The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, August 03, 1886, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

o£ 1>ike ' and a B ' I AN ARCTIC SURVIVOR. *}' jJiujj. Hamilton, of Floyd, and — McWliorler. of Ogle FACTS ^P'" TllK DUUY OF AN ^‘ b ';! T Onbomo, of Elbert. AllOTfO KXPLOaIB. *’ f E. Winn, of Gwinnett, and B. 1,°1'S d. „ r Collier, of Bichmond, r ation l' . , _ .iU.f A Al.Altttvtnn a! THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH : TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1886.-TWELVE PAGES. b oU ex-officio chairman of gS^acutiw committee, was in- s ,, nint committeemen from the ?,.UrgT.t bis leisure. or TO* BAILEOAD COMMISSION Vhy Hrnry nai Shot —Dr. PIT) Innocent—The Al leged Cannibalism, Sin Francisco, July 25.—To-day'« Ohron- Jr* P" nU a 1°“B interview with Maurice „n or i»* l one ° f lhe survivors of the Qreely n n „f Paulding, offered a resolution t who lo-day resigned from tho “‘“’the Kdlroid Commission as it ^“‘^SWjs.srmv. Connell was sergeant JlDg Aa After a littlo skirmishing, *“ e expedition. but upon return he in- ‘frL'rrv moved to adjourn sine die, statements which confiict- *0-2- the vote on adjourn-1 Greely h account. To this he at- ''"’.mken Colonel Hill said: "Let ‘"“V* 4 the cloud which has rested ,,, n “ nll v 0 te an my resolution. If °? b * m> Although he did good ser- of it let tho people know." v *“ m the Arctic he has never i Son to adjourn was carried, ® c ‘ Te f promotion and ho went ont ! e %it> m theconventionaljourned. P" T * te , b ® ® ntCTed - The immediate it H* 0 !’• m jau*e of resignation waahia Budden transfer . ta l,K WITH A DIVER. from the signal service in this city to Los ———— I Angeles, where the hot climate incapacitated him for work. During tho Greely expedl ... Raton Globe. ti°n ho kept a regular diary, written in tnie it is,” said Captain Baker, of j cipher and shorthand. This was taken by ii .ton Towboat Company, yesterday, the signal service officer on his return . tnnn never knows what a day may from the Arotic, and though he trequent- ? rth’ Mr. Duncan hero, our head demanded it, it was only returned to ,'t W ero just homo from a six nim a few weeks ago. It is from this snu A.... i ... .1. „ V..*....1,-, I d ill Tv llinf Cnnnoll the Ilottom ol the Gate City. lU . 0 “ t y“te1iuy disaster, and here we I other topics. KISSED INTO LIFE BY LOVE. Hurled on the Ilattln Field-Ill. Flnancoe'i Leap Into the Grave—Insane from a Wound—Married In Brooklyn A Pretty Urtde*s Story. in taking chronomclrical observations and comparisons. After these facts were stated to Lockwood, that officer stated to Israel and myselt that he would , without donbt return to the spot he BOMANTICEXPBBIBNCBOFAYOUWG had v sited, as h- had marked, and take l.is ] SOLDlElt AND HIS HWKETHFAHT. obfervations over again, in order that some certainly conld ho obtained as to the exact location of his journey northward, and whether the United Slates was justified in claiming that cne of her officers had reached the highest polar point ever reached by man. "Unfortunately, tho fate of the expedi tion was such as not to permit Lockwood to carry ont his design.” In concl for failure u. u» »inuiuuu uu umij, ..u ■ - -. ,, «, ,- - ,. not on Haven or Uarlington. Ho declares ?°»“.»ndheld np» pairof prettv red lips that if the original instructions ol Haven I £ W 88 * 1 tyMayor W “*“®J of Brooklyn, had hcon followed the expedition would I mayor looked willing, nnd, after have been a aucceas. 8 U “ C H th « h.Mtand f the pretty girl. ventured to avail himself of the proffered solntc; As he had just married the couple before him everybody conceded that he had From the New York Star. Anna Eisenbach, vuw „™ KU . . . . gracefully formed conclusion, Connell plaoes the blame German girl, plump looking and neatly tilnre of the expedition on Greely, and Gressed. atoori on tiptoe yesterday after- Anil Will Not lleleaso Cutting Cnder Any earned rf,, reward, bnt they were not so #11 «•«-* ■— sure about Secretary Phillips’ right to follow Circumstances. Connell, after remarking that he conld ™. S rioht hack over the road they had “ ot *Uow »“y long 'shetracts from hia ” dlavy to be printed, as he waa engaged in “* were you doing on the Nan- writing a book, arid: “ ‘ 1 THE FIRST QUARREL, . . .. ... i "The first dissension commenced in Au- lOiking on the sunken bark Ibis, Mr gog^ 1881, in a quarrel between Greely and »n replied. She was loaded with j, ient Kisiingbury. It occurred in this . 1,11111 bales they said, but I think wfty , j w ill quote from my diary: "On cnly had l,29ff aboard. August 2(5,1881, Lockwood was not np; we ve wuuldn t get half of it. \> e set out wete ttt breakfast. Kisiingbury was up, but [11,250 bales, and beat tha^ flgure by | performing morning ablution. Greely made .t officers should be up earlier. ( fifteen. I tell yon it was hard work, _ ... „ uo ah. The vessel had sunk m the sand Ki H ii n ghury repelled the insinuation against was level with her deck. Down in gayfug it was no t right for Greelv to old it was stagnant water, pilch dark, I admonish officers before enlisted men. Gree- te conld only work by feeling. This j yga j d . ‘If you do not like the way I talk you City wreck will be a much easier one cat , RO b.ck to the United States.’ Kislmg- ork on. If it keeps quiet, I had rather bury walked out and aftor a while came under water than on top. AFTEB HEB HUSBAND. r ICecrtunt cli Ma uutiv. —— - , .back and made application to be returned mt I thought it made no difference un- home The VroU . ns that brought ns up rater how rough it was on top? was B tiU oa t j n harbor. Kislingbury’g , that’s where you are wrong. It application was granted, and he started for a Kteat deal of difference, working the vessel, but it was steaming away. Poor .City of Columbus, for initance, was Kisiingbury came back and thus lost his ,jy hard, so strong were the currents. I ]if B j^y b e i n « juat five minutes too late, as r, air, whtn I wm under the water the I jj 6 on gj 0 expedilion. Greely ignored fir swell* would knock off his feet every Kisiingbury after that, both as officer and in the boat above me, and I could I maDj an( j treated him unjustly. Other dy breast their strength below. A ° u I 0 ffi C t*rs and men took Kisiingbury’s side, e undertow broke up that boat very ^ this was the beginning of quarrels and ly. ^ ven yjfle Wft9 111 “® r B “ e I distensions. Greely became dictatorial in up, *nd big pieces of iron would I mannert and would order men into his tf and hit me almost hard enough I p^oi witli the air of a king granting an ■—u on jy dl J or I audience. He seldom had a conference |go inside of her the first aay 0 ffi cera aod relied on his own judg- ■ divers went down. It was aent jmption to do it, and Captain “But of all the men whom Greely mis- ir told me not to, but the relatives and I treikte d Dr. Pavy, the physician of the ds of those that had been on ^be boat I p ar ty t had most to complain. He was to anxious to learn if any bodies I no ijio and heroic, and yet Greely has ac- left in htr.I felt bound to do it. And I cnae< i fiioi of being a common thief. I do then another diver has exhibited him- | no j Relie ve anything he says about Dr. a a dime museum, and been advertised j p ftT - stealing Ellison’s rations or anybody -e diter who went in the City orColum-1 The evidence points more'to Greely and recovered so many bodies. The fact I himiielf. There was petty stealing going at he found no bodies; only one was on j rom time to time during the winter at found after that first lot, and that I Q a p 6 gabine. The pangs or a starving man a child’s body found in the steerage. I Rre grea | when he sees food, and he cannot tn the boat struck everybody rushed to I j^wj^t the temptation to take it. (lwk. Those that were not saved were obinly a thiit ? ft my, The first enrrent swept as orixlv a thief Y i bodies out beyond Gay Head/and the "In regMd to the suspicion that Qreely lUookthem out to aea.’ f stole, I will relate tho tollowing from my lihould thick it would be tmeanny jounial: Wbcn tbe last ^ the rations were l buntirm for dead bodies.” ie.n«l on May 13, l«l EUUon .part, who (Veil," uid the diver, "you know when wa* crippled, waa taken by Greelv. The leipectto find uny thing yon aro not can with meat waa placed under his head trued to find it That's pert of the when he retired. The next morning a loess and we get used to it.” great part of the meat waa missing. Any i tie cue of the Gate City the direr on Rian may guees for himself who stole it. 1M docent had only to examine the Yet he says Dr. Pavy stole it. Dr. Pavy ,’e bottom and ascertain her injuries, was never discovered in any such case, and j of her boats waa lowered from the for Greely to cover his name with cslnmny fU «nd into it got Capt. Baker, Mr. and accusations is unjust.” inn end bis sssiitant and three sailors, Afterward Connell says Greely declared In rich end to keep the boat away from in the presenoe of the enlisted men that he lahip’. .idea with boathooks, and the third I had the affidavits of three witnesses who the pump. The diver only removed saw Pavy steal EUUon a rations, and he Nandccat of tho business attire ho bail said he wonld use these affidavits if Pavy la down in the cars. Then he pulled on attacked him on the return of the expedi- t bli trousers and vest tho rubber suit I tion to the United States. When Pavy was 1 the big collar that looked like a horse told this he went to Greely and refused to p Xi it he pulled on a pair of overalls, longer administer EUieon’s ration*. Ho N’ his rubber suit fi«m chafing, as ho broke down completely because Greely —’ ' " Then getting over would so accuse him. _» Jtith bis leas in tho In regard to tho shooting of Henry, Con- t uni his head down in tho boat while nell said: "I do not think that itws* right "'■'taut fastened round hi, waist tho to shoot Henry. Greely had soknowl- i lot'led with pieces of iron. Lost of all edged to some that he believed hi* iron helmet waa alipped over his Dr. Pavy stole, snd yet he did not or- |l;*Uha monkeywrench It was bolted to I der him shoLor even investigate the Icillsr, and-th* end of the long rubber esse. Private Whistler, a ahort time be- thing tube was screwed on. fora Henry’s execution, was brought before i, With S big Splash, Greely, snd a pound of bacon taken out of »» dropped into lhe water, bis pocket, and Graely did nothing to him. I'-ftj seconds big bubbles foamed up He was one of his right-hand men. The T blace. As the diver walked along only evidence on which Henry was executed “be bottom the boat was pulled by a waa a statement of Greely that Henry had . Mid it took not long to go war round contested to him that he had »tolen. He I 1 ^ Hwuatr. There waa no reapite tor waa not caught In the act.” ■bus at the air pump all the time. I alleged caxvibaluw. Lul erlhe * dl y er . stopped and gate a| Concerning alleged cannibaliam, Connel El Paso, July 28.—Editor Cutting, for I tho mayor’s example a? he did. whose rdeaso the United States govern* I Mr. and Mrs. Herman Krause then told ment made formal demand on Mexico, still the simple story of their life and love, remains in jail. The air in the daogeon which commenced in the village of Fried- in which he is incarcerated became I eriebsau on the Rhine. Their experience so dreadful that orders were given to break I somewhat resembled that of Romeo and a small opening through the thick adobe Juliet, with tho trilling exception that it wall so os to admit fresh air. Before I was tho lover who was buried alive, nnd this was done, there was no ventilation I being rescued by his maiden fair ho had except by means of a small door, and his I no possible reason for committing suicide daily allowance for subsistence has been I to slow music, raised from seven to fifty cents I The little bride, who looked as pictn- per day. Ttxo Mexican troops are kept rcsqne as a figure on a bit of Dresden busy at some kind of work in rear chins, told her story with modest excite- of the barracks and the old I ment after she had been judiciously cathedral. They deny that they are build- prompted: ing fortification or entrenchments; bnt re* I “Uermnn and I were born in Frieder- fuse to state what work it is they are em* I ichsan,” she said, "and we played together ployed upon. The attitude of the Mexi* I as children. He used to carry me and can authorities shows very clearly my books to school, and we always loved that they do not intend to I ©nob other, didn’t we, Herman?" give Cutting np under any circumstances. | Herman, who is as big and yellow haired Senor Rnmos, chief justice of the State of | and good nAtured looking os any German Chihuahua, in company with Senor Rinco, i conld well be, gave his nriuu u fond look the Governor’s private secretary, were at I and remarked briefly: the El£Paso yesterday and had a talk “Yah!" with some of the leading citizens about tho I “When Herman was 18 years old he had Cntting case. They conld arrive at no I to go away to the army, and oh! my heart other conclusion than that Cutting was I was sad. 1 made him promise to always guilty of deliberate and flagrant contempt think of me, and I gave him a little Bible to of court, and the offense being I read. When the Kaiser commenced to tight committed on Mexican soil, cjme I the French I knew Herman wonld have to under tho Mexican laws. They stated thut I go to war in earnest, and us I wanted to bo the publication made by the prisoner in I near him I joined the Red Cross hospital the El Paso newspaper did not figure in the I corps. During the battles I always tried matter at all, except as corroborating I not to think of Herman, and remembered the charge of contempt, based I only the poor wounded men whom I upon other acts. Both gentlemen I nursed. Alter tho battle of Gravelotte Her* said the question was now a subject of cor* I man did not come to see me or send me a respondent between the two governments, I message, as he always did, and then I knew ana wonld be settled in the ordinary conrse j that there was something wrong. I got to o* diplomacy; but that the government of I wbero his regiment had been fighting, and Mexico could Dot be scared into an uncon* I there on the dark field I found men burying ditional surrender. I the dead. When 1 asked for him one ox the mnn a soldiers looked ts if he was very sorry, and WONDERFUL MAUD S. | pointed to a big hole in the ground which She Makes a Quarter Second* and a Half, From the New York Bun. John Mr. Robert A Deserted Wife’s HearcU f« Lord-A Victim of Fr rlsjgc Jaws. Among the juissmgera by tho Chicagoaml Alton train to Chicago, last night, says the 'fit Louis Globe-Democrat, was a well- dressed yonng lady, apparently about 19 Tear* of age. .She seemed much depressed, her manner and dress, as well as her com plexion, proving her to be a foreigner, and on being asked if she was not English, she eagerly replied in the affirmative, anil pro ceeded to explain very graphically how she came to cross the ocean alone nnd unattend ed. Her statement was to tho effect that she was born in Wiltshire, in the south west of Eogland, her parents, who were in moderate circumstances, dying when she was lfi years old. Sho advertised for a situation os governess, and obtained employment in the family of • gintlinun tumid Norris, residing io Loudon. In tho winter of 1881, Bhe accompanied the family to Nice, in the Bonth ot France, where she be came acquainted with a young Frenchman namod IUnri Parry, who was also winter ing at that resort. He from the first ex pressed a strong attachment for her, and when the time drew near for tho return of the Norris family to London, ho pressed her to agree to on immediate marriage. Sho declined for sometime, but, not being com fortable in her sitnation.eho finally consent ed, and early in January, last year, she was married to him iu the Church do la Con- cordie, Nice, a certificate id due form be ing obtained from the mayor. Mrs. Parry, at this point iu her 'narrative, produced ’ document in verification of her statement, which contained the names "Henri Auguste Parry, 20,” anil 'Annie Pearl Marshall, 17,” with a long IN A TRANCE. TIIK ASTONISHING EXPERIENCE OF AN INDIANA FAliMKit. lie Is TlioUKtit to be l>«»a<l-• n Fuiierml Cry- Tlie Man's I'.lft* Saved by » Strange Accident. From the New York Sun. On the evening of JnnolStb, 18G8, Georgo Wellington, an Indiana farmer, had a gath ering of friends at hia house. Ho woh a limn l 1 yi .ii*» «•{ and *.f robust health, and on this evening it was noticed that ho was in particularly good spirits. After the guests had departed he remarked to his \w!«‘ thut 11 * * I fit inert* like singing and dancing than goiog to bed. They retinol about 11:30 o'clock, and sho was asleep be fore midnight. Tho farmer was always out of bed at five o’clock, bnt on the morning following tho party tho wife awoke at six nnd found him •till sl.-i-ping. When sh»* attempted to aronse him sno discovered that ho was dead. A doctor was sent for, nnd he arrived in tho conrse of an hour and pronounced it a coso of heart disease. He said tho man had lx dead tjueo hours when tho wife awoke. The undertaker came and prepared the body for burial. It was remarked that tho corpso retained a life-liko appearance, and that none of the limbs grew rigid, but tho two other physicians called in vigorously com batted the idea that he whh in n trance and might be restored to life. . Nevertbeleas, tbo wife and sons had a secret hope that doath had not really come to him. During tho interval ho corpso was constantly watch ed for any signs of returning animation, bnt nothing occurred to delay the funeral arrangements. The burin) waa to take placo in a country graveyard, and most of the vehicles gather ing at the house belonged to the farmers. . The usual ceremonies look place over Luo wra* I doad » ftnd fho coffin woh brongbt out and placed in the hearse, While the procession printed statement in French, and a very indistinct signatude at the foot, which the vivacious little lady explained was that of the mayor. Her yonng husband told her the marriage must bo kept secret till he was 21, or his father would stop m« allow • ance and disinherit him. They went straight to Paris, where ho engaged fur- ^ ... vaTrT , ir „ nisbed apartments for her, and for eev-1 forming a team attached to an empty end weeks he visited her daily. But as the w “ on ctm ?5 own the road, running awa/ summer wor«iod.he became las* attentive, xho wggon coUil | el i WU h tho hearse, i.nd and during the fall only called about once the utt(jr vehicle •«. ui,» e t and tbo coffin » n d# , >n>etlme* leas frequently, un-1 fl ung out. Four or five men ran to pick it til the btcinuing of December, when her n „ bnt before a band had tonchod it a baby was born, and when bis visits ceased v ‘ ice W(W .«yina: altogether, and Mrs. Fairy was forced to ,. Kor God „ ke M me ont o£ tU , r the conclusion that the and her child had The p8oplo at flrgt m0TeJ back in af iri gbt> been abandoned. I but as the voice continued to address thorn hlie had discovered anting the earlier ^ co ffin was righted and opened, and leriod of her marriage that her father-in-1 Wellington was found struggling to get out *»»“'* wealthy silkmerchnntinbusiness I Wllh a , itUo he pu | Ic) i HiuiHelC both In Paris and Lyons, and at last, her on ^ 0 j ^ ox an ^ talked into the houso money being exhausted, she could bear the ftnd gat down in H chair Iu baU ntl Lour suspense no longer, so went to him, nls* be bttd b j g ©jotheg on ftnd was moving closed tbesesret and produced proofs of the I aroulld among tho amazed people to whom nccnracy of her story. To her snrpnse »hc bo rolated bbl experi-nce. discovered that the old gentleman wsj ,.j (Iill not £a fj u | Mp nntl i BOmo tim0 thoroughly acquainted with all the facts, after m i dn i Rbt . When I awoke the clock bnt Bhe was scarcely prepared for thei wa * striking five. I made a rnovo to got sequel. M. Lany, 8r., gave her a brief I OQ ^ 0 f m y g reft t amazement, I lecture on I reixeh marnngo Iuwh, and I con i d B tir neither hand nor foot I had tho pointed oat that hii son, being a Irench full UB0 of my ^ j ftrgue d at first that subject and under age, could mit be 11 was not vet wide awake, bnt when my ...n.rio.l tnlik/MlI l.i. futlis.ru ... .* .... . - legally married consent; that without liis father h I w jf 0 nhook me and called mo by name, l that consent had I j could not respond by even moving uumitted pcijury in making amuavilluat my bfarin(f waa painfuUy aentc. 1 mala had. He proceeded to inform her in a e |f 0 rt* afUr effort to throw off tho great liet and, as she called It, "cold blooded I wel „ht which seemed to bo holding do - or a Mile In thirty was half fall ot dead men. They said 1 dr a u -oo Gait went crazy, but I didn't. I was wild to kbit him just once, and for tlfb 1 Murphy "took his weekly trip up to ft* . trenc K Vl on KatnnV?°to n nU h e llaSd Z ot Herm.n’. lacc .uu xa.ru co^Wr ZX inured 11 “ UyU ‘ iD « (° r tl ! e ab la ^o' b pnt‘h^r° own I "Afterward, when tho soldiers went to expects *• p 1 * 5*LS | B t S, aw bury more men, they saw that Herman had record of 8:081. the 1brat ihi the world. Mur- m0 ^, hi , hcad ( bej know ho Va1 ^ phy jumped into the auiky, and, after giv- anil they took bia bodv '’ out , ent him "ThG a'flvTnrr 0 ’ Itldnk^ llhava^to t0 the Whan l got well they told i 1 fl na?S' n r\ . talT.Vl ^rln^ “ P itce «t shell had fractured bis skull, 1*‘ her „°S l for ‘ •Itterter 1 , to take tho rough ud t £ at it had ln j ured bi , bnUn BO that ho uSf ..In,... , wonld always bo insane. X sow him once fc>ho was sent »vr»y tro11ing raw trao nw n 1 wben j„ b j s d diium he tried to kill me nnd Z q^efin Z ,ondS«mo d o“SJj 1 wherealmut. of tho much-m.rricd young | uT.~w!Sr'Hid”a"pWirWKd £ ../.ons. . o-O) cult v.nnhnA* I ,< ^? D K 11 * country. and we maD| M- Parry turned a deaf I the room I am sure the spell would h.ivo but counted her out 200 franca, about »tl>, baen btoW( , D . After thodoctor’s nltimotum and told her she had better go back to her j felt t h al I „hould be bnrie.1 alive. But friend* In England. A Halt to the waa j aliu? All of a sudden this query offics of the British consul only continued Ua ,hed across my brain, and I was troubled the story Just told her, and with a hrart raorc lbaD j you. A* Dmd’ almost broken by her trouble* the deserted , u d , )(lfor , 10w waa j to k „ () *. brid.went to Loghmd and. having obtained Uoni? Conld the dead hear nnd think? sufficient funds from her relatives, and leav- tVaa tho mind ol a corpso in nctivo opera- ng her bsby n charge of an aunt, she r«- lion? Itwu 0 problem I conld not w ell tnrned to Paris, with the fixed Intention of no j Te 1 finding the runaway and “haying it out with "Not a word was apoken near ino which him. The means she adopted for discov- j d | d no£ ca t c hand fully understand. Thars ing her ox-husband a where./)OuU resulted, I waa a grext deal of weeping, and 1 failed to after a short period of waiting, in a cb.m- gaiufy myaalf u to ,h e M i had died, bermaid at the Parry household, who had bnl j, dl< f D ot seem as if never been obtained, and in order to pro- I ©yeii^ i became satisfied that I waa in u cure a license the ardent> young lov«r had I trance. My mind waa never clearer, and committed perjury in making affidavit that 1 * .... ... it had. H * 1 1 " quiet and, waaaw , manner, that a few days before her visit her dowPi bot t con i d not bend a too or crook so-called bnaband bait been legally married a fl D g er . However, it was only alter tho to a rich I arisan belle, the requisite parent-1 do ctor bail pronounced me doncl that I felt al consent having this time been duly ob-1 ^jy ,d U rin. Up to that time it bad seemed tamed. To her earnest entreaties as to tho I m © j could soon manage to got rid seconds, a 2:02 gait Everybody present UvedInBrooklvn; O neyear ago ^ I got a speed. The fact that aho had madoa quar- tbo dootor s had taken out the piece of ^ “JSA wi7h. 2iii5^ot d « " kul1 whioh ha<1 “«(• hi “ ta»»n» so many *^Si^ ”” that be still loved me. He quarter in these low figures whenever she j andcd a , Castle Garden last week, and my was called on to do it. 1 - - - - - - father got him good work, so we came here to-dny to be married." The little bnde walked out of the mayor’s The Doctrine Proclaimed by a Young Wo- [ office, loaning fondly on the arm of the "GUD’ri GROUND." man In Pennsylvania. Bcraktox, July 20.—The case of the Cin cinnati woman who created a sensation by proclaiming herself to he Jeans Christ is stoical Herman, and gazing at him with evident admiration. Although the bride waa very yonng, bar- been sufficiently bribed, bringing her a let- L I0D *e. When my wife bent over tbo _ -a a — ter addressed to "XL A. l’arry, Post-office, and ^.hbed and grieved and refused Montreal. Through the inflnence of the British con- to ho comforted, I did not feci bad with her. A Persian llrlds. Suplicatcd' ut Wheatland, a small village I From Ihx London Soeuty. near Sharon, by a prepossessing yonng lady Although the bride w who, apart from her venr strange delusion, I ing, at the most, seen sixteen summers, appears intellectually brilliant. Arming rouge, alas, wa* no stranger even to her herself with a clnb, she visited the rcspec-1 pretty face. Her hair, which was jut black tiro homes ot the residents, and by threats and very long, was plaited into a number anil exhortations compelled them to tempo- of tiny tails, the end* of which peeped rarily abandon their premises. 8he stated forth from nnder the cliagat of folded white as a reason that tUepl-ce was God's ground, I linen she wore on her bead. Nothing can trouble* seem to have commenced in i s'n and that their presence wa* a desecration, exceed the ugliness or unbeoomingness of _____ , ITT1TT „ She says the Tillage is under a curse, and this head-gear. It is merely a square piece dtv snd was completely at sea iu the diffi- , n mir „, M woll ag body . It w „ a baK0 de . she finds many believers, as from a prosper-1 of uinalin or cotton folded cornrrwise, and •—'•(— n.» a.ii„. .. it. .s. i ' out mannfseturing town Wheatland Jits re-1 lightly fastened with a pin or tiny brooch trograded into an almost wholly deserted under the chin, with two ends hanging place. The woman la holding daily religious I down the back, and the remaining two Call- service* in the street*. Paoplo are flocking I ing over the breast Over toil again —■*-,T7_—:——- — --- I on the contrary, her action surp. .1 me. aul ths obtained a cheap berth in the nvben the two other doctors pronomiceil mo steamer Bonen and arrlrisl in Montreal in dead j talu | a C p m y niiud that I wus dead March of this year. Hera the poor girls that ths tod Ul come. I bad been troubles seem to hsve commenced in ea»n. UuRhl to wl „„ tb , a tbo kplrit o( d| a l est hhe had no idea of the extent of the uccudrd to heaven, and that the dead were dtv and was completely at tea in thsduh. , n DlDd M woll „ boilv It Vll a buo do cnltica which faced her. Acting on Hi* ad- c .pti on , j f e lt indignant that it wa* *o. rice received from tbs British consul at I ,-As an inatanco of the uenteneas of m, ZSaiZZ I «Phto that after I in from aarrounding towns (o hear her. AN UNUK.vn.KMANLY CLEBK is worn ths honse veil, wbioh velop* the whole figure; it is a luge square or rounded pitce ot mus lin or gsy-pattcrned chintz, and la not fast- Dismissed From the Treasury for “Con* spicuous Conduct" on a Steamboat/ I and York atriped^saUlL trtnu ened on, bnt simply kept in its place by the arms Her voluminous skirt was ot white office in Uontred where Md.tm.ce p^^’ta'.h.’ e^Tu.sVr.oepUcU ^ *“Withmoved over to an open window in the par- Wmto^thsrunawufdtbo^i^U rafted !S r ' wb , Melt . k, 'Pl»'tedon wwdmnsa. SSfiStSfiBS'r'S I snd for an hour conversed of my ing the description of her hnshsnd, ra she daatb In an ordinary tone of voice. 1 did persists to calling him, h^y,ig left tho^dty nok m U* one single word ot the eonvi.--.a- tion, as both afterwards admitted. I conll bear every tick of the kitchen clock, and B . , „ _ . _ ... , much of the conversation of the women In the upetalri room*. On the night previous Hhe tonml “"II 1>I!5 to 0,0 fun *”* 1 i h*lf-ps*t Uu o’clock, I? n ,?P7. r ■ • y”? Bni1 tho two men sitting up with ’ I the corpse were reading, I hi aril two men ‘r. .t climb the fence into the barnyard, cioi t iho J* a<1 “><1 en t«r the barn. After n few min- op K in discovenDK that when 11*»? conpio I Hiey came out. and 1 heard tho iinigto tefttheirb^g, wm oheclrad to Kansas carried b“one^rtf .Ira pak?" ! T?; f' i«E!? ca wM .SSIi conld not make ont what waa going on, fc 5v„.!il ; I bat l«*med afterwanl. The two m. u stole Ihl lnn. , n* horse from a field opposite- my ami £ ”is£ ! b ^ T <B « ma mj pr ' , ‘ u ** in * e ‘ rchot * rnnplngU>a truantetoearth. ,FortnnaUly | .q’heard the people a^mble for the for h*r, {die had * conlldante of tho I and M j caught a word from thin ladv with whom sha lodged iu Kaunas City, I ©g© olb identified them by name to and yeeterday received a letter from her I f x. m ’ . ateting that she had axceitaim .1 positivtly, b / t j , m i n i.,. r JL, k 0 , { in fhat i.v. B To*cSrirago M«! f£j■ ^ t^no^KatoWktw “ accordingly going test night, ud,.judging ‘as c£ri«T5»j!t wd^l^Sd in the hearse, from the Vigorous manner in which the de- 0 nd I am cciUin I heard (he clatter of the bXwilhhim l Xild“hte “dtee'JriM wfte ^ rttogteg awaybetora anybody righted Mis. PM17, orMUs hUnhall, whichaver “Atol'Vo’bSi'tte h?S^^t of ay b« her strictly comet title, is a de-1 j : 'iVi ii'.'rl dedly good-looking blonde, although the ^. b L b “f ‘ b -J wm not ’l' uck .U. . :: .1“ enough. A* the collision came my eyes who attracted public notice on on* of the med wilh ^ lace an ^ r#ach , d only half exennion boat, on the nrer test Bnnday way tbe K knM - th . frg, we „ bare. Often by hte actions, haa been dismissed by I u lnany M tw ,. n ty ysnS of silk or satin Assistant Secretary Thompson on the are tmp l oyad , or these skirts, which ate charge of action* unbecoming a gentleman Rtther ^ to a band at th, watet. and an and a goyeromeut employe. . worn oyer four or tire petticoat* very much .. ?Tf reUry “J* wbl 5 ^, c * stiffened. Tho more a skirt stand* out the human flesh. He thinks most of the muti- think* government emplorci hsv* « »ight m0 M fashionable it is. The bodice U a to do as they plraa* outside of office hours, Ioou mt of jackrt ot ^ or „ Wet tr im- hepropo^ to show them that “ . ,r l “° mini with gold lacs, the sleeve* an long, do for tbeiu to dinregsrd the proprieUes of d a pointed cuff that turn* some months before for Chicago, in corn' psny with his wife, a term Mrs. Parry em' pkiciscd with a thoroughly genuine sneer. X ,1,1 , , - I I— -— I v onceruiug imcgcu tmiuiuanom, -.uuun f")?' tbe steamer msrkod on I fayB h# never succeeded in Retting any of 40 ,ni4lc * t ® the spots tbo aQap ecteil men to confess they had eaten FI Il'ich holes wen found. human flesh. Ha thinks most of the muti- C ki! Md ’ , wh *“ ft® !“ asked how ution waa done to uoa,, bait for shrimps, tlr .vi , b ® answered, I «]] e ( ore Ur. Pavy died he came to me and U J ‘fleeted by aalt’water.” As Italian's invilstjient. life, or to do anything to raflect upon the back ^ rtach , nR ntar ‘ ly tha elbow. This c.aracter ot the public scrrice. >■ " — I lie* a L , | ' s »II JMIOIv Xs», X A* V UICU lit t-i*iu»j iu ml nuw P‘J ‘bout three mouths of conatant on June 1: •Connal, I think it U all up VI,' 01 course, the helmet and P nw P 1 with us; we have no more bait with whic i t ‘ « * long lime, bnt the rubber is I to ca teh shrimp*. I will see Greely snd - -*'** " ss* if be will ent np some of the bodies to catch shrimps.' I saw him go np to Greely and talk to him, and when he came iiack be said Greely had agreed to allow hi* j proposition. Another thing that ^convince* Bsuesville, July 28.—To-day Mr. A. L. I a scope for the peculiar taste or fancy of thi IAUNKiVILLB. is worn ovsr a calico or linen skirt. Although all dresses agree in their leading features, and th* fashions never change in f 0( Louisiana BtateZrttery if*,- d* >U‘t, was Mr. Vito Dilorcnzo, krid one-fifth of tbo ticket 77,227, ® 5sar ss-TTrifiss! r.ra h »r w» S^rnraXt Gr?ly ‘oh. him ft Traprlstov ot m wsililagtan Btrset flesh tied to * string. He bronght it to the ' the dis- iught it _ i pt was human dash. Ilicderbick had eaten a piece x «VoneS* P NrtioMi e B^ik C, fOT t the I of tbe m< * t ’ ® nd - 0,1 reo * lT V 1 * in4 ■'MitcauS to?“ “ B * nk “ “® | from Greely that it »a* human flesh, _he /*• Uiloreazo, w‘l ; “ » native of Iu,, Uld^L.-! 1 ® ^ ! I CI Tha original record* of the party which L^‘ a comfnrtlwl*.fiwJ'* S!f^ U b 9kwood to.l^«^Uon.Md i _ttat A Preacher's Bon Trie* to commit Balclde— the east aa they do in the west, yet they A Negro Woman Bbot. | differ to a great extent in detail, and afford Kv »f th® company yesterday mt | *as promptly handed a cneck only our reacn- Fslike *« go^ UTi “*- JP-Sj! claim that he reaped the fartheat north *mlarv.ii' U ?’ b °waver,wiU enahl® ^ unfounded. The observationa were giv- ,^x hu builnra. and enjoy more t W “ to °S i l he -tronomer. to reduce te- 1* , I reel was puzzled for some time over the ob- ‘rtireteL^ f . J^ * lgn ®I ,, lo scrvaUons, but finally said they ware not J bn, , „ ad spend what money they C0rr6C i ac .i Lockwood might have gone ‘ktnv tefgjgt 1 » Aj* . c0nl ft7’ b * D * , “ Cither farther north and much farmer south thsaftaohrarvationawreld Ired on. * v? kindly smiled upon by Dame x u now prove more suaeept- I Ct "TteSte**;!®°«^y®‘»‘l‘»8 b4 ' r out instruction* regarding the taking ox •r Itt-’r ^ r ;J hl0 ^ ! “* 0 w “ met b fl observations, and there were grave doubt* —dal^ authenticity. Israel re- ■ *>•» money, o (adividual than he the acribe had Hi * fliew llV.* So. .. regarding tht ir authenticity. v— * ft® * cnb ® h* 1 txjrUil the matter to Greely. and the com h®w Orleans (La.) Pirayune, | „pcaiUon aaked the aatron omtr not to aay anything about f...- cl, ervation* to tbe men, and to redace them as b—t he coidiL Iaiael to.d u# that LockWQo-I n. ate mivtai-w in hi- magnetu v.-rutiua,, and h » watch L -i at I ped on Perdue, son of ltev. G. H. Perdue, of Mon roe connty, while in town, tried to kill him-, self by drinking an ounce of laudanum. I 1-arxon llrowalow’a Widow- Medical aid waa summoned, and at last ac-1 From Urn NxihvUla American. Jolj 11. counts be was in a critical condition. I The public know* but little of how vivid- A negro woman wm badly shot in tbe I ly similar to the character of her husband is neck to-dayby some boy* who were bird I Mrs. W. G. Brownlow. She would not ex- hnnting. They ran away when they found I change the old family residenee close by ont what they had done. | Hillside street, in Knoxville, for a palace •——— — . . I Her delight is in memories ot "Mr. Brown- A Healthy Parmer s Act. low” and in attention to her handsome and CmcAOO, July 28.—A special from Law- popular granddaughters, along with the rence, Kan., says; John Pierson, a wealthy widowed daughter and grandson, who n~ Bwediah farmer, Using about ten miles In tide with her. Bound copies of Brownlow’e the oounlry, yesterday shot hia wits anil I Whig are kept in the house, and the refers then himself. Th* couple had quarreled I to them with pride aa exponents of the continually for several year*, and one I ex-Govemor’s and ex-Benator’s views in the month ego parted. Through the influ-1 most trying period of our national history, ence of a eon, they had mutually agreed I Hhe is of medium size, and, though her to a division of goods, and yeatorda} I black hair, parted in the old-fashioncdway, |lie son and mother drove to the homestead has hardly a sprinkle ot gray, she talks for that porpoae. While tha woman was I about growing old, and she don’t mind teU- hclping to carry ont some ot the furniture, I ing that she is Gd the huxbtnd shot her in the back of the T h ! 1 bead, then placing th* muzzle of the ravol-1 Consumption cured, ver in his month, blew out his own brains. Tho woman may recover. The Final Abollttou of Hlavery In Cuba. Madrid, July 28.—In the Chamber of I f a i!!)ia 1 -i^plsy ll - 1 -i ll -Si l ^j _ Deputies to-day Honor Labra moved a reeo-1 nn dsMUty and «U nstvoc* esmpialau, after kav- Aa old physician, rstlrsd from pneties, kavinf had pUc»dUhlshsadsi>T*ak««tIadiaiaUsliina-l ry ika formula of a rtssplsvaaslsrils taawdy foe the s,- • ■!.' Sad penuantat con of coasoapUoa. bron chitis, caurrh. nstkawaad aUtSmat and luogaf- froni which th. flrat United •si-cidted Franklin—cents »P*Pm weigh Intion that the government free, as soon ss I lae WamdU* wsaSitfsl caraUtc iwvsn 1 xhe government agreed 1 counting room. in Cuba. The government agreed to I nottrs _ reaolntion, and it waa pasned nn&nimooaljr. I will mm* The preeiaent of the cLamber congTstalated 1 4,1 tbo members on the "crowning of lb rioa* work of tbe abolition of slavery. chArg*. to *11 who dmtn it, ibl i* r rrneb ud Fnglisli, with fall isrix^u al : uslojc. H«atbjrm*il / thl* i W . njkmtnKthUi*i-®*f, 1 . K <LevUr. N. Y. may cidwlly good-looking . worry and travel ol the past three or four opined and m7irp«c Wisas: ■” , K , n”s?s3l£2SS"s“ 5T ' sligliily bnilt, and was dicstil lavt night in a clo.e-fitting gray silk dress wilh a rather ooqncUidi hat, which wsa prohahly stylish Iwloire c.nstaiit Luuckiug about had worn »!f the i livtini. brillisncy ot its trimmings. as restored, and i aU right" Mis* N. E. White, the national lecturer of the Woman's Christian Temperance Un- Hu. carries with her a pfetore of her young I J a 4J m ° wnt0 Mre Pfohi&itl«Mte>a_ of huaUnd, in which he u mate to loo^ „cg I ^ “ “.if “ d • UUClfn-s’-J| HI W lilCis 14“ IM uiA -t Mr IUUK OTcu I _ vininn _. ,.« _ younger than hte years, and is apparently Ira Hinjnn orator^ in i rather tall, with dark hair and a painful .ft®,“*? tan, apology for a moustache. far connu&ptioc; baring found It to be *11 that yoa claim for It, deadm to testify to lu rirtne. My frtaeda lowborn I bar* raeoouaended It, praise It *r\ o* ||... (•,. -!,u.. and fall of tbe great nat;-.im of auti<£uity: ‘TdO.dk at Koine, k ok atlU' yl-.n, lcKjk at the J«w« took at AtbfE.fi, tbe |tre»t AtLeu« ’a Ntw Dlecorery to core Congbe, roup, aad erery of Tbroal, ! Lttikga. Trial !)■ :>. free a*. LA.u«r, dMUera Drug h.ne. L*rv -t.a «i • Itn did ebe !>eifto it Aibeaet Where their going hwn - 11 We have no obj< Ion, Athens, Jertu White will I</« k ut !. ’ id l’c .ol ] jjKjrtion to tb-.ir u ii to lo« kin^ at Baby- Km -^1 Romo if Mum U. _ r. li-lileford, Lew- 'i ii* r- a good deal itiou towns tn