The New York Herald Newspaper, March 15, 1872, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1872—TRIPLE SHEET. , Court compelled him toanswer; said @ boy | dead in his tracks. Tnis fact 13 estab!ished by all 7 % k free, ¢ 1s Would not hurt ring her's TE “CROQUET” MURDER se for bu engi Know what Boy. 4 the witnesses present at the shooting, SPIRITE AL, MU RBERARS prea tb airy 5 nan oer y Ed Wort agelt ee Se ner t ° d i le Colonel Bald- | At five u'clock P. M. he closed iis opening speech “You wouldn't know if 1 tuld you,’ scribe that atten o’ciock he would be afraid to Murquarut’s nel, poare all CAs , win replied. ” aud the Court adjourned, home; but as it was only haif-past nine there wes, easily «xcited and apt to get ka cave ela He didn’t know 80 much about that; that he was oe nodanger. He started off, saying, “When I got out | ordinary conversation, without provocation, og with ® good many boys, from the ola Sumazing Up tor the Defence. i ¢: ue jara x shouted to God Almighty to strengthen = — ~ wens ware ustagerene ‘and tn . 9 . @ | four miles to 1Star, metimes, | ing, hat i uncontrollable temper, The Trial of Charles Carson at INVETERATE UATE OF CARSON. Staunton, Maren 7, 187 | A Horrible Tragedy Perpetrated Under | air, 1 was soar oouee ia ae ie ues: | Wee nave workes uacomrouabie temper, is A ‘ 6 —! z a a8 iat as day, % into @ creek | too, Were very but nos that they were Meredith Meade (cviored) testiled—Knew Cline ‘This morning, at ten o'clock, the aefence was agalo it was d 1 gol re cross, ry wer cron re Staunt on. Va Dell and Parenn, worked there iour days, thrashing; | opened by Mr. George M. Cocaran in an able and Religious Hallucinations hai-leg deep, bac I kuew God Almighty was with | or unkind to each other, y 9 Ve Seer re eed Mrs Careon RUE We went to the | roroinle speech of abous am hour's length. Mr. > oh eae ee bs gag ; the. Sritchen; Carson came in with “its "coat xn Cochran does pot make long speeches, but 1t is re- eee “T finally got hone, Thad a bi bulldog there to Mi phage oon oeeoer ‘The ‘eines 1 a had pistol” on his person; asked =him | markable hew much lie saya.in tvem. He 1s terse, keep thieves away. He never had been crossto me th, say that they were rary ever whipped, an bi ; Wen only with the open hand. Bos these calidre: H are remarkably bright, pleasant loowing creat oben mis Jaws. 1 knew he conidn’t Hurt me. { | Lue girl cspeciaily Laving an intelligent and ing; but before homicide could be @ crime two 1 Ran RG ca dN 9 called on God Almighty (o strengthen me, 1 almost | face. Tae newhvors say that the family It things must concur. There must be tie fact of Bande @ ulus suite, i lalla fini as Faovita, ‘ranatee os tees gntest as pa 4 wi ec nH naning at the killing, and.tiere must be malice ia the slayer’s Solema Compact Befire God to Destroy Them- quered. | I gave Rima Kiel aad he ay st went | of # stranger, We wnouid have 4 Shon heart; it must f, nt house an id Mary we had better gu to | Impression from our interview with the I PA orgie rrp ele barney § selves and Their Six Children, the woods With the children, "Sue took one—i took | beth this morning. Sle seeined” self-posdeurea If we are to believe What ie said as soon as be had two, Isat upon the fence when she gave me the | even dignified when talking to strangers, aud ae shot Clinebell we must believe he did it in — enlid she had. J held them in my arms tignt (show. | told to us the simple and pathetic.story, as gell-defence, He said immediately, “I did it bank #0 the hones fos the oreee iv “3 we tant Tuk oc wwered atid hid away son ie chge or and 3 wo, We Ww 10 uk co’ ‘amon: Bath Fo SE 68 ore Me ord A ent gy nt | Obeying the Almighty, Devils and | tolteaven, I kaew we hat ns bythe statue | from Friday night Until Sunday Suot, and uo one can refuse to believe they were tue and narrow path, There @ thorny ratch | only a litte ying re fo that fong in true “utterances of his heart. if ne believed thar Witches. m tho woods, ‘That is the straight way. hen ‘we leit the scene the post mortem Olinevell was 10 shoot him, whether it was 1 went with the children that way, and | nation and the inquest were #0 OF not, he Would be innocent-of muraer. These ~ dropped them as ‘I went, I do not’ know | former at Marquardv’s ‘where the Parties stdod to each other in, the attitude of Bur. Ro} die, I went to | mother and children lay, and ter at 3 Ww to the pr took of my clothes, and sat down in it ner’s schoolhouse, On the tavlony gr cuvmn am creevu coi teak |" po), ened aed menedalene nn” | seas faked tance" a asa | Cas ue. wn . i e mud ans ny most r wi a ble Py inven lll ae prt ng oy , Samuel and Magdalen Water with me. She said she couldn't tind the | exathined when wo left the Tatton phsne a Poon Teached Carson’s eara, ald he sent linebe:l word a Scriptural Famil, other two children (the poor things, frightened | testimony embraced-in our report. ‘ that il ne attacned him he would shoot him, Ye almost to death, were cuncealed uader the bed), IMONY OF JOMN WELSH. ‘Test! 7 they had gone somewnere.” I told Mary it was very John Welsh was toe only one of the tn the presence Of his sweetheart, What weehi you cold, and vhe had better go to the house. Sue | whose testimony ae trom, tose 01 - t; he said, “You'll see; before, bat Ad nid “GREAT EXCI TEMENT IN COURT sy re Miity Bi vigorous and i bi a a a somehow ne lougat me. seized nim you tell Giles i'l! not be over wo Greenville to-night, forcible, and speaks with great ear- JARD MARQ ‘ARD' NEES: by the Ja P asl j, Will be over Wedneaday evening; as | mestness, He sald the defence did not aeny the kill. LEOW. uy, Ts co SION. er lawes rl keer he octane tea to CluebEll, Ihave vo goud blood for him, uonow; A Mover I raise this at Clinevelt 1 wail shoot ‘ull 1 put : 5 nd he'll rise nd more;” there was The Prisoner’ 8 Envy, Hatred and Malice Dovhing said avout any other diMcalty with Cline- * Solace: ay were Jonn beret, mgseit and Gs fe CK; et, myself and Georue Against His Victim. McDowell all there; don’t know whether Carson Was OF Waa not; Clinebdell was not; Carson had ; been there soon tn tae morning; Mré. Carson was . , in . e: tho, {tons perch wean abe sipeke: Was in 4 th we Went tn; John Street, mysei aoe ea game * | fee ere eeereeee er aa : mu ersalion Drama. Dave Cortis leaned out of the w:ndow; Jona sire ‘Was standi the other aide of Varaon. t to Who was sitting, ered, “1 keop telling you OPENING FOR THE DEFENCE. Iwas setting; wheal telis a man @ thing once I v Want that todo! Was tne window up or down? How? Was be potng to look out 10 see if the win- ‘ dow was msted’”) Carson Dad his coat of, that ts he | the wort sua wancod our. Gay: te said” he hudao 01 $ e no ee ene ee We ee ee ee eee eet ‘ at could nots Ground He 0a. Giles I promiuied to ter over tere thts evening oe thing, and I wail settieis any way le. VLU TAKE BIS INFERNAL & HIDE ¥ iC he fools long with me; Patton Citnebell has been ACCHAPTER ON. VIRGINIA CHIVALRY. | wits onsitutzs ton woo seta ou « s ‘4 Woulan’t go without me, and proposed that we orted eliciling an} A Wealii's Atoruey, 'No'onewy has’ runt wimace | MURDER COMMENCED WITH PRAYER, | shout arets ur cioctes were, diryz ana sand | he. seatided as faowa:-Margunrdt ca one run before defending himself. Carson Kaew * | “No, it isn’t worth while; we can go to the house | house last Friday, about {our o! thas Oumebell was aware of bis carry: 8 pistol, naked,” We went back (not a word from Marquardt | noon, and asked me if | had m of 11 and of bis threat to shoot him, should he attack about Dis strangled little ones'; Mary laid duwa in | winter and if 1 had seen auything wroug him; but Chnebell did not believe Carson would bed, She said “You want to kill me?” “No, Mary,” | I answered ‘No,’ and asked: if nd or hie shout aud ‘presdmed Upaly wht he Matret | The Nude Parents Destroy Samuel, ~Leah | ! aia. +11 woutdn’s kilt you for alt theworlu,” Thad | were sick; he said “No; that they were al Ms Senet. ‘Does it devolve upon Carson to prove ? pases feeling: I kept rubpimy my face with my | and at home; he said he never thor a ca ‘waenever | r snterrupied to KNOW What thing.) nds; I flaaily put them on Mary's throat; it was | this; I asked what; he answered wi Witness foxoltediy)~ tine ne tase to cuss question | yun Zomacauon?, dhe law provides that | beiore and Magdalene in the Woods. solt and smooth. 1 dlda't intend to hurches, Mistere | witch; he took Off his coat abd said lis Leaded Pistols, Excited Brains and | ™¢; Wet! say tirst I sar last, ond @ reasonable douby ‘of tne prisoner's guilt, But she did’nt come to. hollered at her; her body | company had tried to kill him; he took an Counsel—Yes, 1 understand, you must believe Luat his heart is corrups aud wile Was warm; I laid down beside her; I thought I could | oatof his pucket and said they tried (0 a ss lags i Witness—Woll, 1 you understand 40 you Unwise Damsels, Koop on asking wet (Here Uommonwesiutstae torney interfered to bryag the witness to the rack. Counsel for the defence objected to any interfer- ence; said ne could get aiong.) He (Carson) did not eee te fe pose eae a @ ree the J ferred to his Distol when he ‘said, ditever 1 raise to fury. that up Pl put him to sleep, aad he'll rise no more;” {drew the pistol Out of Lis pocket; do not a A i ‘erdi der the money and before ne talked about Tom Ghies, Seger aged roaels Is ell us Hess—| shop in Greenville ond Degree. The tnd Tully vent upog the destruction of his teow bein: bring her to as Christ had done, but I couldn't do pete then took oif his vest and snows it. Then | read my Bible. Somehow, Mister, [ | his shirt was cut aud his shoulder kind 0! the procr aea ee ne mainialned, from the ovidene® | Mary Hugged to Death Dy the | 284 a notion tat i nad detior put om my best | scratcned like, and deep enough to draw de.en was proved by Dis witnesses and the clothes yesterday morning. That’s the way they | sald they couldnt Kili him; tnat he was like | Witnesses of the Commonwealth. Throat found ine, 1 never did drink much, Mister, but { | that he liad seen God, and that God was with’ MAJOR T. G. BLDBI ‘CCREDED CAPTAIN COCHRAN f had two hanks of wine—one for Mary and one tor | and he couldn’: be killed; he wanted me to-go for the defence in agpeecn of aluut three hours. me, #uti couldn't bring Mary to, Idida’t intend | them home; that nis wife wanted to kill him, His ianguage was chaste and elegant, his manner to hurt Mary, Mister, for she Was good to me, and -| sie shouid not, for God was with him; 1 wens impressive, nis. uments TORcibig’ ana ‘strong and. we were good to cach uther. I hadn't eat much tor | with him to sausiy him; the family were ail iis pathos touching. “There was a wood desl ovanx. | ~eare i Deeeriptions by. Mitsaheth ana Sao Seriarcre Beltre: oak aie eae bree en toace a cncea nce 1 aa . Habakkuk, Wh au} ever drau re, and n't feel it.a vit, | reading a Testament; he as e1 d Polar eerpe or ntageyr pris igre emer ak, Who Esorpe to a Haystack—How | {was ‘going round this way when these fellows | beter’ aud if sho would. promise to. arive* Virginia and not exactly “to the manor born’—aud Their Parents Read the Buble, Prayed, (eighbors we understood) picked me up in their | witches away; so he would stay with ber; ® good part of the crow! haying heard of him and wagon, I was wiluug to go anywhere with any- him she was not a witch, and that he t Rever seen him. 1 think he (ull? answered the ext Danced and Killed Witches—Mar. boy or I never was & qiarreisome man. You | that was in the wrong; he wanted her to Kil could bit me in the face, Mister, and I wouldn’t nit-| sé could; she said she did oot wantto kilbot pystasions: of 1p. crema) sand oli Virgidis nad no querdt, After Choking His Wife, you back, because I tuibk 1t wrong. But, Mister, | but he might kill her; he said “No, 1 won's” : ares fen Pn 5 er erg Endeavors to Imitate “The they ougntu’t to have taken me back where Marg | said “You e tried to Kill me, and | shows mse ig, ohn B, Ealdwin succeeded Majer was lying dead.” Jonn my shirt; he satd he waated her to cab bi | der. it would be ngviews to attempt to give Mas‘er’s Example’ and ‘Tuere was vastly more of this singularly amazing | and Kili the witches that were On him; they talks @ sByuo} of his en as 1 ghould tall story Of a maniac murderer, but at three o'clock | 1m this way some time; she told him he couidn’t | short of beta themeuytning like justice. Safico Bring Her Back to Life. this moruing We Cannot give more of It, He told us~| her; that she would just sleep away and / rages "J wees = pigere oes pion that he was not addicted to drink, though we sus- | heaven; he then asked the chilaren if they di Major Eluer's sian ae gracctul and incisive pect from his appearance that he drank deeply | waut to go along to heaven; tried to talk them \ 1 . % a Yesterday. tis muuner and tone are excceding! of this delusion, bat to no purpose; 1 B. wo! Gotonel Batawinne usar caaly teusmgied. 180 “yon: | CORONER’S IN QUEST AND VERDICT r ho insists, wit slrdmif petaleceney, tur | leaves ne took ihe down two tue wouds aud & aad derous battle axe of ie “ilou-hearted two! bye Sy enmtuicnces ye very foroivle speech Miseraoie murdérer’a own lips, never wist tu hear | Old crocks anil some rags down at the woods; . ie a The Last Act—The Case Given ‘the day of the gulling; e off the thom tree br four books Im one sido, gud in phe . jem three or 9 ide, TEN YEAR T other ig pat fie at tbat sD hat ot ; a ie corpse inside oF 8 IN THE § 4 ‘ATE P RISON the ubids it remained uuder my observation pretty : Touch all the time, uutil it was taken away at nigit, Bravron, Va., Maron é, 16r2, | downs horse wis “uitomed "oN back abreol ae Nite ‘AUNTORN, Va., ; 5 - Blouth’ Y 3 It woul st Te 1s almost tmposatbie to depict with any just | Took tne-sudtie posuets OW the sud won, Delors ‘@egree of accuracy the scene on the opening of the | sundown. Gran THOMAS GILES’ STATEMENT, t eee eee ogee BONING, | TES 1 had & conversation with Uarson with reference mild, he dogs not know how his cnildren died, 'rnose | wouldn't Stay; that God had tola Bim not to, king,” a8 he Mis Beata the shocking story at length trom the | he couldn't disobey; here he showed me Sensation prodaced on the previous Jay had spread Clunedel’s having vrougnt moa message from | of jour hours, elosed for tue Uo nmoaWen th ‘Tno Dayton (Ohio) Journa? tarnishes the following | auovner like it. Whether his wile, like htnmself, was | he sald he tried to bura @ witch, but. that ; ke “wildfre’—if so common aterm be allowed— im, and he (Carson) denied sendsug It; I told Cline- | case, at six o'glock P.M, Was given. to jury, | terrible but amazing story touching the murderer | ® Te!igious monomautac remaiuis co be deveioped. Wouldn't burn; had tried, at his wite’s requi “} < nd the court room was taken posecssion of at | Déll Carson sald it was “a damued lie;” Cimeveh | who retued toner room’ sn charge of the Suerii, | Marquardt, whose wil wh a Hie Teac ON EEE SARs eee DOR Une S10 CE: AMER R ROAR DEY SORE an said, “When we threo meet I want to ask Carson in | gna the ‘prisoner was carried to the jatle a ty wife and three children were The testumo: {the chiltreu, a8 given vefvre the | burn either; he went With me as far as my gate; Ne au hour before the ume named Bo continuing Jour presence if he did not send that message to . brutally murdered a few aaya ago under some reit- peri uot f UAT ORD ftatements, consti. Shem wens down Le, clip pe nite He Look trial; and the benches usual, OU.’ ‘ FR cl ie to obtain, ard him going home, singin: je wen ; praca ais 2° seatepaag sear iaaw acaet tead 7 OPENING OF THE DEFENCE. ‘The Last Act—Verdict and Scntenee Sed dite to BIAGABETH’S TESTIMONY. T'suw of nim was when they were taking ittn-co Jail \ pigeon ae pity at & solar tape Here the Commonweaitu viosed in chief, and the ‘SrauNTON, March 9, 1872, ay Bt) z reese at the time of its occurrence: — Ae es a Marqnarye nired even, er testified neve teens, Nee boa thine; he strats aoe mpaces Galle! tn for the defence were Called, 8 @ precedent history of the famuy and the stor, ‘vuri an tnterpreter:—Mother Killed two ot tne | his wile well, and seemed to prosper; no! it set apart for counset Wieorge Mawpe testiiodcine iat of ast Septem, | . Yesterday the argument was closed aud tho case | of the dmarder io dramas ie the Se eH ne one, | chuluren and lovin killed Lowhe cHey Hille that ne | toclar gee ond, Seamed to Prosper; years, bub Sapacity, but the space sp: was rge Hawpi Sept ry ~* (iiee invaded, go that the gentlemen engaged on both ber @ yearago Patten Guinebell came to oursawmill | Submitted to the jury, who rewired to consider their | gree. There was not time when this was written to | tite Woous; alter they nad Killed them they came in | late had been reading the Bible # grewt dea a ‘ ng tor a ioad of amber; I went out to snow him, and | verdict until'ten.o’clook on Saturday. ~Loug betore | ‘ll the tale of tue maniac husband aad father, He | 80d lay on the bed; they talked lutuie avd motner VERD.CY OF THE JURY, ~~~? J while watering his horses f #aid, “1 heard you and O & cage in the station uouse asleep, when ne i; 5 wont to 9 doctor’s written autopsy was hand ‘Wdes in the, case were confined in smaller quarters, ing 74 yi the Court th i Was in in the stati [i ue ry died; she felt out of tue bed; father then 0 Here the doctor's writte: i ‘as handed Those, first at the. door, of.course, rushed in and | Carson had a dght;” he said, “Yes, we did} 1 said, e, Court opened the cours room was filled With aD’) iwas awaxened to tell nis story.to us, When aroused | tte woods, aud I did not see aim again duuil he was | which was read, and the following ts the verdict . » P “pid you whtp him} and nesatd * Tatd;? itwas | 81xXlous crowd, waitiug tho return.of the jury. Ag] Ne struck us at once as a deranged man, althougn | Drought home yesterday (sunday); I and brother | the jury:— vn ‘oom. the most prominent seats, and, indeed, be it about a letter Miss Rosa Graham. written to | @ Uttle afer ten’ o'diock the jury entered, and, with | bié Wnnaturally red. face suggested ‘mtemperance, | TAN under the bed when they (ouk the otier chil. “We, the Jury, Ona that the deceased Mary Mars uy vaid, many of the gentior sex were among the | Charies Carson; he said, “Carson comes to your |: a puvst ofexpeciation; the crowd awaltea:the reply ‘But his story disabused us ol that impression, at'| (ten; it was dark; we siept under the bed the migut 1 quardt, wile of Leonard Marquard, dod’ Leah: d ‘foremost to “take up positions, irom whici, | house sonietimés—don’t he? You teil hum for me ” -the rep! the'close he sald, “I drank more yesterday than 1| Of the murcer oud wiso the next mghi; | Marquardt, came to thelr death py violence fri , the first time I catch him in Rusa Graham’s pres- 1» ne ran! one day in my lie, a id BOS » jee) pI Of the foreman, who, to the clerk’s question, a ever drank in a lle, and f did 1 | father was. in the house and slept | strangulauon or smowering at the hands of Li dpecing Of the Latest creer ere. ure 12 | ence f intend to thrash bim and wear int ut | awered; “Not axreed.” They zeured to tho Jury.| 14 at all” We wiougit iim & mau at leadt sity | On hie, ‘bod during. the, day (Sauurday); | Marquardt: deatu'by viotence trom strangulation 98 { speaking lad mean ti r 3? ; Carson came year-old, origins ar a “were rong that ee ‘who chal ja Ser eaae aonaeisaartiaerl went pap reer t room to fursher consider their verdict, During azlys ike a taaiients ear aaatie portato pew | and ‘loved’ them around t\hevmeck; didn’t te auy- | drowning at the nands of eltner, or bor, ’ i Gyarts decduse wey ere Wostrous of setiug some | $2,,7H0re We hounds were} ne sald, “owt stay | thelr adseace ine most intense excltement prevailed, Rich novus ponderyaaiasaign dieatostohar vo | {Ming around tue necks dont they tool irom tae | ine deceageds Nadeuna Mmarquardy, caine 60 Her 3 —) 7 3 bair Was long and iank, ide; ; i Mi 4 Long =i Faas, he (see oui" I stared, nwo oF and many opinions were expressed as to they ult Dchia, With & sion, steaiake | House; we Went. under the ud so Wey coulan's Kill | death oy violence irom being stuck ‘With @ 4 moved by the great excitement and axitation | gparp oatiook. He was.respecrab! aged ; sald. of the youngest; famer kitled Lean, the ‘olucst; produce death, at tue hands of ettuer or botir / @ouutry, arriving in carriages, in many instances, | M88 Rusa Graham aud come back; the rouson that | around ura, RSE ed antes eae eee ee ee | tattinn ail quotes Games Int0 the RAGA. eked wat | sale Rae EKORRRR. Marqaardt. ‘faxing a't the testi’ 2 1 want you te go 1s that a certuin person has sald sy » Py 1B “ hrash ‘ol a TUE VERDICT—MURDER IN THE SECOND DEGRER. Man, the feciing aad snake of nis hand was like wu | Mother wanted to catch fs, but Jather told her to | mony into consideration, We are Of UBe Opinion that @md_ wearing costumes pattcrned fromthe latest | he was going to thrash me out Greenville;’ In ab ean: e H re + ¥ of the he said it was Olinebell; I then thonght i¢ my duty in about halt an huur the jury returned and ren- | woman's, He sald bis story would take an hour, | &9 to ved and rest; mother dicd oO: herself; did not | there was evidentiy an insane agreéinent between ‘Omanauons modiste, ana adorned after the to tell. bim Clinebell’s imi ‘@nd 1 dia; Caraon their verdict of guilty Oi murder tu tnesecond.| fate as it was, we told nim to go-om “Hesaid hia | See father kil mothers after mother was dead ho | Leonard and Marquacac to destroy tuer waold > ~ mont artiatic styles, with jewels, dad cowure comme said, “You tell nim if Pa > ie u degree, und fixed the prisoner’ punishment at ten | name was Leonard Marquardt; is a Hessian, thirty. | Still cated net ay nee Geary) nd bay i her to | family,” 4 sr ah Up; yostar essai, ‘Ts morning “we made partiowlat inquiry ‘ of all Marquardt’s nearest ewgaporn : their opinion regarding lis stave f } ike babies and killed | of whom cousidered iim @ very a y er and mother | man, wich an exceedingly high and in ay B "@ Jout, ‘The rustic of namerous silks could be dis- 17}, sATEAOKS MB BEFORE MICO ROSA/GRAHAM | from 001 ve” a lew days after imaens heera the bor, the pertume from nun | ciinenell in Vine's shop, and told hliny he eald, il have it to do—1 can shoot a3 many times as arson came to my house some time before years’ imprisonment im tue-Penitenuary. = years old; came to this country when he way | £ct ; | Clothes gad went away; saw the litue cn! ie Pods neat Never eS as in the woods Tosieraari eae was away; tuey @, and separated ‘Because | the children out m their arms ti ieee ahey were inarried litte over | them in the woods; we -Mifeds ot. handkerchiets filed the room, aad thus ‘while one might be delighted to took acrdss over the otherwise re! to unmoved, feared Tatu re ‘ago he married because they wanted to kill us toot they talked of | trolluble temper, and woen with hts friends in 7 bas one mi! ‘The counsel tur delence moved trial, tour years s Mass of features and ‘behold so many sirixing and | ‘2 Killing and wanted mo to let & boy take his Honor ov ‘ saying | that ot going to heaven; mother said the little cbilaren in | ordinary conversation, when crossed 10 the sigt)) ‘ds ~ *Qevely countenances, adding a charm to the scene pore okey eae as Aid Pt ge ege Hhouga tue verdict was sotne, at harsher whan he ee Be Ph cee eta a BDO the | the woods Would go to heaven, out that shey Uather est, Would throw off ins coat, insist on Agi iat incentive to aud 237 ‘was afer the 3d of August; Ciinevell did pam ompneinds7ey. he ig, Rot see any Froands. to | same reason that caused the divorce Between | 221 motner) would not; fatner and moter were | tal a Tiolence. ‘They all ean eapnere was fendered deligttu. reminding one | Bee tei me nae vue later wan soo, bate waa | OM nun ten wag aaa tie vont ober. | Rum aa ici | Sac gticr™tethePwas etban uu o:fen cooifea ths | name mah and an‘extgrtuaty sktewd baer aad el iy en. - ar “ more of a grand rec¥ption than’ trint for murder, | “Qc What wae the mativear See ax to tered on tue record uns Monday, tat they migut | oriier: Tuoy us Six chuaren, tn eigut Seerm the childfens tater never wiupped motner: tatuer aud | senier, und was generally well posted upon most aay. ! - to take his horse ‘ap to Cuinenalnt ‘So hold a consultation as to what was to be uoae, oungest only eo old, being the | Mother prayed when they Went to ved aod when | subject, and that the idea of insanity at tos ime , Fee representative gentlemen of the town and Seauek oe by the Commonwealth.) Witness sald ‘A PETITION TO THR GOVERNOR. spent was “goa kaows,-he said, | they got Up, and also wien tuey eat; they never | won't do; and, furthermore, that they boil taat oy aeeighborhood were also in attendance. These were fron ike ‘to be an unwillingness on Carson's On Saturday evening the iollowing petition to the | “how 1 died.!? ae and Mary had not livea | Weat wokurch. ; this crime was committed on Friday night, and oa $m many instances in the gilierics, and- mant{esved part to @o Up there; said he did ot want to go up Pageant © eee sem i signed by paneynily. but there. were differences, Sne be- Habakit ta o EEGt akc Wreaya) nxflotier he Pas Smt sunday pay si- Sd pees a bea smintonse interest in the proceedings throughout | there. MISS. SUB GRAHAM RECALLED, “The ‘andersigned, Ol, Augasta county, feat Kor to tpg i ue Ee y | wanted to kill ine; rua uuder the bed: don’t know | fue children’s remaining in the house and straw- the day. As ususual in cases of this kind, tere Miss Sue Graham was recalled by tae defence and tfolly ask thats pardon may be granted to} Bou were Lutherans, thougi neither went to | Ow long I was under the bed; went under the ved | stack near by for two nights and two daye~is thas Wefe ‘certain representatives of -tho “great )un- | testined—Wnen I approached Uarson after ine | Oba apuhesiiaat cl, Tcanrminsestnaahehsinen Age, | church nor saw a clergyman nor Dad anything to Fopivens Moches wanked WcAteh Mes SORp ender: erry lag Dulidog acted a8 @ uae to tem.) 3 ism. \e notions t a Wiahed” occupying Seats on the Deacues who, dut.°| shoolldg: he: seemed to regret vary mach what Re | fonnd guilty, m the County Court of this county, of | Must do-as God und the devil told her, If God dig | _ fer took the children in the woods tnthetr arms; | brougut nome Sunday a¢ternoon by the wsignbory | deg: the day gave evidences of their preagnce by:}on, Mind Sue!” and scemed too much overcome to | Muruer in thie second degree, and sentenced to ten | not answver her alter her {roe “appeals the fourth. | Sits Fkugw they wauled vo Kill Usy tor they srted | Show Seg ioe conten Fe ote cay verdbed tay Aequent acclamations, 1oud whispers and signifi. | say Anything more; his emotion was very great — | "Without at-all intending 10 take pait in or ex- | Sury that she must to What both, God gad te, | 1wee us out; It was dark, bus tney Lad a light; tney | coaxed oat from tRelr uldiag place wider theaters f gaat innuendos. watliam Holbert testifled in August of last. year pressing An opinion avout the Uniortunate contro- | devil told her. They both prayed. He was devout; | wanted fo | take us atl Ou together; wey oor farce | Mr. Welniand, one of the awebde aa thee ay of : ; versy which hi juited in the f one youtt fy le i on a ait ‘THE JUR¥ AND THB PRISONER, L was driv! ® wagon loaded with oats for Mr. and Aud Senvinton? of the. other, “and by nO mene fad éiiidreu fapidly an ane VGid Nita now % ye welt to bed; pa killed Leah Orst, ‘aod mother killed the friends of their parents, who bave oven sent 4 ‘Me jury, in the care of the Sherif, were conveyed ae sortie raphy pee ig oe eae dn Mood te the Virginia Hotel after the Court closed last | Wacon; Mr, was ie, dri Wwagot of Mr. Carson’s, also loaded witn oa toe wi sgrening, and nour guardian pro deri. was daly 1n- | % ‘Staunton; ahous & mile” aud. quarter irom sefucted that no communication with them would waren, leading La amanive aaa hang Lid ay bigest be permitted, nor any conversation allowed “ out the wagon and went forward, saying he mh outsiders. relative to te tral At ten'| was going. \ovwhip Carson; pelore “he reached reflecting upon any one concerned in the trial or | cord weir names io the bible, Both read the Bibie, | the other two; killed baby first, and afterward killed Ps Mi y conviction, we feel satisfied that the case is one one first controversy was about heaven. Ther | Samuel; motner died in bew of hersel(; she fell on 2 Wich appeals strongly to vhe Executive clemency, | firstemid, now over seven years old, was named | the floor; father hit ner with his hand; when DEATH OF DETECTIVE LAMBRECHT, on in Motner was dead and in the »bed, father ¢ and we have no hesiiation asking that this youtn Eliaaboth, paler ine eae Se ye the Bay at au d her; the dog was in the room, but de sitihe <epantnanhotie K, tne $ ; not under the bed; we were at the straw stack Re Prophet; the tuird afier John the Baptist (this child Sunday morning; = 7% wens there, ‘daylight; The Murderous Assault on Offieer Lam P ¢ lay! MAYOR HALL’S TBIAL dying when elgiy montis old); tne fourth Leah. the | oniy saw them go out wita the children, undaid noi | breckt—His Denth Im st. Luke's Hospitala | and Magdalene were the three who were murdered, | 8€¢ What happened afterward; neard them cry out Post-Mortem Examination Te-Day and the Elizapeth and Habakkuk escapiny. * | 1m the woods, and alter father and mother came back | Coroner’ out on Saturday=The Alleged, Death of the Sick Juror—skeich of Mr. | “ine unnappy-wreich told a long story about nis | tothe house did hot Near tne children ery, and | yee ee Clatk=Probable EMect of the Death Upon | discussion with his wife about witches, God and the beri ays shey were. dead; wien {hey came back they ue * the Trial. devil, ‘He sald she urged him to take fire to the | calléd on Father in Wen, &c.; father got Leah Yesterdey morning, about eight o’clock, Officer e first; motner was in bed yet, and got up and took ‘Thedeath of Mr. Clark, the jnror im the above yt ate | Apeh ee logeing peares | ony the other two: we Went out and looked, and mother | PAtlp Lambrecht, of the Nineteenth precinct, who, hile in the discharge of his duty, was struck On the trial, caused no litte excitement in legal circles yess { things from her. relatious (lier father died several | and father were standing at tue branch washing | W! terday ‘fas to the course that will es when the years ago) which she thou Mt bewitched, and wanted | themseives; their pak. ein suits, mr toe | head with a heavy piece of marble slab, alleged td thent burned, She told uim that a bundle of el «phere grandlmar aa ere they were | nave been in the hands of George Lavery, = p o’clouk this morning the | Mr. Garson’s wag ung Carson turn Baerit condctod them’ to thew seats tn the | Notes and rode towerds Greenvale) Clnevel q z yn gotte ‘eoart room, where they remained standing for | Sn tne same morning he hat made some ten @minote, coascious of being well scanned as the ‘about Miss Graham, and said ‘he was geing to cow. ‘mest'prominent persons engaged in the trial, on | Aide Carson in Miss Graham's presence; Clinebéll lived on one of Mr. Varson’s places; at Mr. Coontz’s ‘Whom it would devolve to determine whether young | he once said he would “cowhide Carsou as long as arson should suffer forthe death of Olinebeu, or | he sous fod him and then cowhide the ground ‘whether he should return to his irends under » | Where esaw Did tate on was in ay, teovle verdict of acquittal, leaving nothing but his pi on tae areatng of tay nk ns hd ag - qonsciencé to appease for the extermination of a | store to pany Wi itch; Clinebell called and asked for Carson ; tul fellow being,, and the burteh of such ‘accusation, |. fiten; Cheer nelucy and lily he said he would which usually—nay, invariably—attaches to an in- | caich BP we him is eee him; on rae. G@ividual alter an ordeal of thie nature, They | ber which; Carson i remained tn my stor: Jookea fresh and Weil, and certainly did credit to | Sout Aiton minuies; Ciluebell was on footw hon ‘thetr host. % ‘See prisoner, Charies 0, Carson, was brought into Third Day=The Defence, Oourt by the jater, and, with the exception of a STAUNTON, March 6, 1872 might paiencss, there was no apparent change in ‘The Court House was. crowded at an early hour, “Bim. He was tasuly attired in an evening suit, and | for % was expected that the evidence would be Serupulously clean, His father had previously en- | closed to-day. tered the space within the railings, The unnappy ‘Weatom Arnold testified—Heard Olinebell say he looked turtively around at his friends and | was going to whip Uarson last August; he was audience; then, with great coolness, delidera- riding up the road with me; he was talking avout dq and possession, took a seat by the side of . 4 ¥ careworn and anxtous parent, At this moment |.& letter which passed between them, Charles Carson ‘Was great excitement in tae Court, those being | gnd Tom Wiles, about 1st or middie of August, near or against the prisoner expressing themselves} Grosnyine; nave known Ciinebell since 1867; live ‘gocordingiy. T@OMM&NOING THE SECOND DAY’S PROCREDINGS. | Within a mile of nis house; something: sald about dudge Hendren entered the Court, and, havi getiing. Giles and Carson together; wanted to amaumed his “judicial face,’ he let the gavel tail a fea @.g100k, and ‘ordered he erier to open the, Court, new ide dent: Carson imputea the le before were present, a) second act bega: i fhe drama began, (he Commonwealth conuauing 1a aaa eee nace ther ooeene a pS Me ill new. Gosed, with privilege of introducing George anew Carson sit enubty? wor Koanat nis iasheris | MgDoWwal (colorea) again. Rome place ’ ‘Thomes Harris, re-oxamined—Had snort conver Place during ina, July; there were some sation with Patton Ciinevell on the morning of Kills aug; | ing; sald noting else bat that ne 5 bus was Court assembles ths morning. Inasmuch | were her mother, and insisted that sue shoud fo E as it Wout be. illegal: for © the trial’| burued in a crock. He kuew God—in whom he "b Fn Oa ee err ete renes, | Seonlae 8 fracture of the skull, day noon; uy wile was sweeping of the porco; | |} im st, Luke's Hospital from the | eect to proceed with a jury. of, eleven; |. }!eved”—nad not ordered these things to ne burned, 0 wanted to know it ahe would taxe § because they wouldn’t burn. Meantime tue chil- gorne sionm ene ar no; sue aaid she might cai me, | of the injuries receivet. It will be cor tora even if “both sides were to. consent, it i ts deemed not unlikely that the Court may make | thar mother tauguttacm so, and they persuaded | ald Wentaway, and afer awnlle Lyons and Over: | tuat on Sunday mient, the 25th att., Omoer holtz came along with nis la the wagon and wanted | uly was dangerously assguited by tne following two quzgestions:—To order a new | lim that ue could cately the witcnes, in soy to know what should wedo with him; I told tiem cong.ot Naty panel and select @ Jurymam ‘to sérve’with the pres- | S20,,8dueez? inom, to, Of GOO, and abe got an | % take him home to bia tamny; we took him as tar | teenth ward outlaws, and for a time Bie life was i a8 pharp’s; ons Wanied Bim vO get out; he | considered m imminent danger. The ma ent eleven, abd havo tip evidence alteady.tekem | answer all right, It she dunt then It was tne | oo, oo "ag weer dowa wie road after the waxon; ted to Captain Guaner, at the pape ber of the devil; _ when the devil answered then I would quit, go! report , L order at azew Jury ve supancled on wapecta | St ion Mary Woshs wet tha, | paartuitg umm’ WS tae ices win ie? nee: | eter Dolce watlon, Uo at noe ordered Detewuve order tna a nom Je, be ompanciiod on @ special |-bat L.coaidn’s have had a velier wile. We Were DOR | fs Wand suid he had wo go to God; sald his wite | Lambrecht amd Officers Weob, Tooker’ and ws md Heaven, and le | orpri in cluzens? a to sooar te will |The patnos of thts pour-ieliow in thig recital | 98d chikiren wens 9 ¢ jen, 2 ress, Provably, | was ‘extremely touching, especially when the | Was. following thea Bo lo wantado | procinet, and if possible arrest the dssail- ro | wept over “Mary was a good wile, I couldn’s | Home with me or ges th le ee veld his wile and | ante of OMicer ‘Tully. At the corner of Fifty. ceedti upto the adjournment on Monday ins, to | have a better, didn’t. vend to kill her, nut I aid.?’ | 89, but not vetcould ne go he Sal ne Wa ani ye if drop and to be as if they had not been, as iar as any | Tien he went on to describe a wild dauce they had | Clilldren were B ins a Ff KS Lyon: $Y | ninth street amd Second avenue these guardians ¢ eifect is concerned, and {or the .¢d3¢ to take its | to kill witcues; now Utey kuled them; then that | there too; I wen! own Miyer’s, and they brought | of the public peacs encountered a gang of dis. ~ ordinary piace in the calendar of the General Ses- | Mary had a hallucination that sne ought to cut om | he met tiem as far far a8 Sharp's; there An- | orderly rock blas:ers, whom they requestea tkeep sions, ‘Jt will (hen afford an occasion for the prose- | his head; that she took @ kriife and cut througn his | Yim back in & wagon as ‘ih aration mnae ’ pkeep Fes { cution or the defence to make some move by which | neck-bandkerchiel into his skin until he bled, when | @rew Sharp and Lyons wWwol ti fleid’ tO hy | quiet and go about their business, which they ” recess 2 Boush and Andrews weal acroas eid a a judge” “Ma whost fg in poate Lo ag te fol bean EP ds om house; we got to the house, saw his wile dead on staobornly refased to do, A fight ensued, in Which ‘ Should it be decided to take it from the routine | “Ou, how We hollered ”” said the poor lunatic, | the Moor beside the ved entirely, naked Boe on | George Lavery, his brothers William, Robert ang order of the General Sessions Court, the ability | “Then we butted our heads against the wall, and [ | the bed bus tM 4 ny ig a inene cl or Matthew, William Fitzgerald, ‘Thomas, _ 46 that the trial Will go into. the Coureol Uyer and.| told Mary to hit me on the iead with a hatenet, | Mawe Wud then oath we went te, Ce, ue wise “stitch” McCarthy and Charies L. Qlemeng) it m Terminer, and that a judge from the interior of the | She did, but it dian’tdo any good. 1t was sore next weet BPM. te SE eainaay Wank | alleged, were actively etigaged, Durtig ie! i State wil be selectea 10 preside at the ial = any, eal ae oat a“ ae ee . Tuning all over it (Leah), aboub a r souk | band struggle Detective Foe dl Res} seemed to E r u east of Samuel; the baby was laid about iour | on the head wtih a marble si ‘hich ine,” he said, “that as Mary couldn’ ; re of the skuil, which has 4 dag A Be oom if ra Cut my head off with a sharp kuife wien told her | 708 southeast of Lean; baby was about haif | compound tracture Fe ee mach OMver O'Brien, Mathias Utark,-@ well KHowm and esteemed | to cut away that nothing could kill me. | felt nag | naked, clowns, Ce a ot | Georre Lavery. nirige the fatal blow,/ana may cluzen of Naw Hor dind ‘hw tenidench, alter © | oe 2ug 2 aud ouicre. iu ime {read my oiole | Mee back}, hed not cwines on; was, vareiooced | be oinee wlinea’es wing sar the gente ug, ae e jure m “ hands; they had sh all of capt " psi gprer ileal ge night Mr | gay aud night, and I velieved in God Aimgnty with | WIA Ned Sort Amn shes round tue ober tires chile | quently tried and convicted im the Court of xesetat |). fall my goul.?? dren at tae straw siack; knew Marquardt about one | Sessions. Several of the assailants were sentenced Panel, returnable on Monday next. Tt is nnuer- | kind to each other through all tiis foolery.” stood’ that neither of these yu be acee p Trad The course which, in Da ‘will be pred, will be for the wi of the tioned. Here the derence ee king to some of us; we were all in | DUA was, Goulng: 10 ride someting else, goons Mr. | Ciark served a8 une of the jurora sworn for the ttohen, telling, Ars, Carson goodby, as me as 1 was on my way here day veiore Te Knchen, with Mus dost’ off aay eect | Here defence objected to introducing evidence 4 rprise at | Which was intended to impeach Hawpe without chin ale ck nemne. ye he was Being to — Ss notice and an opportuaity to make ‘With it; he said he would show them some time Hat handouts | wires at Ta a eae $ us then thai eard wi jad been saying avout hin; said he was going | Come here afd teil the truth ry es Loe bye trial of Mayor Hall, He continued to disonarge his THE LAST DAY. 5 nav oad habits; | to the Penitentiary tor six and twelve months each. duty in tne ei at We inquired about the ciuidren again. He said | Zeon: Neves (one onan Feligions panjest; never “Coroner Scuirmer, being notified of Mr. Lam- gy herd jaty box unuil he was ‘completely €X- | tnoy pooved in Wiiches as strongly as ‘Mary did. saw any suing like insanity about him unul Sunday | brecht’s death, gave on. to “remove the re hausted by Wervous prostration, amd .eompelied -to | They were not airaid of him, put always when ho | 147.9.) was gougidered @ gOOd nelghoor; when ile | mainsto the residence of nis motner, toot of Fifty- 6 ig Fetire, by permission of tne Court, to kis.home and | came home they met Aim with @ shous; but Mary to the house me said he was innocent of the | fourth street, Kast River, where Dr. Joseph the care of his physicians, | His system had been | would havo spells. On Frillay last sus went to ved saute Ot his ontldren, bat had killed. as wire; ail ue | man, Deputy Coronsr, ‘will this mornin make & previously.shatiered by an attack of hemiplegia— | and Jaid as if ele were dead, said and only wauted to know was about his a post-m examination. All the important Ww: nesses have been summoned to appear at tne © Coroner's office at ten o’clock on Saturday morn ing, at which tne the inquest will be held, Detec- tive Lambrecht had long been an hes wen be Roan obi to resort to the admini ‘Of the | be s0.?? She had one of these spells, She went to | him and asked where he was going; told me to go poten amt i feenneae toa Toa ‘ mos I st:matants in order vo oop the | bed and would not get op. Ho thought she was | away; he thea went up and untied Lyons’ horse Gaines preg pa action of the heart, hoping that tne result we 6 | dead. She did not feed the children and would not | and started off; Lyons and I got In wagon aad took in prison at the’ Filty-seveath such an improvement of his bodily powers as would | have a fire, They both set up in bed nearly ali night, | him to Sharp’, aud from there took hin awaiting the result uf Corone farnish Ete y formore active measures jooking to | Sometimes he would get up and read the Binie, in | home; on the way over he said sa YOu will gation. his recovery. ‘The hope was vain. Mr, Clark was | the morning sue would have tire. He told herhe was | be sorry to go; you had better not go,” when a sixty-five yeats of age. He was tly esteemed | ‘tired of tis foolery,’’ and if sbé did not quit it he | we got to his wools he spoke and said, ‘“Ihore Sketch of Philip Lambrecht. j raphe dy Honest, good man. During the past | would leave her and never come back; but, he added | Jays one of my cutldren,” and went iurther and nt, ® police officer, de fos few years he-has not engaged in active business. ex- | patheticaily, ‘1 told her she shoud have every cent I | pointed out the others, aud said they Rad gone to Philip Lambrecnt, peers are > : Ceptas counected with his duties as President of Radin ine world; 1 would not have taken five cents | heaven; went up to the house and went in the | quty as detective In the Nineteenth wi low j the People’s Insarance Company and Vice Presi- | from her for mulions, for she was a good wile to | house, and saw his wife on the floor by the door, Ke ent of the People’s Baal Parte he, See sustain , 80 al o ‘api! mnseq ut t tne She said the end was soon comivg. She did not ANDREW'S TESTIMONY. of mad gua irae, Ofwhich 2 ne i unaerstan’ it, He dia not want her vo go to heaven Abraham Andrews—Firat I saw of Marquardt se her, She satd she Saw a vision of her own ie | Comm and ihe collins of the children, but nov his, | Sed he did not say anytning about the murder, Greenville and Would. seve with Cinevell any | | Thomas Harris, recalled —Mr. he one i \ ver told ‘body he did: fur ished, and that When ne drew his pistol om | MO any money; ne’ i Mr, io rmisuaed 50 ‘shuot; (his was the second | Hawpe tola me to come here tal Yun erat saw him with @ pistol; | was working at Mr. SPEECH OF THE DOMMONWEALTH ATTORNEY. beli’s waen young Ms. Cineveil was killeu; ps The evidence having been finished in the fore- See rein orn Th ite tans | tan ora “baamngaraae, ner," ommonwealth at. worked 01 : ne torashing on Friday evening; it was Satar- | torney, began is jing speech, For morning when we were in the kitchen; the e1 pl 83 nd I stepped before if rears of age. jed of the murder, is rect Police Court, Schirmer’s investi. are Saturday last bs physicians have | without him; “but if God Almighty said so it must | was at Lyons; he was going by, ger strat de e open! ng — ment and jpoudness of expianation 4 Adjoins the house; there were preseut Mrs, | I have never it excelied, The jury could have ‘bo leit soon aiter young Varson came in; | no difficulty in underst: the points of law he ge Mi well, Meredith Aileade, David Qurtis | relied upon, and his e: tion of the evidence if; we Were all siting down wien Carson | was so plain that bes) simplest ok had rany ae ; old Mr. Cunebeil had gone | jury the dierent les ie; that the law depot; My Gueg Clinvuel, nad left; don’t know eo that no had been committed uatil where Carson and Clwevell lodged; heard tney | it was proved; then the innocence ef the pm gL ST] T first saw Carson with 4 pistoi ia ae until positive of the killing and of field; coula & prisoner ; Uarson had gone in the house before |- derstand the case, in St Luke’s Hospital yesterday morn- could i & bewter Oné ia all the | dead; she was naked, and was lying on the side; | York died . eT , © | the room was all torn’ up, and fo; on one hip | ing from the offects of @ fracture of the skull in- ‘Marquardt went on to say that on that day, Sat- | sho was bruised pretty ly; appeared. as if she | qicved on him some ten days since by s man whom OBITUARY. urday, “1 was a little against ner, but I didn’t quar. | bad been dead some time; we then Went for the | 44 sought to arrest, on Secona avenue, near Fifty. rel with her. We dian’t quarrel. We only argued | children that were missing; Mr. Sharp fuund them th street. Lambrecht was dressed in citizen’s! ~ about God Almighty, the devil and witciies, Sue | in the straw stack; one chiid was lying close to the | nin bg He ,* had got to thinking that she was @ Witch, that the’| ditch, one lyiug ort distance aWay and tue bade | clothing at the’moment of the affray. was Capt ssh Sabai tin rvane, | Seton e's, ech hans ran wit A | (usu Vaca tat oe rte ts | ero aren Juma ee nen ures ne oldest cir West Twenty-third street, tn this city, during last | fre‘cnudren said mamma aldat (taught tnein}, Jue | fuce was Druised; aidwt novice sayening about ine | sad has been counecied Win, We, Mersope ma aun en ne leaned forward on luling by the prisoner; but tirat when jhe had boon bong the mouse after Cimebeil | is proved to have done the killing, then malice is gud betore i saw the pistol; Carson began talk. sumed by law and must be removed vy rebutting mg that mornimg about what Clmevell Lad said | proof or snow extenuating circumstances, if we ‘Wout hin; that he had heard of that Commonwealth then wishes to we ak of Ahead is Jobn 0, Bak: “DAMNED BIG TA! NEBELL’8,”” whe first beg % must prove sharply questioned as to ig position the | have been wiliul, deliberate and premeditated and became coniused, und, in stating the position | wit malice aforethuaght, In the first place, he ‘the parties, said Carson was on the same side of | sald, it Was Mecessary to understand the attitude the room with himselr, He suddenly stopped and | the partiés occupied towards each over at the time > exclaimed, “I see @ piace where you are trying to | of the killing; thas eaich me.’ The witness througtiout was reluctant IF CARSON HAD MALICE IN HIS HEART to testify and it was with diMcuity anything could | when he fired the fatal shot, 1¢ was murder in the sone out of him. Finally succeeded in eliciting | second degree. If anger and hatred are proved, Carson said Clinebell bad whipped him‘and he | malice 18 proved to have existed as ‘bad Not liked him since; said he nad ho iriends in | ex) in words, were two things to be that end! and was going to leave; that ne was | considered—the acts of the parties, the motives of | oy! to Greenville to settle some iittie matters | the parties. The acts of the parties we learn irom " he had heard 01; that Ciincbeil and Giles were | the large number of respectavie aud intelligent 7 r— 4 some big talking about him, and that he | witnesses who were present and saw everything. settle it in any way they wanted 10; that if | The motives of the parties must be judged of by Ol them opened their mouths to him he would | thelracts at the time of the terrible tragedy. He mi te sleep; that when he drew his pistoi he | taen turned to the evidence and followed the tenued to shoot it; said he had not been sent tor, | parties up step by step from the time they first bat went of nts own accord (being pressed upon | came upon the scene to the moment when the fatal tls point); said ne had been sent for yesterday | shot was fred, How when Ciinebell dismounted Morning, pus yeiueed to lel] who same’ for kim; Jaga ‘week, in th@ Bixty-sixth year of his age. He was | they wouldn’t say that I bad anything to do with it, gue atthe fonges Lyons and | 6 a ted Se een of remarkable Physical development, born in Boston in March, received niess Mary (his wife) touched them.” Thea Mar- jarquardt; on the way down bi Dou: in ion 1906, and ony quarat would go off again in his wild way, praising | kul any of his children; afterward acknowledge! he Pa ae io Baa aa % hae English education 96. the Hingham Seminary, alter | he gooaness of his wile. He said ho made tie fre | had killed one of the children und bis wite; suid ho | of the, Btrongost ‘on rte leaving which he engaged in business in Boston as | urn notwithstanding Mary said it wouldn't, and guaked his wile and kicaed her oat of bed; we w i ee prominent cine a clerk with his father. Owing to il health he was | alter awhile Mary got up and milked the cows. Then | him Co officers at Saulsoury. wrens as to | from the time of Fouens, 1 ‘obliged to avandon the sedentary life of a clerk and | he went to reading his Bible and got to crying, and Your reporter made special fogs Cin ane ipetter in Scotland to go to sea, For a numoer Hf egrs he then de- | tien another talk with me of i Lea B: vo that or when he went over | Marquardt’s past treatment r in the Castle of Dudlin—who haeelt ke Voted himwelt to the. profession of a'seaman, ooeu- | 40. his ueignbor, Jack Weld's, and ‘told, “his | childven, but fuueu to ‘au anyining 101 3 | Pangea tor the perpetration Of tne BIUIWar-Of AM | ying positions of trust under the irm of G. #, | trouble. Mr. Weld seems to havo understood | to suppose that lie was wilfal ytold of him taking | Ttalian boy which he plauned and omeentea in 4 J, Patten, of Bath, me. In 1853 he settiedin | Marquardt’s situation, and tried to pacity | wife or chiidren, A hard story 1s | edavin at. | order to “make crime rife”—Lambrecht’s ° a ing and commission merchant, | him, bus was unsuccessful At halt-past & neignvor’s, o te | aod conunued hat business until about three | nine o’clock Saturday night Marquardt vest, when she had ‘pind sheaves all day acer & | by his friends and nis enemies, the tat it t years when ho retired, Even while a city mer | he was at another neiguvor’s. house, Mr. Mil- ad requiring er to pind sbenvire carctai noc (o | said that he Dad a great pumber, particularly fe chant ¢ ja Baker went on two long voyages in | ler’s and tiat Mrs. Miler, without any fire, got aper, bub those WhO spores fotood tocome wzatust | the district in which he resided. ‘deocesed’ io snips or ie was partowner, As a merchant bg hot cup of coffee in less than two 4 that Mrs, Marsiar Whose harvest it Was, iow: layed @ prominent part in the capture At <* New York asa ship his Wile With Hin 10 a eee only three Weeks vid, | ton Was canvassed in the most o hoenjoyed: tue confidence of business men of all | minutes, “How she did it, Mister,” he satu, “with. asses With whom he came in contact, and was | Out fire, nobody but God Almighty could ‘tell, But d for His upright beoriag fn all relations as my wife coulda’ cut my throat off with a shar; We. Me waa buried 19 Hingham, Moxa knite | kpew that hot coifee nor poison couldn't ki! want har 10 wil ‘The Jarm i ae Nn ing again, because he suid J), the murderer of Neer I and Hod work woul Hither, an he didnot | manner on the witnese stand as Real's trial w extminal: twisti i A “ his face red, tong aud thia, with a au UI ¥ \@erture, but ed canals iae periia Boao 19 Greenville wich sl Beg oyerand. ‘cal 0 | mate fate of the pMsoner. te sat apparentiy un- | nose; forehead low; eyes gray and sina, witha w a Us; motuer wanted to kill all of us aud did Kil both jostrameey causing a fracture of the skal sumotond x i ‘ia {0 bie Hi¢ld, Marguardt protested | very muah crinjciass. irom big horse Carson drew hig viatal ava abot

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