Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. 4 NEW YORK HERALD): WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. oe : e Bt { “ r ”” of the dofecdant, and 2 Bow travelling under the it did not by aay the part of the House, as be thought it was not in its | call bis wife mother; ndorstood that we were to | “unrequited love” on the part RIAL AFRICA. equator, MASSACHUSETTS MORALS, | province ind’ue tarcrod tie ‘ascepiaace of the resigaar | g0 to Rupe when We mare. “a + | also tended te show that at the sama Side the cefamians EQquand See ten, taal ibe beak cf the stmeaphere was ~ eninn | mien atmnned Eevee wink muna. ince | com: | Tit metas toate rina aaemue wee ts a Bh ey gg ee Mr. Jewell, of Boston, said (bere were wo ms | menced this case to find g was made; I claims was courting & fy a wf ae to be con are ee was due to the gentleman from | cannot remember that ka sean mene, me to move | occasion 10 her of muck mental sufforimg and pain, fa- | Mr. De Challlws Lecture pope aes eet od Sring to the great moisture ‘of the couatry arising ie 4 Abngton, and what was due tothe House? Several | to fast Bosiou; Ido swear thas Mr. Keliy visited me in | curabie by heartsease. Depositions were read, ory for the Advaacemem’ mee Stak eeots ie and also the large forests w! * ad Li grave charges bad been made in the public prints, and | Bast Boston; at all of the interviews my sister was pros- | lug U0 show that Belinds was pleasing to tho ayoe Last evening Mr. Du Chaiify delivered, at the Cooper | rit » pe henge ennaek, The highest \emperetens A Wicked Parson and Licen-| fivscceiss Be ey eng od , aud no denial of these charges hay- | ent ouly; my last interview with Mr. Keily was ia the | Charles Davis, and that he was s frequent Visiior 86.) situs Before the Association for the Advaneement of ire ing been made, his view was that the committee rv wrote to him in March for | her touse in East Bostoa, even ping all night " 3 latter part of October, 1865; Setence yrrative of his experi- | stood at ninet; slator. immodiateiy, aud that some action of the House should | money. [A letter directed ; Keliy and dated in | there, and furthermore that Belinda spoken of a and Art, an interesting na’ ‘eight degrees, and this, of outa, tious Legi be one There was no necessity to go to Abington, a x shown to (Aan Bagge ‘doubted the | desire of Mr. D. for her to goto his fg vat Mad mar- | encesand adventures in Equatoris'! Africa, Those who 4 s the Coole Placo—under s verandah im one Nate) es een as the charges bad been publicly made, and the dignity | sicnatare, and could not smear it was her wriinz.] I] ried. The visits of other geutlemen to her house were | 1.74 04 nowed thie gentleman speak im public cam form ae a Ne mole of the House demanded an wquiry, hever received an suswer to that letier; I bougut a sew- | Westified to, but Mr, Kelly's visits there, 20 poy Pata of bia eiyle ert [eye " : Mr. E. Wright, of Boston, opposed investigation by a | ing machine on mortgage of it; think I'made turee pay- | Witnesses for the defence were aware of, were idee peculiarities thelr attrac. i. hv at He Runs Away from His Congregation and | commitico of the Houso, on tae ground that it was be- | ments; I bought iu my own name; tink itwas in | “angels visits, few and far between. Jove musings | WOR f0" thoee who prefer the conversational to the dl- he ound id neath its dignity to inquire into rumors. He did not | September, 1865; 1 wrote to Mr, Kelly for money to | As yet has been Ratton gee Be oth oveild. forea | 4actic form of lecture. Nothing can be simpler or more | tne Resigns His Seat in the House. think the House was an inquisition, and that if the party | pay the instalments on the machine; I swear I did not | or charming etes recounted, which co pe yprngpaclonies sa) FS ~ so charged, actingon the advice of friends, bad not ad- | Write that letter, moment crimson tue cheek of the most chaste Ere whesd unpretentious than his manner, and RU mitted bis guilt, he should not be condemned by the A second leiter, directed to Mrs, Merrill, was shown the | that would furnish “Comus” with one moment * | more effective. His English, though not what is called ra tao Sian insti race | Sema Redness an | Un flo aleonn Nera sly ir. ame, am, moved the previous ques- 10 leker said she did not siga. ¥ INTERESTING BREAC:| OF PROMISE CASE, | tion, and Mr. Jowen's ‘motion to refor the letter of re: | thind letter, dated February 2 2808, was snow tie | never was crowded before, uot excepting the famous | at a los for words to express his ideas accuracy, and | stood’ . signa to a committee was lost—49 to 83, witness, who recognized the jwriting as hers. Daiton divorce case, when such lighis iu the cgrhry there ws an undercurrent of humor pervading them that — oA: r, A.J. Wnght, of Boston, moved that the resigna- The second letter refers to Mra, Morrill’s presence at | mament as Choate and Dana were pitting against adds very much to his popularity with his audiences, thas ry tion of Mr. Hovo be accepted, and on this motion the | witness's house when Mr. Kelly waa ther», and to 4 cor: | OMG) Tee tha Neneh ora examinod for the purpose | From the commencement to the close of his discourse he | mazima s yeas Bays were refused. matt wi ocoul wi was 4 A Disappointed Widow Claims $20,000 | Mr. Avery, of Braintree, thought it not right to ac- | witness’s house, Witness tostified that Mrs. Merrill was of impeaching Mrs. Ellms’ character for veracity and | manages not only to keep their attention alive, but to | the arin a, - thy Shipbuilder. cee shageigaiion until more of the facts were known a areas at any interview between herself and the — perky cor doyle a irreoeg fn | excite their risibility by toe ‘and pul of oe pene 9h oe <tr} from a Wealthy Ship . Hous questa? OB that account he opposed the pre~ } Gerona oes was asked to compare the first lettor, | showing that the widow was notorious for lying. The | his sallies, which are half xsnglish, half Frech in thelr | from 28 to 126 degreea &e. &., &. Mr, Jowell, of Boston, again spoke, and said he hoped | which shedenied writing, with the third letter which sha | testimony respecting ber chastity was of @ peculiar | charmeter. ‘There ts'one thing to be sald of his lecvares | 0'clocks the heat of that for the dignity of the House the previous question | recognized as her handwriting, and upon doing so t character, and came from men mostly emp! come oa which cannot be said of many other entertainments of @ | one ‘The pipiens <y would not be ordered. fied that she thought the haudwriting looked alike, defendant, and mostly of his crafi, and dependent similar kind) piers ahbaut a. Lane ant ke: sea ae THE CASE OF THE BAPTIST CLERGYMAN. ‘The vote was then taken, and the motion for the pre- | she did not think sho wrote the first letter, for she | him ine great measure for support. Accord.ng 2 oe ony that they are almost telligil re: oe sd * | vioas question was negatived—34 to 96. bolieved she wrote to Mr. Kelly for money in | statements her reputation as aa anchaste womaD ¥as | tractive to young people a8 to adulta, He seems to bave, | marke ar er Mr. ng, of Lee, then moved that the House go | March. Mr. Kelly gavo mes dress pattern | the general speech of the pabiic in East Boston: D4 | 4 natural love of children, and takes especial pains to | ;,1#°,cteerved wnen tm onty. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE @F TUE WERAL into secret seasion, and’ this vote being carried, the-gal- | and two pieces of cotton cloih; think there | general a8 it was, in no instance could any ftom | make himself understood by them, often addressing | two degmes. The yar * WERALD. Jeries and the body of the hall were cicared of all but | were three patterns; they were ‘amait; never asked | tho names of more than (bree or four persons W! by them, - members. whore you tl ; be me how many yards 3 BS December, April, and Reiman, Hay 58, 000; The House remained in secret session for one hour. On wane Hes canta myeelt was present when dogare the fineness ao taomiedy ot ua goat onable pe o MEANGABEGET whee waned toot oom , Sa in oe Tho most shocking and revolting instance of human | the qu sd— | mothe dress patterns; did not ask were the cotton came | reputation for virtue for twenty years back, which ex- 5 coldest months ana depravity evar reccedad' Tbe eas KesaeceAtie aatadie POS Oe ee Ten earned Trott did mor nok cae tine pete shank i, was bought | oeeds by about six years the time during which the {air | bimself's fecling of surprise is experienced st the small, Pique You wil protebiy inquire bow T = A ‘ ; did not know anti resided in Island ward (East Boston). Some ie and grace of Massachusetts, A man, high in social position, It was understood before the House went into secret | in acwmee, ae it he Cag ig tees pp bh pongo ds Geer ( pnp nt oe! fragile looking figure which has faced so many perils: i Hl i el i session that Mr, Howe could not be found, the suppost- | of Mr. Kelty’ ? encountered eo many hardships in the cause of science. occupying & bigh place in the esteem of this community, | tion being that he had left the State, ported and contradicted several times; heard he was en- | visiting her house (‘rom which % was intended to be in- last pastor of the Baptist church im Abington—s man promi Io the Legislature of 1855 a groal stir was made by a | gaged in March, 1365; in October, ‘104, he bought two | ferred they went there from impulses athas wan Fy Mr. Da Chaillu is considerabiy below the middle height, | mo a degree ent pap vn yma oeet —— crime commitied by one Hiss, of Boston, of adultery | Tings; a day or two after he bought the ring witu au in- | tonic), but could only give the name of the dofen: in | with stooping shoulders, and a head always bent forward | every one else aoe nent in the cause of education and temperance, and | nq jicentiouaness; but that tremor was bathing com- | scription on it; from September to October, 1804, ho | that connection. Every witness was concurrent in | |. ir in tne aititude of listening, His features aro regu- | With agun Pie Se ype ah gr mg withal a member of the Legislature—has so lowered | pared with the excitement caused by this beastly crime | called often ; he always walked over to Chelsea; the time | opinion that these visitors were all respectable persons. orchead unusually high and expansive, bad boon miy guides, aad conseqavally y tisads a toe bimself im brutal passions aud practices as to contaminate | of the Abington representative. awe is a man of » gave oS tbe parse mn he ware me the $100; bdens ot tie Tee of the teeaele Parl 6 pena lar, a pe see a ies = pr ag pemcrnng best : wl a Ser tienen i. now at mers Cheisoa ; eyes full of A im i the wnole atmoephere around him, The unfortunate man | Or'ine'Rduoution Committee of the House; bas served. | make dresses while, there; my health was 10 food; I ] able to ago they stood as fais as hat of any wi: Ta pulls thas © eplpaades Stood they told me bere. 1 was, and it was always wie vas euadenty brougat to a tornioaling on aterieg | oes eet of Rrustens and of Examincrs of on@ or | frees showta vant nal c hoeoo ia Hast Bosion; the | nestes, either rom an over sealous dire to serve their | gives an idoe to Passio i psoas 8 Po Cl Le hn Ay hls n munity ag an orator of no mean ability: bas written | reason I went back to East Bustom was because Mr. | employer, of from a misunderstanding of the pvlat | theircredulity, and no doubt has had much to do with the | for @ short. time, and I welcomed them beck evening, and go indignant and excited were the citizons | articies of an educational character of decided merit; | Kelly advised me to do so; Mra. Whither was prosent | in issue, aud evidently undritied by counsel, by thelr | | /..- ceiticisms that have beem written upon him on | With & feoling of ploasare. Y ‘shall alway poser of Abington that it was almost by a miracie that he | hus flled the palpit with talent; has been a most faith: | at an interview botwoen myself and Mr. Kelly; also | tes-imony made Mrs. Eilms bear an unenviable repute: a.0t-ths, atiduiee® ab posse a OT ed aco Bo dh pcg ed escaped from the town witb his life It seoms that | fu! pastor, and a wise counsellor and friend of his flock, | when h» has been at toa at my house; sue went | tion fur unchasuty wuen only eleven years of age. i both sides of the Atlantic. regards er bare left an in = hee pepe ir pan Taking ail this into consideration, his fall is still more | away to St. Paal afier I brought this suit. does appear singular that many oid citizens (most his narratives, there is no question that it is substantially | April and May were the mont atmosphere a -examination—I wrote thi letter ra. Merrill, Ly Ru y tix yer ses an by apparent exemplary. conduct be | tian” tt OY he beter els of prone than eter | ea be erdones oF ao ints suc | meaty aurora ganeping power) should tres | core While co cepts in regan to them are tn | S°itoasiy date hat gece nts daly Wright ears since, be 7 2 po th pear pric fr me ae ae 2 Magee did wee a Totter to Mr. Kelly, requesting a loan of | suddea!y become unadle to ind.viduatize in regard t general persons without any scientific education, the | in the it of heaven. At that period the finest com- 4 pal oe: ‘ $100 to pay what I owed on my sewing machine; | told | matter of so much imporiance as the virtu: of a haud- | jeaqing scientide minds of the age have concurred in’ | stellations of the southern hemisphere were wichin view munity ip genoral. Being very forward in promoting | THE CASE OF THE SHIPBUILDER AND WIDOW. | fim in exchango 1 would give him my note; 1 wrote a | some woman who has boon am agreeabie acquaintance» of "8 Sl hie aekeeneaa lee at tfe game time. The constellation of the of the the cause of education, he was made Chairman of the letter to Mr. Kelly after Terss the letter requesting | 80 prominent @ citizen as the defendant, whose un- | Supporting the accuracy Wi0@ | Cross, of the Centaur, the Fey coon and the < School Committee of the tow! 4 the loan, and after I received the letter from Mr. | chaste lief, per testimony, 18 co-oxistunt with their | made these few prefatory remarks concerning the | Orion. All these included the three brightest stars ‘ m, and was en- SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD, Kelly. term of the residency of said © old citizens.” lecturer, who was introduced to the audience by Mr. the; heerenac Eaing, Oampae ant bobs, Gpotanet, ‘The Cat he general educational supervision | Brench ot Promise in High Life—Salt Againat | _ The deposition of Eliza Whitctior, who resides in at. | , he testiwony in rebuttal was commenced on Friday | <0) 9 suai now proceed to lay before our readers | planets, Venus, Pg gi Rd of the youth of the whole town. He | “a Wealthy Shipbuilder in Boston—A Claim of | Paul, Minn., was read. By it it appoars that in 1884-'05 | [oom when Mr. Charies Alfred Davis, the lover gt " : of the “arabs, white little pa:ches, especially the was also a prominent temperance advocate, a ", sho resided in East Boston and is sister of the piaintitf; | Huds, as claimed by Daniel, wag examined Aithough | tho lecture itselt :— aoe ry soe oop + | $20,000 for Disappointed Love—The Dee | Viown defendant for five yeats; saw bia in auternn and | 218 mechanic, and in favor of the eight hour eystem | toes ayn Geeriawen:—I have been invited by the | larger ones, t inated fn indusirious advooate of prohibition, and as such | fendant Formerly a Boston Alderman—Ex- | winter of 1804'S, after at mny sister's houseto, wait upon | Of 'abor; although he was in the army, and obtained tne | society for the Promotioa of Scince and Art to appear. | they revolved round the stariess south pole, contrasting gained accoss to the confidence and esteem of the probi- | Governor Andrew one of the Counsel—In- | ber and to carry her to Chelsoa; defendant during that | Uaeaviable reputation of deserter; although h» tell ® | Horore you to give a brie outline of my explorations in with known’ coal sack adjo! a ~ oh i t ret ‘k of @ lady’s beart, and was ern Croaa and the part of the Milky Way een the Ditionists all around him, All sorts of honors were | teresting Stories on Both Sides, &c, time spoke to me about_us eugazement with my siete TT ee eee a ott tneahos, whipped 1D Myyniec Afvion. _ I soaie wits Sane ear ite teaes Aifloth and eightioth parallels, so beautifl and rich, im forced upon him, and he bad the respect and good will ‘ Bustos, May 11, 1861. | ide loved my sister and fotendod to marry her; they | PY, Cupid's darts, “bus lor three years past “has | Toss ‘of the ‘chome is too great for a course of two leo. | crowded nebrlm, and stars soemed $0 be in a perfect body who knew him, until his brutal practices | There has been a plentiful supply of interesting | met at my house several times; first called in Ociober, | Bt Abided with | his tair_| captor; although | tures, But I hope you will look with indulgence and | blaze bot annie Se , all’ these social bugbears are recorded against of travell 7 scandal and eager curiosity here during the week, over | 1864, about noon, and left a note for my sister stating kindness upon the best endeavors & poor traveller, wane Soren ae Sea, the aidermil Hee WER Babies that ‘be would Gail’ wad carry Ler, fo Unielebe; 00 bo our alleged Loiuurio, yet no cupuing of counsel drew | who, Tassure you, will try bis best to recount to you A few days previous it was generally whispered about Droaress of a breach of promise caso in the Supreme | Coo tLe Me sohly asked my sister how sho was cet- | {fom hita the unction of confession to olf down the ugly | Yome of the inadents of lis travels. In the country I she town that he manifested a strange desire for the con- | Judicial Court. The parties implicated are well known | ting atong with her preparations for marriage and with | feature of the defence, that Belinda was Ubarles Alfred's | travelled always on foot, and made large collections, ts fen aflianced bride. No, dot an uuction tor Daniel's soul. fied and brovghs out more than two thousind birds, stant companionship of the youth of both sexes, and | audof high standing in the community, especially the | hor sewing; be also left on several occasions lottors | Mianced bride. | Nv, not an uuction ior Daniel's soul. | stuffed and broug , upon ‘eviving incidents of the past many circumstances | defendant in the case, Mr. Dauiel D, Kelly, a wealthy | “iTected to my sister, and verbal tnessages, too; iny sister y the remainder of the evidence of which sixty were new to science, I killed one thou 3 g i | the northern, lations pass the meridian within a short time of i be during the time is question did nod, to my Knowledge, | Putin, and on slonday the closing arguments will sand quadrupeds, of which more than two hundred wore remembered which, now that suspicion had been | East Boston shipbuilder, and formerly an Alderman | roooive the attention of any otner man than. Mr made, Bdward Sovier, an “Ody Gammon” appearing | wore stuffed by ‘me and sent home, with moro than | Ober. | fret TS gett tambo t all ror aroused, pointed to him as one of the vilest of | from the Island ward, The plaintiff in tho auit is Mrs. | Kelly; 1 was in tho habit of visiting my sister; | S4¢t Of man, but withal a squaro practition eighty skeletons, About thirty of these quadrupeds | (1 Centauri burni Ted, Then, as Belinda B, Ell ry hhivtecdane of | during the summer of 1365 I think I was tuere | 24vecae, making tue arguinent for the piaintitl, aud | were new to sctonce, When I returned to New York, | Alpha mer we lee ae te the men. The suspicions wero soon contirmed by a conver. | Belin any ie Sony i PnIrey-eiabe, renee as often as once or twice a week; I nover | 2Xx-Governor Androw for tue defence. in 1859, I had also twenty-one gorilla sking and skele- Ee aah ecukie: tid soainas Habe ‘viel her sation which was overheard by a parent, of her own and | 4@, and well and favorably known in the community in | met any other gentleman visitor there. than the deten- tons, besides chimpanzees and collections of in- pigs rox Ocoee 1a brilliancy, of @ bright yel- re tg Loge fe gh WM Sie lareatakpmbaevebetonaaey py Sp aplek ny SALE OF THE STEAM Wa OUNDERREHE soak jreinggond cou baad a al | (be ln'and Sane pula lap toe Sey ister’s study, ings which they saw and did, " of cotton cloth and an engagement ring, in which was — ou how ie f allot which were indecont and extremely dispusting. | 12 for disappointed love aud blighted aftection, and | oF TAved ivan to Bel,” he aiso asked me if Thal seen | She Is Purchased by the French Government. | por: such collections, Now 1 wil try, to tho best of my a. Gut tet h ovendtaowed ta ehtests Sr we ume, One of these chitdren, a little girl, was taken to task by | has entrusted her case in the hands of S. J. Thomas and | tho engagement ring, aud alsospoke of tue engagement, For some time past it has been well known that agents | ability, to give you a bird’s e; of the physical ‘Way and the rays of the full moon, the beautiful yellow ber mother, and she made a full confession of Howo’s | E. D, Sohier, Mr. Kelly denies any breach of promise, | saying he should be very happy with Bol afier they | o¢ various foreign governments have in negotiation | 8°°8Paphy of the country I have explored and of some ligne pvp “ivenil towards the ‘and com- Proceedings with her and other children in the town, | s14 or ddurse objecte to the payment of any such sum, | WeT® married; the dofendant gave my sislor $20 foreign gs been Of the tribes which inhabit it. My explorations have | light. gradually, duit The bine of whe: aky. BD and the story was told to the father. He immediately a pay! aay » | in September, 1805 for the purchase of the famous steam ram Dunderberg, | demonstrated that Equatorial Africa, from tho wost | ted res perp ty ‘clouds about it, and some- consulted with ether heads of familios in the town, | and the claim against him is opposed in court by counsel | Mary L. Russell tostified:—Am sister of the plaintiff; {| wr, W, H. Webb, her builder, baving obtained from the | Coast, forms # belt of impenotrabie jungle as far as I —— ‘often 20. brillians and they in turn bed con: ersations with thelr own chil” | in the person of Ex-Governor Andrew aud Asa Cottrell, | was at the house of Mra Ellms, my sir ia Seplemer, | vysi.¢4 grates government permiasion to sell hor on the | BAYe been. This immense forest did aot stop there, but i cating ee ren, when it was establishes yond a doul wi e “ 1864; saw the defendant ere; 1 tho! was thet ‘wo ‘was seon as @5 my eyes could reach, an‘ natives ge very worst of their suspicions were coniirmod by disgust- | _ Breach of promise cases are not fasbionable here, and | ()"tirce days; saw sir, Kelly there several ti T | most available terms. A fow months sinco the Dunder- | had never heard were it ended. The breadth of this, er, ing facts. Very many of the children in town, it appears | the Injured party must have a case passing prima facie | was thore when he brought in the droas patterns; he said, gigantic forest extends north and south of the equator by theso investigations, Lad been invited and seduced | before the public will favorably view tt as proper or de- | ‘ifero, Bel, aro some patterns, which do you like?” ue | DOrs went on an cosas isial iP, and the vest then made ‘euch i seagoing steamer ‘The beaatics by this clergyman to become accessories to the gratifica- said he thought they would make up pretty into travel- | Of ber qualities, both as og and ass war looking ion of bis lustful passiggs, and both soxes of tlie youth | CoMt to bring before them. Not every daughter of Eve | Tin? dressce:*he spoke oF lis intended marriage with | frigate, gave every satisfaction to the commission of | the darkses of ae eS ae Of the village were ameag his victims. His position as | who receives a visit or two from a rollicking Adam | hor, ‘and said he bad no doubt but that they should get | yayai and marine officers, headed by Captain Pemnock, | ™y eyes met te ato of school committeeman gave him unusual facilitiés for | can look upon him in a quasi marital relation, Not | along well; saw the encagement ring, but never spol ‘auiiite wit 66 ‘the~vesiiel the lived in auch « soil littieness of man circulating among the young, and over some of them he | every case of eye-viowing, ogling impre-aion upon the | '@ MF. K. about it; beard him ask her how ale was g 0 were appoll nobompany. . coast the moun! This evening time forbids me to speak at any length om seemed to bold @ power as sirong and mysterious as | OVerY ol a. ogling, Ampre: pon the | ting along with hier sewing; think sho engagod in | trip. Since then, the vessel baving reverted back into | parallel with it This rango of mountains seomaaimost | This evening, ‘of the country, Ta these equatorial was evil and debauching. Many of them used to sleep | sensibilities can be brought beforea jury, therefore par- | making up the cloth given tu hor by Mr. Kelly. the hands of her builder, Mr. Webb, various offers of | t0 gird the whole of tho west coast of Aires. Between foresta there are found a vast number of ‘come of with him nights in his rom in the vesiry of the | ties have to be respectable themselves or lean upon tho Mrs. Elims was recalied, whea sho tes.ifed:—That rebase have been made by foreign naval powets, these mountains and the seathe country I have ox- which are 0 terrible to man, and even beast, church, and it is stat that some of his | son of counsel before they can be heard with any | ®t the time I engaged myself to bim ai mny house be sn tray d Beatin were Chinen outtecoant ‘glow and marshy and soveral rivers are found, | Siheir venomous bite, thelr fierce engagements of this kind were made a week or two in strong counsel y Y | siaiod, I think, that he was worth about $80,000 in ves. | Cutlo, Russie and France peiecipel Sacteetew principal-ones being the Benito, the Muni, Mezias, Sarear panes treoly’ abandoned to thems peng Goren he used to take young boys with | degree ot success, But parties have now a case going | scls ‘and real estate; he might have given | forthe Haein gr aé-or this Aaa’ micinisinal igs} Gabbe, Nezeresh, Monda and Fernand-Vaz, The four = ‘one being the first to commence him to ‘on to gratify his passion, One (act in con- | on which seoms to possess the genuine qualification ofa | the names of thé vessels; he said he was passed or, morchern rivers are short, on account of their sources Jyovyneg firmation of this statement is that when in the Legis. Going 10 sell bis real estate and tuvest it in vessois, | transfer papers having been already drawn’ up, | being on the first tableland, The Nazareth, the Merias.| The kind of ent shat ts the maaee Gpnaaee —4 lature he frequently had with him in his seat youths | Seauine sensation, The plaintiff makes a very pretty | “cris. exnmined—The conversations we had when we | though not signed, when special gents of thé | gag the Fernand.Vaz aro formed by the river Oxebal, Pee Cay Oe aa erlane tastunnvay Denidte che vine of ten or fifteen years. appearance in court, dressed in fashionable biack, a thin | were engaged I cannot recollect; the third conversation ‘rene wr farther ba ahd bs be t ‘ur | which is formed bythe Rembo la and Rembo | ‘Dat they are mot go much. dy insect All of these facts having been talked over by some of | binek veil covering her fuce—{ace thin, quite pretty, | we had he gave me tno ring with the iascription; Lhave | ® Ro mag ene aN bien Une Ngonyal. Tho lowland is aMuvial, and has no doubt wats mit be tailed the ford. of ya It is tl the prominent citizens of the town, it was decided to ith cat deciatvelueak of features, She basthus | K20%2 | Sir. Kelly for sume fourteen years; never ren ‘te :eaalen te i moobeeten 06 Une’ been formed i: the course of time by the washing of a voracious creature I ever met, and is the al ‘wait upon Mr. Howe on Saturday evening and see | With am wbimed visited Sirs, Kelly; went to the same church; was not | @uthority to mi got 4 ng A terms | deposit coming from the tablelands. How far eastward | tt ‘animals, from the gorilis and leoperd down to the what he had to offer in explanation of the strange | far paid tho closest attention to the running of the teati- | acquainted with bis daaghter; Ihave had letiers from | demanded tinny — ng 4 peg pres this mmense belt of woody country extends further ex-\| 'Iv' insect. It ie their habit to march through the ‘anon, he mas conducting an gvemoy prayer tverie Ta | MOBY, bending over and frequently consulting her coun ict perhaps two or vhree; | Sithorising the ageats to cater into the nezoustion fori. | Plorations alone can show, but T suppose Tongihs imdeon | forest in 8 regular line line tg. inches the vestry of the church. of the gentlemen of the | ®l. The defendant sits by her with a most unalder- rial the plaintiff rested her cage, | with, The bargain was thereupom closed, tho price | } shouid not bo surprised if it reacked the lake regions | Several miles in Bnd canding’ Committee, a father of one of the children whom he had | manic make up—a thin, astute, grinning faco, lips cut- | and the defence was commenced. shiol 3 iad Fag k fen vee PE We of Kastern Africa Tne Moxiss and the Nazareth are wnt arora ‘end keeping thoir my instructed in debauchery, told him what they had heard, | ting sharp into one another, and looking on tho caso | MF, S J. Thomas opencd the case for the defence, sot- | Lions of dollars. | The Dunderberg will be immediately | only outiets of the Ogobai river, which also throws proper array. If they come to « ‘where and asked if he bad anything to say. ‘ith all the oni Hi ia to | ting forth in his argument that be would that perl, Apts at ‘Er ' ha portion of ita waters into the Fernand-Vaz, chi fre no trees to shelter them from the’ saa, He received the charges with the utmost composure, | ¥' sgearance of fanscence. » ie: Woskd Seen) there never existed any promise of marriag inc calibre, al which will have Ericasou’s pateat | through the Nponloungy. Thus those three rivers are in, heat “they cannot bear, they° lonmédiately ect'sboes and replied, with an air of injured innocence, that he | make a dangerous fight in a political struggle or ina Dauiel 0. Kelly, the defendant, was first called, He | pivot gun carriages. Asal! are aware this bre is the | fact mouths of the Ogobai, and they form, with the inter- be ‘underground through which she bad nothing whatever to say in reply to such ‘slanders, | case like this, said:—I reside in East Boston ; havo lived there thtrteen | inost powerful engine of naval warfare now afloat, Her | vouing low anda (which are undoubtedly alinvial depos uilding ges ‘on, in colt to the e and that furthermore he did not wish to Le iu- - i ; years; was married about fourteen years ‘@ my fret | Cousiraction was commenced when the late rebellion | i1s), an extensive and very complicated network of. z at iy cae ‘nen th ‘grow hungry, ye tye lorrupted while conducting a religious moeting, | The piaintiif’s declaration is as follows:— Wife; ‘abe diod the 7to of Sepiember, 1864; knew the its highest point, but botore sho was completed | swamps and dense forests, for which I have propose wendy the long line’ spreads “iiselt The gentlemen then retired and Rev. Mr. Howe returned Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Suflk, #.—Supreme | piaiutiff, and bave known her for eighteen years, and war had Coase: ihe is a Pa ument of Ainericam | the name of “Delta of the Ogobai.”” My -axpraaaiobs f Pager forward, and attacking —— to continue the exercises of t Court, July, 1868, Belinda B, Films vs. Danie! D. Keily, | know her husband; he was in my ewpioy; he died foar- dil, and wherever she may mak: her sphere of opora- | ip tale iebyriedh reumoneseningiy tedious, and resuited | the forest, arene, ‘end. inaticnace ‘nas comes Sabsequently, however, before iinishing up his in an action of contrae!.—And the plaintiff says that she | teen or fifteen years ago; she called apon'me soon after | tions, her movements will be watched with totense in- | oniy in knowledge that this‘large tract is entirely | VOUTIDg Overy! wg ‘Which is quite irresistible, ted upon a second time by the same gei aod the defendant mutually promised to marry each | the death of her husbaud and asked tor advice; 1 gave | terest by our countrymen. uninbabited by human betngs; that during th» rainy | 200% Uint Paty oralia use, tht beat mace men, informed very emphatically that be must | other, and she has always been ready to marry the de- | it to her and gavo her assistance; when my wife died Ta teil aa seasons, when the rivers and their 4 creeks are | The Lo tale fe oy earner make some explanation of the accusations against him | fendant, but the detendant refuses to perform his | sho lived in Cheisea; saw her asbort time before my THE PUBLIC HEALTH. swollen, the whole country is ‘and that the | Tun away—every animal that poms —- or prepare forthwith for a hasty exit from the town. At | promise. BELINDA B, ELLMS. | wife died; went to Chelsea to see her, ag sue sent a novo ——_. Iaod is ‘covered with immense (oreste of palm, there te ghnees andl 00 lameer ee Be atic wade ted ven, about the same moment a By hor attorneys, Cottrell & Bennett. to me {or assistance; went there about eight o'clock in The following is Dm Harris’ weekly lotter on the being found none of the ci mangrove swamps. Led rick in Bente’ Those ute ‘neces 66 oh oad and feathers was made by one of the Annexed is the defendant's answer:— the evening, and other parties were be only | mortality iv this city and Brooklyn forthe week ending | Land aud water are tenanted only by wild beasts, von- doth ‘and day. Many a time have I been crowd; whereupon the diguity and air of Judioia way Ican fix the date is beesuse I ne pay away | caturday, the 1th inatant:— omous reptiles and intolerable ae aneeenes along plant nd been obi! to rush into the injared innocence which he had all along manifesied | | Sufioldy s.—Supreme Judicial Court, Octaber Term, | money without making a memorandum of the same, | © , ‘ Ia this great woody wilderness man a about}: arakeacd 90s oC Berean theltreeds cietcbes, When gave way to astonishment and grief, Ho quickiy left the | 1800, Jims vs. Kelly.—And now tho defendant comes | T paid er wome $20, aud never called upon Mernorotiran Board ov Hraura, and divided into a groat uumber of tribes, 1 1 CA 1 Cen coartamee hap aleerit ar recy” . coureb, and the devotional services inside were brousht | 80d denies that the plaintiff? and himself ever mat her after this, and never was in Chelsea after. Bornav ov Virat Statemocs, May 14, 1867. I was struck by the absenco of those of ani a ee uy every + heen Page to a Tasty termination. While a crowd was rapidly | 2gfeed to marry each other, and denies that hi wards uniil last fall, and then not to see her; shoruy Tn the week that ended last Saturday there were 416 | which aro found in aimost every other part of Africa. : ery gathering be improved the opportunity of darkness to | Promised to marry the piaintiff, and deates after the death of iny wife I received avery kind note | deaths ia New York, including 73 in public institu. | Op reflection I did not wonder at this, for the country 1 make good his escape. Some of the most indignant, — bas always been ready to marry him; and from her, sy mj sethlsinn with me and requesting metocall | tous, 47 pene Soe of the island hospitals and | now visited. was wi unlike tarne that hed. however, were still persistent in their determivation to | further, that if any such promises were ever made, | and geo her; 1 answered the uote, enclosing $20 to ner, | asylums, In kiyn there were 144 deat inciu- | been explored before. I found neither thivoceros, have revenge by applying a coat of tar and feathers, | which he doth not admit but denies, then that the | toiling bor, 1 think, that I thougut Lmight goe ber somo | sive of 16 deaths in Kings county asylums, &c. This | zebra, giraffe nor ostrich; the several. varieties of and if he showed resistance to lynch him | Plaintiff and himself mutually releasod each other there- | time or otiier; on the 26ch day of November, 1861, her | Mortality ts pa & sees death-rate of 26.42 per too, although found everywhere else in Afi upon the nearest tree. This spirit of a mob | from, and, further answering, says that during the timo | gister, Mrs. Whither, called on me and st that her | 1,000 in New and 2248 per 1,000 in Brooklyn. | were not to be seen. The t thinly inhabit approach of @ bashikoway army heralded to me b; Caally bocame so prevalent that some uf the prominent | Wi ‘shall attempt to prove that the defendant was | Sister desired to se: ine; have bad bat one other convor. | estimated upon popaia:ion ax given by iast conaus, and | py man, was still more scantily inhabited by Now | Beant Wherever they go they make ® clean citizens of the town were obliged to appeal in aspeech | under any promise to marry, she was under a promise to | gation with Mrs. Whitcher about hor sister, tho piuintiff | excluding certain county institutions, and then by the side of the wild man roamed the ape, | ¢¥e@ ascending to the ae: trees and houses to the crowd to desist from any violent demonstration. | marry another man. By his attorney, (sire, Whitcher testidied that defendant called upon her | — Zymotic infections killed 99 persoms, or 24 04 per cent | among which ciaes of animals there are several varieties, | PUEuit of their prey. it mode of attack is This wise counsel prevailed, and Howe was allowed to SOHIER & WELCH. sister often, carried ber to Chelsea, &c.); Tstated to Mrs. | of ail that died in New York, and 31, or 21.53 cent | chief among which was the savage gorilla, who aome- | 2. impetuous ; instantiy their strong pincer spend the night unharmed tn an adjacent town, and he Anothor paper states that the plaintiff claims damages | Whticuer that her sister was aware that I should never | Of ail who died im Brooklyn. Measles, the predominant | times destroyed the plantations of the native and seat | ike arms are into « were clothes, was not heard of again until he reached this city to-day. | in the gum of $20,000, visit her home again; I asked what ghe wanted; | d:s°ase in this destroyed 23 lives in New York— | punvor into his household. There were no beasts of | #04 they never let until they nee a The news of eee Go a Le ety she said that her sisior was afraid 1 | mosily in the Eleventh, Twelfth and Seventeenth | purden, no horse, no camel, no.cattle, no donkey—map, | morsel of antmal aS such o time lwe reached the Stave House fore the arrival of the m- Mr. Cottrell opened the case for the plaintiff, com- | was going to be married; sho did not ex; mo to | wards—and, in Brooklyn, desiroying 14 lives, 8 of whieh | of rather woman, was tho only beast of Often bers of the Logislature, and met them as they came up | menting upon the respectability of his client, reviewing marry het, but she did not want me to ry avy oag | were in the Ninth and Tenth wards, Scarlatina, in the | after traversi g miles upon niles without hearing (he by one to their day's work. The stories told by his Ise; I told her that 1 would call and se) her if .he | $&me unbygicnic quarters, killed 17 children im New | sound of a bird, the chatter of i ha tatghbors and thos who held tho printed partictiars | 'B@ history of the caso in bricf, and siating gonerally the | °° 2 4 & monkey or the footsiops 3 | ig would be at Mrs, Whitcher’s ou that evening; i York and 9 in Brooklyn. The practical results of the | of » gazelie, or the humming noise of the falli Ld eagrossed the attention of every one, and groups | facts upon which the plaintiff based her claim As | and she staied to mo just what hee sister bed cleansing and disinfection in the crowded and fout | of @ loaf or the gentle murmur of some ‘stcoam | Dasbikouay, tied to a tree 80 pa ON gathered on the portico and in the’ lobbies ear- | these will appear more fally in the evidence I postpone | I toid her that if I waned to marry should not dwoliings, where these infections are most fatal, reach | came ouly upon one's cars to break the deadness of this | #0d have been thus devoured. Dasbikouay is Bostly discussing the affair and oxpressiNg | mention thereof at present, suit her or any one else; I told Mra Kvans that it was | beyond the immediate benefits to the families that | awing sienc: and disturb the hushed stiliness of the | ‘an any variety of tho ant we have in Amorica. indignation and sorrow, The natural excitement of the Useless tw talk on tho! subject; rave Mrs, Kms $20 | now gratofully accept these now methods of pro. | grandost solitude man could ever behold or intrude apoa— | Btmber of their armies 1s #0 great that one does not mouibers was heightened by the appearance of Howe, | Mrs. Ellms, plaintiff, was first called. She testified:— | and loft the house; next timo I heard from Mrs Bilus | tection to thelr children; for such cleansing 18 | @ solitude which often chilled me, but which was well | %.enter into a calculation for fear of exaggeration, wo, a baif hour before the time or opening the sersion | Am thirty-five years of age; live in East Boston; was | was by anote; think it was about 16, 1065; | % arent safeguard | against | the cholera, | which | adaptod for the grea: study of nature, Tn this | 1bave really soon a contineous eee Ee 2 Of the day, showed himsel! in the House and attempted | Lareieq to A 8, Elims and lived with him seven years | S2¢ Teqiiested Yome money; I wont her noies | will pe he to scourge fitby | country the explorer bas contin to fight against pan dng ee ee t» brazen it out. To questions eagerly put to him by adie ie vt hers from her I desiroyed; the next I heard her was | quarters our American towns. Erysipelas | hunger and thirst, and starvation stares ‘ia. weivo successive hours. pS tony cat friends, whether or not be wasyguiity, whether he had | before be died; was @ shipbuilder; I know Daniel | a note in June, 1865, Tequesting me to call and | aud puerperal fever killed 6, and other fevers took 10 | the iuce, The foreste, which bave been resing for ee near Cone ate ae any explanation, or whether anything could be said to | p, Kelly; his house is within sight of mine; I became | see her; did not wish to her money, so | persons ia New York, but none in Brooklyn. The re-| ages in their gloumy solitude, seem to be even | the study of natural history, T yoy te meet the charges and tnaké his innocence po pee Be acquainted with him shortly after my hus +i | 1 Seut by a messenger a note and some money; fe ae Ea de soy then ad ‘unfavorable the faorense of the beasts | Da>ts of the Cage tl ne contact and answered dodgedly that he had nothing to say and no band died; tt | sent a verval message Dy the messonger; the contents of | month fully confirm the fact that one abd the same Gon- | that are thelr chief ‘imhabiiaats “BUI. worm. thas | association, What struck me frst was the a explanation to inake His frends told him | was throagh a mattor of business and J have since com- | tne noto was a retusal to call and see-her; on the lollow- tages potsee. 1a producing these untimety deathe, In- | hunger, bowever, was the wretehed climate, Sarr nies a Sdn erimestenag: that, the circumstances boing as they were, | municated with him through matters of business in | ing Saturday Mrs. Elims came to my office for the first igent pbyaicians are to this fact, our common | andi reaily could wot tolt you how often I was pros: | ‘ferent dialects and ‘Tribes bearing @ the best and safest thing for hi to do | baying a house; this was thirteen years ‘and I have came ‘closed the | Midwives and nurses are not, nor 2 oo trated by ‘and sickness; bat amidst the perils I ame consider themselves en altogether separate nation, was to leave the State House at once and repair | resided in that house ever since; I recollect Mra -Keily’s her business, and | the importance of constant cleaning and on in | had to endure I was sustained by an enthusiasm which Saeet es ae teed te cae identical he = to parts unkoown, whither all criminals fly after tbe | death in September, 1864; after that time Mr. Kelly | she stated to me, after collecting herself somewhat, that | such cases. T cannot desoribe. I felt that Twas the pioneer of the | Ail the tribes were divided into distinct clans, each commission of their crimes against the jaws and bu- | called to see me on the 28h of Sop ; Indy by the | _ The ‘and wrapt up | independent of the other, and often at Tee Tite ae oar. It being also inthnated that he would be treated | j¢ was early in the evening and Loar ghaeg ‘wook ‘passed pleasant » North of the moet tribes are roughly and per! unwercifully if he did not make | quring the evening; he called after that if ‘that | deaths ‘not @ horizontal ae those tbat are cannibals, t dofore much time elapsed, he concluded that it |, namber of times I am a dressmaker the beter; | in 8 tion, and now and then I was rewarded by the discovery | Wh, Lave Paget i EO waa, after all, best to leave, So he dictated a resicna- | and have been such for about thi ; ae eee teen ene Soot ee, of a now @ fresh animal, or ele, and fal irom workers min ever seen tion of his seat, which was placed on the Speaker's desk, | visits were quite frequent; the first house, and she me most need the operation jouse Reform act. | following u 1 ee bardships I provi- ‘the tribes are 7 Fees | character asvally. and left the House, it is trosted, forever. spoke of the loss of his wife and seemed uch ; she gaid ber sis- The corouers made returns upon 32 deaths. 13 vase ously through. further I went into the in- have a sort of rade loom, ee ee, On account of this fresh and almost unprecedented | in October, I think, be called at my house in Chelace herself; I asked her | by violouce and 6 by In Londou, the third | terior the higher rose the level of the country, I crossed | 8% epecies of cloth out of the Sibres of news concerning a member of the Massachusetts Lezis- | proposed that I shoa!d move to my house in East Bos- she eald nu; taen I told her | week io April, 000 io of the | tree villages of these tribes were very Hy lature, U@ House of ives did not come to | ton; he said be didn’t know how to manage bis family ; that was the last talk es coe foatheast, and | tobacco was also very plentiful, a# also the order Until a long time its esual hour. of children, expressed his affection for Whitcher; a few days after 1 met Mra. | thore were bi farther Tanning | ‘éicas, or wild hemp. Ie the midst of these Soon after the House was called to order the following know of any woman whom he Eu i she not look te me | out the French countries, ee ee eee Sate PRICE. | letter, addressed to the Speaker, was read by the piace of bis children’s mother than m as if she bad been very badly powoued or sick; ene | city vie with those ia relay the dry or | small statare Lae acon Aw tag rod Clerk = 5 wey 0, ton jortly afterwards be called and brought ¢wo rings, stopped me, and talked to me very Pheaped ee onthe as tliaad hot season. The former begins in September and po nn ed six inehes, The a aulte a. which T Preferred, coming again he abuse upon me; she told me that if she had » ‘The temperature eo than the cor. pre pte ao btn he goverament ‘various tribes 1. How, J. M. Stoxm, Speaker jouse bark, marked, the ring 1 had chosen. (Witness prod he ; told her if I had one I would Tepeniag reek tem reee, mean being 54 degrees | it rained ail the year round. The dry season commences man-caters ornot. I was be _1 hereby tender to the House of Representa. | the ring, which was marked “Dan to Bel” on the inside, tend her st; thie was the last ume I talked vo bee wasil s 1 Inet week, the year previously it was | about the of Mey ia the of the country Se ee gnation of seat member of ihe body. | It was given to ine before [ moved from Chelsea to East | short time before marrying; then she came up #@ me on Rais Seaver, The bumidity this year was 63, tying sear te soerand’ sty dani dopremaner The dry more wo Precve gomasumioate the above to the Ii and | Boston; I expressed some doubt of my ability to fulfil the | the street and asked if 1 was going to be married; told ye sat ny saturation of the atmos- Scgeen progrenaee, 00, 1 were, from. tbe wast and the No or < o> ge yours, traly, SERENO HOWE position and discharge the ities Of @ mother | ber that I was; she seemed to manifest an interest ny ccs = ‘The rain fall oqualled 2.81 | rainy season ‘the cast, of the ie The question, aecording to parliamentary rale, was, | to the children, bat he urged me, and after I had | children—that my betrothed would not saree Inches of water, and es the storm came on there was ® | the rains appeared 0 come from the A ad nt nde pe “shall the pation be accepted?’ when Mr. Jewell, | acoopted he requested that I should ‘sot circulate very | of them, and I thanked her for her kindness, amd told | fall of 2' inches in the barometer. and south of the equator they came lg heme] wae of Moa.on, moved that a commitiee of nine be appointed extensively the report; after that he called frequently hor that I understood she was to be married; she said Dearing any semblance to Asiatic cholera bas always from the eas, ihe rainfall during the a; 1 thet tho to whom ihe communication of Mr. Howe should be re- | om me; he would callin on his way to and from Mhat was the talk, and passed it over, never gave her | yet ‘ne oe tl ag A full report | whole year in Equatorial Africa te 226 inches; but as it — thom, in whine ferred office; these visits he continued for two mouths; think | the ring with the inscription on it, er any Sakae Oy Re disease witnessed | raine, as I observed before, mere in the interior than on Raye teed et Mr. Willis, of Bostom, said he he was at that time in some kind of basiness at Alton, | bot boughta ring for six years, and I defy oan pin iy been forwarded 0 ue & | the coast, I have mo doubt the rainfall is even greater Avnet reforeuse vos sould ' N. H+ 1 told bim one tue that I thou was wait: oy oe an re wes fom Cone he le tiered Cites ee eee ee thas this calcelatien, (Tee preston fall of rasa I ever age nation, denied ‘endangered than observed twenty-four seven a ‘of Walpole, aaid that in bis opinion the Ar Medco wte | mot oo, 1 hops God will strike me Geed; satuma ia, London. Dublin and Liverpool, whence none inches, Iwo or three decrese of latitude make aa House ought to investigate the matier. Certain eve long never told Sewenan, ot asked her, to be my wife, | Was “A Ky. cities enormous difference im the lime of the rainy or dry sea- ber, and and one why he didn’t | neither directly nor indirectly ; never called at her house oe eerie opt iene od eon, Longitude ps Da a |, aad if there | call, and Neved faise reports about him, | and took tea with her, while in East Boston, for the jo ins iP ee one English leas degree, I think these diferences of and accept haber be Prt I wont to New York, bat told Gout wen’ pers ber $100, 200 saves eae car. i 27 per 1,000 90 fa ‘inbarg, 38 in bd is oi the Of water to the Nile In the interior, Ay 7 ; i st none, cope eign sa | Te Rat Sissies ene aa et | aaa Meena cones se metatante | Eig can Wins te ris wom tv | Siete ct eee cr Demond, o! on, 0} im ‘hitman in New it was York ‘xington street; | never sent her, in March, 1885, $90; I was married in Hi Nd tae pentierbon rppbehy Monroe yo very heavy, and was unsccompanied by thunder, The gain he | I told him, and also | public on the VR egy 3 | ee a song on pty Seventeenth tornadoes geuerally come from the northeast or from ‘and that | spoke about yersation was an | one that I intended to go to Europe with Mra, Elli ef our ae 96," inbebitents live im that | the cast, and are very ho AY of | hour seemed to | think I received «letter during the winter from Mra. cap went Toot ch imation, dese sot contain ene. , Mareh and ‘The te warned be- ‘them. He | feel bed ence after. | Eilms, and gave it to my wife, who sent her $20, and [rd oe rm Siceres we ‘of the ‘Of these torsadoes, The as he asked | wards, about the time his i itwes eb eaten = esta, This, lst ‘ork death rate oa ‘a per eaten ete cae bieck, and this aa Y yn the ‘edduced om ‘the ditect examine: | 1,000—-anmeel desth ‘rate, loclading the mortalsy itall | up to that ver that he bad lady in | nor testimony direct, Samuations, Yi 5 B' cua Sonn taal ca al A bad been | Alton, and learned from were on- | tion in the least, The defendant Soper Smeut et wo contiage to use birds est bea and he 4id not | “upon the find was ready to give answer 8 beat rae myn Aaa em fright, the ot the case he seemed at | whatever the opposing counsel saw fit to correcting our published rates, g SS, Sud the tinct clonts ariees acom- | first ‘Gace made up his mind | pak seems te matter | never to for having oa ae as the defendant testified that be SALES OF REAL ESTATE TESTERBAY, wind comes he — ily 4 df iH 553 pitt rl il ine iH ; Bl i ie THe nil iF py at an after im oa hard for about ra etree 2 eee | eines Seca |e ee aes tan termes meer ween | a org Hee es | scanned So) Receras ri Sone permet | ores |B PE Bk ‘| SET rae 2 baediaghni joxpeasvaaapad | 3 43 Bisse | pees poeeg poate sen | SESS Sai | ae wen ‘M.. Davia, of Medford, opposed any investigation oa | of Bim thet, if he married ber childrea ehould not | paaion @f one at the ume abe complainn of ry 6, 290 fiw. Gh gr MB 000.1, TUBS | ap masaine of June, duly nod Ausust, Although Lees