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f 12 THE. EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON D.©. SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGES. house from which it was to be published had | ie suid the oration of Mr. Custis was, extem- THE CHILEAN VIEW OF IT. Trodtuged on thie court, by the fact that an at STEED. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION. BATTLE WITH CIGARETTES. ibera d_ organized some | poraneous, so affecting was it that — been made to create a troublesome —— FREEDOM OF THE PRESS a procter Sag the oe of the|oid warriors who had almost for-| How the Valparaiso Affair is Regarded by | international question out of an occurrence | Some Good Stories Told by the General's | Prof Gregory's Address Before the Conven-| A Story That Shows How Strong @ Grip the citizens of Baltimore and all the details settied | gotten how to weep soon felt the Matta, which (appreciating matters with impartial Driver About “Old Deck.” tion at Nashville, Tenn. Mabit Has, = and adjusted by persons who must have been | stream of sympathy stealing down — and dispassionate judgment), on account of its Harry L. Goodman was Gen. Sheridan's! The delegates :to the annual convention of | acquainted wits military service. driver for years after the war, and he tells | education of colored youth now in seaston in many a good story about Old Dock, whose real | Nashville, Tenn., had presented to them in the name was John Astley and who was with the | address of Prof. James M. Gregory of Howard . After taking | their furrowed ‘cheeks, while their breasts| LETTERS WRITTEN BY THE CHILEAN MINISTER | nature, its character and its (pe Saeer ought The Baltimore Massacre Nearly a tue iouse te determined pubiiskers fortified | heaved with convulsive sobs. Throughont the | oF rousioy arvatns 70 Mixistem Baax—na- | not to have gone Levend the alls of this tri- it strongly and preparod arms and ammunition | whole address the assembled multitude stood} ponrs ape BY THE POLICE commaxpeR axp | Dunal, which has investigated it in conformity Century Ago. to defend it. ‘The paper in the meantime had | with uncovered heads, Eloquently the brave] To srnoe or cantme, to the laws which in our country secure the ry been published in ergetown, and the day | deedsof the deceased were related; long did Tights of all without distinction of nationality. ral all during the war, . — following the occupation of the house the | the speaker dwell on the town’sloss. ‘He +poke| 744 New York Herald day published a|__neffect, Mr. Minister, in order that a com- | Sen’ fe war, eays the Chicago | University, the president of the convention, A GEORGETOWN MAN KILLED. | Sheets "ere sent to Baltimore in charge of | against no particular man. | [t was stain on a oe Ses y PI a Or TC ‘NN MAN KILLED. Herald. His home was in Pennsylvania, where | an elaborate and intelligent discussion of the - mon crime (recognized und punished by our John Howard Payne, the immorial writer of | Maryland, be said; « stain which the waters of | number of official iettersfrom Minister Mattaand | penal oth, Souretived i Our territory and in | be left his wife come years before the war be- university extension plan. He said that this . : OE tae Te the eden oudnevor wash out: Through: | other Chilean officials regarding the Baltimore | which, as responsible nctors or as victims, there | gan and followed the fortunes of the army. | plan is the remedy which is offered are cor.| “1 know all about it. Iwase regular slave ent federalist from this | out the eulogy the names of Washington and | incident, which explains Chile's attitude in tho | have intervened foreign citizens) should leave | He was then in the prime of life. As the star | rective of inconsistencies under present | to the habit, and the struggle I bad with my- Gen. Lingan’s Remarkable Career—Hie Res- | end and a gentieman interested im the paper, | Lingan were linked bo ipoet oe ae cyuert | affair that now sc seriously throatens toem- Bape ee be hmong ~~ = endive of Sheridan's fortunes rose Old Dock was still | methods. Its central idea is to extend the ad-| self before I quit it was as terri idence in Old Georgetown—Hie Connection | ¥Fote to Hanson: “The Senos fag bo eg paolesiteheetrer mart ipa ide vUY the | Droil both her and the United States in war. | rights as a sovereign and civilized nation, and | Tetained. No one could so promptly and at | vantages of higher education to those who do | drunkard ever went throngh to quit drink- With the Federal Republicna—Driven From | [Per which they will deliver by (ny brou | thar of bis’ conte dree bene the cloco'ot |The letters, the Herald says, wore obtained ui order to carry it to the ground of diplomacy, | the same time so well serve the needs of the | not now attend the college and the university, | ing Baltimore—Atincked im Jail by the Mob. | attzck.” Prominent among the articles of this | lis remarks the people had become so affected | from sources of the highest authority. it wonld be necessary that one of the following trooper. He was profane as the | These institutions, representative of the high-| “I had smoked cigarettes continually during iagne was one which spoke in highly uncompli- | that their sobs were distinctly heard. Then} The first isaletter by Minister of Foreign Ie a have occurred: worst of “Our Army in Flanders,” but he was| est culture, the speaker said, are breaking | my sophomore and junior years at col mentery terms of the mayor. people and police | came the recital of the death scene, famous for | agirs Matta to Minister Egan, dated October iret. That in this crime the authorities of | xind to the animals and faithful to duty. away from old traditions and restraints, and, | my health w fering from it. It is the in- f Bail . Mi ies were circulated | its «ffectivencss. “Attend,” he said, ‘the clos- > the piace or its responsible agents should have Dock was at A dh “ " ms Written tor Tux Evamne from freely throughout the cites tu the couree of | ing act of the tragedy. ‘The old wan falls~yet | 27. which Minister afatta says: taken a personal and direct part oking about the stablea ot hence | nese eet Ties the narrow limite to, which ling thet ix de dangerous part of the habit. . . ‘ some hours poking about the stables at N THESE GREAT DAYS OF FREEDOM, | 4h, 4 the enraged Madi- | feebly ratsing his wounded head,on which three | Sin—The undersigned received yesterday the | Second. That if these same authorities or rt bel ease carpi as they see fit; whe | poo tre ter Gon Engen, Sactanter Menten, | oceee posse bak cha Geape snows. bo eppeads to | nate tu which your excelloncy, under date of | their agents could have prevented the occur-| T*rters there at Winchester the October | wider field. “Some day Iam going to write the contes- sions of a cigarette smoker.” The speaker, a young man, stood before the open fire at the Denison, says the Indianapolia News. He was looking at a sixteen-year-old oy who was inhaling a cigarette by the mews ‘Home, Sweet Home,” | J. Wagner, a prot “— would be almost harm! morning when the rebels routed the army of nel mating odor, but nin + o8 Fadel nd othera were in the house, hi old man, whose | the 26th instant, complying with instructions | Fence of the fact or ite after consequences they | the Sheamujeah’ He og the first one to: sed edhccrcienge< A oink be ee mf congregations are of nightly acoeeenns Sees Fee See ecan taey kak ads i | pentaete ae et mere ike fatter whose | received fren ple ju hee gives an ac- | ould have refused to do so. that jaded steed and Dreathlees ofiece cone | He then traced the history of the university Hundred do im anti it had unjust laws ure speedily denounced and the | Tam iis Bree expected to be attacked. A] orphans will want! Spare the old soldier, somnd of ten diplecnae cro elt ek 1rd, That ordinary justice being cognizant gallopmg up the pike from the south and he | €%tension plan, which began in Oxford, Eng. Sacerd guahh an one 7 ) i welea free spoken Press with its condemnation of |} umber of people were seen to enter the house | whose faithful services and whore hard suffcr- | Place on the 16th. ard, after relating the result ceeded to tay eg ned Should not have pro-| followed what was evidently the bearer of mo-| as far back as 1645. Net long after another - some governmental piicy is spread broadest | in the morning and stay there. In the evening | ings have ned hig country’ er estigat ¢ facts in order to pun- ish those who mizkt be proven guilty. Fourth. That the court called to investigate r Teached by acommission of the officers and Hare, as it it WeFe | commander of the cruiser Baltimore, éxprel i ‘mulates demands and make threats for days at a time and then go back to the duigenee. It was the summer of 159 that T made my mentous news right tothe door of the general's room. Somehow the awful message flew frum mouth to mouth even before t! al country on earth, | many boys who had heard their fathers’ heated | ties! Spare ° ggles | words against the publishers gutheredabont the | neceseary to cap the climax of horror, | buiiding and made themselves exceedingly | to render the catastrophe of hell complete, throughout the most4i step was made in advance when the universi- how seldom we pause to think of the st ties sent out persons to examine these stud fair should” decide ie cect eae | mout r ‘eport was | who were pursuing studies privately at home | final resolve to quit, and succeeded. I het = not contrucicted with acrimony, t delivered: “The army ix surprised and in re- | or under tutors. 7 |beon to Mackinac Island and returned vin of those who and fearlesnets | Couplesome #0 the mumuien At 8 o'clock «| know,Americans, fiat tense lagen, the sobdiee | cna nck eecauta, aor extn ap-tomcaestat UF aoa daw and in prejudice to the foreiguers| treat. ‘The rebels are chasing then.’ ‘Thea | ort wiper Dh hr eer ene be noe beoa te Mackinac indend end re armed via Gained for us this unrestrained liberty we BOW | carriage drew up and a quantity of musketsand | of your Washington, the patriot, the hero und | the, government in the present case, nor in any | °°)” ceptial came the corroborating roar of cannon to the | of Cambridge. ‘This aystem received the ap-| that she bens wo. rad right the lake enjoy. And yot ithae not been hundred | othor warlike articles were ween to be cerried | the frieud, the man of charity, who feltfor | Su evernment in the p cae ane iserders of the 16th of October ap- | gouthward—the picture’ which I. Duckans proval of the universities. The roults were | for Chicago without emits “ann nate years since the people the mselves-—the ones to | in the building. Beg 0 ae ee Tre cetacean ee |. The undersigned Coos not doubt nor does he | Piahcegy wed even with any of these circum: | }eed has painted in the first lines of his lamous | bros eatittants During the year 189 im | kuow that there wa © to buy acigarette whom the blessings had been Lequeathed—be- | 2>Usive language and throw stones at the wis | rook oultkit ar vite Tinging in his cars, ex- | PTtest against tie sincerity, rectitude and poem: Great Britain 350 courses were delivered and!on board and t would have a terrible = ed at the utterances of & news| fone pat sige rn essed bY the inmates t Eo one othe defender of Bherty aga ay | ability of the inves : reference} OrPonTUNe PoLice AID. 40,187 people were in attendance. An impor-| battle to. fight or thirty-nix houra I cpm 9m - gach agen Fog ese eens, Loar Me hp sity Lo iets oe ee Past Siatine un, | tthe lamentable occurrence between some | Without violating the legal scerecy of the in- tan’ Paper, simpiy because they . eiton | fired fr fe house, charged, it is supposed, n- velopment in the movement was made | y Oxtord in establishing the summer meeting | c; in August, 1888. ‘The pioneer of the movement | in this country, the speaker said, was pe Herbert Adams of Johns Hopk: sity. The plan has been elaborately extub: in Philadelphia by Dr. Peffer and others and | more than forty courses of lectures were de- 7 : berately did not Jay im the usual supply of ae n0'one was injured, | Lindest cut of all” Then-ail went home with | Soetmen butin the periormance of; hie duiy | (ay eatc™,J can advance to your excelloncy ack the printing office and the publish- ATTACKED BY THE MOB. an increased senso of the loss the town had sus- | 204i) compliance with international require- |) he Belge tuted sailors, nor the eap-| Instantly the silence of dawn was tossed into made upon the a oe S a only | Mined. In the course of the day C mente and usages, which bave never been | *i0 of the Baltimore, nor the American con-| confusion by the fierco moving of the ten citi-| The noise caused by the firing served only | observed to Mr. Custis: ““After the sufferings uestioned by cultured nations, he defers and | BOF any person whateoover las offended | ohuse day had come. Gen. Sheridan was furi- zens ignominiously massacred. Romantically | to inerease the crowd, and the attack became | which I have borne in my country's cause 1 Sar dares vo the jurisdiction Of the authorities ies, or their immediate and respon- | ous. He knew whut to do, and had a prem though the story reads, it is novertheless true, | more violent. Huge stones were thrown at the | never expected to weep again, but this mighty | Yr) i Sou cahiiey: SKIN aliae have tall sig it by insinuating even before this | tion—an asuranco—of its success. He roared | and there are many in Georgetown yet whose | house, sashes and windows were recklessly | 4y has quite unmanued me. ‘ With their own thoughts, that an attack was} with blank cartridg. As backed out into the bay I looked into the case. There lay three cigar tt » on the pilot house and smocked one slow then i threw the other two uv the lake, the struggle beg After sible agents, suai : + 1 went upon top of the pilot house 0 and sufticient power to judge and punish the ba eires — of oe 16th could | commands to oo" jad oe {bss, berating =| livered at different places during the last year. nd tried to read. But I ‘could think af fatners have repeated to them the following | broken, and a doorforcedin. The fortified ones THE WIDOW FRIGHTENED. Builty onew, whoever they miay be and wher-| [ory {ten Place with their perticipation oF | orderlies roundly, raving at the clumsiness am a ealtiscak: ehaaveniisho uedecien story: then fired ten ortwelvegursfrom | On the day of the faueral a rufian paraded | ever they may be found on crete Her has any charge whatsvever, | slowness of the i my usual postprandial smoke. My ‘an territory. 1 ORS OVER A CENTURY AGO. ndows in quick succession and several the street in front of the hotel where Mee Lin-| ‘The event secured in Valparaiso, and, froza | eliber concrete or abstract’ beensaade against ert, oittene ap a A national organization has been effected. | NT Kot all uustrumg. James MeCubbin L.ingan was born on the S1st | persons were wounded. Application was made tho sume authorities or ugainst the police for : soja | The speaker went into the details of the organ- | JS! for those «wo —— Lingan was Dorn on the S1st | For military aid to peeverk’ further, mischief, | €4n Was and ficurished a bloody spear and fl batons tuthotibes Sespectively have occupied | {Hit inability to provent Sone ovcurbuces usd | “Fetch me ® horse,” he shouted to “Old 4g s of the organ- | into ui yy of May, 1791, in Harford county, Mary! i war dry A ization of this plan. vers eth started oot come yon - and while the soldiers were assembling firing | tary cap stained with blood and iascribed | tuemselvew in discovering the persons who | ‘Mit Ulterior and deplorable consequences. | Dock,” and the farrier tore away to the stable. bios ol eateries ocak saphena [Cope ml coud bersow. Shes guste His tather was a descendan: of the famous Me-| yotl, to and from the house continued. A load | “Federal republican.” When the bereaved | were te lanes aon ee ele ne Bene imho 1 therwrcentrars, from the actual declarations | Tho first horse he came to was a three-year-old | hye, ei cruities formed the cen ed rt-again on my lolty port. I bad Alphine family of Ireland. aud Bis mother also | fired by one of the attacked killed Dr. Gale, | lady saw him she became s0 overpowered that | the very deplorable event, which Rot Yot | moore it appear e eee ilors of the Balti-| bay, presented to the general by admiring | and tie lecturers ete Applications com. tit would be better t Doanted of benorable ancestry. | Born in the |a gentieman not concerned at all in the riot. | she’ was unable to ationd the ceremonies. To | been examibedacs jolted portune aby ears that the police force lent op- er to keep in the lnke breeze all I could. 1 year and month Georgetown was laid out, be | Then the hot-headed Baltimoreans determined | this the-federalists calmly said: “Our work is 4 iends in Indiana some months before. The | ing in from local centers are acted upon by this | b ortune ald und that it endeavored to protect | fiends in In = ran, Sp | wo Fi CHUNG aN ANSWER. & 3 colt had been in one or two battles before and | central body. When a course is areange:l the ail the afternoon. 1 regretted a hundred Was destined to be closely identified both with | to have revenge, and in ashort time a field | the work of ploty and peace, but if a dagger is Sosatencu ize Drees eed Neches Niet thera by taking them away from the action of | Pore honorable wounda, He had ti fault or | lecturer eprsare before the neck enters ee de, | Ga ny Sully in not taying im my uirusl oup- her interests and her citizens. Coming to the F piece was brought aud leveled at tho house | raised against us there are men enough here to ch ng! arene Galen to the nearest police h blemish and was full of strength and spirit. | livers the icctare provided. A syllabus of the | ply. loward evening 1 felt bett-s, but coud new town at an early age iu seurch of employ-| with the intention of destroying both building | walk over the body of the assassin.” ‘This was | in the position he holds it is his precise nar | teat ae tite ee oF those sallore—N. In « twinkling the saddle was upon Bili, aud by | lectures is provided so as to do away with the eat no supper, merely drinking ar ment. young J.ingan soon located biraself at | and inmates. But by the interposition of sev-| the only unfavorable demonstration made on | cided obligation, as it his desire, to cultivate Necons iy pgs Defore the court that the po- | 4/4 time General Sheridan rushed from the | necessity of taking notes during the lecture. | tity of clinost’ undiluted coffee. th entry” tobacco warehouse on Bridge | cral prominent citizens the warlike people | the day the ceremonies took piace. | Some time | good relations, not only with friendly nations, | blow whee eee ered im had given bim a ; house, booted and spurred, Dock was ready for | A number of questions relating to the subject | tossed in my berth till dawn Shes Scotch ton. dice he apobt the long hoges | Mere Zestrained in this action, under the assur | after the delivery of the eulogy relatives Lad | But with ite distinguished and authorized rep” | DiC Whicn taking him to police headquarters, | Bows, Loot . 4 4 pombe tee y ow site Scotch row. | iere he spent the long hours | ence that the inmates would surrender to civil | the Lody of tho general broughtto Georgetown resentatives, he doos not take into considera- : ; ters | him with Bill. matter of the lecture are also submitted, and | : : , ‘ sulding at the Find Could not poe the AuOW | ‘The farrier followed down that terrible ride, | those in attendance are expected to prepare |! SF Se dog warking among Go dusty benches | antherity. and jauietly buried in the Lingan place be-| tion the form given by the minister plenipoten- | ‘at Pelicemaan and could not prove the fact. for bis board and pittauce. ‘The town's prin- © comms racing beside the aids and trying to overt The second day sufferings were not vo severe, Lut they were i enough. J slept most of theafternoon, and written replics,witich are;passed upon by the | we reached Chicago at % P nder of the Balt:more himself, i i - “Sones ' : - COMMITTED TO JAIL. neath a huge poplar treo and at a point close | tiary to the complaints and protests contained | who. together mitt ' | the general When Bill was wounded by a | lecturer. ‘I wus afraid to trust myself about a hotel cipal wharves were then just below 33d street, i the | Where tho New Cut and i roads now | income parts of bis note, and proceeds to | Mag somether with the American vico consul, | Cann ball, close to the end of the battle, cad A: on aa office, so A went right to a theater and then to and when the chips which carried the tobacco | Im due time the military arrived on meet. Ont) ame | answer the only two pointe iu it. which require | Paid an official visit te this court, made satis i AN EXAMINATION AXD CERTIFICA’ 1 to foreign ports were loaded they sailed down | Scene and comparative peace reigned. Nego- fhe western channel of the river between Ana- | tintions were soom entered into and the in- | posing residence. anti a small statue of the god- | in the poditon gud fa the: Meee wee seit | the police in reference to the disorders invest another mount for the leader and took the | Hcture and certificates are awarded. In this | yi: tecmohe’ jostun Island and the Virginia shore. 12 1809 mates of the house agreed to give themselves | dess for whom ho had tought and died wur-| sponds to them gt — {iided, moreover, that the conduct | Sounded hores bach to the rear. But he never | Country, the epeaker observed, nospecial value | “i have not touched a cigarette since. The this channel was destroyed by, the constric-| yp if furnished witha military escort, and at | mounted the highest point. For years she| “Arter the disorder which cceurred between | font and courte ey ae peon extremely gnl- | ict sight of him. He was not @ surgeon, but | is attached to the certificate, but institutions of | Oder of them now is unbearable tome. When Hon of | the causeway. When the Declaration | 7 o'clock on Tuesday morning ihey wero com- | looked down silently upon the last home of her | american sallore wad Chia an citizens, and whteh | Own behalf that the Come tee aad Of MY | he knew eomething of wounds and ke applied | learning will undoubtene foheg ake example | 1 look Lack upon what 1 went through T think of Independence ‘veicet the sentiments | mitted to jail. Among them were Alex. C. | son, Lut time, transfers and the destruction of | caused the deaths and wounds referred to in | [Yo uisy in ene cours 1s sled an cctive | ointments of his own make till the wound was of Cambridge and recoguiz: it to the extent of 1 truthfuily be suid that no habit is more of ate American people | Lingan | threw | Hanson. James M. Lingan, Gen. Henry Lee, | the house caused at last the destruction of her | your excellence s note, the competent authori- | tui race en f ciscover a ihose guilty for | heated. But it took mont 2 shortening the peried of residence required of | dangerous and bard to leave off than the smok- aside the stendy commercial life he! Wm. Schrocder, John Thompson, Wim. BY | own imago. £ict begun the necessary investigutions im order | of @ friondiy nation: aud slat With, Hes. | Tesult and Bill was never again tho borve he had | extension students, who, Ving several such | 1g of cigarettes.” was then leading, an prigg. Henry ae Kobert LINGAN's GRAVE, to establish who were ‘the responsible parties | Operation of the police force thee Lect able tp | been. ‘The run, the fierce baitle, the tearing | certificates, enter the univer ity for the pur- eeeition ad saoce than Bis port of the wes x, Henry Nelvou, Jolin E. “Hall, George | In this almost deserted spot, a half hundred | aud how they should be punished, and regard- | OPET*ti veral of the imdividuals to whem, ig! Wound had made him ugly, and wt times be | pose of taking « degree. ors of the classes that made the “United Thirteen” a free and ter, Peregrin Warficld, Geo. Kicbards, | miles from the city where he met his tragic | ing this investigation the comnunder of the acibuted eiivectee ci pation in, thowe ow | Would fight viciously. formed frequeatiy meet weckly or fortnightly, independent power. He enlisted with inn, David Hotfmai death, the body of this editor-general has lain | Mltimore must have received notice or have | currences, two of em having contenea, °° | One time, long after the war, Dock was lo- | discuss poits Lrougiit out Ly the texcher attenk pany of ritiemen formed in Georgiown, which | 1; phraim Gaither, Wm. Gaither, | ¢ath, the body of this euitor-gen at, | had some knowledge, since on the 22d or 23d of eS ee eee cated at the stables in Gen. Sheridan's Michigan | arranging for a course of reading several weeks was soon transferred to Long Island and pli Mark oN. Pringle, Dan-/| for nearly eighty years. Few of those who pass | t1.5 present month, as I am informed, the judge WHY THE INVESTIGATION TOOK 80 LONG. avenue home. Goodman, then a reckiess | befure zho lectures are to begin and thus pre- aa bpm _ Gen. com enore. jel = Murray and Richard Grabb. | the place ever stop to think for an instant of | of crime directed a note to the intendente of | It is to be regretted that the investigation | young fellow, was driver, and in the summer | pare the minds cf the mea for the instruc- Yith of August, 1776, a report rea After their removal the citizens entered the | the man who was once such a prominent figure. | Val; paraiso, which was sent by him to the com- | sh Y eady he put the old horse out at pasture on the | tion that is to follow. . the Americans that the Br: publishing house and destroyed everything | For seventy years the grave remained’ un-| jae should not have already terminated, but your a threw the general, plunging wildly in every : 7 bed. ' ‘The next day I felt much better, and, ex- direction in the agony of pain, Dock provided | , AN ¢*mination is heldat tho close of the | oo; immusintely alter any dvaner, had little des of “Harlem,” the general had crected an im- ‘ Te | factory d so xe Sn answer, in order that matters may remain | {/C'0ty declaratious respecting the conduct of md with musket and | pend, Otto Kak Koscive W. Judson, Barrister, Paid « Lill and Made a Fee. y Star, Judson, a relic of the war of mauder of the Baltimore, in virtue of instruc- a Sutherlin place-—better known by the road died net long ago in Ogdensburg, a pretty Sethe road, cading along the coast from the | they laid ther hands on. The mayor applied | marked save by the grand poplar that spreads | tions received under date or thee lees, Sreeteny, Will understand that however much | iouse, the 'Ten-milo House,” which Sutheriis Ss cedsstbuahon Stub Speaker “edeusak Sd iad 1SUES omy cee caus ee ioeromn tees eae Narrows. A detachment under Lord ste eriff to use particular caution iu | ity mighty brauches over it, Dut about teu years CNR ee De raion Bight be devoted to it it is mot powsi- | aiso kept. Old Dock wasa curious fellow in his Seg eee : ge ayant was immediately sent out to ae them. iarding the prisoners and, accordingly, orders | ago the neglected condition of the place was 5 bie to conclude in «few days an investigation | oid days and enjored special privileges from | Movement now being mude by the national | York state. The general knew everybody am Doth sides had been reinfor the arri : . u it | Mere issued calling out a regiment of infantry, | brought to the attention of a nephew of the| The judicial investigation of the facts, which | of « complex fact in which lundredsof persons of new men the attack began. ‘luough vastly | two troops of cavalry and two companies of | deceased, who is an attorney in New Orleans, | in our procedure has the name “sumario,” and | have taken part, many of whom must be called | taitfel ‘y. He groomed the horses and helped | university extension. He said that it would be urs of Kis life he was haunted by the ghost outnumbered the Americans held their own for Aikcee were placed about the jail to | and a journey was made here by Lim. Gath-| is kept secret up to a certain point, when it is | *° testify, it also being necessary to serve | thestabemen “Oren keine only one who | « commendable thing for Congress to make an | of many a good whisky which be had scen and # long time, and every foot of ground the iu-| prevent harm being done the incarcerated by | ering sufficient information from’ the oldest in- de public, b: 3 8 summons and to hear the testimony which | could a) proach “Lill,” the horse that “saved | appropriation for this object. He then dis- . iters, Stined was ‘ought for co the death. | the infuriated people. ‘The mayor and many | habitants as to the location of the grave, he | "ad rusia Wig doreeet es Kaomikdge | {Hose Who are being judged may preseut in | the day” chtsed in what ways. the university exteusion | CON1 <#0% and the weight of these many vie Lingan’s bravery on tis occasion was en-| peaceabie citizens repaired to the juil early in | surrounded it with a neat iron railing and oth- a ike | their favor. - followed Gen. Sheridan so loug and so to secure a fund for the support of | everybody knew the general. During the last tories bowed bis shoulders a pemes 2 teaching may be made applicable in the insti- ked upon by his superiors. < agp crpeags : ; | and cannot trunsimit the facts concerning th eee aH DOCK TOOK INFORMAL FURLOUGHS. 5 \ ‘ errs coco Tnthove trging dase when, the Britah wee | regener ars sop brevent of pombe by their | erwin improved iteappenrance. A gute, whose | crime GF thors wiom the investigation MY | cated by our a ot Tear ee eae | Bat Dock would tako informal furloughe | €0U0Ts tablished in tho ‘special interest of |, DY rtofesson Gea. Judson was & lawyer masters of New York and the blood-thirsty. | those who had taken part in the riot were in- | the name of “Lingan.”” From that day to this | PFove to be guilty. i colored students. The cld man drew a pension every qua miwhen it was gone he got “trusted.” rust” reached such proportions that the mercenary Hessians ! esitated to do no crime, | formed that the newspaper men or their friends | the inclosure has never been entered by an in- , : : ns 3 conclusions w ey a risous there were worse than bastiles, ans | should nut be bailed they appeared to be satie- | terested person, and cach summer sees it over. | C°RClUusions what they may regar As acon as this renches itefinal point, be the fer may be perfectly convinced that full and | Very year, wandering off without the slightest the ; ‘ : the dark deeds perpetrated im then: mace the | tied and went off, and in consequence of -no| grown w Pability and the guilty parti - | paral justice will be done If, then, the ; Warning. At these times he always bad plenty a we abe =~ first two circumstances above insinuated were | of money. He would fill a satchel with medi- Details of the Gold Brick Trick. poverame boun for two o ‘Near by, nestling ad S L ay nthe; | Wamting inthe disorders of the loth: if the i a Trom the Indianapolis Sentinel, pene goed r - Americans fear them +o that he fought with a| citack being feared the soldiers were dis. | suong sume ancient and surrounded by | {-Eitimnate aathiet {for the judging of srigtnat | Competent court is investigating tiie case with MIgTLoapee io ont a eee eee in| OF ais cae orny- of humnn beeps uho peas] Coke mee eet ee desperation never known before or ~|missed and the law-abiding people who | a paling fence, is another grave, but its occu- y his Rete Cer acn 4 9 aptboreangam A | remy , Screae aches es: | Hctivity and perseverance; if there is no mo- | 843) Washington was brought m contact with yourg | bad gathered went to their homeg. ut died a denth in anarked contrast to its | Uabitshed by the people of chine eat ent A | tive whiatever for supposing that in the deGnite | Nal Lingan many times during the war and thew aX EVENTFUL sicuT. silent neighbor. He was only a plain, ordinary | nonor and the olfligation to colmmunicntcite, | Judgment which this court may give the law Span angen rege oe | or ary ma Rorabarpece ET man and neither his Iie nor death was | tho envoy extraordinary and: minister pleut wat be trampled on to the prejudice of the over into genuine friendsinp. When ar remarkable. COntRee Or tives United a vern. | Tights of the sailors of the Baitimore, how can Fison at Fort Washington ou the Hudson was | one for Baltimore und one of terror for the | ee eg? Ba ata! We eediear rel aby the American minister seck through diplomatic overpowered and comp: re ; | coutined, for shortly after dark the disorderly | for man: ill disregard in other countries with | ¥*¥8 the protection of his citi: Lingan (then » general) with his associaics was friendly relations, the pre- | HOt been deuied to anybody and which the | Kicked and fought and bi, Sethedle omens, ae to tl Ts pe cea — — es and rights of sovereignty, which no- | Chilean law amply grants them as it does to its help the dri but Bill wasawar horse and | qnere. bie woauds and though suifering greatly trom 1 Nhiere are more evident or of greater applica- | NN soNs?, Lhe undersigned entertains thecer-| wouldn't surrcnder, So they left him, suthier- | es and nerve. ‘Their operations, unlike other |", a4. tne general met Boyd on the street © oy wal ylnpeben en pehenbmrmn be fin was} (o8ether, a confused march was made to the | Capt. Fairbank, wich eight other men clung on | tion than in the oeereie of that jurisdiction | (inty that your excelleney will uphold with | jin promising strategy. When Lill came into | classes of crooke, are necessarily confined | aud Lctore the well-worn bill could be found Drought which proved toniert aod the gusca | tong liouse, bat on their grrival they ware | to ber Keel for nine weary days aud nights and | whicn corresponds to every independent us. the patriotism, rectitude and impartiality | the stable some time ho would capture him and | almost exclusively to. the rural districts and | part: Z oved to suard | confronted Ly the mayor, who had been noti- | be and two others were taken from the wreck | {ign which are characteristic of you the rights of | G ot are | small . . Their “Kate, . Proposed to cut off the head of the deceased | tied of their move, and an urgeut request was | in en unconscious state and conveyed safely to | "9" Goodman could im next Sun | small towns of the country. Their earnings, ‘Nate, there's just one way that bill can be and put it im with the body, Lingan, tired at y While awaiting the moment he may know | this court, in the event (which I do uot expect) | “Along about 10 o'clock at nigut Ola Dock | if the term may be ased ave simply exormous, | collected, for I've decided not to pay it unless the medignaty about to be citeaneee Jired at | made by him to go home and let the law take | Ual-imore. and make known the result of ihe exarvination | that the niinister plenipotentiary of the United . 4 the ola man, and, knowing that ingsled him, but he always turned up | upon their fellow mer there are none more | the uccouuts would betore long ‘be bivtted out e end of three or four months, worn, never to be reopeued, © ed and hungry, penniless and hopeless, but | 2userous or desperate and mone who cope as | Xivit be mehene, & meu to the general, who 2. but always Just a litte short ‘ bil and change bis tinetly American, and they are, as a rule, fol- | luck when he was fishing off the dock,or would lowed by men of more than ordinary shrewd- | 4¥8 him when looking at the bottle in agrocery Aporeperit successfully with the police as the three-card- Well, after Bill hed been om pasture Jong | monte men and gold brick swindlers. These t enough Goodman, the driver, went down after | two branches of the crooked profession are dis- | Nute would yremeut 6 witich has | him; but Dill wasn't ready to come home. He | ihe good ship jen. Lingan, after plying years between Georgetown and Euro- element began to increase in numbers and | peau cities, was lost one day between Savan: threats to break open the jail were loudly | «md Laltimore in consequence of her Lemg made. Atlast, when hundreds hud gatuerca | overladen wita lumber. Her commander, : * . - came to the Jen-mile House, returning from | and ifthey were inclined tobe provident many | J jasc SUE, suse foes Whi once cer eakc eace thels threat to avenge see coed him, but soon | _ Under an ordinance enacted April 18, 1818, it | relative to we oceurrences and to the guilty | States should attempt to disregurd them. his weary tramp. ile was tersibly dilapidated. | of them could pose as retired millionaires while | jj, 9's that?” asked the Scotchman. as baal on We oa pried yom gone their threat io avenge the indigmity that they hoc are a s ne i L = hye as at ones of the 16th instant, without acknowledging ASKING THE NAMES OF WITNESSES. ‘Mrs. Sutherlin prepared him a supper and | still middle-aged. But their ill-gotten gains} =D. vou re: ly want to know?” stroy the first man wlio dared to mutilate the oe hed been heaped upon them got the | slo WL Liccae sued Lingan, in honor of | that the disorders in the streets of Valparuso| On the 9th of ter of judgment, and in spite of protesta-| Gen. Jas. M. Lingan, «fan tions the jail was attacked. After the turnkey | ‘That the honored dead was a churchman is | “2h a1) appear as the expression of ill-will 2 ATTACKING HIS CHARACTER. had resolutely refused for some time tu open | Proven by the story of his frequent attendazce | toward the government oF the United States, | Of Witnesses, which Commander Schley said | when he had eaten supper he and Sutherlin | | “The gold brick men are the top sawyers of | “Lord within the hour found « justi When the war was all over, the country at | the doors a threat was roade against, ix lite | at the little frame) building oy aa Feet | which may endanger the inaistcuance of the the United States minister could furnish ‘The | went down inthe Yusture. Away across the | the crooked fraternity.” said @ local detective : seoples’ | 2€ 4id not at once comply. and fearfully he sur- | new . hie! an sed durin ne | friendly relations between the two countries,” | letter #9; his is (with thencecssary reserve | dark field they saw tue Lorses dimly outlined. | Wbo has had much dealing with these men to Tnuns Was served and the old warrior came to a [asearmng riers pe en rendeved the Keys ‘hen with the fury of | week as a school and a place where | the undersigned has the honor tote te | in reference toall that might be understood as | Dock eglied out, “Coup, bul ‘Coap, Bill!” and | reporter. “Yes,” he continued impresively. |= 4 iis arms laden with dast-covered vol- her. see teint re ia tee, NH? | waumen the rioters teemed in the prisoa| divine wervices were held cu Sundays the envoy extraordinary and minister pien- | derogatory to Chitenn jurisdiction, on account | the horse that would pefim? no commoa band | “they have given the plain clothes men more umes. Boyd stated his case wud showed hie was now almost idolized by his townsunen, be-/and began their bloody work. nivey|1n 1782 the congregation built w small | j¢,,¢! iary his distinguished considerations, | f certain methods of procedureand the words | to touch him remembered tho farrier who aad. | trouble thaw any other clase of crooked people | bi. gan their werk to injare bis hard-earned istols, muskets, sledge hammers, stones | but more substantial piace of worship at the &e., &e. ” | with which itis explained) the point about | died him for his o famous ride and came | in the country, and will continue to do 0,1] “po you acknowledge this” wked the jus- tation, and among the calumnics cire: d other such tools were used on the bodies of | corner of Bridge and Washington sircets. a eae which this department of foreign affairs de- promptly across the meadow. Next morning | Suppose, for all time tocome. Monte agd the were certain published letters said to ba: poor prisoners with telling effect and cre | Among those who subscribed to te erection ee ino | Sites that by giving the necessary and perti- | Old Dock came up to the Miciigan aveuue | Gold brick ‘graft’ go hand in haud. Skew me beew written during the revolution 5 A dozen of beaten, wounded, scarred and | fund were Thomas Jefferson, Albert G: | The repert of the intendente of Valparaiso | nent testimony for the clearing up of the facts | barn riding the horse that Sheridan rod to members of hi Ee eee ing APParently lifeless on j and James M Lingan. Gen. Washington was | and the commander of police regarding the | and the discovery of the eriminids the euros | ernst the tloors of the cold cells. frequently seen among the worshipers. In 1373 i jovember Minister Matta ae told him of the failure to capture — x7 cand and weofwed retire —— “Ves” . te 3 ; 1. Prison doors close upon them, or whena| “\cil, yousueme, always paya judgment Bee ee een eve sucine for the names | car, catcli Liaw” growed Waal Boek. aaa poten tome nee Upa crooked career. | aguinet ie wwee the silence the department pPewe and broughs suit for kis ts. es, sir.” @ man who is selling bricks and T'lishow youa| jen why should nota judgment be given ume Gen. Sheridan wus carefulabouz | man who fingers the three cards whenever the iy affair are also given The police commander's | €xtraordinary aud minister plenipotentiary of driving was when women or children were pos- | Opportunity offers. Of course everybody who ie we I have « bill against Mr. Boyd. = ders baggage ring one Rg we engas: LINGAN'S DEATH. the ike eat A aap ce ot rece report, dated October 28, Gn referring to re- _ United pares na rf vlessed te give the | sibly endangered. At such times he woaldeae: has — the —— Agee that the gold brick | po, ms stiepeisednnd Sostaned that Leowed euts in whic e love pa se letters 7 inga sion: ‘@ cart fice was | 1p be “: By e information required, thas contri! uting to aid on Goo ba “take: = swins isas ol ‘8 ‘hills It has bee x tt contained sentiments unfricuily tu the couse | Gen. Lingan, thea sixty years old, was| "ous th tunavoidabie, aud accor angie the ones | Ports of his subordinates: By’ these you will | information req 1 aid | tion Goodman to go slow and “take care.” At Is as been © see the extremity reached in the inexactness of | iu the discovery and knowledge of the truth | the races, which he alway the charges formulated by the minister of the | regarding the facts relativo to the occurrence | drive lik k United States agaist the police of this port. | ot the 16thof October Inst. The delay in the | they got in the grounds and aiiong the shifting | landed on it during the past year than over be. In the first place it Is materially impossible for | prosecution of the preliminary examination | crowds he was always apprehensive of causing | fore. “Didn't y the police to have committed the number of | Las already been of several days, due to the ex- | injury. “As a rule three of these neople work to- | against myself?” Hrutalitics and crucltics charged against them. | Cuse given to the court for the non-appearance | “But the day of the general's marriage was the | Rether, aud they mever work in the dark, | St ™ ‘The contiict commenced about 6 p.m. before it of the crew of the Baltimore, and now | end of his reckless driving. After that the | either. When they decide to descend upon a of literty. The forgery was apparent to ail| struck over the head with @ sledge ham-| ner stone of the new’ structure on £ atrect wae who had werved in the war, and it was never | mer and otherwise cruelly crushed until | laid with appropriate ceremonies. Lingan leit believed the baggage of the accused ever | life was extinct.” His cries for mercy were | # family of four, his wide, who was a Miss Janet been taken. Washington during his official |joud and pittul, but they feli on unieeding | Henderson, and three minor childre lige Tefused to notice these attache, but| cars, and after a short period of the most in| _ Though the Federal Kepublican met with such when he gave | tense su wexpired. Some of the prisoners | ‘lisasters in Baltimore tue publishers were not the | made their escape in the crowd, but eleven be- | Gefeated in the purpose to upuoid their party. attended, he would | posed hundreds of times, and yet, while you] “~) |.:ve a bill for professional services, a bill fehu, the son of Numski, but when | may not believe it, more’ suckers have been said Boyd. how to collect this bill : ud didn’t I tell you to sue and didn't you A stricts comprised by the streets of it will be prolonged ns much Jouger as the cvi- | ambulayco gave way to a carriage nud the | community one of the gung goes ahead and | gion soy mvices TL same late on ne Seer recognition of the general were horribly distigured and | aud it was again estubiished on a larger seale ten, tan Francisco, &c., inhal dence required by the judge is delayed, which | mules t8 a span of horses. Noteven the four- | picks out the mark who is to be worked. After | jayver to collect that Dill and charge you $5 © collectorship | thrown in the street for dead. ‘There they lay [44 Georgetown, where it existed lor some of questionable life ‘and testimony, Ht appears, ue requires tor the con- | in-hand was often calied for. He was thence- | be locates his victim he proceeds to gain all | tr .ivice and comnedl. A bereister, oe, docss t jhe port of Georgetown. As | silently until the attackers had all g years, drinking saloons and sailors’ d tinuation and completion of the investigution.” | forth as timorous as he had been reckless be- | the information he can concerning lm, and give his opinion for nothing,” aud Judson pre- the Presiden: uid wot have the friends and wagons carried them to places of ee forming of a inob in these districts ix a few fore. Jie never was a horseback rider after | especially as to the state of his finances. It | © ted a written statement of the account. img up of a bundred thowuus or more offices | safety. general's body lay all that might] & MILLIONAIKE’S HARD DAYS. — | momenisis very easy. © position was ifies how appears Though Li: gan Fich (xt the time of bis deait. ben as it far from d until neon the next day or none of his friends dared hour it was secured and taken to a deserted the war. One time he complained of indiges-| does not take the ‘fixer’ long to make the ac-| jue general left the court room with $2 im front of the ji tion and ordered “Lill,” the war horse, pre-| quaintance of the “pappy guy,’ and by the | i. peckes for suit brought against biusell, pared tor morning cunters. But he charged | time his confederates make tieir appearance “Bonanza” Mackay Saw the Time When He TO PRESERVE PEACR. intendencia wax informed of the tumult This se , uismind betore the first ride, and it is not| 0M the scene, generally a week alter his SRT tte GT spot on the owtskirtws of the city, where it was |< Has Hothins te Bat. at akout a quarter past six. Orders were at i . likely he ever mounted the famous steed after | arrival, he and the old man are warm iriends, Mad to Own Up. mitered. “The iriensls of the dead ian be-| When John W. Mackay worked as a poor | once siven by telephone to police headquarters KeH. Albany: Joel M that bitter, glorious day in October when to- | It is usually the ‘fixer’s’ play to be iu search of | From the Cincinuats Comanercial tauzette, Leved his grave would Lave been desecrated | placcr miner, says the San Francisco News | and to santo Domingo station and SISHA DAYS IN JAPAN. By EI gether they won immortal glory. a farm, and the price that he intimates that he | ~-absalom Carruters,” said his wife, with the had 4: been dug in one of the city’s ceme-| Letter, he was always careful to put by enough, | the ¢ ard of ihe intenden . Iustrated, New Yo ae <i will pay the old) man tor his, place ‘makes the | secent on each syllable, for good measure, “you veri ‘the news of the massacre soon reached sia es “ Fi alias nt’s loss of time they should proces eee tter's eyes bulge out with astonishment. - * i night.” “Wel Georgetown and the tragic death “of Lingen, | ™He# Ue could, to put him ins position to goat force poasible, to pat dow cits: Siilies Witone Heapin; Coals of Fire He, of cotirse, does not want the farm for him- | ¥e¥@ intoxicated last a se Seer one of her most respected citizens, was de- | S4€ 4m Opportuuity when it offered; or, saving | uit. 4 done, but wher saturies. 125+i85v. New York: | From the New York Record. | selt, but is simply acting as agent for a couple | to notice it. rybouy else noticed it;ebey yiored by the whole piace. Tho hasty act of | that, tobave something iaid away fora rainy | rived, esp the police, about hal!-past 6 * ¥ ‘The sickest-looking married man in New York | & ©tern men, who will be along in a few | couldn't help it. You wereirretrievably drunk. the Boltimoreans was condemned by both | day. But prudence can't put virgin gold in | o'clock. the cro 'y cousisted of aboutone | ¢ 'S EXPIATION. | A Rassian Story: By | stood for half an hour in front of the Hoff days, Sure enough, the alleged speculators | «ot by a jugtul.” “Ne, but by several jug- Madisoui sts, and their manner | the ground, and Mr. Mackay's claim on the dimen, which, from the Plaza Franeeseo Hevny GreviLte. Philadelphia: 1. 1. Petec- | Stood for half an hour in front o} ‘ofman | present themselves at the ed of the week and | jig” "-\oure away off, Hepsy.” “Not as was ikened unto the madness of | both ey a ied woumcd + ft ren to the piesenger mole, compri: House last night deliberating pro and con. “Go | the trio drive out to look at the farm. The greatly off as you were. lou tried to open the the Varisians in the ee ed worked at it for | t.- streets Cocurane end Blanco and Exraguri¢ a - considerable prelim decided that on 2 ues rs shouid be paid to tne memory of the home, old chap, and stick the punishment out. a are well agegt Prepintenay will be | Cate with your latchkey, and = fell over 16 f the Mexic: pas yee. Obes wan ready to consumma: leal just a6 600M 8s | Tato the grass.” “Nonsense.” “You came up fainter and fainter. He sat in hs lonely eabin | which all, aud capcevally the Americans, fought | , The fortheoming It'stors of Arreravied alee seeped ear pnp an Aaa they receive a certain sum of money for which | te srouticpa on Sour huts and kueos,opemen, y one rainy night supperlesa, reading by bis Jast | With stones, sticks and knives. y 4 » ae Rca cas they have tha: morning telegraphed. the door, and inquired at Carruthers lived here. fe tas, tat had respected | eutlow candle a work on mineralogy, wisich he | , 12¢ foree of police and the army which went | will prove to be a publication of local as well | plied the other, beginning to sob, | “Sho is a| “in the conversation that follows the gold | pe you kuow thaty” “Bosk!” “And you . While his coid, 3 orem id badd 1p, | to the place did nothing elso as general interest. It isthe only history of | terror, ch? Well, [kinder guess!” responded | prick is produced, with that old, old story, stumbled on ® dark flower in the carpet and ptin au obscure grave the pro: had borrowed from a lordly and surprised en- | arrest {hose who were mo:t des the Mesican war written since the civil wat,and ng his exes. Then he added | and a few minutes later three clever bunce | * a wc atacwn.” “Not aword of truth ia it ef the District aud many gineer. Above the noise of the storm came a| on account of their excitement or bec. of its prominent features is tracing, down Wazzer you think shosay?” | men aro shaking the dust of that com-| "i,j tolung pour baton # fly on the wait aud d Virginia es their state kuock on the door. Andy Hepworth, keeper | their drunkenness and disperse the m Eavhsesy Ihe barearectithe paacecmiens eee, ne ic, Vimmen is| munity from their pedal extremities with| (uc, asked suere that nail weut to.” “You admiration of his fi "s Bar, | bour later (balf-past 5 . m.) everything | f° placed i mid » -Wazzer bluff can P| several thousand dollars of that old tarmers totlly bailucinated.” “Why, you talked i of the All Souls’ saloon at Thompson's Bar, i P. serving gallantly in Mexico, became distii GO” "Ese ‘ ae . are totally t Georgetown to decide | ai Bi # ’ | was tranquil, and those who pad been arrested vuished commanders on one side or the other 4 xtra work good money in their inside pockets. Occa- out of pour cars, and when the baby cried on ing manner in Which to express | StéKered in. His stagger was caused by ed at, the disposition of the Judge of | Bt tate struggle between the state ities | St the, Delayed by an 1. sionally, whien the swindlers have induced the | {2 {2 jou went to rocking its eri as Lard aa regret at their joss. It was Several things. One of them was a lot of his | crime, who had also gone to the seene cf the woluise' wi be handsomely filasteated, arn (MOT. eG." eitup. But you | victim to draw money from the bank to go | nui, singing that all should assemble at|cwn whisky, which was under his skin: tho | disturbance. Sheng in personal notices and interesting | Pette'——" “Shay,” he suid suddenly, drying | against a sure thing, they will not even give fhecollect that?” sbyteran Church, — then , _sit-| others were two sides of bacon anda sack of | When the police arrived a shot ard be- | incidents, and alcogetuer. constitutes ‘a work | 28 tears, “I got a’ereat scheme. Let's have | hima chance to loss it on the brace game. pect uot, and you gotwu your knew tue southeast corner of | 30th | doar. wich weighted his shoulders and hands, | hind the officer wo coninanded thenife turned | neident merit a place in both publie and pri- | Botwer drink an’ T'lltell you allaboutit.” “No, | They are inahurry and adopt the quickest | P°o' "leu the bark of ive hound worked 1m Mostreets, where an eloquent and touch-} “Joby.” he said, “you uever spend a dollar | immediately and saw a sailor of the i thod Utimore | vate collections. youmust gohomexow." “Woll.shay,lemmeteli | method of getting the roll, which is to shove | Std {WUC he basi vt ti ne rate, wind would be delivered by Mr. Custis | over my bar or any ctber bar at the camp, and | fail, wounded in the nec! Tho shot had evi+ you. Soon ssi ing the coli business cf buy the records skow dm waking a sale or transfe-. AS AN EDITOR. months,and pan as he might the color got} avenue, formed a veritable tiuld of battle, in ‘The forthcoming In the first dic ethers and edited Kepablivan, « se the bell PU =y fer Joy, | a gun in his face, grab the boodie and drive * ae e “i tell you 1 don't : : ——— — . - 2 sail, “Doggie, doggse ; liters fromthe ios | chau weal casceees Dut » part of it When I see one. Here's something to keep | cover who fired the shot or who the armed per- | From the eon eae wt Tribeue tite ing.» | spon wae me pap paeeenh bis ther ype fraught with more danger than the straightoat | Tu: pill.” “something strange. ‘That bub side the most hated of men. At ixat there | voxxes: you going.” Aud he tlrew on the rough floor | sen might be, a fact which is easily explained ‘I was reading morning,” | like wimmenailus does. ‘Ob, you brute ! irr, | bunco; it is never resorted to unless operators | (00:4 kind o uutural and familiar. But 1 appeared, on June 20, 1512, am editorial de- 1 ak ata Be . the rack of flour and two sides of bacon. He | when we take into account thdt this occutred said a gentieman at the Hotel Cadillac, “about ‘oun’, an’ ‘roun’, an’ ’roun’, an’ rt hehe dyin’ | fear that some outsider has got next to their | yici't drank.” “Ut course it does lock famil- preciating in ©: the declar: and, , Them, that all might b ‘ retained the whisky in the moment when the polico tenched ‘the | the heavy gambling operations carried on at | ® that Ilove her; wlien she kicks over the | play and they have no time to lose.” jar, aud you said to ay poor,dear wa, “Mother, depioring the war u: a foolis g | tei townsmen eatolled, the meeting place | “Jt was a good many years later, when Mackay | Plaza Echaurren. ‘Lhe officer dismounted, nt. : - Til say ‘Darin’, I love yer; when she n> with us "til spring freezes = It tern hotels. I'll tell yon a trae story | St°¥° tare 7 i cee. you to stay area en the part of Americ was changed to Varrott’s woods, near Rock | bad become a rich , that he again met Hep- | tended'the wounded man, had ‘Bim conducted | the weet s breaks the furniture I'l eay ‘I love yer, my “Yes, you did, Absalom,” said the words: “We are avoweddly creek, where Ock Hill now eas and at the | worth, gone in heuith, crushed ianpicta lounge to Guzman’s drag store, wheré his wound was | aboat ono of theso gumes if you do not use my | arias’; when she pours scalding water ds A Voice From the Organ Loft. oid lady. “Abe-peo—i wee; 1 —was—very—very Of Madisou, and we Union Hotel, opposite the church, the mourn- | ing umong the crowd of hopelessness ones who | dressed, and then had bin sent fo the hospital. | name. Not that f care so much, but on account | my back I'll jest be equal to the sae Mlaciar: { | FFom the Chicago Herald. drunk.” ere fell in line aud marched to the musie of a | bang lke fics about the banabole of the stock | Unfortinately he died om the way. of the frm I aun now with. Twas in business Bu ook OU | dee hovin'; trac | In west side church a sedate young man 008 al dirge. Four cle of | market, sugarless for them. ‘Hullo, Andy! COULD NoT DO MORE THAN TMEY DID. in Kansas City, an « splondid young fei- | have allus china Sow.” rgan. preacher's junting pression aban- | denominations, Mr. Geo. Lingua, the aaenie | cried John, delighted. "You don't ‘mean’ to 1 do not believe, sir, that the local authorities | low for a partner. He would play poker and | blue!” “It iv a great sel epg [aretignaetr _ th eg — —— Sates ! . * . x . 3 ‘hy, say,” he said, moving off, “It'll be jest | w: juarter the organ et Sun- | From Puck. tall cherish as | sou, the wounded veteran, Myjor Musgrave, | SY Checliraegeeatiasrillewel a a. could have done more than they did in refor- | f¥ to beat the houses. T ottén warned him of ny Say eekly qi pamps very the issue was abed's relatives were prominent in vet a Hi q 3 = eon danger of this, but he persisted. It was | like the lesson wot says we should heap coals of | day. ‘The organist has always been jooked| Kirby Stone—“Hiello! Where have you feast urbe You bet Ido, and that “four and ‘bacon, tos. | exce to this disagreeable occurrence, when we hear Ciistnad tine, and vue hnorniag he care | fire, ek?” Then he wobbled away in the dark. rapens aka sprecnse to society. Mothers fre- | so long?” distributed, and the pubsisuer “ “Plat.” that not only every federalist recetved one, Dut | tnecoe eee Ca eae are cganter of the | Broke friends and patriots worthy of ihe name. Oba c aes Saat who bad survived the mamucre, Mr. Hanson <4 Ticarry you a hundred | consider the place where it began, the de-| into the store und said: Last night I lost $900 GEA juently said to their sons: “Took at Mr | DeD. Broke—“Out west” ong, by four bi i [of Con. Virginia.” | “Good enougit, John, | ficiency of the police force for this exteusive |ut poker, 1 still owe $500 to the gamo, and FET the or : ; thet every follower of Madison should ran his | ing, wus the emp2y hearee, wine fer canta, | Youve rescud me from bell’ When monty |e irceguinr city and the impradence of wne- [fare triay to mae gece, Tam going to raise Le Soanso; what @ nice young man bets He eyes over these words. mourners waiked beside it with downeast eyes. | veli7” “When I tell you.” But be wouldn't | ing ashore at one time 160 men (as J im in- | the inoney somewhere, aud want You to go and | From the Pal ayer doesn’t drink and come home late and swest ATTACKING THE PRINTING OF¥icE. Close Lehind it and led by a groom came the | seil when he was told and) Mackay had to pay | furmed by the police) of the Baltimore. ‘The happened thr the disorder tt ns bess Sins. | Pn, —_ me, asT am never going to entera| “Our old nobility,” ae people are —= ‘and gamble and—and—" course the publication general's horse. During ‘its march iinute | the loss. This happet ec times. Then | precise cause of the der ‘heen, gambling room egain.” by this time. isa superstition, At a And now the sedate organist is away below inne Mebaghaah Gi dagen aoe Guos were fired from the Giret sip evee ness | the millionaire pat His arm through Hepworth's | bossitie tp determaine, Trae not know if it ap- y least ii felt sorry for the young man, and after | of the hereditary pecrages have been created orpament and example of Christian : : took hit up to his office one day. “And; re in the examinatten now beltig hell, but | dinner he handed me eW.and T'went ante wenn, minister's | CY.” ious were heard om every side. The irrite-| with wouter “Bape ad ad ae ree | A tO a Pe oe ect sa, eee: Everything Jeuds us to suppose that tt dom: | y'Gt, Wheel ened ‘tho room a big laugh | Within the last sixty years, and not haegg Petpeparsb aires wri oom | Bing a fon soon deepened into anger, and ere long | Lingan. A soleuu stillness hung over the place | youlet it alone?” “Yes, Lean.” “Honest In-|imenced in a fight between drunken milors, Went tip, aud the men, all my personal frien, | wore in existence 150 yearvago, The peerage | yon, Like all ministers’ wona,this ‘boy reads} «-ti.” the auger into rage. The more the article was | und everywhere was uoticed closed and barred | jun?” “Straight” “All right. There's nouse | just av at “a lt righ ox b days ago between Ger-|.and the wealthiest in the city, Logan to guy me | consists, for the most part, of clever lawyers, dime novela. If 38 wasn’t, for ministers sons discussed the more infuriated the administrative | shops. Many of them were draped. trying to help you in stocks. You're a gambler, | nun an ai “ verly was there | who, ay Burke said, are only birds of passagein | dime novel publishers wouldn't make their People, Vecame, and by Monday they had |" "As tho procession reached the ground the | aid when the fever gets hold of you you won't | Owaccount of the procedure established in | S°°% i, 2 the young mau ‘ad sent his old | fie lower house, stecossful cosmoaneee ei" | bulla The boy was up in the loft read time worked themselves up to such a pitch thut an | troops opened to receive it. Gray-lieaded men | tieten to me or auybudy ¢lso. Souls’ was a | crininel affairs,during the preliminary process | partner pte bend tho game. Now. in yoars | successful party backs, munificent party back-| ing the adventures of “Deadwood Dick,” | From ins (11 pm.) “What's the mab attack was made spon the printing office occu- | who had lomg since bid udiew to the bustle of | first-rate saloon, and you knew how to run it | the proceedingsare maintained secret, und for | gone by I had played a pretty uti game of | ery and wealthy browers. These are “our old | Which isa dime classic of western life. The] Materfamilias (11 p. pied by the publishers. and soon the building | public life, the appearance of the milgary, of | That's your forte. I'll send Dick Dey out to | this reason the undersigned can know hose poker myself, and I had | nobility,” aud we entirely fail to seo why auy- | proxcher arose at the close of was inrums. The walls were razed. fur | the aged revolutionary heroes why had come | find a good place, and you put yourself behind | else than what is contained in the reports of | not played a game in years. So,'ihstend of pay- body should object to their buying themselves | and said: Pg dicots wage) uiture demolished and the Rresors destroyed. | from all quarters te pay their last sad re-| the bar. Come back in two days—3-30 p.m.” | certain persons, and therefore they can neither ing the €500 2500 into “our old properties.” In: the change | hymn and sing ey | Not satiated with that a dulizest haat was | spects to & dead brother, of the wecping| At the hour appointed Mr. Dey and Hop- | aflirm nor deny in reference to theresult which worth of chips and began to play. is 40 obviously an economic advantage that we | which the congregation, will Sint thes 9 wasmuaning exidaight, oo i wolked 3 ‘or them, | tataily and of those covered with burtfui | Worth were there. “Here,” said Mr. Mackay, | may be reached by the judge in charge of the | with me from the firs in about an hour I| cannotoven share Sir Horace Davey's profes: s they had evcaped to Georgetowa suring the ex- | woands occasioned by the fury of the Baltimore | drawing check. “There's $10,000, Andy. | investigation, which lasts and complicates itself | lind canceled the 2500 my partner “owed and with disgust josten: both him and sional at the Jews who fc ‘aristo- | tered, and then was silent, The organist | right into the room, and, gitement. The commotion svou subsicied and! mob, ail leut an indescribable effect to the oc- | Dick struck au Al place on Market strect. You | all the more the greater the number of those was ahead of the ». I played another hour | cratic extravagance. After ail they are only | planted his feet on the tp ag our a. severe dook, I deliberately ‘the matter was uur legal investigacion, wien | cusion ‘ihe platform trom which the culogy | can by it aud have something left to stand a | charged with the responsibility of the crime. | and cashed in $1,500, having won back =f assisting the natural whereby the peer- prog hanen Syke J a oo gw tarned out n't be get rates ae henner Taran one the eitzoc, | was so be spoken was occuried by the tent | run of barasc, if eed be, Keep the bottie for | These opgrt# abd. accompanying documents ’s Ideses of the preceding night and | age ts becoming the roaring bape cot Sees AE Be a as gd with several of bis frionds from othcy counties, | ander which 20 vtten had sat the great Wash- | cther foiks avd you'll be all right If you by Minister “Muita “to Minister | 91,100 to tho good. I carried back a receipt png ha RT a you. came iutotho city unknowato the imbabitants | ington; around it was placed the veteran band | dun't-—byt I hope you will for your own sake. | Egan. for, $500 to him and said nothing. eastern detective bad the drop on the band- — erspown ou!y to a few of then, au }took posses. | of the revolution. Major Musgrave, pale and | And don’t you ever forget, Andy, that that flour ‘JUDGE FOSTER EXPRESSES SURPRISE. Christmas day I turned over to him a Another Colonel. some road agent. >. In Boston. sion of ahozse ou Charlesstscot, onnied by a Mr. Som pyre the Sxnfey, Mule Cou Btaart pa ener aig fad ‘draft at sight for a A letter dated November 3, 1991, from Judge nape ope malay cdg Mecy oar pre! From the Kaneas City Times. ig eunnnes Deeks ae zn ‘said aren “ . . jagner. aud Stoddard stood’ oa either side of | grub state. And now the question has been raised, must " ‘the It was the mes ee FURLISErD IX GEORGETOWN. ica, : ; the author of “The Light of Asia” be addressed | Then 8 vosce broke the silence. It was the | in The makors of children's blocks never rh aati apelcenaratar encore Pia" herstipeea lz nec aa ir Edwin Arnold, Bir Arnold or Sir Eawia? | Jod-> y pump of Til kick the | think of patting letters on them, ond ward found and comm:nicated to the mayor} The ceremonies commenced with prayer by that the plan of renewing the publication of the | the Rev. Dr. Addicon and concluded with eae wager and of arming for the dofeuse of the | appropriate remarks by the Kev. Dr. Balch. It —— ealute him as Col Greek Wonldn't i be a god idea drop at nonsraes Sei eaeaee peat ente there's my poor Wtle Emerson simpiy dying