWO YANKEE*. Result of a Scouting Expedition It was only a year ago that I met Abe McClellan. Poor Abe! I hard* iv knew him, so sadly had Iteclianged. His hair was gray, his eyes bleared and bloodshot aud I is lace bloated and discolored. He was sitting iu a barroom at Johnson City, Term., very much under the influence of liq uor, but whn he recognized me his manner changed, aud he seemed to (eel r ght keenly the degration of his appearance and condition. vYe drew oar chairs together in one corner of the room and began to fight over again the battles we had Plight together a decade aud a hull ago. Whilst we were talking a pom pous,’consequential man entered the room and walking to ihe bar called lor drinks, inviting the company pres cn: 10 join him. 1 refused and Abe, although his face lighted up at the prospect of more liquor, aid 1 could s e the refusal cost him considerable efl'er-, imitated me. When tile pom pous party at last, left the room 1 ask ed Abe who lie was. “lie was with Stover in the early part of the war—Capt. Young; and I captur'd him at Murfreesboro. He is now an in.-unitice agent. By the way, I don't think you ever In uni that stoiy, Colonel. I captured him and his companion, Lieut. Blevins. Would yui Jike to hear lk i 1 ’’ “Assuredly,” I rcp.iod, and with n longing look towards the and earners and bottles b hind the bar, Abe till ed back his chair, and began as fol lows; ••It was just liefore the battle ol Ccrtinlli that I happen and to s art out on it scouting expedition, and iu three days from the time l icti mu camp found myself condor ably quar tered at Murfreesboro, winch place was then iu possession of the Feder al*. I had been there an hour m two —long enough to take u walk through the town aud pick up some valnab e information—when 1 stum bled across my brother Nod, who had been attached lo Zol.icoffer’s com mand. but was now with John Mor <rn. He was on a scont, also, and we linked fortunes. My business was completed the next day, and I hunted up Ned to know if lie would accompany me out of the city that night. “Certainly,” he replied, “but we must first do Something to make the Yankees remember us.” ‘•What shall it be?’’ ‘•Listen and I’ll tell you,” said he. “I learned, this morning, that two Yankee officers, Cpt. Young and Lieut. Blevins, are stopping at the house of a noted Union sympathizer just outside of the lilies. If we go about it right we can capture them.” Young was known to me as, tbe leader ol a party of bushwhackers, who had been the death of many of ,my friends and companions. Blevins was his lieutenant. I was willing to take great risk to effect their capture. They were stopping with one McAn drews, who was the father of two beautiful and very interesting daugh ters, the admiration of all the eligible young officers of both armies. Care fully making our arrangements be fore hand, we passed through Mur freesboro, and under cover of night passed through the lines and gained the house of Me Andrews. There Were two doors to the mansion, and leaving Ned to guard one door, I went around to the other and knoclc 'ed loudly tor admittance. McAndrcws came to tbe door. Presenting my pistol I said: “I wish you to deliver up, at once, Capt. Young and his friend, Lieut. Blevins, both officers of the Fede: al army." Seeing that I wits alone, the old man proceeded to slam the door in my face, but Was prevented by Ned, Who had entered the rear door un preceivcd, and seized his arms. ‘‘Hang on to him,” I cried, “and I'll search the building from roof to ccllan” MBNA VISTA, MARION COUNTY, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1878 . I Went through the bui ding thor oughly, with the exception of one room, the chamber ol tiie grown-up duuglit. rs of McAndrcws. “You will respect that chamber,” said the old man, ••will you not? My daughters are both undressed unci iu b d.” Just then I heard a scuffle down stairs and walked out upon the land ing to sec Lieut. Blevins struggling to escape from Ned, who had puled him out of a cock standing in one corner of the room, a ponderous eight day affair, in Ihe compacions interior of which a man could easily slow himself a way. One gl nee satisfied me that Ned had his man under con troll, and I turned aga n to the old man. “1 do not want to molest, or harm your daughters,” said I, ‘ but I must search that room.” Accordingly the old n an stepped into the apartment and told his daughters to lay st ill and cover them s Ives up, as I was about to enter the room. The g rls did as desired, and when 1 went in not oven their faces could be seen. With ut dis turbing them, I examinined every closet aud cupboard, carefully search ed in every nook where it was possi ble a man could be hidden, but could discover no one. In dispair I ad vanced lo the bed, and lifting tho curiums, looked under if, in despite of old Me Andrews’ protest. ‘ Come, Captain,” said 1, “get out, of ibis. ’ The girls now began to cry bitter ly at their awkward position, and as Voung would not get. out, qui tly, lie was most unceremoniously Compelled to, and walk down stairs with hro. On mounting our horses we compell ed our prisoners lo seat themselves in front of us, and when wo were ready to leave, I turned t old Mc- Andrcws and said: “I would advi.-o you in futme to be a little more discrete and nor con ceal Yankee officers in your daugh ters’ r.oin—such conduct may result ; n something dangerous lo your lion or.” “We rode all that night in the di rection ot Sneed vilie, and the next morning readied a Confedraie camp, and turned our prisoners over.” Abe having fiunislnd his sto.y, I rose and walked towards the bar. He followed with alacrity, and in re sponse to the 1) riem rs inquiry as to wi,at lie should he served with, hoarsely ejaculated ‘’whiskey." Size of lieu >ts. It is a dispn ed question as to whether there is a relation b tween the size of the head aud the deveiope ment of the intellect. But. the t. I lowitig facts stated by a French med ical journal. would scim to indicate Unit the relation exists: Cuvier, Byron and the First Nc poleau required larger fiats than tho average man, and their head cover ing, gays a contemporary, would probably come down on the nose of an inmate oftlic Earlswood Assy lunr. Bismarck and Molteke measures more round the crown than the Em peror William. Inferior races have heads smaller than the Europeans, the heads ot negroes, lied Indians and Cocbin-Chinese being paiticu larly small, although, by way of com pnnsaFon, they are particlarly hard. Women have small heads, but a deni of mischief is sometimes packed in them. Mon in the South has small er heads than these in tlie North, mountaineers than denizens of the plains, artizans than artists. Tho heads of peasants grow, says tho writer of this article, when their owners come to reside in towns, i l ire head increases in volume with the ordinary mortal until the age of lofiy five. All Astonished Dutchman. A Dutchman in Pennsylvania oil re gions let liis hands to an oil company last Spring on condition of receiving one-ciglit of the oil procured. The well proved to be a pretty good one, and the former thought that the oil men should give him a better choice, and ventured to tell them so. He said they ought to give him one twelf h. Ihe ar rangement was finallv made, with the understanding that the Dutchman was not to tell any one. All went on Rtnoo'bly until the division day came, when our fiieml was early al hand, to see how much belter he would be off under the new bargain. Eleven barrels were rolled to one side for the oil men and one for him. “How’s dish?’said be, “I think 1 was to get, more as before, you have made somo mistakes." The matter was explained to him that he for merly got one barrel out of eight, but it was his proposition to take one out ef every twelve. This revelation took him abash. lie scratched his head, looked cross and relieved his swelling biaast of self-reproach by indignantly remaricing, “Well dat ish tho first lime as lever knowed eight wasmor’u dweive. A- DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER. TOixkisitippl. A panther nine feet long wns killed near Oakland. Summit Times : Tho ju! in Liberty was visited on Saturday night ol lasi week by a body of twenty or tweniy-tiVc outlaws, who made a determined effort to release the bulldoMrs confined in it, and would probably have succeeded, but for tbe alarm being given by a shot fired at a citizen, who was accidentally pass ing across the street. There were no guards at the jail, we learn to resist the attack ; but the alarm be ; ng given, the bloodhounds fled into the surrounding dat kntss. Meridian Mercury save: An old negro woman died in this city, a day or so since, something like a hundred years old. She dieo of no disease whatever but merely expired of old age. What is remarkable about this old woman is, that site never prayed in her life, as she asserted a few (Jays before her death. The Columbus Democrat says: That along the road from Walthall to Winona the caterpillars have laitly denued the foiesl ot foliage. It is feared that fruit trees v ill he seriously damaged. Num bers of trees in the forest will die, which besides the loss of timber, it tnav cause sieknes*. The caterpillar curse is all over the State, but seems to he worse in the central counties than elsewhere. Wlial lie Have Smoked. If one could calculate beforehand all the cost of yielping to temptation every time that ail evil indulgence might present itself, and would s .ve | and lay up that cost in money, it would be a better investment than a lile-iusurance. Att exchange men tions the successful result of au ex periment in that line by Mr. Hub bard, a Connecticut gentlemun. He was about eiglremt years old when lie determined to lay aside day by day the money lie would have ' siient lor cigars had lie been a smok-i cr. At the end of each month lie deposited at uitere-t the turn thus obtained in a saving bunk. As the price of good cigars advanc ed, he conespoiiingly increased the amount of money to be laid away each day. From time to time, when Ins sating* in the bunk reached a few hundred dollars, he would draw them out to make a better investment. By wise and shrewd management, the fund amounted to from $15,000 lo SIB,OOO a lew' years since. Mr. Hubbard then took this money, andi with it. purchased a ( harming site on Grenwich Hill, mid built a comforta ble and commodious heme for hint self and family. The place over looks Long Island Sound, ami com mauds ( ne of the widest ami finest views that, can be found on the Cott mct.icut shore. Not His Skirt Mis. Jones was one evening busy embroidering some muslin} Mr. Jones sat looking at the rich display she was making, and at last said; ‘Why don’t you fix up my underclothing fancy, too V ‘Oh,’ replied Mrs. Jones, ‘men don’t care about such things.’ ‘Of course they do,’ answered her husband, but the women are too care less and lazy to take the trouble to put on tbe fancy work.’ Nothing more was said, but Mrs. Jones looked as though something had come into her mind that woiicetfully pleased Iter. A few night afterwards, as they were retiring, Mr. Jones appeared to be anx ious'y bunting something he couldn’t find, and at last, very petulantly asked ‘where is my nightdress?’ ‘(Jn ler your pillow, my dear,’gently replied his wife. ‘No it isn’t,’ said Jones, ‘you have made a mistake and put some of your flummery here.’ ‘Ob no, that is not mine,’ said Mrs. Jones, as she took up tho garment she held it up before heiGiusband, ‘it is your night-shirt, fixed up as you said you would iiko ii.’ And further examination showed the astonished Jones, that his shirt was ornamented with a frill around ihe bottom, and a ruffle around the top while a pretty piece of embroidery ran down tbe front. To make the joke more decided, his wife had put all his other shirts tit wash, so that for once he was compelled to sleep iu this fancy garment, and as he expressed it when lie got up in the morning, he was not, sure whether he was himself or some woman. At his request his wife took off tiro fan cy fixings, as Jones called them, and lie never afterwards complained that she was careless about Liis underclothing, Au Anecdote lor Stychninc. According to some recent experi ments of I)r. Lclli, detailed in the London Lancet, strong coffee may be successfully used to counteract poi soning by strychnine. The expc.i ments were made upon rabbits, and were tried m consequence of a report ed instance of failure in an attempt to poison a family where strychnine had been introduced into tho coff.e pot. Tlie Great Dari* Ilallooii. It will be the laigcnt in the world. One litindted and sixty sewing gil ls are engaged In putting the pieces of Which it is made togethci. Tho car will hold fifty passengets and liar, a restaurant and bar attached. A wire rope, some 800 feet in length, will he s- cured in the bettom of thi* car and operated by a windla, sti that t’-.e balloon with its living cargo will always he under coi - tro I —provided the rope does not break. It will taki about four minutes, under favorable eircoms’anees, for the balloon to ascend until the end of the rope L reached; and about eight lo wind ii down again, the wit.d ass le he operated by a small steam engine. A ride in the balloon will cost two francs, and admit tance to the enclosure whctrfrjm the ascents take places, otic franc. The c! anciS of an accident by the rope giv ing away, are freely discussed and would form, doubtless, an acceptable side-show to the satiated Parisians. IVlm'ii Good Times will Come. When business will revive no man can tell. Pltophesics wiil not hasten its revival, despondency only retards it. Strength Comes slowly to a man who has been wasted ami enfeebled dv long illness. The country must thus convalesce after the exhaustion which war, wild speculation and reck less extravagance have produced. The cure is tube effected by industry, economy and hopefulness. It will thus be effected. We must dismiss our expectations of large interest, wake from our dn am of sudden riches, live within onr morns, and pay as we go. We greatly mistake, if we are not, slowly perhaps, but surely, learning wisdom by tne tilings we have suffered. Silk Culture i:i Alabama. An attempt to introduce tLe culture of silk as a source of indus try among the colored people of Alabama, is now in progress it) j that State. Two years ago an ex periment on tit is basis was coin menced at //unfsville Ala. Scv-j era! cocoons, which were donated by a Englishman who ha I brought them across the Atlantic, were placed in a c. tiple of acres of white mulberry trees. From these co coons nearly 100,000 worms were hatched. An academy has been formed for tbe purpose of training tbe cdored folk in reeling, spin ning and weaving, and fifty pupils are now engage in the industry, while the silk produced is pro nounced to be of an excellent qual- Rcgiii to s itve. Wc commend this excellent, advice given to young men by the Cougre gationalis: Young men ought to begin laying up money or pmperty in some form, earlier than many of them now do. Their income may indeed bo small, but so may bo their expenses, and in more titan a corresponding ratio; and tor their income, they can not be sure that it will soon or ever be any larger. There are a good n any men in mature or advanced life w io are poor to-day because they wait for large pay or profits before they be gin to save or lay up anything. Tlie Scij;e of Vickburg. Joseph S. Irwin has presented the Louisiana (Mo.) Press h r inspection a relic of the seige of Yieksbtng It is a copy ot the Citizen of June 30. 18G3, cootainingfonr columns printed on one side of a p'ece of wall paper. The local column contains Severn 1 in teresting items of tlie siege then be ing conducted by Gen Grant’s army against the city; among them tho death of Gen. Martin Green, of Mis souri; the bursting of a shell in tlie Catholic church during services and the miraculous escape of the congre gation; the wounding of several la dies; an account of tho killing and eating of a mule bv the starving gar rison; tne sad killing of the brave and lamented Col. Eugene Irwin, of the Sixth Regiment Missouri Volun teers, on June 25, while on tho works preparing to lead a desperate charge. Forty years ago from tho Bth inst.,the first steamship which ever crossed the Atlantic Ocean, left New York, There are scientist now living who scoffed and ridi culed the idea of navigating the ocean by steamships. Some men agreed to eat the first one which succeed in crossing. Had ho done so, and continued to eat them un til now. lie would have been cer tainly a prodigy of digesty. 3,000,000 visitors in Paris are en joying the wonders of the Exposition. HEW GOODS AT GOLD AND SILVER TRICES. THE UNDEItSIQNED lIA VE JUST OTEE3ED THEIR STOCK OK Spring and Summer c^ooidi^: And, low as Co/ton in, 1)111 GOODS, many of them, are lower than ttoU'd ever teas. We bought some of them cheaper than ever, and will sell them at VOLE) and SILVER PRICES FOR CASIf \VE KEEP UP OUR USUAL STOCK OF i STAPLE DRYGOODS, POCKET and TABLE CU I'LiERY, rAOTHINO. U.MDRELI.AS, CARPETS NOTIONS, HATS, TOBACCOS. SHOES, AO., AC. Some Extra Fine Pocket Knives and “Razor Steel” Scissors. 1 A OUR We offer some ENTIRELY NEW FABRICS, BEAUTIFUL IS DESIGN, and ver# STYLISH as well ns very CHEAP. OCR ASSORTMENT of CLOTHING Was NEVER BETTER—NEVER SO CHEAP" It consists of Common and Fine Coats Pants and Vest, Linen Shirts and Collars, Gauze, and Check Muslin Undershirts. OUR “BOW-TON” CORSETS Have proven to be VERY SUPERIOR, FITTING PERFECTLY and GIVING SATIS FACTION to all who have tried them. "I N 1 E offer no INDUCEMENTS to purchasers by selling a FEW LEADING ARTI- V t CLES at LESS TEAS i’OST, but we do, find will satisfy r.ll whp take iipo consid oration the AVERAGE PROFITS we charge, that we sell goods as £ OIK as A Kl' house is Southwestern Georgia. f; lIAABFJSIII & BARLOW, Americus. G-oergia. Longevlly of Trees. From observations made on speci mens still in existence, the longevity of various trees has been estimated to be as follows: Deciduous cypress 0,000 years, boabab trees, 5,000; dra gon tree, 5.000; yew, 3,000; “great trees” ot California, 1,000; chestnut, 3,000; olive, 2,500; oak 1,000; orange, 1,500; Oriental palm, 1,200; cabbage palm, 700; lime, 000; ash, 400; cocoanut palm, 300; pear, 300; apple, 200; Brazil wine palm, 150; Scotch fir, 100; and the balm of tiilead about 50 years. Such exam ples are perhaps sufficient to justify a remark of Sclilciden’s “tlieie seems to lie a possibility of a compound plant living on without end.”—True Citizen. A Paris correspondent: Tlie only novelty in dress introduced at the last, qu- en’s drawing-room which is likely to lie widely taken up—lor I do not count one noblewoman’s sandals set with gems as likely to start a fashion—; is the jardiniere, a silver filigree bas ket filled with flowers, flat on the side next tho form and hung from the waist like a chateblaine bag'. A glass lining permits this to be filled with water, in which the flowers keep fresh for many hours. The cifj of Little Rock, Arkan sas, put in circulation upwards of SIOO,OOO of noles, obligations to pay, and which passed current as any other money, in banks, stores and all other places in‘the city. They were decided illegal in the Chancery Court of Pulaski county, afterwards bonded and tho bonds subsequently repudiated. After several years the city was sued by a number of of parties—the mer chants' National -Sank being tbe chief plantiff—aggregating a total stun of $40,000 or mure, and upon these Judge Dillon, of the United State Circuit Court, recently de cided in favor of plaintiff Ilorse tkiefs arc dealt with lather roughly iu Western Kansas. For sometime past the practice has been going on pretty extensively. One ol the citizens of Belleville lost a team of horses recently, and called his neighbors together and started in pursuit of the thief. After hard rid ing overtook the rougue, and catried him to jail. At night a mob broke into the jail and curried off’the horse thief, and the next morning ho was found hanging upon a butcher’s der rick half a riffle from town. On the back of the corpse was a card with this grim epitaph: *• ’Tis said man is the noblest work of Go l l, but in this case it was a failure. Horse thieves, beware! Take notice of your doom. Shipped by lightning express to a damned eternity.” Subscription, $2 00 It isYi great irtisfortune to have a fretful disposition. It takes the fragrance out of one’s life, and leaves only weeds where a cheer ful disposition would cause flowers to bloom. The habit of fretting is one that grows rapily unless it be sternly repressed ; the best way is to look on the cheerful side of things. •'John Phoenix,” (be American hu morist, being one night at a theatre fancied he saw a friend some three scats in lront of him. Turning to his next neighbor ho said: “Would you be kind enough to touch that gentleman with your stick?” “Cer tainly,” was the reply, and the thing was clone; but when the individual thus assaulted turn'd around, Phoe nix saw he was not the man he took him for, and became at once absorb ed in the play, leaving liis friend to settle matters with the gentleman in fiont., which, as he had no excuse handy, Was not donavwitbouc consid erable trouble. When the hubbub was over, the victim said: “Didn’t you tell nie to tap that man with my stick ?” “Yes.” “And what did you want?” ‘‘Oil,” said Phoenix, with imperturbable gravity, “I wanted to see whether you vvou'd tap him of not.” A eonvict confined in the Erie county, New York, penitentiary known as Win. Foreman, and sen tenced to 18 months service lor bur glary and larceny had served six months of the time, where a short time ago a petition for his pardon whs being considered, it was determined, according to the laws of the peniten tiary to examine carefully the state of the prisoner’s health under Such cir cumstances. The surgeon soon dis covered that Wm. Freeman was a woman. This led to the feveldtiou of her real name, and some Circum stances of her life. Ifer real ilaine is Mary Anne Schafer, who left her mother and step-father when only 11 years old, and to enable her the better to get employment for an independent living dressed in boy’s clothes. She has ever since at tired herself as a male and engaged in all manner of hard woik cn a farm. None but her mother and herself knew her real personality until the lime re ferred to. She is 23 years old, weighs 140 pounds, is healthy and good look ing. She was removed to a secluded apartment a.id dressed in female at tire, and begged to be kept there fi r life rather than expose her name and change her clothing. After detection she avers that though slio pleaded guilty to the charge, it was under tear, and that she is Innocent, and the man who threatened her life to induce the confession is sfill living. No. 37.