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♦ .ma. 'were curried to the boot ,4w mm th rwl,.r«i w , of wiro strong endjgh to bq lad dawn Vy C**CV L rDr«2t - hu bi - on r". "\« _*"*$.*? jBttflfl Sg^qBglR.h some 0*1 board 1 ' the which kept the Icj from coining* UnTt^*-iglDC^,1. LE Tr Withlft GreelD-' wUtojc/ful at he ™e dC?«d bodiep and wrap Omlk'WMMt. j. .' y™ ln_ a pitrt were taken to each ship. . fa. "!* y "®eota* *' Ted were BnrlU on * Kite*, — si In by side, 500 yards fnfcp the camp* AT THE NAVY DgPAR mith a very high mountain jnst back. Two — others were lying a little distance belojr the Highly Grattfled at th» *0 tttjj DnCj * \ s Wttlifaers DC_thti fleet off Wgatarbolme bread i "..■ - ■ ishuid and announced Oreely'a iMcns to n»ifc■ ' ' fhem that they might not be delayed from fulrD*v Rescue of Seven SurvivorDC S&JZ tHH the Gri*!* Taffy; "'SSJK S»Si." *i»' T 41 - »D *•* * •** Hi jftiififot Xpm SSfc*?** t9ar. /auajhaJthe jmt*r wonw»»ve »nday# tiortd loft for cro8tini{ Smith's swupd '•ton feUud -oh MarrU 1st. tlof' r Smith1* •sound remained op an Irom ohildwatchedfame {alt by all mothar and jwwa wu ood- AlHioat overcome DID HE COMMIT SUICIDE? iV IHT Read, ponder and. profit then*]., £•»»&**, Balaam for tlie Throat and Iad(b la aanoaded by all who have used it to excel aay preparation in the market aa a complete Throat *"tfj J Lung Healer. All person# dreadful disease —Consumption speedy relief and In a majority of caaea a far- - Mystery Surrounding the Disappear- ance at a Wealthy Man. ion's safety of so many of 1 'I'/ll i ■ -|i 'h Warner D. Hatch Bids His Wife «■ AflTectlouate Good-by and Is Seen Ifo More—Suicide Suspected. ;he Alert and fcock Garry off Devil's Thuml straggling through the heavy ice. Com mander Coffin did admirably to get along no far with a transport sp early in the season before an opening hod occurred. 18 DEAD FfiQJI STABVAT10N. iTMtNT. the KxpedltCCm. lOMMI .Of Wew York, Jnly 18,—Warner D. Hatch, president of the Hatch Engraving and Lithographing company, of No. 84 Nesey stalest, lived in an elegant villa on the top of • grassy, sloping hill in the village of Dobbs Ferry. The grounds about his house are considered the most beautiful for miles around, rivalling those of Jay Gould and Cyrus Field, woich are close by,' in romantio surroundings, • ' . f to any party who has taken three-fourtha of a bottle wiltidtti relief. Price 60c add $1. Trial _y«r ,/CD•(' TWTIWb Suffering and Heroic Limit Emory, with the Bar, hm mipportad me throughout with great ikillfulnea and unflinching readiness to accomplishing the great doty of relieving Greely. I would ask instruction about the Lock Cfarry, as the iehaHfer party Md by her master differs in several respects from inine. The Oreely party are very much improved since rescue, but were critical in the extreme when found, auCi for several dayi after. Forty-eight liovrs delay in reaching them would have been fatal to all now lfving. The season north is late, and the closest for years. Smith's sound was not open when. I left Cape Sabine. The Printer about Met tllle bay was the most severe for twenty, yonrs. "This great result i» entirely due to tlaf irttmipt action and unwearied energy of yourself and the secretary of war in fitting out this expedition for the work it has had the honor to accomplish. Tbe Bear's Good Worlt, j r camp, the survivors not having strength enough VD Wry them With the rest, making twelve bodies taken on board strip. Poor others wero buried on tfea ice from the winter house, bnt the io* had broken off and taken them with it. Washington, July 18.—The news of the rescue of the survivors of the Greely party was received at the nary department and created a profound sanation. It m the chief topic of conversation at the War and navy departments. The sentiment was universalis one of .gladness at the rescuo of the .seven men, mingled, of ochres, with tadiioaf for the loss of the remaining eighteen of the liarty. Many well-informed olBoiais had looked forward with dread to a report that all would bo found dead, and some had felt apprehensive evsnabout the safety of Qapt Schley and the rescuing party. Both army and navy-effcitla iael highly gratified at the sucoaos of Cap! SclUe/s expedition. size free. Achievement. Gallant Rescues. Edwards, an Esquimaux, was drowned while hunting. C J" ■Ki i Total deaths since the i*rty reached fine Sabftie, 18. J. KllisOn, ' who get the 830 rations left bv Bee be in 18H2, got bad\y During the wiato# Both Ills l?eet Dropped Of at the ankles, and hi# Angers dried up, hard. Hf also lost the top of his bAfe. For it foV days hf got along.Auly. btj M 4 little while • be tooK another change, Went wrong in thej head, Anally going to his long home on the 8th of June. There can be Hometlilng heroic ttr a cine as well u an indlriddaL'C;Bo«fcek Bteatf » Bit era have effftoted-nrfakiyia gallant reacae i, luriaag the aufteriaK «plc Thousands hay; eeeapeJ the miaoijes of pernus debility thtough the use of this wouderful medicine.. It is emphatically the beat ifomicb and blood tonic In the world. '*' •! 1 CAPTAIN SCHLEY'S REPORT. Tn The IvUron Vouud at the month •f* M|ftira !Douad — The Initro■•■U and Beeorda Saved. , Roarer Than any «Ulf» CtC Greel7 ud jkciii«t«-A Valley • V - * DMeevtredi -« D'• Surrounded hy all the luxurios a man oould Wish for, ». Hatch, heiilg ehndless, spent hli spare time in -the company of his wife, a refined lady, in the old homestead on the hill, whero his father Jjeforn hint lived. Be lovM fine horses, and his turnout , was Bust elegant. No home was more Jiappy, and from the testimony of the villagers there his wife and hbsiuees, he was l«Hp #4 If a model maa , T*!^ TuesJay'indhiing he lsft his homo for New' York, bidding his »ife a most affectionate good-by, promising to attend to n little shop* ping and return as early as possible. This was the last heard of him ttattl Wednesday, when a note reached John H. HUier, a lawyer, of No. 8* Pine strost,-who . attends to ttwlegal business of the HatflMhigraving and lithographing company, signed by M|\ Hatch, saying that he intended to commit suicide by jumpingoff the steamer 8t Johns on one of her trip* to Long Branch. He further explicitly said that he wpuld select a spot somewhere off Sandy Hoofc: for the consummation of the act, and that his hat and oasd would be found on the boat Another letter somewhat similar was received by Mrs. Hatch. V If-/ fD ■ D R* JBars I have been afljicted with Fever. I gave Ely * Cream B&Ima trial. To* relief was immediate. ' I ' regard cured.—G. Schreiber, 8upt of Oordagv do., Elizabeth, N. J. Prioe 50 ceota. ainK A Disposition to Criticise. Now that Lieut Greely has been found" at (JApe Sabine, there is * disposition shown by some to again crtttciso the efforts of Lieut, Garlington, who sailod with the Protons from 8t Johns last June to find and provision Lieut. (jrooiy and his Party- Gen. Hasen and Commodore Walker are inclined to think what has bean charged as the greatest error of the Proteus expedition, —the failure to leave provisions at Littletonisland—would have made lie difference iu the sad result, as Greely and his men were unable to reach (hat point. Gen. Hasen thinks Garl ingUAn should hate left more of the provisions saved from the Proteus at Cape Sabine. Capt. Davis, who was a member nf J he Proteus board, thinks that the great mistake of the expedition was in not Ian-hog stores at Cape Sabine instead of trying to take them further north. Had this tD4en deae the Greely party might- all h(\jr# been saved; bqt. of course, GarUagton bad no orders to land stores there and could not do it AMERICA BEATS THE WORLD. (Mil Nort& Ever Beached. ? . | . Blscover^of Arthur Laud. Washington, J'jJy 18.— Lieut Groely's" second dispatch Is as follows: Catarrh ! of theVadder.' inflammation, all Kidney and Urinary Complaints cured by " Buchupaiba." $1. » The three v ewe la sailed from St, Johns as follows: The Bear, Mar 8; the Thetis, May 12, and the Alert, May 1». v W. S. Schley, commander. Sr. Johks, N. F-, July 17, 1884. Chief Signal Officer, W ashington, D. C.: For the first time in three centuries England yields the honors of the farthest north. Lieut. Lock wood and Sergeant Brainard on May 13 reached Lock wood Island, in lati- The Saved. Lieut, Adolphus Grealy, first Lieutenant, Fifth cavalry, acting signal ofBccr -awl «*•' sjBlant; married; wife's preeont residence, San Diego, Cal. BBgttudB 40.4A. Jhey saw from ivation no land north or north- Kergt. David L Braiuard, sergeant, Compauy L, Second cavalry, enlisted at New YoHc city; born in Oswogo county, N. Y. ,000 fret el but to nortl dand, ■et ex- w 1 i|W#:; :u* *4KlHc POWDER -r intV nil irDi»nnwDii ■ 111 tl —i SWlUl' thau the ordinary klnas, aad cannotTs wHla •onoMlboa wtULtha multitude of low tMt*M Weight; alum or Sotd onlv la oana. Eoyal Pwrter Cfc. Mt W street. N, Y. Hospital Steward Henry Bierderback, private, Company Ci, Seventeenth infantry; enlisted at Cincinna ti, O.; born in Waldeck, Germany. Lieut. '* Wn party . Dr. rtOte, ortli tod, IB I Into Mnurice Connell, private, Company B, Thir.l cavalry; enlisted at camp on Gooso Creek, Wy.; born in Kerry, Ireland. Sergt. Joseph Elison, corporal, Company E, Tenth infantry, enlisted at Fort Wayne, Mich.; born in Germany. (Sergt. Ellison was very much prostrated and badly frostbitten when found, and died at Godhaven on July 0, after undergoing a surgical operation. * Sergt Jill ins Fredericks, Company I, Seeotid cavalry; enlisted at Cleveland, O.: unmarried; born in Dayton, O. The lawyer investigated the matter am) to his surprise, tfpon inquiry of the officers ol the St Johns, was handed the hat worn by Mr. Hatch with his card .Inside. A, deck hand had found at the port aide ot the main deck behind the ladies' cabin when thelboat landed at Long Branch on bar 13:15 trip, which is a special one for tin accommodation of visitors to the raoes at Monmouth Park. •• made a aprinr and later a Bummer trij the Interior of Qrinnell Land, HMtmlni iitkt Hazon Sixty by ten miles lnertent, which in i t/ -jT Ice from cope of North Grimiell Lani CT in drained by Rnggles river and Weyj fiord Into Cony bar bay and ArcherV « Frpjn summit of Mount Arthur, feet, the contour of land west Conger mountains convinced me thai Orinnell Land tends directly south from 1 Bramard succeeded in crossing 11 a fiord 4. the WMtom •*». tetmxaSrilj named Uy Lieut. Look-wood Orally flonf. From the center of the fiord in latitude ».30, rongltifl£9S.S0. Lieut Lockfrood Saw the Northern shore Termlnvtloa omo twentyi miles west and southern shore xtendlilfsoihe fifty miles, with Cape Lock # Gn. Rami to Lieut. Greely. Washington, July IS.—tfen. Haxen ye»- terday afternoon Mnt the following dispatch to IJeut. Greely: "Our are overflowing with gUdnaaa and think* to God for your safety, and in aadaewfor those who, wtthout fault of yours, are dead. Your family are well and in Son Diego," '«d by and ■epht fiord. VWO of LIEUTENANT QREELY. A RECEIVING THE NEWS. Suicide «» apparent, bat no cause could be divined. Although president of a large business ranking among ftret In its line, Mr. Hatch was not at nil dependent on the profits ot the bastue*?. being a man of Wealth, His father before him was a very wtalthj nan, owning more than a quarter of a million dollars' worth at property in Dobtx Ferry, all ot which, together with • hand some sum in cash, was inherited by Mr. Hatclfc who wa* auoaly child. His wift brought him a large dower, which she in herited from her grandmother, estimated aC ■early »l,000.C0a The greater part of thii wealth was deposited la a tnut oootpany, Mr. Hatch using only snoh amounts as hi chase to invest in profitable schemes This In oeaaeotioa with his affeetioaate domestl relations, almost prectnded the Idea that hi had committed suicide for any reason 01 financial or &her troubles. . From a very reliabtMsaaros it waaaaoer talned that lately JflT&tih syactfiixd i gnat deal, especially lit the Ksely motor, ii whtoh'he placed grtat confidence. Durlnj the past few year* it Is said he lost heavily How far he became involved no one can say. The police are making every effort to fim the body or the man. _|£ •D"" me Kansas ttepnbllcane* 3 ItowatA, Ka., Ifjtlt to.-The Htoubtfe-n state convention aaembM again ySMMay. Judge J. C. Strong, chairman of the com mittee on resolutions, presented a report with the remark that l&Was the unanimous action of the committee and had been ai rived at through harmony and in the spin of concession. The platform declares thA the Republicans of Kansas rejoice over thi victories qr principles that gldriileC their career since they first met at dsawa tomic, twenty-five years ago; indorse* thi nomination of James U. Blaiae and John A Logan, the first alt! sen of the Republic am the brave and gallant Union soldier, ant pledgee to them, tbe~laspss* *aJMf eve given in that state; approves the.nations • RepaMlcanptaSfiina said heneet stifsriissaim of the amendment, tha' the full effeota'&Tprohibition maybe realised i-rsasrasnJ SLS its cumbersome features and to unequivocall| vsst in tha board ot railroad commissioner! all necessdry power to accomplish the gOoc sought to be obtained, Md to compel oam pliance with reasonable orders of the board Admiral Nlcholls also wired Commodore SehWy the heartiest congratulations to himself, officers and men, and directed him to use his discretion about the care and transportation of the bodies. WaskixgtiW, Jul£ 18.—There is great re- Joijn* liere over the ne^»S'telegraphod from St Jonrix, IT. FT, of the rescue of Lieut, freely and five others of the Greely relief party by the expedition sent to their a'Mdsfeanoe under the direction of Lieut-Comluander Winftfeld Beott Schley. The loss of uineteen members of the gallant party naturally' "excites the deepest sympathy for the relatives and frionds of t)ie unfortunates and commisoration ■for their sad fate, but Whan the terrible privations to which all were subjected are yUplflsrtd •grsat surprise is expressed that lnvWtuWD»a dire. The recitals made byCopimander Schley and Lieut. Greely are of thrilling interest, telling as they do, in graphic language, of the awful experience of the intrepid men during their sojourn in Itie pQifti' regions. The arrival of OommaartSr Schley's expedition is shown ta have been tadeed timely, aradrfayef twenty-four liours would have been fatal to all, and not not a single member of the Greely party jTMflaf!#* ftrrtred to tell the story of sof%nhg, fji vatlon and death. "Wttr ftVdftlons ate regarded, from a Kvcntlfie btaiidpoinf, as the most surc.'ssful that hev%ever b«a male- into the frozen i dgions of the north, and as all of tho reoords of observations bearing on the re- D'arches of Lieut Greely have boon preterved the importance of hs Intelligent efforts cannot be overestimated. For the ftrst time In a period of three centuries America can claim the proud distinction of liay&g penetrate I to a point nearer to the «ta any ottisr country on the globe. C B|H. Hcbler'n lleport. The foTlowlnq; telegram watf received yes terday ir.oMMng from Commander 8chley: St. JonNS, N. F., July 17—9 a. m. ToWm. E. Chandler, Secretary of the Navy, t-'ergt. Francis Long, private. Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barracks, Neb.; bora in Wurtenburg, Germany. ROUTE TRAVERSED RY GREELY. (CfSRpot wh«» Qreety wsi temA.fg'" Jacob Bender, private, Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barracks, Neb.; born in Frlodberg, Germany. The liOst, entire winter, rendering crossing imjioaJMB. (•umo failed, despite bunting frag early in February. Befaro the sun returned only 500 pounds of meet had been obtained. This, together with minute sbrlrapi;'' sea weed, sassafras, rock-liekers and seal skins, wen* resorted to for food with results as •ho*» by the number of survivors. Detroit, Jplj 18.—Edwartl Israel, the astronomer of tho Greely party, mm a native oiDKalamasoo, iji this state, where.his friends reside. Hi« mother-is jArostrated witb grief over the (ad whleM was communicated to her yeefcayday aftarftoou. His family are among the wealthy and promi nent people of that town. His age was 26. At Israel's Basse. William H. Cross, sergeant, general service, Washington, D. CS; married; barn at Washington, D. C. ,./g William A. Ellis, private Company C, seoond cavalry; enlisted at New York city; born in Seneca Falls, N. Y. The Lsil Reicnlar Peed. Hampden 8. Gardiner, sergeant, signal •corps, Philadelphia, Pa.; unmarried; Jxirn at Philadelphia, Pa. The last regular food was issued on May 14. As there wer# only 150 pounds of meat left by Oarllngton, I was compelled to send, In November, four men to obtain 144 podndi of English meat at Cape Isabella. During the trip ElHson froze solid both harnjs and feet, and lost them alU surviving, however, through our terrible wirtter and spring until July 18. named new land Arthur Land. Lieut Locliwood followed—going and returning— an ice oape ycnrijpular facet . It fellow* that Orinnei: Land'* tatsrior Is ice-eapped with a belt ol country some sixty miles vMt between the northern and southern-ice capes. In March, 188#, Sergt Long, while hunttog, looked from the northwest side of Hount i^o Hayes sound, seeing on the northern thryo capes westward of the furthest seuii by Nares In 1870. The sound extends some twenty miles further wost than shown by the English chart, but is possibly shut in by land which sjwwed' up across Its "western end. Tho two years' station dutlas «b*et'rations. all operations, and the rotroat to Capa| Sabine wero accomplished without loss of life, disease, or even sever.) frosc bites. No scurvy was experienced at Conger and bat one death from it accoiTtM last winter. Gkkkly, Comoiauiiinj. miles distant, ai - » . » Notified of his Ns'l Bulk, Washington, July 18.—A telegram wm received by General Lockwood, father of Lieut Lotkwood, of the Greely party, from Lieut. Greely, lu which the latter conveyed the news of Lieut Loekwood'i death, and stated that he had lmmortaHwd hftnseif by loading a party to the furthest point north that has over been reached. Charles B. Henry, private, Company IS, Fifth oavalry; enlisted at Cincinnati, O.; bom in Hanovar, Germany. Carton's Patent G&Mght Hot 2 Airfurnkfe ■ •' *■ ABH v IMP m v:j |H^^Hp 01) Ititw lO THK ' Iston and^V^ 'jarll Edward Israel, sergeant, Signal corps; Kalamazoo, Mich.; unmarried; bofn at Kalamazoo, MicW Tb« survivor* owe their liva» to the indomitable energy of CafDt. Schley and Lieut Bmory, who, preceded by three, and aocotftpaniou by five whalers, forced their vessels from Upernavik through Melville bay into north water at Capa York vjith tt» foremost whaler*. They gained a ynrd whenever possible and alwayt held it Smiths round was crossed, and \ Winfield 8. Jewell, sergeant, Signal oorps; unmarried; born at Lisbon, N. H. Frederick F. Kislin#bury, second lieutenant, acting sign 4.1 officer, of Rochester, N. Y.; was a native of England; entered the service as a private ib thu Fifty-fourth Now York State militia in 1864 as a six months' man; be re-entered the service again in 188*; was promoted to sergeant In 1873, and created second lieutenant in Octobor, 1873; he was a widower and had two children. PROGRESS OF THE CHOLERA. Wo Perceptible Chance ®»r Ihe BoMor FarIs, July m-r-Thero was no marked increase in the nthuW of cholera oaafa'at Marseille* and Toulon yesterrtay. - The death list is about tlfc same as Wednesday. The "Weather liss teen favorable to chetetn patients, but the dlsoasa is atilt reported spreading In the districts adjacent to U10 untoi twi itu cities aljoro named. The death list records sixty-nb.a deaths at Marseilles aud forty-ei jht at Toulon. The two cities are cknuly fpiaraatin&l, and every precaution it exerted aguiust a spread of the fatal malady. ot Maroolltoo or Teale*. during one of the moat violent gales I hare ev«y- known.. The boats were handled only at bimiindht rhla of swauiplng. Four of us were then nnattie to walk, ai*4 'could not have survived exceeding twenty-four hours. Every oars and attention vtto given us. I have saved and bring back copies of meteorological, tidal, astronomical, magnetic, pendulum and other jbaervatioM. Alio pendulum, Tale and nandard thermometers, forty-eight photographic negative*, a collection of plmts and photographic pririts. Esquimaux relics and other things -were necessarily abandoned. The Thetis remains here five days probably. ' " Tho Party Rescued, David Linn, sergeant, Company C, Second cavalry, enlisted at Philadelphia, Fa.; 'bora at Philadelphia, Pa. James B. Lockwood, first lieutenant, Twenty-third infantry, acting signal officer, Washington, D. C.; unmarried; is a son of (Jen. Lockwood (retired), U. 8. A. Nicholas Nalor, corporal, Company H. Second cavalry, enlisted at Cinjinnati, O.; unmarried; bcru nt Luxembourg, tfermanj'. A VALLEY DISCOVERED. Vegetation Abuuisnl and the Ci£ oil) Dr. Octave Pavy, medical officer; married; wife's address, Maryville, Nodaway county. Mo. mMe IHt Tory tstsre. St. Johns, N. P., JuftlS.—Lieut Greely assured the United Primcorrespondent thai he had clear proof that an open .polar sea existedljotflSf #Wpa*D4driftlng Into it bul was blown back. He lays lie agrees in tbil with JJordenskJold. A valley running from near Lady Franklin bay to the W, iters ocean, about sixty wide was discovered. It is bounded nofth and vDoth by continwmii glVciers and has no apparent hreaka Id the valley vegetation was abundant and the climate much milder than usual. This he styles "The Men *T (He Ntnk.li . 11m French Academy of medicine has decided, by * mftiifcuou* vote, that a land quarnntii a in France is impracticable. It also declares that the disinfection orocess is inefficacious and illusory, and urges the establishment of cholera hospitals at all large railroad stations. ; Pk lemty. We have the most fomphilfelilfbf ftrruaces in oar mirei'A&ftg tlkat hits •tor been shown in atiy bonrt M tfee State, comprising oyer twenty* liifef and dtyles. HavmgmadoatSrttiracf with the Carton "the getoOTa? tgency t»f 4o\ ftntrtyfya&ia and New Jtaafcy ♦C ore prepared to give sack price* 4i the goods that wilt dfe aWsiy with**- onteide competition. D Thetis, lioar and Lock Gary arrived here t D day from AV««t Greenland, all well. Bop- -ft AlertrCmo hundred and fifty Dr. Pavy's career was a remartabl idles norUt during a gale. At # P. *. June He was born in Havre, France, anc "D Ave miles ()g Cape EpIlVh Bmith'i there. He accompanied a Freni. »ound, edition to Lady Franklin Bay far «ur7ivor» di™worl»iwfottl!r pfrrJin^tbis 5, at Oodfcuven. •fcwrampotation (olMd the OtJbIj,«ipe*iMo^LtDfa^^U which becomstapetattrs. Seventeen A coast of Greened, where he hftt of IhB tw«nl»-lire (»»■»■• (Miniiuiiiiig this ex. - named after the unsuccessful Howgate pedition perished by starvation at the oedttirm. --- where f9»Cd. One Was drowned while a»al- l)avii 0.' Ral8ton, seiwnt, signal food. Twelve bodies ot $he umnai-jried; bo*n afSloomfield, Ohto. Mad were rescued and are now on VDard G*frge Klce, sergeant, Signal Thetii and . Oryfe Esquimau, TurneVik. Washington, D. C.; uumarried; bor one. edu- ijRKMf.Tj f^nronifnl'ng it ext retail.He THE STORY OF THE RESCUE Aa Told If Cupl. Ash, Iee-Pllot ot Albany, July 18«-The feeling is about AM usual. Anti-CIevelandltse are boisterous. Manning will say nothing as to the probable action of the State Democratic committee in regard to PurceU*s successor. Of cenrae,' a strong Cleveland man will be selected. There is some talk about the defection of Uteliicilcolarsd element, but it amounts to nothing. The labor element win probably have somC tlilug to say to-night, when some fOO pt the workmen at th» Capital will be laid Aft Their retirement is doe to tha lack Of money for continuing the work. The governor has nothing to do with it, but scone snmhaaris may want to talk and they may talk interestingly. Political Oosalp from Altaaf. ibune Sr. Johns, N, F., July 18.—Capt Ash, icepilot of tbe Bear, fifes the following interesting details of the rescue: "(Sail ml rrofn St. Johns May 4, reached TJpernavIk on the SOtii, Duck Island on June 6, Cape Yot-lt on June 18 and Payer harbor on June 23. At 7 p. M. we had both ships fast to a hoary floe in Payer harbor and some of the officers and men left the ships for the shore in different directions. An officer from the Thetis found the record on Breroort island, statine that Greely and party were all w?n and that they left Fort Conger on Aug. 0 and landed at Balrd iqlet ,pn Sept. 29, after driving about On the ioe nearly three weeks in the vicinity of Cape 8abine. The record also told where to find his winter camp. the Bear. ctty. raedi He An «WM»i4nDWI*t offered by Col. AnJhonj in fatot of a constitutional convention wai -ala»d, —'•« ax- Oreely says that if MO pounds of mea*had been left by Oarttngton his party would have been saved. Littleton Island could not be reacljed in winter, the sound% twenty-live miles wide, being open, and in theQspring the party were Wo weak to go. The survivors are yet very weak, but recovering rap idly. Oreely is weak. Hfe expedition, he says,- would hava been the moat successful on record if food had been left on Cape Sabine, where it should have bean. Ill* ships had been roughly used, as superhuman exertions ware raado to effect a rescue. The party left Fort Conger, August #, in + steam launoh, three boats and a dingey. After their thirty days' float on the ice floo, they decided ' to abandon tho laUnflh and two boats as too heavy to carry. The winter quartersapttsistod of a hut of stones oovered by one boat anCl a sail. At l«dy Franklin Bay, plenty of food hail boon left as it was too heavy to carry, and they expeoted to find plenty at Cape Sabine. They found dele**d, aud (Oaifonn, «a« adopted. Ai&a&U -Horkii *ai»ipME Cwn|i»attid bj acclamation, and W. A. Johnston for a**o elate justice. co*»; Jail : We have a first class Wrought »6n furnace that will heat fotur roonsaor a good sized store that we art sell #or.#60.00, sad so on upwards According to eiae of - boHdipg to foe bealW.--,' CoL John A. Martin, editer of The Atchi Mo Champion, and late secretary ot the Ke publican datiobal committee, wagsxikiinatec for goT«iwi by a rising Vote and received three cheers, for which he returned thanki in a most graceful manner. * T~ I I. I —l wa* turlcxj at Dkco in accordance with tli deriro of the inspector of Western Green land. " Slve bodies hurled In th» ioefort near tha oaaDp were nropt away to sea Uy_wioda. and currents before my arrival and gould not .be »acovered. ..anmgtau, Sidney, Nov & Scotia. corps, *n at R. H. Schneider, private, Company A. Bi-st artillery; enlisted at Port Columbus, . H»w York har twr; bom in Chemnitz, Germany.*ss es a Private tank, Nwr^ToSTMy m*Tn»^3Si»ore4ni Ohio and Banker* and Merchant*' telegrapt companies and the Postal Telegraph ant Cable company,'have united. Hereafter tlu three oompanies will pool their earning* auc expenses tor a period «t twmtpk* jJmu* mittee composed of the executive committed of-the several oompanies. Mr. D. H. Bates, president of the Baltimore and Ohio ooro paHft Vtl ykm ex*»t**e manager. The nnfch-OV-the three eempoBlss bringf under one control over 16,000 miles of poli lines and l!j%0e0 miles of- wire lines. Tlu Bennett-Mackey cable will form a part Of thi system. • ,i,S\ Abandoning the Boats. "William Whistler, private, Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barrucks, Nab.; born in, Carroll county, fed ; father's address is Mouon, Ind. A Bad Omen. ITOIAKAPOUB, July 18.— A. 47, C. 'ft Harrison's private bank, one of the oldest In the SBSr SBBBHt a run. Harrison refused to pay cent, although be paid he wouidHave plenty of money to-day. The rclevtnf house iwtsatad dWfcks drtSwn OB Harrison's bank. His conduct caused much severe comment, aa he was re-ceiret* of the Indiana Soaking company, now defunot, and is supposed to have a large fund belonging to that institution on deposit jiD his ow« bank. His areditors threaten to ask for a receiver unless their claims an adjusted without delay. , •noo Cull «id so# the send for catalogue circulawmd pricflptio "Greely abandoned *11 Ills bjflts and was adrift for thirty days on* ice floe In Smith's Hound. His permanent camp «■ established October 21, 1883, at the point wtarn. be was found. During the nine months his party lived upon a scant allowance of rood brought from Fort Conger, "that had been cached at Payer Harbor and Cape Isabella by Sir George Narcs in 1875, but found much damaged by lapse of time, and that cached by Beebe at Cape fiqbine in ISA, aud a small am»6t saved from tlie wreck of the Proteus in 188S and landed by Lieuts. Garlington and Cowell on the baach where Groely's party had been found camped. When these provisions were consumed the party was forced to live upon boiled sealakin atrips from their sealskin clothing, lich ens an£ shrimps preserved in good weather, when they were strong enough to make the exertion. As 1,000 shrimps were re({ciasd te All a gallon measure the labor was too exhausting to depend upon thorn to sustain life entirely. Our-«team launch being out and ready we wore immediately sent away for the camp, wb id was about three miles northwest Of Cape Sabine. The Thetis blew her whistle recall some of her men and thoy heard it at the camp, and as we nsftred It we saw one man make his appearance where he oould loojc down til* cape, lie saw the boat and came down to where we wen going to land. Seeing but one man and the way he staggered In the snow, we thought it a bad omen. On Jumping ashore the first question waa how they all were. His answer wast . J i i Frederick Eskimo, taken on as guide. Jeus Edwards Eskimo, taken on as guide. W« can save money fory«u if ypu will allow us to fignro withyoiu ilj In addition to tho men mentioned above, fans Edward, an Esquimaux, and Frederick Thorley Christiansen, a half breed, both- of whom Were engaged at Proven, accompanied the expedition. Hie colony consisted of twenty-five men, all told. PSTTSTON STOVE £k). U'RKASDKY DKPA»TMKNT. OMlOB.i DF , COiUTROLUCtt OP THE CURBCHOT. • .. Washington June 10th,1884. WlwiM by CstlslSo«ory»eld«acn» tirmmf to the undersigned it has been made to appear that the First National. *ACnt am nmbi fal the Borough or Pittstow. In Che Cohmtt or Lnuuit end jtate oT PunnsylWH. Bu compiled with ail tUe bro»Mon» of the act of CnMrm to enable National Banking Associations to extend their OUOH 5.' No. 4T« ' Comptroller of CUnrMHiy. ADDITIONAL PARTICULARS. Only turn Barrels of Bread Left in the cpehfe mado by the Proteus arew after her loss', a damaged -cache left by the British and a few rations left by the relief expedition of 1683. In autiunn a forlorn hope started to reach some dried meat cached by Kares, but Ellison's feat trad bands W«T? jfrosen and they wero forced to abandon tho meat and return. In the spring a tent was ereeteft, but tho party were too weak to fasten it strongly. " - The Hardships and Sufferings Kn- Nine IIolira a Oafs I.ahar. IT** York. July 1R—Walking Delegate Donnelly, of the brkMayer's uuion, yesterday visited the members of the craft engaged upon various buildings m course of construction iu the upper portion of tile city, and {OTAJBlly notified the'men that unless the demand for a i d 1 notion of the hours of labor was acceded to before then they should nut resume work ou Holiday. ~ A majority of the contractors in tb« «ity are determined torajlfittho dnnaiii, but »|. th«rg aro less than 500 uou-unlon bricklayers in the city, tlio sontractors aro at the mercy of the men and will probably be compelled to surrender. dared by the Party. "There Are NeTen of Us Left,'* Sad nows and a sudden reverse to our spirits of a quarter of an hour ago. But it was no time to reflect. We must try to save the living. I jumped into , the launch and at once passed some food that we were pre pared with, and we at once started for the camp. It was blowing a gala The camp tent was blown down except a stout prop under one end. The poor fellows hod not strength enough to put it up. Washington, July- 18.—Gen. Basen haa received two telegrams from Lieut Groely, containing additional particular* of the hardships and sufferings endured by the party since last August, as well as a summary of the results of their explorations luring the past two years. The first of these dispatches reads as follows: Fresh Plots Against the Csar. Bt. Pbtkiisbdro, July 18.—The existent* of a plot to blow up the palace at Warsaw during the e»arV stay thy sin has been discovered. - A justice of the peanejuuned Bar boTstii, who is suspected of complicity in the cdhspiracy, has boon Arrested. A quantity of arms and-dyuamite, which were to harC baeu used,by the plotters in carrying oul their design, were found. In April ftice and Fredericks volunteered fo find the abandoned meat. Rica • (All Groely's records and all instruments brought by him from Fort Conger are recovered Ca*d are on board. ''I had a terrible time with my ships," sayB the commander ha his report. "From Hare Island to Smith's Sound I had a cotistrmt and furious ' St. Johws, N. F., July 17, 1881—Chief signal office, Washington; Bralnard, Bierborbick, Connell, Fredericks, Long, myself, 14gle survivors, arrived to-day, having been rescued at the point of death Am starvation by relief ships Thetis and .Bear, on June K3, in CaSap Clay, northwest o*f Capo Babino. All are now in good health, but weak. Wad on tba Way, and Fredericks returned in a terribly exhausted conditiolf Two men, Locfcwood and Jewell, died in camp while Fredericks was away, and on the 1st of June Kiugsbury died. After HtSa of moment, except constantly reourring deaths, ocotfrred, utlLil June 3J, when the faint -sound of a straw Whistle Mi hoard by Loos, He and Brainard tot vut of thuir fleoping bats and went to a point, but seeing nothing they started to return. Long was unable to do so, nnd iat down In tieslde soinB-r«l|Ci. fj*Q he saw a steam launch, to which he snouted, aul In a little wVJe the rescuers UndaL SIX Men Lay Starring and unable to help thepiaelvea, Pointing to one, they said he was dying; bit he rallbd and Is doing well now. We cut a hole in the canvas to give us room, and commenced to feed them, serving them all round gradually and uot letting them have as much as they wanted. Tho laancfa wei sent off to the Bear, which was coming. The Thetis vrvs also closa \ty, Capt. Emory, Dr. Ames in 1 a crew came en share; a Ure waa npule, the swCCeaprs were attended to by lDr. Auk* and given plasty of warm milk. Hoi k 6f them were soon able to stand and stagger about Mean tibia Commander Schley aud officers had arrived and bjgan to superintend the removal to fhe ships. Paris, July 18.—A dlspat&k Ttota Pondicherry, capital of the French possessions in India, states that a rocket exploded during the c-.eui-ati -n of the fell of the Bastile. The building'fn' which the rocket exploded ooutaiiH d a large quantity of arswork, and a fearful explosion resulted, killing fifteen n««P Killed—iltsnF lajsiri. Hm Diamond Field. J K. J AMCK. •J. o it tat x;o si*o , practical . . struggle with ice ill impassable floes. Solid batTlefs of ice were overcome by watchfulnets and patiauoo alouo. No opportunity to New Yohk, July 16.—The following is the result of the hasehall games played yester- r-r-f . - « Ion Driven Into Kane Inlet. Abondoned steamer launch on Sept. 18, sloven miles northeast of Cocked Hat Islsnd. When on the point of landing were-three times dtiveu by .south sLornie into JCaiie tuiet Finally landed Sopt Dp in*' Baii'4 inlet. Learthg by scopting'parties of tbirPrQ. tous disaster and that no provisions had beep left for us from Isabella to Cape Sabine, we moved Mid established winter quartern at Camp Clay, half-way betwoou Cape Sabint and Cocked Hat Islands, An inventor} AdVaiiO- a mile escaped Bie, and fog* st*v At Louisville, 1; »a»l, a At Cleveland—Cleveland, 3; Detroit, 8. At Baltimore—Baltimore, 12; Brooklyn, a * At Piitabur^—Alleghany, 8; Washing ion, a WAT6HMAKER ANHiMNMI; hundrod miles the ships were forced to ram tfreir wajr from lead to lead through ice vary' m \ w tmckitass from thive "to foot, aud when rafted much greater. The'Whaling Fleet. fix un, floor Mm wrtwfcrttfb. Londox, July 18. —The Standard says that the lamentable issue of the Qreely expedition requires do coiauent. The bare facta are sod enough, without any moral being added. The last great effort to tad the farty has bean nobly rewarded. .1* Ytattto lo Tho ISietis and Bear reached Cap« Vwfc CB June 18, after a passago ot twenty-one days ip Melville Bay with the two advance ships of the Duud.f At blank OreolyU Home. At Boston—Providence, TJ; Ifc*ton, 4. At Buffalo—Buffalo, 1; Chicago, i At New York-JMropolitow, 3; Athbtt* & r-rD. ~r~ AtVi .. '.i' *... 1;.:i: ON WATBB HTJKJEianL'. .03 U0hj;i!r. VjJtJtlM !JCy)d' OfftcT lEWBCRYPORT, Mass., July la—The n;wa Of the finding of tfae Oreely party C was reoelTed at thu homo of tho famoiu commander Stretchcrs bad been brought and the nD*4 1; National*, 9. - ljDv» Repainog of Fin* Watoheaa Specially.
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 653, July 18, 1884 |
Issue | 653 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1884-07-18 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 653, July 18, 1884 |
Issue | 653 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1884-07-18 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18840718_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | ♦ .ma. 'were curried to the boot ,4w mm th rwl,.r«i w , of wiro strong endjgh to bq lad dawn Vy C**CV L rDr«2t - hu bi - on r". "\« _*"*$.*? jBttflfl Sg^qBglR.h some 0*1 board 1 ' the which kept the Icj from coining* UnTt^*-iglDC^,1. LE Tr Withlft GreelD-' wUtojc/ful at he ™e dC?«d bodiep and wrap Omlk'WMMt. j. .' y™ ln_ a pitrt were taken to each ship. . fa. "!* y "®eota* *' Ted were BnrlU on * Kite*, — si In by side, 500 yards fnfcp the camp* AT THE NAVY DgPAR mith a very high mountain jnst back. Two — others were lying a little distance belojr the Highly Grattfled at th» *0 tttjj DnCj * \ s Wttlifaers DC_thti fleet off Wgatarbolme bread i "..■ - ■ ishuid and announced Oreely'a iMcns to n»ifc■ ' ' fhem that they might not be delayed from fulrD*v Rescue of Seven SurvivorDC S&JZ tHH the Gri*!* Taffy; "'SSJK S»Si." *i»' T 41 - »D *•* * •** Hi jftiififot Xpm SSfc*?** t9ar. /auajhaJthe jmt*r wonw»»ve »nday# tiortd loft for cro8tini{ Smith's swupd '•ton feUud -oh MarrU 1st. tlof' r Smith1* •sound remained op an Irom ohildwatchedfame {alt by all mothar and jwwa wu ood- AlHioat overcome DID HE COMMIT SUICIDE? iV IHT Read, ponder and. profit then*]., £•»»&**, Balaam for tlie Throat and Iad(b la aanoaded by all who have used it to excel aay preparation in the market aa a complete Throat *"tfj J Lung Healer. All person# dreadful disease —Consumption speedy relief and In a majority of caaea a far- - Mystery Surrounding the Disappear- ance at a Wealthy Man. ion's safety of so many of 1 'I'/ll i ■ -|i 'h Warner D. Hatch Bids His Wife «■ AflTectlouate Good-by and Is Seen Ifo More—Suicide Suspected. ;he Alert and fcock Garry off Devil's Thuml straggling through the heavy ice. Com mander Coffin did admirably to get along no far with a transport sp early in the season before an opening hod occurred. 18 DEAD FfiQJI STABVAT10N. iTMtNT. the KxpedltCCm. lOMMI .Of Wew York, Jnly 18,—Warner D. Hatch, president of the Hatch Engraving and Lithographing company, of No. 84 Nesey stalest, lived in an elegant villa on the top of • grassy, sloping hill in the village of Dobbs Ferry. The grounds about his house are considered the most beautiful for miles around, rivalling those of Jay Gould and Cyrus Field, woich are close by,' in romantio surroundings, • ' . f to any party who has taken three-fourtha of a bottle wiltidtti relief. Price 60c add $1. Trial _y«r ,/CD•(' TWTIWb Suffering and Heroic Limit Emory, with the Bar, hm mipportad me throughout with great ikillfulnea and unflinching readiness to accomplishing the great doty of relieving Greely. I would ask instruction about the Lock Cfarry, as the iehaHfer party Md by her master differs in several respects from inine. The Oreely party are very much improved since rescue, but were critical in the extreme when found, auCi for several dayi after. Forty-eight liovrs delay in reaching them would have been fatal to all now lfving. The season north is late, and the closest for years. Smith's sound was not open when. I left Cape Sabine. The Printer about Met tllle bay was the most severe for twenty, yonrs. "This great result i» entirely due to tlaf irttmipt action and unwearied energy of yourself and the secretary of war in fitting out this expedition for the work it has had the honor to accomplish. Tbe Bear's Good Worlt, j r camp, the survivors not having strength enough VD Wry them With the rest, making twelve bodies taken on board strip. Poor others wero buried on tfea ice from the winter house, bnt the io* had broken off and taken them with it. Washington, July 18.—The news of the rescue of the survivors of the Greely party was received at the nary department and created a profound sanation. It m the chief topic of conversation at the War and navy departments. The sentiment was universalis one of .gladness at the rescuo of the .seven men, mingled, of ochres, with tadiioaf for the loss of the remaining eighteen of the liarty. Many well-informed olBoiais had looked forward with dread to a report that all would bo found dead, and some had felt apprehensive evsnabout the safety of Qapt Schley and the rescuing party. Both army and navy-effcitla iael highly gratified at the sucoaos of Cap! SclUe/s expedition. size free. Achievement. Gallant Rescues. Edwards, an Esquimaux, was drowned while hunting. C J" ■Ki i Total deaths since the i*rty reached fine Sabftie, 18. J. KllisOn, ' who get the 830 rations left bv Bee be in 18H2, got bad\y During the wiato# Both Ills l?eet Dropped Of at the ankles, and hi# Angers dried up, hard. Hf also lost the top of his bAfe. For it foV days hf got along.Auly. btj M 4 little while • be tooK another change, Went wrong in thej head, Anally going to his long home on the 8th of June. There can be Hometlilng heroic ttr a cine as well u an indlriddaL'C;Bo«fcek Bteatf » Bit era have effftoted-nrfakiyia gallant reacae i, luriaag the aufteriaK «plc Thousands hay; eeeapeJ the miaoijes of pernus debility thtough the use of this wouderful medicine.. It is emphatically the beat ifomicb and blood tonic In the world. '*' •! 1 CAPTAIN SCHLEY'S REPORT. Tn The IvUron Vouud at the month •f* M|ftira !Douad — The Initro■•■U and Beeorda Saved. , Roarer Than any «Ulf» CtC Greel7 ud jkciii«t«-A Valley • V - * DMeevtredi -« D'• Surrounded hy all the luxurios a man oould Wish for, ». Hatch, heiilg ehndless, spent hli spare time in -the company of his wife, a refined lady, in the old homestead on the hill, whero his father Jjeforn hint lived. Be lovM fine horses, and his turnout , was Bust elegant. No home was more Jiappy, and from the testimony of the villagers there his wife and hbsiuees, he was l«Hp #4 If a model maa , T*!^ TuesJay'indhiing he lsft his homo for New' York, bidding his »ife a most affectionate good-by, promising to attend to n little shop* ping and return as early as possible. This was the last heard of him ttattl Wednesday, when a note reached John H. HUier, a lawyer, of No. 8* Pine strost,-who . attends to ttwlegal business of the HatflMhigraving and lithographing company, signed by M|\ Hatch, saying that he intended to commit suicide by jumpingoff the steamer 8t Johns on one of her trip* to Long Branch. He further explicitly said that he wpuld select a spot somewhere off Sandy Hoofc: for the consummation of the act, and that his hat and oasd would be found on the boat Another letter somewhat similar was received by Mrs. Hatch. V If-/ fD ■ D R* JBars I have been afljicted with Fever. I gave Ely * Cream B&Ima trial. To* relief was immediate. ' I ' regard cured.—G. Schreiber, 8upt of Oordagv do., Elizabeth, N. J. Prioe 50 ceota. ainK A Disposition to Criticise. Now that Lieut Greely has been found" at (JApe Sabine, there is * disposition shown by some to again crtttciso the efforts of Lieut, Garlington, who sailod with the Protons from 8t Johns last June to find and provision Lieut. (jrooiy and his Party- Gen. Hasen and Commodore Walker are inclined to think what has bean charged as the greatest error of the Proteus expedition, —the failure to leave provisions at Littletonisland—would have made lie difference iu the sad result, as Greely and his men were unable to reach (hat point. Gen. Hasen thinks Garl ingUAn should hate left more of the provisions saved from the Proteus at Cape Sabine. Capt. Davis, who was a member nf J he Proteus board, thinks that the great mistake of the expedition was in not Ian-hog stores at Cape Sabine instead of trying to take them further north. Had this tD4en deae the Greely party might- all h(\jr# been saved; bqt. of course, GarUagton bad no orders to land stores there and could not do it AMERICA BEATS THE WORLD. (Mil Nort& Ever Beached. ? . | . Blscover^of Arthur Laud. Washington, J'jJy 18.— Lieut Groely's" second dispatch Is as follows: Catarrh ! of theVadder.' inflammation, all Kidney and Urinary Complaints cured by " Buchupaiba." $1. » The three v ewe la sailed from St, Johns as follows: The Bear, Mar 8; the Thetis, May 12, and the Alert, May 1». v W. S. Schley, commander. Sr. Johks, N. F-, July 17, 1884. Chief Signal Officer, W ashington, D. C.: For the first time in three centuries England yields the honors of the farthest north. Lieut. Lock wood and Sergeant Brainard on May 13 reached Lock wood Island, in lati- The Saved. Lieut, Adolphus Grealy, first Lieutenant, Fifth cavalry, acting signal ofBccr -awl «*•' sjBlant; married; wife's preeont residence, San Diego, Cal. BBgttudB 40.4A. Jhey saw from ivation no land north or north- Kergt. David L Braiuard, sergeant, Compauy L, Second cavalry, enlisted at New YoHc city; born in Oswogo county, N. Y. ,000 fret el but to nortl dand, ■et ex- w 1 i|W#:; :u* *4KlHc POWDER -r intV nil irDi»nnwDii ■ 111 tl —i SWlUl' thau the ordinary klnas, aad cannotTs wHla •onoMlboa wtULtha multitude of low tMt*M Weight; alum or Sotd onlv la oana. Eoyal Pwrter Cfc. Mt W street. N, Y. Hospital Steward Henry Bierderback, private, Company Ci, Seventeenth infantry; enlisted at Cincinna ti, O.; born in Waldeck, Germany. Lieut. '* Wn party . Dr. rtOte, ortli tod, IB I Into Mnurice Connell, private, Company B, Thir.l cavalry; enlisted at camp on Gooso Creek, Wy.; born in Kerry, Ireland. Sergt. Joseph Elison, corporal, Company E, Tenth infantry, enlisted at Fort Wayne, Mich.; born in Germany. (Sergt. Ellison was very much prostrated and badly frostbitten when found, and died at Godhaven on July 0, after undergoing a surgical operation. * Sergt Jill ins Fredericks, Company I, Seeotid cavalry; enlisted at Cleveland, O.: unmarried; born in Dayton, O. The lawyer investigated the matter am) to his surprise, tfpon inquiry of the officers ol the St Johns, was handed the hat worn by Mr. Hatch with his card .Inside. A, deck hand had found at the port aide ot the main deck behind the ladies' cabin when thelboat landed at Long Branch on bar 13:15 trip, which is a special one for tin accommodation of visitors to the raoes at Monmouth Park. •• made a aprinr and later a Bummer trij the Interior of Qrinnell Land, HMtmlni iitkt Hazon Sixty by ten miles lnertent, which in i t/ -jT Ice from cope of North Grimiell Lani CT in drained by Rnggles river and Weyj fiord Into Cony bar bay and ArcherV « Frpjn summit of Mount Arthur, feet, the contour of land west Conger mountains convinced me thai Orinnell Land tends directly south from 1 Bramard succeeded in crossing 11 a fiord 4. the WMtom •*». tetmxaSrilj named Uy Lieut. Look-wood Orally flonf. From the center of the fiord in latitude ».30, rongltifl£9S.S0. Lieut Lockfrood Saw the Northern shore Termlnvtloa omo twentyi miles west and southern shore xtendlilfsoihe fifty miles, with Cape Lock # Gn. Rami to Lieut. Greely. Washington, July IS.—tfen. Haxen ye»- terday afternoon Mnt the following dispatch to IJeut. Greely: "Our are overflowing with gUdnaaa and think* to God for your safety, and in aadaewfor those who, wtthout fault of yours, are dead. Your family are well and in Son Diego," '«d by and ■epht fiord. VWO of LIEUTENANT QREELY. A RECEIVING THE NEWS. Suicide «» apparent, bat no cause could be divined. Although president of a large business ranking among ftret In its line, Mr. Hatch was not at nil dependent on the profits ot the bastue*?. being a man of Wealth, His father before him was a very wtalthj nan, owning more than a quarter of a million dollars' worth at property in Dobtx Ferry, all ot which, together with • hand some sum in cash, was inherited by Mr. Hatclfc who wa* auoaly child. His wift brought him a large dower, which she in herited from her grandmother, estimated aC ■early »l,000.C0a The greater part of thii wealth was deposited la a tnut oootpany, Mr. Hatch using only snoh amounts as hi chase to invest in profitable schemes This In oeaaeotioa with his affeetioaate domestl relations, almost prectnded the Idea that hi had committed suicide for any reason 01 financial or &her troubles. . From a very reliabtMsaaros it waaaaoer talned that lately JflT&tih syactfiixd i gnat deal, especially lit the Ksely motor, ii whtoh'he placed grtat confidence. Durlnj the past few year* it Is said he lost heavily How far he became involved no one can say. The police are making every effort to fim the body or the man. _|£ •D"" me Kansas ttepnbllcane* 3 ItowatA, Ka., Ifjtlt to.-The Htoubtfe-n state convention aaembM again ySMMay. Judge J. C. Strong, chairman of the com mittee on resolutions, presented a report with the remark that l&Was the unanimous action of the committee and had been ai rived at through harmony and in the spin of concession. The platform declares thA the Republicans of Kansas rejoice over thi victories qr principles that gldriileC their career since they first met at dsawa tomic, twenty-five years ago; indorse* thi nomination of James U. Blaiae and John A Logan, the first alt! sen of the Republic am the brave and gallant Union soldier, ant pledgee to them, tbe~laspss* *aJMf eve given in that state; approves the.nations • RepaMlcanptaSfiina said heneet stifsriissaim of the amendment, tha' the full effeota'&Tprohibition maybe realised i-rsasrasnJ SLS its cumbersome features and to unequivocall| vsst in tha board ot railroad commissioner! all necessdry power to accomplish the gOoc sought to be obtained, Md to compel oam pliance with reasonable orders of the board Admiral Nlcholls also wired Commodore SehWy the heartiest congratulations to himself, officers and men, and directed him to use his discretion about the care and transportation of the bodies. WaskixgtiW, Jul£ 18.—There is great re- Joijn* liere over the ne^»S'telegraphod from St Jonrix, IT. FT, of the rescue of Lieut, freely and five others of the Greely relief party by the expedition sent to their a'Mdsfeanoe under the direction of Lieut-Comluander Winftfeld Beott Schley. The loss of uineteen members of the gallant party naturally' "excites the deepest sympathy for the relatives and frionds of t)ie unfortunates and commisoration ■for their sad fate, but Whan the terrible privations to which all were subjected are yUplflsrtd •grsat surprise is expressed that lnvWtuWD»a dire. The recitals made byCopimander Schley and Lieut. Greely are of thrilling interest, telling as they do, in graphic language, of the awful experience of the intrepid men during their sojourn in Itie pQifti' regions. The arrival of OommaartSr Schley's expedition is shown ta have been tadeed timely, aradrfayef twenty-four liours would have been fatal to all, and not not a single member of the Greely party jTMflaf!#* ftrrtred to tell the story of sof%nhg, fji vatlon and death. "Wttr ftVdftlons ate regarded, from a Kvcntlfie btaiidpoinf, as the most surc.'ssful that hev%ever b«a male- into the frozen i dgions of the north, and as all of tho reoords of observations bearing on the re- D'arches of Lieut Greely have boon preterved the importance of hs Intelligent efforts cannot be overestimated. For the ftrst time In a period of three centuries America can claim the proud distinction of liay&g penetrate I to a point nearer to the «ta any ottisr country on the globe. C B|H. Hcbler'n lleport. The foTlowlnq; telegram watf received yes terday ir.oMMng from Commander 8chley: St. JonNS, N. F., July 17—9 a. m. ToWm. E. Chandler, Secretary of the Navy, t-'ergt. Francis Long, private. Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barracks, Neb.; bora in Wurtenburg, Germany. ROUTE TRAVERSED RY GREELY. (CfSRpot wh«» Qreety wsi temA.fg'" Jacob Bender, private, Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barracks, Neb.; born in Frlodberg, Germany. The liOst, entire winter, rendering crossing imjioaJMB. (•umo failed, despite bunting frag early in February. Befaro the sun returned only 500 pounds of meet had been obtained. This, together with minute sbrlrapi;'' sea weed, sassafras, rock-liekers and seal skins, wen* resorted to for food with results as •ho*» by the number of survivors. Detroit, Jplj 18.—Edwartl Israel, the astronomer of tho Greely party, mm a native oiDKalamasoo, iji this state, where.his friends reside. Hi« mother-is jArostrated witb grief over the (ad whleM was communicated to her yeefcayday aftarftoou. His family are among the wealthy and promi nent people of that town. His age was 26. At Israel's Basse. William H. Cross, sergeant, general service, Washington, D. CS; married; barn at Washington, D. C. ,./g William A. Ellis, private Company C, seoond cavalry; enlisted at New York city; born in Seneca Falls, N. Y. The Lsil Reicnlar Peed. Hampden 8. Gardiner, sergeant, signal •corps, Philadelphia, Pa.; unmarried; Jxirn at Philadelphia, Pa. The last regular food was issued on May 14. As there wer# only 150 pounds of meat left by Oarllngton, I was compelled to send, In November, four men to obtain 144 podndi of English meat at Cape Isabella. During the trip ElHson froze solid both harnjs and feet, and lost them alU surviving, however, through our terrible wirtter and spring until July 18. named new land Arthur Land. Lieut Locliwood followed—going and returning— an ice oape ycnrijpular facet . It fellow* that Orinnei: Land'* tatsrior Is ice-eapped with a belt ol country some sixty miles vMt between the northern and southern-ice capes. In March, 188#, Sergt Long, while hunttog, looked from the northwest side of Hount i^o Hayes sound, seeing on the northern thryo capes westward of the furthest seuii by Nares In 1870. The sound extends some twenty miles further wost than shown by the English chart, but is possibly shut in by land which sjwwed' up across Its "western end. Tho two years' station dutlas «b*et'rations. all operations, and the rotroat to Capa| Sabine wero accomplished without loss of life, disease, or even sever.) frosc bites. No scurvy was experienced at Conger and bat one death from it accoiTtM last winter. Gkkkly, Comoiauiiinj. miles distant, ai - » . » Notified of his Ns'l Bulk, Washington, July 18.—A telegram wm received by General Lockwood, father of Lieut Lotkwood, of the Greely party, from Lieut. Greely, lu which the latter conveyed the news of Lieut Loekwood'i death, and stated that he had lmmortaHwd hftnseif by loading a party to the furthest point north that has over been reached. Charles B. Henry, private, Company IS, Fifth oavalry; enlisted at Cincinnati, O.; bom in Hanovar, Germany. Carton's Patent G&Mght Hot 2 Airfurnkfe ■ •' *■ ABH v IMP m v:j |H^^Hp 01) Ititw lO THK ' Iston and^V^ 'jarll Edward Israel, sergeant, Signal corps; Kalamazoo, Mich.; unmarried; bofn at Kalamazoo, MicW Tb« survivor* owe their liva» to the indomitable energy of CafDt. Schley and Lieut Bmory, who, preceded by three, and aocotftpaniou by five whalers, forced their vessels from Upernavik through Melville bay into north water at Capa York vjith tt» foremost whaler*. They gained a ynrd whenever possible and alwayt held it Smiths round was crossed, and \ Winfield 8. Jewell, sergeant, Signal oorps; unmarried; born at Lisbon, N. H. Frederick F. Kislin#bury, second lieutenant, acting sign 4.1 officer, of Rochester, N. Y.; was a native of England; entered the service as a private ib thu Fifty-fourth Now York State militia in 1864 as a six months' man; be re-entered the service again in 188*; was promoted to sergeant In 1873, and created second lieutenant in Octobor, 1873; he was a widower and had two children. PROGRESS OF THE CHOLERA. Wo Perceptible Chance ®»r Ihe BoMor FarIs, July m-r-Thero was no marked increase in the nthuW of cholera oaafa'at Marseille* and Toulon yesterrtay. - The death list is about tlfc same as Wednesday. The "Weather liss teen favorable to chetetn patients, but the dlsoasa is atilt reported spreading In the districts adjacent to U10 untoi twi itu cities aljoro named. The death list records sixty-nb.a deaths at Marseilles aud forty-ei jht at Toulon. The two cities are cknuly fpiaraatin&l, and every precaution it exerted aguiust a spread of the fatal malady. ot Maroolltoo or Teale*. during one of the moat violent gales I hare ev«y- known.. The boats were handled only at bimiindht rhla of swauiplng. Four of us were then nnattie to walk, ai*4 'could not have survived exceeding twenty-four hours. Every oars and attention vtto given us. I have saved and bring back copies of meteorological, tidal, astronomical, magnetic, pendulum and other jbaervatioM. Alio pendulum, Tale and nandard thermometers, forty-eight photographic negative*, a collection of plmts and photographic pririts. Esquimaux relics and other things -were necessarily abandoned. The Thetis remains here five days probably. ' " Tho Party Rescued, David Linn, sergeant, Company C, Second cavalry, enlisted at Philadelphia, Fa.; 'bora at Philadelphia, Pa. James B. Lockwood, first lieutenant, Twenty-third infantry, acting signal officer, Washington, D. C.; unmarried; is a son of (Jen. Lockwood (retired), U. 8. A. Nicholas Nalor, corporal, Company H. Second cavalry, enlisted at Cinjinnati, O.; unmarried; bcru nt Luxembourg, tfermanj'. A VALLEY DISCOVERED. Vegetation Abuuisnl and the Ci£ oil) Dr. Octave Pavy, medical officer; married; wife's address, Maryville, Nodaway county. Mo. mMe IHt Tory tstsre. St. Johns, N. P., JuftlS.—Lieut Greely assured the United Primcorrespondent thai he had clear proof that an open .polar sea existedljotflSf #Wpa*D4driftlng Into it bul was blown back. He lays lie agrees in tbil with JJordenskJold. A valley running from near Lady Franklin bay to the W, iters ocean, about sixty wide was discovered. It is bounded nofth and vDoth by continwmii glVciers and has no apparent hreaka Id the valley vegetation was abundant and the climate much milder than usual. This he styles "The Men *T (He Ntnk.li . 11m French Academy of medicine has decided, by * mftiifcuou* vote, that a land quarnntii a in France is impracticable. It also declares that the disinfection orocess is inefficacious and illusory, and urges the establishment of cholera hospitals at all large railroad stations. ; Pk lemty. We have the most fomphilfelilfbf ftrruaces in oar mirei'A&ftg tlkat hits •tor been shown in atiy bonrt M tfee State, comprising oyer twenty* liifef and dtyles. HavmgmadoatSrttiracf with the Carton "the getoOTa? tgency t»f 4o\ ftntrtyfya&ia and New Jtaafcy ♦C ore prepared to give sack price* 4i the goods that wilt dfe aWsiy with**- onteide competition. D Thetis, lioar and Lock Gary arrived here t D day from AV««t Greenland, all well. Bop- -ft AlertrCmo hundred and fifty Dr. Pavy's career was a remartabl idles norUt during a gale. At # P. *. June He was born in Havre, France, anc "D Ave miles ()g Cape EpIlVh Bmith'i there. He accompanied a Freni. »ound, edition to Lady Franklin Bay far «ur7ivor» di™worl»iwfottl!r pfrrJin^tbis 5, at Oodfcuven. •fcwrampotation (olMd the OtJbIj,«ipe*iMo^LtDfa^^U which becomstapetattrs. Seventeen A coast of Greened, where he hftt of IhB tw«nl»-lire (»»■»■• (Miniiuiiiiig this ex. - named after the unsuccessful Howgate pedition perished by starvation at the oedttirm. --- where f9»Cd. One Was drowned while a»al- l)avii 0.' Ral8ton, seiwnt, signal food. Twelve bodies ot $he umnai-jried; bo*n afSloomfield, Ohto. Mad were rescued and are now on VDard G*frge Klce, sergeant, Signal Thetii and . Oryfe Esquimau, TurneVik. Washington, D. C.; uumarried; bor one. edu- ijRKMf.Tj f^nronifnl'ng it ext retail.He THE STORY OF THE RESCUE Aa Told If Cupl. Ash, Iee-Pllot ot Albany, July 18«-The feeling is about AM usual. Anti-CIevelandltse are boisterous. Manning will say nothing as to the probable action of the State Democratic committee in regard to PurceU*s successor. Of cenrae,' a strong Cleveland man will be selected. There is some talk about the defection of Uteliicilcolarsd element, but it amounts to nothing. The labor element win probably have somC tlilug to say to-night, when some fOO pt the workmen at th» Capital will be laid Aft Their retirement is doe to tha lack Of money for continuing the work. The governor has nothing to do with it, but scone snmhaaris may want to talk and they may talk interestingly. Political Oosalp from Altaaf. ibune Sr. Johns, N, F., July 18.—Capt Ash, icepilot of tbe Bear, fifes the following interesting details of the rescue: "(Sail ml rrofn St. Johns May 4, reached TJpernavIk on the SOtii, Duck Island on June 6, Cape Yot-lt on June 18 and Payer harbor on June 23. At 7 p. M. we had both ships fast to a hoary floe in Payer harbor and some of the officers and men left the ships for the shore in different directions. An officer from the Thetis found the record on Breroort island, statine that Greely and party were all w?n and that they left Fort Conger on Aug. 0 and landed at Balrd iqlet ,pn Sept. 29, after driving about On the ioe nearly three weeks in the vicinity of Cape 8abine. The record also told where to find his winter camp. the Bear. ctty. raedi He An «WM»i4nDWI*t offered by Col. AnJhonj in fatot of a constitutional convention wai -ala»d, —'•« ax- Oreely says that if MO pounds of mea*had been left by Oarttngton his party would have been saved. Littleton Island could not be reacljed in winter, the sound% twenty-live miles wide, being open, and in theQspring the party were Wo weak to go. The survivors are yet very weak, but recovering rap idly. Oreely is weak. Hfe expedition, he says,- would hava been the moat successful on record if food had been left on Cape Sabine, where it should have bean. Ill* ships had been roughly used, as superhuman exertions ware raado to effect a rescue. The party left Fort Conger, August #, in + steam launoh, three boats and a dingey. After their thirty days' float on the ice floo, they decided ' to abandon tho laUnflh and two boats as too heavy to carry. The winter quartersapttsistod of a hut of stones oovered by one boat anCl a sail. At l«dy Franklin Bay, plenty of food hail boon left as it was too heavy to carry, and they expeoted to find plenty at Cape Sabine. They found dele**d, aud (Oaifonn, «a« adopted. Ai&a&U -Horkii *ai»ipME Cwn|i»attid bj acclamation, and W. A. Johnston for a**o elate justice. co*»; Jail : We have a first class Wrought »6n furnace that will heat fotur roonsaor a good sized store that we art sell #or.#60.00, sad so on upwards According to eiae of - boHdipg to foe bealW.--,' CoL John A. Martin, editer of The Atchi Mo Champion, and late secretary ot the Ke publican datiobal committee, wagsxikiinatec for goT«iwi by a rising Vote and received three cheers, for which he returned thanki in a most graceful manner. * T~ I I. I —l wa* turlcxj at Dkco in accordance with tli deriro of the inspector of Western Green land. " Slve bodies hurled In th» ioefort near tha oaaDp were nropt away to sea Uy_wioda. and currents before my arrival and gould not .be »acovered. ..anmgtau, Sidney, Nov & Scotia. corps, *n at R. H. Schneider, private, Company A. Bi-st artillery; enlisted at Port Columbus, . H»w York har twr; bom in Chemnitz, Germany.*ss es a Private tank, Nwr^ToSTMy m*Tn»^3Si»ore4ni Ohio and Banker* and Merchant*' telegrapt companies and the Postal Telegraph ant Cable company,'have united. Hereafter tlu three oompanies will pool their earning* auc expenses tor a period «t twmtpk* jJmu* mittee composed of the executive committed of-the several oompanies. Mr. D. H. Bates, president of the Baltimore and Ohio ooro paHft Vtl ykm ex*»t**e manager. The nnfch-OV-the three eempoBlss bringf under one control over 16,000 miles of poli lines and l!j%0e0 miles of- wire lines. Tlu Bennett-Mackey cable will form a part Of thi system. • ,i,S\ Abandoning the Boats. "William Whistler, private, Company F, Ninth infantry; enlisted at Omaha barrucks, Nab.; born in, Carroll county, fed ; father's address is Mouon, Ind. A Bad Omen. ITOIAKAPOUB, July 18.— A. 47, C. 'ft Harrison's private bank, one of the oldest In the SBSr SBBBHt a run. Harrison refused to pay cent, although be paid he wouidHave plenty of money to-day. The rclevtnf house iwtsatad dWfcks drtSwn OB Harrison's bank. His conduct caused much severe comment, aa he was re-ceiret* of the Indiana Soaking company, now defunot, and is supposed to have a large fund belonging to that institution on deposit jiD his ow« bank. His areditors threaten to ask for a receiver unless their claims an adjusted without delay. , •noo Cull «id so# the send for catalogue circulawmd pricflptio "Greely abandoned *11 Ills bjflts and was adrift for thirty days on* ice floe In Smith's Hound. His permanent camp «■ established October 21, 1883, at the point wtarn. be was found. During the nine months his party lived upon a scant allowance of rood brought from Fort Conger, "that had been cached at Payer Harbor and Cape Isabella by Sir George Narcs in 1875, but found much damaged by lapse of time, and that cached by Beebe at Cape fiqbine in ISA, aud a small am»6t saved from tlie wreck of the Proteus in 188S and landed by Lieuts. Garlington and Cowell on the baach where Groely's party had been found camped. When these provisions were consumed the party was forced to live upon boiled sealakin atrips from their sealskin clothing, lich ens an£ shrimps preserved in good weather, when they were strong enough to make the exertion. As 1,000 shrimps were re({ciasd te All a gallon measure the labor was too exhausting to depend upon thorn to sustain life entirely. Our-«team launch being out and ready we wore immediately sent away for the camp, wb id was about three miles northwest Of Cape Sabine. The Thetis blew her whistle recall some of her men and thoy heard it at the camp, and as we nsftred It we saw one man make his appearance where he oould loojc down til* cape, lie saw the boat and came down to where we wen going to land. Seeing but one man and the way he staggered In the snow, we thought it a bad omen. On Jumping ashore the first question waa how they all were. His answer wast . J i i Frederick Eskimo, taken on as guide. Jeus Edwards Eskimo, taken on as guide. W« can save money fory«u if ypu will allow us to fignro withyoiu ilj In addition to tho men mentioned above, fans Edward, an Esquimaux, and Frederick Thorley Christiansen, a half breed, both- of whom Were engaged at Proven, accompanied the expedition. Hie colony consisted of twenty-five men, all told. PSTTSTON STOVE £k). U'RKASDKY DKPA»TMKNT. OMlOB.i DF , COiUTROLUCtt OP THE CURBCHOT. • .. Washington June 10th,1884. WlwiM by CstlslSo«ory»eld«acn» tirmmf to the undersigned it has been made to appear that the First National. *ACnt am nmbi fal the Borough or Pittstow. In Che Cohmtt or Lnuuit end jtate oT PunnsylWH. Bu compiled with ail tUe bro»Mon» of the act of CnMrm to enable National Banking Associations to extend their OUOH 5.' No. 4T« ' Comptroller of CUnrMHiy. ADDITIONAL PARTICULARS. Only turn Barrels of Bread Left in the cpehfe mado by the Proteus arew after her loss', a damaged -cache left by the British and a few rations left by the relief expedition of 1683. In autiunn a forlorn hope started to reach some dried meat cached by Kares, but Ellison's feat trad bands W«T? jfrosen and they wero forced to abandon tho meat and return. In the spring a tent was ereeteft, but tho party were too weak to fasten it strongly. " - The Hardships and Sufferings Kn- Nine IIolira a Oafs I.ahar. IT** York. July 1R—Walking Delegate Donnelly, of the brkMayer's uuion, yesterday visited the members of the craft engaged upon various buildings m course of construction iu the upper portion of tile city, and {OTAJBlly notified the'men that unless the demand for a i d 1 notion of the hours of labor was acceded to before then they should nut resume work ou Holiday. ~ A majority of the contractors in tb« «ity are determined torajlfittho dnnaiii, but »|. th«rg aro less than 500 uou-unlon bricklayers in the city, tlio sontractors aro at the mercy of the men and will probably be compelled to surrender. dared by the Party. "There Are NeTen of Us Left,'* Sad nows and a sudden reverse to our spirits of a quarter of an hour ago. But it was no time to reflect. We must try to save the living. I jumped into , the launch and at once passed some food that we were pre pared with, and we at once started for the camp. It was blowing a gala The camp tent was blown down except a stout prop under one end. The poor fellows hod not strength enough to put it up. Washington, July- 18.—Gen. Basen haa received two telegrams from Lieut Groely, containing additional particular* of the hardships and sufferings endured by the party since last August, as well as a summary of the results of their explorations luring the past two years. The first of these dispatches reads as follows: Fresh Plots Against the Csar. Bt. Pbtkiisbdro, July 18.—The existent* of a plot to blow up the palace at Warsaw during the e»arV stay thy sin has been discovered. - A justice of the peanejuuned Bar boTstii, who is suspected of complicity in the cdhspiracy, has boon Arrested. A quantity of arms and-dyuamite, which were to harC baeu used,by the plotters in carrying oul their design, were found. In April ftice and Fredericks volunteered fo find the abandoned meat. Rica • (All Groely's records and all instruments brought by him from Fort Conger are recovered Ca*d are on board. ''I had a terrible time with my ships," sayB the commander ha his report. "From Hare Island to Smith's Sound I had a cotistrmt and furious ' St. Johws, N. F., July 17, 1881—Chief signal office, Washington; Bralnard, Bierborbick, Connell, Fredericks, Long, myself, 14gle survivors, arrived to-day, having been rescued at the point of death Am starvation by relief ships Thetis and .Bear, on June K3, in CaSap Clay, northwest o*f Capo Babino. All are now in good health, but weak. Wad on tba Way, and Fredericks returned in a terribly exhausted conditiolf Two men, Locfcwood and Jewell, died in camp while Fredericks was away, and on the 1st of June Kiugsbury died. After HtSa of moment, except constantly reourring deaths, ocotfrred, utlLil June 3J, when the faint -sound of a straw Whistle Mi hoard by Loos, He and Brainard tot vut of thuir fleoping bats and went to a point, but seeing nothing they started to return. Long was unable to do so, nnd iat down In tieslde soinB-r«l|Ci. fj*Q he saw a steam launch, to which he snouted, aul In a little wVJe the rescuers UndaL SIX Men Lay Starring and unable to help thepiaelvea, Pointing to one, they said he was dying; bit he rallbd and Is doing well now. We cut a hole in the canvas to give us room, and commenced to feed them, serving them all round gradually and uot letting them have as much as they wanted. Tho laancfa wei sent off to the Bear, which was coming. The Thetis vrvs also closa \ty, Capt. Emory, Dr. Ames in 1 a crew came en share; a Ure waa npule, the swCCeaprs were attended to by lDr. Auk* and given plasty of warm milk. Hoi k 6f them were soon able to stand and stagger about Mean tibia Commander Schley aud officers had arrived and bjgan to superintend the removal to fhe ships. Paris, July 18.—A dlspat&k Ttota Pondicherry, capital of the French possessions in India, states that a rocket exploded during the c-.eui-ati -n of the fell of the Bastile. The building'fn' which the rocket exploded ooutaiiH d a large quantity of arswork, and a fearful explosion resulted, killing fifteen n««P Killed—iltsnF lajsiri. Hm Diamond Field. J K. J AMCK. •J. o it tat x;o si*o , practical . . struggle with ice ill impassable floes. Solid batTlefs of ice were overcome by watchfulnets and patiauoo alouo. No opportunity to New Yohk, July 16.—The following is the result of the hasehall games played yester- r-r-f . - « Ion Driven Into Kane Inlet. Abondoned steamer launch on Sept. 18, sloven miles northeast of Cocked Hat Islsnd. When on the point of landing were-three times dtiveu by .south sLornie into JCaiie tuiet Finally landed Sopt Dp in*' Baii'4 inlet. Learthg by scopting'parties of tbirPrQ. tous disaster and that no provisions had beep left for us from Isabella to Cape Sabine, we moved Mid established winter quartern at Camp Clay, half-way betwoou Cape Sabint and Cocked Hat Islands, An inventor} AdVaiiO- a mile escaped Bie, and fog* st*v At Louisville, 1; »a»l, a At Cleveland—Cleveland, 3; Detroit, 8. At Baltimore—Baltimore, 12; Brooklyn, a * At Piitabur^—Alleghany, 8; Washing ion, a WAT6HMAKER ANHiMNMI; hundrod miles the ships were forced to ram tfreir wajr from lead to lead through ice vary' m \ w tmckitass from thive "to foot, aud when rafted much greater. The'Whaling Fleet. fix un, floor Mm wrtwfcrttfb. Londox, July 18. —The Standard says that the lamentable issue of the Qreely expedition requires do coiauent. The bare facta are sod enough, without any moral being added. The last great effort to tad the farty has bean nobly rewarded. .1* Ytattto lo Tho ISietis and Bear reached Cap« Vwfc CB June 18, after a passago ot twenty-one days ip Melville Bay with the two advance ships of the Duud.f At blank OreolyU Home. At Boston—Providence, TJ; Ifc*ton, 4. At Buffalo—Buffalo, 1; Chicago, i At New York-JMropolitow, 3; Athbtt* & r-rD. ~r~ AtVi .. '.i' *... 1;.:i: ON WATBB HTJKJEianL'. .03 U0hj;i!r. VjJtJtlM !JCy)d' OfftcT lEWBCRYPORT, Mass., July la—The n;wa Of the finding of tfae Oreely party C was reoelTed at thu homo of tho famoiu commander Stretchcrs bad been brought and the nD*4 1; National*, 9. - ljDv» Repainog of Fin* Watoheaa Specially. |
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