The Sun (New York) Newspaper, August 31, 1872, Page 2

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The es Sun. Tt Shines for AIL V allock's Theatre White's Atbenm The Grant € orruption & Administration large estimate to ay that the 10,000 of these are contribute mouey for securing Geant eral officeholders who, in addition to their incidental aud ‘fn, will be comp outlays for yeoribe tow aded by the National Committ President will be required to furnish from this so corruption fund whi RACE GREELEY V exalted positions or of the oxisti Administration, intelligent | bankers and bro! and busine: e of finance fy themeclves ys and Mar other nooks and crevices where eorn multiplicity md dol ars tion of Gr hundved ty etructious ¢ | perate at the prospect of defeat, n North Carolit gencies of th How muct ito meet the exi- ingenuity and the cour- in charge o. the publicmoney events, wholly irrespective of ine hands of leadir at incorraprible necticut Politics. Itheirtact and prudence in select election by ast of any purty in the State will carry the yw wajority running the short period that itis to beam uy abandoned the GRANT must Compret vy iPustration necessary recognition Connecticut orded consistently Tespoot of the leaders; Was imperatiy the demand , aud the concession made without hesitation, Yankee ingo- nuity, however, was equal to the exi- gency, and the odium of conferring dis- tinction upon one of Grane’s plundering tools was offset by the gelection of Mr. Henny Farxim as one of his colleagues on the ticket, Mr, Farsam, an amiable entleman, of the most gencrous dispo- sition, has won the love of the New Haven people by munificent dona tion to Yale Colleze. Tle takes no interest in current political affairs, and regard GeANT as the poorest sort of a white man, us Mosnon man half a ntury ago, when we had gentlemen in the White House; but he will not decline nomination, kuowing that it mvolves ty, and that ho will never tly he called upon to desrade himself hy voting for an incompetent and unsuit- te for the ——— Religion in Politics. We have received a letter from a Meth dist layman denouncing the conduct. of the Rey. Mr. Wann, formerly pastor of the Forestville Methodist Episeopal Church, who, aecording to our correspondent behaved in an improper manner at a ent camp meeting in Plainville, Con- necticut. The Rev. Mr. Wenn, it seems, is aGRANtT man, and his potitieal zeal appears to outrun his piety. Mr. Eowarp J son, Who is a straight Geeeney man, had erected for hinsell and tamily a tent, that they might conventently profit by the ex- ercises of the camp The Rey, Mr. Wena and one or t) . conceiving to be their y not merely to labor for 4 maintenance in the al hapy » but also for his conversion to the cause of the Great Amer Gitt-Takes, got into conversation with him, and beset him with reasoning; but findings that they could not thus change his political opinions, they nployed other a putt having been a zea able eancic¢ rosilerte Brother Jouuns way of spirit up a i ut tent was the wan. In so doin: ivers, their pury . Jouxson; and we a are whether it is 1 mothods to convert either to religion or to Gr our corresponds men won't Most certain! method of conduct. ing political discussions at camp meet! asked to de resort to su ikem; aud 3 that the Gimaury is not right. Iu fact politics ought to be ‘ from camp ge, which are bla vayer p for the 1 of “and for the ene 1 ’ a! 1 ' itual life in aceo sd with the ¢ uindments, All these u oft ‘ Hwere, in our jude | lated when the Rey, M Vent vin if Lin an untimely ind inappropriate political discussion, d berately pan insulting placard presumed to ampoon his fellow Christians because they would not adopt his political | views. For this conduct he is clearly + to be dealt with both by eeclesiastical discipline and by the secalararm of the law But we earnestly nay he Greeny 161 to bear with pationce every such sult and wrong which their opponents may prestime to put upon then, Surely those Who wean to govern their conduct by the | sincere application of Christian principle J can pardon someth » the m 1 ad yo Mia bad cause who by: ¢ in argument, commit the impr rt to such outrages Rey, Mr, Wena was guilty of, pared with the atroc and pl nepotism and eorruptic tablished in the i thing to f aa visive | 1 upon a man's tent 1 that the Gueecex men will 1 Nand the manifestation of a Crime Among the Police. t of a pollee officer fort mission of a umber of burglaries sugg tate of morals among the public dians not very gratifying or assuring t taxpayers, If would be alike hasty and | Unjust to e acknowlec lemn the whole force for th d crimes of one of its mem rs, Still, the fact cann it the brass-buttoned bur If so low an opin tl lar hi How officers Mif-hand way the pot his yrapose in the mo mmisston of a robbery to one with whom | © bad had but slight acquaintance. Capt. AMERON’S precinet is 1 t the only one in which mysterious burglaries have been perpetrated during the passing season, and burglary has not been the most heinous offence committed in a mysterious way It is not, however, in this aspect alone that the arrest of this burglarious polices man is sug stive, There is a erime more dangevous to the public welfare than either burglary or murder, It erver of erit tl trials must Knowledge to have grown but too com- than t of the body It is the crime place confidence in the sworn statement f officers who have been coucerned in the arrest of criminal 1 i if for no other, 1 it is ral charneter only a ted, Enough As, lor , are 1 und dil ‘ houlder our citi zons must not be ast Ito hear that wir houses are plundered by the very non Ww ilance they have been 104 y peer The Herald publishes the following Vet. LIVINGSTONE f i maha Joa} letter of De. : JAMee alee ret Dr hire Wy Africa, t healtati i Wo letters to by This is very good so farasit goes, Mr, STRAZNICKY is @ most respectable person, THE SUN, SATURDAY, AUGUST HENRY STANLEY'S CAREER. DID HE EVER SEE DR. DAVID raphy, and he probably has had very little experience in the examination of counter- For this reason his t nothing to what was known before. that it amounts to is that there is are- markable resemblance between the alleged timony adds rer letters Which Dr, Livinestoxe wrote letters wer Iuced by Staxney and not by Livixc- it is a matter handwriting, being Iful penman, stowd so greatly resem- itof Livinastoxe as to deceive scholar like Mr, Strazxrexy, but the same time found in it certs Sranury's ively Ue case with these e writing is generally ex- coedingly like Lryisc tains many minor features of a ver: exeription which chars of STANLEY, there would he young nan, We li board the elip on account of bis ba’ an vid captain who was also « passenger on the Damascus, Reporter Do you think he cheate ze the writ! this reason no certific identity of the handwriting in the Herald letters with that found in unquestionable LIVINGSTONE can settle the controversy or contribute anything to | convince the public allegations of STANLEY, tions, and his whe time Stanley and tho old captain played cards there was a row, and the captain would com- plain of Stanley cheating manuscripts of Dr. and BLANTON ss, and in the DUNCAN Wa rits of the great Kn: Merchant (with hesitatl Well wire-pullers have sudde Blue have been appealed t to rally to the | on whieh they set an | within the is prompuy ong several such tn HARD Eparworrn, ber of farn sustain the Karahissar, the trav sideration seration ferings and troubles by (ie amass convention will be held in this city t be overcome | Patel auppors the G says Basser LEY men with a t | Lord A Pract | American Govern a crime which | ard Hayti ia 1 Ang umatiem, and t It is very sad would be if Joun MELAuc N, the gentlen two biocks, should suiler from rieumadisi | 1 issue their fall styl He ls not, however, au expert im chirog- | Fulton wid’ vind f heats to-day, corner of LIVINGSTONE? Singular Story from a Merehant—Stantey, While in thi Con A gentle at merea forthcoming if necessary, called at City, Writes a Letter from ple to the New York Tim nan connected with a prom- ie house of this city, whose name # SUN nein da good deal of troub) g cheated him ? hant—Yes, do, 1 judge from all his ee onduct. [know that every porter Whar did Stanley say to this accus rehant— Nothing ; he taughod at It PANLEY CHANGES A SOVEREION. ter Do you know anything else of Stan- e matter, but I think it’s scarcely worth mentioning Reporter—What fs it? Merchant—Well, When we ¢ t to Portland he i te reign and to give me rit, A day or two afterward I got for my hange me as with, eed tof anitte Mr. Jay Morris, tem t > to lay thelr easy Luister Resident tate that after di Hassan Pey, the + received the Is, and much comimis- the al of their suf- society of the dal was evi and Vizier Issued orders for the app: mpts to disprove the iden Tht b so bape a" woeful ons that the Las Proper one, the fi ‘uument, certainly, as it spelling of the word is (wolul) being & many of the most experlenced newspaper writers are defective in spelling, relying upon rs and proof readers in these matte is more common than to, cont and misplace the letters “el” and " in such words as ceive,” * bell ey’ ee. lat Jus titia ” also seys Following his profs have said. baited w turn without puttin 3 The punctuation argument amounts to no- thing. as the Henry letters contain commas in the middle of sentences and omit pertods at the end ofthem, In fact, it is rather an argument In favor of the sente onal practice he would not ried defeated and forced to re in'# comma vecastonal! a profes nal newspaper writer, as it fs acon. office yesterday and stated that he was asteer- | TPt practice to loave such matters entirely to passenger with Henry Stanley on the Da- A discretion of the c+ , In feb fat | Pivingstone w have. been «erent deal more Mmascus, which arrived on Feb. 1, 1807, at apt to Insert comuas in such & caso than Stanley Portland, Me,, from Liverpool, Stanley spoke | Would. a good deal of hie adventures in the ty and aiden Motel tf sesonable, allowance poranae pis difference of time and circumstances under the outrageous robbery of which he had been | Aiferenve of time cand elrounmunces, winter made a vietim anley did not make the im- | st Stanley letters were written, the similarity ssion upon his fellow passenger of being an | 1s a8 exact asc EA ae OX nal St Tie BAG mnes' deserves gieat credit for exposing the gigantic honest mar fraud TYPO. porter~ Why? - Merchant—Well, [bad no confidence in ! im The Sabstance of the Let + avd Not the He seemed to me to be too smart for such @ Handwriting the Most Couvincimaus To the Bitior of The Su Sin: [harbor a lively interest in the ¢ cussion as to the authenticity of the letters (fac- similes of which you b ing to have beon written by Livingstone and Stanley respectively. The absorb’ ow seems to be the striking similarity between that of Livingstone to Bennett aud those of Stanly to Noe, Your correspondent, W. ¥. T. ©., lays great stress on the samoness of certain mall and c.pltal letters which he finds in tho repies under consideration, With what little larity is of no consequence whatever, for It ts capable of demonstration that the general for- mation of letters in the back slope style In any umber of lisewous writers will bo found very much | and Whatis more to the pure you will we ly ever lind that writers who this style writing are v riuble in form. yn of letter: The er lifference found in the w f the pen with which for an | this difference ex- er decree whether the writing erate. You will already pave This w these iste Ina sll is rapid or d discovered this tn this communie Fsov pices ret 1 found that | Inst sentence ts written with had cheated me sis amore trite slowly, without any purpose to aoa ‘ : dcterilahs least, and. wupremeditative rth mentioning. the clara tor of Stanley's letter from Paris porter—What did Stanley inregartto | Tho thirogruphic student fous his greatest | sbiery oF he hn diMiculty in studying the forward angular iyi, wets Or : | In which the ft difercnces exist between hant—It's so long ago that Dean scarcely ; wie band. will vary 1 that he» t he Lowi or with speed. ‘chan | give You another instance ka thls xe which mwhen fe eritten with a scurolboy's deliberation; and was rol lly with Tthink experts would have some difficulty. in to prosocu mber this | tracing both writing: to the same hand, tg | ling aside the evidence based upon ; my own Impression of the falsity ter—And when you arrived in New | of the pretended letters of Llvingstone wa the great Lack of style which Matin. ‘ hecoletters. inthe reading of them ant—IHfo preva teke | fooked for something lispiriting-some detail the Grant Li ery. | of result which would Wactant the vast outlay of Hie wanted me to | timer and: moneys ani having re . do seat ore 0 a J tire thon waide, ard ia my ttekat, but returned without buying tt, | Are there Two Identten! § hot make up nid to trust Hutu. ‘he | 2 yee ; two, who bealdes me w 1 meen rinte Heratd publish went w I think he wanted to go to Lar In regard to Twoutd lay th not go afterall, He had no time, he said. On the Zid of ¢ ober, 260 . I jolned an exp ; be itlon to the Indian Tertiary, lithe capuclty of BT naw hitn write un article in | artist for Frank Lealle's Illustrated Newtepriper. Hoe showed it to me, and 1} My duty was to furnish sketches to the above w that is a“ correspondence” from Coue | Named publication of the council of, the ected maenlilite a rie hoes and Comanche indians on Medicine £ nople describing tho robbery Creek. Indian Territory. This council b porter—Was it printe matter of inp 5 presentatives « Merchant Yes, in the Times of Feb, 5, 1507. | the press wer (Among @ umber of d he had offered it to the HeraUt, but that | Eiunley. A recovulsed Iu the portrait publishe Bennett Id not t,and that he aft y Frank Leshe, in t hewspaper of July 1d flored It to the Tim furnished him through the kindness ‘of Me. Aatiapleln VP », | Conrey of the Herald), the identical st © reporter t {the gentleman for the | whose peculiarities had attracted, ny atten foll is Stanley's cor. | ¢ my stay in the Indian ‘Cerrtory.. This ie Gay rople, written in | Sravley had ben ordeved from is statleD at St York, and printed by the New ¥ a | Now, the perplexing point of the whole r er id tet Fed. 5,18 eos, Who bad by rirait pull ‘Lin Leslie's by het tule cits dation is the | when he bad bet t ssid in the spring i f New While the Indian incil was being held « id i 7 Medi Lo Creek the war was raging ordi y they. wore travellers there ace two Stanley Litth T 4 Tills and Ass | exactly alike in appearance, and both rep polntof copurt \ | forthe press, it may be safely accepted that there nh hear the tow fA h | \ v Asia. James bod vako, Arti r 1 d > Ieee Wanted te ce Gara T meee tae Mimutey ie Nothing but a Braud, erty. tshon Sin: Ldo not regard itas pre Ceredit and a valuntie | ‘you f rr Aivor ruftians « Key Tehih-Hissar, w they were t - | Dr. Livingston: rat ft Violen and brie e Stante a ier t 1 ge eller, Mr. Noo, was ab | that tunley's st sit ald be \ Fmalignity. The women | first time in the y own observation Feonttibuted to the | aud experience tha renga foundation for nity heaped upon the ta con ; a haale for nothing a with f Tie | pre t t v r s tthat ¥ In theit | case tos wt the ndwrit f the , pr as pte) dear sir” letter of br. Livings with all is mystery in which thoy | letters kuown to be fr Pe Tan Sa AN a dae tas it does noc involve th rand more im- | (anbes da the town, who | Dortant question, namely, "Did Stanley write Ries ease trae hes Dr. Livingstone’s letter of thanks to the editor noy wote. reed a | of the Herald they were Med. AUD’ That that letter resembles very closely the handwriting of Dr. Livingstone nobody se to doubt; not evea his own family, Why, th but from sheer w sé. ds such an efort niad: | that the letter of thanks is in Dr. Ly | sown handwriting, ‘the editor of ul Horak! ought to know that the uttnost he ean do in this direetion | slow how perfectly Sun. dey teas bu d Livingstone Hyver since T saw it siated that Dr, Livingstone had determined to “retura aud finish his ox Immediately on receipt of news of the | plorat Wilhout firs! coming home to greet a ee eee Lo, is family and hisseleatide frie nd to Make robbery, tho American Minister sent an encr- | uriiliant aud imposing arrangements fora fresh Festitution of th feitectataken | Start that could not fail of its end. became | the travellers, Mabie teh ae | comirmed in my suspicions of the whole thi limet Effendi, the ex-Cadi, and bis nine ac. | sor iit be y of the erepeb yk ae vine mplices before a tribunal of unexceptionabls | Sune ba indeed a fabricatiun, then Stauley’s re impartiality, In accordance with the request, | Pert of him ast as) OAL 1D Central Africa, coming home, would be absolutely neces bof the rob ¢ and their | ato Bi "f capital of the | salle, in Which the robbery was committed, ; Suspicious Cirew was promptly done, and they arrived at | Siantey 1 wy I chaluy a day or two aco, The trial Will lake place without delay absence | Man Tater Conatlar Avent. aC Hrwice | ‘The efforts of several papers in the last yous has courteowly requested the Lu fe w Gays t Ww that Stanley's dix aver of o okt : ° Of discussion, and. the opinion rapidly increase tuat the whole aidair ts a boax, Tinportant reve al Priot Jaiions concerning tis matter are promised In a eteers tr day or two by several persons who know Stanley aud Were familiar with bis plans at the tine of The Sun the expedition to Abyssinia and previous to his sin: I have carefully read the Ujiji | departure for Zanzibar, Several scientifle gent opinion Was un Hots t 1 ley s story is of the handwriting of the two letters of | false. A co. of Livingstone’s letter to Henry Stanley and Davld Livingtono Stanley, | Bennett with the private lolter of Stanley shows reel istind fe lon desite to offer a few | & Wonderful similarity of handwriting, and sev- and with your pormlasion desire to offer a f Stal aanecte pronounce. ¢hein. 1a tMo \ discrepancies poluted out by the H orld and SUN Herald docs not question that the two | ate to bo fullowed rs. The letter to Liv : teh pea ] ingstono’s brother in Canal has been sent for ned Her b ritten 22 ANd | and pages from it will be compared With private a on, and they bear no greater | bette nt nee toe ther than elth the A private le F Geographical S ae sign manual,” as the | purine jroots arcuinents of the Herald | Went unto Afr lance in the formation | be learned of | bis diary and used with equal effect | jim, Knowin i t i Jarit f the two Henry Liv ae a tts ox ry letters fora | 1 Hi ments Th fords Han tered part of has pointed i t t|t le would s in the and Wie : ~ tone 1 Open Livingstone’s Diary, niust I mind that the two with of mM to “Ilenry" Jotiers were written near the sa t ' tt and ie We Apa Blah aiterenaen beleen i t Woversy. But then Mr ma hot rea yi for wtill | Nee " , vat Stanley ts after, and wader widely diferent eireumn Ur SULUTne oR I wONd be-well for Dr. Livy he's daugater in ireland to open how aword to Flat Justitia’ In regara | the package which stanley brougat hor, Lt pur to hin Cautatlo eriticiam, (very eaurtte Of coatocy | RATER LO be hie ive ye Mary and bears tho tn being written by the writer of the article which | Junction that it ts not to be opened until the pan by aunieation bsainepe_res | Keeat traveller is Known to be dead. A glimp f the Haulee artument, the only new | al tue interior of that inysterivus budget migh points brought forward being the following Werte Che qnention, ICMr, Stanley had written the Livingstone letters Co va I APLLY suell cOrreetly RL least, aud Wid Wt have Written perveive" porcieve,” OF WoLul iro Stanley's dircovery of Livingstone and the genuincness of his lotters from the African explorer are still called in question, Bvidenes n'a | is presonted on both sldes, aud the Herakl for SPaper innovation, and not authorized by | the defonce, and THE SUN for the. prosecution bost authorities. ‘It is also a well-known brought by the unbellovera, present thei ft the argument fs evidence and the strength o it must be THE BALTIMORE A MYSTERY STILL HANGING AnOUP THE DREADPUL CRIMK, is ch eee eee et Ao rverncity, does fot stand venta Stantey with The Motive that Might have to Murder bi at Will-Alleged Finding of the ™ From tha Herat of Totey snuifbox set ved by Mr. Stanley: Fornton Orrice T have grent satisfaction in cons mand of the Queen ether with a magniti Driliiants, has been rec pondence of The Banrimore, Av Mrs, Wheat at her have display with her subjects, she had felt in re fate of that distinguished traveller. desires mo to express her thanks for th hus rendered, \ which han yu so fears | | lay bare the successfully carried out thet st obediant hunible servant, GUANVLLLE. most famous mur¢ | the attention of a jury. sed of the murder, was a you excellent characte of young m H. M, STANLEY, Fea. Using Words Coined er Dr, Livingstone ve published) purport- | , the alleged New York Sun of the avowed lot Tt is gettin @ question | ts side by side fac simil ter of Livinyratone to Bennett and a le ton by Stanloy to. his former companion, Louls ind the similarity of hand is certainly su The World also points out bad spelling in. thesLivingstone letter, of which an educated man ike the doctor would vention to th young wom ited in marriage ’ be guilty, and A gentleman interpolatio percue’s past life says that he first thought he should prepare himself for the rain urged thisdesire u: sented to place him in Dickinson College, hut tuntilhe had re struction from the Rev. Mr. N ing in Dickinson his aunt that the cide with his v | tuned her to allow him to w Whether or not she consented @ ander knowledge I possess of chirography, this siml- legitimate ® As previous 1 Leen raised by the fact that Living- stone & made in Wis letter to represent an African era ruining up hill, dnd also as using words rhe had been lost strange that tat dil not see the wikda of Africa, it wood many “de heui, begin to bting Thom vel a hoax of rather large | institution, not known, but he I d University. He ret y months Dlished an au. 4 to prove that raph lettor of Stante te to his aunt f ne. M t hoax of the century. In this Another F wrote to her that be had bi Le Voyage from Gerni on, the well- om Zanzibar, apher, has ret | He report A states that the hinself as dissatistied nt certain of ht been the fruit of actual aud in Marvellous, oubt that Stanley wand mike Wowith Mra. Wieat ho was t. These facts furnish a ve if true, rrespondent vols attention t FUNERAL OF A KNICKERBOCKER, A Large Guthering Distinguished Persons in Grace Chureh, y morning at is further positively Wheat was not awere that her pry, d Lombard str as hi I other Words, it is alleged for the property now held tn. reue Were obiained t h (Mie, Wie, su WW o'clock th remains of a leading ber of a well-known Knickerbe Hall Ward, took »wing named gentlemen were H. Strong, Wale b Astor, John » Johnston Livingstone, Henry T. Drown, and Ja ] the pall-bearers : 3 fact that for th the property in his own partly Whee mountings. HENRY HALL WAt i tif she was she was making, and was The casket was covered with wreaths and nortelles and tub her, organ el for eased and a nephew of Ward graduated at yandoned th sted ina banking £ continuing in the rs practice he rher heirs, aud the d by the di until his de: or seventeen years, PROM JUSTiCK BROWNE from his mivep by thi ‘omb's Dam and dred from the ase Inte the hallway below t that on the morning of the arrested on a war- Hauptman, having been e Fant from Jv «made forthe bullet suid be found. A bullet, or at Lo: garet Wheat, whil Pon examining the wails it sinaliseale of me Wer the charge of assault be Khad been di ther means did not aopear 1 otuer gi » Michael Lennon, went on a spree Aout 9 o'clock turned up on th New York side Visiting a r drinking they asked Jack to. the Harlem River tot terday mo} i where th ver mentic xamined the grou Lepson and Serg ithe lad who found the w ted them to the precise ty had « keen sense of | had drive in the ground where the pistol liy fear that the mark should be discovered ar other boys, he carefully ight by placing over it an old tin pan. fthe pistol being found in the rear iH, It Was fou on the t ur back b When Browne and Schwab were quarrel proached and dir The lad, who evide | Schad bit Brow mien discussed the subject last evening, and this | him whirhn Was served likewi received the worst e and stayed th e Wont to Justice Shlel 1 clip over the Justice Flannagan, | BROOKLYN MURDER Mrs, Drisco probably fatal In a Vory oritt 8 | hap. vi Wife's injuries. Very r New You, Aug. dy bs Perersnunc, Aug. 30. Poared at Groduo, the capital of the Goveram: th the weatern pai Maliuw of Urvdug lo about 15.00), coune fact that the most e:ninent weholars, aud eves | ter wKuiuents dally, Bo far the weight of the A Phe Second Pistol. an. W0.—The with intense pveries of nt “al dis rival in interest and imy » He bad ny on Tuesday next ULPERCUR'S PAST LIFK, timately acqua at instructions there wa of theoloty left the voll ained dad mission some. tim © mon On arriving in Kugla: Mra. Wheat called at the her counsel, and said she protected, as Jesse was aftor MRS, WHEAL'S WILIS. About three years ago Mrs, Whoat uted a willdevising a lane por the Methodist Chure and the rem was about Ure; could not ain it have ind nt Ant furnisues an addition. d MOTIVE FOR THE MURDER, Tt ts anid that about a year aco Mra, Wh hor house epliew Lo se juvest the prot he sald he had di ds asserted Ls had bee 1th aperty would ba tb bein iscovery the futur ha val t at Mrs. Wheat was fuliy istained by the ho, took he Ju sured th st Uppe s cimde ayral THE LOST WILE, Yesterday morning Mr. Bannon, legal » Wheat, and Messrs. nglis cue, vieled ted by Mr wher Mrs. Upr iret Wheat, sis and two youu ita f the family ve during life ‘| five ‘Another house Is to go vo balance of the eased is Willed to young Up. | Peicue, and after bis death to his heirs. THE MISSING BULL be remembered rsons that Veral | rediately z that entire d fh ‘ning in he was sweep eof the chim dged by th it. Le ps e defect in the wall f lead has been locked up, and may rein the trial of youn, stated by Uppercue. The bullet, however, could not have 1 if fred down (he font stal PHAY Ske PISTOL y said he ned in his testimony will be arin ofa | About 8 where the 1 f dwelling PRISONER AND HIS METI Drinking aod Sweariug. rae sue of God's cor tome that if armand Paul cae Ay who t n osu nyt wr bof God, which ty att Verse 10, as follows N nor drunkards, nor re vil %. xii inherit Liv kkaguu: poet fully poople! Dep: un Lullding.—44e TRAGEDY, Induced Uppers nt—The Vietinn« murd paldence, 664 Weat Lombant street, fs the leading topic of conversation here, and every atom of Informal | tragedy is seized uy Yesterday tance were made, but nothing has heen ed that may serve to cle about tho torrible unsel on both sides are using strong efforts (a facts of the case, and the n boar cases that ever Jesse Uppereus, who eof th of his age and posite nk, nor used tobaceo, nor attended places of amusement. H netic kind, and his evenings always spent either at his home or at that of the n to whom he was to have | habits we a his aunt until st 49 a fow months haraw fr Five years ao, unkno his aunt, he went to Germany, aud | University of Merlin. He svon tired of that ‘and then gal piversity of Hettelber bat at Tost, tirin y with Walch Wheat borrowed €.0 a bed while on y. and asked her tor mittauee of $0. ‘This w din due time Upper Tho Amertean says Uuat shortly af waned her wr to young Uppercue persuaded his auae to bother to Which all the j given to Lim, Since tien, tt expressed a desire to rev and for that purpose sent for Me statement 4 in bank. and that sae ward ascertained thatno such oale had Leen t been the case a will | h the other hand, young Upp " f the property wit ledve of his aunt, can tb nout doubt, have onsiderable Weis ry the Witnesses who eT ROUND, n being awakened pistol shot that kliled pper * dining room by M was disc had been knocked but whether Uf Hing, Upperene's coun: ds ininutely, as ant Barhart, a —F—22 ESS

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