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« -* J % X Ssm PITTSTONs PA.. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1884 I TWO CENTS. j IVu Csti'a Par Weak. "V L U VICTORIA ACTEvS1 and mortification, Mrs. away with u heartless li roast go and we ray ' bal her husband. She then walk«d C and. left the house. Leaving her father's hoasa Mrs. St heUinj hastened to tfc» iid*«f ker husband, who kissed hor In the presence of the langhing, storing crowd. Together they returned .to Werner's lager beer saloon, followed by the crowd. Here they took dinner and remained among the husband's former acquaintances until 4 o'clock in the afternooA, when she returned to the Morosini house. The interview, like the one in the morning, was brief and unsympathetic, and Mrs. Bchelltng soon hurried back to the saloon. turned A CANDIDATE ON WHEELS. SMART LITTLE JENNIE. THE CHOLERA IN ITALY Tariif or Ko Tt.iifT, ''Ikat'a the Quta- x'HE ACT OF A FIEND. Tb« Nominee or the Woatn't Bight* An Awfnl State of Things in Italy. tiou f KlasMoroaWi Returns to the Anc«» tral Hoof Troo. "*"""" Mar Verjr Strarice Gandoet—She Wll not Dcaert bar Bmbaud — Mr. (Jig to stair* Party—Her Trleyele. She Fools her Fond Pap* im a Very Effects on the People. Ii is the question rpon which the coming Presidential, campaign \» ill be-(ought. It la the qiif.-tion which lias riifciued the leading minds of liotli yrmi political parties for the pad tifly yeHTi*, C \c«t* » hen overahadpaed for a liioe by ll u groat question of "Shall the (Tn on tw Preset vtd ?" We mad to post ourrtlvea, fii.d lie I n pari d to vote understandgrtai question. White there iiu of opinion, and white '! ere if irfricji t!i«' tr.ay t« mid, both in later of and against ireo trade, fine il,#£ in certain, md tlial if, Jin cannot liud a medicine that «fili euro (Vuiihs, Colds, Asilima, or any diatliis lltront or t'luni to 0. C. 0., (funis' (JoujrlnCompoutiii) Tiy it. A Sane Wife Four Years ia an In- Wabhwoton, Sept 1&— It la bat natural that the country should wiah to know mora of the presidential candidate, Behia Lock-1 wood, the nominoe at the Woman1* Right? p-irty. The candidate's life, mitten by an Impartial hand, aa the only means for completely supplying this demand, will doubtless appear at an early day. la Washington uo book of the kind is needed. She is to be seen almost any day. threading; the strwsts mounted on a tricycle, head erect, and •feet working with energy. She was the first of her sex to mount the tricycle and dem m•itrate tha right of woman to ride whatever will b-st suit her purpose. As a lawyer sin rides wherever her business calls, and »lie also rides for the pleasure it affords, as others do in tlieir carriages. She is nof. a devotee of fashion in any respect. Shs sots her own fashions. With head in air and face oarnostiy, not to say fiercely, pointing in the direction her industrious feet are propeling her, site whirls along, every turn of tho crank fiipflapping her skirt with unceasing regularity. SUe stops at nothing, i#d tUrn* asi le only to pass slower goers or piok a stretch of clear track whereon to display a pace which might moke Maud S. envious. Able Ksnntr. London, Sept. 15.—The attack of tho cholera o.i Italy is nonLftdmitted to be fur severer than that on France. Almost incredible stories are told of the rapidity with which it has carried off its viotims. In si n e families four or, five member* have bo: n swept off together. Ah old Wotnaa and a boy, falling together in the streets if Naples, were both taken up dead; a lady seized with vomiting while at jnas3 died C..p reaching horn*. In fact, death in inany cases has occurred within ten minu'.vts »| iiiy first, sy m Many porsons have CJ.u rt'it'iin tlireo or four hours, and tho fatal ens ■ lnvu rarely lasted more .than five ir six i The plaguci has led, according to all accounts, to n revival of religious feeling so strong that the archbishop hiin urt has I in to 11 lsi ■ m rage religions proc status, as touting to increase diseas-. The gam bliaD fjilrit has also receive,1 a great im- I*»tus. Thus "one day ii ty-two mothers rudiud to n school and took away flfcy-one children, null every body played these numbers in the government lottery, and all won. On another day tlio numbers 8, 4 and 29 corresponded to curront events in the stroc'-s, and were played extonsively and all three came out. 'ihe result was a loss oi 2,- 00(5,000 franca by Ihu-govomment. a general debauch by the lucky inhabiiants, aud a violent increase of the cholera. The king is the reigning hero o Europe, an.l George Augustus 8a!a, the celebrated journalist, gives as one of his many virtuos that he wcai-s iu public in Rome a low-crownod hat. sane _ Her Haaband Places Mer There Becanae He la In Love With an Unprincipled Widow—Rea- Readied by a miracle. He Objeeta to Her Hean—A Trip Taken to the Catakllle Proves to be a Honeymoon In maanlae. A Father's Dligusk Moroalnl Oolne to Hmila. BIr»; Moroalnl Djtlni. RuTHSRfOBD, N. /., Bept. 18.—The gossips hero are in their glory and are tearing to pieces the sweetest morsels of a scandal, such as has never before been thought of in this place. The parties concerned, George T. Holmes and Miss Jennie Vreeland, are Lioth highly connected and move in the highest social circles. The lady's father, Mr. Jacob H. Vreeland, holds a high and trusted position in the Brie Railroad company. When ho heard of the affair he turned livid with rage and asked whore Holmes was. Holmes' father throattned to whip tho young man. For some time Holmes has been paying court to Miss Vreeland against the will of the young lady's father. Rambles about t.l«o town, rows on tiie river, trips to Coney Island and other summer resorts were taken. Yon wltt, N, Y., Sept )6.*-The elima* fa the yesterday, as nas expected, tut it was not such a conclusion as m st people eitber anticipated 01 believed possible. At 5:22 o'clock yesterday morning tlie Montreal express, which reachei the Qraud Central depot in Now York at ( steamed into Yonkers, and, to the intcnw amazement of the fe « stragglats there pro» cnt, there stepped from til.) cars a party o( lour, who hart got on at Troy. Miss Victoria Xprosini, clad in a dark suit with a black hat, from which waved a white plume, and with liar eyes red from weeping, was the first to step to the ground with tht assistanco of Ernest .8 shelling, her lmsbaad. Miss Moroajit smiled at Policeman Dinsmore, who' t.as near by. Following ths eloping paipecme Mr. Stolpe and'til' young lady who lib* figured so promincntlD in th« little coupo episodes outeide of the Stolpe & Jlulskanipa's beer aalocm, Walker street and West Broadway. As they entered the Station the party stopped for a moment to oonverse, and then Miss Morosini asked for a telephone. Montreal, Sept. 15.—Four years in an insane asylum is tha penalty Mrs. Pete# Lyman has suffered for being the wife of a cruel man. The case is now being investigated by the superior court, and from all the evidence it is proved that slid has been rational all these _years. Peter Lyman is the guardian of the Royal Canadian insur. ance company, and enjoy3 life on a good salary, bains admmittod to the best society in Montroal. About eight years ago lie married a beautiful and well-educated young lady. Sho was an orphau and inherited large estates from her fattier, hi his day t.Ue wealthiest I'UnkQr in the city. She loved f»ud trusted Lyman completely, an I arter inarri ajje she gave lii:n the bulk of her income.When sho had left,; Dr. Horace B. Pike, tho family-physician, said he could not understand the change that had come over Miss Mcrosini. Sho was always an affectionate girl, but at the interviews-displayed the utmost heartlessness. She neither kissed her father, mother or brothers and displayed no emotion. The doctor added that Mr. Morogini was so heartbrok n that he exclaimed: "She is no longer n daughter of mine." During the evening a personal friend of Mr. Morisini called upon his daughter fend triad to induce hsr to return homo if she would leave her husband. This sha firmly declined to do. M«. Morisini, it is said, is going to Russia. On Friday he made a new will, but its tenor is not known. Mrs. Morosini is said to be beyond recovery. Mr. and lira Rebelling will remain in Yonkers untfl Vict ria's trial comes off. Ii. K. ( UUTIH, I'iiiji lihuitou, N. T. Mr. Vreeland viewed these manifestations with disapproval. When Holmes called at the Vroelund homestead Mr. Vre»land would sigh as ho remembered that his last winters boots were worn out. However, Holmes was always received by the family very pleasantly, thoy looking upon him as a friond only. Finally when it became apl*rcnt that Holmes called in the role of a beau. Mr. Vreeland, not appreciating the attentions, firmly, yet in a gentle manly manner, told hiin that his attentions to his daughter must cease. The meetings between Miss Vreeland and Holmes were not as public as before Mr. Vree?und's edict went lorth. On August 8 Miss Vreeland pro-, posed a visit to tha Catskills to her father, saying she wished to go with a younj lady friend whoso father is a prominent merchant hero. Mr. Vreeland ga.v« his consent, and on te.e 19th he took her to the boat. As Mr. Vreeland bid his daughter "Good-hy" he did not notice the pale and anzions face of a young man peering anxiously from behind a pile of goods as if afraid of meeting some one. The young man was Holmr* ISIt Nonrly five years ago, when, as it was supposed the Lyman's wara Jiving happily together, nil extremely pretty but unprincipled widow moved into the neighbor•jpDod and iro»i that day the wife's uuliappiness data. Sbo daily saw bar husband's love slipping from lier and was not long iu finding . i it the widow had stolon his love. News ciV..;i cam) to the wife's ears that he husban t lustetd of being at his office, r.s shj believed, was riding or walU'ing with thj lieartlo.widow. She stood this as lou-- as possi ilc, but cno day, when tno thiol' who had stol i lifDr h'Ct irjasuiv. liinjlie l mocking ■ ... s.i." fould stand it no longer. FRAUDS IN JUSTICE. A Bart showing lHade bjr the Attor- ■toy General'* Report. Washington, Sept. 15.—It is said thereport of Attorney-General Brewster to the president next December will contain some interesting reading. He will show by the rejnirt of his special inspectors, who have been kept busy all summer, that hardly an official connected with the administration of justice in the south and th;j territories will escapo severe arraignment for oxtr»viv»ance, extortion and fraud. When these inspectors come back to Washington they t'il good stories of how unpopular they are in the districts visited. On their appearance in town they are made to feel that they are regarded as spies and informers, men engaged in hounding respectable men with petty persecutions. The local papers are used to make them miserable, and all kinds of traps • re set to catch them, if possible, in sosie indiscretion, such as d.'-iuking, gam- I li.Vr, and kindred dissipations. If a slip Is mode, dozens of affidavits are at once for w ni'dod, setting forth the moral obliquities of the inspector, in order that the force of liis rsport may ho broken. In one or two cases these tactics have Scared off inspectors, bivt as a gmeral thing the agents of Attorney-General Brewster have proved to be very shrewd follows, and their summer's work will go far to show that the department of jastica is earnestly in favor of a nliolesome reform. QEN. BUTLER'# RETURN. "There's one in the bagpoge-room," answered Policeman Dinsmcro, and after pointing it out to the bridegroom he stood respectfully in the baokground. Kohelling advanced to the (to him) formidable instrument, but met with little success, and r» quested the policeman to manipulate it tot him. He Receives a Warm Welcome In There have been 8,297 deaths from cholera at Naples alone since tho outbreak of the epidemic. New York, Sept. 13.—Wlion theiUliicago limited express lulled into the Pennsylvania railroad depot in Jersey City, Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, dusty and travel worn, yet frisky as a colt, alighted from a parlor ear, Messrs. Francis D. Moulton, Jxntis F. Fost, William H. Fowler and a delegation from the New York county committee of tlio Toole's Democratic party crowded Around thoir Dad«r while the Sixty-ninth regiment band Now York—A Short Speech. DR. TALMACE ON FOLQER. POWDER He Kulofflzes the Dead Secretary and Alludes to Speculation. "Who dc you wantD and whatr asked -V'"—-""1 talk to Eddy Co rSho nu?t iier hu?tatirl irquarcly and charge.1 him wit-i cruel lioic'ecfc and perjury of marriage vov.s. TheKcene was aUxmg 0110. The wife th:-*ato!i-*l to bring a suit for divorce Niw York, riopt. 15.—In his sermon yesterday Dr. Talmage said;—"Tho oolunms of our custom houses, and of the national and rtate capitols are swathed it) black, and all •he flags are at half-mnst for the dead »9cretary of the treasury. At the age of (Mi he died, without a . spot 011 his reputation, although moat of his lifo wes spent among temptations that hare flung multitudes into th« dust For three years lm held the purs of the nation, but not a half-pjnny stuck to his hands. In his dying hour he asked his attendant to take a check from the left pocket of hia coat and have it cashed immediately, so that he might pay the expenses of his obsequies. After paying his way through life he paid his admission fee at the door of the sepulchre. Square with his fellow-men, square with tho government—square, I hope, with the rules of all governments and of all men Dinsmoi'e. "We want to / Corfu's «MDle«lDd •* for a hack," was Schel- I P' liitfa Iktor. After tho lapse of about tan D' minutes Cornell sent back wonl that a hack fc would be around to the station iu a little to wliilo. Seeing that the party would most likely reBU% Ig ..**■ maX 0,4 poUw' headquarter#, jat the corner of Dock street and Warburtou avenuo, to inform Captain Margin of the arrival of the ruu- w a way a The latter official started at one® ' or the depot and mot the party just as they lad Secome impatient and were on the way a ll's stables to get the desired vehicle lhe nexu «iu ayly played. Then a procession was formed - the Fifth Avonue hotel, ancl while the ;eneral refreshed himself after his Ions Jotarney the baud playJS on Twenty-third .jsfcreet, and .a couple at thousand peoplo gatli • wad outside the hotel and shouted lustily foi he general to come out At about 10:30 the 'ell-known rotuud form and massive head ppearod cn the Twenty-third entrance to the hotel. "You '\o not know with what imotidns of gratitude your coming here has Lied my rniuu," began the people's caudilate, and tlirej hearty cheers let him know lis audience were glud to seo him. "It is an larnest," he continued, "of the deep interest rou havo in the principles of the People'e jnrty. I hare just returned- from a long ourney in the west where 1 find the hearts if the p.'ot)l9 responding entirely to yours, 'vo traveled 6,000 miles through sixteen tates in seventeen days," remarked Gen. Sutler to a repsrter after the last toot of the Daud, "and I've made fifty-two speech's, so i.;u see I've been tolerably busy." Bu: t!uD li.'Xt day never came in freedom for .ho jiiiabie wife. Mr. Lyman paid a basinoss visit to Dr. King's- privato asylum that evening, and in well simulated, heartbroken grief declared that for a long tiin»D hi* wife had shown evidences of losing her mind, and that h r only hope wag in enter ing th3 asylum. The regular certificate. Absolutely Pure. I his powder never rSne». A marvel of purity arenvtb and wholeaomet eaa. More moiodmI hart the ordinary klnns. and cannot be told la -pmpotilion with tie multitude of low t*»t. Dh*t Avljcnt, alum or phoMihate i o*rier* Sold onl* r cam. koyal Baking Powder 06., IK Wal creet. V. Y. The next day, August 11, Miss Vreeland was married to Holme* by the Rev. Mr. Gibbs. She returned home after a few days among the mountains, but said nothing i bout the marriage. When Mr. Vreeland kear.i of it he said not a w\jrd, but the look on ha face spoke volumes. Holmes kept out of the way very prudently until the storm blew over. Then he met Mr. Vreeland. The new father-in-law told Holmes that after the first of October ho murt support Mrs. Holmes. Miss Jennie Vreeland, or Mrs. Ueorge T. Heimes, as she will hereafter sign her named Is the belle of the town. She is a pretty blonde about 90 years of age. She dresses in fashionabls attire and is extremely modest and retiring. Holmes is 21 years old, although a casual observer would take him to be 18 or 19 at the outside. He wears English cut clothing and toothpick shoes. He works in the Erie railroad office and earns $30 a month and : aii'Uid by two physicians, wiih readily- ob tabled, and before mornipg Mrs. Lyman was plaeei among the mad. For awhile ■iftir his wife had thus been spirited away Mr. Lyman seemed to be inconsolable, and was the recipient of much wasted sympathy. But gradually the relations between him and she widow became more apparent, until they openly lived together. 1 he wife iii the isylum was as if she was de;D(L , Cornell's su. -.10 get ... Jiwo. At the suggestion of the captain all . four Agreed to wait in his private room at headquarter* until the hack had been pro- Vured 1 When ono« safe in his custody, Capt. Maagin asked whether it would not be bettar if *ome one should first go to tlia Moro•ini mansion and tell Mr. Morosini of his daughter's arrival, as the unexpected sight of her husband with her might causo the infuriated old banker to lose all control over himself and do something desperate. M«na Moroaini, in rwponae to this, said that she bftd come to see her mother, who she had board was lying at the point of dsath. ' She hid come, aha said, in responsj to a letter from her father,sent her through her fatherln-l*w, which stated that if sho would return home all wonll be Von. She was quite willing, however, that her arrival he first made known before sho visited the house. "What a glorious background this is to the epidemic of fraud that prevails through all this laud. This unroofing of bank*, this disappearance of ad minis Ira tors with the estates they have beon appointed to administer, this disorder in post office accounts makes a pestilence of crime, and leads every christian to ask how it can be sioppod. It is a simoon, a typhoon, a sirocco of crime. I have often thought if it wouldn't be bet ter for men making wills to bequeath all to executors and officials of courts, making the widows and" orphans a committee to sec that tho others get all that don't Lelong to them" When slia was removed to the asylum sho jjrotestod, as sho had often done before, that sho was not insane. "But," said Keeper Thomas, "nearly every person we receive here says the same thins. U we were to take their words for it the outside sane people Would be in more danger than they now are of being locked up unjustly." The Fantliiic Ctrl Pronounced a Fraud. Fort N. Y., Sept. 15.—Dr. Darwin Potter, the leading physician of this town, on August 31 made an examination of lOite .Stsulsey, who is alleged to have eaten nothing since March 10. Dr. Potter's conclusion is that tli&'girl is suffering froiu St. Vitus' dance, "pure, simple and uncomplicated." As to the story of the prolonged fast, he says: "I have no disposition to impugn the motives of the family, or to impcaoli their honesty or veracity, for they aro people of Character and respectability, but as a medical man I unhesitatingly pronounce the ahove statement an unmitigated humbug, a jtup-n lous fraud and a physiological impo» .-.ibility. I am firmly convinced that the lady takes some food and some drink dally) unough, at least, to support life and keep the body in a qtato of nourishment that could not possiblybe attained by the starvation claimed to have been kept up dnring the time mentioned." The Weekly Bsie Ball Summary. The Providence nine still have the lead in the race for the championship of the Leaguei They are so far ahead of the Bostons—eight games—that the letter can never hope to get any nearer to them. The New Yorks have ,Cot into third p!ace, and are now one gome .ihead of the Buffalo*. The Chicagos are fifth, and the Clevelands and Philadelphia.* ai » tied for the sixth place, with the chances At last forluno favored Mrs. Lyman in the shape oi an investigating committee. One gentleman was struck by the intelligence that shone from the l.dy's sorrowful oye and lie asked her a fow questions. She inid given up nil hopes of ever b.-ing released, but she answered the questions in a quiet, ladylike way that carriad great "eight. He asked her story and she related it. He was slightly acquainted with Mr. Lyman and was schocked to hea:- such railroad pass to Rutherford. New York, Sept 15.—All Wall street has been preying for years, but Saturday it was treated to the novelty of a little praying. A neat, trim little Irish woman, passing the sub-treasury steps, looked up and saw the massive "olunin heavily drape 1 in honor gt the late Secretary Folger. She paused tor a moment and then mounted the steps and entered the building. In sight of all the clerks she kpelt down on the marble floor. "What is the matter, my good woman f" asked Doorkeeper Broly. " Please, snr, I would, like to say a short prayer for the good man who has died." Broly stepped back and the woman went on with her prayers. No, she was not insane; she was only a poor woman on whom Judge Folger had several years ago bestowed his benefaction. A Little IJellBlon In Wall Street. A Porter's $8,000,000 Legacf. SPRtNUFitci.D, Mess., Kept 15.— Juan Ramon, a distinguished looking Spauiard of about 47 years, baa for two month* p:ist been elevator man and porter attlie E/atu house. Both he ani his wife showed by their betrinj that they were by birth and breeding above their present position, but they lived very secluded lives and made the acquaintance of nobody. Friday a messenger from the Spanish consul at N. W York appeared with tho following meisaye for Ramon: "The consul at New York has received a cable message from Spain, saying that your uncle isdying. His estate falls to you. Gome to "New York at ouca." Itgaion left for New York by the earliest train'* ThC* estate which he will inherit is said to bt valued at C8,000,003. Ramon was aft educated engineer in Spain. This medicine, combining Iron with pure vegetable -tonics, quickly tint! completely Cures Dyspepsia. Iniifntlm, Wtakiesa, I mpure Blood, Malaria, CMIIe aad Vnm, "It iran unfiiUna remedy for DiseasvoTtbe Kidneys and fJver. It is Invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women, and all who lead sedentary Urea. It does not Injure the teeth, cause headache,or produce constipation—other Iron mrdicinet d». It enriches and purifies the blood, stlmulaM the appetite, al£s the assimilation of food, relievos Heartburn and Belching, and strengthens tlie muscles and nerv&. For Intermittent Fevers. Lassitude, Lack of Energy, Ac., It has no equal. The genuine has above trade mark and Crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no otheraula mIj kjr BROWS CUBICAL CO, SiLTIBOai, fcD Mi a. Stolpe was the one chosen to delivci the Mtn,°uid in ]ess than an Igour sue ha,1 returned with Attiilio, Victoria's brother. TUB latter refused to see his sister while she rum a mod in tha presence o f her husband, and then went in company with Capt. Man gin before Justice Bents. Attiilio here swore out a warrant* in which he accused his sistoi of committing grand larceny in stealing from her sister Julia a diamond (tin valued at $711. With this warrant in his hand Capt. Mangin ventured to the room where the young wife was and arretted her. It wai •bout 8:80 o'clock when she was brought Into the city court rcom. The charge was read to-lMT, and in « calm voioe she replied "Not «t «n •» in favor of the latter. Tho following is tli record to date:— ;t story, but ho dotermineci to investigate the matter, and the result will probably ba. that the wronged woman will get her freedom and her income. Cubs. A Very mysterious Disappearance. Boston. imrraio .'lilvago i lbvui&n4 i,M, Detroit New York.. i* k'pins.. i'roDUeuce.,., H 11 1(1 I* - t h — u 11 •« 84 Tir 12 3 il 8 8 - 0 U 12 lit H Bi Bridgeport, Ct., Sept. 15—A mysterious disappearance, differing frdih ordinary events of this character, is agitating this City. -A new manager for the branch house of the Cheat Atlantic and Pacific tea com pany, named Robert Esler, camo to Ijlridgepoi 1Thursday morning last lie was very t oidiaUy received and made * favorable improsSfftftl upon all with whoir ho came in contact He was well dressed, 8: triable and apparently rejoicing at the prospect of a change irom New York life. He gave orders for 'certain alterations in the establishment on Main street. Board »as engaged on Fairilold avenue and sundry details connected with his stay here perfected lu a rational manner. At 11 o'clock, seemingly overcome with the heat, he left the store ostensibly to visit the newspaper offices for advertising purposes, leaving behind him hi* :oat, cuffs, cane, etc., ru(i wearing a- light black alapaca coat. Not a trpce of him has )Doen seon by any one connected with the store since that tima To a sjber, industrious and exemplary life Esler odds the re speet of a five years' service with his prisjnt employers, and none of the ordinary reasons for sudden disappearance aro applicable i:i his case. Disintegrating the Amalgamated As- sociation. Wheeling, W. Vs., Sept 15,—Belmont lodge, in this city, of the Amalgamated association has surrendered its charter and other lodge property. This is thought to be tho first movements toward a disintegration of the association. This action has been taken on account of the deposition of the nailers to aid the manufacturers in thoir efforts to make steel nails a suecoss. They say that if they become a success the amalgamation is done for. Resolutions were massed severely characterizing the action of the Riverside and Bellaire nailers in refusing to abide by the laws adopted by tha as tociation and embodying their unanimous bcl.ef that it is a waste of time and money (o kojp their in existence any longer, for by so doing they would be aiding unscrupulous and unprincipled men who are working directly against the nailers' Tu- t mm »loU. Then with o wild, unnatural burst of laughter that made everyone prennt start, she rwogniied "Ps*sy" Klymi, • detect!v« who is well known, and crieil oati "Ohl That's Patsy Flynn. .Yon needn't look At me with yot-r big, black eye* -like that. Patsy, I gave you the slip, after all.' The are two games ahead of the Columbus nine in the struggle for the American association pennant. The fight has been a hard one from the beginning between these two elub4 but it now looks cs if the club from New York would carry off ft Burglar Sk»l «■C OsplSra4. Fprino Vau-hy, Kept lS.—Considerable excitement was occasioned here by the capture of one oC a supposed gang of burglar* which has been operating in this oounty for soma weeks pant. He said his nam* was Jones Reagan, having no residence. HD broke into the store and dwelling of. & E. Johnson, s*ChifferH, and carried oft a (Juan tity of salable goods, but was overtaken at Monsey, one mile from here, with some of the goods in his possession. Refusing to surrender he was shot, but even then he escaped. Twenty men were soon on his track, but being seriously wounded he had only boon able to crawl in a bush, where be lay when found. His condition is critical, one ball having lodged in his lung. Carton's Patent GoS-tight Hot Air Furnace. An Annual Barbecue Over hi* Grave. D-— -r Madison, (Ja., Sept. 15.—Iu IS17 Beuj%- min Braswell, a wealthy citiun of this county, died leaving his estate of'$85,000 for the education of the orphans ot tho county. A condition was annexed that a barbecue should be held over his grave every year. The fund has been judiciously invested and faithfully applu*} during tlie last sixty-five years, hundreds ot orphans leaving been educated by it Saturday the annual bar becue provided for wns held, at which 1,10(1 persons sat down. The feature of tlie occasion was the laying of the corner stone of Braswell and Maaonie '' ofi the honors. The lowing is the staudin On her attention being directed to lbs charge against her, Miss Morosini explained that ah* took the pin through mlsUkt, believing it to be lierowtL The court stated that she was entitled to counsel, and asked hi r if she wished to have the examination adjourned, and she said she did not care. It wns then suggested by the court that an adjournment be had, and the case was set down for the 22 1 instant, and the prisoner was released upon her own recognizance. of »he several ell Clubs. Mletdieuy Athletic .. ilajuaMHe Brooklyn '-'In lni.nl... I'olumlr.iw !idlau«,K»ll«. ionUsviiia v Meti-ty oMtan ■St. I.OOl* rolo o....... teres t. By this time the carriage was in waitiiig outside, and the newt of Miss Moroslni's arrival baring flown like wildfire all over the city, a large crowd was in waiting to stare the qucrtette out of countcrance. All four oiuered the vehicle which was rapidly driven down Riverdale avenue to the saloon o! George Werner, cornqr of Ludlow street, where Schilling had previously boarded. They stopped there only a few minutes and then walked up to the paternal mansion KchelUng carrying an umbrella over hi) wife to shield her from the rays of tho sun. At the Morosiui gate Schelling left his wilt (Rul walked to a litUe lane a short distance off, from wliioh place-he watched her footste-s.b 5| Hi G tt 1 'J 1 L:'l s L1 *i f*. ?! lil The Pleasure or Living In Gsrnfuf, Londok, Sept. 15.—The rigors of military conscription in Germany are illustrated by. a recent incident at Ore:*. Two gentlemen of : hat. city, being soldiers of the landwehr i.-. ass, were ordered to report for duty for the autumn uiaueuvres of the German army. The only means of transportation offered llierii was to go in a cattle train with a lot of p easants, who were also land wehr soldiers. The gentlemen refused to take their plaoesin the cuttle trucks and telegraphed a remonstrance to the Emperor William at Berliu. A reply came back through military official channels to the effect that the offenders were to be tried in the usual way for disobedience ijf crdei-s. The two gentlemen were accordingly tried by court martial, and the seutenco has just been approved. The sentence U, for each o:' them, eight yoars' imprisonment at hard labor in the cimmon prison at Greiz. Anxious to Share WelDb*i Fate. ! Paris, Sept. 15. —The Temps' correspondent at Hai-Fong, an open port near th mouth of an arm of the Tonquin river, tele graphs that six companies or marines from the French garrison left there under orders to Join Admiral Courbat, who has started north from Matson with his entire fleet Six other companies have gone from S.iigou.the capital of French Cochin-China, on a like mission. The dispatch of these reinforcemeiits to the front is evidence that the admiral has received Premier Ferry's telegraphic orders to resume war-like operations at once, although China has not declared war. Warlike Operations to be Resumed Buffalo, Sopt IS.—Oliver Wormald, a Buffalo fresco painter, will go to Niagara Falls to perfect arrangements for going over the cataract on a rubber ball fifteen foot in diameter, and Peter S. Grant, a Buffalo business man. Is managing tlie affair. Wormald's ball will be of rubber, three inches thick, is covered with closely braided tail ed rope and filled with compressed «ir. He expects the ball will receive sufficient momentum to hurl it a considerable distance beyond tbe falls arid he will be picked up by one of the ferryboats plying at the Prospect park inclined railway. Virginia ifamen lost New Yoiik, Sept. 15.—The Thirteen club dinuer, which took place at Martinelli's, was presided over with dignity by Chief II t or David McAdani, chief justice of ihe city court of New York. The dinuor, which was tho thirty-third of the club, began promptly a". 8:13 o'clock. While tho menu was being disposed.of the members had very little op]kji tunlty to discuss the club'ssubjact—superstition; but w hen the coffeo and cigars had beau leached they let themselves loose and Spoke freely upon superstition and luck. Short stories were told and u pleasant evening spent, Slid it was far Into 'the night before the luem be re left tho teStive board and sought oiit their homes. Tho scribe red a tow letters from persouj who regretted their inability to be present. He also read a few lines from Gov. Cleveland, thanking the elub for having niudo him one of its members. Tber Are Not Superstitious. to tii k l'jsyrj r, ok At Cincinnati—Cincinnati, 4; Brooklyns, X At Louisville—Louisville, 6; Viginia. 1. At St. Louis—St Louis, 4; Metropolitans, T. Sunday lebull, and Vicinty. Wc b? sv til- tin D1 ,iin]:letc line of *uruac«D in • r cms tbat baa - ver been yl.vv. iC iii i.nv house in the State, oonipiising over twenty, sizes tuj Styles, [laving made a contract with., tb'- Ciirlon Furnace .£!C*; ,f«f, he gpiicnJ C .f Uit so goods for PenuBjlwiiiia ami Ni w Jersey wa ire pre| ■D*. il iD» i wt- f in-li juices in he goo.ih vv ill do any •uteide competition. i».C tien. Sliarpe Not to be Secretary. Washington, Sept. 15.—No sooner had Secretary Folger passed away than the air w as rife with rumors touching the successorship. Busy tongues announced with semiaut'.'or/titative tone that Postmaster General Grcshaiu was to be transferred to the treasury office as chief, while othc.- tongues quite as busy mentioned, and professed lu 'know whereof they spoke, Secretary Chandler as tho coming man. Finally a great loal began to be said about the intention oi tho president to place Gen. Goorge H. Siiarpe, of New York, in charge of the treasury portfolio. Whatever likelihood i here may be of either of the first fcjgo named ■jentleuien being appointed to I he vacancy u is certain that Gen. Hharpe is not to be ihe new secretary of the treasury. The fact is stated upon information which b positive, ■in 1 can admit of |)o doubt whatgge|D. More than a score of persons and reporter: approached him as he stood there, but lit could not be induced to talk upon the subject which most agitated the public. He ■aid that he bad just arrived from Troy and had engaged board at Werner's for himself and wife tor a week. He laughed at theideu Of Mr. Morosini inducing his wife to leave bini. Meanwhile, Miss Morosini walked up the steps leading to her father's house. She gsre the bell a pronounced pull, which at once brought the servants to the entrance. The door swung open for a moment, while the girl glided into the hallway. The sou, Attillio, conveyed his sister into her father'* presence, but his parental blessing mat with a haughty reception. To her sister and brothers she spoke as though she had just stepped down town, and despite the fact that she is naturally impulslvq, and consequently demonstrative girl, she neither kissed bot embraced any laepihnr of tin U-~ ' Indianapolis, bept. 15.—The question of requiring Blaine to answer the interrogatories in relation to his marriage filed in court ten dava ago by the counsel of The Bentinel was argued before Judge Wopda. Mr. Blaine's lawyers objected to the interrogatories because they eould not admitted, t hey claimed, jn common law practice. I'i ccodents and authorities were cited in support of the position of both sides, aad at the conclusion of the arguments Judge Woods refused to make any decision upon the .question, for the reason that he was not prepared so to do, and he did not believe it imperatively necessary. Th« Blaine UM Malt. CONDENSED NEWS. Another miner was arrested at Pittsburg on the general charge of conspiracy. The men are becoming very indignant and excited. . r ■■ Chicago's Water Nuppljr. Chicago, Sept 15.—The water supply problem is again fretting the souls of the city officials. Having drivdli two tunnels under the city and out into the lake, it is discovered that tie two waterworks are already being work.il to their full capacity to meet thj ueeis of the city, and the necessity of still greater facilities in the near futurj is force! upon their intention. To complicate matters, the pres- B.it crib in the lake where the water first mters the tunuel is in a direct line with the mouth of tbo C hknt'o river, and It has long been contended thai its foulness finds its ivay into the -wat tunnols, During the present week several prospeqMjjg expeditions Lavo been out ou tba lake, well to the south jt ilia city, making soundings with a view to suiim now recommendations to the oounrlL Annie Gutsier, a victim of melancholia, In Cincinnati threw hirself from • fourth story window. Her Injuries are supposed to be fatal. France Wauts Another Waterloo, We have a tir&t class wrought inn A ■. 'urinico tlint will lueat four rootoe 'or' t good sized store that we can. Mil -' or £50.60, and so on , npwnrd« ao■ording to size of building to be . 1'aius, Sept. 15. —Paris is given over to blio delirium of English denunciation, from which not even the gravest and wisest soem able to escape. Articles are daily printed over signatures wliich 'ho whole wor.U respects, breathing vengeance and slaughter. Among many otLers u former minister and a viefe-aunuml jDi|blish letter showing how- England can bost bo attacked. and mappiug out campaigns for war. The Eng.ish papers say less now than they said a week ago, but the English people are very angry, and it would take only a slight hflch in tho Egyptian affairs or injury to English interests in China to raisa the biggesi. kind of a war cloud here. The case of Dr. J. D Pitta, fpr the murder of Dr. Thomas Walter, at Norfolk, Va., ia exciting great lute rest. Anumbsrof lady friends of the prisoner are attending the trial. Ida Mewkirk, a talented operatic singer, was married May 24 and now brings suit for divorce. Bh» claims her husband has deserted her. He says he was never married to her. Too near Comedians la Gongreea. "Tlie Ba« Boy" ta Court. Boston, Sept IS.—In the United Btatcs circuit court Judge Nelson granted at) order of notice, returnable on Tuesday, for tbe defendants to show oause iu the suit of George W. Peck, of Milwaukee, and Charles |P. Atkinson, of Boston, against Isaac B. Rich and William B Harris, of tha Howard Athonseum, why they should not be restrained from perforating a piece c&Ued ••That Bad Boy." The bill alleges that the plaintiffs are and exclusive owner* of tho dramatic composition know,* as "Pock's Bad Boy," adapted by Charles F. Pidgin, from the book of that name. Chicauo, Bept. 15.—James H. McVicker, the veterap manager and actor, whote favorite roles on the stage are Flagstaff and The Graved igger in "Hamlet," is mentioned as a candidate for congress from the Pint district. Mr.'McVicker is reputed to have replied to the committee which waited upon him that in his opinion there were already too many comedians in congress. teated Gall and sec the furnaces, or send * 'or catalogue circular and .prices, a* . We cun save money for you if yon I ■vill allow us to figure with vDn. PTTTRTON STOVE CO. nilf. " Yomr mother i* in the next room." aai it. Moreeini. taaliy. "Do yon ear* to ae mt f' " Y«, I will go at odm," was tb realy, and ah* pwaad drttaatly out of tb room. lira. Moroaini had tttan aami-con •clou* for iwo Hays. The daughter atoo alImitly at the bedaide, while her mother luj with closed eyes aud apparently at the dooi of death. It was many minutes before ilu allowed any signs of returning conscious new. Finally she opened bar eyea and gaaed with delight upon her daughter** form. I) waa«Bio«aant before abe qttiutly taurmured, " Vlutorbl, j*o are home," and again aanli book upon her pillow. Once again during the Ufteeu mlnuta* which the daughtei poeaed at her mother's aide was ahe recogalted by her beart-atricken parent Tb« girl heraelf showed little eaaoMoa. Biatei and brother* atood aatde with beating hearts fir the Hr«t Indication on th* runaway') jv ■ - UDat aba had rlp*»W. To tMr grid OsnarThoaaas Taylor, chief of polio* of Louisville, and bis son were find to the ful extent of the law for making an unprovoked assault on Joseph Kslflns, city editoi of The Times. For Sale. Got. Cleveland to Visit Chltscs, Chicago, Sept. 15.—Ths president of the Iroquois olub has been in correspondence with Grover Cleveland, and has the afctirince from that gentleman that he coutem; lates making a journey tj this city shortly, l'ho Iroquois is already arranging to give lim a reception of untoward Western tpleodqr. The Rational Equal Rights party will hold a ratification meeting at Wilson's Station, near Washington, to-morrow, to Ale brat the nomination of Mrs. Belva LookwoovJ- foi the presidency. A goosteady, kind sn.) gentle family or team horse. Weight, from ten hand red to twelve hundred pound.*. VVil he sold cheap. Ia quire of J hn Nash. Bottler, Welch Hill. Charge* of Municipal Corruption, • y. J., Sept, 15,-—Political cir- I'ireles arc much exercised over the publicalion o.m 8t Dry seriously retiscting; on H. N. Uran.*, ci unci! man from the second ward, rift Alitor.can District Telegraph company recently ootaiiu-.l ( ermissioo to run wires through lho city, and it was alleged that Uiauj tLwandcd as a rewa.d niuoly shares ar stock in the company, which, ho said, Weiv to b-» livided b. two 11 hi nisei., Mayor Funkya .i.l Couucilmca HurCpsf Kenny and Malo.to/. C'ouac«luad Crano has heretofore been co.o».i *r i\ad a fraelwilt-r of the county. He it • «« ory r»n 1 will d?raand an in* a »%t tho nuetijig of Mie common ¥»mu* ! New Yobk, Bept. 15. —Theodore Bung* ihot and instantly killed Adolph J. Nockln, the proprietor of a drug store in Harlem, on Saturday evening. Bunge was formerly smployeJ by Nockin as a clerk in the store. No reason has been assigned for the act, exsept that Bunge appears to be insane or else is simulating insanity. Killed bf an Insane Ulan. Frank Jones, a lunatic of Wellington. Kan., creatod great excitement by gallop ing up and down the streets at the topri armed with a Winchester rills and flifn; into the houses of citizens. He wounded t child. . B y het*«-o U a C117 jearaolJ to drite grocery vagon • nd wi-rW in store Apply at once. Cor Maiu and Mark, t hts , littston. IPeO W AN I E«D. 40,000 School Children at a Fair. Chicago, Sept. 14.—Ttoe state fair groun ls in this eity, tlirowu open this week, presented tlie unusugl fcpeclacle of 40,000 children iu att-n lance. Three hundred and fifty thousanT fret tickets hc4 been issued tc the school children tOToughout tho entire »-at«D, and Uii* crowd o£ miniature iiuinaniiy wos tha result. Ad known methods of truuiit Avcre called into requisition to c j» v. y tlu-m I) an I from tUe grouu.lu. EXTRtV, Death Due to Impnlaa. 51y rrotch terrier. colwr. standard, nine oioi.tha D1 . well crown. Ikui In til? hi hind leg Fii.der please return lo I.. & H station. CVrlr • ad NliW Orlkaxs, Sept. 15.—A singular aoadeat happened at iliineburg, the old Lake End. J. O. Fortune was standing ou tho A panic occurred at the Hheepshead Bhy, New York, raca course, by a drunken nW Insulting a woman on the grand stand. Bav eral people thought the stand had cagth fire, and women and children war* kaoegs town and injured. iaisdtaa Beef for KsrypL. London, Bept 15.—A further order far ulf a million poun ls of compressed beef us been givtxf to a Chicago firm, making a atal of 740,(MO pounds of beef ordered for lbs Nile relief expedition. ( EOE.C K E. FEKBIS, :et rewaid. W. H. RUTi ElKlfc. I tie f :er. Forgetting that he could net mini ..e impulsively jumped in after it aiW ■as drown d wharf a v.l his straw hat blew off and fell in UTTORNFT Frtw o
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 693, September 15, 1884 |
Issue | 693 |
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 | 1884-09-15 |
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 693, September 15, 1884 |
Issue | 693 |
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 | 1884-09-15 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18840915_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 | « -* J % X Ssm PITTSTONs PA.. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1884 I TWO CENTS. j IVu Csti'a Par Weak. "V L U VICTORIA ACTEvS1 and mortification, Mrs. away with u heartless li roast go and we ray ' bal her husband. She then walk«d C and. left the house. Leaving her father's hoasa Mrs. St heUinj hastened to tfc» iid*«f ker husband, who kissed hor In the presence of the langhing, storing crowd. Together they returned .to Werner's lager beer saloon, followed by the crowd. Here they took dinner and remained among the husband's former acquaintances until 4 o'clock in the afternooA, when she returned to the Morosini house. The interview, like the one in the morning, was brief and unsympathetic, and Mrs. Bchelltng soon hurried back to the saloon. turned A CANDIDATE ON WHEELS. SMART LITTLE JENNIE. THE CHOLERA IN ITALY Tariif or Ko Tt.iifT, ''Ikat'a the Quta- x'HE ACT OF A FIEND. Tb« Nominee or the Woatn't Bight* An Awfnl State of Things in Italy. tiou f KlasMoroaWi Returns to the Anc«» tral Hoof Troo. "*"""" Mar Verjr Strarice Gandoet—She Wll not Dcaert bar Bmbaud — Mr. (Jig to stair* Party—Her Trleyele. She Fools her Fond Pap* im a Very Effects on the People. Ii is the question rpon which the coming Presidential, campaign \» ill be-(ought. It la the qiif.-tion which lias riifciued the leading minds of liotli yrmi political parties for the pad tifly yeHTi*, C \c«t* » hen overahadpaed for a liioe by ll u groat question of "Shall the (Tn on tw Preset vtd ?" We mad to post ourrtlvea, fii.d lie I n pari d to vote understandgrtai question. White there iiu of opinion, and white '! ere if irfricji t!i«' tr.ay t« mid, both in later of and against ireo trade, fine il,#£ in certain, md tlial if, Jin cannot liud a medicine that «fili euro (Vuiihs, Colds, Asilima, or any diatliis lltront or t'luni to 0. C. 0., (funis' (JoujrlnCompoutiii) Tiy it. A Sane Wife Four Years ia an In- Wabhwoton, Sept 1&— It la bat natural that the country should wiah to know mora of the presidential candidate, Behia Lock-1 wood, the nominoe at the Woman1* Right? p-irty. The candidate's life, mitten by an Impartial hand, aa the only means for completely supplying this demand, will doubtless appear at an early day. la Washington uo book of the kind is needed. She is to be seen almost any day. threading; the strwsts mounted on a tricycle, head erect, and •feet working with energy. She was the first of her sex to mount the tricycle and dem m•itrate tha right of woman to ride whatever will b-st suit her purpose. As a lawyer sin rides wherever her business calls, and »lie also rides for the pleasure it affords, as others do in tlieir carriages. She is nof. a devotee of fashion in any respect. Shs sots her own fashions. With head in air and face oarnostiy, not to say fiercely, pointing in the direction her industrious feet are propeling her, site whirls along, every turn of tho crank fiipflapping her skirt with unceasing regularity. SUe stops at nothing, i#d tUrn* asi le only to pass slower goers or piok a stretch of clear track whereon to display a pace which might moke Maud S. envious. Able Ksnntr. London, Sept. 15.—The attack of tho cholera o.i Italy is nonLftdmitted to be fur severer than that on France. Almost incredible stories are told of the rapidity with which it has carried off its viotims. In si n e families four or, five member* have bo: n swept off together. Ah old Wotnaa and a boy, falling together in the streets if Naples, were both taken up dead; a lady seized with vomiting while at jnas3 died C..p reaching horn*. In fact, death in inany cases has occurred within ten minu'.vts »| iiiy first, sy m Many porsons have CJ.u rt'it'iin tlireo or four hours, and tho fatal ens ■ lnvu rarely lasted more .than five ir six i The plaguci has led, according to all accounts, to n revival of religious feeling so strong that the archbishop hiin urt has I in to 11 lsi ■ m rage religions proc status, as touting to increase diseas-. The gam bliaD fjilrit has also receive,1 a great im- I*»tus. Thus "one day ii ty-two mothers rudiud to n school and took away flfcy-one children, null every body played these numbers in the government lottery, and all won. On another day tlio numbers 8, 4 and 29 corresponded to curront events in the stroc'-s, and were played extonsively and all three came out. 'ihe result was a loss oi 2,- 00(5,000 franca by Ihu-govomment. a general debauch by the lucky inhabiiants, aud a violent increase of the cholera. The king is the reigning hero o Europe, an.l George Augustus 8a!a, the celebrated journalist, gives as one of his many virtuos that he wcai-s iu public in Rome a low-crownod hat. sane _ Her Haaband Places Mer There Becanae He la In Love With an Unprincipled Widow—Rea- Readied by a miracle. He Objeeta to Her Hean—A Trip Taken to the Catakllle Proves to be a Honeymoon In maanlae. A Father's Dligusk Moroalnl Oolne to Hmila. BIr»; Moroalnl Djtlni. RuTHSRfOBD, N. /., Bept. 18.—The gossips hero are in their glory and are tearing to pieces the sweetest morsels of a scandal, such as has never before been thought of in this place. The parties concerned, George T. Holmes and Miss Jennie Vreeland, are Lioth highly connected and move in the highest social circles. The lady's father, Mr. Jacob H. Vreeland, holds a high and trusted position in the Brie Railroad company. When ho heard of the affair he turned livid with rage and asked whore Holmes was. Holmes' father throattned to whip tho young man. For some time Holmes has been paying court to Miss Vreeland against the will of the young lady's father. Rambles about t.l«o town, rows on tiie river, trips to Coney Island and other summer resorts were taken. Yon wltt, N, Y., Sept )6.*-The elima* fa the yesterday, as nas expected, tut it was not such a conclusion as m st people eitber anticipated 01 believed possible. At 5:22 o'clock yesterday morning tlie Montreal express, which reachei the Qraud Central depot in Now York at ( steamed into Yonkers, and, to the intcnw amazement of the fe « stragglats there pro» cnt, there stepped from til.) cars a party o( lour, who hart got on at Troy. Miss Victoria Xprosini, clad in a dark suit with a black hat, from which waved a white plume, and with liar eyes red from weeping, was the first to step to the ground with tht assistanco of Ernest .8 shelling, her lmsbaad. Miss Moroajit smiled at Policeman Dinsmore, who' t.as near by. Following ths eloping paipecme Mr. Stolpe and'til' young lady who lib* figured so promincntlD in th« little coupo episodes outeide of the Stolpe & Jlulskanipa's beer aalocm, Walker street and West Broadway. As they entered the Station the party stopped for a moment to oonverse, and then Miss Morosini asked for a telephone. Montreal, Sept. 15.—Four years in an insane asylum is tha penalty Mrs. Pete# Lyman has suffered for being the wife of a cruel man. The case is now being investigated by the superior court, and from all the evidence it is proved that slid has been rational all these _years. Peter Lyman is the guardian of the Royal Canadian insur. ance company, and enjoy3 life on a good salary, bains admmittod to the best society in Montroal. About eight years ago lie married a beautiful and well-educated young lady. Sho was an orphau and inherited large estates from her fattier, hi his day t.Ue wealthiest I'UnkQr in the city. She loved f»ud trusted Lyman completely, an I arter inarri ajje she gave lii:n the bulk of her income.When sho had left,; Dr. Horace B. Pike, tho family-physician, said he could not understand the change that had come over Miss Mcrosini. Sho was always an affectionate girl, but at the interviews-displayed the utmost heartlessness. She neither kissed her father, mother or brothers and displayed no emotion. The doctor added that Mr. Morogini was so heartbrok n that he exclaimed: "She is no longer n daughter of mine." During the evening a personal friend of Mr. Morisini called upon his daughter fend triad to induce hsr to return homo if she would leave her husband. This sha firmly declined to do. M«. Morisini, it is said, is going to Russia. On Friday he made a new will, but its tenor is not known. Mrs. Morosini is said to be beyond recovery. Mr. and lira Rebelling will remain in Yonkers untfl Vict ria's trial comes off. Ii. K. ( UUTIH, I'iiiji lihuitou, N. T. Mr. Vreeland viewed these manifestations with disapproval. When Holmes called at the Vroelund homestead Mr. Vre»land would sigh as ho remembered that his last winters boots were worn out. However, Holmes was always received by the family very pleasantly, thoy looking upon him as a friond only. Finally when it became apl*rcnt that Holmes called in the role of a beau. Mr. Vreeland, not appreciating the attentions, firmly, yet in a gentle manly manner, told hiin that his attentions to his daughter must cease. The meetings between Miss Vreeland and Holmes were not as public as before Mr. Vree?und's edict went lorth. On August 8 Miss Vreeland pro-, posed a visit to tha Catskills to her father, saying she wished to go with a younj lady friend whoso father is a prominent merchant hero. Mr. Vreeland ga.v« his consent, and on te.e 19th he took her to the boat. As Mr. Vreeland bid his daughter "Good-hy" he did not notice the pale and anzions face of a young man peering anxiously from behind a pile of goods as if afraid of meeting some one. The young man was Holmr* ISIt Nonrly five years ago, when, as it was supposed the Lyman's wara Jiving happily together, nil extremely pretty but unprincipled widow moved into the neighbor•jpDod and iro»i that day the wife's uuliappiness data. Sbo daily saw bar husband's love slipping from lier and was not long iu finding . i it the widow had stolon his love. News ciV..;i cam) to the wife's ears that he husban t lustetd of being at his office, r.s shj believed, was riding or walU'ing with thj lieartlo.widow. She stood this as lou-- as possi ilc, but cno day, when tno thiol' who had stol i lifDr h'Ct irjasuiv. liinjlie l mocking ■ ... s.i." fould stand it no longer. FRAUDS IN JUSTICE. A Bart showing lHade bjr the Attor- ■toy General'* Report. Washington, Sept. 15.—It is said thereport of Attorney-General Brewster to the president next December will contain some interesting reading. He will show by the rejnirt of his special inspectors, who have been kept busy all summer, that hardly an official connected with the administration of justice in the south and th;j territories will escapo severe arraignment for oxtr»viv»ance, extortion and fraud. When these inspectors come back to Washington they t'il good stories of how unpopular they are in the districts visited. On their appearance in town they are made to feel that they are regarded as spies and informers, men engaged in hounding respectable men with petty persecutions. The local papers are used to make them miserable, and all kinds of traps • re set to catch them, if possible, in sosie indiscretion, such as d.'-iuking, gam- I li.Vr, and kindred dissipations. If a slip Is mode, dozens of affidavits are at once for w ni'dod, setting forth the moral obliquities of the inspector, in order that the force of liis rsport may ho broken. In one or two cases these tactics have Scared off inspectors, bivt as a gmeral thing the agents of Attorney-General Brewster have proved to be very shrewd follows, and their summer's work will go far to show that the department of jastica is earnestly in favor of a nliolesome reform. QEN. BUTLER'# RETURN. "There's one in the bagpoge-room," answered Policeman Dinsmcro, and after pointing it out to the bridegroom he stood respectfully in the baokground. Kohelling advanced to the (to him) formidable instrument, but met with little success, and r» quested the policeman to manipulate it tot him. He Receives a Warm Welcome In There have been 8,297 deaths from cholera at Naples alone since tho outbreak of the epidemic. New York, Sept. 13.—Wlion theiUliicago limited express lulled into the Pennsylvania railroad depot in Jersey City, Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, dusty and travel worn, yet frisky as a colt, alighted from a parlor ear, Messrs. Francis D. Moulton, Jxntis F. Fost, William H. Fowler and a delegation from the New York county committee of tlio Toole's Democratic party crowded Around thoir Dad«r while the Sixty-ninth regiment band Now York—A Short Speech. DR. TALMACE ON FOLQER. POWDER He Kulofflzes the Dead Secretary and Alludes to Speculation. "Who dc you wantD and whatr asked -V'"—-""1 talk to Eddy Co rSho nu?t iier hu?tatirl irquarcly and charge.1 him wit-i cruel lioic'ecfc and perjury of marriage vov.s. TheKcene was aUxmg 0110. The wife th:-*ato!i-*l to bring a suit for divorce Niw York, riopt. 15.—In his sermon yesterday Dr. Talmage said;—"Tho oolunms of our custom houses, and of the national and rtate capitols are swathed it) black, and all •he flags are at half-mnst for the dead »9cretary of the treasury. At the age of (Mi he died, without a . spot 011 his reputation, although moat of his lifo wes spent among temptations that hare flung multitudes into th« dust For three years lm held the purs of the nation, but not a half-pjnny stuck to his hands. In his dying hour he asked his attendant to take a check from the left pocket of hia coat and have it cashed immediately, so that he might pay the expenses of his obsequies. After paying his way through life he paid his admission fee at the door of the sepulchre. Square with his fellow-men, square with tho government—square, I hope, with the rules of all governments and of all men Dinsmoi'e. "We want to / Corfu's «MDle«lDd •* for a hack," was Schel- I P' liitfa Iktor. After tho lapse of about tan D' minutes Cornell sent back wonl that a hack fc would be around to the station iu a little to wliilo. Seeing that the party would most likely reBU% Ig ..**■ maX 0,4 poUw' headquarter#, jat the corner of Dock street and Warburtou avenuo, to inform Captain Margin of the arrival of the ruu- w a way a The latter official started at one® ' or the depot and mot the party just as they lad Secome impatient and were on the way a ll's stables to get the desired vehicle lhe nexu «iu ayly played. Then a procession was formed - the Fifth Avonue hotel, ancl while the ;eneral refreshed himself after his Ions Jotarney the baud playJS on Twenty-third .jsfcreet, and .a couple at thousand peoplo gatli • wad outside the hotel and shouted lustily foi he general to come out At about 10:30 the 'ell-known rotuud form and massive head ppearod cn the Twenty-third entrance to the hotel. "You '\o not know with what imotidns of gratitude your coming here has Lied my rniuu," began the people's caudilate, and tlirej hearty cheers let him know lis audience were glud to seo him. "It is an larnest," he continued, "of the deep interest rou havo in the principles of the People'e jnrty. I hare just returned- from a long ourney in the west where 1 find the hearts if the p.'ot)l9 responding entirely to yours, 'vo traveled 6,000 miles through sixteen tates in seventeen days," remarked Gen. Sutler to a repsrter after the last toot of the Daud, "and I've made fifty-two speech's, so i.;u see I've been tolerably busy." Bu: t!uD li.'Xt day never came in freedom for .ho jiiiabie wife. Mr. Lyman paid a basinoss visit to Dr. King's- privato asylum that evening, and in well simulated, heartbroken grief declared that for a long tiin»D hi* wife had shown evidences of losing her mind, and that h r only hope wag in enter ing th3 asylum. The regular certificate. Absolutely Pure. I his powder never rSne». A marvel of purity arenvtb and wholeaomet eaa. More moiodmI hart the ordinary klnns. and cannot be told la -pmpotilion with tie multitude of low t*»t. Dh*t Avljcnt, alum or phoMihate i o*rier* Sold onl* r cam. koyal Baking Powder 06., IK Wal creet. V. Y. The next day, August 11, Miss Vreeland was married to Holme* by the Rev. Mr. Gibbs. She returned home after a few days among the mountains, but said nothing i bout the marriage. When Mr. Vreeland kear.i of it he said not a w\jrd, but the look on ha face spoke volumes. Holmes kept out of the way very prudently until the storm blew over. Then he met Mr. Vreeland. The new father-in-law told Holmes that after the first of October ho murt support Mrs. Holmes. Miss Jennie Vreeland, or Mrs. Ueorge T. Heimes, as she will hereafter sign her named Is the belle of the town. She is a pretty blonde about 90 years of age. She dresses in fashionabls attire and is extremely modest and retiring. Holmes is 21 years old, although a casual observer would take him to be 18 or 19 at the outside. He wears English cut clothing and toothpick shoes. He works in the Erie railroad office and earns $30 a month and : aii'Uid by two physicians, wiih readily- ob tabled, and before mornipg Mrs. Lyman was plaeei among the mad. For awhile ■iftir his wife had thus been spirited away Mr. Lyman seemed to be inconsolable, and was the recipient of much wasted sympathy. But gradually the relations between him and she widow became more apparent, until they openly lived together. 1 he wife iii the isylum was as if she was de;D(L , Cornell's su. -.10 get ... Jiwo. At the suggestion of the captain all . four Agreed to wait in his private room at headquarter* until the hack had been pro- Vured 1 When ono« safe in his custody, Capt. Maagin asked whether it would not be bettar if *ome one should first go to tlia Moro•ini mansion and tell Mr. Morosini of his daughter's arrival, as the unexpected sight of her husband with her might causo the infuriated old banker to lose all control over himself and do something desperate. M«na Moroaini, in rwponae to this, said that she bftd come to see her mother, who she had board was lying at the point of dsath. ' She hid come, aha said, in responsj to a letter from her father,sent her through her fatherln-l*w, which stated that if sho would return home all wonll be Von. She was quite willing, however, that her arrival he first made known before sho visited the house. "What a glorious background this is to the epidemic of fraud that prevails through all this laud. This unroofing of bank*, this disappearance of ad minis Ira tors with the estates they have beon appointed to administer, this disorder in post office accounts makes a pestilence of crime, and leads every christian to ask how it can be sioppod. It is a simoon, a typhoon, a sirocco of crime. I have often thought if it wouldn't be bet ter for men making wills to bequeath all to executors and officials of courts, making the widows and" orphans a committee to sec that tho others get all that don't Lelong to them" When slia was removed to the asylum sho jjrotestod, as sho had often done before, that sho was not insane. "But," said Keeper Thomas, "nearly every person we receive here says the same thins. U we were to take their words for it the outside sane people Would be in more danger than they now are of being locked up unjustly." The Fantliiic Ctrl Pronounced a Fraud. Fort N. Y., Sept. 15.—Dr. Darwin Potter, the leading physician of this town, on August 31 made an examination of lOite .Stsulsey, who is alleged to have eaten nothing since March 10. Dr. Potter's conclusion is that tli&'girl is suffering froiu St. Vitus' dance, "pure, simple and uncomplicated." As to the story of the prolonged fast, he says: "I have no disposition to impugn the motives of the family, or to impcaoli their honesty or veracity, for they aro people of Character and respectability, but as a medical man I unhesitatingly pronounce the ahove statement an unmitigated humbug, a jtup-n lous fraud and a physiological impo» .-.ibility. I am firmly convinced that the lady takes some food and some drink dally) unough, at least, to support life and keep the body in a qtato of nourishment that could not possiblybe attained by the starvation claimed to have been kept up dnring the time mentioned." The Weekly Bsie Ball Summary. The Providence nine still have the lead in the race for the championship of the Leaguei They are so far ahead of the Bostons—eight games—that the letter can never hope to get any nearer to them. The New Yorks have ,Cot into third p!ace, and are now one gome .ihead of the Buffalo*. The Chicagos are fifth, and the Clevelands and Philadelphia.* ai » tied for the sixth place, with the chances At last forluno favored Mrs. Lyman in the shape oi an investigating committee. One gentleman was struck by the intelligence that shone from the l.dy's sorrowful oye and lie asked her a fow questions. She inid given up nil hopes of ever b.-ing released, but she answered the questions in a quiet, ladylike way that carriad great "eight. He asked her story and she related it. He was slightly acquainted with Mr. Lyman and was schocked to hea:- such railroad pass to Rutherford. New York, Sept 15.—All Wall street has been preying for years, but Saturday it was treated to the novelty of a little praying. A neat, trim little Irish woman, passing the sub-treasury steps, looked up and saw the massive "olunin heavily drape 1 in honor gt the late Secretary Folger. She paused tor a moment and then mounted the steps and entered the building. In sight of all the clerks she kpelt down on the marble floor. "What is the matter, my good woman f" asked Doorkeeper Broly. " Please, snr, I would, like to say a short prayer for the good man who has died." Broly stepped back and the woman went on with her prayers. No, she was not insane; she was only a poor woman on whom Judge Folger had several years ago bestowed his benefaction. A Little IJellBlon In Wall Street. A Porter's $8,000,000 Legacf. SPRtNUFitci.D, Mess., Kept 15.— Juan Ramon, a distinguished looking Spauiard of about 47 years, baa for two month* p:ist been elevator man and porter attlie E/atu house. Both he ani his wife showed by their betrinj that they were by birth and breeding above their present position, but they lived very secluded lives and made the acquaintance of nobody. Friday a messenger from the Spanish consul at N. W York appeared with tho following meisaye for Ramon: "The consul at New York has received a cable message from Spain, saying that your uncle isdying. His estate falls to you. Gome to "New York at ouca." Itgaion left for New York by the earliest train'* ThC* estate which he will inherit is said to bt valued at C8,000,003. Ramon was aft educated engineer in Spain. This medicine, combining Iron with pure vegetable -tonics, quickly tint! completely Cures Dyspepsia. Iniifntlm, Wtakiesa, I mpure Blood, Malaria, CMIIe aad Vnm, "It iran unfiiUna remedy for DiseasvoTtbe Kidneys and fJver. It is Invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women, and all who lead sedentary Urea. It does not Injure the teeth, cause headache,or produce constipation—other Iron mrdicinet d». It enriches and purifies the blood, stlmulaM the appetite, al£s the assimilation of food, relievos Heartburn and Belching, and strengthens tlie muscles and nerv&. For Intermittent Fevers. Lassitude, Lack of Energy, Ac., It has no equal. The genuine has above trade mark and Crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no otheraula mIj kjr BROWS CUBICAL CO, SiLTIBOai, fcD Mi a. Stolpe was the one chosen to delivci the Mtn,°uid in ]ess than an Igour sue ha,1 returned with Attiilio, Victoria's brother. TUB latter refused to see his sister while she rum a mod in tha presence o f her husband, and then went in company with Capt. Man gin before Justice Bents. Attiilio here swore out a warrant* in which he accused his sistoi of committing grand larceny in stealing from her sister Julia a diamond (tin valued at $711. With this warrant in his hand Capt. Mangin ventured to the room where the young wife was and arretted her. It wai •bout 8:80 o'clock when she was brought Into the city court rcom. The charge was read to-lMT, and in « calm voioe she replied "Not «t «n •» in favor of the latter. Tho following is tli record to date:— ;t story, but ho dotermineci to investigate the matter, and the result will probably ba. that the wronged woman will get her freedom and her income. Cubs. A Very mysterious Disappearance. Boston. imrraio .'lilvago i lbvui&n4 i,M, Detroit New York.. i* k'pins.. i'roDUeuce.,., H 11 1(1 I* - t h — u 11 •« 84 Tir 12 3 il 8 8 - 0 U 12 lit H Bi Bridgeport, Ct., Sept. 15—A mysterious disappearance, differing frdih ordinary events of this character, is agitating this City. -A new manager for the branch house of the Cheat Atlantic and Pacific tea com pany, named Robert Esler, camo to Ijlridgepoi 1Thursday morning last lie was very t oidiaUy received and made * favorable improsSfftftl upon all with whoir ho came in contact He was well dressed, 8: triable and apparently rejoicing at the prospect of a change irom New York life. He gave orders for 'certain alterations in the establishment on Main street. Board »as engaged on Fairilold avenue and sundry details connected with his stay here perfected lu a rational manner. At 11 o'clock, seemingly overcome with the heat, he left the store ostensibly to visit the newspaper offices for advertising purposes, leaving behind him hi* :oat, cuffs, cane, etc., ru(i wearing a- light black alapaca coat. Not a trpce of him has )Doen seon by any one connected with the store since that tima To a sjber, industrious and exemplary life Esler odds the re speet of a five years' service with his prisjnt employers, and none of the ordinary reasons for sudden disappearance aro applicable i:i his case. Disintegrating the Amalgamated As- sociation. Wheeling, W. Vs., Sept 15,—Belmont lodge, in this city, of the Amalgamated association has surrendered its charter and other lodge property. This is thought to be tho first movements toward a disintegration of the association. This action has been taken on account of the deposition of the nailers to aid the manufacturers in thoir efforts to make steel nails a suecoss. They say that if they become a success the amalgamation is done for. Resolutions were massed severely characterizing the action of the Riverside and Bellaire nailers in refusing to abide by the laws adopted by tha as tociation and embodying their unanimous bcl.ef that it is a waste of time and money (o kojp their in existence any longer, for by so doing they would be aiding unscrupulous and unprincipled men who are working directly against the nailers' Tu- t mm »loU. Then with o wild, unnatural burst of laughter that made everyone prennt start, she rwogniied "Ps*sy" Klymi, • detect!v« who is well known, and crieil oati "Ohl That's Patsy Flynn. .Yon needn't look At me with yot-r big, black eye* -like that. Patsy, I gave you the slip, after all.' The are two games ahead of the Columbus nine in the struggle for the American association pennant. The fight has been a hard one from the beginning between these two elub4 but it now looks cs if the club from New York would carry off ft Burglar Sk»l «■C OsplSra4. Fprino Vau-hy, Kept lS.—Considerable excitement was occasioned here by the capture of one oC a supposed gang of burglar* which has been operating in this oounty for soma weeks pant. He said his nam* was Jones Reagan, having no residence. HD broke into the store and dwelling of. & E. Johnson, s*ChifferH, and carried oft a (Juan tity of salable goods, but was overtaken at Monsey, one mile from here, with some of the goods in his possession. Refusing to surrender he was shot, but even then he escaped. Twenty men were soon on his track, but being seriously wounded he had only boon able to crawl in a bush, where be lay when found. His condition is critical, one ball having lodged in his lung. Carton's Patent GoS-tight Hot Air Furnace. An Annual Barbecue Over hi* Grave. D-— -r Madison, (Ja., Sept. 15.—Iu IS17 Beuj%- min Braswell, a wealthy citiun of this county, died leaving his estate of'$85,000 for the education of the orphans ot tho county. A condition was annexed that a barbecue should be held over his grave every year. The fund has been judiciously invested and faithfully applu*} during tlie last sixty-five years, hundreds ot orphans leaving been educated by it Saturday the annual bar becue provided for wns held, at which 1,10(1 persons sat down. The feature of tlie occasion was the laying of the corner stone of Braswell and Maaonie '' ofi the honors. The lowing is the staudin On her attention being directed to lbs charge against her, Miss Morosini explained that ah* took the pin through mlsUkt, believing it to be lierowtL The court stated that she was entitled to counsel, and asked hi r if she wished to have the examination adjourned, and she said she did not care. It wns then suggested by the court that an adjournment be had, and the case was set down for the 22 1 instant, and the prisoner was released upon her own recognizance. of »he several ell Clubs. Mletdieuy Athletic .. ilajuaMHe Brooklyn '-'In lni.nl... I'olumlr.iw !idlau«,K»ll«. ionUsviiia v Meti-ty oMtan ■St. I.OOl* rolo o....... teres t. By this time the carriage was in waitiiig outside, and the newt of Miss Moroslni's arrival baring flown like wildfire all over the city, a large crowd was in waiting to stare the qucrtette out of countcrance. All four oiuered the vehicle which was rapidly driven down Riverdale avenue to the saloon o! George Werner, cornqr of Ludlow street, where Schilling had previously boarded. They stopped there only a few minutes and then walked up to the paternal mansion KchelUng carrying an umbrella over hi) wife to shield her from the rays of tho sun. At the Morosiui gate Schelling left his wilt (Rul walked to a litUe lane a short distance off, from wliioh place-he watched her footste-s.b 5| Hi G tt 1 'J 1 L:'l s L1 *i f*. ?! lil The Pleasure or Living In Gsrnfuf, Londok, Sept. 15.—The rigors of military conscription in Germany are illustrated by. a recent incident at Ore:*. Two gentlemen of : hat. city, being soldiers of the landwehr i.-. ass, were ordered to report for duty for the autumn uiaueuvres of the German army. The only means of transportation offered llierii was to go in a cattle train with a lot of p easants, who were also land wehr soldiers. The gentlemen refused to take their plaoesin the cuttle trucks and telegraphed a remonstrance to the Emperor William at Berliu. A reply came back through military official channels to the effect that the offenders were to be tried in the usual way for disobedience ijf crdei-s. The two gentlemen were accordingly tried by court martial, and the seutenco has just been approved. The sentence U, for each o:' them, eight yoars' imprisonment at hard labor in the cimmon prison at Greiz. Anxious to Share WelDb*i Fate. ! Paris, Sept. 15. —The Temps' correspondent at Hai-Fong, an open port near th mouth of an arm of the Tonquin river, tele graphs that six companies or marines from the French garrison left there under orders to Join Admiral Courbat, who has started north from Matson with his entire fleet Six other companies have gone from S.iigou.the capital of French Cochin-China, on a like mission. The dispatch of these reinforcemeiits to the front is evidence that the admiral has received Premier Ferry's telegraphic orders to resume war-like operations at once, although China has not declared war. Warlike Operations to be Resumed Buffalo, Sopt IS.—Oliver Wormald, a Buffalo fresco painter, will go to Niagara Falls to perfect arrangements for going over the cataract on a rubber ball fifteen foot in diameter, and Peter S. Grant, a Buffalo business man. Is managing tlie affair. Wormald's ball will be of rubber, three inches thick, is covered with closely braided tail ed rope and filled with compressed «ir. He expects the ball will receive sufficient momentum to hurl it a considerable distance beyond tbe falls arid he will be picked up by one of the ferryboats plying at the Prospect park inclined railway. Virginia ifamen lost New Yoiik, Sept. 15.—The Thirteen club dinuer, which took place at Martinelli's, was presided over with dignity by Chief II t or David McAdani, chief justice of ihe city court of New York. The dinuor, which was tho thirty-third of the club, began promptly a". 8:13 o'clock. While tho menu was being disposed.of the members had very little op]kji tunlty to discuss the club'ssubjact—superstition; but w hen the coffeo and cigars had beau leached they let themselves loose and Spoke freely upon superstition and luck. Short stories were told and u pleasant evening spent, Slid it was far Into 'the night before the luem be re left tho teStive board and sought oiit their homes. Tho scribe red a tow letters from persouj who regretted their inability to be present. He also read a few lines from Gov. Cleveland, thanking the elub for having niudo him one of its members. Tber Are Not Superstitious. to tii k l'jsyrj r, ok At Cincinnati—Cincinnati, 4; Brooklyns, X At Louisville—Louisville, 6; Viginia. 1. At St. Louis—St Louis, 4; Metropolitans, T. Sunday lebull, and Vicinty. Wc b? sv til- tin D1 ,iin]:letc line of *uruac«D in • r cms tbat baa - ver been yl.vv. iC iii i.nv house in the State, oonipiising over twenty, sizes tuj Styles, [laving made a contract with., tb'- Ciirlon Furnace .£!C*; ,f«f, he gpiicnJ C .f Uit so goods for PenuBjlwiiiia ami Ni w Jersey wa ire pre| ■D*. il iD» i wt- f in-li juices in he goo.ih vv ill do any •uteide competition. i».C tien. Sliarpe Not to be Secretary. Washington, Sept. 15.—No sooner had Secretary Folger passed away than the air w as rife with rumors touching the successorship. Busy tongues announced with semiaut'.'or/titative tone that Postmaster General Grcshaiu was to be transferred to the treasury office as chief, while othc.- tongues quite as busy mentioned, and professed lu 'know whereof they spoke, Secretary Chandler as tho coming man. Finally a great loal began to be said about the intention oi tho president to place Gen. Goorge H. Siiarpe, of New York, in charge of the treasury portfolio. Whatever likelihood i here may be of either of the first fcjgo named ■jentleuien being appointed to I he vacancy u is certain that Gen. Hharpe is not to be ihe new secretary of the treasury. The fact is stated upon information which b positive, ■in 1 can admit of |)o doubt whatgge|D. More than a score of persons and reporter: approached him as he stood there, but lit could not be induced to talk upon the subject which most agitated the public. He ■aid that he bad just arrived from Troy and had engaged board at Werner's for himself and wife tor a week. He laughed at theideu Of Mr. Morosini inducing his wife to leave bini. Meanwhile, Miss Morosini walked up the steps leading to her father's house. She gsre the bell a pronounced pull, which at once brought the servants to the entrance. The door swung open for a moment, while the girl glided into the hallway. The sou, Attillio, conveyed his sister into her father'* presence, but his parental blessing mat with a haughty reception. To her sister and brothers she spoke as though she had just stepped down town, and despite the fact that she is naturally impulslvq, and consequently demonstrative girl, she neither kissed bot embraced any laepihnr of tin U-~ ' Indianapolis, bept. 15.—The question of requiring Blaine to answer the interrogatories in relation to his marriage filed in court ten dava ago by the counsel of The Bentinel was argued before Judge Wopda. Mr. Blaine's lawyers objected to the interrogatories because they eould not admitted, t hey claimed, jn common law practice. I'i ccodents and authorities were cited in support of the position of both sides, aad at the conclusion of the arguments Judge Woods refused to make any decision upon the .question, for the reason that he was not prepared so to do, and he did not believe it imperatively necessary. Th« Blaine UM Malt. CONDENSED NEWS. Another miner was arrested at Pittsburg on the general charge of conspiracy. The men are becoming very indignant and excited. . r ■■ Chicago's Water Nuppljr. Chicago, Sept 15.—The water supply problem is again fretting the souls of the city officials. Having drivdli two tunnels under the city and out into the lake, it is discovered that tie two waterworks are already being work.il to their full capacity to meet thj ueeis of the city, and the necessity of still greater facilities in the near futurj is force! upon their intention. To complicate matters, the pres- B.it crib in the lake where the water first mters the tunuel is in a direct line with the mouth of tbo C hknt'o river, and It has long been contended thai its foulness finds its ivay into the -wat tunnols, During the present week several prospeqMjjg expeditions Lavo been out ou tba lake, well to the south jt ilia city, making soundings with a view to suiim now recommendations to the oounrlL Annie Gutsier, a victim of melancholia, In Cincinnati threw hirself from • fourth story window. Her Injuries are supposed to be fatal. France Wauts Another Waterloo, We have a tir&t class wrought inn A ■. 'urinico tlint will lueat four rootoe 'or' t good sized store that we can. Mil -' or £50.60, and so on , npwnrd« ao■ording to size of building to be . 1'aius, Sept. 15. —Paris is given over to blio delirium of English denunciation, from which not even the gravest and wisest soem able to escape. Articles are daily printed over signatures wliich 'ho whole wor.U respects, breathing vengeance and slaughter. Among many otLers u former minister and a viefe-aunuml jDi|blish letter showing how- England can bost bo attacked. and mappiug out campaigns for war. The Eng.ish papers say less now than they said a week ago, but the English people are very angry, and it would take only a slight hflch in tho Egyptian affairs or injury to English interests in China to raisa the biggesi. kind of a war cloud here. The case of Dr. J. D Pitta, fpr the murder of Dr. Thomas Walter, at Norfolk, Va., ia exciting great lute rest. Anumbsrof lady friends of the prisoner are attending the trial. Ida Mewkirk, a talented operatic singer, was married May 24 and now brings suit for divorce. Bh» claims her husband has deserted her. He says he was never married to her. Too near Comedians la Gongreea. "Tlie Ba« Boy" ta Court. Boston, Sept IS.—In the United Btatcs circuit court Judge Nelson granted at) order of notice, returnable on Tuesday, for tbe defendants to show oause iu the suit of George W. Peck, of Milwaukee, and Charles |P. Atkinson, of Boston, against Isaac B. Rich and William B Harris, of tha Howard Athonseum, why they should not be restrained from perforating a piece c&Ued ••That Bad Boy." The bill alleges that the plaintiffs are and exclusive owner* of tho dramatic composition know,* as "Pock's Bad Boy," adapted by Charles F. Pidgin, from the book of that name. Chicauo, Bept. 15.—James H. McVicker, the veterap manager and actor, whote favorite roles on the stage are Flagstaff and The Graved igger in "Hamlet," is mentioned as a candidate for congress from the Pint district. Mr.'McVicker is reputed to have replied to the committee which waited upon him that in his opinion there were already too many comedians in congress. teated Gall and sec the furnaces, or send * 'or catalogue circular and .prices, a* . We cun save money for you if yon I ■vill allow us to figure with vDn. PTTTRTON STOVE CO. nilf. " Yomr mother i* in the next room." aai it. Moreeini. taaliy. "Do yon ear* to ae mt f' " Y«, I will go at odm," was tb realy, and ah* pwaad drttaatly out of tb room. lira. Moroaini had tttan aami-con •clou* for iwo Hays. The daughter atoo alImitly at the bedaide, while her mother luj with closed eyes aud apparently at the dooi of death. It was many minutes before ilu allowed any signs of returning conscious new. Finally she opened bar eyea and gaaed with delight upon her daughter** form. I) waa«Bio«aant before abe qttiutly taurmured, " Vlutorbl, j*o are home," and again aanli book upon her pillow. Once again during the Ufteeu mlnuta* which the daughtei poeaed at her mother's aide was ahe recogalted by her beart-atricken parent Tb« girl heraelf showed little eaaoMoa. Biatei and brother* atood aatde with beating hearts fir the Hr«t Indication on th* runaway') jv ■ - UDat aba had rlp*»W. To tMr grid OsnarThoaaas Taylor, chief of polio* of Louisville, and bis son were find to the ful extent of the law for making an unprovoked assault on Joseph Kslflns, city editoi of The Times. For Sale. Got. Cleveland to Visit Chltscs, Chicago, Sept. 15.—Ths president of the Iroquois olub has been in correspondence with Grover Cleveland, and has the afctirince from that gentleman that he coutem; lates making a journey tj this city shortly, l'ho Iroquois is already arranging to give lim a reception of untoward Western tpleodqr. The Rational Equal Rights party will hold a ratification meeting at Wilson's Station, near Washington, to-morrow, to Ale brat the nomination of Mrs. Belva LookwoovJ- foi the presidency. A goosteady, kind sn.) gentle family or team horse. Weight, from ten hand red to twelve hundred pound.*. VVil he sold cheap. Ia quire of J hn Nash. Bottler, Welch Hill. Charge* of Municipal Corruption, • y. J., Sept, 15,-—Political cir- I'ireles arc much exercised over the publicalion o.m 8t Dry seriously retiscting; on H. N. Uran.*, ci unci! man from the second ward, rift Alitor.can District Telegraph company recently ootaiiu-.l ( ermissioo to run wires through lho city, and it was alleged that Uiauj tLwandcd as a rewa.d niuoly shares ar stock in the company, which, ho said, Weiv to b-» livided b. two 11 hi nisei., Mayor Funkya .i.l Couucilmca HurCpsf Kenny and Malo.to/. C'ouac«luad Crano has heretofore been co.o».i *r i\ad a fraelwilt-r of the county. He it • «« ory r»n 1 will d?raand an in* a »%t tho nuetijig of Mie common ¥»mu* ! New Yobk, Bept. 15. —Theodore Bung* ihot and instantly killed Adolph J. Nockln, the proprietor of a drug store in Harlem, on Saturday evening. Bunge was formerly smployeJ by Nockin as a clerk in the store. No reason has been assigned for the act, exsept that Bunge appears to be insane or else is simulating insanity. Killed bf an Insane Ulan. Frank Jones, a lunatic of Wellington. Kan., creatod great excitement by gallop ing up and down the streets at the topri armed with a Winchester rills and flifn; into the houses of citizens. He wounded t child. . B y het*«-o U a C117 jearaolJ to drite grocery vagon • nd wi-rW in store Apply at once. Cor Maiu and Mark, t hts , littston. IPeO W AN I E«D. 40,000 School Children at a Fair. Chicago, Sept. 14.—Ttoe state fair groun ls in this eity, tlirowu open this week, presented tlie unusugl fcpeclacle of 40,000 children iu att-n lance. Three hundred and fifty thousanT fret tickets hc4 been issued tc the school children tOToughout tho entire »-at«D, and Uii* crowd o£ miniature iiuinaniiy wos tha result. Ad known methods of truuiit Avcre called into requisition to c j» v. y tlu-m I) an I from tUe grouu.lu. EXTRtV, Death Due to Impnlaa. 51y rrotch terrier. colwr. standard, nine oioi.tha D1 . well crown. Ikui In til? hi hind leg Fii.der please return lo I.. & H station. CVrlr • ad NliW Orlkaxs, Sept. 15.—A singular aoadeat happened at iliineburg, the old Lake End. J. O. Fortune was standing ou tho A panic occurred at the Hheepshead Bhy, New York, raca course, by a drunken nW Insulting a woman on the grand stand. Bav eral people thought the stand had cagth fire, and women and children war* kaoegs town and injured. iaisdtaa Beef for KsrypL. London, Bept 15.—A further order far ulf a million poun ls of compressed beef us been givtxf to a Chicago firm, making a atal of 740,(MO pounds of beef ordered for lbs Nile relief expedition. ( EOE.C K E. FEKBIS, :et rewaid. W. H. RUTi ElKlfc. I tie f :er. Forgetting that he could net mini ..e impulsively jumped in after it aiW ■as drown d wharf a v.l his straw hat blew off and fell in UTTORNFT Frtw o |
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