The Sun (New York) Newspaper, August 29, 1872, Page 1

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| on the Herald the anme aa he has imposed on Digwost stories and f uaible way 1 over aeard, and make fe believe thy . sald the reporte flotitious drafta, Tauppose, on which to negotinte By the time the fraud would ated that we would be jer of Asia Mi lor the banker to f ve of chasing us Up THR RONDERY IN ASTA MINOR, anid the reportor, party claimed to have He can tell the HENRY STANLEY'S EXPLOIT. IDENCE FROM “the recoipt of Dr. « diary and letters have be dein Bowland they could be Linposed t Jous handweiting professing to be Dr, Living= ea, Fedo," sald Now. Lo ters and you van see half a dozen different | ings, a0 different t were written t was able to get writing, either b ror of Persl wo to the ex) CORRODORATIVE FE LOUIS NOB, Stanley andy: Wed of valual K over those let- 4 Discovery of Dr. Liv your own atater the same man, smarkable disclosures of Mr. Louls old of any of Dr. Livi ntalned tn his co Ne SUN of the 24th 1 us to send a reporter to visit me, and have # porsonal inter Our reporter readily fou e's parents, which Is situated and shortly after Mr. Nc ‘Tho residence isa plain and cc tory house, and fairly compares with the old-fashioned Long Island homes. met with a ready welcome, and soon was J in conversation with Joct of his visit, HI. Noe of Sayville, L. 1. muntoation published tn Inst., determin Mr. Noe at his hi view with him ley to the editor on our arrl in which he stat onvy, Valuables, and ¢ of 80,00) plastres, that when the Turks were searched, af sed them of robbing us, oply 40 plastre ‘That may have belonged ; but Pknow we had no eft at the time we were prison 4 handbill he sent mein. which still bigger story of his losses, THE PRINTED MANDBL here banded the reporter a printed hand- As following : at that were robbed of all hing to the tu He says, in th suld imitate eo well that it would trouble anybody to detect the fraud.” THE TROUNLE IN CONSTANTINOPLE: wint Ewish to got a little nstantinople Stante kign a statement that youb: d recelve of the money he had Turks thomnsely in the village got from Mr. Morris, the How was that brought * That happened in this way," sald Noe. * After having got the money fr draft, Stanley was very 1 jatght he cou Thereporter Mr. Morris on the h agitated, and at tired and was soon Noo himself is a tall, spare young man, of about 23 years of age, with black eyes and hair, dark complexton, an aquiline nose, and # black moustache, not heavy. ost in demeanor, but ¢ While he de le About midnight he woke me up lewis Lwant you to shen this paper, Tt was a certificate that 1 had received one-third o on tie draft. Being within th ed to parley a little over His reply was, * ied ference whetl My reluctance t view of the promptness with which Thad been customed to obey his commands, and there was silence fora The American Traveller, STANLEY, bed by, the Turk the monvy that b that Lhad not nis of elviliza who was cruell ter of credit, and jes. having any personal ity toward Stanley, he says that it ts due rd that the re Hid be known, aa which he was personally fumil Stanley's identity, based upon the its of his travels In Asia Minor, which tally alluded to in the public published state- of Dr. Living- a bit of dif: TRAVELS AND ADVENTURES IN TURKEY 1 want you to AND LIFE IN THK ORIKNT!! He felt con Anot made Mr. Cs Lhe * Linve jen at To'clock y has served tn the American Navy had been tnetde prints in conn ments of his alleged discover; He said that Cook would do it, or he D BLOW His BRAINS OWT, ton with th from which he has ju ; he will appear in the cosiuime ‘urkish aval oticer Will also sow to the au Of mall, neediework by Fea and the elegan this regard. Y'S PHOTOGRAPHS, He produced a copy of Frank Lestie'a Mustra- which was con- rtrait of Stanley copied from a pho- tograph by Abdullah Brothers, Constantinople The reporter asked him whether the portrait resembled Stanley. Yes, some,” said Noe, was another Ipnce s Saracente a look of i a voice of th Is. are you going t T sald, *L will if Tam obliged to.’ to do it; if you don't, ted Newspaper pyself T signed it ve added, "in the and after 1 There was one mistake printing of my letter in ‘Tne Sus to say that Stanley had the manners of a iby the present Sultan of Turks Passport signed by our Secret “but Thave a photo him teken by Abdullah Brothers which exact likene Stanley will re prayer after the im sacred Arabic lat t the Moslem call id Th the couve Much more was Noo in reforen with Stanley of sufficient iinportance to said the reporter, “anda eee Utes Clerelnne or tbe cet comparison of it with the printed portrait, will show whether there is any resemblance.” ‘The photograph was produced bearing the im= print of * Abdullah Brothers, Ph Majesté Impér fore the leetur audicbee are re quested ty uulte in einging AMERICA=NATION AL HYMN. pressed with: th rgrepes de sa Je Sultan, Pera, Constant It is an ordinary cate de visi tanding position di mparison of the pictur Speech at Brig genic, and Many Mem= the Geographical socie LADIES AND GENTLEMEN jeury Stantey* where my fathers dled, officer's coat Let freedou ring. that published in the ilu some points of general re ns were so different that one would t they were intended to ropresent 1 consider m: ubadour, to relat Mf anold man who to diacover the source of t Then follows the other verse of the h w did you get this? anley sent it to me as he did bis i Was printed in ciad for use here, the reporter | sand sufferings, sud how be bore sfortunes with the Christal 4 and was ine nv of the tickets ter, “that Stanloy tral Africa T knew nothing at; how did that hap- tract in the ce My duty led me to fie f that great a naval officer's an continent, m Central Afrtea should. vist ve smiled at myself ) FIND LIVINGSTONE. my duties at Mad TRE TURKISH BUTTON e "that happened In this wa: + Was in the navy du y's clerk, and he was always f a navy officer hople we were rgged Noe here produced a ticket tn th i t of Africa I should b s | have state w, While | was follow TRAVELS AN ans to pay for our clothing TICKETS TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. by obtained by Stanley tidous draft on his supposed father t aud then, to make ingttshed as possible “that In the ‘Ob, you are the man T want Livingstone int aks of bis service mention the way he left the « said the reporter, apt to ‘state that you know where on the ends But when it came to the buttons “be would hardly be “D really don't: know That is a point T wanted to “What do you comprehension. and in this strait he yourself from k he is alive, and I want you to find mantic task, but I ny evidence of ides your own statement” STANLEY'S DESERT star on the ON FHOM THE NAVY {Loud cheer Will show the f ¢ Navy Departinent U have a letter h he alludes Burton and Speke expedit Are you ready to tn nonded, Dr twas sent after ilar evidence t ; Mr. Bonnett re ) that if Mnished draw another je done draw nt rd of that draw that expens IN ORIENTA produced the photograph £100, and when you have fand antler.” Twas in such a positi I saw he was det what was Ito ruined | shou take no apologies or excuses, s huinan nature to do whether Stanley New York, « that there was 1 gentienen, Africa, and, ing Divinestone a hooks aud newspapers had sald) much people gloried in him, kK with a statens tan as Stanley * father to be found, L think Mr, orroborate my § ever Feed any book on ent, though, e negro boy whose only ga never spoke t about bin, and that al yet Lhad a doubt about lis being alive. n my mission I had to give a de tion of the opening of the Suez thad to visit the vast Te from Stanley / asked the rey Have got a gc oman or man, decidedly novel p WHEN A BOY, “Here's another picture when be was a bo was thirteen or anal, and then yple of Solomon under n mentioned other du= which Included jour Persia, Taga: he had to di the Dead Sea, Ca the Euphrates Valley Railway for the first time with an & Lewspaper, In which it found drowned RUMORS CONCERNING DR. hed Zanzibar 1 n Central Africa, and to the cost of my expeditt circumstances, When I rew assuiue alter our rion, and he was ane and address— Mounted Volunteers, ‘hat Was the bane he wanted to enlist me un- and ats Quee enta an ungainly, | riny and gave bim my: Morton, Eighth N.Y t 1 had to increase It sev reached €2, he had in learning the numes « ong the natives in tradi: z, and how very Arab he met whether a wiite i seen in the ¢ information be re sald he saw one at Cjiji, and he was ¥ Uaughter.) Ungton saloy evident conse ty resting ur usness of the awful responst)ili n him of having bis picture taken Il-Ntted to his person, and the of awkward ME TO BF A BOUNTY JUMPER, and Morton Is what M stands for in his middle He calls hinself vow picture is suggestive ved on the sub, ary M. Stanley STANLEY WHEN A YOUNG * Have you got any more pictures? sory about UD said a white man ? ngaged in hut mbe, the great ¢ al of the unpus her letter tomy sisterdated *Thave one taken wh tral depots notice that they are two differ bas a copy ald he lived peared when L Juced a larger photogr: you think he ta master! Idon't say Hive, because Luere has beon war there. “an, and found Now, my next point was Thad never been in letter Is also add: 1 Black Hawk City, Colo- Xt is to re from Black sister, and ts dat Lo. Sept. 4, 1G, f his travels fr ado, whieh 1 m New York to Colo: Then there is one wk City, Oct dated Black having @ cold Cj gt, from Uayanyembe. dated Black H sald the rep ny Way through this a know whether he speaks April 29, bons alway wanted to he fact that he | Mest at that time We started on our jo’ hext letter ts dated Arabs, and L fs between tho Asia Minor. ) July 20, Isis, | there is a war goin ‘ Arabs and the native way to Livingstone ou Must not do that ah ANd say you going to get k Th one way ts closed, If that Ja closed, we can try y Hoston, Mass., sated, and ls addressed to my next in date are the Id you about, and were written to me Wales while [ was in time that I bad e ed a tirade against me English, $0 that the Liverpool; one is | write to the Sul ntanything that Lewis cai ene Timers iain A few days after STANLEY'S STORY OF HIS TRIALS, So on the Zid September last and Went dir OSELY-WRITTEN LETTER in which he year T started Uy south until Peame to the fron country, and when TL can found there Was anoties In fact Twas going straight int UP north now, an pans of whieh Burton spe river [had such little tne eating one of my next toa land notorious for its rob! hot know this, and one night Lf calle from Liverpool, date y of Wales at all tT have two letters fr Hover bie rpool with his uncle and aunt w to get home, and which were Here they are. December 2), Lit, out because a word js written across it; but as near as T can make it out itis *Bokedelwydaen Village (I am not sure about the third and fourth letters), le and aunt told region there. 18, si, off Lon ° Was then, L suppose America; and that spring Xt letter was dated Head- rtment of the Miasouri, Chey xieo, April 15, 1667 6 region, though no place bs nd ix dated April 30, 1 she speaks of being with ting Indians, but there it was written After that he left the West, Fast, and went to Europe, and my last let ter from him is dated Pari * e quite a sto. ing an opportunit Written to me in dated * Denbigh, Vale street, other can’t. make came to the salt Jents as a cro: West again, for his a \uarters Dep Camp, Kansas, New next 1s from the sai n. his tribate taking. 1 do, muster ? hey asked, "What The thing is to nd make direct dof the night we went into the bamboo and on the fourth day w had crossed th ix neither place his folks, and arg stood on the rough & mem NeMar urate ta Of correspondenc uncle told me not that Is what they al- t me in the moun feelings against strongly to come to Wales, hi wered in the palms beneath us Now, it is customary in Africa tc presence known by shouting a We Qred our guns as only exubs Tsuppose I shail not tnd the white oon to the Congo and Joean, but we must find So we were firing away, shout beating drums. people came out, and the great Arabs from Mus- cat came out, Hearing wo were from friendly and brought news of their they welcomed us, down that stee are a good meny are more I can find nn few days was in the army Ldestroyed, ise I could not carry them around with ers, and It nay be the Tgathered th ors to me while tains there, with his pi to, L would never get out THK NAMB OF STANLEY'S UNCLE. objection to giving the name asked the reporter, e least," sald Thomas Morris, and’ he then lived—this was in the fall of Issb~at 18 Da Morris is @ wood, kind-he: hardly know how Is shooting guns rant heroes ean * Have you an away to the of Stanley's uncle ? this white man.” blowing horns, The reporter read over the letters, when the conversation was renewed, STANLEY'S Pi sald the reporter, “that in many of these letters and in the diary he q ture and talks more or leas of piety. * He is excellent on that,” replied N k was one of the things that sand slaters confidenes in “His name is quotes Scrip Zanzibar, and were i wot along until home, had tt And while we were nd Mrs. Morris, “sald the reporter, “in your letter that Stanley and yourself and his other o you left smyrna, had not more How did he suppose it possi- 4 travel through the heart of Aslato India without any means whatever?” HOW STANLEY eors and Lay er.) L turne Wito the inte hed ang are your "1 fan quote tho Bible sald sharply, aim the servant of Dr. Liv Livingstone here / Isaw him just now. mean to #ay Dr. Livingstone ls here “Go and toll him Lam comin Do you think it possible for soribe my emotions as I walked down those Low hundred y rds? (STANLEY'S STORY OF THE MEETING, ‘This man, David Livingstone, that 1 believed to be a myth, was in front of me afew ‘ou that were ttn Ings of pride, I should have turned over a som Tut | was ineffably hy Chan five dollars. ‘ood deal bett ble that he could at ie his obje many of those letters In professing love and affection for your? ired the reportei 08, "It was to induce an attach- him so that Twould accompany him ‘and after [had done so, knowing that his wbuse of me might cause me to betray his secrets, ho flattered me and praised me tn ope that I would keep my mouth shut," LIVINGSTON, “What reason have you to suppose, as you have stated In your letter, th Livingstone ¢’ inquired the reporter. Id Noe, “except that he to oto’ Afton as the cor dent of the Herald, to Wake @ sensation, TRAVELIRD THROUGH ASLA (Laughter and “He proposed to provure means,” said Noo, * He opened up his plas to } after what! have related in ting horses, you will not be eek Lo procure money He said thut ‘ " ts we traveliod | outils travel nurprised that he 3 in an equally dishonest: way the way wo were hundred miles Ne should get up @ story uf being Toubed of a letter of credit, and get fi . © go on Wo Tiflis ta 1 Stanley has not (Laughter.} und Livingstone ; my. wo Tt is only & march tothe Orst telegraph station, and so give word to the world, (Uhoers.] et Means there rey the news course usiug A groat many people gathered around us, My attention was directed to where agroup of Arabs waa stand- ing, and In the centre of this group a pale, care- worn, gray-bearded old man, dressed Ina red shirt, with a-crimson Joho, with a gold band round Wis cap, an old tweed palr of pants, his shoes looking the worse for wear. Who Is this old man? Lask myself, Ty it Livingstone? You, It ia. No, it Is not. You It ia. Dr, Livingstone, I amet = Yea,” (Loud cheers] Now ft would never have done in tho presence of the grave Arabs, who stood heir beards, for two white mon to kick up thelr heel ttended No; ‘the Arabs must be a ¥,arould carry the story that we wore ch fools, So we walked alde by side Into the verandah, ‘There we sat—the man, the myth, and 1. ‘This was the man; and what a wotal tale of ¢ ities that wrinkled fac those gray hairs in his beard, those silver Hines in his head—what a woful tale they told! Now we bogin to talk. T don’t know about what, 1 know we talk, and by-and-by come plenty’ of presents from the Arabs, We eat and talk, and whether Livingstone oats most or Leat most I cannottell. 1 toll him many things. * Do you know such and such “How is het" ad. Oh such a one?’ “Alive and well God!” And what aro they all doing in Bu- owe Well, the French are kicking up a fuss; and the Prussians are around Waris, and the world is turned. topsy-turvy Tt is alla matter of wonder for Livingst He soon turned in to read his letters, STAN OPOSES AN EXCURSION, And who shall stand between this man and the outer world? Tshould like to say a great I wore to you. but T want you to And gut one thing, and that l#—1 want you to find out what this man Livingstone was—what was his charactor that this man can stand the fatignes, brave the dav gers and sufferings of Central Afri- ca. Whatis there in him which makes him go on while others turn back? What is it to hin who scovered so inany lakes and rivers and streams, passed over 40 many virgin cou tries and through so many ta, that makes him say, “It is not enough?” ‘This is what 1 want to’ know. Lasked him if he had by to the Lake Tanganyika yet. ‘There ia a great deal seid about that. He said the central line of drainage absorbed all his means. | proposed him we should go th ewith my men and mae terial, and make a p) rtyof it. He said, “Tam your man.” 4 They think we should go there.” Very well; It shall be done to-morrow.” And to-morrow we went wit is about what stone and myself discover. ed at the Northern end of Lake Tanganyika that the Koyal Geographical Sock 8 requested me to read you a formal paper on the subject Cheers] ’ n road bis paper descriptive of Lake Ta The President -¥ your applause your appre touching nd interesting narrative you Just heard, One alinost regrets—-if one might be allowed to parody aremark of Sydney Suilth’s that more eminent African discoverers were not lost in Africa, and that more able correspondents like Mr. Stantey have not gone there in search of them. (Cheers) Twill say no more now, be- use we have much todo. Lwillsimply ask Mr Stanley how much further Lake Tanganyika ex- tends to the northward than the furthest point nid Spe and Speke halted miles fi tifed by ona a trem balf way in’ my add Where resided King of the Uranti they n acen the northern end of Tangany th Dut resting where they did, they elinply Fei Int Where the eastern and Western Fat and where the eastern overlaps the we orn, “At the extremest end Tanganyika ts Mfteon or sixteen miles brow THE WATERS OF TANGANYIKA, President—1 should like to ask another ton, and that rewerds the sweetness ort kishness of the waerof Lake ‘Tanganyika This is important, because question of Rusiz is make a. Lake ‘Tangs Meo than t ehter and nta R. Marcham th from Dr, Livinestone's Forelzn Office despatches, which have already bee ed ia fall Mr. Stantey, in reply to a further question put by the President, explained that mony of the read extracts plices marked on the isting maps did not cor- respod with the places ithere they Were put an the maps of Dr. Livingston cits TEEN The Great English Traveller, Col. Grant, Makes Some Singular Discoveries. Betray froma Letter Writien by Col. Grant Heat at the The two letters from Dr. Livingstone to Mr. Gordon Bennett of the New York Herald In form ts that he had traced the southern waters from Il te S south latitud ad he supposed that hey must fow on to the Nile by the Halr-Gazal. at 9 degrees north latitude. I must say that (hie is an ertraumipant les which cannot be for a mom ment entertained, Jor there are meny eirenm- aunces precluding uh a thing. he distance stil unexplored by Dr. Lis Ne may be roughly stated as 1,00 miles between his most advanced position and the mouth of the Gazal. In this distance we have Speke's Moun M and the great bend to the west of the degrees 8 minutes north as the prin- cipal obstructions — to ivingstone's theory, We haye also miles of longitude between the two positions; Iut the curious aljection to Dr. Livingstone's reaching the Nite te the fact that wwe already know—that the source of Gdaal was visited and determined a few vears ayo by the eminent botanist, Schweinfurth, who fully satished ad yeographers’ that the source of the Gazal be north of the @ Livingstone mipposes, ‘eleven < My « ator, not as Dr. urees south of dt srvations of the Gazal were in Maroh whon descending the Nily from Gondo- with my late companion, and show that t ‘i nt when compared with the Nik wamp with little current neh along whieh we were sailin eased In width by the wator of th Gazal. ‘The Nile maintained tts width of 100 yards till after the Giraie and a Jouned It and then the stream was theres a width of 4 yards. The Gazal bad no pers stream at the Junetion {ts waters were still and looked like a backwater half a mile across, and sur rounded by rushes. Mr. Qatman and others told us that no boats were able to ascend it that year, is its channel was choked with reods srofore, ho regular trafic on It by rs it ts completely blocked—a ile, which is navigable for large nh Gund boats and Ki QUKEN ERKORS FOR DR, LIVINGSTONE TO MAKE. If anything wore wanting to prove that the Yazal has ne tion with the southern. wa ters of Livingstone, reference might made te several men who have been into the Gazal coun- try, but Dr. Sehweinfurth, who is now in Europe would be most able to give definite information The narrative of Dr. Livingstane contains some irious incidents which are guite novel to me, for on our journey from Zanzibar to Buypt, when travellig on Ue water sied of the Nile, we never saw any trace of cannibala, any signs’ of gorilla, neither did we And that an race of natives kept 1 tn the damesticated state, "They eat one es of wild pig, Dut no race of natives in tht y of the Nile vis ever seen to. keep pigs tom: Oysters must bea misprint. ‘Taking {nto consi¢ rkable hese lifferences from th traversed, | cannot but think that Dr. Livingstone, having no chronometer to Ox the longitude, got further to. the west than he supposes, and that he has been among races simMlarin most reapects to those on the west coust of Africa, visited by Mons. du Chailiu, In conclusion, this fresh discovery of lakes and rivers by Livingstone deflaos a distinct new basis, and leaves clearer than ever the position given by Spoke tothe Nile in 1s Henry Stanley's Anury Reply to Col, Grant, From Stantey's Secoud Speech at the Brighton Hanque Capt aut states that there is a discrep- ancy between Dr. Livingstone’s and Capt. Speke's statements, Ident see that there is any at all. The Nyanza has nothing to do with the Lualabu That is , for between them extsts the great Lake Tanganyika. It was objected. that there were no goriilas ip the country near this lake, but that Is no reason why they should not exist in Central Africa, Capt, Grant says that Dr. Livingstone has made a mistake about the river Lualabu; but what IT want to know ts how a geographical resident in England can say uh is no such river when Dr, Livingstone bh it? (Laughter) What ls that great and mig! river the Lualabu? Where does ito to? it go into a lake, as Sir Henry Rawlinson sup poses? What! the Lualabu flow into a lake into a marsh! ‘amp! (Laughter.] Why you intght Just as well say that the Mis- sissfppi flows into a swamp! (Laughter and cbeera.) '! the rivers flowing into the Tangonyika are nothing whatever compared with the Lualabu, which at some places is from three to five miles broad, If t Lualabu enters a swamp, where does all the water go? (Cheers.) No’ natiyi ever told Livi that the Cualabu went west. On the y, they all sald that it ran north, and yet an Leographer comes for- ward and says he little rt Hoe may have done 80, but that 4. at pre the Lualybu from being ably river, (Laughter.) 1 never ye heard of an Enalishman who had discovered any thing but a Herr of some sort wing forward and guid he had been there before.” (iad thter.) Do you mean to tell me that Dr. LAvingstone has spent six years searching for the aourees of the Congo? Notabit of it. What he wants ts to find out the sources of the Nile. The sources of the » may go where they ike go far as he ts neerned T have not the stightest doubt that will yet come home with the true story of the sources of the Nile, (Loud ers. ‘Those vontlowon have not askod # alnglo x Sun. question whic ee PRICE TWO CENTS. MURDERED FOR Ht —— ro not asked of Dr, Livi J asked him if he had discovered the source Of the Nite at 2,000 fert above the sea, how he coull aeoount for the discrepancy as to ‘the a latitude which have been mentioned. JOHN COBINE'S POOR RELATIONS. ER MONKRY A TENNESSER ADVENTURER MAR- RYING AN ARKANSAS WIDOW. Going for Home of the Contiient Property on Inland-A Weary Walt of Ninety-nine Years. A largo number of the heirs and de- scondantes of John Cozine mot on Tuesday after- noon in the office of Messrs. T. Jay & O. W. nbers street, to take action to re- cover a large amount of property in this city, ‘They claim about five blocks on the west s' between Fifty-fourth and Fify-seyenth streets, between Hudson River and Sixth avenue uit three hundred acros Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh avenues, But thelr greatest claim ts a plot of elght acres about Fulton street and Broadway, which has been hetd since 1773 under a ninety-nine years’ As the lease is about expiring, the de- scendants claim that {t must of course revert to legitimate heirs. As it has been leased, and the leases transferred to hundreds of persons itis evidentthat @ is in prospect. e heirs contend that the up-town propert tat tax sales, and nalitios th the (Laughter.) But still he adhered to bla opinion, and you must recollect that he has arrived at {t with hesitation and humility, after six years’ travel that his thermometers, barometers and othor instruments, which were tarted, may now be in error, that may now seem Thoory and Enticing Her From Her Home and thon Put+ wiiet Through her Brain The Body Thrown Into a Pond dd Hot by a Mob, Correspondence of The Sun. Mewenn, Aug. 26.—G. W. Martin of Rip- ley county, Tenn., who was arrested a few days ring hin wife and then Fr body into pond, was taken out day night by twenty armed men, who conducted him toa place afew rods from tho jail, where twelve charges of buckshot from as many guns were emptied Into his body. Martin was the widow of Judge William J, Rodgers, a prominent lawyor of Lonoke, Ark a small station about forty miles this side of Little Rock. Tne Judge died about three years ago and loft his wife considerable real estate and some money. Mrs. Rodgers opened a boarding house, and with the profits of this business and the revenu ived from several | The Marderer new when he goes there and says, " L have sven the 801 ting in hia easy chair or chon any ground near Harlem, ‘Hear, hear, prove Dr. Livingstone. Dr.$ ve rightyand Dr, We cannot how solve the must go there and disprove what has said for yourself, oF elae Uaten to anil belive those who have been there. HOW STANLEY RVADRD THR POINT. Mr, tall said thet Dr. Livingstone had arbitra- rily fixed the source of the and twelve degrees of south latitude, and he wished to ask Mr, Stanley how he recon with the facts he himaelf, of fall on Bu Avingstone may be Dr. Livingstone ile at between ten pd sized legal well as Dr, Li em in that part of Central Afrtea. confossed be did not see any had simply foll the river fo dts source, and what could he do more ? (Laughter) ver disposed that on account of sales, and the existence of heirs, the tities to the property are tovalid, must revert to The whole pi After her hv band's death nd the whole roved lots In Lonoke, she was placed in easy financial circumstances, He WOLF ENTERS TH FOLD. In June last a respectable-looking man arrived in Lonoke, and went to board with Mrs, Rogers, me of G, W. Majors, an sented. himself as a widower, whose wife had died some three years previous. direct attack upon the heart of his boarding His suit was favored, and on tho 4th Then Majors began rty claimed is worth an ou Aum, and the ¢ be interosting. ntest for it w Tho heirs are numbered by hun- dreds, and are scattered over New Jersey, Long persevered w Impatience « and Mr. Stanle: from the contest bh bia questi rt_of the audience, y humoronaly responded and rethred iy was originally from HH b Cozine married Fre: love Heckbude In Amsterdam, and tn 1767 they emigrated to what ts known as Six children were be He gave the n ¢ Tn May, 17@2, Analyzing Dr. w Lots, Long Majors made a To the Bxitor of the World, The Herald of this morning pub- it describes as a fi vl. Totter recelve nimatone thre this avowedly in defen: Its own defence against the Imputation of tm- poxlng upon the public. that the imputation has n land on M. ected the ninet tan Island, and in I ar lease to the pr ulton street. Tn the next generation th Corzine, son of the first J the junior who are making e session of the property. The second simile of an by Mr. Benn ah Mr. Stanle: of July they were married. talking of his plantation in West Tennessee, He sald that he owned one of the finest tracts of land in Lauderdale county, and that he had rented it to some black men, who were raising @ crop. Yielding finally to his importunities, his reed to sell her him to his plantation, ng about $1,000 in cash, w While the remainder were On the 1th of July was another John It is the heirs of urts to obtain pos- It Is obvious, there- eon seriously y will agree on, having been hot to Le disposed of in. the sl ous spirit in which the Herald seems tn- 1 to deal with it Without entering to-day tr analysis of the stanley-Livin ence as thus far published, mit me to call atte john Cozine became an extensive drover, and was widely known in the West. at thnes controlled the New York market, and accumulated immense wealth. part of his life he was eccentric, living for Ime in an old house in Ei ‘ty-fourth and Fifty- He boarded w jows, and fastened the doors with hi Ho died about 17 vears ago. were sold, real Majors took chai rented out on the two set out for Tennessee. ina two-horse wagon, In which was a alarge quantity of the lady's wearin together with bedding of various kinds. THE MURDER AT JENNING'S POND, Proceeding stopped one day with Mr. John of Mrs. Martin. Thence they rly directios Fulton, and th pond, Just befor the wagon broke down, as was noticed by agen- assing, and the man mounted one horse while his wife rode the other. evening of the 4th inst. hth avenue, between © any exhaustive stope correspond. trust you will tion to the gravely sus; er of the fac-simile yesterday in attempted vindleation of the genuinenoss of I confine inyself to but The letter thus presented to us ars date at Ujifl ind 1iten by Dr. Livingstone s gratitude t ferald for the expedition sent to suve him 1871, was Mr. James Gordon Bennett, As’ was very considerately ot banquet given in P: Mr. Stanley's success, the merit of this dash- ing exploit that correspondence, A COLLA PT QUIET. two points, an Inquiries Concerning the Employment and Indemnity Company, Yesterday morning an aged man entered the SUN office and asked hand he carried ab: cover of the book was as follows: The Employment and City of New York for Baviu It was numbered 4 noved in a northe crossing the Mississippt at 1d military road to the editor o ut to seek and r a reporter. nk book. The legend on the orved at the isin honor of ‘This was the Nothing more was seen until the following Tuesday wee! diy was found floating In the pon with a bullet hole through the brat other through the arm. held and the body buried. A week later it was nda close exami had been committe AFTER THE MURDER. The morning aftor Ma) William J. Martin. lis father-tn-law, Indemnity Company of the and Depuaite, 4 Union ‘aud bore the ‘name of eath the Visi urope was intern Until bis return to Stanley was in ignora vurse, therefore of his son and succes- pted early In th urope, of course, Mr. A hurried Inquest was Inside the book was alist of the officers and Direotors of the cord of the depoatt made by Mr. Handley of $300. ‘The following is the list as printed and written in the book : Presitent, B. G. Bo demmnity" Ce resurrected, that a murd tion showed m Dr. Living. Livingstone in Mr. Stanley, would ors’s wagon had broken «dat the house of W. Farrell, who lives uta mile and @ half from where the aceldent Martin had a quantity of ladles’ wear- ing apparel and bedding, which he sald had bes He also had two fine one a genti Seeretary, M. But the ad- Rloss, M. H. Chambers, Alexa ge Maribaler, It, W. Milbank, J: pund Waterman, Frederick Killiai m1 to. have be is a point to be mptly by # glan D.. sidney Roc ven to us may be pretty fairly represented | Mr, Handley's story was soon told. He had seen th Company advertised in the Christian Meas Seven per cent. was offered for deposite, and as had $30 which he did not care to use he came to this city and deposited it on the 2th of On the 20th of June, 1872, he k that he should f that mont in Milton, N. Y. P lady's watch, *, bore the indeription, * W. his wife Emily, biark toaster st initials" W. tituted his own ft his hom James Gordon Bennett, Eequire this letter had em) inscribe ‘The initials he Med April with the avowed intention of going to Kentucky, and when he returned he only spoke of having vis- ited that State. MARTIN'S ARIEST, t Monday, when the body of the murdered an Was resurrected, » f her person bearing the name of W. A gentleman was alao found who remem Of having seen Martin riaing in aw dress correspond t have heen writ lly and simply as every man even m niltar with the usages would write It Noaember, I sent a written notice to the b want his money onthe 24th that day he went to 4 Union square, and, ble in thirty days; * James Gordon Bennett, Jr., E As it stands tion putin a who put in th rds plainly an addi- tet Wee weritte fered a draft, pi refused to take, r then told him he must give them thirty days notice at once. of July he again went to get his money, but the establishment had collapsed, anemployment office remain ount of the sv been made public, a about the city to and he came to the SuN ly in the same t writing with the r © that word uld ‘have written and. nothing but : . woman whe Livingstone verwhelming more likely t tt as editor of than is the inett to have permitted himself ston ofthe bank had wrote that word tl watch worn by Mrs. Martin, caused suspicion to attach to Martin, and he was accordingly first arrested he addressed th Mee for information despatched to see Mr. the book as Pres! t her different a! the one with which he had Bioss, whos The gentleman's offic palace of the Equitable Life Insurance Compa- ny, and he is a director of that body ceived the reporter pleasantly. ‘as the book was produc He evidently t lawyer, and he | thing about the was the President. The reporter undecelved Mr. Bloss as to his rofession, saying that he was a SUN re Phe ex-President became polite again 1 ment, and wanted to insure his visitor's life— cheap as dirt, my boy. quired about'the Inde Jected to enter into the subject of life insur- ance until the original theme was exhausted. nding that the SUN man meant business, Mr. Bloss plainly told what he kuew, Tan sure the company is safe enough breaking of the Ring, the labor strikes, and sev- other elreumstances nd for a time; but they 100, and Mr. Wilder, the F the money or pape the authorities fro entertained his wife. THLE MURDERER'S STORY. He sald that while absent he tucky and then Arka Mrs. Rodgers. to Lauderdale having marri reached home, hims overtaken by a’ strang broke down Mrs. Rodgers left him and went with name or place of residence That, Le said, was the last he saw of Mrs. Rodgers, whose watches and cloth- ing he had purchased of her. When searched, however, there was found tn book a’ note for $300, drawn by a citl- Lonoke, payabl . nett’s death there more thar nelusion left As soon, how. da change came k his visitor for # refused to say any- xcept to deny that he the body of the written plainly and clearly * or accident, ter the word “perceive he latter had ace ty as his wife, About a day be! It ts written and. sharply {¢ n orthography the letters full sis an error nmon among uned ple, both in this ¢ it iy such an error as 1 y ted or * half. When the wagon untry and in the stranger, whos he did not learn. slight acquaintance with could make If you will consider. points, what it needs but aglance at th fac-simile to show, that the,tiandwriting « Livingstone as there represont correctly represented, is ah ly easy of imitation— flowing and round the Latin language, {n addition to these two . Majors and he didn'thnow was taken of but merely sald that ‘A photograph dwriting pectin anything about it, smbined to make nk you will not wic them, suspei differ from me in my conclusion that the Inte: fthe Herald in this matter up to the nt time hax simply given con tto what bad otherwise been very vague and shadowy susyt And I aim your obedient servant, AMCHE AFTER STANLEY Dye asa correct married his sister TAKEN PROM JAIL eness of the m nder the name of Majors, Rtew we nyou are not the President, Mr. Bloas ? ted as President the Dr, Alexander Wilder took my jot the President when that book The company was origiuully char- us a Servants’ Indemnity ¢ ave them power to take de- at one time about $100,000 on deposit, and they have paid all but about €: V don't see how you can make much of a swindle Thompson and Herren of Ripley examination was committed to Jail w await his trial before the criminal ¢ The inhabitants of the ne however, were so incensed that they could not walt for the slow proc They determined to t their own hands, and accord New Yonk, Aux. 2 the foul murder Stanley's Lnconst Aro the Letter, on Sunday r janded that uy The jailor saw at once that it would be folly t ontroversy anent the Stanley ming decide tion, How the banking house could Mr. Hoss said there was It had been He did hot know himself when it Yesterday the e simile of @ part ordon Bennett, Jr. purporting Livingstone in Africa N reproduces thi and prints beside it two fac similes engraved from letters of Stanley to Louis N against Stanley pre juxtaposition is & close without notice? house in making « fi il and dragge He was taken to ® was confronted ntime to say sion, and th twelve muskets were raised and alin At the word tho guns were discharged, <i with twelve of the first beew written by orter also called on Mr. Thomas Alli- is in the book as a director. pnies all Knowledge of the concern, his name was unlawfully nd Mr, Chambers were out of town and could not be seen Teco ete er and Martin buckshot In his body, ived in Landerdale county on In the September following he W. Hurrell, a well- inings's Pond. Martin, and satd b reyond his word nothing te ated in this Janunry 2, 1870, will perceive a married a daughte of the handwriting In CHUCK'S CARPETIN © the name of will be seen th arefully the sand ook Mouths tn Jail? James Sullivan is apparently He was aren sions for stealing @ roll of ea known of him € documents Jolly Roboson's 1 by glaring ¢ Your article on the employment of Vat the nation's expense for the ecretary Robeson’s h . but one point is left out xpense of two thousand dollars, Ineurred por in having put ft fn comparison with the m Chuck, a short, thick d face, in which self-com- placency was the most prominent charavteristic, med te know the Tallapo speaks of Dr true as far as it yor and too old to fol thing of the larceny’ after the owner of rebody told bin Sulliy 1 plece of carpeti Iron conatitut f peting one answer, me paper, describing his fret |” Ze officer; hi Stanley anys: 4 by hundreds meeting with mation of a Government steamer service Into @ pleasure yacht 4s to which the nally devoted by the depart ance of navy stores, &¢ gray-bearded, and b So the great African explorer is, at nstivution worn-out, pale= nothing either, man and he did so. supposed larceny had teld Mr, Chuck and gone his way, nobody about ho to ask his name, that be ml testified that police station Sullivan had in nent Is the convey mone navy yard to in her legitimate she unquestionably sayes money to the public exchequer, At the time when she was “wanted " by secre: tary Robeson for his summer jaunt, she was on her way to the navy cargo composed of rope, which shi Boston, and anch and "sturdy and, when en sec) As wAVILNOSS, on the way to the ain satisfactorily ail @ slight discrepancies. nutless and took it to get three WHAT THE PEOPLE THINK fail, where I could have s city with @ Does Dr. Livingstone Know how to Sp: Word * Perceive ¢”” To the Eititor of The Sun While carefully cx of the alleged Livingstone let Stanley to Mr His clothes were not « there was an airof neatness about them which His eyes were cast de was evidently ashamed of himself », don iim with « pitying eye, and acquittal was in their ore he spoke a word one, and bore evidence of truth on its fave. working man, and chainy, told in his favor. pparing the facsimile articles were urgently required here for vessels fitting out, and the Tallapoosa bad been ordered tward for them Just when about to leave your Instructions fror Department to land the cargo in Philadelphia, f course exe Noe, I saw to my surprise that in the former letter, the word " perceive” nt of positive proof Thad look upon the lettore ax has worally convinced His story was a plain wt, her coms Your Honors, 1 was drunk J against the The carpeting was so Twas drunk and told the m Tima sober, industrious nd crazy with large I cout me that Dr, L. did not write them. If the whole civilized world has really b this bold and unprineipled adventurer, w with the pure and un: which orders he ‘The vessel was then placed at the disposal of the Administration gang for a pleasure trip, Among other intimate friends of the jolly Secro- who availed thamselves of bls kind and liberal invitation were sundry menibers of the Cattell family and A.D, 8, Kemble, Esq. Robes horses, which had been drive here, completed the party The discharge of the Tallapoosa's Philadelphia instead of at this {ts subsequent cost the country over fifty th: But of course this sun omfort which would bh to the Becreraty's guests and horses by delaying the pleasure trip long opaugh say three days to have aliowed the cargo around here and return for the Jun en duped by | wanted to be arrested, tate to tamps felt by every one in the suece to further bis should be made to ft oad not be permitted for of thts contomptib| The Judge~Have you got Ilive in Green| let mé.go, 1’ be aw sober, industrious man. deed 1 will, your Honors, The Judge-T do Court will find you ck Was ast didn’t know what to make of It of the grevt explorer, iu int; and if you'll gotiatical and & 8 disgraceful position keenly, day longer to enjoy the I'm vertatnly t believe you never drink To the Katitor af The Sun, Thaye read your publications concerning re that the letter purporting to have ne ise downright forgery, another drop. vy yard, and pyeyance hither by rail, have Military Geverument, To the Buitor af The » Sim: Have you noticed how the Grantites are tending toward a military government? n, Dix for Governor, Gen, Robtuwon for Woodford of slave trade Stanley, and fee! written by Dr. he Kenulug correay for President, ( Tallaboosa to | bacnee of woleh lu the Meraid stumps tt, | An Ba Kervpiicay, WasuinaTton, Aug, 2, LT.

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