The New York Herald Newspaper, November 12, 1871, Page 4

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NEW YOKK HERALD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1871-TRIPLE SHEET, Yemembered that the preacher ts a German) | built up. He comes to All Saints with a bright re- | he refusing, the request bas been sent to the Arch- us INTELL! ENCE. leity itself, ress! . | Cord, aud has already infused life into the | bishon of Utrecht, who, it will be remember has RELIGIO @ wwe amet the Amprossion pro- | pariah, which 18 one of the oldest in the city and | been elected by tiie old Catholics to perform al tne duced resting entirely om tne grave and | was atone time the wealthtest, Dr. Dupoell will | necessary episcopal fanctions during their period sacred nature of the subject handled, and onthe find a large missionary field before him, and prove, | necessity. In one of the villazesin the neighbor- r we are assured, a worthy successo! inent | hood of Munich Dr. Friedrich was called to perform November 12—Twenty-fourth Sun- personality of the devoted missionary himecit I divines a3 asigne, Egnvrodt Winn ani ocner. the burial service upon a respected citizen, a friend —seaenneaemeseama: to. m Wefleld then said no man of common sense could defend her, and she ought to ve convicted of mur- der and hung; and that if he, sald Littlefield, = 1d tind sould be on the Jury t0 ry her, He would. ind je | Termination of the Newari. shall dwef only on the facts he related, leaving of the priest of the villi ‘The latter stood by at e, : his eyes aeclared | that if she was not convicted, “You know hundreds day After Pentecost, aside the exhortations he so touchingly ahd zeal- | Religious Destitution in the Hudson iver | {he “cremony, td perform the function, as Ne Was of men living here luke Crittenden would be shot Tragedy Trial. ously introduced, Facts speak more, sometimes, Counties. obeying instructions from his bishop. I cannot re- | down by women.” ‘ban any words, and where eioguenee would | Wednesday last the Western Convocation, oom | call the name of the Yillage, bus vouch for. the ao. pe Saye 700. what this ame Latwodield ie in su roire sagt Programme of Religious Exercises for the Day— | We*rs, the preseuce of ® man who may one | posed of ciericat and lay delegates from the Episco- | CUTACY of the incident, 1” ia In auen Cove as COED | the mater talked of pretty freely at. the tume: did The Doom of George Botts, “Pet” dence and ‘Beli- @ay give his life for Christ, can do naught but tn | pat churches in Orange, Ulster and Sullivan coun- | deprived of the benefts of his religion, which he | not converse particularly abut it myself; do not ge Religious Correspondence spire the deepest respect, and present to our eyes & | ties, held its quarterly session in St, Paul's church, | had been taught were his Bll mee fatal rs of aay, ous o tig RS 1 Ioemea bof, Orurenend a ade: Halsted’s Mura = gious Matters Generally. Spectacio that shames our own lukewarmness aud | Newburg. The Convocation employs swo missiona- | 1810, came to deprive Mim of them, | © Sonehee® OF | an impression; 1t is @ Breity decided impression; ull seer fair-weather Christianity. ries—one located at Port Jervis, Orange county, and I hear someting to counteract it, you might con- sider it so; I nave an impression that would require gridence to remove; I cave. ‘ag much credit to what | Another Impressive Scene in the Essex Oyer and Services To-Day. Since the Power of France has wanod, and she | the othor at Ellenville, Uistor eounty. These mis- TEMPLE EMANUEL. x read as I do to ne’ accounts generally; cunnot say wheter Laccepted ik a true or nott i | Terminer—Denial of the Motion for a-New can no longer protect her missionaries, the rulers | sionaries—Rev. Messrs, Luson and Edmunds—far- “A Man of One Idea” will be the subject of Rev. | or Ching nave again instituted a cruel persecution | mished interesting reports of their labors dut- ~~ Davia Mitchell’s discourse this morning, in the ing the year past, and made some strike | “Would to God That All the Lord’s People | vhought the accounts in the new: rs about this Trial- fudge Dopue Canal street Presbyterian church. , Against the Christians. The Catholic missionaries | inf statements regarding the religions destitu: | Were Prophets” <Locture by Rev. Dr. | mater ia the mail ries Wau her felieve, far a iris catia and their Chinese converts are now hanted, exiled, | tion of the population among whom they were ny mind is now tormed, that she was justified in The Murderer Sentenced To Bo Hanged ‘The anniversary of the Bethienem Mission Sanday imprisoned and even martyred, China, and the | employed. Gotheim, ling him; it Would take evidence to remove that - S D School will take place this afternoon in Brookes’ | gajscent countries of Japan, Thibet, Corea, Mon- ae eR MENDS, he naan musstonary, Fe. Many Gentiles gathered in this beautiful ppg be et sa fu entauas om Thursday, December 21—What Assembly Rooms, 361 Broome street. Addresses a Manteh tain h th: ot inhabitants yesterday to unite with the Jewish members in the challenged fis man for implte: Ho Said and How He Looked. Will be madé by Rev, J. Hyatt Smith and othera, golla an jantchoorila, contain no less ‘an | county sixty-six mever enter a church, and of Worship of the common Lord. Tne Rev. Dr. and then the prosecution put these questions:— 400,000,000 of auman beings, and more than twice | those who do the large majority go “to hear and Q. Inow trom what vou have heard, or any Asermon on the difficulties experienced in the tire ber abitea | 20¢ to worship.” In many districts the people were | Gutneim preached. When at the command of God, | means you have n: jt use, The ace! traged; discharge of daty will be delivered ths evening bY pes eg meagon catia tie pirtleetonew ae extremely umorant in religious matters, and needed | ne said, Moses hed assembled the seventy elders to fovee formed an unqualified opinton—nat i to anya Ph presacral arg ha tee . ssionart piniou—asg to the guilt or innocence Rev. P. L Davies tn the Berean church, corner Bed~| »\o0 tomos of martyred priests, ‘missionaries, | "Bev. Mr. Lusow drew a dark ploture of the spt | assist ‘him in tne government of Israel a8 | Of'ra Pur orinoemate cease ace was enacted in the Essex County Court of Oyer and ford and Downing street, a fiual condition of the Jarge number of railroad em- | @ national council or senate, a8 we read Rev. Andrew Longacre will preach in the Central sitet Waa haat ace tote ae Piet Rae Plovée living m_ the village of Port Jervis. | in today's Soripture, the Lord osme down b ery 100 of these railroad 4 and spake to Mi and took of Methodist Episcopal church this morning and even- Enropean and native, have never received burial, | hands ‘‘were ungodly men.” They were demoral- im a cloud and sp: joses, ing. and await the final resurrection in un. | #¢d by the raliroad. ey were compelled to be at | nis spirit and put it on the seventy elders, and they ‘The third anniversary service of the Ladies’ Do- | known caves and holes where a hasty vengeance Las) = = goad, or in, the, nen onthe, Lead’ prophesied. But there were two men—Eldaa and mestic Missionary Reitef Association will be held in , !mmolated them to the heathen of China, It a ordered to do re ould etree [ne liaple to | Medad—upon whom the spirit rested also, aud they Zion church this evening. Addresses will be made | ‘84 Most interesting fact, no less to the searcher Prompt discharge. The speaker said ne was often-| prophesied in the camp at their owa tents. ‘There after antiquities than to the fervent Christian, that by Bishop Armitage, of Wisconsin; Rev. Dr. B. H. | inthe abuals of Chinese history during. the eighth caijed upon to attend some poor fellow wy | ram ® young man to tel Moses, as if tt was a great Paddock, rector of Grace church, Brooklyn, and | century, more than a thousand years ago, are | Rot W Ot Strenuth, “and had beon brought | crime for those two men not to have gone forth crushed lim! found records of the expulsion of 3,000 Christian Rev. & D. Hinman, missionary to the Indians, 1 of the West’ (according’ to the text), back in a few hours with a it with che others. Joshua, who had been Moses’ ser- Rev. Robert Cameron will preach in the Open no ware Ort raga ordinanses pent is a body “back and whose dying confession was, perhaps, that “he | vant from his beyaood, velieving it to bea crime, Communton Baptist charch, West Sixteenth street, | 10 the West.” Their religion was styled in these | Rad not been. inside of achuron in ten or Shea | 10 sug wy Lora Moses forbid them.” But records “the religion of number ten,” from the ac- this morning and evening. +t Care of these People, but scorned and derided them | Moses, with the meekness and moaesty for wnich Rev. H. D. Northrop will preach in the West fhe numer 10s a crows Tae missionaries have Seschen vo ths putter Teespens. pledged eee he was ever proverbial, answered, “Envieat thon x street Presbyterian . | B80 discovered among the je sayings an‘ tra- sake that Twenty-third + Presbyterian church this morn- | fittons that have been handel down irom the time | Mouey for the carrying forward of the missionary | Doobie were prophets”? Whereupon the Court denied the challenge, and | terminer tn wehad to 4 a yesterday. in presence of a large gathering Under the same eireumstences, ‘Sotuat you see my | of the morbidly curious and the learnedly legal cn ge oJ Fieronlean, task which they could not | The Court opened at ten o’ctock with @ full benok, ay Sa Tequiren, th hid py ices Sry consisting of Judge. David A. Depue, presiding: tunds of these jarors of settled conviction, and, | Judges F. H. Teese, W. B. Guila, Jesse Williams a8 the affidavits show, a predetermination to hang | and Herman Ise, associates: George Botts, the me. counsel, of ‘course, too! oe ee ay Ba es ik ae convicted murderer, was represented by his coun- oI enty-five its which he has for the Supreme Court. | 8¢l, Messrs, Charles 8. Spencer, of New York, ana fela-cned pital erent iit eva Little: W. B. Gutld, Jz, of Newark. The interests ot the tention against me, ‘ana iy counsel was right in ob- Stave were looked after by County Prosecutor Valen @ not only formed and ex- | 8. Titsworth. in, and -also his intention as to BOITS Was BROUGHT IN hortly after ten o'clock and provided with aseat. - tA will show by an affidavit aleo read i ; + Courty that he was ® bratal man. not ft toate ce | Near his coumtset. Considering nis awful position kK of the Col lon and the reclamation of the actentand” Ant eh wouan not or his kind, a. Oe ae ib ea Oe 5 work 0 nv fen ol K ing and evening. of this early evangelization, In many instances the | {fo'heomen of Orange aud Ulster counties, ane? Was @ Teimarkable gentence, 0 great expres | ee aad ne oe cing au iltleraie | BOW and tien, ss he looked up, there Bishop Neely, of Maine, will preach in the Chapel wey resemblance of ne outer observances of the lon, i; German Jew, a butcher, and had been for twelve | W4S Visible about the mouth a twitek- of St. Chrysostom this evening. Catnelts Chareeh baa tale telede a hoe etal Departure of Missionaries. uttered py a erent noe It points out | Years; but then my jury was an exceedingly mixed | ing which told how great a struggle the Rev. Chauncey Giles wil preach in the Sweden- | argument against the latter, Two young missionanes—Rev. Messrs, Harding borgian church, in East Tnirty-fifth street, this | | fhe condition of women among the Chinese was | snq wood—satlea last week in the steamship morning, on “Heavenly Blessedness,” and in the | ary ‘and a striking example of tie degradation in. | Colorado, for Syria. Mr. F. A. Wood is known to evening 02 “Tne Theological Writings of Sweden- | duced by heathenism upon Chinese women wi many of our city readers. He is @ graduate ot the borg.” Riven. One of these unhappy creatures, still full | Oniversity of New York and has been for several Rev. Dr. Merrill Richardson will preach, morning | °! the popular i aceices belief that her sex possessed years past an Assistant Librarian at the Astor no soul, was, through the accidental circumstan’ and evening, in the New England Congregational | of the testing uno & persecution in her mech Library. During the recent war he “ine no ne cnuren. Lorhood, too hastily admitted into the ranks of the | #c0t of the Christian Commission. ‘The hopes and Rey. Oharles F. Lee will discourse on “Human | Cattolica. (Ordinarily the catechumens are kept | prayers of many iriends follow prep! . _ - under instruction tor two or even three years, | Dreturen and their young wives. Despondency and Divine Encouragement” in | before tiey are baptized, and tmis rule is never —— Chickering Hall (Fifth Universalist church) this | broken save in the case of imminent danger of Religious Notes—Personal and General. morning. nan aot ae big pc son tite nn cnet Rev. H. F. Hickok, of Orange, N. J., has recived a on, Rev. George V. Mingins, Superintendent of city | ner betiet that she had no soul. Upon being seri. | hearty call to the Central Presbyterian church, ‘Missions; Rev. C. C. Foote and others will address | OUsly pressed to explain her meaning, and asked | Auburn, N. Y. the Morning Star Sunday School, 130 West Twenty- = get me kee ater ene eon Rey. John M. Allis was installed pastor of the fonrth street, this afternoon. Tights.” What an unconscious testimony to the un- | First Presvytertan cnurch of Lansing, Mich., on Rev. ©. S Harrower will preach this morning | M!Mching zeal of the Cnurch for the recognition of | Tuesday, October 24. woman's spiritual and social stand! and at the and evening in St Luke’s Methodist Episcopal | same time whai a sad revelation of the effects of | _ S¢¥- Septimus Tustin, D. D., died at his home in the ideal after which the prophets should strive, and gives us an insight also into the very soul of the Great prophet, and shows at @ glance the beauty and nobleness of his character and the purity of his mind. All the Lord’s people should be prophets in- spired by the spirit of God. They should strive a(ter hoiiness, goodness and sanctification, They should take the best and most excellent of the people as their modeis, and whus demonstrate that the spirit of God rests upon them. What is the spirit of God? How is it manifested? And what is the voice that speaks in thunder vones through the prophets? The spirit of God 13 divine. It 1s the triumph of truth over falsehood, of right over wrong, of virtue over vice, of mind over matter, and @ man proves thereby that he is in- spired by God; and whoever is not possessed of this spirit, 18 not consctous of it in his soul, must strive aiter it by louking to the exemplars who have lived and died and those who still live among us. We must iinitate their virtues and make their lives our models. 1t may require & struggie, an effort, to attain to their greatness; but, the inspiration of God ob- tained, no one can fail to reach that poiat affair, anyway—ihree Germans, three Jews, four Americans and two irishmen—-quite a credit to the | Wretched man was making with himself to continue United States, tor this is what they call trying an | D8 role of the stoic. Two of his brothers entered American by her peers; and let me not forget to | with him, and during the proceedings his three state the fact that turee of these jurors were butch- ers, and I don’t suppose ever knew that a woman slaters appeared visibly affected. They fell on bis had nerves or was ¥ be looked upon other than as | Heck and sobbed bitterly. beasts of burden, t) be used forthe animal com- At ten minutes past ten o'clock Mr. Titsworth Hees Co as the following atiidavit will 1ully | rose and moved for judgment, LEY! W. TAYLOR, Counselior GUILD rose and moved for a new trial, ing duly sworn, deposes and says:—I know D.C. | on the ground that one of the jurors, Patrick bel Littlefield; have known lum for about twelve years; first knew him at Marysville; that on Saturday, | McGovern, had said, as was alleged upon oath by dune 3, A. D. 1871, he, this affiant, was passing | 0ne Jobn G. wall, a barber, that he (McGovern) ha@ ¢ through the market of which he, the said Littlefield, | stated that he wished he naa been challenged, as he has charge; I met bim as I was passing through the market; 4 called hum by naine,- Littienela had made up ls mind from the firat to vote for ; L asked him if they had granted a new trial for Mrs. Fair; | banging Botts. ‘This conversation 1s alleged to have Lesion di it! LA Ls and a) ey Fae re fone taken piace on the day after tne close of the triat, 0) jung by the neck on the 28th of July sc! next, and, God damn ner! I hope she will suffer in | Counsellor SrxNcER followed his colleague, and hell for a thousand years,” he appeared to be very | 8ai1 that since the trial ne had examined carefully much excited, and I turned away from him 1n dis- | every guling made by the Honorable Judge, and ’ church. even the most stable and respectavie of all civuuza- | Washington, D. C., on Saturday, October 23, thus | “‘Tnere are men inclined to self-induigence—men | SuSt. rather doubiod that any of his rulings could be sue- . anise closing a long, active and useful life, Does this not give you an insight as to what Rev. Dr. Morgan will preach this evening in St. | Hons terre | has been humanized and vivided by | ee A. F'Todd, lately of Piermont, X. Y., was | Te reag pal, thelr, enermies to increase the means | jAvner'or mon Sompesed my uke? This brings | cessfully attacked, if these atidavits be true. Joan by which they can command the greatest amount of pleasure and enjoyment, but who care for others only 80 lar as necessity compels them, ‘Tney are the centres around which everything revolves. THE UNIVERSE WAS CREATED FOR THEM, and for their benefit alone were all the sources of pleasure brought into existence. Men of this stamp May have enjoyed themselves, but they cannot be said to live or to have lived, since no trace of them remains. They are altogether like the brutes which have no ideas beyond the present, They eat what they have not sown, and sleep on_beas for which they nave not labored. They herd with others @ho know as little as themselves, Now, if such an anl- Mal disposition should spread, what would become of society? No institution would be founded to ameliorate distress or to promote the general good. No enterprise would be lertakea which, in the centuries to come, would bring forth fruit. The days of Noah would return, when God should be compelled Peter's church, Weat Twentieth street. Of the fate of a million of Chinese children yearly, | mstalled ag pastor of the Reformed church of Boon- At the Chuftn of Our Father (First Universalist), hed gf Sane aire it a pga i ed ane ton on Wednesday evening of last week. cruelty that dooms the so-called surplus population 7 Brookiyn, Rev. H.R. Nve, of Springfield, Mass. | toeatn and turns God's best gifts imto'e burden | ofe¥;, Charles KR. Strong was installed over the will preach Wiis morning on the subject, “What | and a curse is too well known throughout the | having fora long period supplied this palpiy’ re- God Hath joined Together Let No Man Put Asun- | World. The preacher also insisted upon the duties | tired on account of infirm Kane Ger,” and in the evening on “What is ‘Trath.”” we ft Ae ety aeerine in tae paas. Rey. Dr. Hoge, who has been a pastor in Rich- Bishop Snow will preach this afternoon in the | by thousands to minister vo our comfort | Mond. Va, for many years, has been called to the University, Washington square. and luxury, and descanted upon their naturaliy | First Presbyterian church of Nashville, Tenn. His Site.; Matas Aarditige Swill’ epeex. ber tne | £900 qualitics, which only want the light of the | acceptance of the call is doubtful, . ge will spe fore spel to become high virtues, They are, he said, Mr. James mM. Huntting, Jr., was installed by the Soclety of Spiritualists, in Apolio Hall, this morn- | practically, though not soapy imbued with | Presvytery of Nassau, Rensselaer county, N. Y., ing and evening. a es the Lage tod Tee atte a ops peters Leben nl cialis on Be 25th eg Mr. society—a respect fo , deep and sin- | Huntting 1s the first pastor settled over this ctruri Rev. Dr. E. 0. Flagg will preach in the morning | ore filial Jove, industry and patience, aud, above | for many years, be ‘@t the Church of the Resurrection, soutnwest corner | ail, sobriety in their habits of lile; yet with all these Rev. Ezra E. Adams, D. D., formerly pastor of the of Fifty-fith street and Third avenue, qualities we see them booge 4 their degrading idol | proad street Presbyterian” church, Philadelphia, Worship to these Unrisylan shores, and no one liits | qioq last Friday at the age of sixty’ years. At the me to the point to which I wished to call your at- | Moran, a manin the employ of Ball, made an am- tention regarding the papers here—that 1s, the ¢ ‘ Alla, Bulletin, Call and Crroniele, When this am. | 4avit to the effect tnat McGovern had been in the davit was read. im Court it caused # sbodder even shop onthe morntag before the trial commenced, among those lecherous attorneys ol the San Fran- | and in answer to a question he said he would hang ISCO var; and these four natu rs fag, I suppose, the eflect of sacle an cekinitio of | Botts it he went on the jury. By afdavits made by brutality against me, upon the community at large, | Joseph Malcolmson and Nicholes McKenna, these + and veing, as I believe: subsidized to do all against | men set forth that McGovern told them the day me, suppressed the scathing remarks made by my | alter the trial that he was. attorney upon this matier and glossed it over as NOT IN FAVOR OF HANGING BOTTS, best they cuuld, I called the attention of my coun- | that he fought against the verdict, but as they gave sel to the fact that what Mr. Campbell said on the | him no show he was brow-beaten and bullied into 16 subject had been published, but his remarks omit- | by the other jurymen. ‘They also swore that he ted. He said he supposed 1t was accidental; where- | it was all cut and aried for Botis, and he-was the upon I got the four papers und compared them; | only Jrisaman on the jury and heii out for Botts as and, just as I expected, in each the same part was | lung as be could. They iurnish legitimate grounds left out, proving, to my mind, a combination, par- | for a new trial. If the Court was willing he would ticularly as eacn of these papers had their separate in foriy-eignt hours be prepared to arguo on the jelize and save the! becan: |. | Teporter in vbe court room all the time during the | atidavits. He would also, il the Court could cause ‘The True Mission of the Trae Woman, TE pani throug Japan, the preacher went on io is trocar he was Professor of Theology in wy stahineee: Stan ne guverned in some seis a the same to ve done, like to have the juror placed om To rar Epiror cF THE HERALD:— to say, he had visited, near one of the great citics COND Fe nateeean « by bis sel he may be completely con- anom I will say a few words upon the juror, Henry .| the stand, where he could be examined and cross Beach. He swore on his wore dire, after examined as to the truth or Jalsity of the charges. mses, and In the name ofall the true and womanty of my (ine name of which escaped me), the Mountof Mar- | It is feared that Rev. J. B. Goodrich (Eptscopal), | trolled by them, and he will be unless ne strug- the place where thousands of Jesuit and Fran- | Of Connecticut, was one of the victims of the Uhi- usual preliminary questions, as follows:— Then followed the views of opposing counsel on sex I beg to thank you for coming to the defence of | sean tmssionaries and many. faltnfat “Japanese |. cago fire. He was last seen in his room at night in | 8% wail sik. aera ack ass cele Q. By my attorney. What is your business? A. | the legality of considering sucu aiiidavits. The oar holiest and dearest “rignts” and institutions | conver’s have been crucified, impaled, burned or | the Metropolitan Horel, which caugnt fire at three | at such juncture as this, when corruption | Commission merchant, at 302 Battery svreet. prosecutor argued that tae opposing counsel's arga- = + beheaded, from the days of St. Francis Xavier to our | O'clock in the morning. A diligent search for him Rae oh Doble and high-oned articles as that | oW'nyrom tis height he saw the elty lying novfar | has proved fruitless. which you published last Sunday unaer the head away, with European trade flourishing qui 1n its The Jewish Messenger notices that a state- of “The Marriage Relations,” &c, Ite publica- freee prt ee Fay ge beg meat has been going the rounds of the press tion thi least des! - | that a meeting has been heid at Frankf = and Particular day seems nothing less | rection over the Christian faith and Chris. Germany, and large sums raised among the sane than brovideatial, contrasting as it aces sa| tian teachers. He saw, too, at the foot of purchase Jerusalem from the Sultan, and: that it 1s Gnely with articles of so different a tone as ies oe a peren penaees aoe their intention Tnsn t0 aotte once more on this soll. that which is the leading one in the World | tron discovered by the government and instantly | 22cre#s Not # word of truth in the statement. Of the same day, which stoops “to record the con- | driven from hearth and home into the fastneases of tempuble conduct of certain shameless, brazen wae mountains, On the horizon ed iy alee, se THE OLD CATHOLIC MOVEMENT. ue outline mountains whe! individuals—unworthy the name of woman—who, Beas Cnrisilans were wandering and perishing at @s representatives of Mra. Woodhull, Claflin & | that Net mgd pare See i a yh the | Reception of the Reform News in Rome— Oo,—{ah! could you but know, as1 do, who and | M™lsstonaries, whose le nouse he could also see Amtonelli Inclined to Concilinto=—The Snag " # mute Word *Co.” stands for }—go ino | 17m this hill, were going from one place to another, Q Whatis your firm? A. Henry A. Beach only. | mont was weak. Finally You are alone? A. Yes, sir. THE JUDGES RETIRED What is your native State? A. New York. to consider the matier, and wore absent about® Did you read the newspaper account of this | quarter of an hour. On returning Judge Lepue 8: shooting? <A. Yes, sir. that the Court had unanimously arrived at tht Q in what paper did you readit? A. I do not | cisiop that if the fatts sworn to in these aMdavils Know, as | was absent several months including | were proven they would afford no ground for set- that time, read itim the papers I found im the | ting aside the verdict already rendered. With _ Place where I was. Tespect tO other matters contained in the affe ™ Where was that? A. Truckee, California, davits, viz, remarks made since the trial, @ Did you converse with any one about it? A..| nad long been settled in these courts that evidence No, sir; [had no conversation with any one about | of such remarks was of no avail in avtempting \o it; they were strangers, set aside a verdict, for the very obvious reason thas 9. Have you heard if talked about in your pres- | under such circumstances, no matter how great ite ence? A. Very little. if any. importance, could it be considered safe, reliable or Q From what you Rave read or heard, or both, | conclusive. He further said that an unusual indul- have youformed an unqguakfied opinion as to the | gence bad been granted to the prisoner’s counsel, seems to have seized upon every seat of power, all the Lord's ‘Reople should be prophets. He puts in our souls Werds of virtue which we should speak and thereby nelp to reform society. Suppose there were no such prophets as Moses and his seventy, and that those truths were not proclaimed. man has a prophet in bis own soul, wuich will rect him t to do. He iooks at creation and into himself, and discovers in such affections and sympathies that cannot be gratified on earth, and the spirit answers from above and places the trath in nis heart, is the higher destiny for which we live, and it shot!d prompt us to live the lives of the great ex- emplars who recelxed their inspiration irom above. Mao communes with his Heaveniy Father by faith, and walks before him; and this communion 1s a re- the pi ‘an armed force accompanied them atacertaindis-| of Sectarianism Avoided—Fears of the | Werq guilt or innocence of the accused? A. I have not. and that now the Court considered that 1t was Dot barbers’ saloons, grogshops, and the like, clamor- | tance, and day and — the watch was never Jesuits. true fava “Tue good man lives as in Rte cae, Or expressed one? A. I have not, advisable to delay the administering of justice in ing loudly for ineir “rignts,"? flourishing tne con- | Telaxed, in order that ey should have no oppor- MuNICH, Oct. 19, 1871. | is ready ior any sacrifice. His trust and | hope are pans ae “epee teen! ee, a8 thoagn this case. pitution im the amazed faces of men, "rend | SUM of tpearing, 1% Japanese concerning. his | The efect produced when Rome by the Munich 18 re ais Counsellor Guild moved an exceptiontothe ruling ‘ Q You couid give her a fair trial, then. A, I | and Mr. Titeworth moved for Judgment, Then tok could. lowed a scene of deep impressiveness, Mr. Campbell then asked him this question:— A DEATH-LIKE STILLNESS Q, Do you know the defendant or any of her family? pervaded the Court and all eyes and ears were cen- A, Ido not. on Judge Depue. The prisoner was told to stand And £0 he was socepted, and we thought we had | up, and as he did go he seemed to jerk out a half @ splendid juryman. A conrmission merchant—all | smothered sigh er groan, He stood with his-hands alone, too; never nad formed or expressed an opin- | on his nips, and awaited the judicial tornado which fon; didn’t know me, and of course never had said he ‘instinctively knew was coming to sweep him he Well, well |_ How could we, after so fair @ | from the face of God’s earth. A pin might have 4 been heard to drop as Judge Depue said:— ¢ “George Botts, you were indicted by the Grand aor of this county for murder, in causing the death of Oliver 8. Halsted, Jr., in this city, on the 2d of a last. On @ traverse of that iudictment you were convicted of murder in the first degree. firm and be performs every duly with cheerfulness and sincerity. THE NOBILITY OF MOSES’ CHARACTER is universally acknowledged. His modesty and meekness are also spoken of in the Scriptures. And God emphasizes His own condescension, so that we see that greatness and humility be joined. The Doctor made an eloquent appeal to his congregauon to be trne witnesses for in doing epee hed the general 3 for in this way only can our lives be made a blessing to ourselves and to others, LAURA D. FAIR. ing theatrically thereirdm and insisting on | were concealed two young men, both Japanese, one | Old Catholic Congress appears to have been deep gag Fo 4 when, buon ators Od | of whom was the son of 8 martyr for the faith, and | andearnest. The movement is not treated at ail these—and, thanks to the unbridled freedom Jovedbaiie cota The | Pchiaunk bans casted bow with ridicule or contempt, as the German ‘Ultra- now allowed to all kinds of inndelities and talse | these two youths served his mass, and how he nim- | Montane papers have treated it, nor with mere Goctrines, their name, alas! 1s Legion—are able to | seit was moved to tears by the sight of such joyous scurrility, such as too many of the Bavarian papers control ils destinies. You smiie at such an idea; constancy ana the thought of all the surround. : ya think st simply preposterous and impossible. ‘Of these two “children of the Sainta.? | Use. The Donau Zeitung, for instance, one of the Ba Flynt or aamaet acct Pong ioe added to the emotion caused the |‘blackest of the black, speaks thus charmingly:— this safely intrenched behing the bars of custom and Toousnt ius homuae sien toes tus very man Raped shad mgd Macon leila memrig > Soaventionality, in the shelter of happy homea, | whose words,«o simple and unassuming, are ring- | (@chwewehunde) ts uneoupled, and barks at us in Ss ae MB peso Enpenroond and ee = ing-in your ears, may one nd eres Numbered | such @ manner.” But the Florence Nazione’s re- with the fouiness ‘and iniquity of the great world | privileged person thus: tobe in the presedioe of ue | POT’ of the impression produced by the news of that seethes and struggies outside your home- | go nearly linked toGod. And then contrast with this | he Congress in Romo ts very different. That jour- misnment prescribed by law for that crime is charmed how superb 1s your scornful | lire of danger and courage the life of many, of most | nal says that the Jesuit party 1s determined to rik Feath. Have you anything to say why senvence of nd incredulous smile! Bi i that ristian 3d te 5 continue to remain scornful and iueredulous of the | Smoug,,we Christian congregations ay, and among | axe was UFO THE OFroNgNrs oP ras Dooxa, |The Argument Before the Supreme Court of | Weilet 4.2... Poh, & clerk, in Post nies: s. B ina 68 0c et Be Pr nonnees ae vae ty of tnese warning words of min eakling dnd ineMcient @ Such cold and aif. | While the party of moderation, headed by some car- Beach in his illness, and W. H. Wells, all of Trackee, | pores gave place to the man, and he manifested You do not arwe in the might oi your modesty and earn d fulfilment of duty ! dinals who fear to increase the difficulties within the California on Motion for a New Trial. Delng duly sworn, éach and every one deposes Pal agitacon uncontrolled. “After @ deep pause ( trae rights of your outraged sex, the rights of wives state of the civiived Coutizents of Americe ang | CBUFCD, are terrifed at the course which the oppost- —~ Of the following expressions relauve tothe aliatr: | «at nave had no qe Sane witness swore agin of wantons, of mothers instead of ye Earope, which he was traversing for te purpose of | tion to the dogma is taking in Germany, and seek That Uf he was to be on the jury he should consider | me il through. Carr, that was the one; not one of Christianity insiead of mnfldelity of {rath instead, setting on foot some more comprehensive system of | to impress upon the Holy S¢e the necessity of seek-| The Points ou Which a New Trial ad Fe ogres, $nd he, Squid hang | word of what you said was true”? tant, that snail wrecg your peace, your nopes, your or the three great pooh of aK ct lust bg] ing to bring about @ reconciliation. The view pre- y ‘There was another pause, which was finally broken is Demanded. flesh, the lust of the eye and the pride of life. He | vailsin Rome that the Vatican must come to some bomes, your hearts and ail that you hold sacred. said he saw in America cities given Ba? these | decision as regards Manich, otherwise new difficul- ered it a wilfal murder; that at the time he, the said Beach, made use of the above expression he had a | Y Judge Depue, who ssked the prisoner if he hed “SHOOK HIS HEAD AND SAID “NO.” newspaper in his hands, and ap] evils, corruption ruling the land and been read) @N account of the shoot be Paying fer Seats in Churches. Gown verntve warding inthe form of natural ued | tes will be rising in the city of SI. Peter. pubject matter and facts shooting and the | ;,20%8° Depue then edaressed te prisoner aa fot: fo rae Eprror or rum HeRaLp:— other calamities, saw beyond in Europe, CARDINAL ANTONELLI, INTERESTING LETTER FROM MRS. FAIR, | circumstances connected therewith (so i {HE SENTENCE. an naividual signing Mines ~“Cashotcan” and | FDC, Maw, ENG, He, eteaemof Fulng | 1 ts eat, euppors the party of collation “to a ied) on, wore, tod! hy ‘an otligme fy, whey * snnouncing to the world in general that he is “a| and infidelity, and the greatest of Catuoile | Certain point,” he having more than once expressea Beach, Was present. Tad zounsa.. "No tontimuony offered on your behalf good Catholic,” complains through your columns | nations SS as moe oe hee as | himself to the effect that ‘if the movement could be San FRANCISOO, Nov. 3, 1871. Now, though the prosecution isent to ‘Sepa, ‘was excluded, nor was any admitted on the partof Of being called upon in some churches to pay for @ | AYA arg. aly De, gow the Father of the | reduced to a schism Rome would have nothing to | The argument before the Supreme Court of the | they ‘could not get one single amidavit | the'seate to which your counsel madi seat at the half-past ten mass on Sundays, of the Jews when they called out to Pilate, “Away | fear.” The truth seems to have penetrated within I know nos “Uatholicue’ ” ideas as to what consti. | With a oon he Barabbas™ | The worl the walls of the Vatican that the old Catholics have now said to “Away you, we ir affairs without runi tates ® good Catholic, but it te reasonable to sup- | will not follow you; we will not obey "you; | snag cf sectarianisin, "A "sect OF schians witia ine Pose that # good Catholic will not rush into print fbn our as py 4 Church could not have existed a week; @ fact ru ell might of “Behol nh with @ view of drawing odtum on hts Cbureh, or in the man | —that is, the max in whose oy a Gathos, | XHown as well in Munich as in Romo, ag the re- from the Co! will have proven. For Sach manner seek redress for grievances, imaginary | jty, ‘law and justice are represented; the man in | pore, irom the Congress will nave prove. For the eo & objec- contradict Or impeaching these perso! ned and 6x id all they did ges was an aiiqavital man named | MOO, ou rere defended Oy ne etry Salone who only said he had nos heard Beach say AnY- | tney made tor you was the beat that ould be made im Sing OF ‘cite im, Stik Check Tid Saino Del seus @ case which in ail its parts was without s legal de- Qtvorneys his affidavit that ne knew ali the pares fence. The jury patiently and attentively listened Who had given thelr affidavits against Beach, and } 1 whatever might be said orurged im your bebalf. juestion. Then Beach gets some dozen afidavits | * x the offorts of your counsel the jury, under State of Callforma on motion for # new trial for Mra, Laura D. Fair comes up on the 11th inst., and much hope is expressed thata decision will be given in her favor. The following are the five fundamental ports of the counsel on which the new trial 1s demanded:— ther oaths, and with a sense of their responsi- of otherwise, when there 1s abundant means of ob- | whom divine jurisdiction has its type, and human | geath, and their influence, it 18 feared, will be very ‘That the Courterred in its ruling relative to the re in the oily, to say they would believe him un- | Hele oaie, anc fh Wine teas exoeid eee tuning Plot uy appying tote lagna autor | Gees te SHER a saarinn ana Japanese | ADO yh e?y emis, mu tenuoea | qrmPegin OL Mvers Of tne jurone a tte ine tbe | de otk the fondhn ap adiaarie his ows, a | Chu Gag found Jom glo Tao Nghe cane ad bonzos now hold up their heads against tne unpro- | case’ Antonelli has subjected his own convicuun to | ,,riat it erred in several of tte rulings during the | Har. ‘That word seems to be tabooed, charged 10’ the in trial, admitting and excluding certain testimony. ‘That it erred in ita charge tothe jury and in re fusing certain instructions asked tor by the defence. That the veruict of the jury was contrary to the law and evidence. That the court erred in retusing to set aside the verdict for other reasons, but particularly for the reason that Beach and .ittiefleld were not fair and impartial jurors, The following letter from Mrs. Fair to @ person ‘who haa taken much interest in her case shows her feeling about the trial and her opinion regarding the appeal taken to the Supreme Court. It is evident 80 far a8 iB CORRECTNESS OF THETR VERDICT ladies are concerned; but what can T say? Must I.| the court does not antertain the least doube, Your Say story-teller t ‘That don’t sound right, 80 Vil een | gefence that you were irresponsible before the law let it stand—iiar—for thas what Re Was, and tO | for your acts py reason of insanity was rejected by prev EENAT Ac SEAOR the jury. Under the evidence no. other conclustom being duly sworn, saith, when he was sammonod as | Could be reached. | Incited by guilty Dp Ita fealty juror in the above cause, he earnestly requested | toward the man who had supplanted yoo in her Peputy Sheri Boyd, P. J. Waite, Sherif of 840 | ravors, you deliberately formed ibe purpase to take that Sherif! White recommended hit ta aaey es | is ite, and, stimulated with intoxicating liquor, the Court; that thereupom he went toe. | 2OSCTeRnHE EDEL WARES POOR. TOLRETE:D Hon.) SH. Dwinelle and representea to him Te emer ooey Puvcenieed waa Oe ot ooo nent | Was entirely dependent | of your crime through a pretence of insanity w on his Business for his living, and that ne was em- | of Yo ‘4 Every good Catholic whé attends church regularly yeas ea C4 ure the ewig Je ace the will of a bh bie} be 4 nee cherish i France, opes in the Kmperor of Germany— \° (and those who do not, and have Lealth and means tg, and in whieh you donbtediy ‘ted by the Bismarck of the Uitramon: of doing 80, are not good Catholics) 18 well | trusted”? But we all knew that they had some- | tanes, Bishop Ketteler, of Mayence, who defies with aware that ut all the early masses from six to | thing higher and better in which to trust, even, equal impunity both Berlin and Munich—but the mine o'clock A. ka., inclusive, with one or two ex- | and especially, during persecution. He then an- } German government is simply waiting to see the ceptions at the latier hour, seats are free | nounced, th @ rare delicacy, which might, results ‘of the Bavarian Movement in order to take in every Catholic church throughout tne city. ‘hey | with advantage, be imitated wd the hosts of | equally positive measures. also know that the only source of revenue for the } fore! uestors who come vo these shores in THE ANSWER OF MINISTER LUT? Support and building of churches is the renting of | ben of the churches of the Old World, | to the interpellation of Herr Herz 18 unfortunately pews, which are generally occupied by the ‘tenants | that he knew the difficulties with which the parish one of those documents which it requires a great Gt the half-past ten mass. Such pews as are not | had to conten and therefore considered it | amount of patience to read through, He delivered Tented entire are reserved for transient visitors, | out of place to ask for any special collection for his it to the House without sing, at a two hours who song paying ora seat at late mass rather | work, but that, as he was going to remain for a few stretch, not allowing himself to ve interrupted ear. Were seats free throughout | wee! would give lect be. ed by Mr. Sh: have been an enticement to violence to avenge every by the year. Were seats fi bd ks in the city, he would four I - ther by the marks of approbation of the Leit or has ig h pl by Mr. Shaffer in the sale of @ certain kind Teal or fancied ‘which would have been dis- the entire Sunday churches would soon ve . ing on Wedresday, tl nst., and co! . | eather R i that she strol ope of escaping the gallows ip cere Known as Pipifax bitters, and earnestly or injury, rm Be ry following Wi fecpenaate. These Hee. oe ry Sarno’ Up Bis bees te and of ultimate ireedom:— requested said Judge to release him; for, if he astrous to the peace and good order of this commur itead of imto juristic ‘but there are a certain class of so-called Catho- | tures would treat of the obstacles to the spreading pW ri yp toed conte FF, have few in number, thank God |, of the faith among the Chinese, resulting from Con- | heen infinitely better. As it 1s, nota per te- igtous, AoC! single pai facianism Buddhism and their religious, nocia! / religion from one eud ol the year to Sad political thaw a x religyous, nocia! | has as vet had the courage to publish the minis Of this ter- should be compelled to serve, he would lose his | ty. The events which preceded the night: position and De wholly destitute of beans, Where, | Tle crime; your threats of personal violence to the San FRANCI800, Nov. 2, 1871. MY, Bani Ob! where is my commission merchant, 902 Batiery | ¢eceased, made weeks and months before the fatal DEAR SIR—The ap has been received and read justic tn fi Bae cae and bar 10 prove me wrong, and if you desire letters | pronounce will not be carried into effect, You only means of paying off sth debts aad car- | as gencrally felt by Christians of one tes is too ultramontane in the subject for publication I will send them. p ‘the jastice that is meted out ublish persuasion as Fent expenses, as I before statea, is the revenue | of another, and ough Vatholics are pretty well mit of any serious loss of Moc eaiancioel Pettsical tans occurrence; the its that Immediately p! fluence. The . The document at once an- me with ® great deal of pleasure. 1 toox the | *reet, all alone by himself? . means obtained access to the the otuer, who attend mass only now and then, | courscs he would divide ito thirds, and devote one- Ever both Deputies Hiers and Kolb, culminating in Be of showing izto my aiterneys. think it | »,He really did make the request, just ag he ye Tootn wince your victian was: your conduct and de- when they go, like “Catholicus,” without & | third to the h schools adjoining the church, | Sssenuing to the latter's request to bring in @ Would not be wise to make any mention of it in the | fo" the Judge did not contraaict this alMdavit and | Ciarations immediately on doing the fatal deed, and Seong rate nee ee ee OF the plate, | which, he said, were dotng a great and noble work, | for the com; separation of Church and State, pers now, as it mignt be construed into an evi. | fhe Sheriffs made afidavits to the facts. But how | when arrested and at the station house, combine to feeling that by thelr, sugass ce they copier @ | he was happy, to be sble to further i etty war. | wich will at once put an end to the political trod Ronee that we dia not expect a new trial trom the Freee tat, Mr. 8. H. Dwineile could sisven to | Show that you were conscious of the nature of the sort of iavor on Almighty God and His temple. Such | The pastor, indeed, had wished him to keep the en- | Mes connected with the Catholic movement. The | Supreme Court, which my attorneys do feel con- wien belng sworn on his viore dire and not | Sct'yon were doing, the guilt you incurred and the ere the Catholics who generally a holse and, | tire proceeds of leciures, but as the sum was | gunstance of the answers that the government is | vinced ] wil: get, unless there is no honor in the | ©Xpose him when he was saying he was a commis- Co! uences that Would result therefrom. Tre | like ‘Uatholicus,” ask ‘what becomes of the | entirely at his own disposal, ‘he should insist upon willing to afford fall protection to ita citizens, cler- | bench and 8 pertect disregard for all law. They | S10 Merchsnt and alone in his busine:s? and, in overwhelming weight of the proofs of your sanity in sony ee Tuion.;Catholicus.”” ‘were he what be | making this offering to the parish by whose gone- | ical and iay, agaist dlerical abuse of power gives | have every fait in the Judges as honor. | the face of All this and much more, he (this Samuel | {ty legal accepration mace ital on the Teprosence nimselt to be, and attended mass regu- | rosity he was to profit. The uckets are fixed at | to parent it able men, but I, not kno} them, and ju Dwinelle) sald he “did not think it suMotent w ‘ound of insanity impossible, |The proof 1s clear , might have learned from the anuoal reports Afty cents, and one will admit to the four lectures. | ton for their children izes the old Catholics | from my experience with Dwinelle, have lt Which to give me ® new tetas, wien really 1 18 | and convinaing that you were guilty i the pews, without appealing to the ou should judge st worth while, I would sug. | ag ca, and is willing that new laws | faith. Plain tothe most stupid beholder that I have not | Wiryor,: DBLIBERATE| AND PREMEDITATED MUR- BRALD or the public for iniormation, He must be | gest that a report of one or two of these discourses | should be adopted which shall secure the ‘ou never need have @ doubt as tothe tratn of | ads triai—it was a farce. But I am lengthen; DER. aware that Catholic churches, like all others, cost | would be very acceptable to many ai your PULL INDEPENDENCE OF CHURCE im the pal Tegarding the | Cut this beyond all patience. I could All hundi ‘The punishment for that crime is one which makes money to build, and in every instance are large in | readers, especially your Sunday readers, and State one the other—all_ good, 7 i sue prejust exhibited, for | Of sheets of paper upon this trial, eX-| yocrtre ® forfelt {mn your case there are no cir ons age} Sains. Poneto J constant toll anx- ae that cann fA to be Cog aes nore indeed, that eas follow words. It should 44 borne him and me pee. oe, again We a Large al etaae one mich od ees oe ia yi | ‘espect tors. an eye-witness e facts jescr! a snoul a tnat * in mind, however, that the present Bavarian House hi Twaien Tea t A ie wie he sligh' lany and injustice beng done me, they di expeot only by from pews and the voluntary contributions of the juainted with Oninese annals througn the ‘%o- ‘and, case | Thus, instead of unere being room for doubt as to | You have my permission to p Shis if you ae- deluded ty any that you PATTY 4 CATHOLIC SUBSCRIBER, ciety yor the Propagauon of the Faith,” others may Ure present” House ‘he dissolved, the new elections frath of what aid appear egzinst the Court, | tre; ber i tn CU eta 4 cape tt bub hse lay, and earuenty, —_—_—_— ersan| them. proba! fecal ‘Itramontane | half took piare. ° case, i; | make paration A Word Abent the Chinese, the naire of theve leotures is not amply’ avscrip: majority. nm mst ‘movement 1am cer- Je, when the motion for a new was being thing I write published I know you will see that it | oaq your It remains for the Cours eae ae Gara the imeliectaal working of ine prevailing heathen lees actly SOWn te eitiarven Se atari be forgotten) my’ counsel roduced again Re | That wonkd bo hari seang though the Goldensage x | ODN tOPFOROUHO® y 24 fg A Among the many sermons preached last | systems im the crowded empire oft China. ee ee “tert, Fe te 4 te DG, Titueiaid the following amdavits, never beea bitter like ome others. W!' which is, and this Court doth order and y that you, George Botts, be taken hence to the of this county, whence you came, inere so ve Nove trict custody until Thursday, the 2ist De- ps ember next ensuing, and that on the day, Which will be the Zist day of December n “Banday Bnd reported in your enterprising and | ,).Wish I could contribute something better to the |. Tare tne old Catholics are termed heret furtherance OI this noble mission than my earnest “ widely read journal, there was not one that could | wisnes alone, and, therefore, 1 have ted, througn | the ‘esta tal’ eFe meet fot election, What bore a tival in interest and importance that which 1 hap- | your columns, to interest ali zealous and’ believing | VOTne in mind is simply this—That 4 mnesher poli man- shall give from the official re) omit- an ed couree Mt the preliminary questions as to age, residence, &., and confine myself to the oes ren ae , that you may know I make no Tintended to have added the Foung, of Trackee, he constitutional country, sll reforms, whether . he kgew me; but that would pened by mere chance to hear delivered in the iitue | Phrisuans Rieke Reopen last Sunday morn- } cal or religious, mu: 0 on un 8 constitu aa SES 5g gee: i 3 28 : B 5 at i 3 i i ing by Btate W. N. M’NAMARA, between the hours of ten in the forenoon and two Church of 8. Lawrence, in Eighty-fourth street, | fng tickow are procurabie at’ the pastor's reste | Bef, The he typed i: He Tite | being duly sworn, deposes and says:—I have known | °F four more sheets of paper, Sr9 | tho afternoon of that day, elther within the said Yorkville, Thus church is the centre of a populous | dence, adjoining Bt. Lawrence’s church, Bignty- seperation ‘will "not mend the reach made within DG. iitWeteia for nearly a y Past; have metnam | Pretty badly tmp so I will leave that for a | privon or within the enclosed {ard of ‘said prison. ‘and is in the charge of the Futhers of the fourth street, Yorkville, the Catholic Church, frequently at a grocery store by Witham pk Other letter. Respectfully, you be hanged by the neck unit! your body ia di pensh, COLUMBA NAHEEHS, THE REFORM MOVEMENT IN BAVARIA on the southeast corner of Butter and Powell The prisoner was then removed. In ante. Society of Jemus, whose indefatigable and really ts one which is going on on the religious fleld—the | streets, In this city; that within s few dare after the ui HUMANITARIANS. Toom some misguidea person managed, while the apostolic zeal cannot fall to attract the notice and A New Pastor of an Old Charge. political side is but secondary, and can only sup- | shooting of A. P. Orittenden 1 met said Littlefield at — daterday. Zustioe ‘ sed the vigilant constables were in the w: elicit the admiration of even such chance visitors as | The Rev. William N. Dunnell has fully enterod but not lead, the old Catholics, Therefore, we 6 and sald el At the Yorkville Police Oourt y lon, to give him @ flask of whiskey. He w myself. into a new missionary field (last Sunday; as rector of Catholics tne Sologue, when ‘the move- which acenn ‘The sermon on Sunday, November 5, was preached | Ali Saints’ (Free) churen, corner Henry and Scam- proach its falfiment. Two ents | tion ‘in sabstance, as 1ollows:—Said ate Let, a Jesuit, tormerty ‘8 friend | mé@ streets. Dr. Dunneil comes trom Trinity ‘will show you the Ls aid prevailing Hated that would | Ber cmegnig oe Fat by @ missionary p within the Church. ‘The old Catholics (Pfarrer | for shoot! len; 1 Be ‘and companion of the pastor of 8t. Lawrence's | church, Red Bank, N. J., where he has labored for | Rentrie's parish) recently requested the Bisho of | willand te notto do It, hia rvvate sata wil Church “ether Goekbn, The words used (let it be | the past sixteen years for @ congregation which he | Augsburg to perform the office of condrmaation, Dut which wi Coulter held for trial at the Court of General Ses- Sangut in the act of taking @ ‘swig’ and prevented m emptying the bottle, Was soon after con- sions three of Mr. Bergh’s humantterians or oMcers | quoted, Rndewe rer vg of conevabien, i“ ine for ® brutal assault committed by them on & man | county jail and pi in the murderer's cell, the nat Patrick Baxter, of Fifuieth street and | same occupied by Welsn and.Sohwann, Sevonth avenue. Tnoir names are Archie Cawp- | The verdict and the sentence are entirely satiaind W. Doty aq Sherman P. Sage. tory to the law-abiding people of Newark. sald grocery store, and deponen' Littlefield had #eonversation concerning said shooting of said Crittenden atendant and

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