The New York Herald Newspaper, July 9, 1874, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a ARMY INTELLIGENCE. | Promulzstion of Promotions, Appointments, Transfers, Dismissals, Retirements and Deaths in General Order No. 77. i ‘ Wasnreron, July 8 1974, | The following *oMcial order was promulgated to, - GRNERAL ORDERS NO. 77. NT, UTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, eee SINGTON, D. Sony Ca 3 following promotions and appointments in an erat Wine Cnited states, nade by the Preat- @ent, by ana with the consent of the Senate and by the President atone, since the publication of General Orders Lat of April 1, 1874, up to July 1, ounced — aoe are 80 PROMOTIONS. Department—Lientenant Colonel Marces D. L. Simpson, assistant commissary geucral of subsistence, to be assistant commis- ary general of subsistence, with the rank of feoldne!, May 1, 1874, vice Shiras, appointed com- amissary general of subsistence, L.ajor Wilkam W. Burns, commissary of snbsis- tence, To be assistant commissary general of sub- wmistence, With the Tank of Neutenant colonel, May 1, 1874, vice simpson, promoted. Captato Jona P. Hawkins, commissary of subsis- ‘tence, to be Commissary Of subsistence, with the Yunk of Major, May 1, 1s74, vice Burns promoted. @aptain Michael P. Smith, coumissary of subsist- ence, to be commissary O01 Subsistence with the wank of major, June 22, 1874, vice Beckwith, ap- pointed lieutenant colonel aud assistant comais- mary general Of subsistence. second Regiment of Artillery—First Lieutenant Joseph ©. Breckenridge to be captaim, June 17, eld, vice Robertson, appointed avr, under ac. of Congress, approved June 17, 1574 (Company B) ; Sevond Lieutenant Medorem Crawsord, Jr., to be rst lieucenant, Goals viee Breckenridge, pro- ed (Company L). *Fourta Regiment of Artiilery—Second Ltent- evant John A. Lundeen to be first lteatenant, Subsistence March 7, 1874, vice Greer, resigned (Company M). First Regiment of Infaniry—sevond Lieuteuant Robert Armstrong to be first lieutenant, May 2. isa, Tyler, retired irom active service many G). Colonel Charles «. Woods, of the Yniantry, to ve colonel, February 18, 1874, len, retired om active service: : mnt Regiment of Infantry—Major Joseph W. G. Whistler, of the Twenty~ a miantry, to ve Veutenant colonel, February 18, 1874, vice Woods, pronoted to the Second infantry. sixth Regiment of Infantry—Captain Orlando H. Moore to be major, June 8, 1874, vice Roy, pro- noted to the Filteenth infantry. First Lieutenant Siephen Baker to be Captain, Jane §, 1874, vice Moore, promoted (Company 8). Second Liea- tenant Nelson Bronson to he first leutenant, June 8 1874, vice Baker, promoted (Company 4). seventh Regiment of Iniautry—Captain Guido | Niges, of the Fourteenth tnlantry, to be major, De- eetober 10, 1873, vice Lewis, promoted to the Mine- teenth iniantry. fight Regiment of In/autry—Lieutenant Colo- ne: August V. Kautz, of the Fifleenth inlaps to De colonel, Jume 8, 1874, Vice Bawiord, retired from active service. Thitteenth Regiment et Infantry—Firet Lieu- tenant Gustavus M. Bascom, reuimental quarter- master, to be captain, December 11, 1873, vice Os- Borne, prometea to Fifteenth injantry (Company B). First Lieutenant Senjamtn H, Rogers to be captain, Febreary 13, 1574, vice Hongh, promoted %o the Twenty-second infantry (Company 0). 3+ en! Lieutenant Rogers Binnie, Jr, to de fi Heutenant, pbrvary 18, 1874, vice Rogers, promoted (Company G). second — Lieaten- ant Stannope E. Blunt, to be first leu- tenant, Mared 27, 1874, Vice Binnie, appomt- ec regimental quartermaster (Company (). Fourteenth Kegiument of Iuiantry—First Lien- tenant James Kennington to be captain, Decem- ber 10, 1874, vice Ilges, promoted to the Seveuth in- fantry (C.mpany G}. Second Lieutenant James A. Buchanan to be first iteutenant, December 10, 1873, vice Kennington, promoted (Company C). Second Lieutenant Will WwW. M miBon to be Grst lieutenant, Becember 10, 1875, he being tre Tegomenta! adjutent. Second Leeutenant Thomas BR. Brigus wo be first Heatenant, February 9, 1874, Vice Rovmson, deceased (Company A). Fifteenth Regment of Intantry—Major James P. Koy, of the Sixth infantry, tO be lieutenant nel, dune 5, 1874, vice Kutz, promoted to the E.gath intantry. Captain Naihan W. Osborne, of the Thirteenth infantry, co be major, December 11, pt vice Mason, promoted to the Fourth imantry, First Lieutenant John P, Welland, regimeutal jartermaster, to be captain, March 31, 1574, vice weman resigned (Company K). Righteenih Regiment of Infantry—Lientenant Joseph K. Hyer, to be captain, May 4, 1874, vice Obristopher, deceased (Company C). Second Liew tenant, Charies B. Hinton to be frst heutenant May 4, 1874, vice Hyer promoted (Company i). , ‘Swenty-Orst Regiment o: Iniantry—First Lien- tenant Stephen B. Jocelyn to be captain, May 19, 1874, vice Silva resigned (Company b) First Lieutenant, John 1. Jobuson, regimental nartermusver, to be captain, May 29, 1874, vice el#on retired Irom-active rervice, (Company F} Becona Lieutenant Henry H. Pierce, to be fret heutenant, May 29, 1574, vice Jocelyn promoicd, qompany B}. twenty-second Regiment of Infantry—Captain Altred L. Hough, ofthe Thirteenth intantry, to be major, February 13, ls74, vice Wuistier, promoted fe tne FULL unfautry. APPOINTMENTS, Amspector Generai’s Leparitment:—Majer Abea- tom Baird, Assistant Inspector General, to be As~ @stant Inspector General. with the rana of Lieuten- ant Colonel, 0 date (rom June 13, 1867, im accor- @ance wit an act of Congress approved June i6, Asi. qQuartermaster’s Department:—Major William Meyers, Wuartermester, to be Quartermaster, with the rank of Major, to date (rom Jauuary, 15, 1867, ft take piace on the Army Register next beiow Muyjor Jonn G. Chandler, Quartermaster, in aceor- dance with the act of Congress approved Jane 20, wei, subsistence Department.—Colonel E. sniras, Assistant matence, Lo be Cominise: of Subsistence, with the rank of Brigadier General, May 1, 1574, we Haton, retired irom active service; Major Amos Keck with, Commissary oO! Subsistence, to be Asm stant Commissary General of Subsisten ‘WAL! Lhe rank o1 Lieutenant Colonel, June 23, 1s First Lieuvenant Char! Twellth intan- try, W be Commissary of Shousistence. with tne aptain, June 23, 1574, vice Small, pro- mote’ Major. Medical Department—Lieutenant Colonel Jede- dian H. Baxter, Chief Medical Purveyor, to be Chiet Medical Parveyor, with the rauk of Colonel, done 23, 1874, to fill an original vacancy under tue act of Congress approved June 25, 1574. Orduance Deparunent—dajor stephen V. Benet to be Criet of Ordoance, with the rank of Briga- die General, June 2, 1474, vice Dyer, deceased, Second Regiment of Artille: Robertson to be Majer, dune 17, 107 act of Congress approved June | Reappvinted # the Ninth Regiment of Cavailry— Charles Parker, late Captain a. the Ninth cavairy, wo ve Captain, April 29, 1374, with the lormer rank from Janvary 16, 1870, vice Unmireville, dtemissed (company K), RETIRED FOR INCAPACITY Fesuiting from jeng and faithiul servi: from wounds wu imjery received, trom disease cou- tracted or irom exposure in the jine oi duty, in coniormity With sections 16 and 17 of the act of August 3, 1861:—Captain Whligm Neison, of tie Twenty-lirst iniantry, May 29, 1874; Firss Lieu- tenant Joun Ty First mfentry, May 29. 1874. By direction of the President, ie conformity with section 12 ofthe act of suly 17, 1862, Brigadier Gen- @rai Anos 2. Ear, Con wstence, May 1, 1874; Colc Resigned—Najor James ihwelin, Surgeon, June 6, 1874; Captam Valentine MLO. Suva, Dwenty-trat iniantry. Commiesions vacated by new appointimente By Brigadier General Alexander &. Suiras, Com- missary General of SubAistence, lie commission as Womumissary General Of Subsistence, with the rank of Colonel, May 1, 1874; by Brigadier General s. Vv. Benet, Chief of Ordnance, bis commission of Major Of Ordnance, June 24, 1874; by Colovel Jedediah H, Baxter, Chiet Medical Purveyor, his commiasion as Chief Medical Purveyor, with the rank of luleu- tenant Colonel, June 23, 1874; by Lieutenant Colonel Absaiom Baird, Assistant luspecter General, his Alexander nerai oj Sub- under the | Houston street. NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, 1 [aubenfels, nis name having been 80 | ed by | = of Congress approved April 22, 1874. appear, and continued to do 80 twenty-two years. By order of the Secretary of War. | Three years ago it did not show Lge : A, yd THOMAS M. VINCENT, she coinplained of a vever® Dap JD (he back o! hex Assistant Adjutant General, head, and this pain Das been a creat ive her since. Tuesday evening, May 5, the be came on agai with greater virulence, trothing at THE LAND OF CANINE. | the mouti, growhag and pawing whea her bands | } were at )berty, constantly making an effort as li to eT oar | swaliow water, and when it was odfered to her she A Purther Shipment Across the River | would cremible and become very m' agitated, | making every effort to tree herself trom those Styx and More Dogs “Asphyxed"—They | TOMINE ner und to bite them, then would grab the Die Easily—The Next Suffocation to ‘Take Place on Saturday. Humanity in our city is doing its best to rid itsell Of the pest ol loose and dangerous dogs. OMcial dog slaying goes surely on, its speed only retarded by the slow rate at which the brutes are brought in for destruction, Yesterday Captain Marriott | ; ’ despatchea 100 wongrel curs of various degrees of of ‘Squibb + oe depravity. Their taking of was by the vewly ap- | gate bs proved method of asphyxiation with carbonic acid | wholly ceased and the pationt dropped of inloa 5 the huge tauk, from which the air is ex- | quie! sleep which lasted two hours, and when she | § dba pad ett ter the -dogs waxened her inind "Vasa Nttie muddied,batshe soon | t hansted by two large pumps alter + G08 conversed rationally. Next day I orderea tnirty have its hatches battened upon them. They | graius of chloral to ve given every three hours, | okly 7 o d leit her to be watebed closely, and if spas: died easily, quickly, without violent resistauce, ai + aD 2 . 3 ‘ame, to give her the chloroiurm as belore, whica but witn unanimous protest against the ruthless | SNS. [ii sont forme. Lartived in about half curtailment of their bark, So perfect are the ar an hour and gave her two veaspooniuls more, 1 e ifthe dogs and 1u hall an hour anothsr teaspooniul, when sh usparuania OE Laan crawl ah of man, | became periectly quiet, Wakened as the might ! must die no lover of the four-100! AD,“ jore, but complained of Weariness, so T ordered yi, not even the head of the society With a name WO chioral to be en as 7 hag veer B,C ht in its operations to | No more rabid symptoms appeared, and pie jg lone oer Ten minutes auger the jutroduction of | now iM becter leah than ever, She bas tc years | the deadiy gus no sound or motion could ve per- looked sad and downeast, feeling indil grein: to | ceived in the death chamber; 1i8 iwmates were as eVerything, but now has a pelt, aPPY -eounren- lueless a8 those of their race who for centuries | &nce and takes as tively intel in © 4 giairs of | have been sacrificed to the curiosity oi strangers | itle as any one, One pamt i Wish LOM? Ke and that | we cuprdity t the celebrated | 1s, that m Uns class o1 disease paw’ d.¢e will bear abd tue cupidity of exhibitors @ u grotie det cano. and require much larger doses, “4d oftener re- | There ave now left at the pound 100 dogs taken eaten, than in miki cages, and the @isease must be im Tuesday and yesterday, but whose legal term bac tied witu til conquered. A PHYSICIAN. tor rescue by thelr owners had wot expired. They | ie i wil be wuitocated on Saturday, with all others | A Care for the Bite 07a Mua Dog. taken m season. Yet the city is infested by thou: | 7 ® HERAA.Dim pends of the useless, gowbed, uocared ior and | TO 82 Epiron or Tas HE Abs dangereus class of Vagrant dogs, Whose presence | Drink skullcap tea torty daye; talf a pint warm in our streets ts a constant menace ol hydro- | gt night, vali a pet coldcin the morning. Every | third day omit the tea ated take one tabiespooniul ‘about the same time, this ppenprenen would re- © i teeth, After a while the spasin ¢ Would relax aud she would become more quiet. Not knowin formidave disease, and having used chioroform © and chloral hydrate with great success in conges | tuve, convulsive and Spasmiodic diseases, I deter- |. jped to give them @ thorough and persistent ‘The drst evening | gave two teaspooniuls uv chioroiorm, Which very much miti- Jn hati an hour Ul gave two tea- | phovia, SIX other pounds im otuer parts oi tue city might in a short Ume make @ notadie impres- | of spur; serler diet, sion on this Objectionable population; bac though ‘ a ‘ ip Marr.ot’s operations do not rapidiy di- PARSONAL EXPERIENCE. © inish Whe dog nuisance they no doubt put an end i UR aes some ven’ whic h weuld otherwise be finished Unnecessary Cruelty. by the police piste! aitd recorded in the list ot mad! To me Epiror or THE HERALD: dogs shot. ays | Some days ago a little inoffensive black and tan Dogs Killed Yesterday. | dog was lying on the sidewalk in East Twelfth | OMcer McCiemarid, of the Eleventh precinct, ; street, A valiant policeman came along, drew his | everua No. 396. E revolver and shot the dog. it got up and ran, when | shot a mad dog yesterday morning #6 No. 2.East | revolves Abel th, without Killing it He then elated | | ip and leit it to die, It Jay jor half an hour in the | A mad deg was killed yesterday by “Officer | greatest agony. A policeman in Greenwich ave- | Retliey, of the ‘Twenty-ninth precinct, at No, 097 ue also clubbed @ black and tandog and left it Sixth avenue to die. At eleven 0’ lock A. M. yesterday Ulcer Hickey, | 1. Gone Suggestion froin Texas for Our O! Lhe Seventeenth precinct, shot @ wad dog in iront of No, 2i2 Kust Tweuth street. | Authorities, Officer Doyle, ol the Seventh precinct, shot & [From the San Antonio (texas) Herald}. taad dog iat night at No, 2 Pixerstreet. | i i Aan ae At 9X 0'Ch just evening 4 mad dog was shot We nouce by our sprightiy pamesake in New | rst street and Fith avenue, York (the New YORK HERALD), that the City Coun- | cil is scratching itseif bald to find out the best way | to kill the dogs, or, in the language of the poet, | “send them to the bappy land of canine.” As we | will soun have to grapple with the same question | here, we tender New York our sympathies and , | corner ef Forty ‘Thy Dog War in Newark, Yesterday a woman named Mrs. Mary Smith ap- peared at the Newark police station and made complaint that @ mestiff belonging to Mr. Charles P. Molanney mad bitten her little girl suggestions. Severely, and tue owner bad remsed to kul the | We have heard somewhere that a hair of the dog dog. Pokcemen were sent, but the dog was found | Will cure its bite, wich is the ovject to be accom secured, and Mr. Moilwuney declared he was com- Plisned. This idea nay be carried out, but how Peuled to keep the animal in his place in order to | 40vut the peion or Ro-valt dogs? They have munis guard against thieves and boyish depredators, It suggented, bas Ie is too-riakys. Boopla wane to | seems several Otuer Children have been bitten by rf ther children until the railroad gets uere, i the bruce, and visions of hydrophubia are naturally | Witty the heartbroken parents can readze sone. haunting the mtads of parents. Mrs, Smita deter- Sell darlings. I adul ant | mined to take the law in ber Own Rands 20d $100t Pee oe ane ee nee Oe aarreGan’ ay Bowen | the dog. She got a gun, but could not get it t0 20 | Shooting is still more risky. fhe police are hot ai | off. So the dog stul lives, and Mrs. Sumithis almost fooq spots, The candidates are vecoming thick crazy herseli. | now, and just sappose one or two of | them should o¢ eiected by the bullet for | Hydrophobia Developed After Twenty~ | 110 jong term. OF suppose. some stranger | five Years—Cured by Chloroform and ) carry oi with him to his home a small lead mine Chiloral Hydrate. | ana Se pcos reminiscences, Beare: wou't ue " é | stand tre or hold water, or whatever the appro- | To ray Eptror oF THE HERALD:— ptiate provero may be. Catching and impound. | One may go into the highways, byways and lanes ,ng is too costly, particularly as the poiice need | of medical research and opinion in regard to the ey Peete Rh Alte et en been | ” n suggested, but tinless it 1s @ sbOtgun it cause, origin, inception, period of Incubation and | hover eifective. Besides, it destroys the historic symptoms of bydrophooia, and will find that there — beauty o} our city to nave dogs travelling around isa great varlety of opinion. Belore proceeding Mine cid Pardini phd orseee arciered Sia F . | It bas been 8 OW away an to give the details of a most singular and interest- je ve cue dogs tere; but then we Could not carry | ing case that recently came under my observation our keographical position. along, and without it we | and treatment, I wili give the statements of some Would be @ sort Of & Seguin of a place. , few physicians and surgeons, whose opinions ana | V¢ #ive lv up. observations are entitled to puolic respect:—Dr. | Samuel D. Gross, of Philadelpuia, says:—‘-How the | A MERCENARY BRIDEGROOM. disease originates in the dog, one of the animals | in which it is generated spontaneously, | 4 Poor But Unscrupulous New Yorker 18 not ascertained—tt is all conjecture.” | Captures a Boston Belle—The Old Gen-~ Dr. John Erichsen says:—“When originating | tleman to the Rescue—How He Induced de novo its causes are exceedingly obscure ;’? His Son-in-Law to Leave His Bride. 80 that we are in total ignorance on this point. One day last week an elderiy, dignified gentle- But as to the animals in which the poison is | M40, with his wife and daughter, arrived in New spontancensly generated no difference of opinion York and put up atthe Fittn Avenue Hotel. The exists, of which I may mention the dog, cat, wolf, | Sentieman, whose name, tor sufficient cause, itis fox, jackal, badger, and even the horse and pig, | Deedless to mention here, is a highly respected gems | Division street gir't 4 ae night in the - + Bud Drose his egy aI yo, saz Kighth avenve, be out for rife pracr jorbes With her mouth and hold on With Rife Association’s rar any successfal treatment for this | its ninth stree spoopiuls more, and in filteen minutes the spasins at the F evts added were several costly spittoons. | patronized the concern they | arrest. | tu custody by Officers ver and Sullivan, of the j WYacture of the thigh and other injuries received | tne false representations that tiey were passen- eS So JULY Y% % , Paw JULY % .0674.—TRIPLE SHEET. y IEEE TS ae a érepidatton, with nis face bandaged. not befaworable to the com/ort or convenience of | ue LS Gatton, Jedical’ treatment at Dis the laster, On Sunday morning last a squad of nine | He had Yet Mie Mull since the ~ @eteetives was ordered to make a raid on the gam- | this ponth. It appears that he was attacked blers, who are beginning to iniest the beach at | by avoman named rrences teary aed | UBSophisticated visitors, 1c trauxpired, however, Mist Was in the act of rising from tue geound he pe harnenpe Lorry See ema eaetl of the onions Oe rowues fas thrown back by the aid of Julia O’Connor, my Bottied of the propose ge oan | Both these women were under bail to keep the Bihaged to get of. Suspicion fell upon the ofll- / peace for an attack on the same man previously. . cers, aud the cansed them to a i sonal Guard, 8. N. ¥., Will | Bear for examination, the near Was conduetey Zuatice-Leonayd jasned ® Warrant fur-the arreas Of are to-day, at the Nauonal | feprivaue It was usserted that one of the omer i i es, at Creedmoor, y el an early train for the island in — aventy montis old, living with | morning, and he had sent a messenger to warn STATEN ISLAND. neat Sn aia r Leach, oach last evenin 2% Stone street, fell out of a the Commissioners retesecd rua ithe devedives Patrick Dona ‘and was almost instantly Lyn { could not keep seeret their orders they coud ape | The Staten Island Railway Company's steamer seeh wR At, ores, Oe MO MA Base nami a hte post duty might i carening ethan. ‘The , Josephine made a biuefisuing excursion to Sandy akpown be @ved im the left arm last night by | decisious were reserved. Tne utmost auxecy pre-,| Hook yesterday. with the airectors of the terry on 4, corner ot Third avenue and FIty- | yaiis among the detectives concerned i the case,'| board. Among the party were Vaptain J. H. Vander- | pending the announcement of their sate. From | bilt, Mr, Dwight Townsend, Mr. G, BH, Appleton and # Thursday evening reunion will be held | experience the authorities appear 10 Jean tomars others. treet, ,e Training Schools, No. 47 East Tenth | big arr phir sey changes 1m.the PLA ian! flagpole, 100 feet high, with gold letters bes ,*o-night, at eight o'clock. All interested 1M | the department, | indicating the points of the compass and a weather 1 shools are invited to attend. | vane, has been erected on the bank of the Kili von ie Comptroiier’s ofice among the new orna Kull, tn front of the Sailors’ Snug Harbor, at New Over | | Brighton, upon which the American ensign is dis- acu is suspended a placard:—"Spit on the floor, emcee ere | gia Sa dais The iinprovements here bave cost &# the spittoons are oniy jor ornament.” ‘The Court of Pardons held their final session for 8OU% $2,000, * Assistant Alderman Poilip Cumisky fecls him- | the summer term yesterday, when five convicts | Sell aggrieved at being mentioned in yesterday's | were pardoned and a reduction made in the sen HERALD as a referee in a prize tight. He says that | tences of abont a dozen others. ee fifty miles of tue spot. i The Board of Aidermen of Jersey City having The Jury itn the Trial of William FLY eg eee ee one ote yoctenday | persisted in thelr refusal to elect city ofcers. Al- | Baker Disagree and Do Not Find » minine: atwourth oahu (an sixry-aieh Hasse Tee kege rth heading eat ade Board, wl ap- | Verdict=The Poll Nine to Thr and Was dangerously injured about tue head. | The Boardateublie, Works aoApiae City nave Aguin the Court of General Sesstons was filled in ‘Two boys, named respectively Dennis and Timo | yeryseq thusfar to Menanaibust: she ontle tn’ the | fair deflance of the burning heatas on the previous thy O’Connel, living at No. 1,145 Second avenue, | First precinct station though repeatedly asked to | day, and che neighborhpod of the open windows were severely scalded last mgit by a kettle of | go so by the Police Commissioners. which looked ‘into the City Halt Park and were voting water failing ou them at their residence, Jackson Peterson, a colored man, has been ar- | dimly by the scant foliage, One of our recent real estate reports described rested and lodged in the Flemington, Hunterdon | were baunted with the perspiring officials certain property involved inalaw suit as being { County, sail, on charges of being implicated in @ | and lawyers wio frequent the court. situated at the southwest corner of 125th street | geries'oi incendiarisms, He coniessed to firmg the , Every. man strove for. ®& breath’ of air ane Ces f a feat on should have ap- | yarn of is employer, Mr. Johu Holcomb. | and even Judge Sutherfsnd seemed as if he were Nee din a fe Betta piace dt eaten The Court of Errors and Appeals yesterday | poiling but good naturedly, for the learned Judge Macy are undergoing alterations, under tue super- | granted @ divorce for ltie between Elien M. Close | qoes occasionally indulge in @ joke, The case of actirip Wilham Baker, the colored man who was charged intendence of Mr. W. G. Steinmetz, Assistant aq) SRIZOSEPY Close. thus reversing the se erated pervising Architect of ‘the Treasufy Departimeut, | that un allowance be tude irom the estate of ine | With outraging the tittle Italian girl, Emilie Bad- to be used by the United States Assay ollice, | husband for the support oJ the appellant, Elien M. | innolli, was resumed yesterday morning at eleven Efward Conway, of Providence, R. 1, employea | Close, | o'clock. A large crowd had gatherea to wit- on board the steamer Doris, of the Neptune line, in consequence of their utter failure to attend | ness the sceue and it would seem that there tell overboard yesterday afternoon, at pier No. 27 | to their swora duties the agitation has com- | ty q morbid feeling in the breasts of many to gaze North River, and was drowned. The body was re- need again in Newark looking to the abolish- ¥ covered and tue Coroner notified vo hoid an in- mene of an Excise Board. For ‘years it has been | (P the Progress Ms scrap aaa sod hey wn quest, the byword and laughing-stock of the town. By | Crowd into @ cours room and. struggle for The Washington and Lee University, of Vir- | its Mattention the city 1s cheated ont of large , piaces, though the tiermometer may be at blood ginia, have recently conierred on Mr. Vincent L, | {hel ger iceusesor mote, poe euers Seu Whether | neat. ‘The victim of the outrage, a httle sallow. Bradford, late President of the Philadelphia and ‘A bul of indictment ies been prepared against a | faced girl, wearing a Diack dress, with a rose at Trenton Railroad Company, and a distinguished member of the Board of Chosen Freeholders of her waist, aud having piercing black eyes, witn jurist, of Philadelphia, une degree of Docior of her back hatr braided in small braids, sat with her Law. Hudson county, to be presented to the next Grand i416 sriend Celeste Rosavalli, who was dressed A meeting of the Board of Apportionment was Se eA tETOcun oe Althouse topertora gore | like Emilia, tu the small b called for yesterday afternoon, at the Comptroller's | jor him by contract Without auy remuneiation to Teerved for jemales, | hall, @ dozen Omice, but adjourned, alter Waiting a considerable | the county. Attorney General Gilcurist nas been | WHOM | were groupes Around the | children, time for the Mayor. The ovject of the meeting | CAlled upon to prosecute in the case. | piaced before the bur, a Very decent looking col- was to apportion ihe sum of $47,500 to the Com. | ‘fhe Mercer County Board of Freeholders held Ged man and his ycung wife, a pleasant and miss:oners of Excise foc the payment by them of | their regular monthly meeting yesierday, rather refined looking woman, who ware 2 EYpey salaries. |.when the County Treasurer made the S!faw hat and had light feasures, sat bes! er There was music yesterday afternoon at Tomp- | soyowing report:—Recelved during ihe past 'uscsnd and seemed to Ha Was Seaared to him by kins square by the Central Park band, under the | PP ean one a Ria; | Roem end exrreseiin, TakiGe Oe the Dan ARs 9 | Month, $87,147; cash paid out inst month, $81,502; Hisimict Attorney Allen sat, his whole face ob- direction of H. B. Dodworth, The programme was | balance on hand, $5,644. The Treasurer Was or- | gcured by an immense pair of spectacles, of the usual length and contained selections from dered to borrow inoney (not exceeding $10,00v per and looking down in profound thought while the the best music of Strauss, Ambrose ‘Thomas, Kuh- | 02th) to meet current expenses. | Counsel tor the delence, Mr, x 8. Bone! ek by her, Gungi and others. The occasion attracted a gE S06 EHS { the sive of the prisoner whoa! ecb io! jpered, great crowd of tne east side population to the | THE BEAN SMUGGLING OASE, | with his counsel and then looked steadfastly at square, PES eae | the jury witn a Brave COUrAEE for an Ppgent The Distric ttorney’s Argument and | Tlic odds were really tremeidous againgt un- James E. Horton was arraigned before Justice | 14. yuacers canseeerks descr of the | fortunate man aud many persons if the crowded Murray yesterday cuarged with an effort to qbtain a s' | court who watched his sdemeanor whispered to money by false pretences. He presented a bill of ary. | each otner that he did not look iike nor act like In the great silk smuggling case, which has oc- | a guilty man. $10 to T. Lyman & Co., brewers, for advertising in FA 2 ‘The first witness called was a lady named Mrs, Gouldiing’s Uity Directory. As the firm nad never | Cupied the attention 61 the United States District | Gham, of No. 144 West Twenty-first street, who caused Horton’s | Court at Trenton for several days pust, Mr. ascended the stand and impressed every one of Juage Murray held him to bail in $500 10 | Keagby, the istrict Attorney, requeszed the the jury by her good face and ladylike manner. answer, | Court to charge as follows yesterday :— | She'‘came to testify, as it was understood, that soon set ge ne nadinperdbad apne llwtarntedlbapin ort cam First—Vhat it the goods i pny were wholly Metres: ae SEP LTOni the: ney betove tha * — id ec’ uence doing 60me Wor A gaged in a quarrel with some persons in Hariem | merchandise intended {or sale, and the purchaser | trme “bade beea committed, and that he and, as he alleges, was stabbed 1u the abdomen by | and imiporter knowingly and wilfnlly neglected | wag to come to her residence and Anton Kollman, of No, 33 Essex street. Kollman | 0 procure @ tribilcate invoice, certified by the have some money paid him for his work. The escaped ar:est until yesterday, when he was taken Consul, as required py acto! March 4, 1863, and — eyjgence would have been most material 1! it could brought vein to the United States trom England | have been given for the prisoner, but it was ruied Tenth precinct, and held by Judge Bixby tO await | Without such invoice, they were imported con- out, Baker had stated when on the stand that at the result of the injurtes, | Gere bt Heh egcdeeee the fourth section of the act | the moment he was arrented he was on his way'to | ol duly . Mrs. Graham’s to receive his money, and it wasa Coroner Eickhoff was yesterday called to the | swond—That if such goods, being wholly mer- | strong polut Jor the delence to get this lady's tes- Morgue to hold an inquest on the body of Mary | chandise intended lor sale, were packed in Lon- | timonvin. jhe next witness called was @ man Derockle, a widow Woman, filty-eight years of age | don 1n traveMing trunks, with intent to Jaisely rep- numed Barker, a newspaper carrier, @ man a bi in Ireland, died fi | resent them to be personal efiecis, and were | of ood character, who also keeps a and born in Ireland, who died from compound | yrought to the Cnited states in such truuxs under | stand. in the neighborhood of Spring. and Greene streets, He swore that on the day on Or ine oth inst, by accidentaily luing down & gers? baggage and so ‘auded, not Leing put on the | which the ciime Was committed he cnapged a Hehe OF stars at Harry Will's saloon, 26 East Suip's maniiest a8 merchandise, they were im- | dollar bill for We prisoner @t abvut Nulf-past nine Dene ae he Trane ort a Aaferd employed as cook. | porved contrary to law and are liable to forieiture | or ten o'clock. All tne testimony for the prosecu- a barat phage | under the act of July 18, 1568, tion bad agreed Cai the crime was committed at The business manager of the fippodrume de- | Third—inatif any of the packages containing | Nu, 38 Amity street, at about half-past nine o'clock cided yesterday to further postpone the departure | 8UCh gooils consisted wholly of mercliandise in- | oj the morning, and the witnesses for the defenze f the ball til eleven o'clock to-<d: ‘The | tended for sale were falsety represented to be per- had supported the prisoner very well in ort alloon un Clock to-day. | sonal effects, with the intent that they shouid be | his statements. Then, for rebuttal, Mr. allen ascension will be positively made at that time, un- | received on the ship as such and landed under the | gajled jor the prosecution the little girls less a rain storm should prevent. ‘Ike desire of general permit fur the januing of personal effects ex- | Emiha and Celeste, and the former testified to Mr. Barnum and his manager seems to ve to have | empt irom duty, and were landed under such permit | having seen a wound or burn on the back of the it take piace in the qmetest possible manner, They | without apy bagzage aeciarations or any comma- | prisoner's neck. Alter this Mr, Abranam 8, Hum- Geclare that these experiments are solely m the | nications to tne omcers o1 the ship or tue customs | me) summed up in a very able manner for the Bridget Costello, of No. 55 Bax ar street, fell in day altern yon and broke her Andrew Gatley, of No. 225 F The Fifth regiment Nat’ Ann Daly, a child t rents at No, The uso NEW JERSEY. “WAS HE IDENTIFIED?” | shavowed | | | Interest of science, and are not a part of the Hip- | olticers of the nature of their contents prior to qefence and called the jury’s attention podrome performance. such landing, they were lauded without @ permit | to the fact that the ‘entire evidence Quite a lively and serious fight between Mary | #€alnSt tue iftieih section of the act of 1859, apainst the prisoner rested upon what That the poison is contained in the saliva and 4d Wealthy Boston merchant, and was visiting other secretions of the mouth and tauces—most New York on the eve of sailing with his tamily to | probably in the salva—is the opinion of all | Europe tor a brief season. The daughter, an only | authors, and that it 18 conveyed into the human | Child, is a beautiiul and highly accomplished belle | subject on the teeth of the animal there is no Of little more than seventeen summers, and | difference of opimion. On the period of incubation | S!though, in the estimation of her ioving mamma, | ff} there seems to De noUniversallty of opinion or ex- | Was thought to be as yet too young to have beaux, | perience. Dr, Gross says:—‘The period of latency | bad for more than a year past her snare of ad- of this disease varies Irom a few weeks to several Mreré. Tne favored one, however, was a resident montbs, and in eighty-nine cases analyzed | Of West Sixteenth street, in this city, by vr. Blachfora and br. Spier, of Troy, the | 8nd her regard for him did not lessen average period was abont seventy days. when sbe found out that his whoie fortune con- The minimum in twenty-three cases was sisted in his good looks, agreeable manner and the thirty days and under and the maximum in six store Clothes ne wore. Less than @ year ago she cases Was Upwards of 200 daya, Then,” he says, | bad Jormed bis acquaintance, and since that time | “in the only two cases of hydrophobia tnat I have | @ Clandestine correspondence had been kept up | ever seen the disease appeared in one at the end | between the parties, During the monetary panic | of four weeks and in the other after nine months | last tall her lover was thrown out of employment from the period 01 inoculation.” According to Dr. | i this city and sought Boston in the hope oi ob- 2) e e taining a situation, Where he could at the same Jouu Hunter the extremes range from thirty day$ time have an occasional interview with the object vo eighteen montis, Dr, Bardsley, an English | of his heart’s auoration. The visit to Boston de- | writer, rejere wo an instance where the disease did ™Monstraved to lum the unpleasant face that situa- noi show itseli for twelve yeara. Dr. Erichsen | WOUS were about ue scarce iD that city as in this, and, to make matters worse, the lather of the Says that ihe perlod that intervenes between the | young man’s inamorata, last February, per- bite aud the occurrence of the disease 13 consider- ceiving what was in the wind, and not | abie. Dr. Meade relates the case ola lady who got relishing @ poor, impecunious do-nothing for a the disease fiileen months aiter tae bite, Elliote son-in-law, unceremouiously lorbid him tue house son says that the average time that and requested that all Jurtier communication be- elapses between the injury and the symp- | tween-the lovers should cease, Cease it did ior tins is irom siX weeks to three months. tue, witil a few days ago, when the Boston party Tue Duke of Richinond, who was bitten by — arrived in the city, But our nero—tf a hero he can | @ tame fox, took the disease seven weeks | be called—who had previously returned to New afier the injury. There are eminent authors bes York, Was duly informed ot the mteuded visit and | | sides these mentioned Who say that six, seven, | with @ beating heart awaited ner coming. The tweive and ven filleen years may intervene be- | afternoon aiter the guests arrived at the Fifth | tween the infliction of tie wound and the mani- | gvenue, a meeting Was planned between the cou- | festations Ol tue syiuptoms., im the case of Wil- ple of lovers, and in jess Lime than it takes to ree liam MeVorauck the period of incubation ts stated | fect upon the cousegnences of such an action an in the papers ‘o lave been three weeks. Dr. elopement was agreed upon. And eio) Gross, lu tis answers to the HERALD correspon- the couple did, and through the intervention of a | dea, says “ihat ihe period irom incubauon ww the | Presvyterian divine, who sermonizes up town to development of the disease—and of which he gmail audieuces these sultry Sundays, Miss 0. speaks knowingly in two cases—was abuuttwo hau changed her name to Sirs. B- , and placed | moutis.” Dr. Hamilton says to the HERALD cor- her jate, ti not her fortune, in the keeping of respondent that the development afier moculae | another. The marriage over the couple returned | tion may take place from wirty to lorty days, | to the Fifth Avenue—unknown to the parents of Now, irom the different accounts given above of the bride of course—and agreed to meet the fol- ta period of development of this disease, differ- lowing day to discuss What course to pursue (or ing 80 widely, What conclusions mast the public tne rest their lives. The bridegrooin’s refiec- | necessarily come to? Simply thatit may beac- tions were not the happiest in tue world, tor, veloped in turee weeks or im fiity years, though the husband of arich wife, a pauper ‘bim- or that ali that occur after @ certain time are vot | sell, he could hardly hope ior mercy at the hands cases of hydrophobia, “When doctois disagree oi an indignant father. His chums, bowever, 10 who shall decide?” 1 think that question had bet- whom he coniided the secret of his Joys ter be Jeft alone, or uDti] some geniusappears Who and woes, advised him to brave ‘it can demonstrate the period beyouu which tne out, and to ask the old man’s forgive- | poison cannotextend. The case above mentioued ness, Which the next morning he quickly resulved came under IDy treatment May 1, 1874. The patient is a jady thirty-five years of age, short, iigat Weight, marred apd the mother of three or four | to do. Calling at te hotel he met bis stern Jather-in-law, and in a jew words mace known the object of nis visit. The old gentleman did not | commission 48 Assistans Inspector Geueral, Wita children, and by occupation stewardess on a Tave, hor swear, bor blow the Jellow’s brains out the rank Of Mejor, June 20, 1674, amer plying between this port and Kio Janeiro. | with a pocket biunderbus, as one might suppose; | By Lieutenant Colonel Amos Beckwith, Assist Her symptoms were those Of ordinary chuls and ‘ put listened to him in @ businessike way and re- ant Commissary General of Substste his cot- fever. Nex day she felt quite Well, but the third quested the pleasure of his visitor's compauy for | Bssion a8 Commissary of Subsistence, wie tue day the chills and fever returned, so I diagnosed it a walk. The latter compiled and ina short time | raok of Major, June 23d, 1874. by Major Williaw | tertiary intermittent lever and prescribed for ber they Were engaged in a most contdeatial and | Meyers, Quartermuster, lis comimission a8 Quarta as 1 do in ail such cases. Next morning — spirited conversation in tbe purlor 0! anotuer of | master, with the rank of Major from June 4, 18 I found she had complained of chiis our uptown hotels. Only a few words wei eg | to June 22, 1874. By Major James } rion, | at short intervals all day, could Dot bear a draught , sary to decide the question of iorgiveness. Atter | Second artillery, bis commission as Captain Seq@ond — Ol air, felt dni), sed, wanted her room darkeacd aiundry expostulations on the part oi tae party of | aitiliery, June 17, 1874. | and to be left aione, aud when left, would gecout | the frst part the party of the second part was DIED. | 0) bed aod stand 4s itin amaze, This contunued | inde pair witn the forbearing father-inJaw | Major General George L. Hartsnf, United States until ten k P.M. when sae trembied, jooked | to the office of a neighboring Justice of the Peace, | Army, retired, at New ¥ city, May 16, 18743 anxious and became Very mach agitated, moving | and there, in cousideration ef a few thousaud tol. Brivadier General Alexander B. Dyer, Cniet a! | from side to At en o'cleck she began to | Jars, a iree pass to Envope and a receipt ior out Ordnanc at Washington, v. ( May 20, > ciawilike adog pawin edirt, biting the bed- | standing board and tailors’ bills tncurred since jor Levi H. Holden, United Sta Army ciothes, th fad regaia sms, $9 thacit re- the panic, was indy to sign a paper w absent tired, at Vineland, N. J May 12, 1ei4; Captain, quired three and tour to bold her; wold bark ana | himeelf trom the country for an tudellnite period olin Chrisiopher, of the Eighteenth wianiry, as? growl, Shupping her N together, and with and never again to seck an interview with lis orgville, S.U.. May 4, 1874. great violence and superhuman effort snap at and , newly made bride. ‘This busi being settles, DISMISSED. { aticmpt to bite dose around her, After observing | the bridegroom sailed for Europe on the next aptain J. Lee Rum inth cavalry. April } these symptoms, | remurked to per (she Was steamer and the jather, wife and daughter re- % Isi4; Second Jicuienant Frank A. Page, United", present) that she nad every appearance of hydro- | turned to Boston, the pretty bride to repamt her Avates Arm, 1874. Phovia, aud the atiendunis replied that some | Jolly and, after due time, to get divori phe at- omcers ) aged in the foregoing’! Bad made the same sugyestion pdeiore, | fair has occasioned much gossip in quart where prder to the compan) ich they have suc- ) wail that she had complained very much of being the young bridegroom was well known in New ceeded in the natural course of promotion or thirsty, but, when water was oifered, she could York; but it is hardly probable that the soston wntment, or to which they have been agsigi no} drink it, aud would choke and gasp ior breath; | people will ever be any the Wiser as tar as the par- | y competent anihority, Accepiance or non- 40d Wiel Water Was running from the taucet in| ties are concerned, unless it 1s bronght pron Acceptance of appoinuments, and, Incase of accept- | ab adjolving room would be Very much disiressed | nently beiore the coaris. ance, the birthplace of the oMicer appointed, nig | and Fequest them to stop tt, Tasked ber mother | 7 Oe | Se ANd residence when appointed, aud mus foul | i her daughter had ever been bitten by a doy, and, | AROB Dame, correctly written, Wul im all cases be rompsy reported to the Adjutent General. tua ae OF the deat of an officer it is hereby r the duty of his im late commanding oilicer to report the fact at re direct to this vitice, star se, date place. oficer away irom bis command 4) anuer treatment, te medical o im P will iorward the report u® above re. not under treatment by au army leer, the report will be made by ony Ving cognizance of the incwy MEMORANDUM. | Jonn Rziha, @ captain in tue Fourth regiment of Mfantry, Wul hereafver be known and recognised @ the army of the United States as Jon Laue ” ! genuime case of hydrophobla, She then remen alter thinking a moment, she said yes, twenty-five . aus 1 then assured her that this was a | yeare ago. JULY 7, 1874, To Tay Epitor oF Thr Heratp:— 4 You will greatiy oblige those who are onfortu- | bered, and related to me the circam seid when her daughter was ten years rr a nog ges — in ae ey p ying wWitu it, nately compelled to use the Harlem Railroad cars win he suddenly snapped at her right cheek. py pays '. | The wonwd Was very Soon healed, and nomore PY Calling the attention of the Health Oficer wo the | Notice was taken ‘of it unui tne next Au- ; Hitoy condition of the tunnel from Thirty-fourth to | gust (the month in whic she was bitfen) Forty-second street, The stench generated by the | when a brigut red spot would — gise | filthiness of vhe place must be Jatal to those wuo | upon the very piace, surrounded by a dark, purple | bse it. circle of ut two inches IM diaineter, the whole Aithough the Vanderbilts get sixty per cent becoming tard and very painful, The mother said , More than iv charged by avy other city road they she applied an ordinary poulth to it and ina few do (he ieast to accommodate Lue vadiic. Weeks Jk Would pil @O AWAY, Dub bie ueat year, UNION CLUB, | children seetas to have preity gener i ‘ourth—Tnat If the claimant purchased goods In | two little girls—mere chilaren—have sworn Brannan and Julia Brewster, joint occupants of @ | London without advising the seer that they were | to and that fe did not believe that tuey were floor in the tenement house No. 96 Washington | for exportution, or obtaining triplicate invoices, | guilty of perjury, but that negroes all looked alike street, took place last night at about half-past | 20d caused them to ve seut to lus lodgings aud | tochilaren, and then cited several authorities to ten, The combatants pounded each otver | Packed in unmarked second hand traveling | siow tuat the evidence of children, whose tm- Tight heartily witn beer mugs, two deep | WUuusS, and took them to the steamer and caused | agination was likely to be worked upon, and who ugly though not dangerous’ gashes on them to be carried to Jersey City and landed ag iis | were subject to the coutrol of older persons, their respective heads being tne result. They Personal effects, wholly concealing irom ail per- guould be received with extreme caution, ‘The were locked up in the Twenty-seventa precinct | $0n8 the nature of their contents up to the time of | fate of the prisoner hung upon their verdict station for appearance at the Tombs this morning. | Janding, and escaping from tne vessel secretly and and that of his wife and ciild, and he, therefore, in haste as soon a8 the discovery was made and | begged of them to be cautious in @ case which he he was threatened with arrest, the goods amount- | peeved to be nothing more than oue of mistaken LONG ISLAND. ing in vaine to $16,500, and being intended for | identity. Saie, these Jacts are cogent evidence that heim- | Mr, ‘Kien, the Assistant District Attorney, then ported them with intent to evade the payment of | summed up briefly for the prosecution, alter whicn The snipe season has commenced on the south | duties. Judge Sutnerland cuarged the jury, and when Fy th,—That if the claimant did in any manner tuat body of men ieit te box they Seemed rather ine, Ss SO SrERS oh StS BevING RdOd Stores, bring such goods into te United States’ with de. | Grarwndinved nit not ‘scupeiod: by the evidence, ‘The bay business at Atlanticvilie has been nearly | sign and intent to deiraud, tuey are liable to for- | sudiiuing up and charge. At halt-past five o'clock ruined by the closing of the inlet there, anda | feiture. after @ long and weary Waiting and discussion of Ju ixon then made an elaborate cna | three houra and a half they came back less Heaps i the baymen are already seeking otuer mente dencliow as Papeete Fee, ID | satisfied with theinselves than when they went pay During the whole long hot day, with not a vreat Edward Nedenbach, engaged inthe mill of Mr. That the case was of importance to both the | or aire the brave wile: of the accused sat in Kock, at Hicksville, met with a serious accident | Claimant and the government, and the Court courtroom, gasping, as it were, for air, but she esterday. He was alone in the mill at the time | ‘Merelure interred that, be the verdict either for would not desert ner post. She bad no food x y~ © | or against the claimant, one side or the other frum an early hour im the morning, and @nd had just commenced work. when by some , would carry the cage up for review. The importa: | sat it out patienly and Without ’ mur- Incans his left sleeve was caught in the machinery, | tion and efiry of merchandise are two distinct mer. Sometimes her head tell forward and his arm was drawn in untti it was literally | acts—the former ending where the latter begins. — from sheer Jatigue, and all this time her husband, ‘ound of near the elbow. He ran toa neigh- | The Judge then proceeded to review the case in wio was shut upin the box, had nothing to eas. or’s, Where surgical assistance was immediately ; Getail, full particulars of which have already ap- ‘Towards tour o'clock (hia Woman, adhering to him procured, and it was lound necessary to make @ | peared in the HERALD, and then if the jury through good and evil report, went out—or, rather, lurther amputation in consequence of the splin- | were satisfied that there was ai understanding stole out—to get sume reireshment tor Baker, and tered condition of the bone, | between Bean and the ofticers, as alieged, to de- procured him a sandwich, which she hanaed About one o’cluck yesterday, while the family | !raud the government, then the declarations of through the bars and which he ate eagerly. were at dinner, a female sneak-thiet robbed the Howell and Livingston may be considered in | When the jury came in hts wile was nearly faint- ? reaching a verdict; but iJ the jury believed there ing, and as they stood up they were polled. They residence ot Professor Vierot, in Union Hall street, | was no understanding then those acts and decla- | had disagreed. There were nine for coaviction and Jamaica, Mme. Vienot, thinking that she heard | rations cannot be considered. He also charged three Jor acquittal. The wife of Baker watched gome one on the stairs, went into the hallway, | that the jury should first find waether claimant them every one Witi her eyes almost bursting from Where she encountered a German woman, rather | Possessed @ lraudulent intent or not. If he did their sockets, and when it was announced that shabbily dressed in black and carrying small | hot then the case should end there. If such in- they had disagreed she said to Counsellor Hum- satchel, who could apparently talk but litte Eng- | tent existed then the jury must inquire, “Were | mei:— lish, but who made a pretence that she had a little | the goods unloaded or delivered?” | “Thank God, they did not find him guilty—justice boy whom &he desired to send to the Professor's Mr. Lopes for claimant, noted exceptions to a , ts so very, very hard to find io this world.” school, and asked for @ circular, which she re- portion of the charge; after which the jury re- | Counsellor Hummel immediately asked that the ceived and departed. Shortly alterwara it was | Ured, and after being absent three hours returned | prisoner should be bailed, but District Attorney discovered that the visitor had been up stairs in | With a verdict as follows :—“That upon the intent Allen objected on tue ground that he had learned Mme. Vienot’s roora, and stolen from the burean ; to deiraud they could not agree. As regards the | of some new evidence. two watches, one gold and the other silver, valued | unloading or delivery of the goods they fuund for | Judge Sutherland refused the request. at $125. A pair ol gold bracelets, which also lay | the claimant, and against the government.” | And thas has ended the first trial of William upon the bureau, were not taken, and $26 in | _ ‘Me case will be brought belure the United States Baker, one oi the most curious in its relation to greenbacks, Whicu was in the upper drawer, were | Circuit Court ior review. | the question of mistaken identity ever tried In a also lett. oa criminal court of this city. HAVE THEY ELOPED? The Latest Newark Domostic Divertisse- | THE DEPARTURE FOR EUROPE. ment, Yesterday three steamers left this port for If the Beaver street gossips in Newark are to be | Europe, carrying with tuem 176 cabin passengers relied upon, and the general impression is that 0d a@ full complement of steerage passengers. Without plenty of fresh air to decarvonize the | they are in the present instance, atallevents, | The names of the vessels were as follows:—The blood and abundance of healthfal exercise to | Newark has been the scene of another elopment, | Calabria, Cunard line, McMeekar commander; create and maintain a vigorous circulation of the | tne story a8 it goes is as follows:—In Beaver Hermann, of the North German Lloyd line, and vital fluid no animal can long continue to enjoy street, for some vime, has dwelt Mr. David State of Virginia, of the State line. The Calabria pleasurable existence, Recognizing this great | Pioneer, having @ wife and one chiid, The wife | carried eighty-atx cabin passengers and $300,178 87 fact, and seeing that thousands among our grow- | is arather good looking brunette, They had a of specie; the Hermaun, flity-three cabin passen- ing-up children of both sexes are so circumstanced | 8Pare Toom, and into the spare room, as it gers, and the State o: Virginia, thirty-five cabin CONEY ISLAND. The Surf Bathing Yesterday—How the Children Enjoyed Themselves. in life that their parents or guardians cannot af | foksacr, Bala > gall gv kPa ga Leena a at led ig considered | Oy se ford to send their littie ones co country by trade ana has an inordinate passion for climb- er ove. thken, aud they never pet Neer tion recreations, charity is doing much in the | ing lofty steeples and flagstans, Once he caused sp Oh i pad the vessels leaving on that day will have all tueir Way of well managed picnics and excursions to | thousands of persons to suudder in Broadway and berths filled. i y is the lavorite day for enable these poor children to taste some of tue | Wail street by his daring ascent of Trinity church outdoor pleasures of summer Iife. And thatthe steeple. Frank, it 18 Said, used to invelgie Sr, public are convinced of the usefulness of such a Pioneer off to saloons, “lay him eut” and then go movement in bebalf of the rising generation im | home and make Jove to Mrs. Pioneer. A few weeks this city no better proof cau be cited than the | ago Frank left the house, and soon aiter Mrs, fact that large numbers o1 well-to-do families are | Ploneer started, as she said, to see her mother making unusta) efforts to nave thet children tn Philadelphia, Ste was to be One breathe the sweet, pure aw of the green flelds or two weeks. At the expiration of that time inhale the bracing breeze of the seaside. The | her husband wrote to haye her come home. series Of charitable picnics and excursions that He received a letter saying that she had ieft jong are being given for the enjoyment o! the elty poor | velore, alter bemg only aiew days at her motiers, lily infected | and said she was going to meet her husband i heads of jamilies with @ contagious emulation to | New York, She is still non est inventus, and 30 ts departure, and tiligreiore Saturday's steamers have nad for several Seasons past their best vertis engaged montns before the day of sailing. The opinion of the respective companies is that while Kuropean travel bas perceptioly fallen of, as com- pared with previous years, yet the demand Jor oerths shows that the pursuit of business and ihe pur- Suit Of pleasure surnish this year a very graulying and remunerative return to tose who have inves ed their capital in European steamship companies, ‘The spectacie at the respective docks of the three companies showed the usual interesting scenes of also do sometuing ior the amusement and | Jacobus, Hence the belief is that the two are EU ten ie Chane waa An the Hoare grin ot recreation of their own litte ones, This not quite as Much as a mile apart, ti 4 ue & eh tt ‘ale iP My accounts for the unusually large number ; ie hand and the drinking 0! le parting glass ol} chainpagne by the gentiemen. The supreme indir « ference with Which ail this emotion and convivial- of children Who might be seen on the Coney Imana | THE JERSBY SOHUETZEN PEST OLOSED, | ity was looked upon by the officers and crew was a beach yesterday disporung in the spirkiing, | eliveid Wave here and there among the bathers, res i elight Was In thelr wapect, and Intenee Katine. | _ The German Schuetzen Fest or shooting festival, | suggestion for tho cynically disposed that soul tion brightened the eros of these merry-making | Which began on the Fourth of July and has con. | Rut pass unheeded, oungelers, Who made the air re-ecuo their shouls | tinned with great ¢clat ever since, wi “Eh drjoyous exchement, while one wave Uigger tuan | the siokie Pas TANGY, inet arn | 4 FATAL AFFRAY, another swept their’ fragile forms in its foamy, Peete » last might with a | electric embrace. Both up and down the beach fine display of fireworks and agrand bail. Prom- On Tuesday evening Coroner Woltman received nent among the visitors who stayed more than a | tniormation that Peter Beck had died in Bellevue there were crowds of bathers beionging to both | sexes and of all ages and conditions in !ife, The | long while were @ score o! politicians, seekers | Hospital from the effects of @ wound in the abdo- men, On the Morning of the 24 inst., during a water and weather were in One condition, and the | after the lew fat oflces which become vacant in the or, overworked cilizens, neh and otherwise, of | County this fail. Prizes were distributed to a ew York apd Brookiyn seemed resolved to make | $Mail regiment of successtul marksmen, amount- | Quarrei in a drinking place corner of Sheriff and the best of the auspicious time, ing in, value to $2,000, | Stanton streets, Beck and a number of others had been drinking together, when Beck compiained ta ANOTHER JERSEY AMAZON, Peter Get, the barkeeper, that $19 had been taken Beard Torn Of by @ Furious from him, ‘his excited the anger of Oet, who Woman, caught up @ screwdriver and stabbed Beck in the arm. Oet repeated the blow, when the weapon The Police Commissioners of Brooklyn are de. | An extraordinary case came to light in the omce | few from the handie, and, the sharp edge striking liberating over the propriety of making changes | of Justice Leonard, at Jersey City, yesterday. A among te devectives, Which, I carried ont, Will | MAD ,named Joup D, Wiat eyrergd im A_greal Coney Island Gumblers—Brookiyn De- tectives and the Unpleas; n Ate | A Man tached to Their Last Raid. | Beck in the abdomen, inflicted a wound which re- sulted iataily. Oet, the bartender, was held to bau J 5002 Wy AWALL te resuli Of an lnVestauon,

Other pages from this issue: