Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-07-14 page 1 |
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7 cm II . i 'Ai J I. , ii ei'.r' t7wrI1.fr li i. '? ',; ,' i.jj rvrf ;'.- it r):f ;.,'( ''i -A- COLUMBUS, MONDAY, JVhVmS., , I tt : ' NO.-164. VOL.' XXXIV. 111 ;nil1lFH-; lfil -Vllll o rvm ii li 117 ii .,r, -ii-ir- xii, it, ,..-. r XY II II II II A I n m Offlooi Hit.' Pearl and Chapel His. COXLT fc SMITH, PUBLISHES AKB rs0laiBT0BS. JAMES Sf. COSILY, miltor, OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY i CanetltatsaMl CmMllia Ham. , , , Bsmrjr. Jujy 12. Fourteen members absent at roll call.... A communication from the Railroad Commissioner was read and ordered to be printed. He reports that no complaints of violation of charters of companies or the laws of the State relating to railroads hare been filed within the year closing June 30. ...Petition, were presented Against the Use of public funds in building railroads; for a bureau of labor statistics .. . . The Convention went into committee of the Whole on Proposition 185, relating to the judicial system After a discussion, lasting through the session, the committee rose, reported progress, and the Convention adjourned. See second page for notes of some very interesting new books.' If the Democracy really want a Farmer candidate for Governor, why don't they take up Land Bilf Allen, of this county ? Although the cholera ha- been severe at both Memphis and Nashville, Knox-ville has thus far -escaped. But Krrox-ville has Parson Brownlow. . The Mayor of Knoxville issues his proclamation for a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer to Almighty God, and he requests " all citiiens to close their places of business, their stores and their workshops, on that day, and repair to their several places of worship, and with their pastors publicly acknowledge the goodness of God" in preserving Knoxville from the visitation that has so afflicted neighboring cities. The Mt. Vernon Republican still makes it lively for the editor of the Banner. We begin to feel a sympathy for Harper. After all his misery, after padlocking his mouth about Morgan and the salary grab, after all the fraternal handshaking with the faithful (the Republican says Har per did more handshaking than the town pump) after all- this, poor Harper was beaten in the Convention where he was a candidate . for State Senator. He was beaten by Paul, and the Cleveland Herald hints that the reason was that Paul " sighted the three taverns once too often for him. However that may be, the Democracy, of Knox have hanged their Harper upon the willows, and he is ready to say to Paul, " Almost thou persuadent me to be a heathen." There are few things in that grand convocation called the Constitutional Convention of Ohio, more uncertain than the time when the majority report of the committee on Apportionment and Representation will be made, or than what it will contain when made. The committee has unfortunately two sides to it presenting opposite views. The impartial reporter, in search of the pure, unadulter ated truth, views or interviews one side, and learns that the report will be made some time this week, and will embody the cumulative voting plan. He goes round to the other side and ascertains that the report will be forthcoming immediately and will not contain any provision for proportional representation, or anything of the sort. So, in resigned suspense, we await the coming in of the report, when all uncertainty will be removed as to its contents. It is a little singular that so well informed a newspaper as the New York Tribune should have confounded the cumulative vote as practiced In Illinois with the " restricted " or " limited " vote. Yet it does so, in a leading editorial of some length, which is meant to discuss the question with some care. The Illinois plan allows each elector cast his three votes for Representatives as he pleases, all for one man, or divide them to suit him aelf. The Tribune states that no elector is permitted to vote for more than two of the three to be elected. This is not the Illinois plan, and it is the worst expedl ent yet devised for securing a representation to the minority. ' As we have before pointed out, it secures the result by depriving each elector of onethird of his right as an elector, and leaves him in the position of having one man in every three claiming to be his representative, without ever having expressed any choice as to whether be will have the man for his rep resentative or not. A writer in the Dispatch, who sup poses he is discussing "The Question of Money," complains that "some time ago the senior editor of the State Journal declined to open its columns" to him for the enlightenment of mankind. He also says that he haa "written a little book' "for the purpose of exposing just such tissues of sophistry, false assumptions and miscalled science" as our recent article on making money plenty by act of Congress and he includes in the same category with as the "financial organs of the eastern cities," and admits scornfully that "the same sort of stuff is taught in many of our colleges as true science." Perhaps, after this, the reader is prepared for the pathetic confession of this new Redeemer who comes to save a fallen world from financial ruin, that be is not only exclud ed from onr columns, but "has not been able to find a publisher" for his "little book" aforesaid. The editor of the Dis patch (whose knowledge of finance may be reduced to the formula "The legal tender dollar is rood for twenty nun of beet") opens his columns to the placenta of oar injured financial friend perhaps he might be willing to stand sponsor also for the aborted offspring refused by the cruel publishers. The Democratic party seems to be laboring under two difficulties 1. The leaders have no followers; 2. The followers have no leaders. Senator Thur-man wants to try it once more on a regular old slmonpure Democratic platform, in which the colored brother shall be decorated with two ggs, and made to know his place. The Commercial says the Senator is the person who is "of all others most entitled to speak for the Democracy." Yet the Commercial goes right along and tells everybody that the true doctrine is to drop all old party names, claim an alibi as to all the dead aid damned regular1 old simonpure Democratic platformB and other offenses, swear that nobody now living was there or had anything to do with the history of the Democratic party for the last decade, and start off fresh with the simple platform that it shall be indelicate for anybody to mention what anybody was, where he was, or who he belonged to five or ten years ago. The chief thing seems to be to enable the Democratic party in some way to prove that it isn't Itself any more that there is no Democratic party and never has been that the only facts in existence ate, that the Republican party is wicked, and that it must be bursted up by whoever can be got to do the job. Thurman is a leader, and the Commercial is a leader the "off leader," let us say. But where is the man to be found with such an infinity of straddle as to follow both these leaders at once ? it to be wondered at that the Allen county brethren, under these circumstances, are ready to start off on their own hook, denounce all parties and everybody alike, and say that all is vanity and there is nothing true but heaven and the offices neither of which are at present accessible to the Democracy ? There is much truth in what the Com mercial says of the unsavory nature of the Democratic carcase. We will be perfectly candid, and say that there is even much truth in what it says of the corruption of individual members of the Republican party. No great party ever yet held power as long as the Republican party has, without gathering to itself trading politicians" men on the make," to use the slang of the times. That these men con stitute th party, control the party, or are any manner countenanced by the party after they " show their hand," is not true. That the masses of the Republican party are any more corrupt, or any more likely to countenance corruption, than the Adullamites who are be sought to carry their grievances to the Commercial's cave, we do not believe- The Republican masses, who have the power, are just as certain to "clean out" the trading politicians as the Conimer- cial's Adullamites would be, if they had the power. The Commercial need not go from home for an example how a mean Republican may be beaten in a Republi- can district, even under a truly good ec clesiastical name. We do not hold this up as the best mode the defeat would be better before the nominating Convention but if the nominating Convention fails, there remains still a remedy that is not worse than the disease. Mean men do not always get office. The righteous some times prosper. The honest masses of the Republican party may sometimes be de ceived, but they are no more likely to be deceived than other men. It is a safe rule in any event to hold fast to what we have until sure of some thing better. Is the Commercial prepared to assure us that we shall find this "some thing better" in the motley gang of lion est grumblers, dismal jemmies, desperate and long defeated partisans, soreheads and mulligrubs, whom the Commercial and others are attempting to mobilize for the defeat of the Republican party ? It is no gain to go from bad to worse. The Com mercial has said again and again that the Democracy have no pretense of claim that they are better than the Republicans. We should be glad to know where the virtue for the new force is to come Ironi tne -jommerciai can i furnish all of it. It says there is none in the Democracy. We know there is none in the fellows who have gone off with the mulligrubs because they could-not get office in the Republican party. There remain chiefly the honest grumblers and dismal jemmies who, like the maid in the poem, have nothing but virtue for their dower, and who would not on any account spare any of it for the common fund. The Commercial is a dragon of virtue, but virtue don't count against niim bers, in parties, and we fear the Commercial's virtue would be outvoted by the Democratic ballots and the rest of the un reliable. . Then where would the soul find rest? opinion that the Probate Court will be retained as at present organised, since its abolition would involve a radical change in the judicial system to which the people have been accustomed for over twenty years. When this question is disposed of, the other portions of the' proposed judicial article will come up for examination and settlement. How long this may take, it is impossible to foresee. The contest over the Probate Court has developed the fact' that there will be a strong and determined opposition to other prominent feature! of the reported plan, . ' "' BY TELEGRAPH 20 TBB OHIO SljATE JOURNAL. If the editor of the Ohio State Journal is an intelligent person, he is aware that there is a great deal in the Allen county resolutions besides the simple declaration that the Democratic party is inefficient. It is also in substance stated that the Republican uarty is played out. We recommend editors to apply themselves to the study of current history. Sunday Uommcrcial. The editor of the Commercial will do well to overhaul his Greenleaf, and make a note on 't. The admissions of acriminal are good as against himself, mit we have never heard that they are worth much as against his adversary. So we are very willing to take the Democracy at their word when they say " We are all miserable sinners." It does not by any means follow, however, that 'the Republican party is to join in the cry, mea culpa, because its old adversary makes a mieericordia out of a party platform, and does itself to death by means of a contrite resolution. While our poetic friend of the Statesman is engaged in bouncing the " Salary Grabbers," he should not permit himself to forget that a majority of all the Democrats in Congress voted for the grab. It is extremely proper to bounce the grab bers of the back pay every Republican Convention has done so, though only a minority of the Republicans in CongresB voted for it but our neighbor should keep his eye on the Democrats as well sb the Republicans. We do. Hubbard & Jones have latest numbers of Harper's Weekly and the Nation. STATE NEWS. The Vrsssu Vmmrt. At the close of the session of the Con stitutional Convention Saturday afternoon, the Probate Court had been on trial for two days and a -half in committee of the Whole. The object of its prosecutors, who are chiefly lawyers, is to abolish it as a constitutional court. Apparently the most feasible substitution for the present Probate Court yet outlined, is a County Court, with a single judge, having the same jurisdiction as both the Probate Courts and Courts of Common Pleas we now have. This plan, it is contended would be more convenient than the pres ent system or the one proposed in the report of the committee on the Judicial Department, as it would do away with Common Pleas judges elected in subdivisions or districts. The main point in controversy seems to be whether the present system modified as the Judicial committee propose, shall be retained, or the County Court plan adopted. When the Convention adjourned, Saturday afternoon, the committee of the Whole appeared to be ao nearer reaching a decisive vote on the question than when it waa first raised by Judge Hoadly on Thursday last It will probably occupy a day or two longer in committee. Those who havs watched the) controversy thus far and an familiar with the views of the man bers on the eubject, are generally of William Sellers, ofYoungstown, has an eight years' old girl w.ho weighs one hund red pounds. A boy in Findlay tumbled out of a sec ond story window last week. His pants were badly fractured nothing more. John Porter Mitchell, seventy-one years old. died at Martin's Ferry. Belmont county, on Thursday, the 2d inst. - He was an old resident of that place. Mr. Benjamin Derry, an old an respected citizen of Wilkesville, Vinton county, died at his residence, July 4, after an illness of a long time. The deceased' was aged about sixlytlve years. The amount asked of Delaware county one hundred thousand dollars for the Columbus and Toledo railroad, is raised, and the people Saturday night rejoiced. John E. Pfringer, a citizen of Stow township, Summit county, on Sunday last wsb married at the German Lutheran church in Akron, to a widow from Suf-field, Portage county. In the .afternoon he returned with his bride to Sufh'eld. He retired at nine o'clock and at ten he was a corpse. On last Tuesday two boys named Lewis Betscher and Sherman Hard, aged ten and eight years respectively, were drowned at Canal Dover. They had gone into the canal near the brewery to bathe. Lewis could swim, but Sherman could not, and the latter getting beyond his depth, began to sink, when Lewis went to rescue mm and both went down together. About two hundred of the most intelligent and extensive farmers of Ross coun ty, met Saturday, in Chillicothe, for the purpose of considering the expediency of lorniing a urange. aiucn uiscussion ensued as to what was the purpose of a Urange, but no one seemed to know, and it waB finally decided to have nothing to do with it at present, but to form a Farmers' Club, a meeting for which purpose will be held July aftn. Many inquiries were made as to what was done with the immense sums required to be paid over to the National Urange, but no one could answer. Une ot those in attendance thoueht the farmers had too many laws for their protection now, and could best serve their own interests by enforcing such legislation as already existed. The meet ing was participated in by prominent nieiuuera ui uuiu nmucai iiurties. Two suicides were committed in Jack Bon township, Sandusky county, last week, Jacob Cherry, while temporarily insane, hung himself, and John wnitmore shot himself. Whitmore had been plowinar corn in a field near the house, up till about 9 o clock. About that time his wife had occasion to go across the fields to her father's, and saw him at work appar ently all rinht. But it appears that soon alter she had gone, tie unhitched the horses from the plow, went to the house, got the gun and loaded it, leaving the shot pouch and powder norn on ine oea. He then went out and discharged the gun, receivins the contents in his head, and ,, i r l- .i. -t-!i. l: leu aeaa upon -me pain wiiwu u wnv must take on her return home. There he was found soon after the deed was com mitted. No reason is known for the com mission of the act. A letter from the Cheyenne and Arrap- ahoe airencv reports that a number of Arrapahoes recently started on the war patb,DUl an except louriwn wers muuixu bv the older men to return to their reser vation. These fourteen attacked a band of Toncas. off their reservation on leave, and scalped the second chief, and on returning to their own reservation proposed having a scalp-dance. - A party of wealthy Englishmen and Canadians, includinsr Hon. Mr. Uisoy, member of the Dominion parliament, have just made a location in Marion county, Kansas, and arranged for the purchase' of 20,000 acres of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad lands, to gether with the intermediate sections owned by private parties. The followine Internal Revenue ap pointments were made Saturday : Store keepersRobert E. Buchanan, Seventh Tennessee District; uiaries ureenieai, Fifth Illinois District: George Franken- burg, Seventh Ohio District. Gangers John O. McDermott and Frederick Sis- son, fitth Illinois District. The owners of the tickets drawing the large prises in the Louisville lottery have not yet Deea louna. LORD GORDON. Proceeding's In the Case at Ft. 6ar- TJ Assuming International Pro lions, Milwaukee, Julv 12. A Minneapolis special to the Daily Wisconsin says that during the proceedings in the Gordon case Hon Uarry yesterday, the legal papers possession of Captain Hay were sub mitted to the Court, whereupon, the legal pint upon which the authority to arrest ordon depended being exposed, there was a decided reaction in public opinion among the Manitobians. immediately alter the introduction oi the paper United States Consul Taylor issued a card to the public, the substance of which is as follows : Gordon was arrested in New York for embezzlement. Roberts released him from prison on bail of $37,500. Gordon fled the country, and took residence near Fort Garry. His whereabouts beine discovered. Mr. Rob erts procured a bail piece, and executed a ower or attorney to uaptain ferry to act. 'hus the arrest, made to release Roberts from his bond, and by common law the bailee has a right to take his principal whenever and wherever found, treaties and extradition laws not being applicable the case, i be common law exists in Manitoba, uncontrolled by statutes. following this exposition the Consul declares the gravity of the question involved, as well as the interests of both countries, requires that all the testimony which the delense are prepared to show should be admitted, and that, as an act international courtesy, Mr, Wilsoa should be heard during the examination. Utlier advices state that the investigation has broueht out the fact that the Ameri can prisoners were arrested south of the new boundary line, on American soil. This will work new complications, although it cannot be yet surmised just what effect this discovery will have on future proceedings. Fort Uarry, July 13. The feeling over the Gordon affair continues to be intense. The examination of the prisoners will be resumed to-morrow. It will go hard with them. Governor Morris has received a telegram from Governor Austin, of Minnesota, requesting him to interpose his authority for the good treatment of the prisoners, and that Fletcher and Morrison, arrested on suspicion, be not manacled and otherwise treated as crim inals. St. Paul, July 13. General Austin has addressed a letter to United States Consul Taylor, of Manitoba, in which he says : "I have noticed with deepsatisfac- tion the manly and independent course which yon have taken in defense of the rights of the prisoners. Thev are Ameri can citizens, and as such are entitled, guilty or innocent, to the privileges reier-red to, and I am glad that the United States has a representative on the ground who comprehends the rights and dignity American ci.izens. 1 trust you 11 not be intimidated in your de fense of those principles, but will boldly defend the prisoners in all their lawful privileges, entering a fearless protest against every outrage that in offered either to their persons or their civil rights. The officers effecting Gordon's arrest clearly acted in the lull be lief that they had a perfect right to arrest and remove him in the manner under taken, and it is by no means certain that they had not that right. Should the prisoner be held to answer, and especially if refused bail, 1 think it a case that should be laid immediately and specfically before our Government. I am aware it is hot mv province to instruct or direct your course, but I have no doubt you will be fully and cheerfully sustained by the Government at Washington in acting up to these suggestions. I speak only as a citizen of the United States and as a rep resentative of the Executive authority oi the State of which the prisoners are citi zens, and which will not fail to do all in its power to protect the humblest people uguinsi outrages. CHOLERA. Kentucky 1'onr Dcnlua In Bourbon Paris. Ky.. July 12. The Cholera has made its appearance at the little city of Miliersuurg, in this county, mere nave been four deaths since Thursday after noon, and four or five new cases are re portedall colored, Tennessee The Scourge Abating. Memphis. July 12. But five inter ments were reported to the Board of Health to-day, two from cholera. JNabiiville, July 11. Eight deaths in the city to-day six children and two adults. One is reported as cholera, occa sioned by imprudence. 1 here were tour deaths in Chattanooga to-day, one of cholera ; reported as caused from fright. Weather fair and very warm. Nashville, July 13. No deaths from any cause were reported in the city to-day, The city papers have ceased their daily mortuary reports, and it is generally agreed the cholera has spent its force and made its exit from Tennessee. Trains on all roads centering at Nashville, which were discontinued on account of the cholera, will resume their regular schedule to-morrow. Cincinnati Three Deaths. Cincinnati. July 13. Three deaths from cholera are reported at the Health Office to-day. A storm of rain, thunder and lightning visited the city at V o'ciock to-night, and was heavy over a portion of the northern part ot toe city. T. M. 0. A. Adjournment r the International PnuoHKEEPSiE. N. Y.. Julv 12. At the morning session of the International Convention of the Younir Men's Christian Association to-day, W. ii. Modden, oi Great Britain, was introduced, and told of the work in England and Ireland. Dr. Thompson, of New York, read a paper upon the Bible and Bible class instruction, which was ordered printed. Cobb, nf Clevelsnd. nn the narticularsof rail road work in that citv. where the railroaa companies provided the Association with elegant rooms, and 6000 railroad employes attend the meetinrs. At 5:30, the usual resolutions of thanks being adopted, and the Convention having sung a railroad song, the doxology ana benediction following, the Convention ad journed sine die. In the evening a large meeting waa held in the Opera House. To-morrow the pulpits in the city will be filled by the delegates. Over half of the delegates kave left lor home, and the re mainder will leave Monday. I'aatora Frawsle. Washington, July 13. The Commissioner of Customs is havins? a thorouah investigation made into the charges of fraud made against several prominent arms tn isew lora. The Daily News, of Milwaukee, learns from Senator Carpenter that the Chief Justiceship will be offered to Senator Howe, of Wisconsin, should Senator Coakling decline. THE GOOD&JCH MT?TEE,y.:J The Matter net jut Cleareal 'tirTua Confessed Muderaaa Insane Tbo, Coroner' laaeaUaalf ifilf Kins; ral fjnlltj. , ..'rn': New York, J1i I2.--hKte fitoflard, the confessed murderess of Goodrich, it; evening p,.. . ..w uw ywviBivp-Hw f ' ano in the Captain's room at the, station, bouse in Brooklyn xht rouofruomnna.-. slonersof the station say that she is an educated and refined woman, but a little "touched." .Roacoa'a capture last night was considered certain, at there was a large force in search of him, : The Polioe Commissioners are under the. impression that Kate Stoddard is assuming the responsibility in order to' shield another, and that person is, they believe, Roscoe. The Goodrich inquest was resumed today in Brooklyn Court House, before Coroner Whitehall. The alleged murderess, Kate Stoddard, alias Amy Stone, was present. Win. 0. DtWitt was retained as counsel by the prisoner.;' Mrs. Lucette Myers testified that she recognised the watch, chain and seal as having belonged to Charles Goodrich. She also recognized a small charm which was upon the chain. She could not identify either the pocket-book or diary Have seen the pistol before. I saw it in the bands of a man named Roscoe; saw it in his possession some time before tbe murder perhaps a week previous. He was in the street at the time. When asked whatcommunica-tion she had with Roscoe at the time, she hesitated and said that she could not an swer. Coroner Is it for fear you will crim inate yourself? : Witness No, that is not it. It is because I think it not best. It will defeat the ends of justice, .Witness then recognized Kate. She was then positive that it was her. Knew, her as Amy Snow or Kate Stoddard. The Coroner asked witness if she would no on and give the jury any information she possessed, when she replied that she had nothing else to state, on the ground that it might defeat the ends of justice. She had seen this woman, Kate, and Roscoe together on several occasions. O. Why did you say on a previous examination that you did not know Kate Stoddard? A. I had certain reasons for saying so. The next .witness was miss Adeline Palm, who was engaged to be married to deceased. The ''witness was very nervous, and almost fainted. She was shown the articles, and continued: I recognize the watch and two seals. The ring had been worn by him, but I have never seen the cnarm or chain, ine pocket-book was his. I fail to identify either of the pistols. There is a lady present 1 have seen betore. 1 have seen this one (Kate Stoddard) before. It was New York, at 217 Thirteenth street, in company with Mr. Goodrich. Have bad a conversation with Mr, G. referring to the lady, when he .saiditwas bis sister. He said she lived ii Brooklyn. This occurred -ia-June a fear ago. . Never had any conversation with her at any time. . David Uoodncb, father of the murdered man, was next placed on the stand, He was shown the watch and chain, etc, and identified them. The- pistol he did not recognize as one he had seen with his son. Miss Handley testified that Bhe had been looking for the prisoner, and then related the story of the arrest. It was supposed that the prisoner would be puton the stand, but contrary to expectation her testimony was not laxen. Under direction oi counsel ine accusea will make no confession of cuilt. The Brooklyn i-agle says, regarding the prisoner : "it took out a lew moments to pi-entA amnnor the bystanders the impres sion that they were looking upon an insane woman; and this woman is undouDtediy insane, if ordinary indications of lunacy are to be relied on. She sat there for a full half bour.smilmg and chatting pleas- antlv. a stranire. wild light beaming from her eyes all the while, it was lmpossioie to converse with her. althoueh she talked sensibly enough, without being almost absolutely convinced ot her -insanity, Miss Handley, in an interview with a re- Dorter, stated that the prisoner was six years sgo a lunatic, and was an inmate of a lunatic asylum, and that her insanity was caused by disappointment in love." The hacle also says that when theUiiet of Folice asked the prisoner to band him the locket, which is a very large one, she was at first loth to comply; butseeingthat resistance was useless she passed it over. On receiving it the Chief took hold to open it. Oh, be careful, be careful. said she, "there is a mineral in that which don't want to lose." Despite the utmost care, however, a little portion of mineral as she called it, fell upon the floor, and this, to the Chief's surprise, she picked up promptly, put in her mouth and swallow. ed. "What did you do that for?" said the Chief. Looking steadily into his eye, she said: ihat is vharles Uoodrich's blood r And, sure enough, upon closer examina tion, the locket was found to be filled with congealed blood. A few questions elicited the tact that on leaving Uoodrich s house on that Friday morning she had taken away with her, among other thinirs.acup full of blood which had oozed from tbe brain. This blood had congealed, and she had been eating a little of it every day since the time of the tragedy till the time oi her capture. The Coroner's jury returned the follow ing verdict: "We find that said Charles Goodrich came to his death by pistol-shot wounds in tlie head, inflicted by Lizzie Liioya King, anas n,ate Stoddard, with in, tent to cause neath, nn the evening- nf tl 20lh or morning of the 21st of Marc 1873. at his bouse in Desraw street." In answer to the usual questions from the Coroner, the prisoner said her name was Lizzie Lloyd King; that Bhe was twentvsix years of age, and was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts; that she was a bonnet-maker, but declined to say any thing in relation to the charge against her. She was taken to jail by the Sheriff. ,:T 1 ?d) t : a!t'.'i i ' (J ! THE TURF. rH io i- i ii;i;-,-J v C ABIJBT '-' BlUC Eg8XS-"ISSrRKCTIO! AT t,.lirr.i1',:'"-"T-"'1 . jMaPRH), July 12.-i-Th Government :hMeeeivea dispatches Confirming the de feat, ef Cabrinety tad thai death of that !oQif) I 'The defeati Is attributed to the lack of discipline in the Republican ranks. The men captured by ' the insurgents sur rendered almost' without tiring a shot. The report of an International insur rection in Atcoyts also conarmeav- uen. Velarde, with a body of troops, ii hastening thither. The insurrectionist assassinated the Mayor, notwithstanding he was a thorough Republican, and had spent a fortune in the cause of the Republicans. His body was dragged through the streets of the town by the mob. The collector of taxes was also assassinated, and his body treated with some indignities. Five cotton factories were burned by the mob. ' . , : i . . i There" is serious trouble at Malaga. Yesterday while the bull fight Was in progress the people of the city rose against the municipality and 1 assaulted several Councilors. The Governor of Malaga has resigned. : . Lieutenant General Sanches Beoga, has received orders to hasten to Navarre and take command of the army of the North. The Cabinet is thoroughly united, and resolved to suppress all disorders. In the Cortes to-day the Minister of Colonies presented and read a bill applying to the Island of Eprto Rico the constitutional clause of 1869 with reference tn in dividual rights, and also applying the same clause to the Island of Cuba, with the exception of the territory occupied by the insurgents. A dispatch has been sent to the Cap tain Ueneral or uuha, authorizing him to adopt the same extraordinary measures against the Insurrectionists on that island as have been resorted to by tbe Govern ment for the suppression of the Carlut in surrection. The abolition of Blavery in uiba will oe realized Dy law. carlist cause improving. Bayonne, July 12. Adviees from Car-list sources Btate that the insurgent chief tain Sierra, with a band of five hundred men, has crossed the river Ebro and entered old Castile, where he is organizing risings ot Uarlists. i here is much agitation in Burges, and many of the inhabit ants of that province are cnlistinsr under the banner of Don Carlos. Several bands of Carlists have appeared in the province ot Leon. 1 here are threet;arust clnelsin Galicia, each at the head of an organized lorce. A dispatch has been received at the War Office from General Velarde, announcing his arrival Deiore Aicoy and his determina tion to attack the town to-day. ALCOY INSURRECTION, ETC. Madrid, July 13. The Cortes yester day authorized energetic measures for the suppression of the insurrection in Alcoy. A paper manulactory at Villa Daibo has been burned by rioters. Messengers lrom the town of Uravallas De Vailes arrived at Barcelona with press- iug demands for reinforcements. Ueneral Velarde, with seven battalions. has arrived before Alcoy. He was oblig ed to arrest thirty of his own men for in subordination on the march. It is rumored that the Internationalists have r'ae l in Cartoirena and made them selves masters of the town, the forts, the railroad and the telegraph. The marines remain faithful to the Government and hold the navy yard, CARLIST REINFOREHENTS. Bayonne, July 13. Five thousand peasants at Alfera have joined the Carlists, driven thereto by excesses of Republicans. KHIVA. SURRENDER OF THE KHAN TO RUSSIAN FJRCES. St. Petersburg, July 13. Dispatches from Khiva give the following account of events subsequent to the capture of the city : The Khan voluntarily entered the ilussian camp and gave in his submission, formally declaring himself a vassal of Russia. General Kaufmann then re stored him to the throne, and appointed a Council of Administration to assist him in the Government during the occupation of the Khonete by the Russian forces. The Khan, in token ot gratitude, issued on the 24th of J une a decree for ever abolishing slavery within his domions. General Kaufi'mann has sent dispatches to Teheran notifying ihe Persian Government to make preparations for the reception of ten thousand natives of Persia, released lrom slavery by the Kahn s de cree. FBANCE. GAME ETTA SHAKES THE ASSEMBLY, Versailles, July 12. There was a tu multuous scene in the National Assembly to-day, and the disorder finally became so great that President Buffet was obliged to suspend the sitting. Upon the resump tion of the session Uambetta ascended the tribune and addressed the Assembly in defense of his speech delivered at Grenoble. He said France was revolutionary, glorified universal suffrage, and accusea the majority of wishing to mutilate it. Ernoul, Minister of Justice, protested against the charges of Gambetta. The Government, he said, was willing to accept at any time debate upon its policy, IRELAND. ORANGE DAY TRANQUILITY PRINCE AR THUR. . Dublin. July 12. Everything passed off quietly in Londonderry and Belfast this city. Prince Arthur haa gone to Christiana, to be present at the coronation of Oscar as King of Norway. EHfiLAND. . A ROYAL LEAVE TAKING. London, July 13. The Czarowitch and Princess Dagmarn took leave of the yueen yesterday, and departed for Darm stadt. IT ALT. work, the fire spread and was soon entirely beyond their control! . - ,:. .. The flames spread in all directions, consuming every ting in its way, from Bridge street to Trowbridge, and from Canal to Division street, except the building fronting south on Bridge street, and west of Canal street. Barkey A. Gay's furniture warehouse, Rice & Tearse's flouring mill, two or three adjoining' buildings on the south, tide, a quantity of lumber on the lot next to the Ohio House, were all that was burned on Canal street. ' About twenty acres of ground was burned oyer, and two hundred buildings consumed. . The loss cannot be less than three hundred thousand dollars. Itit impossible at this time to give. the amount of insurance, but it will approximate to two hundred thousand, dollars. At this hour the fire is entirely under the control of the firemen, and no further damage is probable. . ,;: BY WAIL AND TELEGRAPH. -Specie shipments Saturday, $1,700,000. The Connecticut Legislature adjourned Saturday.. The Tigress will sail to-day in search of the roiaris. The Orange procession Saturday in New York passed off without disturbance. The steamer Meridian is quarantined at New York with four cases of yellow fever on board. - The Secretary of War denies rnort msi me neaaquarters or ine veppmem of Dakota 'are to be removed from St. Paul, Minnesota, to Minneapolis. The Sultan has declined the invitation of the Emperor Francis Joseph to visit the Vienna Exposition, assigning as a reason that the affairs of State prevent him leaving Constantinople. General B. M. Bradford, who was Ma jor of tbe first Mississippi Jnfantry during the Mexican war, and distinguished bimBelf at Buena Vista, died at Craw-fordsville, Mississippi, Friday. The bridge across the Arkansas river at Ureat Bend was completed Saturday, and large herds of Texas cattle are now on the way to that point for crossing the river and shipment to tbe East. Albecca W. E. Easterbrooke. a well known contributor to Harper's Magazine and various periodicals, died Friday night, The funeral took place from his late residence in Brooklyn yesterday afternoon. A Havana letter states that two entire Spanish regiments are in revolt against the Uaptain Ueneral. several Spanish camps in Puerto Principe have been withdrawn, and the forts in the northern sec tion of the island are beine abandoned by the Spaniards. Up to date. $11,539 have been con tributed to the Drummond, Nova Scotia, Colliery fund. The fires in the slopes are not yet extinguished. There is now very little, if any, hope of saving the old works, except by filling them up with water. . The deaths in St. Louis for the past week were two hundred and fortvone Of this number sixtyseven are reported as cnoiera morbus, and lorty three cholera infantum and summer complaint. One hundred and thirty children under five years are included in the list. a Deputy United -Died of Fire In- The Murder ot Htatea Mnrshal Juries. New York, July 13. It is now stated that the killing of Deputy United States Marshal Stevenson in Jersey City was a deliberately planned murder, and the in quest will develop the fact the murderer, Welthar, was not a Kussian sailor, but boarding house runner, who had been concealing sailor deserters. Jacob Hoffman and Wm. i-berodt, who were so badly burned during the fire at hberling's brewery, Mornsiana. last Tues day, died at the German HoBpital last night. Committed. Suicide with n Baaor. Milwaukee, July 13. A German named Uotleib cebub, a blacksmith, re ading in the Sixth ward, 'disappeared on the 3d, and was found to-day dead in the woods near White fish bay, having committed suicide with a razor. Monmouth Park Race Saturday. Long Branch, July 11. The first race to-day at Monmouth Park was a steeple chase of about three miles, and waa won by Dully in 1:1.1, ueorge West second. Tammany threw hit rider at the ninth jump. ilie Jersey jockey uuo purse, mile heats, best three in live, was won by Ari zona, Time 1:40, 1:481, 1:47, l:o3, 1:55. Whisper won the first two heats. Jury and, the fcightning colt were drawn at the conclusion of the fourth heat. Third race. Monmouth sequel stakes. two miles, waa won by 8urvivor. Time, i Hansom second, Artist third. Weather Prnbakllltlea. WAsniNOTOw. July 13. On Mondav for Southern btites southeast and southwest winds, rising barometer and partly cloudy weather, for Middle and bast era States southeasterly winds, veering to southwest, high temperature and partly cloudy weather, for lower lakes and Ohio valley southwesterly winds, falling ba rometer, partly clondy weather and local storms; for upper lake region southerly winds, higher temperature and possibly local rains; for Northwest westerly winds and clear or clearing weather. Wm. J. Healy, Paymaster in tbe Navy, died in Brooklyn Friday. SHOCKING THE ETERNAL CITY. Rome, July 13. Slight shocks of earth quake were felt yesterday in this city, and rozireona, Alarm ana raoii. FIRES. Fanndrjr Burned Isn .io,oo. Pittsburg, July 12. Lewis & Reset ter's foundry, the oldest one in Pittsburg, burned this afternoon at four o clock Lose from $25,000 to $30,000; insurance $10,000. The fire caught in the pattern-room, and before it was checked had com municated to a number of tenement houses on the opposite side of Second ave-nne. destroying them at well as five horses. The Pittsburg Gas Works were at one time in great danger, but were saved. The total lose is estimated at $50,000. Twenty Aerea afa city Bnrned-Laaa Grand Rafids, July 13. At 3 o'clock to-day this city was visited with another terrible and devastating fire. It was first discovered in the alley near the Bridge Btrvet House barn, located oa Kent street, and it beine- very dry and a high wind blowing, within a very few minutes the entire building, a large doable brick, waa one sheet of flame. Notwithstanding tbe firemen were early on the ground and CRIMES AND CASUALTIES. aspiraiits are Gov. Osborn, ex-Gov. Harvey, Hon. 1. 8. Kallocb, and Gen. W. C. Baocook ; Congressmen Lowe, Cobb, and Phillips are also talked of. It is understood Gov. Osborn will appoint a Senator in November to serve until tbe election by the Legislature, which will not be until the last week in January, 1874. ' A Wheeling dispatch aaya there is great excitement there over a terrible tragedy enacted Saturday night at Harmony. Pennsylvania, A young man named ' John Frayzier some time since eloped with Kate Faulatick, a girl of seventeen, from Wheeling, where both resided. They went te Pittsburg, and thence to Harmony, where they stopped at a hotel. While ' Miss F. was lying on the bed Fraytier shot her in the head with a revolver, and then shot himself. He lived but a few hours. The girl is still livW. but can not recover. No definite cause is assigned for the act, but jealousy is aup- posed to be the cause for it. , New AdTertlsements. Kindergarten & Primary School. MRS. JOHN OODEN. 181 EAST LONG ST., Columbus, 0. KINDERGARTEN FROM A. M. TO 12 M. Tuition, $5 per term. Primary Keadinff and Hnellinor fmm A-w in a m . Tuition, $1 per term. Piano taught in daily half-hour lessons; Tuition, $6 per term. tmmuiut ierm i weens; commences July 14. Reference. Hon. T. W. H Com'r Com. Sch's, Columbus, ,0. jyl4 It : Cleveland Female Seminary. ' A FAMILY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. AFFORDS superior advantages in the English Branches. Music. Instrumental and Vo. oal, Modern Languages, Drawing and Paint ing, wnn most caretui attention to the health, social culture, mental and moral improvement. Bend for catalogues or apply to S. N. SANF0RD, President; Liivi Bomta, Ac-tuary, Cleveland, Ohio. jy4 2iaw 2m CITIZENS' SAVINGS BANK No. 40 N0KTH HIGH ST. COLUMBUS, O.. LOANS MONEY, BUYS COMMERCIAL Paper, deals in Gold, Silver, Exchange and firat-class Security. Pays interest on Time Deposits, And does a General Banking business. Accounts of Banks. Merchants and individuals solicited. jyU tf CINCINNATI ML THE LEADING Industrial Fair of America! THE FOURTH EXHIBITION WILL open W ED S ESD A V , SEPT. 3, and continue until Saturday, . October 4, 1873. Goods received from August 4th to SOih. Exhibitors should make immediate applica- . tion for space. jyU2taw7t Citizens' Savings Bank 40 NORTH HIGH ST. Killed by a Freight Train. NiSHViLLE, July 13. A gentleman named U. M. Hill, was run over and killed by a freicht train at Hack's Blnff. on the Northern and Southern road last night. He is supposed to have beenintoxicated. Albert Sands, a negro, was executed at Prince Frederick, Md., Friday, for the murder of .' A. Burdell last December. Thomas Jackson, a neero. was hanged at Leonardstown, Md., Friday, for the ureter ot Postmaster Hchoneld in April last. George Dougherty was arrested in Brooklyn Friday night for fatally beat ing hia wife, and attempting to murder an officer. Aaron Rose, shot by Buskirk at Bloom- ingtof , Indiana, is still living, but cannot recover. The ball has been taken out near the spinal column. A dispatch from Fort Le Bear states that the weather continues unfavorable for the operations of the divers at the steamer viiy oi n asningion. A freight train on the Junction rail roaa, in 1-ennByivania, ran on tne tract Saturday atternoon. rive cars were wrecked, and tbe engineer and fireman badly injured. Last week Nelson Washington, aged six, carrying a bottle of whisky to hands in the harvest held, near bimsoma, Ky., drank freely of the liquor on the way, and died in a lew noun. Three men working on the scaffold at the west pier of the St. Louis bridge fell into the river Saturday evening, and one of them, John flatt, of Uhio, was drown' ed. The other two swam ashore. On Sunday the 6th. at Shiloh Church. near Hopkinsville, Ky., Mrs. Emily Owen, wife of a respectable cititen of Christisn county, dropped dead at the altar while in tne act ot partaaing oi communion. While the Phoenix Fire company of New Orleans were trying their new steamer Saturday, the brass nozzle of the hose flew off, striking John Doyle, who i ui .i - . L : i , : l: was uuiuiug ine pipe, uu aiuiug miu aimoat immediately. The sleeping car of the Eastern-bound train on the Atlantic, Missippi and Ohio railroad, jumped the track near New River Bridge, Van Saturday morning, and rolled over the embankment. The brakeman was killed, and Ihe sleeping car conductor had hit leg broken. Six passengers were badly hurt, but escaped serious injuries. David Nesbilt shot Mary A. Hopwood twice Saturday morning at Lindsay, Ontario, and killed her. Nesbitt haa been keening com pan y with the young woman, and under the advice of friends she had discarded him. Nesbitt waa arrested. He claims to have been her husband. The question of the election of a United States Senator next winter, to 611 the unexpired portion of Caldwell's term, is be ginning to excite considerable interest in political circles in Kansas. Tbe principal NO. Org-anlaed Under Act or General Assembly or Onto-. Capital, aieo.ooo. DEPOSITS OF ONE DOLLAR AND UPWARD received. Six per cent, interest paid on time deposits. Special attention given to Savings accounts. Accounts of Banks, Bankers. Merchants and inriiriilnali solicited. Collections made on all parts of the United States, and proceeds promptly remitted. Mortgage Notea, btate and United States Bonds and other firrt-class securities bought and sold. Open daily irom 9 a. m. to S p. m., and on Monday and Saturday evenings, for the accommodation of Savings ueposuors, nom i to V o clocK. John Beatty, Pres't; John M. Push, Vice Pres't; A. D. Rodgers, Treas'r; W. H. H. Shinn, Seo'y; W. S. Ide, Cashier. lausTEEs winasor Atciieson, John v. Richenbacker. John M. Pueh. John G. Mitch ell, Chaa. Breyfogle, John K. Hughes, W. H. h. oninn, Henry Miner, it. u mnman, A. D. Rodgers, John Beittv. ivl4 tf THE TWENTIETH COLLKGIATE year of this well known and establish ed Institution will begin Sepiember 16tb. It appeals to its past success, its admirable loca tion ana toe recommendation ot tnose wno know it beat, as its guarantee to the public for the future. Madame Caroline Rive, whose brilliant career commenced with this Institution and whose skill and success need no indorsement from an v source, will resume her old position in our Department of Music. For catalogues and information, address at heretofore, Rev. L.D.POTTER D. D. Pres., jyl4eod3twit Ulsnoaie. Uhio. GLENDALE FEMALE COLLEGE. THIRD ANNUAL MEETING CLEVELAND CLUB! JULY 29,30, 31, AUGUST 1, 1873. ' Premiums, $30,000 First Day's Pnnirs-380. '- 1st 2d 3d 4th horse horse horse horse 2:34 purse $25O0...$1250 (625 $373 250 2:27 purse f num... muu im 450 Ru'ng puree (300... 175 75 50 Beeoa. Day's Parses 67S0O. 2:31 puree $5500.$33 0 $1375 $825 2:45 purse $1500. 760 375 225 150 Hu ng purse BOO 3U0 150 60 Third Day's Pars-M70C 2:24 purse $5noo$3000 $1250 $750 2:30 purse $3000 1800 760 450 Ku ng purse s ico... sou zuu luu Faarth Day's Parses &9O00. FreetoaU-$600fl$35iO $1500 $1000 2:40 purse $2000...$l000 600 300 200 KWTKIKH CLOSE JI LT 11. The tracks were never in as fine condition as this season, and tbe meeting promises to be of unusual interest anu importance. Trains on the L. S. a M. 8. R. R. run d tect to the grounds, and street ran afford eaty access to the ity. JOHN 10D, Pres't. For programmes or other particulars, ad-drrcs the Secretary, BAM URIUG8. jyl4eodij)30 J. T. ARN EXT, SADDLE and HARNESS KAmjVACrrmta, KO. 7 WEST BROAD COLDMBII8! O. martdkwem ST.,
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-07-14 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1873-07-14 |
Searchable Date | 1873-07-14 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000037 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-07-14 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1873-07-14 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3830.71KB |
Full Text | 7 cm II . i 'Ai J I. , ii ei'.r' t7wrI1.fr li i. '? ',; ,' i.jj rvrf ;'.- it r):f ;.,'( ''i -A- COLUMBUS, MONDAY, JVhVmS., , I tt : ' NO.-164. VOL.' XXXIV. 111 ;nil1lFH-; lfil -Vllll o rvm ii li 117 ii .,r, -ii-ir- xii, it, ,..-. r XY II II II II A I n m Offlooi Hit.' Pearl and Chapel His. COXLT fc SMITH, PUBLISHES AKB rs0laiBT0BS. JAMES Sf. COSILY, miltor, OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY i CanetltatsaMl CmMllia Ham. , , , Bsmrjr. Jujy 12. Fourteen members absent at roll call.... A communication from the Railroad Commissioner was read and ordered to be printed. He reports that no complaints of violation of charters of companies or the laws of the State relating to railroads hare been filed within the year closing June 30. ...Petition, were presented Against the Use of public funds in building railroads; for a bureau of labor statistics .. . . The Convention went into committee of the Whole on Proposition 185, relating to the judicial system After a discussion, lasting through the session, the committee rose, reported progress, and the Convention adjourned. See second page for notes of some very interesting new books.' If the Democracy really want a Farmer candidate for Governor, why don't they take up Land Bilf Allen, of this county ? Although the cholera ha- been severe at both Memphis and Nashville, Knox-ville has thus far -escaped. But Krrox-ville has Parson Brownlow. . The Mayor of Knoxville issues his proclamation for a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer to Almighty God, and he requests " all citiiens to close their places of business, their stores and their workshops, on that day, and repair to their several places of worship, and with their pastors publicly acknowledge the goodness of God" in preserving Knoxville from the visitation that has so afflicted neighboring cities. The Mt. Vernon Republican still makes it lively for the editor of the Banner. We begin to feel a sympathy for Harper. After all his misery, after padlocking his mouth about Morgan and the salary grab, after all the fraternal handshaking with the faithful (the Republican says Har per did more handshaking than the town pump) after all- this, poor Harper was beaten in the Convention where he was a candidate . for State Senator. He was beaten by Paul, and the Cleveland Herald hints that the reason was that Paul " sighted the three taverns once too often for him. However that may be, the Democracy, of Knox have hanged their Harper upon the willows, and he is ready to say to Paul, " Almost thou persuadent me to be a heathen." There are few things in that grand convocation called the Constitutional Convention of Ohio, more uncertain than the time when the majority report of the committee on Apportionment and Representation will be made, or than what it will contain when made. The committee has unfortunately two sides to it presenting opposite views. The impartial reporter, in search of the pure, unadulter ated truth, views or interviews one side, and learns that the report will be made some time this week, and will embody the cumulative voting plan. He goes round to the other side and ascertains that the report will be forthcoming immediately and will not contain any provision for proportional representation, or anything of the sort. So, in resigned suspense, we await the coming in of the report, when all uncertainty will be removed as to its contents. It is a little singular that so well informed a newspaper as the New York Tribune should have confounded the cumulative vote as practiced In Illinois with the " restricted " or " limited " vote. Yet it does so, in a leading editorial of some length, which is meant to discuss the question with some care. The Illinois plan allows each elector cast his three votes for Representatives as he pleases, all for one man, or divide them to suit him aelf. The Tribune states that no elector is permitted to vote for more than two of the three to be elected. This is not the Illinois plan, and it is the worst expedl ent yet devised for securing a representation to the minority. ' As we have before pointed out, it secures the result by depriving each elector of onethird of his right as an elector, and leaves him in the position of having one man in every three claiming to be his representative, without ever having expressed any choice as to whether be will have the man for his rep resentative or not. A writer in the Dispatch, who sup poses he is discussing "The Question of Money," complains that "some time ago the senior editor of the State Journal declined to open its columns" to him for the enlightenment of mankind. He also says that he haa "written a little book' "for the purpose of exposing just such tissues of sophistry, false assumptions and miscalled science" as our recent article on making money plenty by act of Congress and he includes in the same category with as the "financial organs of the eastern cities," and admits scornfully that "the same sort of stuff is taught in many of our colleges as true science." Perhaps, after this, the reader is prepared for the pathetic confession of this new Redeemer who comes to save a fallen world from financial ruin, that be is not only exclud ed from onr columns, but "has not been able to find a publisher" for his "little book" aforesaid. The editor of the Dis patch (whose knowledge of finance may be reduced to the formula "The legal tender dollar is rood for twenty nun of beet") opens his columns to the placenta of oar injured financial friend perhaps he might be willing to stand sponsor also for the aborted offspring refused by the cruel publishers. The Democratic party seems to be laboring under two difficulties 1. The leaders have no followers; 2. The followers have no leaders. Senator Thur-man wants to try it once more on a regular old slmonpure Democratic platform, in which the colored brother shall be decorated with two ggs, and made to know his place. The Commercial says the Senator is the person who is "of all others most entitled to speak for the Democracy." Yet the Commercial goes right along and tells everybody that the true doctrine is to drop all old party names, claim an alibi as to all the dead aid damned regular1 old simonpure Democratic platformB and other offenses, swear that nobody now living was there or had anything to do with the history of the Democratic party for the last decade, and start off fresh with the simple platform that it shall be indelicate for anybody to mention what anybody was, where he was, or who he belonged to five or ten years ago. The chief thing seems to be to enable the Democratic party in some way to prove that it isn't Itself any more that there is no Democratic party and never has been that the only facts in existence ate, that the Republican party is wicked, and that it must be bursted up by whoever can be got to do the job. Thurman is a leader, and the Commercial is a leader the "off leader," let us say. But where is the man to be found with such an infinity of straddle as to follow both these leaders at once ? it to be wondered at that the Allen county brethren, under these circumstances, are ready to start off on their own hook, denounce all parties and everybody alike, and say that all is vanity and there is nothing true but heaven and the offices neither of which are at present accessible to the Democracy ? There is much truth in what the Com mercial says of the unsavory nature of the Democratic carcase. We will be perfectly candid, and say that there is even much truth in what it says of the corruption of individual members of the Republican party. No great party ever yet held power as long as the Republican party has, without gathering to itself trading politicians" men on the make," to use the slang of the times. That these men con stitute th party, control the party, or are any manner countenanced by the party after they " show their hand," is not true. That the masses of the Republican party are any more corrupt, or any more likely to countenance corruption, than the Adullamites who are be sought to carry their grievances to the Commercial's cave, we do not believe- The Republican masses, who have the power, are just as certain to "clean out" the trading politicians as the Conimer- cial's Adullamites would be, if they had the power. The Commercial need not go from home for an example how a mean Republican may be beaten in a Republi- can district, even under a truly good ec clesiastical name. We do not hold this up as the best mode the defeat would be better before the nominating Convention but if the nominating Convention fails, there remains still a remedy that is not worse than the disease. Mean men do not always get office. The righteous some times prosper. The honest masses of the Republican party may sometimes be de ceived, but they are no more likely to be deceived than other men. It is a safe rule in any event to hold fast to what we have until sure of some thing better. Is the Commercial prepared to assure us that we shall find this "some thing better" in the motley gang of lion est grumblers, dismal jemmies, desperate and long defeated partisans, soreheads and mulligrubs, whom the Commercial and others are attempting to mobilize for the defeat of the Republican party ? It is no gain to go from bad to worse. The Com mercial has said again and again that the Democracy have no pretense of claim that they are better than the Republicans. We should be glad to know where the virtue for the new force is to come Ironi tne -jommerciai can i furnish all of it. It says there is none in the Democracy. We know there is none in the fellows who have gone off with the mulligrubs because they could-not get office in the Republican party. There remain chiefly the honest grumblers and dismal jemmies who, like the maid in the poem, have nothing but virtue for their dower, and who would not on any account spare any of it for the common fund. The Commercial is a dragon of virtue, but virtue don't count against niim bers, in parties, and we fear the Commercial's virtue would be outvoted by the Democratic ballots and the rest of the un reliable. . Then where would the soul find rest? opinion that the Probate Court will be retained as at present organised, since its abolition would involve a radical change in the judicial system to which the people have been accustomed for over twenty years. When this question is disposed of, the other portions of the' proposed judicial article will come up for examination and settlement. How long this may take, it is impossible to foresee. The contest over the Probate Court has developed the fact' that there will be a strong and determined opposition to other prominent feature! of the reported plan, . ' "' BY TELEGRAPH 20 TBB OHIO SljATE JOURNAL. If the editor of the Ohio State Journal is an intelligent person, he is aware that there is a great deal in the Allen county resolutions besides the simple declaration that the Democratic party is inefficient. It is also in substance stated that the Republican uarty is played out. We recommend editors to apply themselves to the study of current history. Sunday Uommcrcial. The editor of the Commercial will do well to overhaul his Greenleaf, and make a note on 't. The admissions of acriminal are good as against himself, mit we have never heard that they are worth much as against his adversary. So we are very willing to take the Democracy at their word when they say " We are all miserable sinners." It does not by any means follow, however, that 'the Republican party is to join in the cry, mea culpa, because its old adversary makes a mieericordia out of a party platform, and does itself to death by means of a contrite resolution. While our poetic friend of the Statesman is engaged in bouncing the " Salary Grabbers," he should not permit himself to forget that a majority of all the Democrats in Congress voted for the grab. It is extremely proper to bounce the grab bers of the back pay every Republican Convention has done so, though only a minority of the Republicans in CongresB voted for it but our neighbor should keep his eye on the Democrats as well sb the Republicans. We do. Hubbard & Jones have latest numbers of Harper's Weekly and the Nation. STATE NEWS. The Vrsssu Vmmrt. At the close of the session of the Con stitutional Convention Saturday afternoon, the Probate Court had been on trial for two days and a -half in committee of the Whole. The object of its prosecutors, who are chiefly lawyers, is to abolish it as a constitutional court. Apparently the most feasible substitution for the present Probate Court yet outlined, is a County Court, with a single judge, having the same jurisdiction as both the Probate Courts and Courts of Common Pleas we now have. This plan, it is contended would be more convenient than the pres ent system or the one proposed in the report of the committee on the Judicial Department, as it would do away with Common Pleas judges elected in subdivisions or districts. The main point in controversy seems to be whether the present system modified as the Judicial committee propose, shall be retained, or the County Court plan adopted. When the Convention adjourned, Saturday afternoon, the committee of the Whole appeared to be ao nearer reaching a decisive vote on the question than when it waa first raised by Judge Hoadly on Thursday last It will probably occupy a day or two longer in committee. Those who havs watched the) controversy thus far and an familiar with the views of the man bers on the eubject, are generally of William Sellers, ofYoungstown, has an eight years' old girl w.ho weighs one hund red pounds. A boy in Findlay tumbled out of a sec ond story window last week. His pants were badly fractured nothing more. John Porter Mitchell, seventy-one years old. died at Martin's Ferry. Belmont county, on Thursday, the 2d inst. - He was an old resident of that place. Mr. Benjamin Derry, an old an respected citizen of Wilkesville, Vinton county, died at his residence, July 4, after an illness of a long time. The deceased' was aged about sixlytlve years. The amount asked of Delaware county one hundred thousand dollars for the Columbus and Toledo railroad, is raised, and the people Saturday night rejoiced. John E. Pfringer, a citizen of Stow township, Summit county, on Sunday last wsb married at the German Lutheran church in Akron, to a widow from Suf-field, Portage county. In the .afternoon he returned with his bride to Sufh'eld. He retired at nine o'clock and at ten he was a corpse. On last Tuesday two boys named Lewis Betscher and Sherman Hard, aged ten and eight years respectively, were drowned at Canal Dover. They had gone into the canal near the brewery to bathe. Lewis could swim, but Sherman could not, and the latter getting beyond his depth, began to sink, when Lewis went to rescue mm and both went down together. About two hundred of the most intelligent and extensive farmers of Ross coun ty, met Saturday, in Chillicothe, for the purpose of considering the expediency of lorniing a urange. aiucn uiscussion ensued as to what was the purpose of a Urange, but no one seemed to know, and it waB finally decided to have nothing to do with it at present, but to form a Farmers' Club, a meeting for which purpose will be held July aftn. Many inquiries were made as to what was done with the immense sums required to be paid over to the National Urange, but no one could answer. Une ot those in attendance thoueht the farmers had too many laws for their protection now, and could best serve their own interests by enforcing such legislation as already existed. The meet ing was participated in by prominent nieiuuera ui uuiu nmucai iiurties. Two suicides were committed in Jack Bon township, Sandusky county, last week, Jacob Cherry, while temporarily insane, hung himself, and John wnitmore shot himself. Whitmore had been plowinar corn in a field near the house, up till about 9 o clock. About that time his wife had occasion to go across the fields to her father's, and saw him at work appar ently all rinht. But it appears that soon alter she had gone, tie unhitched the horses from the plow, went to the house, got the gun and loaded it, leaving the shot pouch and powder norn on ine oea. He then went out and discharged the gun, receivins the contents in his head, and ,, i r l- .i. -t-!i. l: leu aeaa upon -me pain wiiwu u wnv must take on her return home. There he was found soon after the deed was com mitted. No reason is known for the com mission of the act. A letter from the Cheyenne and Arrap- ahoe airencv reports that a number of Arrapahoes recently started on the war patb,DUl an except louriwn wers muuixu bv the older men to return to their reser vation. These fourteen attacked a band of Toncas. off their reservation on leave, and scalped the second chief, and on returning to their own reservation proposed having a scalp-dance. - A party of wealthy Englishmen and Canadians, includinsr Hon. Mr. Uisoy, member of the Dominion parliament, have just made a location in Marion county, Kansas, and arranged for the purchase' of 20,000 acres of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad lands, to gether with the intermediate sections owned by private parties. The followine Internal Revenue ap pointments were made Saturday : Store keepersRobert E. Buchanan, Seventh Tennessee District; uiaries ureenieai, Fifth Illinois District: George Franken- burg, Seventh Ohio District. Gangers John O. McDermott and Frederick Sis- son, fitth Illinois District. The owners of the tickets drawing the large prises in the Louisville lottery have not yet Deea louna. LORD GORDON. Proceeding's In the Case at Ft. 6ar- TJ Assuming International Pro lions, Milwaukee, Julv 12. A Minneapolis special to the Daily Wisconsin says that during the proceedings in the Gordon case Hon Uarry yesterday, the legal papers possession of Captain Hay were sub mitted to the Court, whereupon, the legal pint upon which the authority to arrest ordon depended being exposed, there was a decided reaction in public opinion among the Manitobians. immediately alter the introduction oi the paper United States Consul Taylor issued a card to the public, the substance of which is as follows : Gordon was arrested in New York for embezzlement. Roberts released him from prison on bail of $37,500. Gordon fled the country, and took residence near Fort Garry. His whereabouts beine discovered. Mr. Rob erts procured a bail piece, and executed a ower or attorney to uaptain ferry to act. 'hus the arrest, made to release Roberts from his bond, and by common law the bailee has a right to take his principal whenever and wherever found, treaties and extradition laws not being applicable the case, i be common law exists in Manitoba, uncontrolled by statutes. following this exposition the Consul declares the gravity of the question involved, as well as the interests of both countries, requires that all the testimony which the delense are prepared to show should be admitted, and that, as an act international courtesy, Mr, Wilsoa should be heard during the examination. Utlier advices state that the investigation has broueht out the fact that the Ameri can prisoners were arrested south of the new boundary line, on American soil. This will work new complications, although it cannot be yet surmised just what effect this discovery will have on future proceedings. Fort Uarry, July 13. The feeling over the Gordon affair continues to be intense. The examination of the prisoners will be resumed to-morrow. It will go hard with them. Governor Morris has received a telegram from Governor Austin, of Minnesota, requesting him to interpose his authority for the good treatment of the prisoners, and that Fletcher and Morrison, arrested on suspicion, be not manacled and otherwise treated as crim inals. St. Paul, July 13. General Austin has addressed a letter to United States Consul Taylor, of Manitoba, in which he says : "I have noticed with deepsatisfac- tion the manly and independent course which yon have taken in defense of the rights of the prisoners. Thev are Ameri can citizens, and as such are entitled, guilty or innocent, to the privileges reier-red to, and I am glad that the United States has a representative on the ground who comprehends the rights and dignity American ci.izens. 1 trust you 11 not be intimidated in your de fense of those principles, but will boldly defend the prisoners in all their lawful privileges, entering a fearless protest against every outrage that in offered either to their persons or their civil rights. The officers effecting Gordon's arrest clearly acted in the lull be lief that they had a perfect right to arrest and remove him in the manner under taken, and it is by no means certain that they had not that right. Should the prisoner be held to answer, and especially if refused bail, 1 think it a case that should be laid immediately and specfically before our Government. I am aware it is hot mv province to instruct or direct your course, but I have no doubt you will be fully and cheerfully sustained by the Government at Washington in acting up to these suggestions. I speak only as a citizen of the United States and as a rep resentative of the Executive authority oi the State of which the prisoners are citi zens, and which will not fail to do all in its power to protect the humblest people uguinsi outrages. CHOLERA. Kentucky 1'onr Dcnlua In Bourbon Paris. Ky.. July 12. The Cholera has made its appearance at the little city of Miliersuurg, in this county, mere nave been four deaths since Thursday after noon, and four or five new cases are re portedall colored, Tennessee The Scourge Abating. Memphis. July 12. But five inter ments were reported to the Board of Health to-day, two from cholera. JNabiiville, July 11. Eight deaths in the city to-day six children and two adults. One is reported as cholera, occa sioned by imprudence. 1 here were tour deaths in Chattanooga to-day, one of cholera ; reported as caused from fright. Weather fair and very warm. Nashville, July 13. No deaths from any cause were reported in the city to-day, The city papers have ceased their daily mortuary reports, and it is generally agreed the cholera has spent its force and made its exit from Tennessee. Trains on all roads centering at Nashville, which were discontinued on account of the cholera, will resume their regular schedule to-morrow. Cincinnati Three Deaths. Cincinnati. July 13. Three deaths from cholera are reported at the Health Office to-day. A storm of rain, thunder and lightning visited the city at V o'ciock to-night, and was heavy over a portion of the northern part ot toe city. T. M. 0. A. Adjournment r the International PnuoHKEEPSiE. N. Y.. Julv 12. At the morning session of the International Convention of the Younir Men's Christian Association to-day, W. ii. Modden, oi Great Britain, was introduced, and told of the work in England and Ireland. Dr. Thompson, of New York, read a paper upon the Bible and Bible class instruction, which was ordered printed. Cobb, nf Clevelsnd. nn the narticularsof rail road work in that citv. where the railroaa companies provided the Association with elegant rooms, and 6000 railroad employes attend the meetinrs. At 5:30, the usual resolutions of thanks being adopted, and the Convention having sung a railroad song, the doxology ana benediction following, the Convention ad journed sine die. In the evening a large meeting waa held in the Opera House. To-morrow the pulpits in the city will be filled by the delegates. Over half of the delegates kave left lor home, and the re mainder will leave Monday. I'aatora Frawsle. Washington, July 13. The Commissioner of Customs is havins? a thorouah investigation made into the charges of fraud made against several prominent arms tn isew lora. The Daily News, of Milwaukee, learns from Senator Carpenter that the Chief Justiceship will be offered to Senator Howe, of Wisconsin, should Senator Coakling decline. THE GOOD&JCH MT?TEE,y.:J The Matter net jut Cleareal 'tirTua Confessed Muderaaa Insane Tbo, Coroner' laaeaUaalf ifilf Kins; ral fjnlltj. , ..'rn': New York, J1i I2.--hKte fitoflard, the confessed murderess of Goodrich, it; evening p,.. . ..w uw ywviBivp-Hw f ' ano in the Captain's room at the, station, bouse in Brooklyn xht rouofruomnna.-. slonersof the station say that she is an educated and refined woman, but a little "touched." .Roacoa'a capture last night was considered certain, at there was a large force in search of him, : The Polioe Commissioners are under the. impression that Kate Stoddard is assuming the responsibility in order to' shield another, and that person is, they believe, Roscoe. The Goodrich inquest was resumed today in Brooklyn Court House, before Coroner Whitehall. The alleged murderess, Kate Stoddard, alias Amy Stone, was present. Win. 0. DtWitt was retained as counsel by the prisoner.;' Mrs. Lucette Myers testified that she recognised the watch, chain and seal as having belonged to Charles Goodrich. She also recognized a small charm which was upon the chain. She could not identify either the pocket-book or diary Have seen the pistol before. I saw it in the bands of a man named Roscoe; saw it in his possession some time before tbe murder perhaps a week previous. He was in the street at the time. When asked whatcommunica-tion she had with Roscoe at the time, she hesitated and said that she could not an swer. Coroner Is it for fear you will crim inate yourself? : Witness No, that is not it. It is because I think it not best. It will defeat the ends of justice, .Witness then recognized Kate. She was then positive that it was her. Knew, her as Amy Snow or Kate Stoddard. The Coroner asked witness if she would no on and give the jury any information she possessed, when she replied that she had nothing else to state, on the ground that it might defeat the ends of justice. She had seen this woman, Kate, and Roscoe together on several occasions. O. Why did you say on a previous examination that you did not know Kate Stoddard? A. I had certain reasons for saying so. The next .witness was miss Adeline Palm, who was engaged to be married to deceased. The ''witness was very nervous, and almost fainted. She was shown the articles, and continued: I recognize the watch and two seals. The ring had been worn by him, but I have never seen the cnarm or chain, ine pocket-book was his. I fail to identify either of the pistols. There is a lady present 1 have seen betore. 1 have seen this one (Kate Stoddard) before. It was New York, at 217 Thirteenth street, in company with Mr. Goodrich. Have bad a conversation with Mr, G. referring to the lady, when he .saiditwas bis sister. He said she lived ii Brooklyn. This occurred -ia-June a fear ago. . Never had any conversation with her at any time. . David Uoodncb, father of the murdered man, was next placed on the stand, He was shown the watch and chain, etc, and identified them. The- pistol he did not recognize as one he had seen with his son. Miss Handley testified that Bhe had been looking for the prisoner, and then related the story of the arrest. It was supposed that the prisoner would be puton the stand, but contrary to expectation her testimony was not laxen. Under direction oi counsel ine accusea will make no confession of cuilt. The Brooklyn i-agle says, regarding the prisoner : "it took out a lew moments to pi-entA amnnor the bystanders the impres sion that they were looking upon an insane woman; and this woman is undouDtediy insane, if ordinary indications of lunacy are to be relied on. She sat there for a full half bour.smilmg and chatting pleas- antlv. a stranire. wild light beaming from her eyes all the while, it was lmpossioie to converse with her. althoueh she talked sensibly enough, without being almost absolutely convinced ot her -insanity, Miss Handley, in an interview with a re- Dorter, stated that the prisoner was six years sgo a lunatic, and was an inmate of a lunatic asylum, and that her insanity was caused by disappointment in love." The hacle also says that when theUiiet of Folice asked the prisoner to band him the locket, which is a very large one, she was at first loth to comply; butseeingthat resistance was useless she passed it over. On receiving it the Chief took hold to open it. Oh, be careful, be careful. said she, "there is a mineral in that which don't want to lose." Despite the utmost care, however, a little portion of mineral as she called it, fell upon the floor, and this, to the Chief's surprise, she picked up promptly, put in her mouth and swallow. ed. "What did you do that for?" said the Chief. Looking steadily into his eye, she said: ihat is vharles Uoodrich's blood r And, sure enough, upon closer examina tion, the locket was found to be filled with congealed blood. A few questions elicited the tact that on leaving Uoodrich s house on that Friday morning she had taken away with her, among other thinirs.acup full of blood which had oozed from tbe brain. This blood had congealed, and she had been eating a little of it every day since the time of the tragedy till the time oi her capture. The Coroner's jury returned the follow ing verdict: "We find that said Charles Goodrich came to his death by pistol-shot wounds in tlie head, inflicted by Lizzie Liioya King, anas n,ate Stoddard, with in, tent to cause neath, nn the evening- nf tl 20lh or morning of the 21st of Marc 1873. at his bouse in Desraw street." In answer to the usual questions from the Coroner, the prisoner said her name was Lizzie Lloyd King; that Bhe was twentvsix years of age, and was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts; that she was a bonnet-maker, but declined to say any thing in relation to the charge against her. She was taken to jail by the Sheriff. ,:T 1 ?d) t : a!t'.'i i ' (J ! THE TURF. rH io i- i ii;i;-,-J v C ABIJBT '-' BlUC Eg8XS-"ISSrRKCTIO! AT t,.lirr.i1',:'"-"T-"'1 . jMaPRH), July 12.-i-Th Government :hMeeeivea dispatches Confirming the de feat, ef Cabrinety tad thai death of that !oQif) I 'The defeati Is attributed to the lack of discipline in the Republican ranks. The men captured by ' the insurgents sur rendered almost' without tiring a shot. The report of an International insur rection in Atcoyts also conarmeav- uen. Velarde, with a body of troops, ii hastening thither. The insurrectionist assassinated the Mayor, notwithstanding he was a thorough Republican, and had spent a fortune in the cause of the Republicans. His body was dragged through the streets of the town by the mob. The collector of taxes was also assassinated, and his body treated with some indignities. Five cotton factories were burned by the mob. ' . , : i . . i There" is serious trouble at Malaga. Yesterday while the bull fight Was in progress the people of the city rose against the municipality and 1 assaulted several Councilors. The Governor of Malaga has resigned. : . Lieutenant General Sanches Beoga, has received orders to hasten to Navarre and take command of the army of the North. The Cabinet is thoroughly united, and resolved to suppress all disorders. In the Cortes to-day the Minister of Colonies presented and read a bill applying to the Island of Eprto Rico the constitutional clause of 1869 with reference tn in dividual rights, and also applying the same clause to the Island of Cuba, with the exception of the territory occupied by the insurgents. A dispatch has been sent to the Cap tain Ueneral or uuha, authorizing him to adopt the same extraordinary measures against the Insurrectionists on that island as have been resorted to by tbe Govern ment for the suppression of the Carlut in surrection. The abolition of Blavery in uiba will oe realized Dy law. carlist cause improving. Bayonne, July 12. Adviees from Car-list sources Btate that the insurgent chief tain Sierra, with a band of five hundred men, has crossed the river Ebro and entered old Castile, where he is organizing risings ot Uarlists. i here is much agitation in Burges, and many of the inhabit ants of that province are cnlistinsr under the banner of Don Carlos. Several bands of Carlists have appeared in the province ot Leon. 1 here are threet;arust clnelsin Galicia, each at the head of an organized lorce. A dispatch has been received at the War Office from General Velarde, announcing his arrival Deiore Aicoy and his determina tion to attack the town to-day. ALCOY INSURRECTION, ETC. Madrid, July 13. The Cortes yester day authorized energetic measures for the suppression of the insurrection in Alcoy. A paper manulactory at Villa Daibo has been burned by rioters. Messengers lrom the town of Uravallas De Vailes arrived at Barcelona with press- iug demands for reinforcements. Ueneral Velarde, with seven battalions. has arrived before Alcoy. He was oblig ed to arrest thirty of his own men for in subordination on the march. It is rumored that the Internationalists have r'ae l in Cartoirena and made them selves masters of the town, the forts, the railroad and the telegraph. The marines remain faithful to the Government and hold the navy yard, CARLIST REINFOREHENTS. Bayonne, July 13. Five thousand peasants at Alfera have joined the Carlists, driven thereto by excesses of Republicans. KHIVA. SURRENDER OF THE KHAN TO RUSSIAN FJRCES. St. Petersburg, July 13. Dispatches from Khiva give the following account of events subsequent to the capture of the city : The Khan voluntarily entered the ilussian camp and gave in his submission, formally declaring himself a vassal of Russia. General Kaufmann then re stored him to the throne, and appointed a Council of Administration to assist him in the Government during the occupation of the Khonete by the Russian forces. The Khan, in token ot gratitude, issued on the 24th of J une a decree for ever abolishing slavery within his domions. General Kaufi'mann has sent dispatches to Teheran notifying ihe Persian Government to make preparations for the reception of ten thousand natives of Persia, released lrom slavery by the Kahn s de cree. FBANCE. GAME ETTA SHAKES THE ASSEMBLY, Versailles, July 12. There was a tu multuous scene in the National Assembly to-day, and the disorder finally became so great that President Buffet was obliged to suspend the sitting. Upon the resump tion of the session Uambetta ascended the tribune and addressed the Assembly in defense of his speech delivered at Grenoble. He said France was revolutionary, glorified universal suffrage, and accusea the majority of wishing to mutilate it. Ernoul, Minister of Justice, protested against the charges of Gambetta. The Government, he said, was willing to accept at any time debate upon its policy, IRELAND. ORANGE DAY TRANQUILITY PRINCE AR THUR. . Dublin. July 12. Everything passed off quietly in Londonderry and Belfast this city. Prince Arthur haa gone to Christiana, to be present at the coronation of Oscar as King of Norway. EHfiLAND. . A ROYAL LEAVE TAKING. London, July 13. The Czarowitch and Princess Dagmarn took leave of the yueen yesterday, and departed for Darm stadt. IT ALT. work, the fire spread and was soon entirely beyond their control! . - ,:. .. The flames spread in all directions, consuming every ting in its way, from Bridge street to Trowbridge, and from Canal to Division street, except the building fronting south on Bridge street, and west of Canal street. Barkey A. Gay's furniture warehouse, Rice & Tearse's flouring mill, two or three adjoining' buildings on the south, tide, a quantity of lumber on the lot next to the Ohio House, were all that was burned on Canal street. ' About twenty acres of ground was burned oyer, and two hundred buildings consumed. . The loss cannot be less than three hundred thousand dollars. Itit impossible at this time to give. the amount of insurance, but it will approximate to two hundred thousand, dollars. At this hour the fire is entirely under the control of the firemen, and no further damage is probable. . ,;: BY WAIL AND TELEGRAPH. -Specie shipments Saturday, $1,700,000. The Connecticut Legislature adjourned Saturday.. The Tigress will sail to-day in search of the roiaris. The Orange procession Saturday in New York passed off without disturbance. The steamer Meridian is quarantined at New York with four cases of yellow fever on board. - The Secretary of War denies rnort msi me neaaquarters or ine veppmem of Dakota 'are to be removed from St. Paul, Minnesota, to Minneapolis. The Sultan has declined the invitation of the Emperor Francis Joseph to visit the Vienna Exposition, assigning as a reason that the affairs of State prevent him leaving Constantinople. General B. M. Bradford, who was Ma jor of tbe first Mississippi Jnfantry during the Mexican war, and distinguished bimBelf at Buena Vista, died at Craw-fordsville, Mississippi, Friday. The bridge across the Arkansas river at Ureat Bend was completed Saturday, and large herds of Texas cattle are now on the way to that point for crossing the river and shipment to tbe East. Albecca W. E. Easterbrooke. a well known contributor to Harper's Magazine and various periodicals, died Friday night, The funeral took place from his late residence in Brooklyn yesterday afternoon. A Havana letter states that two entire Spanish regiments are in revolt against the Uaptain Ueneral. several Spanish camps in Puerto Principe have been withdrawn, and the forts in the northern sec tion of the island are beine abandoned by the Spaniards. Up to date. $11,539 have been con tributed to the Drummond, Nova Scotia, Colliery fund. The fires in the slopes are not yet extinguished. There is now very little, if any, hope of saving the old works, except by filling them up with water. . The deaths in St. Louis for the past week were two hundred and fortvone Of this number sixtyseven are reported as cnoiera morbus, and lorty three cholera infantum and summer complaint. One hundred and thirty children under five years are included in the list. a Deputy United -Died of Fire In- The Murder ot Htatea Mnrshal Juries. New York, July 13. It is now stated that the killing of Deputy United States Marshal Stevenson in Jersey City was a deliberately planned murder, and the in quest will develop the fact the murderer, Welthar, was not a Kussian sailor, but boarding house runner, who had been concealing sailor deserters. Jacob Hoffman and Wm. i-berodt, who were so badly burned during the fire at hberling's brewery, Mornsiana. last Tues day, died at the German HoBpital last night. Committed. Suicide with n Baaor. Milwaukee, July 13. A German named Uotleib cebub, a blacksmith, re ading in the Sixth ward, 'disappeared on the 3d, and was found to-day dead in the woods near White fish bay, having committed suicide with a razor. Monmouth Park Race Saturday. Long Branch, July 11. The first race to-day at Monmouth Park was a steeple chase of about three miles, and waa won by Dully in 1:1.1, ueorge West second. Tammany threw hit rider at the ninth jump. ilie Jersey jockey uuo purse, mile heats, best three in live, was won by Ari zona, Time 1:40, 1:481, 1:47, l:o3, 1:55. Whisper won the first two heats. Jury and, the fcightning colt were drawn at the conclusion of the fourth heat. Third race. Monmouth sequel stakes. two miles, waa won by 8urvivor. Time, i Hansom second, Artist third. Weather Prnbakllltlea. WAsniNOTOw. July 13. On Mondav for Southern btites southeast and southwest winds, rising barometer and partly cloudy weather, for Middle and bast era States southeasterly winds, veering to southwest, high temperature and partly cloudy weather, for lower lakes and Ohio valley southwesterly winds, falling ba rometer, partly clondy weather and local storms; for upper lake region southerly winds, higher temperature and possibly local rains; for Northwest westerly winds and clear or clearing weather. Wm. J. Healy, Paymaster in tbe Navy, died in Brooklyn Friday. SHOCKING THE ETERNAL CITY. Rome, July 13. Slight shocks of earth quake were felt yesterday in this city, and rozireona, Alarm ana raoii. FIRES. Fanndrjr Burned Isn .io,oo. Pittsburg, July 12. Lewis & Reset ter's foundry, the oldest one in Pittsburg, burned this afternoon at four o clock Lose from $25,000 to $30,000; insurance $10,000. The fire caught in the pattern-room, and before it was checked had com municated to a number of tenement houses on the opposite side of Second ave-nne. destroying them at well as five horses. The Pittsburg Gas Works were at one time in great danger, but were saved. The total lose is estimated at $50,000. Twenty Aerea afa city Bnrned-Laaa Grand Rafids, July 13. At 3 o'clock to-day this city was visited with another terrible and devastating fire. It was first discovered in the alley near the Bridge Btrvet House barn, located oa Kent street, and it beine- very dry and a high wind blowing, within a very few minutes the entire building, a large doable brick, waa one sheet of flame. Notwithstanding tbe firemen were early on the ground and CRIMES AND CASUALTIES. aspiraiits are Gov. Osborn, ex-Gov. Harvey, Hon. 1. 8. Kallocb, and Gen. W. C. Baocook ; Congressmen Lowe, Cobb, and Phillips are also talked of. It is understood Gov. Osborn will appoint a Senator in November to serve until tbe election by the Legislature, which will not be until the last week in January, 1874. ' A Wheeling dispatch aaya there is great excitement there over a terrible tragedy enacted Saturday night at Harmony. Pennsylvania, A young man named ' John Frayzier some time since eloped with Kate Faulatick, a girl of seventeen, from Wheeling, where both resided. They went te Pittsburg, and thence to Harmony, where they stopped at a hotel. While ' Miss F. was lying on the bed Fraytier shot her in the head with a revolver, and then shot himself. He lived but a few hours. The girl is still livW. but can not recover. No definite cause is assigned for the act, but jealousy is aup- posed to be the cause for it. , New AdTertlsements. Kindergarten & Primary School. MRS. JOHN OODEN. 181 EAST LONG ST., Columbus, 0. KINDERGARTEN FROM A. M. TO 12 M. Tuition, $5 per term. Primary Keadinff and Hnellinor fmm A-w in a m . Tuition, $1 per term. Piano taught in daily half-hour lessons; Tuition, $6 per term. tmmuiut ierm i weens; commences July 14. Reference. Hon. T. W. H Com'r Com. Sch's, Columbus, ,0. jyl4 It : Cleveland Female Seminary. ' A FAMILY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. AFFORDS superior advantages in the English Branches. Music. Instrumental and Vo. oal, Modern Languages, Drawing and Paint ing, wnn most caretui attention to the health, social culture, mental and moral improvement. Bend for catalogues or apply to S. N. SANF0RD, President; Liivi Bomta, Ac-tuary, Cleveland, Ohio. jy4 2iaw 2m CITIZENS' SAVINGS BANK No. 40 N0KTH HIGH ST. COLUMBUS, O.. LOANS MONEY, BUYS COMMERCIAL Paper, deals in Gold, Silver, Exchange and firat-class Security. Pays interest on Time Deposits, And does a General Banking business. Accounts of Banks. Merchants and individuals solicited. jyU tf CINCINNATI ML THE LEADING Industrial Fair of America! THE FOURTH EXHIBITION WILL open W ED S ESD A V , SEPT. 3, and continue until Saturday, . October 4, 1873. Goods received from August 4th to SOih. Exhibitors should make immediate applica- . tion for space. jyU2taw7t Citizens' Savings Bank 40 NORTH HIGH ST. Killed by a Freight Train. NiSHViLLE, July 13. A gentleman named U. M. Hill, was run over and killed by a freicht train at Hack's Blnff. on the Northern and Southern road last night. He is supposed to have beenintoxicated. Albert Sands, a negro, was executed at Prince Frederick, Md., Friday, for the murder of .' A. Burdell last December. Thomas Jackson, a neero. was hanged at Leonardstown, Md., Friday, for the ureter ot Postmaster Hchoneld in April last. George Dougherty was arrested in Brooklyn Friday night for fatally beat ing hia wife, and attempting to murder an officer. Aaron Rose, shot by Buskirk at Bloom- ingtof , Indiana, is still living, but cannot recover. The ball has been taken out near the spinal column. A dispatch from Fort Le Bear states that the weather continues unfavorable for the operations of the divers at the steamer viiy oi n asningion. A freight train on the Junction rail roaa, in 1-ennByivania, ran on tne tract Saturday atternoon. rive cars were wrecked, and tbe engineer and fireman badly injured. Last week Nelson Washington, aged six, carrying a bottle of whisky to hands in the harvest held, near bimsoma, Ky., drank freely of the liquor on the way, and died in a lew noun. Three men working on the scaffold at the west pier of the St. Louis bridge fell into the river Saturday evening, and one of them, John flatt, of Uhio, was drown' ed. The other two swam ashore. On Sunday the 6th. at Shiloh Church. near Hopkinsville, Ky., Mrs. Emily Owen, wife of a respectable cititen of Christisn county, dropped dead at the altar while in tne act ot partaaing oi communion. While the Phoenix Fire company of New Orleans were trying their new steamer Saturday, the brass nozzle of the hose flew off, striking John Doyle, who i ui .i - . L : i , : l: was uuiuiug ine pipe, uu aiuiug miu aimoat immediately. The sleeping car of the Eastern-bound train on the Atlantic, Missippi and Ohio railroad, jumped the track near New River Bridge, Van Saturday morning, and rolled over the embankment. The brakeman was killed, and Ihe sleeping car conductor had hit leg broken. Six passengers were badly hurt, but escaped serious injuries. David Nesbilt shot Mary A. Hopwood twice Saturday morning at Lindsay, Ontario, and killed her. Nesbitt haa been keening com pan y with the young woman, and under the advice of friends she had discarded him. Nesbitt waa arrested. He claims to have been her husband. The question of the election of a United States Senator next winter, to 611 the unexpired portion of Caldwell's term, is be ginning to excite considerable interest in political circles in Kansas. Tbe principal NO. Org-anlaed Under Act or General Assembly or Onto-. Capital, aieo.ooo. DEPOSITS OF ONE DOLLAR AND UPWARD received. Six per cent, interest paid on time deposits. Special attention given to Savings accounts. Accounts of Banks, Bankers. Merchants and inriiriilnali solicited. Collections made on all parts of the United States, and proceeds promptly remitted. Mortgage Notea, btate and United States Bonds and other firrt-class securities bought and sold. Open daily irom 9 a. m. to S p. m., and on Monday and Saturday evenings, for the accommodation of Savings ueposuors, nom i to V o clocK. John Beatty, Pres't; John M. Push, Vice Pres't; A. D. Rodgers, Treas'r; W. H. H. Shinn, Seo'y; W. S. Ide, Cashier. lausTEEs winasor Atciieson, John v. Richenbacker. John M. Pueh. John G. Mitch ell, Chaa. Breyfogle, John K. Hughes, W. H. h. oninn, Henry Miner, it. u mnman, A. D. Rodgers, John Beittv. ivl4 tf THE TWENTIETH COLLKGIATE year of this well known and establish ed Institution will begin Sepiember 16tb. It appeals to its past success, its admirable loca tion ana toe recommendation ot tnose wno know it beat, as its guarantee to the public for the future. Madame Caroline Rive, whose brilliant career commenced with this Institution and whose skill and success need no indorsement from an v source, will resume her old position in our Department of Music. For catalogues and information, address at heretofore, Rev. L.D.POTTER D. D. Pres., jyl4eod3twit Ulsnoaie. Uhio. GLENDALE FEMALE COLLEGE. THIRD ANNUAL MEETING CLEVELAND CLUB! JULY 29,30, 31, AUGUST 1, 1873. ' Premiums, $30,000 First Day's Pnnirs-380. '- 1st 2d 3d 4th horse horse horse horse 2:34 purse $25O0...$1250 (625 $373 250 2:27 purse f num... muu im 450 Ru'ng puree (300... 175 75 50 Beeoa. Day's Parses 67S0O. 2:31 puree $5500.$33 0 $1375 $825 2:45 purse $1500. 760 375 225 150 Hu ng purse BOO 3U0 150 60 Third Day's Pars-M70C 2:24 purse $5noo$3000 $1250 $750 2:30 purse $3000 1800 760 450 Ku ng purse s ico... sou zuu luu Faarth Day's Parses &9O00. FreetoaU-$600fl$35iO $1500 $1000 2:40 purse $2000...$l000 600 300 200 KWTKIKH CLOSE JI LT 11. The tracks were never in as fine condition as this season, and tbe meeting promises to be of unusual interest anu importance. Trains on the L. S. a M. 8. R. R. run d tect to the grounds, and street ran afford eaty access to the ity. JOHN 10D, Pres't. For programmes or other particulars, ad-drrcs the Secretary, BAM URIUG8. jyl4eodij)30 J. T. ARN EXT, SADDLE and HARNESS KAmjVACrrmta, KO. 7 WEST BROAD COLDMBII8! O. martdkwem ST., |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000037 |
File Name | 0699 |