J I AT a meoting of {1M Salvation Army i'v in Washington the other day, Gen. ys •; William Booth, the Commander-in- p ̂ diH «> impressed one well-dressed old '#Wrtleman that he rushed tip to the v : platform, his eyes streaming with tears, L •. and taking a good gold watch and chain kjV.v- ^rom his vest gave it aa a thank offer ing for his own oon version. GBK. CASSIUS M. CUT, of Madison |gCounty, Ky., who has announced him- |p,, • s< self as a ^Republican candidate for Gov- £* , ernor, is 76 years of age. He graduated " • at Yale in 1832, and became one of the ||v most noted leaders and agitators of the W' anlfrslavery period. Thirty-six years v*' ~ , ago he received 4,000 voles as the abo- : lition candidate for Governor of Ken- tacky; was a Major General in the Fed- | ©ral army during the early part of the war, and was Minister to Buscria from r 1868 to 1869. k •S~-£. > -v -,V MB. S. H. PULESTON, the millionaire member of Parliament who is about to purchase two million dollars worth of Pennsylvania coal lands, was twenty years ago a reporter on a small paper at Pittson, Pa. lie took an active in terest in local politics there and ulti mately got a good position in Washing ton, D. C. He never was naturalized as an American citizen. Tt is said that there is a venerable and unsatisfied judgment standing against him at Wilkesbarre, Pa., for $20, the* amount ^ V of a store bill contracted inhis poverty- c ( stricken reportorial days. THE Wakulla (Fla.) Times has this ^.paragraph: "Upon the mantel of our sanctum can be seen the skull and jaw- ^ bone of a supposed prehistoric giant. It was excavated from a mound on the ! sea coast by Henry Gwaltney. The ; under jaw is twice as large as that of the largest man of the present decade. The most remarkable fact was the per fect state of preservation of the teeth; they were perfectly sound, with the ex ception of one that was slightly de- * cayed, and not one missing. Evidently ~ the fellow would have weighed at least three or four hundred pounds. The thickness of the skull is simply wonder ful." - . GEORGE WASHINGTON SIMS, of Moun- tainbury, Ark., was, it is stated, born : on January 14, 1777. He* was with N Jackson's baggage wagon in 1812, and met with an accident by the giving way v of a bridge. He was badly hurt, lost a ^ portion of his lip, fractured his skull and dislocated his left shoulder. He underwent an operation, and a piece of « his skull bone about the size of a 25- cent piece was removed. The loss . caused him no inconvenience, he made t\ a speedy recovery and in 1849 made a p. trip to Colorado, suffering the hardships v incidental to pioneers. He is still hale and hearty, can kill a duck at any di» ; tance within the range of his gtin, and - is a first-class rifle shot. sir T THE latest method of identifying prisoners which has been introduced iff-* »>" - into France by M. Alphonse Bertillion, •* and which is now successfully practiced not only in the chief French prisons, but in Russia and Japan as well, is the exact measurement of the prisoner on ; his arrival at the jail. His waist, the | length and width of the head, the left middle finger, the left foot, the out stretched arms, the three other fingers ' of the left hand, the left arm from the ^ elbow to the wrist, and the length and width of the ear are measured, and the color of the eyes and any particularities i are noted down. A photograph is also 1 immediacy taken, and by these means the many mistakes which have been ? made by trusting to a photograph only are avoided. THE testimony in a $5,000 breaoh-of- pr»mise suit of Miss Jennie Davenport, . of Bloomingdale, N. J., against Louis }: Everson, throws considerable light on IS the art of kissing by telegraph. Jen-' s: i Bie, who was employed as a companion ' to young Byerson's mother, occupied the room immediately above the young man, and the two constructed a tele graph line, a cord answering for the short circuit. A tiny bell was attached to each end. The tingling of the bell - was used to represent a kiss, and when they bade each other good night the bells rattled for hours at a tiire. The fair plaintiff said as she enthusiastically described a the schemes to outwit the , old people: "Louis insisted on tele- v graphing our kisses every night, and oh! but didn't he want a lot of them!" AN interesting operation of flesh- grafting, which was one of the dis coveries of M. Paul Bert, has just been performed by a young French surgeon, A named Dr. Dubousquet-Labordiere. A workman had his foot scorched by 1: molten iron, and the skin was destroyed cover a surface of about eight inches by Jfour. Dr. Dubousquet took four strips " *of flesh from the thigh of a young man \ and four from a frog and transferred f -AV,\ them to the wound. By great care the < . . ^ wound healed in a few days. The . t cicatrice obtained by the frog's skin was ' soft, elastic, and inodorous; that from fe^human flesh was a little strained, harder, and produced irritation on some points, i. ' The patient has now been able to re- •, -^sume his occupation. The result of the .^operation is of great importance in - \.y jShowing the superiority of frog skin, p .1 . while on the other hand human flesh is 'not always to b9 had in sufficient quan- ig^g iities for burns or wounds of any size, and the dissection of stripsisivery ^painful. IT was a queer-looking tiling that and between ©lock dial. A icator like a clock hand was to the side of the pan and fiittMi& to the shape of the coffee cup or cathedral dosn. The coffee cup was illuminated and there came from within a merry ticking sound. The coffee cup revolves with the mechanism and the indicator stands still. The illumination comes from a little lamp inside the dome that consumes a penny's worth of oil burning all night. The time of night, or day, for it may be used with out the lamp, can always be seen at a glance. A simple attachment fits over the coffee cup dial, to use for giving medicine. It is a little indicator placed on the minute for next giving medicine and moves around with the dial to the pointing hand. The clock will never be popular with gentlemen who are interested in "lodge" and "club" meet ings. . "THE present Amir of Afghanistan," says the London Standard, "is a moat energetic ruler. Since Abdurrahman ascended the thxone, and especially since we met the Viceroy at Rawal Pindi, civilization has wonderfully ad vanced in Afghanistan. European man ufacturers and customs have been in troduced to an extraordinary extent, and in a few years' time the State will hardly be recognizable at the present rate of progress. The Ami? supervises all the Government machinery person ally, even descending to such details as the packing of lamps for export. He retires late and does not rise early, but gets through an immense deal of busi ness between 10 and 4 p. m., presiding twice a week at public dusbars for the administration of justice. The Gov ernor of Cabul--the Kotwar--every night brings him four registers of the day's offenses, containing respectively the names of those who are to lose their property, those who are to be fined, imprisoned,or are guilty of death, and the Amir looks carefully into each case. No soldier can have a day's leave without direct permission from the Amir, who also sets down separately every item of the expenses of himself and household." "I NEVER see any ghosts or on the track," said an old, grizzled en gineer on the Northwestern road, to a Chicago Herald reporter, "but there's a spot a piece up the track that I never pass without feeling sort of uneasy. Seven years ago I was coming into town at a pretty lively trot when Jake, my fireman, who was on the lookout, yelled to me that there was something on the track. Although it was late in the even ing and rain was falling furiously, I could, see a dark object on the track at the Ashland avenue orossing. I gave the whistle lever a yank, reversed the engine, and sanded the track, but all to no purpose. We were going too fast to make a quick stop, and in less than five seconds the engine shot into the obstruction, if such it may be called, and hurled it to one side. As we sped by I heard a scream and saw a girl dancing wildly on the sidewalk. As soon as we came to a full stop I found that we had run into a baby carriage which a servant girl had abandoned in her fright at the fast approaching head light of the engine. The child ? Poor thing, it was crushed like an egg-shell. Every time I pass that crossing I see the little white face and the 'broidered dress all stained with red. Even the old engine seems to tremble as she wheels over the spot. To me this stretch of track is the worst on the whole line. 1 Other engineers have their wicked rails farther out of town." Si? « rested on a Philadelphia jeweler's case. .,^It was a Small nickel-plated pan two • ^ iinches deep and six in diameter. On 'jtop was an inverted coffee cup made of * fjgtound glass, around which were /painted in big blaok Arabic figures the FRENCH FUN. A YOUNG physician had jnst settled in a country town. One of his first visitors was a gentle man very neatly dressed. "Doctor," he said, "will' it be agree able to you to make the same arrange ment with me that your predecessor did? I gave him so much for every patient he sent me." "Oh! you are the druggist, then.* "No, I am the undertaker." AN ingenious advertisement. The citizen of a small sea-coast town in the west of France, not as yet much patronized by summer visitors, devised the following announcement as likely to attract bathers: "Great Attraction! s . "On Sunday next about 3 p. m* "An enormous Whale will be sttanded on the Beach." IT appears that marriages between brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law are lawful in France under the Code Civile, which the first Napoleon had so im portant a' share in framing. When this section was under con sideration the Emperor was strongly in its favor, and used his argument against those who opposed its adoption. "Gentlemen," said he, "a widower who marries again runs the risk of having two mothers-in-law, while the man who marries his sister-in-law pan only have one." The reasoning was considered con clusive, and the clause was retained. A LOAFER was run in by the police. "What were you doing stretched out on a bench in a public thoroughfare at that time of night?" asked the magis trate. "Me? Oh! I was awaiting the solu tion of the Bulgarian difficulty." What Constitutes a Love Match. "I hear Gus Do Jones is going to be married." "Yes; he is." "To the rich Miss Brown, they tell me." "That's the lady." "She's not very handsome, either,'* "Not to speak ot" "Why do you suppose he is marry ing her ?" 'It's a love match,* 'Oh, pshaw!" ,e, , 'Fact, I assure you. "Lore match, pure and simple." "You don't believe that?" "Yes, I do. She is in love with him and he is in love* with her money."-- Pittsburgh Dispatch. "WHY," asked a lady ot an old judge, "why cannot a woman become a suc cessful lawyer?" "Because," answered the judge, "she is too fond of giving her opinion without pay." GtNigM «f Mm Most Itti- mtiv Darts tf M if *• Ynr 188ft m " " J j . -- : with Met AMraitt, in tie Heal alErasaNe The Legal Executions ef the Tear--lie 's Noose Claims , ̂ Long List ef YMiau. The Lynching of a Twelvemonth--Mob Violence Olaims a Large Hum- ha of Yktims. - MURDER A GhMttr Amy of Crimea Against biw . Rnd Society. JANUARY. "Pu»" OXettr, of Chicago, pl«ai*d guilty to the murder of nit alitor and mMnn, sod was sentenced to Joliet prison for forty yew*. John G. Stevens, President of die Pennsylvania K&U- way system in New Jersey, shot himself, owing to financial difficulties At Battle Creek, Mich., dead bodies of Dr. Martin White, his wife, and two children were discovered by neigh bors, who forced the doors; it was believed that White killed the others and committed suicide. Jacob Reel, a wealthy fanner ot Bellbrook, Ohio, hanged himself in his parlor because of* the arrest of his eldest son for homicide. "Six convict*, who escaped from the Coal Hill (Ark.) mine, were brought back by James Johnson, an did farmer, who captured the desperadoes while asleep in a haystack; Johnson was armed with a double-barreled shotgun, one of the barrels being useless. John Mageo was sentenced by a London court to seven years' penal servitude for an attempt to blackmail the Prince of Wales. James Batt, a saloon-keeper at Akron, Ohio, purchased for 5 cents the handsome wife gf Newell Stratton, and lived hap pily with her until the law interfered. For the murder of his mother, sister, and broth er, William Sheehan was hanged at Cork, Ire land ; the crime was committed in 1877 to obtain possession of some property, and Sheehan was arrested in New Zealand. A party of cowboys from the Bed Biver section, bent on having "a good time," invaded Burlington, Texas; they enjoyed themselves hugely, firing promiscu ously, until a posse of citizens under Sheriff Cooke drove them away, killing four of the des peradoes. A quadrangular duel at Manche-ter, Ky., resulted in the death of all the partici pants--young farmers who quarreled about a woman of ill-repute; liquor inspired the trag edy. Harvey Hadlock, a Portland <Me.) lad, killed himself with a revolver, in hiB father's presence, rather than be sent awav to school. Four members of a Polish revolutionary orga nization were executed at Warsaw. Jack Han ion and Jack Crowley fought a duel at Houston, Texas, in a ftt of jealousy, sad both ware killed. FEBRUARY. Fines of ?l each were imposed upon thirty- thrro Cincinnati actors who performed on Sun day. In a Waco (Tex.) hotel J. E. Graham, a St. Iiouls drummer, "got the drop" on a rival from Chicago, and the latter was killed; the deceased (Win. Lamb) had declared that "a man who traveled for a St. Louis house was no good." Chesley Chambers, a noted criminal who, armed with a club, assaulted a baggage-master and an express messenger and robbed the safe on a imssenger train near Bloomington, Ind., was sentenced to two years' imprisonment. At Newcastle, Del., with the mercury in the neighborhood of zero, five thieves were lashed on their bare backs, and a forger was placed in the pillory for an hour. Mrs. Mary Branchu suicided in a sensational manner by jumping from High Bridge, New York, to the ice below, 120 feet; every bone in her body wits broken. "Unemployed" men in London besieged the authorities for relief, and this not being granted, a mob of 10,000 rioters pillaged shops, broke windows, and hustled well-to-do citizens about, destroying property to the value of S400.000. A French merchant and his wife suicided at Monte Carlo, after heavy losses at gambling ; the lady drowned herself and her husband then blew out his brains. Theodore P. Rich, of Cobleskill, N. Y., tracked his wife to St. Paul, whither she had eloped, and on coming up with her he killed her and then suicided. MARCH. Eli Bearden, of Harriston, Ark., who was twice sentenced to bo banged for the murder of a neighbor, was acquitted on the third trial; his case cost the State S20.00). Edward John son, alias Allen Wright, had a quarrel with hit employer, Henry C. Steadman, on a farm near Lyons, Neb.; Steadman was killed, and John son was pursued and took refuge in a barn which he defended against 300 men who joined in the chase ; the desperado killed Chas. P. Johnson and fatally wounded Edgar Everett; then the barn was set afire, and when it subsided John son was found partly cremated and his body riddled with bullets. In a quarrel over alleged cattle-stealing in the vicinity of Fort Elliott, Tex., four men belonging to the Lone Star Kanch were killed and two wounded. At the funeral of Frank Mulkowgki, a Chicago murderer, from a Polish church, a married sis ter rode on the hearse to the cemetery beside the driver. Three desperadoes confined in the Newcastle (Pa.) jail filed the locks off their ctjjls and escaped through a hole 8x19 Inches out la a window. APRIL. Louis P. Schmidt, of Freeport, III., who had been expelled from the Knights of Lat>or for disclosing secrets of the order, hanged hiin- nelf at Davenport, Iowa. The Earl of Shaftesbury committed suicide in London by •hooting himself; he was the eighth Earl of 8haftesbury, succeeding on Oct. 1, 1883, to the title on the death of his father, the noted philan thropist. Five murderers in Indian Territory •scaped the gallows by a commutation of their sentence to life imprisonment in the Detroit House of Correction ; three of the party killed a peddler for a plug of tobacco. Burmese rebels captured the" British station at Meegandet, bound the garrison with cords, and massacred twenty-three persons. In Seward County, Kan sas, Fritz Kupin, a half-witted farm hand, as saulted the wile of his employer, Mrs. Jacob , Freimuth, and killed both her and her unborn babe ; the husl and was absent at the time, and when he beh&id the mutilated bodies he became a raving maniac, and suicided with a shotgun; a l>osse of neighbors pursued and captured liu- Ein, who was tied by the neck to a fractious orse and dragged for miles over the prairie ; the body of the wretch was left uncovered where the exhausted horse felL Except the Haymarket riots at Chicago (men tion of whieh is made elsewhere), nothing specially noteworthy, transpired during the month that deserves to be classified under the head of crime. JVKB. . PV In a quarrel over politics between two physi cians, at Stephensport, Ind., one killed the other by cutting his throat; the dead man, Dr. A gee, was a brother of an ex-Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska. Mrs. Wtu. Sloane, of Stamford, Vt., in a fit of jealousy, drowned her 4-year-old son, to spits her husband; the shook made Mr. Sloane insane. Forty lives were lost in an election riot in Santiago, the capital of Chili, besides many wounded. In an affray between prison guards and soldiers at Bogota. United States of Colombia, one general, several officers, and thirty soldiers were killed. Tha .aiiawtuto SuiluiiigB, ni Bos ton, worth f:+K),('XiO. were set on Are by a dis charged employe, and destroyed; nine persona perished in the flames. Fifty-one MTHW were allied In election riots in Chili. ...J* to«0M»*S< a wfdtar, _____ _ school superintendent wscwaneetsd aft ] ehaiged with ts®ee sgalnaS sevsv octs- cerned in the slaughter oObepolioe officers at the Haymarket; cm, Hisir W. N êbe, was gtvin fifteen years' lii$iisdiuneut. Up to date seventy-six soleidM reported at Monte Carlo, owing to ruin at the gaming tables. Kdward Myers, ot flfc. Louis, who stole 93,500 •r and fled to F ~ islx montbs' im; from his employer and fled to Hamilton, Ont, was sentenced to six months' imprisonment for bringing stolen money into Canada. The (for Bishop at Tmqain telegraphed that 700 Chris tian* had been massaored aik burned , and forty villages ill the province of Manhoa, sad that *,400 Christians were perishing of hunger. The public executioner of Oreeoe was convicted ot murder and condemned to death. At Kingston, N. J., James Keevan, aged 65, was murdered while eating upper, the remains .being. found seated at a table with a knife and fork in the lifeless hands. George M. Bartholomew, President of the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company, disappeared frem Hartford owing various banks and corporations $2,200,000. At Canton, China, a woman charged with poisoning her husband and three relatives, was out up exactly into 1.000 pieces; later it was shown that she was innooent of the offense, but the people clamored for her deatl̂ which the Viceroy finally ordered. OCTOBER. Two 16-yea*M>ld youths in France, whose heads had been tuned by sensational novels, wt re sentenced to fifteen years' hard labor for the murder Of Marie C. Bout, a girl acquaint ance 1& years old. The father ot Wallace, lynched at BteelvWe. Mo., for tbe murder of the Losan family, refused to care for the body, which was buried on a bill by the roadside, where the remains of a colored murderess, who had been executed according to law, were in terred years ago. NOVEMBER. In a boarding house at Newark, New Jersey, the sight of a single roast chicken for seven hungry men cansea afljht with knives, in which two men were stabbed, the table was wrecked, and the Supper Strewn over tbe floor. Cbas Williams, of White River, Canada, found Rich ard O'Brien in company with his wife, and pro ceeded to horsewhip the Interloper, but the latter shot Williams dead, then killed Williams' aged father and mother and two little children, after Whieh hs stabbed Mrs. Wtn*ams and set the house on Ore: the woman lived long enough to tell the authorities ot O'Brien's crime, and he w as arrested. Benj. Wheller, of Cleveland, o.. aged 81, was held for murdering his wife, aged 87 ; the couple possessed 9400.0X), and it is be lieved that in a quarrel touohing his wife's will the old man strangled her; he insisted that the deed was done by robbers. Rhodes Clements, of Havensville. Kan., suddenly became a rav ing maniac, killed Samuel Gordon, cut off his head, and devoured his heart, lungs, and liver; Clements was jailed. Justice Boon, at the Illi nois Supreme Court, granted a supersedeas in the esse of the Chicago anarchists; aa the court will not sit until March, the execution set for December 3 can not take place until the spring of 1887. Nine youths were sentenoed to death at Sydney, N. 8. W„ for committing a criminal assault upon a IS-year-old servant girl. DECEHBKK. Chas. finodgrass, employed in a clothing house at Cynthiana, Ky., committed suicide by taking morphine because he was accused of stealing 95; his aged father dropped dead when he heard the sad news. J. 8. Cornelisou, a Louisville (Ky.) attorney, was given three years in jail for oowhiding Judge Keid at Mt. Ster ling, who afterward took bis own life from mortification. "William Beed was sbot and killed at English, Ind., by Ben Smith, in a dis pute over the proper spelling of a word. Emily Brown, a wbite woman of Baltimore, was mur dered by two negroes, whose sole object was to sell the corpse to a medical college. The legis lators of the Seminole Indians passed a law punishing stealing by fifty lashes for the first offense and hanging for tbe iourth. James Howell fatally shot James Ciraham at Utica, N. Y.. because (he said) Graham cheated him out of four dollars. hanged for anther JULY. Will Schnell, of Peru, Ind., aged 9, was sen tenced to the reformatory for one bear for horse stealing. A roving band of Turks became so enraged at the failure of one of their number at begging supplies near Youngstown, Ohio, that they threw her infant to a bear, and held her to see the animal devour it. Howard Hines, aged 14, said while picking blackberries near Louis ville, Ky., that he intended to kill some one ; then turning suddenly on Samuel Dean, an 11-year-old companion, he shot him dead; the young murderer went to tbe city and gave himself up, saying that the shooting was acci dental, A terrible story was reported from Tattnall County, Georgia, where a negress named Mary Hollenbeck provided for a picnic party by serving up a stew of human flesn, she having killed and cooked a child that was left in her charge; she confessed her crime and her Infuriated auditors burned her at the stake. Willie Sells, aged 14, of Erie, Kan., was found guilty of tbe murder of his parents, his brother and "his sister, and sentenced to be hanged, which under the laws of that State means im prisonment for life. In a quarrel at Washing ton, D. C., about an umbrella, Thomas Carter, a negro aged 70, stabbed and killed James Holmes (colored), who insisted on borrowing the article against the wishes of the owner. AUGUST. Fred Ihde killed his sweetheart and her father, John Buthke, at Marysville, Neb., be cause he was refused Miss Kuthke'o hand in marriage; he then committed suici e. Alfred Packer, a miner of Colorado, having been con victed of murdering and eating the bodies of five companions during the winter of 1873, was sen tenced to forty years in the penitentiary. Barney Martin, with his wife and two chil dren, of Weaver, A. T., started from that place for Erie, Pa., for a visit; not being heard from, a search was instituted,which resulted in the finding of the charred remains of the entire family between Vulture Mine and Phoenix, Arizona; Martin was known to have had $4,000 with him, realized from tbe sale of JACK KETCH'S VICTIM#: Exaented Felons, and the Crimes for Which They Paid the Death Penalty. JANUARY. Charles Williams (colored) criminal assault at Cambridge. Md.. on (he 6th. The gallon s bore fruit on tbe 15th as follows Noah Merriman, a colored wife-murderer, at Belleville, III.; Charles Wilson, colored, at f-t. Louis, Mo., for slaying the mate of a river steamer ; He v. Win. George, a colored minister, at Lake Providence, La., for the murder of his mistress ; Henry M. Stair, at Nevada, Mo., for the killing of Jacob Bewell and son ; at Beau mont, Texas, Wm. Madison, who killed Albert Smith because of jealcusy--both 'colored. Hen ry Jackson, while slnglnghymns on the scaffold atMinden, La., on the S2d, was rudely inter rupted by the dislocation of 'ms neck; he killed B. A. Britten, a grocer. FERRUABY. Two murderers paid the penalty on tbe 5th Dennis W. Dilda at l'rescott, Arizona, for the killing of Deputy Sheriff J. M. Murphy, and Cyrus Minich, at Leadville, Col. Chas. Her mann, who murdered bis wife at Buffalo. N. Y., and for three nights slept in the bed where the gory corpse lay, was hanged on the 12th. Wie- bren Warteno, a Hollander, murdered John Dregher, who bad befriended him, and expiated his crime at Rensselaer, Ind., on the 3Jth. MARCH. On the 5th, Clarence Gray, alias Isham Col lins, was hanged at Winnemucca, Nev., for the murder of B. H. Scott, while attempting to rob the latter's store. Patrick Ford and John Mur phy, New Orleans politicians, were hanged at the Crescent City on the 1'itii for the murder of Captain A. H. Murphy; the Louisiana Board of Pardons refused to yield to a petition of 2t>,786 citizens for the release of the culprits, who sought to escape the gallows by taking poison, but were purtially revived and worked off by the sheriff at the apjioiute l hour. Louis O'Neil suffered the deatti penalty at Jacksonville, Ore gon, for tbe murder of Lewis McDaniel. On the Skitb, Frank Mulkowsky, the mur.lerer of Mrs. Agnes Kledzieck, expiated his crime in the jail- yarci at Chicago, protesting his innocence to the last iiioment. A negro named John Drake was executed at Thpronston. Ga , for tbe murder of his wile Mid the cremation of her oorpse. APRIL. Jeff Wilson, a colored man, was worked off by the Sheriff at Lexington, Mo., on the 2d, for the murder of his mistress. Kobt. J. Phillips, a colored wife-murderer, was executed at Indian apolis on the 8th. On the loth Sheriffs worked off Allen J. Adams at Amherst, Mass.. for the' murder, in 1875, of his employer, an aged farm er--Adams spent ten years after his crime as a dissolute trump, confessed in a drunken brawl, and was convicted ; Camilio Gonzales, a Mexi can robber, at Bracket, Texas, for the murder of Peter Johnson, a ranchman ; and Cbas. Bob- inson (colored) at Newcastle, Del., for outrage. Bobt. Smith (colored i, aged 13. suffered death at Nicholasville, Ky., for the murder of his step father, James Sea; the culprit soid his body to surgeons for S2.j, which ho expended for fruit. On the '23d Kobt. Fowler was hanged at Mor- ganfield, Ky.. for the murder of Miss Lydia Burnett, who had refused his hand in marriage. On the same day the gallows at Fort Hmith, Ark., was used iseventy-first time in twelve years) in the execution of James Wasson and Joseph Jackson, for murders committed in the Indian Territory. On the 30th and last day of the month the hangman closed the earthly career of J. M. Armstrong at Perryvillo, Ark., George Carroll at Searcy, in the same State, Richard J. Lee and Louis Soinerfield at Wash ington, D. C., and James Walker at Augustine, Fla. Giuseppe Scoma. an Italian, convicted of the murder of one of his countrymen, cheated the hangman by suiciding in his cell at Hudson, N. Y. sin the scaffold for . tegw liiiatnour while tryftM to mmwh» her nuwveMt, La., and Richard Townsendat Vai- dosU. Ga. Lincoln Sprole and Calvin James were hanged atForth faith. Ariu.fcr murders OMWnltM in the Indian Territory ; since 1871, tarty-six men have been hanged at that plane. j5unl» was executed ^Qa*la$lii, Ma, In the presence of 20,000 people. Aa r̂ew Green, who killed a street oar driver, hanged at Denver, confessing his crime on Ueo'Ro Moore wai hanged at tb^)Qcter N. C., lor ftHtolt tipon his daughtur; be jflpoteated his innocence to the last. li*' AUGUST. , Bmidy (colored) was put to death accord- inyto law, at Spartanburg, H. C., on the 6th, for the 'murder ot Annie Hickman, white. Other legal hangings during tbe month were: Kit Boss, a half-breed Cherokee Indian, at Ft Smith, Ark.; John 8mith, at Gallatin, Mo.: Willis Hud- wn. at Ft. Gaines, Ga.; Michael Mars, at Union- fey* Nathaniel s- Bates, at Richmond, Ind.--all for murder. SEPTEMBER. James 8impson and Patterson Bell were banged at Marlon, Ark., on the 3d inst, for murder. Irvin Murray, a wife-murderer, at Georgetown, Tex. Bey. Jesse Cooke (colored), same crime and same penalty, at Butler, Ga. Frank 8. Humphreys, at Milledgeville, Gi, for the murder of his niece and sister-in-law. OCTOBER. Chaa. Edwards, colored, who killed his mis- teesa, Hettie Refuge, in Algiers, La., was exe cuted on the 1st. Other executions during Oc- Wr'8ht Weldon. colored, at Edge- neld, B. C.. for the murder of a planter in lf6i. Henry Norris, who killed George Elliott, owing to a quarrel about a chew of tobacco, at Buch anan, Ga. Robert Evan Sproule, an American citizen, at Victoria, B. C., charged with killing a mining comrade; ho stoutly protested his in- noeeuoe on the scaffold. • NOVEMBER. - V- Two murderers suffered death on vllia'. Msaf- fold in British Columbia on the 3d--Alliert Malloti at Kamloops, and Ah Sweet (who killed a brother Chinaman), at Ke veletock. Other ex ecutions during November were: William S. Wilson at Jonesboro, 111., for wife-murder; Al bert G. Boynton at Los Angeles, Cai., tor kill ing his wife and J, B. Kipp, to whose house the woman had fled to escape ill-treatment; Kong Ah Sing at San Francisco, for the murder of a Chinese woman; Jones Spry at Natchez, Miss., for the murder of Ada Coleman, both colored. DECEMBER. Robert Grayer, colored, was hanged in St. I«uis for the murder of a man who had whipped him in a fight. Louis l'afh, a negro murderer, was executed at Bardstown, Ky. Bob Jeter (oolored), murderer, hanged at Spartanburg, S. C. JUDGE ILYNCH'S WORK. Victims of Mob Violence and Their Crimes-- Hangings, Shootings, and Burning*. 1 JANUARY. Two negroes--Emmt tt Key and Nat Forbes- entered the house of E. T. Carroll in Sunflower County, Mississippi, and asked for some apples; while Carroll was stooping to supply their wants they drove a hatchet into his head, then took t800 and a watch from his person; the cul prits were captured and suspended from a bridge. At the Schuyler (Neb.) jail a prisoner named Latour killed sheriff John Degnan with a piece of scantling; Latour was taken from the juil and hanged .by a mob. Holly Epps, colored, was taken from jail at Vincennes, Tnd., and hauged by a party of twenty men from Greene County, where the culprit killed Far mer Dolison and att mpted to assault bis wife. Sidney Brown (colored) was strung up at Hoche- dale. Texas, for the murder of a farmer named Ford. Calvin Simpson, a mulatto, for the bru tal murder of Mrs. Graves in Henderson Coun ty, Kentucky, was taken from jail and hanged. Citizens of Susanville, Cal., handed in the court-house yard two convicted murderers, an Indian and aMexioan, named Dick and Olinas. FEBRUARY. A notorious colored desperado named James was hanged by citizens of Beauregard, La.; he confessed to one murder, the burning of several houses, and the intention to kiil five persons were he at liberty. The minions of Judge Lynch obeyed his behests in the following in stances during February: John Perry, at Bed Cliff, Colo., for killing Mike Gleaaon; George Itobinson (colored), who killed Millard F. Par ker at Monroe, La.; a negro named Bums at Mart ins bury, W. Va., after confessing to an as sault upon a white girl. Upc&i rSt'MC' for attempted a--aula SKFTKMBKM. Da«d Johnson, a lunaMe, whoUIMI MWl White in tbe street at Western jKSrtTlW., ««a negto named Wllkereon was riddled wtth bul lets near MlUen. Ga., for criminal assault. SSSST ssrs,ftSJSW. charged with murder, was taken from (he au thorities at Montrose, Col., and hanged. OCTOBER. The people of Quiney, Fla., lynched two men suspected of firing a new mill. Masked men at Steelville, Mo., lynched It. P. Wallaee, the al leged murderer of the Logan family of five per sons--father, mother, and three children. Outer culprits who fell victims to mob law during Oc tober were: Tom Farrar, a negro, who assaulted Miss Lizaie Murray and afterward murdered her father at Throckmorton, Texas, Thomas Israel, a negro, for brutally assaulting a ten- year-old white girl at Bocky Ford, Ga. Vigi lantes ot Montrose, Col., took from jail a noto rious man-slayer named John Mdses, and hanged him to a gate-beam. Masked men at Moatieello, 111., took ont of jail and hanged Henry Wildman, a wife-murderer. Three ne groes in Pickens County, Alabama, suspected of incendiarism--strung np. James Haynes, a murderer, was taken from jail at Brownsville, Miss., and hanged; all parties--the murdered victim, lynoheis, and lynched--colored. A mu latto named Hewey quarreled with 8amuel Day over four pounds of cotton at Bad Springs, ; Day was killed, Hewey was followed by bloodhounds, captured and suspended to a tree. NOVEMBER. Samuel Purple surrendered to the Sheriff of Hodgeman County, Kansas, after killing his wife and two children; but a mob took him out of jail and hanged him to a tree. Other culprits upon whom lynch law was visited during the month were: Andrew J. Mulligan, alias James Page/et Harrison, Ark., for murder. Charles Dinwiddle, at McKenxie, Tenn., robbery. Eli as Simmons, oolored, shot to death while asleep at Minden, La. John Davis colored, at Randolph, Ala., for repeated criminal assaults upon white women. Three incendiaries who burned a cot ton gin house in Franklin County, Miss., were "lost in the woods" while being taken to jaU. Four negro murdersrs were strung up in the Choctaw Nation for killing George Traafe, who came upon them while they were cleaning a hog they had stolen. Ciesar Robinson was hanged by a mob at Florence, S. C., for assault npon a white woman. DECEMBER. The town ot Brenham, Texas, waa Invaded at midnight by a masked mob who took from the jail Shea Felder, Alfred Jones and Ephraim Jones (murderers), who were found next morn ing hanging to a tree. George Parks and Mon roe Smith, colored, charged with incendiarism, were lynched at Ringgold, Ga. James Howard, of Bowie County, Texas, who branded his 14- year-old wife with the letter "H," was taken from jail and lynched by his neighbors. Near Harmony, Ga., Frank Sanders butohered John Swilling, his wife, and three children--his pur pose being to secure $10 ; he was hanged by the neighbors of his victims. Factor Jones and Diok Bullock, murderers, were rid dled with bullets by their neighbors in the Choctaw Nation. Win. Mussels, murderer, was suspended from an electrio-light tower by lead ing citizens of Eaton, O. "JimCtami - - -- SAY. Gaorge Young, a negro wife-murderer, was hanged at Galveston. Arthur J. Grover, who murdered Granville G. Looiuis in 1835, suffered the law's dread penalty at the Columbus (Ohio) penitentiary at 1 a. m. of the 14th. Other exe cutions during the month: Louis Willet, alias Charles Crosby, at Kingston, N. Y., for mur der. Peter Louis Otto at Buffalo, N. Y., for the murder of his wife. Lee Barnes at Dover, Ark.; killed Charles Holman and secured $60; both gamblers. Louis Kilgrave at Kaleigh. N. C„ for the murder of Mattie Henderson ; both col ored. James Reynolds at Sidney, Neb., for the murder of James Ralston and son. John C. Henning at Crawfordsville, Ind; killed Mrs. Charlotte Volluier, who had refused to marry him because of his intempefate habits. An tonio Kardello, in Washington, D. C., for the murdtr of Cariaine Rotumto, whom hs robbed of 930. . „ JUNE. Geo. McNair, colored, aged 19, suffered death at the rope's end at Jacksonville. N. C. ; his offense was an assault n}N>n a white girl of 0. A double execution came off at Winchester, Va., on the 4th (Wesley Honesty and Tabley Banks) and a single one (James Baxter) at Winchester, Tenn.; all colored men and all murderers. Ar.hur Williams and a man named Drayton were hanged at Orlando, Fla.; Drayton was convicted of murder and the other of a criminal assault, his victim dying. Alfred Taylor, colored, perished on the scaffold at Opelousas, La., for assault upon a white womtn. Dennis Boyd, a nejjro. was executed at Bellevue. La., for the assassination of David Haas. Geo B. Davis was hanged at Seale, Ala., for the murder of Archie Beeves, and at Greenville. Miss., Bobt. Dillard and James Emmett, both colored murderers, suffered the death penalty. JUtY. Jenkins Wright, a negro, suffered death at the rope's end for wife murder, at Hampton, 8. C.; the culprit threw his victim's bodv into a fire. Other hangings noted during torrid July were: Frank Gaston, colored, at Salisbury, N. C'., for criminal assault upon a white woman. Dock Bishop at Coffeyville, Miss-, for the mur der of Detective Wise. Sam Archer, one of a family of desperadoes, at Shoals, Ind., for the murder of Samuel A. Bunch; SamAtwher's MARCH. V. A. Witoher, an orator and politician, was lynched in southwestern Virginia for the mur der of his fifth wife. An Indian Territory mob reported the mysterious disappearance of a lecherous oxhorter named Murgll, whom they were taking to Vinita for trial for assault upon an Indian girl. John, Martin and Thrmas Archer, three brothers, accused of murder, were taken from jail at Shoals, Ind., by a mob aud lynched. Handy Woodward (colored), who at tempted to assault a child, was taken from jail at Bussellville, Ky,, by masked men, and hanged. At Auburn, Ky., three negroes were summarily hanged by a mob for a criminal assault upon the daughter of a prominent citi zen. Tobe Williams and Weakley liidley, both negroes, were hanged to a tree at Alamo, Tenn., for the murder of Daniel Guthrie. Fred Vil- lerssa, an Italian, was taken $*oui jail at Vicks- burg, Miss., by a mob and hanged ; his crime was an outrageous assault. Forty citizens of Anthony, Kan., took from the sheriff the two brothers Weaver (imprisonod for murder), and shot them to death, the tragedy being witnessed by the mother of the victims and the wife of one of them. Kellis Moorman (colored) was lynched at Axton, Va., for assault and robbery. APRIL. At Springfield, Mo., cn the 9Tth, Geo, 13. Gra ham, wife-murderer, was taken from the jail by a mob of 3U) men, and strong up to a tree ; when the mob unlocked Graham s cell he greeted them with tbe remark: "You can hang me, but by G--d, you can't scare me." Mendy Jones, a colored outlaw, was killed by lynchers at Au burn, Ky , for a criminal attempt upon two white girls, whose room he hod entered. . MAY. Albert Smith, a negro laborer, killed his em ployer, Maj. W. P. Green, a sugar planter, near New Orleans; Smith was taken from jail and hanged to a tree. Dan and Sam Mann were strung up by a mob at Bartow, Fla., for killing the marshal of that place. JUNE. Daring the month mobs inflicted summary punishment in the following cases: Alfred Long, who murdered A. J. McBride and wife and burned their bo'lies, near Lexington, N. C. Charles Whittlo (colored), accpsed of assault ing the child of a clergyman. Ole Becikvolt, near Grand Forks, Dakota. Eli Owens, arrested for assault upon his 10-year-old sister-in-law, taken from jail at Hebron, Neb., and hauged to a tree by masked men. W. P. Pruitt, lynched near Sipe Springs, Comanche County, Texas, for conspiring to murder J. O. Hostetter. The wanton murder of Marshal John Cowev at De troit City, Minn., bv a gambler named William Kahlihen, was speedily followed by the lynch ing of the latter, who was strung up to a tree and then riddled with bullets. Ed Williams (colored) suffered death uvoa an impromptu scaffold at Gainesville, Texas, for criminal'as sault upon a white woman. i JULY. George Parker, colored, for assault upon a white woman, had summary justice meted out to him at Pearlington, Miss. Sidney Davis was on trial at Morgan, Texas, for outrage, when the proceedings were interrupted by the arrival of 500 met/, who hanged the culprit. Steve Ben- froe, a notorious outlaw ana desperado, waa hanged by a mob at Livingston. Ala. Jake lira wel, colored, horribly maltreated Dolly Woods, a six-year-oid girl on her way to school; Brasweil was captured, and a conference of one hundred whites and blacks gave him the choice of being burned or hanging himself; he chose hanging, climbed a tree, and fastened a rope around his own neck and to a limb of a tree, when he was pushed off and his body riddled with bullets. At Frisco, Kan., a posse in pur suit of a murderer surrounded a stable when tbe fugitive was concealed, and upon toe latter refuging to surrender he was killed by a Volley of bullets. Bill Haley, a murderer, was ' '-- from the jail at Paulding, Ohio, b mob and hanged to a tree. Porter ored, was shot to death by a mob Texas; he had assaulted Mrs. hatchet. In Comanche County, hanged a negro boy who had murdered Mrs. Stephens; the ] bent on burning him. but the n murdered Woman plead d for a lesi punishment. A man named Lock .. Jynehed near Litchfield, Conn., for the" of a young lady named Mattie Batidal^ he encountered at a lonely spot on tt way; Lockwood wag tortured by being the buck, and then a negro plunged a knife through his neck ; he was then strung up to a tree. Citizens of Seymour, Ind., lynched Leun der Moody, a well-known desperado of Oakland, 111., for an assault upon a young girl. 8 AUGUST. Ex-Policeman Jim Moore, of Maoon, Ga., was applied to for Information by a stranger, a lady from Savannah, whereupon he procured a hack, enticed her to an assignation house, and with a pistol to her head compelled her submission; when tbe fact became known an angry crowd hanged him to a tree. Judge Lynch inflicted summitry punishment upon divers culprits du*. ing the month as follows • John Shorts,of !-earey. Ark., wife-murder; an unknown tramp who robbed snd murdered John S. Davis, agent of the O. and M. K. K., at Huron, Ind.; Wm. Wat- kins, bricklayer, at Aurora, Ind., was dragged to a water-tank and hanged, with his hands un tie J--he had killed his employer, Louis Hil- bert, a contractor: cltiaens or Jackson, Tenn., banged Eliza Woods, a negro cook, accused of poisoning a whit* woman. John and Lean- der Nelson were banged from a bridge near Magnolia, La. At Vicxsburg, Miss., a negro boy of Iff, who killed Mrs. Davis, wife of his Stonewall Jackson's Flank Attack at Chancellorsville. "Somebody's guns thundered away for a few short minutes, and then oame the fitful rattle of musketry; and before I could again get into the saddle there arose the ceaseless roar of the terrible storm. "I sent out my chief of staff, CoL Asmussen, who was the first officer to mount--'the firing is in front of Dev- ens; go and see if all is in order on the extreme right.' He instantly turned and galloped away. I mounted and set off for a prominent place in rear of Schurz's line, so as to change front to the northwest of every brigade south east of the point of attack, if the at tack extended beyond Devens' right flank; for it was divined at once that the enemy was now west of him. I could see numbers of our men--not the few stragglers that always fly like the chaff at the first breeze, but scores of them--rushing into the opening; some with arms and some without, running or falling before they got behind the cover of Devens' reserves, and before Gen. Schurz's waiting masses could de ploy or charge. The noise and the sm okefilled the air with excitement, an d to add to it Dieckmann's guns and caissons, with battery men scattered, rolled and tumbled like runaway wagons and carts in a thronged city. Tbe guns and the masses of the right brigade struck the second line of Devens before McLean's front had given way, and, quicker thau it could be told, with all the fury of the wildest hailstorm, everything, every sort of organization that lay in the path of the mad current of panio-stricken men, had to give way and be broken into fragments. "My own horse seemed to catch the fury; he sprang, he rose high on his hind legs and fell over, throwing me to the ground. My aid-de-camp, Des- sauer, was struck by a shot and killed, and for a few moments I was as help less as any of the men who were speed ing without arms lo the rear. But faithful orderlies helped me to re mount. "I rode quickly to the reserve batte ries. A staffofflcer of General Hooker, Lieutenant Colonel Dickinson, joined me there; my own staff gathered around me. I was eager to fill the trenches which Barlow would have held. Baschbeck's second line was or dered to change front there. His men kept their ranks, but at first they ap peared slow, 'Will they never get there!' "Dickinson said, 'Oh, General, see those men coming from that hill way off to the right, and there's the enemy after them. Fire, oh, fire at them; you may stop the flight!' " ' No, Colonel,' I said, ' I will never fire on my own men!'*--Gen. O. O. Howard. The Usual Awful Result. Jones--You remember there were thirteen at the table at dinner at my house last night ?| Brown--Yea. Jones--Well, young De Peyster died this morning. • Brown--My! Is that possible! I was looking for something of that kind. Jones--Yes, the poor fellow was talked to death by the Boston girl who sat next him.--Arkansaw Traveler. Earth-warmed Water. The earth's internal heat is now be ing forced into practical service at Pesth, where the deepest artesian well in the world is being sunk, to supply hot water for public baths and other purposes. A depth of 3,120 feet has been reached, and the well supplies daily 176,000 gallons of water heated to 158 degrees Fahrenheit. The boring is to be continued until the temperature of tite water is raiselMo 176 degrt*. They Tasted Queer. "Where did you get the cheese that is in these sandwiches, my love ?" ' "On the window-seat in the »moke- house." "You ignoramus! You have cut up the bar of soap that I was saving for next week's wash. No wonder your sandwiches tasted bad."--- Carl Pret z e l ' s W e e k l y . . . . How He Took Life. ̂ "See that man aoross the street̂ A##! "Yes." * "Well, he's one of those men who take life easily." "He is! Why, he looks like a hard working man." "Well, so he it. He's a butcher, and a good one too, they sty**- FitUburgh Dispatch. , j Fred Wlttrock & His Bed WR* toalBn i Peer ef His Mi AJse tTMier Arrmti-- s Piece «f 9et«K thro W«li - % > ;;f. ! [From the Chicago Daily VmnJl , Ota the nigbt of October 25,1 of • JO and midnight, the Aflgpff, which left St. Louie for Ban rumilisi ^ with one of the most valuable treasons during the year, was robbed of nssrirHMwia^t cash. Mr. Wm. A. Pinkerton baa detailed account of the manner in wUdl ' ease was worked up by the detective sgeneySt -1 ̂ the Western division, ef which he is theebfsl v M O f t h - f i v e m e n n o w n n d e r T I I I S T f r u t l i n « H -- f fourtave borne the reputation of being utable business men. The newe at the robbery had no snissfr • - ;t reached St. Louis and Chisago than Mr. XtT& • v-fl Weir. Manager ot the Adams Kxmeae Ooatna : ' --I ny, placed the matter in tbe handset the The man who oye^wered^Msu "W* s ttetnta ttrirty-stx re Mutent m kertons. Fotheringham and rifled ths~ car at Pacific Junction, a small station miles from St. Louis. Deteotivee were i on the trains from thai station, sat soon obtained a deswItfUwi of "" mnsu '•. The Pinkertons then seeuied a list ot ' ><; the employes, past and present̂ of express company. Among thow wk» had been discharged was W. W. Haighk wfco ,, « had formerly been on the ran between Ftfseo i ' Junction and Vinlta. on which the robbery ial > :| been committed. It was also learned that fen ;v: had been acquainted with FothsringhaOL * was learned that he had resided in ui -* 243 Huron street with his wife's MUt changed his residence, however, bttt tectives finally ascertained that he hi with a family named Williams, at *S _ piaee, and that on Oet. 37 he had left place, saying he waa going to Florida, A later his wife received a letter eonlalL ̂ money, and immediately afterward she via. pared to leave, reporting that she was goingta L^sven worth, where her aunt was d " Among the men whom Height had . injChicago were Fred Wittroek, a ooal 727 West Lake street, and Thomas Wei* proprietor of a laundry at No. 753 on tfefc street. From these faets the detectives ds» rived their first clew. They learned that WUS- rock and Weaver had left (&ieago on this HMh of the month, saying they were going to Kan sas to look tor land and to hunt. They tosftc with them two sachets and two fowl The description of Wittroek tallied of the description of the robber fumisba* Mr Messenger Fotheringham. Weaver retaHMa to ̂Chicago on October tt IT In tiie meantime Fotheringham was mimi K ~ ^ statements, in all of which he dealaxeOAHS* ' 'J nocence. He said the robber, who had triikta ' :J*f| his name was "Jim Cumtnings," woold sMW>' •. ate him. Then came tbe first ot the oalebrafe* iS "Jim Cnmmings" letters. f "Early last January." said Cunuatngs la W* V letter. "I started ont with a d d pocttilj-- . Ufe to see if we couldnt make a stake by boidtaK - . =?1 np an express oar. My partner backed oataai I went to Ohio, where I met a man named Tons •" * Baiffe, who had onoe been an express mesas*- , : S ger on tbe run between St. Lonis and Vinita. I , - • learned the name of the route agent) John ft • ';,i| Barrett, and conceived the plan of eounterMfc- ing the headings of the express company." r !'#! Cnmmings then went into the details aefl told how the robbery was mmmltted. lakfaa great care to shield Fotheringham front S9W f'ik blame. From this letter the detectives gathemoi; • ' »!? several clews. They knew that Wittroek and '-"-M Height were acquainted; that Height had bee* "l a messenger on the run mentioned, and that M ~>-t .S such man as Torn Kaiffe had ever worked the oompany. The detectives secnred in Cbd- v ; - cago a number of hills which Wittmefc hnf V ' made out in his coal business and fis w*ai<ed -C themto St Lonis. Bxpwto dented «tw*«£e< Jim i ummings letters and the COM bills irHia written by ths same man. Ths nnlT itiffsisajss was that the bills were made ont in a flowing hand, while the letter was in MMkhaad.' In a letter Cnmmings had told ahcttl which would be found np the Missouri a few mile* from Bt Charles. He also ' package which he had left in ~ with|the intention of showing had no connection with the tectives found the skiff as visioned as if for a fishing _ tained good descriptions of bought the skiff at St. Charles, the persons was tie scribed in spond with the alleged ro__ lotheringham's story, ">*tjiil¥f rock to the minds of these who 1 cago. The description Sf tfct 1 liwiwith that of WeaveR HU clew was the fact that two 1 in tbe skiff. When the reports sreaohed headquarters la C" xnembered thftt Weaver and 13th, each carrying a gun. on was shadowed, but no trace could be Ob tained of Wittroek. The left hs tfcs express office and mentioned inCnmmi ter was found to oonsist of several rolls 1 street ballads, (hi one was scribbled, as if a memorandum, "2106 Chesnut street,* Tniialij : at that address in St Lonis revealed that two men had rented a room tilers on the Mth. Saab carried a valise. The houss waa kept by a MS," Berry, and she. her son, and ber daoghtsr gave descrigrtkMM which closely nnrrnspwiiled to those in the possession of the Pinkertons. A few days later the deteotivee visited 1% Berry. She rewarded tbem by tuning over a lead seal of the Adams Express Company, aad several express tags whtofc die Conndni tha if room occupied by the strangers. The man left on tbe 31st. Weaver returned to Chi cago on the Sid. While at Mrs. Berry's the large man received mail addressed to "Mr. WO- lianas." On the 25th (the night ot the rabbsqr} - J this man left Mrs. Berry's, saying he was goiuf \Z to Kansas City. It waa away into the fatS part of November when tbe detectives had progressed thus far in their searoh for the Mb. ## bers. '-Sf&U The antecedents of Wittroek were ascertained. ' His mother lived in Leavenworth, and the fam- ' ily was in high standing. His mother had . ' " r loaned him 81,700 with which to go into but- ness in Chicago. Height's family iwnstrtad of a wife and one child. He had Inn alert *• %'•< • Nashville, Tenn., where he was conducting V' --:-.. business as a roofing contractor. Mr. Benv '•/ sinter were brought to Chicago, and ' and his _ identified Weaver as the man who (tunned at their house in St Louis in company with the tall man. It was decided to let Weaver alone i and wait for Wittroek to show up. The lines were now growing closer, and the work centered on Chicago. \V ittrock'a bouse, 10 Lincoln street, had been shadowed for almost a month when, 011 last Tuesday night the Pinkerton man was astonished to see another shadow appear and parade up and down before the house neveral times. A few minutes later a tall man slipped along the street and dodged into the house. In the meantime Ed Kinney, a brother-in-law of Wittroek, left fOjr Quiney, 111., closely attended by a PinhS ton agent. There he went on a drunl^ ' . and on Wednesday ho recetved two tele* .4 v: ,$ grams which greatly excited him. He went iji» i Tfjl to a billiard hall, and hanging his coat on a --"* began playing billiards. While he was ing at the bar tbe Pinkerton man ped tbe telegrams from his pocket and them. They were as follows: •Cams home at once. Jf. is here.* • "Gome home at once. Red has returned." >," Both were signed "Boee Wittroek." ninrdw ' nigbt Bobert and William Pinkerton rented * room near Wittrock's house. In order to dlust - '• suspicion William represented himself *S Sfc? ?roof-reader on the morning editidn ot ititiv Jiewt. while Robert was employed in » - similar capacity on the afternoon edition et the Daily News. Thus they explained why CMS was always leaving when the other was jaitst» riving. A close watch was kept on the hMMw " and at 3 a.m. Friday It was feared thai tbe Mi man (Wittroek) had slipped away. BobortMM his assistants came on duty at 6 o'eleek. At f o'clock Kinney came oat of the ooal eAoe a*d went to Wittrock's bouse. A tew sasaMaSa later he appeared with Weaver, and, afsar gfii.. ing a signal, started down the steset Us aft*-' utes later the big man, who was nana eMr than Wittroek. came oat Bobert PftalmftHa signaled his detectives that he rsnngniseil 1 and that the men were to be arrested all Kinney and Wittroek went into SperbciD f saloon, near Madison and Lineota at Weaver having tuned back. Tbe next ment Kinney also stepped down the itrsaC Mr. Pinkerton and bis deteotivee enteeed tfce saloon and found Wittroek tallinf to pta man who had been seen shadowteg ><« house for him. As soon as WUhNk saw the three officers enter he started to walk out Pinkerton stopped him and Wtttjtoak started back as if to draw a revolver. Tteant moment two detectives sprang forward VMfc drawn revolvers and Wittrook threw np hte hands. His friend, the shadow, was also Mated under arrest. In Wittrock'spoekets werefOttad two 4i-caliber revolvers. Ha had JnatSlMsB his person. Half an hour later Kinney retained and was promptly arrested. A roll of ti.ooo in greenbacks waa tmm&im Weaver's pocket and around his waist Was a belt made of four woolen stockings. In stocking was ¥1,000 in bills. Tbe pri were taken to Pinkerton's agency on avenue. At one o'clock in tbe afternoon Weaver arrested while entering tbe eoal-yard. uiade a desperate resistance. " ' was thai searched, and Mis under arrest After 1 the officers obtained from 1 which waa literally lin^d Witt Fberewas $1,000 in cash and a uond. Weaver's bouse mm aisai *.5,000 was found done npla wrafjsw aadj n fruit-jars under the boose. There is still HQ.0J9 misstep. < lave been arrested, aad the . ihey have a sore case afaltslalt th»]