Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Jan 1882, p. 2

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f ~" '% 'rSi1 , - m r .5 r .. v':.' * ? • ; ; * r t * ? ; y f • » * i v r ; r r * ^ ; . T v ^ , c - Y T - • ' • ? I ' j | ' £ * * ( f tc iu i ! paindcalc i I. VM SLYKEi Etter Mi Pebllsher. MoHENRT, ILLINOIS. f EEKtf REVS REVIEW* THE EAST. Turn World Mutual Relief Association, • graveyard insurance concern of Pennsylvania, has been dissolved by judicial process. It had tailed policies representing over $13,000,000. The three largest companies in that State had previously been s*ept away by the courts. ....Jolm" K»n, the champion bicycle rider Of England, won a race with Johu 8. Pnaoe, DM champion of America, at IJoaton. Judge Otlliert, of Brooklyn, sent fifteen of the Aldermen of that city to jail fee oontnmpt of oonrt m refusing to obey an injunction restrain­ ing them for overriding the Mayor's veto of a aeries of resolutions conferring on the Brook- > lyn Elevated Railway Company tlx; right of extending its route so as to take in Fulton at* ! enoe, Myrtle avenue and other ul the principal j streets o*f the city. i _ OSCAR WlLDK want to Philadelphia i jeet of "his visit was to work np the Sherman last week, where he was tendered a reception ! boo™. Mr Emerson says that he had a perfect . _ , . „. _ _ . .. . „ I understanding with Mr. Sherman, having re- l>y Robert Stewart Davis, an ratbete. Two ; p0ateri|y conversed with him on the subject al hundred leading citizens wet* in attendance ! his houee m vYashington, and the witness pro- The house was profusely decorated with roses ' duoed a number of letters written to him by and call* liiies, and supper was starved in two J Mr. Sherman's confidential advisers said to AT a meeting in Washington to com­ memorate the centennial birthday of DaaM Webster, at whieh addresses were delivered by Senator Blair and 8. J. Randall, it was an­ nounced that a sufficient sum had been sub­ scribed to ereet a statue to the Massachusetts jrOUrrKCAIj* "" " MB. KRM has bean rejeoted bytht President for re-appointment as Postmaster of Madison, Wis., because he is a member of the Legislature. SKNATOH LAMAR was elected by both houses of the Mississippi Legislature to be hie own successor as United States Senator from Mississippi... .In the Iowa Legislature, Jamee F. Wilson was chosen Senator for the long term, and Judge McDili for the Kirkwood va- oancy. A WAsanroTON dispatoh says that "J. A. Enenoft, formerly a clerk in the Tnird Auditor's office, was examined by the Treasury investigfcti ng committee. He is from Arkansas, and swore that ex-Secretary Sherman, in the eptang of 1880, gave him a roving commis­ sion, ostensibly to visit the offices of Collec­ tors of Internal Revenue and other Treasury officials in Arkansas, and to inspert the operations thereof. The real ob- parlors throughout the evening. A GRAND Jury at New Haven indictments against the Malieyv and Blanche Douglass for the murder of Jennie Cramer. They will have a joint trial Ex-Gov. Bul­ lock. ot Massachusetts, died suddenly of apo­ plexy, at Worcester Sainue' Cobb, an old resident of Bellows Fulls, YL, was frightened to death by the wild antics of a drunken son. IN the inquest on the Spuyten Duyvil disaster the conductor of the unfortunate Wag­ ner coach testified that he believed some pass­ engers applied the air-brakes, as a party of Senators, Assemblymen and Aldermen were ; around bottles of whisky and smashing gassing i a^S,' 4 THE WEST* GEN. CARR, the gallant officer who was reported to have been massacred with his entire command by Indians at Fort Apache last rammer, but whose bravery and ability found a way out of the perilous situation and averted a sickening horror like that of the Custer butchery, is under arrest at Fort Grant, by order of. Gen. Wilcox, commanding the Department of Arizona, for trial by court-martial Two freight trains on the Milwaukee ami St. Paul railroad collided on the bndge at La Crosse, breaking away one span and pre­ cipitating five cars into the Mississippi river. The damage to the bridge is estimated at $50,- 000 The wholesale grocery firm of Sibley, Dudley 4 Co., of Chicago, has made an as­ signment for the benefit of their creditors. Liabilities about $200,000, and it is said they will be able to pay 75 per cent, of them.... Bishop Gilmour, of the Catholic diocese of Cleveland, who has heretofore opposed the Land League, declares himself in sympathy with the movement, with the exception of the cry of no rent. THOSK admirable artists, Mr. and MM W. J. Florence, are playing a remarkably-suo- oeesfnl engagement at McVicker's Theater, ap­ pearing in a number of their favorite roles to large and delighted audiences. ADVICES are reoeived by way of Tombstone. Arizona, of an Indian battle near Yanyn: river, in Mexioo. A body of Mexican troops were pursuing a band of Apaches, by whom they were ambushed. After a desperate •TIN >U|VV vv MIV^VUVTU^Y WMV uuvp N 616 compelled to retreat. They lost five men killed and wevi-ral wounded The Illinois Supreme Court, in a case against the Board of Educa­ tion of Quiucy, decides that colored children have the right to attend the pnUio schools and receive the benefit of the school fond the same as white children.... corroborate his statements. Emerson testi­ fied that he found all tho leadiag Republicans of Arkansas and the South for Grant, and that, he saw it would be impoli­ tic for him to antagonize that sentiment; that, * stead of working for Sherman, he gave tils support to Grant, and went to the Chicago Convention in Grant's interest; that on the very day of his return from Chicago to Wash­ ington he was discharged from a position in the treasury which he had acceptably filled for three years." LEADING stalwarts of New York avow their intention to nominate ex-Senator Oonk- ling fcr Governor next fall CEKERAU THB Lake Shore aud Michigan South­ ern and Michigan Central railways have ad­ vanced the rate on grain and flour from Chicago to New York to 15 cents per 100 pounds. THE New York Central and Erie roads and the fast freight lines at Boston have re­ duced freight rates to Chicago nearly one third, the tariff on first-class goods being fixed1 at SO cents per 100 pounds The Mexi­ can National railroad has been completed across Tamaulipos, and is being laid at (he rate of one mile a day. SEVEN lives were lost by the wrecking, of the British schooner Weathergage, in the Gulf of Mexico While a ball fight wag in progress at Matanzas, Cuba, the fall of a scaf­ folding precipitated 300 persons into the stables, one being killed and many injured. LIEUT. MCDONALD, of the Fourth United States Cavalry, has been scouting with twenty Indians in Southern New Mexico. Hav­ ing crossed the border into Chihuahua after Apaches, he was arrested for the invasion by the Mexicans and will be tried. The War De­ partment at Washington has been apprised of situation Peace between Bolivia and t,hui has t>eea secured by the forn er snrren- fromP ' COftat territory and breaking away FOB the better protection of American interests at AspinwalL the United States steam­ ship Y an tic has been ordered thither from Jar maica. THB steamship Oity of London, with «• rrsw of Jortj-iwv men, **uidi sailed Troon London for New York No* 13, is believed to' have been wrecked, as is also the Henry Ed ye, which sailed from Antwerp for Boston Nov. 41, with a crew of thirty-five men. The cargo in each ship was worth #200,000 Gov. Terras- s&s, of Chihuahua, caused the release of Lient. A serious accident occurred on the Dubuque di- ] McDonald, of the Fourth United States caval- nsion of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, near Lansing, Iowa, caused by the breaking of a wheel. The smoking and ladies' cars were precipitated down an embankment, and the occupants were all more or less in­ jured, some seriously. One child was killed. ry, who was arrested for invading Mexican territory. FOREIGN. GAHBETTA ascended the tribune in the - . . . . m , - , , . . . . . i F r e n c h C h a m b e r o f D e p u t i e s a n d r e a d h i s b i l l and it is feared several of the injured mil die. i n. , . . , v, , The train was running at a speed of only about | revision of the French constitution. It an hour, and no to any one concern© I provides for the election of life Senators by separate votes ef the c e Senate of the powe to restore to pnviug lu presence As | the budget items stricken out.by the Deputies, and ex-Gov. Piilsbury fifteen milt is attached The V" and for the abolition of public prayers at the opening of the Legislature Prominent men in England are about to arouse public sympa­ thy m that country in behalf of the Russian Jews, and to organize a scheme for their immi­ gration. A well-known Israelite will head the subscription list with 110,000. THE German Ecclesiastical bill to be presented to the Landtag is entirely favorable to the resumption of their power by the Ger­ man Catholic hierarchy. All the dispossessed Bishops will be allowed to return to their sees, and the Government graats to the church will be continued. A ST. PETERSBURG dispatch states that an American circus-rider, of the Jewish persuasion, who was about to be expelled from the country on account of his creed, was allowed to remain after he had joined a Christian sect which moat nearly re­ sembled the faith of his fathers A serious insurrection has broken out in the Balkan peuiusula. It commenced in Herze­ govina, and is extending to the border districts of Dalmatia, Bosnia, Albania, and, probably, i, a . i. n r • , , Montenegro. It has been determined to dis- wout #170,000, and of H. B. Lock wood, dealer \ patch an army corps to crush the insurrection. they bore interest for twenly-tbree years, it re­ quired §4,103,000 in cash and new bonds to replace them The daughter of Cel. Gil­ lespie, of Lodi, CoL, was fatally wouudod by a man named Leydcn, who fired through the window. He then went to a haystack and shot himself dead. He had been discharged for paying her attention. IT is stated in a dispatch from Tucson, Arizona, that Gen. Carr was placed under ar­ rest by order of the President Tho cause la not definitely ascertained, but it is re­ ported on good authority that it was oa account of certain facts brought out at the recent trial of tho Indian scouts.... The product of precious metals last year in the region west of the Missouri river in estimated by Wells, Fargo & Co. at «3l,869,686 in gold awl $45,(>77,829 in silvi-r... .A verv destructive five occurred at Abilene, Kan. It originated in the buMuess part of the town, and owing to the intense cold and tho inadequate water sup- the flames raged for two hours, destroying property to the amount of about 80,000. Two failtues in the wholesale trade an announced in Chicago, of Meyer Bros. A Co., dry goods, with liabilities amounting to S'-'.'A1?.. In tea aud tobicco, who owes $130,000. Bad collections and inadequate capital se«m to nave been tho cause of the disaster in both ihstances. J UDGII ZANE, of the Sangamon County (III.) Court, has delivered an opinion of great importance and significance. He pronounces pooling contracts between railroad companies violations of law and coutrary to the public in­ tercuts, and declares them null and void. The case is a test one, and will, of course, he car­ ried to the higher courts. GEOBOB LADD, of Elmore, Ohio, sued Gov. R. EL Scott for $10,000 damages to his wife, whose son, Warren G. Drury, was killed by Gov. Scott at Napoleon, Ohio, on Christmas, 1880. The case has jurt been compromised1 by Soott paying costs aud $5.900. THB SOUTH* AFTER battling with the small-pox for thirteen days, Sirs. Caroline Packings-Ber­ nard died at Richmond, Va. She positively refused to be vaccinated. She was born in Lon­ don forty-nine years ago, but eame to the I United States when an infant... .Itis proposed to establish locomotive works at Louisville, Ky. Accompany with $1,000,000 is to be organized. NEAR Little Bock, Ark., five colored oonvicts were crossing a stream in a boat, whan It ins caught in the current and overturned, throwing the men into the water. All of the unfortunate men were drowned before assist­ ance could be rendered. The bodies were re­ covered and buried Jesse Williams, a negro, was hung at Savannah, Ga., for the murder or Tobey Luke. RAILROAD officials in Texas report ft •wy heavy immigration from the Pacific slope. California capitalists are purchasing large tracts oTland beljweeu the Rio Grande and the Staked Plains, for wheat-r»inng and grape-culture.... A Petersburg (Va.) merchant was sen­ tenced to receive twenty stripes for reoeivias stolen manufactured tobacco. WASHINGTON. PH<EBB COUZINS and several other ad- "**tes of woman suffrage appeared at Wash­ ington before the House Committee on Rnif to urge the appointment of a special commit­ tee to correspond with that ordered bv the Sen­ ate on woman's rights....Pubijcnotice is given ttiat all persons having claims/for services ren- SJIiSr ,°I, ^enalfl furnished during President Oartields illness and burial should present Uum to the special House oommittee for audit­ ing on or before Feb. 10. CONGRESSMAN SPRINOZB thinVa bOl appropriating $3,000,000 for the improve- SMatof the Mississippi will go through, and will have the undivided support of the South and West... .It is believed that Secretary Kirk­ wood will be appointed to one of the first-class forego missions. ATTORNEY GENERAL BREWSTER has de? t to revive the practice of appearing °-- tarol'to« .The St Gothard tunnel will be opened for railroad traffic July 1. _ A DECISION of importance under the aew Land act in Ireland was rendered in Bel­ fast by three Commissioners of the Land Court sitting as a Court of Appeal. The case was that of sn appeal from a decision of the Land Court reducing a tenant's rent from £36 10 shillings to £30, the chief claim of the dissatis­ fied landlord being that he was entitled to rent for improvements made prior to the expiration of the lease. Another point was that the land­ lord was entitled to rent for all improvements prior to the lease, and to some rent for improve­ ments made during the lease. On all the points the decision of the court was against the appeal­ ing landlord and in favor of the tenant Flames broke out iu the Circus Kremsier at Bucharest, and spread with such rapidity that many men and horses were burned to death. Some wild boasts in a menagerie opposite the inclosure made desperate efforts to escape, and were terribly scorched by the heat A conspiracy to rise and massacre the British residents of Nipaul, East Indies, has been discovered at Katmandu, the capital, aad twenty-one officers concerned therein have been executed... .Vienna dispatches report the insur­ rection gradually spreading in Southern Herze­ govina. The movement is attributed to for­ eign agitators... .Schliigiutweit, the Bavarian traveler and naturalist, is dead. Patrons of Husbandry. IiJJtxoiB--The annual meeting of the Illi­ nois 8tate Grange was held at Mattoon, f!»i county. A large number of delegates and visitors were present The full number of delegates is 106, ninety-three of whom were present, quite a number being women. Sen­ ator Horace H. Clark delivered the address of welcome on behalf of the citizens of Mattoon : the response was given by Maj. E. Miller, of Green oounty. Mortimer Whitehead, Past Master of the New Jersey State Grange, made an eloquent and lengthy address explaining the "Aims and Objects of the Order." The next meeting will be held in December, 1882. at Belleville. ^ WISCONSIN.--The yearly meeting of the State Grange of Wisconsin convened at Milwaukee. The animal report of the Treasurer showed the total receipts during the year were §4,432.93 ; disbursements. $4,002.87 .' leaving a balance of $430.06 in the treasury. The Secretary's re­ port shows that 121 granges are in ex­ istence in the Stite, having a member­ ship of 3?DS0, Four subordinate granges were organized during the year, and 393 mem­ bers acquired by initiating. The following officers were elected: Master. C. F. Carr, Beioit; Steward, A. Sprague; Chaplain, L. Brainerd; Treasurer, J. Cochrane; Secretary, C. L. Hux­ ley, Gatekeeper, E. Wood; Correspondent, Mrs. C. Sherwiri; Executive Committee, C. F. Carr, R. D. Forrest; Trustee, J. E. Williams; State Purchasing Agent, K. Nifliu. A BOY who takes his bow and arrow and shoots off the heads of a dozen Eng­ lish sparrows, is greater than the who makes a Fourth ol July oration. not ©UITEAU THAI* VOsrrrrr.iTRTB; BAT. Mthoopemng of court Guifeean stated that he had thirty checks, representing about $16,- 000, some of which were worthless, and that he wanted ns more of the latter kind. When Mr. Booville ukM if the nri«onw wnnM Kg jttnnj to spoalc to the Juiy, the assassin exclaimed that no wouldn't trust his case in the hands of tho best lawyer in America. Judge Cox said it was safe to assume that Gui- teau would abuse the privilege of arguing in his own defense, for which reason it would not be granted. Mr. Beed th«n com­ menced an argument which consumed the day, and was subjected to frequent interruptions by the assassin. There were portions of the speech which osemed to coi*" .terably impress the jury--notably the very iiathetio passages in which Mr. Beed denounced the crime for its- atrocity, and pictured the widow nightly pray­ ing that the murderer of her husband might be pronounced insane. Those who closely watched the jury observed that there were tears in the eyes of some. Reed's method wns earnest and deliberate. His expression was always serious. He fought to prove that, from tho tune of hie birth, Gniteau was a victim of mental disease. Commencing with, the period of his mother's maternity, he showed that all through the weary months she was an invalid, and aligned that Guiteau was the sufferer from this. The boy could not talk till he was 6 vears old. and was whip­ ped by his father "because lie could not-- whipped from boyhood, Reed argued, be- sau*>« y»• taad of God was on him. He iod a blameless life from that hoar; it was main­ tained, to the age of 19, when he struck his father. That, the counsel claimed, was an act of madness. Then Luther Guiteau, worthy man as he rrtny have have been in mil other respects, was insane upon religion, and he forced young Guiteau to enter the Oneida Community, which was tho vestibule of hell. From iJhat hour. Reed endeavored to show by Guiteau's letters, which the prosecu­ tion had introduced, and by the testimony of . the Government witnesses, the prisoner was insane. The circumstances surrounding the shooting he dwelt upon witli great emphasis, as indicating this. Rwi drew a parallel favora­ ble to Guiteau from the various promi­ nent political assassinations of history, ending with William Lawrence's attack upon Andrew Jackson. He even quoted the case of Charlotte Corday as one of insanity. Reed quoted Guiteau agiinst himself to prove h.s insanity; and mildly characterized his outrageous outburst as " to some extent a boisterous manner." When Reed went so far as to predict that Guiteau would become a driveling idiot, the latter from the dock hissed out an indignant "Pish !'* In conclusion, Reed said: "Gentlemen of the jury, you all said, when you were sworn, that you would be governed by the evidence ana stand up to it, without regard to the effect it might have upon you and your business. I adjure you to keep that oath. Falter not in the performance of the duty which shall save you and this fair land from eternal dis­ grace. I assert that the conviction of this man to the gallows, and his execution, would be an infamy beyond description--an indelible stain on American jurisprudence and Amer­ ican juries. Think of the scene if you condemn him to the gallows! Though not present in body to see the sight you cannot but be then in mind. Ir such a day shall ever come (and I do not believe it ever can eomo under this evidence) thirk of this man brought out from his oeil with the same pal* face and same weary, wandering eyes ! The officers of the law gathering round him, pin­ ioning him, binding him with cords so that his muscles stand out, covering him with the black hood, shutting out the light of day from him, and leading him to the scaffold. Think of him--a lunatic--condemued to the gallows--a lunatic whom the Savior, if He were on earth, would heal! The picture is nqt overdrawn 1 I am very much obliged to you for your attention. I only ask you, Pray do that which shall not, m after years, bring a blush of shame to your cheeks." WStr-nFTH DAT. George Scoviile began his argument for the defense, and consumed the day without finish­ ing. He started by charging that there was a conspiracy to bang the prisoner. He then proceeded to name the conspirators : The Djp- trict Attorney, Judge Porter, Mr. Davidge and five of the Government experts, namely, Drs. Gray, Hamilton, Kempster, MacDonald and Wooster. The counts of this indictment, twen­ ty in number, are : First--They have perverted the law in this sase. Scoviile, in illustration or Mpport of this count, alluded to the introduction py Judge Por­ ter of the deci^ionoj* ^ ~ ~ - ntly rei WRRed thC^'snifeestion "tBat Judge Davis sat with Cardozo or/Barnard, but ,1 have yet to learn if either cT theM* aver committed a more reprehensible act '•hat of Judge Davis." Scoviile warmed up with his subject, and tM nounced in severe language the extra-judicial act of Judge Davis. " Had a newspaper been guilty of such a bold-faced attempt to influence the decision in a peuding cause, the editor would have bean subject to arrest for con­ tempt" Judge Porter--"Don't let ns turn this court­ room mto a town meeting." Scoviile resumed, but was soon interrupted by Davidge, who, with some impatience, said;. "Oh, no, no, Scoviile ; that's not so." Scoviile--You may interrupt as much as you please; I shall not be deterred from saying just what I believe to be the truth. Davidge--Well, well, I'll not interrupt agai^ and say what you may. Gnteau--That's right, Davidge ; you keep quiet. You talked for two days and didn't say anything eithar; now give some one else a show. BcovilT* continued: When Judge Porter comes before this jury and undertakes to pervert evi­ dence, I shall not keep quiet, as I did with Dav­ idge, hut I shall slop him. Guiteau--So shall L Scoviile--I shall stop him, and I shall osrrect him, it I find he is misstating evidence. Guiteau--Never mind; Til attend to htm Judge Porter--There will be two Guiteaas then to attend to me. Scoviile continued : " The prosecution states that if the prisoner knew the fact was wrong on July 2, then he should hang. Now this is not by any means the whole of it, or a correct statement of the law. The court has added in substance as follows: • Yet if m this act he was overpowered by a consciousness coming through his disoased mind that what he was doing was necessary for the good of the country aud was specially approved bv God, then you cannot convict him of murder.'v Scoviile proceeded to point out to the jury what ho termed the perversions of evidence by Davidge. He attacked the theory of the pros­ ecution that it was the prisoner's own innate or acquired depravity that naturally led up to tho killing of the President aud discussed at some length the evidence introduced by them to show instances of the prisoner's meanness and depravity. "This evidence," said Scoviile, " has in almost every instance been perverted. Counsel parade here the debts owed by the prisoner, and attempt to make much of them in this chani they are weaving." Guiteau--I owe about $1,000, and I suppose that ought to hang a man. If these people will send in their hills now, I'll give them checks for them, and get them out of the way. I suppose I've got some money now. I'll get rid of these people, and then I won't owe any­ body. Scoviile then alluded to the incident sworn to by Shaw of Guiteau pawning a worthless watch for $25. Guiteau shouted : " Oh, you better stop on Shaw--' pshaw,' I mean." And added : "That was meant for a pun, but they don't seem to see it" Scoviile denounced the witness Shaw. He believed he had deliberately perjured himself to this ease, as had also the contemptible little Jew clerk who came down here to help Shaw eat Guiteau screamed out: " This whole testi­ mony of Shaw is false, and no deoent •»" would believe it for an instant." ^ FOKTY-SIXTH DAT. Scoviile resumed his argument for the de­ fense, and was at once interrupted by Guiteau, who made one of his characteristic speeches, asking the court to instruct that if it appear that he was foroed by the Deity to remove the President he may be acquitted on tho ground of transitory mania. Sickles, McFarland and Hiscock, he said, were acquitted on the grooad of transitory mania. Scoviile began with a general complaint of the alleged unfairness on the part of the pros­ ecution, particularly of the Prosecuting Attor­ ney. Ho had from the beginning orescribed who should vufit the jail and who should not. He had introduced persons into the prisoner's | cell under false guise, to worm out his secrets and when the prisoner said anything which i to his benefit tho Prosecuting At~ might inure nlr- torney has been very careful to let it become known. He complained of Corkhiil's unfair­ ness in destroying the notes of Stenographer Bailey, so that the defense could not have the benefit of them. The conduct of the prosecu­ tion in the court-room, he alleged, was not only unfair to the defense, but was oftsn discourte­ ous and more befitting a police oourt than Sooville th«a criticised severely the course of the prosecution in refusing to permit the pris­ oner to address the Jury for a brief hour or two, simply because they feared lie might disclose bv his manner or ^p^MCti his true mental condition. SooviBe thanealtod attention to the letter writ- tfenby&ntteaa to (he District Attorney, and from which a portion had been clipped, as he claimed, by the prosecution, and in a spirit of unfair­ ness. Davidge (smiling)--" Oh. just assume that one of the conspirators cut it out" Corkhill-- "I suppose what you are driving at is that you want the jury to think I cut a slip out of that letter." Scoviile--•' I believe it was done by you, or by your direction, for the reason that you believed it for the interest of the^rosecntion." " So do I," shouted Gniteau. Scoviile then praoeeded to give the jury his views upon Judge Porter, and to instruct then as to how finch weight they should attach to his utterances, and as to the best means of counteracting the influence of his oratory. Porter, he said, was prostituting his fine at­ tainments in an effort to hang an insane man. Scoviile then reviewed the prisoner's life, and said: " When he left the Oneida Community, he sought out Beeoher's church, the Young Men's Christian Association, and the society of Christian people. His tendencies at this time were not immoral, nor had he shown any indi­ cation of that awful (with sarcasm) crime of not paying his board-bills, for which this prosecu­ tion are trying to hang him." Corkhill--"Oh, no. If he is hung at all, it i will be tot murder--not for owing board- ' bills." Guiteau eal!p«I ont: "I guess there ain't much chance of my being hung, anyhow." Scoviile continued, up to the houa. of ad­ journment, his review of the life of the pris­ oner, explaining hijt acts in the light of coun­ sel's (Scoville's) theory upon the case. Guiteau ecoasKmally oomasented, but never seriously disturbed thr <mtim ef the argument Scoviile spoke of tho monumental assurance of the prisoner i® naming himself in connec­ tion with Ghrant, Conkhny and Arthur. " I should say a pretty line quartette," ex- daimod the prisoner. Later on, ScovUIa read from Guiteau's speech, when Guiteau called out: " You better not read any more, Scoviile; it goes dead against your ' fool' theory." lOaTT-SEVENTH DAT, Scoviile resumed his address, taking np and discussing insane-statistics introduced by the prosecution. Discussing the horrors of crime, as often shown in the acts of insane criminals, Scoyillo said there was nothing in this act to compare with some of these acts of insane criminals; "and, gentlemen of the jury," he said, "in my opinion, if there were not reasons, and powerful ones, at the back of this prosecution, this prisoner never would have been brought to trial. But I tell you, gentlemen offhe jury, back of this prose­ cution is an influence which I have felt, and which you may feel, gentlemen, before this trial is concluded. There are politicians who seek to hide their own shame behind the dis­ grace of this poor prisoner aud make him a scapegoat for thqir crime. I did not intend, gentlemen of the jury, to take up this feature of the case, but when I find the power and in­ fluence of this Government used against me in deuying the small pittance that 1 have asked for a fair and impartial trial, and the small fa­ cilities needed for a proper defense, I do, not propose to keep quiet I say that such men as Grant and Conklingv and Arthur are morally and intellectually responsi­ ble for this crime. Mr. Conkling shall not escape, shall not shirk the res}>onsibiiity of the state of things that led to th« act, and he snail not escape the condemnation of the American people, if I can help it, for his share in this disgraceful scramble for office that led to a confl.ct with the etiosen ruler of this great nation, and led this poor insane man to com­ pass--what they would have hailed with satis­ faction, as would, probably, hundreds of other politicians, if it could have occurred ot.i.er than through assassination--the removal of Garfield, who stood in the way of their uniighieona and disgraceful straggle for office. Neither shall Grant escape that condemnation to which he is so jtiHtlj\subjected( when, coming from Mexico, and coming with undue baste to throw his own name into this petty quarrel about a small office in the Republican party, he sought to foment differenoes that had sprung up. I am not going to see the misdeeds of these men, high in power, visited upon the head of this poor insane man if I can help it This clamor lor his blood is not for the purpose of avenging Garfield or of satisfying justice. Their theory is that; If it can be shown that this was the act of a sa^ie man, then these politi­ cians in high win lay, j Of course we are.nt^ j^poiv'Mltfor^jivVrisf & mtue man. re. vsiMm, tnin 'lea a man 10 such an act ;' but, on the contrary, , gent lumen of the jury, what is the effect of your verdi.-t if you acquit him as an insane man V Why, people wul say, 'Some one is at fault •' *' «y will say, ' We will fix the blame upon the heads aud hearts of those men who waged the war upon our poor dead President until it drove this poor insane man, from reading daily in tho paper* what Grant says, wnat Conkhng says, and from constantly thinking upon it, to his insane act of lulling tho President ; and there are men in hij-h places, the really culpa­ ble ones, who wilt go down to posterity with the stigma upon their muses and the detesta­ tion ot their countrymen tautened upon their memories." Scovihes denunciation of Conkling and others created a profound sensation in the oourt-rooui. The prisoner, who had been looking over the New York papers, called out: " I see the New York <'ourt of Appeals has just decided iu fa­ vor of our theory on the insanity question. I thank you, Messrs. Judges." Scoviile discussed the conduct and actions of Guiteau at the time and immediately after the shooting, and contended that they were entire­ ly in keeping with the theory of insanity--that his coolness, bis quietly going to bed and peace­ fully sleeping tue night after the murder were characteristic incidents of crime such as would be expected from an insane man and insane men. FOBTT-EIiJITTi: DAT. Guiteau opened proceedings by thanking the New York Court of Appeals for its timely de­ cision on the law of insanity. "Hitherto," said the assassin, " the law has been that the burden of proof was on tho defendant, but the Oourt of Appeals, with grind maguauimity, says that the burden of proof is on this prosecution, to prove that tho mau n>t only committed the act, but also that he has sane ai the time he committed it." After the prisoner had dolivered himself _ of this little speech, Scoviile resumed his argument, reading from the evidence of several witnesses who were at the depot ana ^awthe scooting and subsequent arrest of Guiteau, his object being to show that the prisoner was ptrfectly calm and cool, and in a condition of terves and intellect at variance with the hypothesis of sanity under such circumstances. As Scoviile proceeded. Corkhill made fre­ quent and, as the speaker evidently thought, slighting comments, unSl. finally becoming ir­ ritated, he turned to tho District. Attorney and denounced in scathing terms his unfair conduct, and instanced his presentation as' evidence in this case of a letter written by the prisoner,and which he (Corkhill) had intercepted and mu­ tilated by cutting off 'the signature and such portion as he thought might benefit the pris­ oner, " a thing," said Scoviile, "which was never before permitted in a court of justice, not even upon the tnal or a civfl suit" Corkhill (sneeriugly)--"That's your opinion merely, Mr. Scoviile. It amounts to nothing as a fact" Scoviile--"Well, let it be my opinion. I Presume I am entitled to one, and so is the ury." Guiteau (with energy)--" It was a friendly allusion to Presideut Arthur *** he cut out--- the mean, dirty whelp." As Scoviile continued, counsel for the prose­ cution frequently interrupted him, and a pun­ ning fire was kept up between counsel for some time. The speaker disclaimed as his main mo­ tive tho desire to shield the prisoner for the honor of the Guiteau family. His greatest de- wre was to save the American people and the American judiciary from tho disgrace of hur­ rying to the gibbet an insane man. Commenting upon, as he claims, the absence of motive on Guiteau's part, Soovllle read: ' You cannot find a case in history--you cannot suppose a case where a man 40 years of age, who has never committed crime, who has never for an hour associated with criminals or bad P60?}®; 1,w^l0> °u the contrary, has always sought the society, not only of the better class of people, but of Christian people ; you cannot conceive of such man's committing such a crime wiUiout motive. Nothing but the theory of insanity can postiuly account for such an act as Guiteau's." Scoviile then discussed the assumption that Guiteau nuKht have been actuated by desire for revenge, and argued the improbability of such assumption, from the fact if anv ground for ul will existed on GuiteauV part it was against Secretary Blaine, and according to the inexor­ able lu ws of mmd it would have been executed against him. There cannot possibly be showiL m "• P"* toW^ Scoviile n<TTt took up the hypothesis that the crime was committed from "an overpowering desire for notoriety, and claimed history failed to point out a cum where such a crime was committed purely aad simply from such mo­ tive, and that it was incompatible with reason and impossible for the human mind to conoeive sseh motive as sufficient to iaduea sMBif. spas •MUi tp cptniait rnnh m-ima. - '• Habit of UntrntliT ̂ * ' Some men seem to have a constitu­ tional inability to tell the simple truth. They may not mean to lie or tell an un­ truth. But they are careless--careless in hearing, careless in understanding, care­ less in repeating what is said to them. These well-meaning but reckless people do more mischief than those who inten­ tionally foment strife' by deliberate false­ hood. There is no firebrand like your well-meaning busybody, who is continu­ ally in search of sc&ndal, and by sheer habit misquotes everybody's statement. This carelessness is a sin of no small magnitude. A man's duty to his fel­ lows requires him to be careful--for wliat else were brains and common sense given him ? Of course that other class, the malignant scandal mongers who take a fiendish pleasure in pro­ moting strife, who deliberately garble men's words and twist their sentiments, is in the minority, and people have a very decided opinion regarding them. Most men misrepresent because they don't seem to think that care in speak­ ing the truth is a pre-eminent duty. The effects of this careless misrepre­ senting of others are seen everywhere. Its effect on the individual is to confirm him in a habit of loose, distorted and exaggerated statement, until telling the trutn becomes a moral impossibility. No other thing causes so many long standing friendships to be broken, sc many dissensions in churches, so much bitterness in communities and so much evil everywhere. It is an abuse that calls (or the rebuke of every honorable man; a rebuke that shall be given not only in words whenever occasion de­ mands, but in example. The Persians were said to teach their youth three things : to ride, to draw the bow, and to speak the truth. A little more instruc­ tion on this latter head would ild no harm to our " advanced civilization."-- Examiner and < fironicle. Volteau's ^oppressed Speech. Guiteau, the assassin, furnished tho Asso­ ciated Press with a brief of his proposed ad­ dress to the jury. It is like his usual drivel about the Deity having inspired the dastardly act. It is a combination of bombast, egotism and blasphemy. He starts out by saying: "If the oourt please, gentlemen of the jury, I am a patriot To-day I suffer in bonds as a patriot Washington was a patriot; Grant was a patriot Washington led the armies of the Revolution tiirough eight years of bloody war to victory and glory; Grant led the armies of the Union to victory and glory; and to-day the nation is prosperous' and happy. To-dsy--Christmas, 1881--1 suffer in bonds as a patriot because I had tho inspiration and nerve to unite a great political party, to the end that the nation might be saved from another devastating war. To-day I suffer in bonds as a patriot There is not the first element of mur­ der in this case." After harping at considerable length upon the old plea of inspiration, quoting Beeoher, Talmage and other clergymen, aud declaring that when he became President in 1884 he would Clean out the MorLuuiu right speedily, he closes thus to the jury: "To hang a man in my mental condition on July 2, when I fired on the President, would be a lasting disgrace to the American people. The mothers and daughters of the republic are praying that you w.ll vindicate my inspira­ tion. I beg you do not get the Deity down on you by meddling with this case. I beg, for your "own sake, and for the sake of the American people, and for the sake of gen­ erations yet unborn, that vou let this case alone. You cannot afford to touch it Let your ver­ dict be that it was Deity's act, not mine. When the President was shot bis Cabinet telegraphed DOINGS OF CONGRESS* Mr. Logan introduced in the Senate the 16th inst, a bill to pay Mrs. Abraham Lincoln $15,000 as arrears ot pension for five years, Mid it was referred to the Pension Committee. The House bill appropriating $540,000 for the cen«ui deficiency ^ passed. The feature of the day was a debase on the resolution for the repeal of the Pension-Arrearages act. Mr. Voorheee declared the measure an honest one; Mr. Beck argued against the scheme at great length, and Mr. Ingalls expressed his willing­ ness to vote $1;000,000,000 to the soldiers! In the House, a bdl was introduced by Mr. Cullen, of Illinois, to appropriate $100,000 for the con­ struction of locks and dams so as to insure six feet of water in the channel of tho Illinois river at low water, and also for the enlargement of the Illinois and Michigan canal to a breadth of not less than 150 feet and a depth of not less than tight feet from Joliot to Chicago. Representa­ tive Townsend introduced a new national bank­ rupt law, which ne claims is in ev­ ery way superior to the old one. Mr Wheeler presented a bill to prevent tho introduction of infectious diseases, and Mr. Far well an act to sweep away bank taxes. Mr. Hazeltine handed in a measnre for the usue of fractional currency, and Mr. Will­ iams a proposition for the erection of a monu­ ment over the grave of Zaohary Taylor. Mr. Garrison moved to pass the bill for the erection of the Garfield Memorial Hospital in the District of ColmnUa, but a debate of half an hour de­ veloped btrong objections, and the House re­ fused to suspend the rales. Mr. Garland introduced a bill in the Senate, on the 17th, directing the Secretary of the Treasury to purchase the Frecdmen'e Bank property, and Mr. Davis offered a measure for ; tho retirement of Justice Ward Hunt. Mr. Blair j presented a bill granting a pension of $5,000 : per year to Mrs. Garfield. Mr. Plumb present­ ed a petition from citizens of Kansas favor- i ing woman suffrage. Mr. Book continued j his criticism of tntr Ingalls resolution touching ; the Poiision-Arreara law. He showed that in 1879 the Pension Commissioner had reported : that hands on the Pension Bureau had resulted from tho Arrears-of-Pension law. The Sher- ; man Funding bill was discussed. Mr. Plumb , argued that the redomption fund for ; United States notes ouxht to bo dimin- j irfhed. and all bonds redeemed up to | the limits of $100,0'0,000. He advocated cur- | rency versus bank circulation. Mr. Teller was J opposed to the bill because he disliked this ! " everlasting tinkering with the finances," and i wnB in favor of silver coinage. The President : sent the following nominations to the Senate : j Postmasters--Thomas C. Moore, Metropolis ! City, III.; Robert Huston, Braidwood, ill.; John ; B. Hay, Belleville, 111.; Warner L. Vestal, Storm Luke, lows; LorenzoD. Myers, Columbus, Ohio; William S. Liuge, Lafayette, Ind.; Milo Blair, Sedalin, Mo. To be Indian Agents--Cyrus P. Lus«, of Illinois, White Earth Agency, Minn.; Jacob K Mitchell, of Kansas, Western Sho- | shone Agency, Nevada. In the House, Mr. rArmfield offered a resolution for a oommittee | to investigate internal-revenue abuses in' the Sixth district of North Carolina. Mr. ; Belmont prosentod---^ resolution calling i for the correspondence relative to efforts I to sec tire peace between Chih, Pern and Bolivia. ^ Mr. Harris called for similar information in rc- | gard to LUe Chiriqui coaling stations. Mr. Robeson called up tho report of the Committee on Rules, and stated that the thirteen commit­ tees whose membership it was proposed to in­ crease had before them nearly 90 per cent, of all the business of the House. A prolonged debate took place, after which a motion to table the report was lost A favorable report was made in the Senate, i on the 18th inst., on the bill to permit the re- : tiremcnt of Justice Hunt A resolution was { adopted that the Committee on Pnblic Lands | inquire into the administration of the land laws i and report recommendations. On his resolution i against the withdrawal of silver certificates, Mr, | Brown argued at great length in favor of | bimetallism. Tho Sherman Funding bill was | taken up, and Mr. Morgan insisted that the { Government can in eleven years take up the t continued bonds without drawing a cent from j the surplus revenues. Mr. Ferry intro- j duced a Lill to fix the couipensa- | tiun of letter carriers. In the House, Mr. Haskell announced that the Commit ee on riaims biid 000 tills under coniaderati-jn. Mr. I Neal offered a resolution for printing 3,000 copies of the report of the Guiteau trial, for the use of members. In the oourse of a debate on rules, Mr. Horr said that one-fifth of the ses­ sion had been frittered away on technical questions. trouble; his creditors have called meeting and wish me to attend, but will not go. He owes me &5,G00, and know he cannot pay it. Poor Forney If his income was £1,000 or $10,000 year he would spend it all. I will seiid to him at once a receipt in full for all de­ mands. That as the best I can do toi him at present.'" to foreign nations that it was the ct of a ' niad- ttu!t (t be oftif^an^1 j^&ded tfiat\t1 was' tne**act of a '•madman.'" •Mr Lynch Law in Washington Territory. A telegram from Seattle, in W ashingtqp Ter­ ritory, says: James Sullivan and William Howard were arrested here to-day on a charge of the mtirder of George R. Reynolds, a young man whom they waylaid and shot last night The prisoners were brought before a magistrate for prelimi­ nary examination. Evidence of their guilt is most conclusive. The feeling was intense, and at tho close of the examination a Oommitteg4>f Safety foroed its way into the court-room, and, overpowering the officers, took the prisoners. Sullivan and Howard were takon a short distance and hanged. Their bodies were loft suspended, and a crowd numbering 4> 0 then proceeded to the county jail, and, overpowering the guards and breaking down the doors of a cell, took out Benjamin Payne, who was confined for the murder of Po ice-Oftioer Sears. He was taken to the place *vhere the bodies of Sullivan and Howard were suspended, and hanged. The bodiesjwere left banging some time, and then given over to the Coroner. The Commit­ tee or Safety oontinues its organization, and have issued a notice that persons guilty of highway robbery in the city will, if ar estod, receive the penalty of death in a suinmarv manner. Woman's Oregg* Under the head of " Hints, Questions and Experiences," Beecher's Christian Union remarks: Few subjects have been more fre­ quently discussed than the healthful dressing of women. Where the weight of the clothes should come ia at last de­ cided without question. But how few, even of those who admit that the weight of the clothing should come on the shoulders, wear their clothing of a pat­ tern that makes it possible. Every year witnesses greater improvements in the undergarments made for women, but few avail themselves of the relief and comfort to be gained by their use. Look at the young girls on our streets, with waists so compressed that no artist, or any other person with a full realiza­ tion of the true beauty of the female form, could behold without a feeling of impatience if not disgust. How many of those girls when they compress their waists in this unnatural manner* know that they entirely destroy their freedom of walking; and that, while they appear to themselves to have freedom of motion, to others, who watch them, they present A very comical combination of freedom and stiffness ? The nppejr part of the body being in a vice is perfectly stiff from the waist up. The shoulders are held in pos.tion far above where they should be, and the elbows are at sharp angles two or threa inches behind the line of the shoulders. Loss of grace is not the only penalty paid. Many girls destroy good voices by this vicious man- • ner of dressing. The waist being so unnaturally compressed, it is impos­ sible to breathe from the right place. To test this for yourself, place your hand on your chest and take breath from below the belt, and nnt( the sylla­ ble, La. Then Bing it breathing from the chest, where you are compelled to breathe if the clothes are worn tightly at the belt, and note the difference in the sound. Try, for a short time before rising, to breathe from below the belt without moving the chest. In short, try all the time to breathe as low down as possible, and watch how the hard, disagreeable head tones--for which American women are famous--will dis­ appear. You will sing without half the effort, you will be able to walk without "getting out of breath" and lose alto­ gether the tired feeling from the chest that so many complain of when wafking. Thitf can be tried by all. It is not for the young alone. Many of the fretful, nervous women can hold their imperfect breathing responsible for much of their fretfuluess and nervousness. Think of - it when sewing, and breathe below the belt. At first, it will seem hard, but if persisted in will finally become as it should have been from the beginning, nature itself. Watch your husband and brother, and you will see their chests make no perceptible movement when breathing, because they breathe natur­ ally. They have not worn their clothing so tightly belted that lungs and other organs of the body have been deprived of room for growth. Peculiar Weddings. Numerous peculiar weddings are hap­ pening nowadays. A girl at Coulters-The bill to retire from the United States Su- -... ^ _ . jre^.BewohJustus Hnnt,-who has for > long J1"?' N- £>•' ]^ked m a ro°um11b/ » umo been totally incapable of discharging the , ', ° chained a savage bull-dog • , ® H T V / I K N N M ̂ 5 / V T T * . V T , « K I * ̂ M 1 A _ 1 duties of the position, passed the Senate, on the 19:h, by a vote of; 41 to 14. The President pro tem. submitted the response of the Secretary of the Interior to the rosolu-ot tion of" inquiry as to the lapsing of tho Northern Pacific land grant, which was referred to the Judiciary Committee. Resolutions from the Leirislature of West Vir­ ginia wore presented, asking that producers of loaf tobacco be not required to take out a license. After prolonged debate on the 3-per­ cent. Funding bill, Mr Ingalls moved to lay tho measure on the table. Almost the entire day in the House was spent in discussing tho report of the Committee on Rules contemplat­ ing additions to numerous standing commit­ tees, and the end of it was that the report, aiong with the amendments that had been of­ fered, was recommitted to the same committee. A bill to appropriate $5,000 for transporting agricultural and mineral specimens from the Atlanta exposition was passed. Monday after­ noon was set apart for eulogies upou Senator Burnside. The Speaker announced that two additional volumes of the spe< ches of President Theirs had been contributed to the library. Mr. Bavye reported a bill for a home for in­ digent soldiers and sailors at Erie, Pa. under the window ; but her lover poi­ soned the dog, pried open her window, and carried her to a clergyman. Mrs. R^eder, on the death of her hus­ band, in Baltimore, received the follow- A Madman's Butchery. A blood-curdling tragedy was enacted near Lancaster, Gerrard county, Ky. James A. | Wilmot, a farmer in good circumstances, was j rendered temporarily insane by brooding over a debt of $400 which he owed to a neighbor. His insanity assumed the homicidal type, and culminated in the wholesale slaughter of the members of his family. Getting oul j of bed during the night, the maniac ! sought an ax, and with this1; weapon slew his • aged mother, his wife and two daughters, and ! wound up by hanging himself in his barn. A I son. aged 20 years, escaped by outrunuin,; tho ! maniac faiher. He alarmed the neighbors, who repaired to the Wilmot mansion and found the ' body of James A. Wilmot hanging in his barn | the dead bodies of Elizabeth Wilmot ! bis mother, aged 89 years; Mattie and 1 Mary Wilmot, his daughters, sged 19 and 16 | years, lying in their beds, with one awful cut ! across the neck and Llows from a new, sharp ax, found lyin« on the floor of the room; also ! the body of El izabeth Wilmot , h is wife , lying i on ..her face on the floor, with three or four gashes in her head and back, made with the same death-dealing ax. The deadly blows had evidently been dealt while the victims were sleeping. Horrible Fate of a Missouri Family. A dispatch from Clinton, Mo., says the house of George C. Smith, at Lewis, five miles north of there, burned at 3 o'clock in tho morning, and five of the inmates perished, viz.: Eliza­ beth Smith, aged 17 ; Rachel, aged 13; Ellen, aged 6; Theodore, aged 16, and the mother, aged 43. The fire is supposed to have started from clothing hanging by the kitchen stove, or from a coal-oil explosion. Mrs. Smith was first to awaken, when she aroused her husband, who made his esoape with the little girl of a neighbor who was staying there for the night, and one of his own daugh­ ters, aged about 8. Smith and bis daughter were seriously burned. The house was a story and a half, and the family were all sleeping in the second story. A Mr. White, who was the suitor of Elizabeth Smit% was at the house until after 1 o'clock, and thinks the lire caught in the kitchen from clothing by the stove. Miss Smith was to have been married in a few weeks. An inquest was held, aad a verdict rendered in accordance with the facts. Mr. Smith was em­ ployed by the Osage Coal and Mining Company. A STORY is told of a member of a cer­ tain theological seminary who was so sensitive as to any suspicion of plagiar­ ism that he never allowed himself to make the slightest quotation without giving an authority. On one occasion he commenced grace at breakfast thus : " Lord, we thank Thee that we have awakened from the sleep which a writer in the Edinburgh JteWeurhasoalled 'the image of death.'" The Death Penalty. Any man who kills another by acci­ dent, without intention to harm him, must be killed. No matter what be the extenuating circumstances of any kill­ ing, no man or government is authorized i to pardon, but the strict law must be fulfilled in every case, and in all cir­ cumstances ; the soldier who kills an­ other in war must die,; the insane man who sheds blood, and the man who iD self-defense kill his assailant, forfeit their lives, etc., etc. Do you object and say, "*'Oh, no; we must construe the command, not as it was construed then, but us the circumstances of our day and our light demand ?" Exactly ; well, wt will meet you on that ground, and cheer­ fully give the supposed command all tli€ weight in present legislation which wt think it ought to have. Do you remind ns that Moses allowed one who had shed blood accidently, or without malice, tc llee to a city of refuge--and as long ai he stayed there the " avenger" could not harm him ? Very true. Moses then felt justified in making exceptions tc this command, if it were such, after th« lapse of a thousand years, and whei change of condition and established gov ernment, and improved civilization, al­ lowed it. Moses set us a good example and now, after 8,500 more years ol growth, and a still more entire changt of condition, and the opening of a nev dis{>ensation, which abrogates tho " eye for eve and tooth for tooth," we take ex ample by the groat Hebrew reformer, and conform methods to our day anc needs, seeking only to keep sacredlj to the idea and spirit which underlie th< wise and humane records of inspiration -- Wendell Phillipi imthe North Amer ican Merino. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer gives the following reminis­ cence of Buchanan and Forney : " The old Penn8ylvanian, at Philadelphia, when edited by John W. Forney, was always considered the personal organ of Mr. Buchanan. Forney was poor and extravagant, and, as his paper was prin­ cipally .supported by politicians, he was always hard up for money, and was a standing pensioner upon the bounty of his political friends. He was constantly borrowing money--l>orrowirig from Peter to pay Paul. In the year the wri­ ter hereof, then editor of the Pittsburgh Morning Post, on his way to Philadel­ phia stopped off by invitation of Mr. Buchanan to visit him at his Wheatland home, near Lancaster. One day, in opening and reading his large mail, he spoke out and said : ' Here is the same old story : Forney is again in financial me letter lrom Franklin Broillar, of Ovroll, Mo. : "I have just heard the news. Will you marry me now? En­ closed find $100 to* bring you and your children here." Broillar and Mrs. Beeder had been engaged before the war; but an uncontradicted report that he had been killed in battle, led her to marry another man. When he learned that he had lost her he went West and and waited twenty iears to renew the oourtship. She saidjyes. Old Edgerton, of Bellevue, Iowa, de­ cided to get rid of hnf^wife and marry a younger woman. This he accomplished by means of an irregular divorce and with the consent of the original wife, who remains in the Edgerton establish­ ment as housekeeper, while the bride plays the idle lady. A Nashville girl being forbidden to marry her lover, promised obedience, but one day requested her father to hand their pastor a note on his way to busi­ ness. Thus he was unsuspectingly led to deliver an invitation to the clergyman to call at onoe and perform the prohibit­ ed ceremony ; and the latter, presuming that parental consent had been obtained, readily obeyed the summons. 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