Star of the Cape, 9 July 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 4

'zstrzx-irszzz called a dam bar of VMnaaaea to prove U>. good aod amiable character of the -lET-KlW. Hardin Wahrorih, the SSttfatoi**S^faSiadT She widow of XaaafMdwidwoith; I waa

10 Grove, the family id and raaideBoo of the ChanWo fired there until JaTl?,

a HardiA, my brotbem, who

are in court, alao were there ocea&ionally. In 1861 we left ^ndoga. (Witneaa here read a Hat of the children

to them, eight in n

Bamec and dataa oi out went to Eantnoky and lived on ■ anperintending a garden and i vegetal) Ice. After my hnaband 1. at Baratoga I did not aea him for

nr nothing of the inth whidTbr. Trim- , On myfather-a I of the dieeeee in

following enamor I saw him for a week in Senioga. The following epring I taw him for a few deye in New York OitT. He came again to " Bird'. Neat" (witnesa'a home in Kentnekyl, the next -for a few day*. In the rammer

him, hie father :iim before hit

dbniUUnga attacked by

of 1866 I

being an lions to ae death. We went to

left me again after

death. During Mr. Walworth'). -* with hie brother in Albany, I

1 Washington, and had a OMrkoneof the departments. When

. , _1T situation then I coma to New

Tort atWalworth's earns tetion, after boarding a while

““ ■»«

Werklng of the Pre-Kata Law la

£25' followii forded

i new Baiboad law. The

i^HAiok: e great rocOv of the West,

Bail way this wee not

euH problem to solve, b: r point renchcd by t, v it is the ahortesn ron

A distance tariff could, tner fore, be profitably made. Bo' with U north and aonth roads the ease & uni ' _ ’ ■■ ■M— " 1

,Wc

they are aoeaotT linos. Take the <_ and Alton Bailroad.

it to intersected by the Indianapolis,

Bloomington and Weal fayette, Bloomington

York to Bloomington that ia made by the Alton Bailroad by way of Chicago, w-latter being the strongeat, the-*—*

I will be enabled, x ander the o

finally separated from my hnaband.

f..^! 5“"™..» *ol‘ »»• «M6nn_ by me

Hr. O'Oonor then read from the paper i the divorce unit to' show that the scree of the ooort was mgdifiad, so tat the father-eoold visit his children. Witness continued: While I was living 'n New York I stayed at tho houae of fudge Barbour, end my brother, Gen. d. B. Hardin, stopped at the Hoffman " “ ■ to atop with Cler-

100 pounds of rosin oil, end heating.

i Walworth, and afterward with . Backus. Then I wait to live et

i toga, when I have

From the time of my separation I Hr. Walworth until hie death be

quently wr ' —

preceding

id my h8au£ wee very he birth of my child at :

one hour, with two pounds of dryelaked lime, allowing It to eool, draw-

There were many lettem written by my hoi band which I did not receive. I received e letter from (Bar-

to Europe with him. shooting. When I told Frank he reseed hie pleasure, and maid that he 1 think about it This was on Thursday before the shooting. On FriS bo went on e fishing excursion. Do know of Frank's receiving a letter from Hr. Walworth on Saturday or Sunday. Do not know that I noticed anything nnn-Ti-l {q the conduct of Frank before he left on Mooday to come to the Oitv. When I found that he had gone on Monday, (I did not know where he

I went into hie ra

ken hie flehing-teekle. I o empty envelope shown d to think in the hand-

„ of Mansfield Tracy Walworth. Witness then deposed to having caused n i or her sou to bo made, end havtbe dispatch to his uncle Clar-

alluded to

affine, oan be unproved ea Inbrioanta, by thiokauing them by melting them with lead soap. Mixtnrea of petrolenm, rosin oil and main soap, art frequently used as inbrioanta, ae roll as glyoer-

No person oan expect the largest untiThS or absfbMoniM 'ronrifSdo* the absolute neoeaeity of relieving overable U, permit a'ttee ‘oTri^ ^b^r

*

mSrt’b

which will bear large orons of oboioe fruit, but they ere r*re. Money would be made if half the fruit of aU {he trees

toS' SnSS? and^U

AnepphtUrfi, Snll ——1- '*#

gentleman in hie testimony.

After witness had idraufied papers in the divoroe rail, Mr. O'Oonor was about to ask her ea to the habits of the prisoner. The District Attorney promptly objected to the question — the ground of its irrelevancy. '

Court sustained the objection.

Hra. Walworth then continued her testimony, and, in answer *- *'

O'Gonor'a questions, deposed one time she found in Frank's a las

to her.

shown witness, which si ho handwriting of hi of those which Frank had ' - dated Ang. 18

must have been written ia 18^' end wee reed only by the District Attorney

— tho Ooort.

The letter which young Walworth wrote to his uncle Clarence of Jnne 1, a *- jury. "

thanked him for the offer to take • Enrope, and further stated that he - -* -• would be

in of the ver rate and thi

; hot they

just as high aa

bring- it a trifie

bed by the long

- - — Shg operation law especially designed to prevent HI It will force the longest road entirely ont of the competition and plaoe it utterly at the mercy of the short route. Fox, rather than lower the general tariff

wuwpaiHtiew mediate stations, to merely nominal figurea, the companies will prefer to abandon the baeinees et competing points the deficiency Ue loss will

gSiXigW

-g-^- T-wbod^gh,

blood, who talk tt one, dm propnete places, think of it and then wait for the next mi

ing in jOTrnalism all my^Ufe kng, m — * a murder Dial yet, 5 ! have ne

non go into the mouth of one o. ommon sewers in New York and wallow i them, ae in that part of journalism

•ewer of the crime* of the lower (Amlanae.) It ia the interest of jonrnalism that these things be either sbnt up «- few or absolutely destroyed o

sa of news should M i

rigidly^eT eluded

they were ever found there. The paper that goes into the household, should go there like tho sunlight that breaka through in the month of May of the cold and frigid air, that ea in through light of buds and being Blossoms. Dst it be as the he frag-, and all

•gent of the srge lor t— 1

consigned to hi local stations tho a rata that would be charged from i cago. Thie policy would violate

spirit of the new law, ~ to evade the penalties mmtby offering^ to tak

for flrat, second,

freight, and wiU

iw, but ho proposes es of its infnngeloads at >0

third and

_ . will offer this advantage any one whe oan ship by car-load. The roralt will be that, if ' '

a hundred mile*

ity. the latter win be compelled to pay . higher rate for a looser distance than the heavier shipper for perhaps double the distance. And their justifiable exenee will be grounded on the wording of the lew prescribing that for • like quantities,’ Ae., a greater charge shall not be nude for e leaser distance then

* iregraaier. "Tnenorti

ind south roads will suf-

, — not alone. The Bock land Company, for instance, will have abandon thebmdneaa of Peoria. Lest

year that a 8300,000. ]

line to the East than by ■go, and wilL therefore, ower then the Book Island

mie.rS Company freight as

fact, andjlke Mr. Smith, of the Alton, end to. Tneker, of the Illinoia Central, is preparing to nuke good this deficiency by increasing the '—’ —‘ ~

cicntly to maintain

than they hare done hitherto, v -‘— ipelled to abendan such _

' :SZ

short

Urge portion of their would be justified in me]

by increasing tho

fore the courts, and be able to oonvinoe any jury that, if the rates charged for the peat ten or twelve years were 1 ‘'ve, their material advance n>

of the opinion " Jur aafe ‘

protected 1

think that h •afc. He further says:

to New York in them'

forming mother, for she would feel very "“I- My trip will determine e— ion in regard to my going

" These view* may yet be modified, ae ne of the Uriffk—exoopt that of the ore in print an arbitrary handling ard dalivwring freight at life iwo siatiriu where received sad delivered. The whole tariff u then made by adding a fixed rate per 100 pounds per mile, vsrytngeooordfng to eUaeifiostion. The result is somewhat to decrease the jmceent ratre and sensibly to equalise

ysHarsfiS father he ought to fed) more benignly; having been reed by the mother it shonla take every wrinkle fror - n*\ by the eh a Cl each other kindly face end with a w grasp. Cursed be that paper that i into the house bringing with it tiani and eavyinga, jealousies hatred and rivalries—aU those divisive influenoee that strike the chad of hate and make the burdene of life heavier. ~ ’ light, give me mirth, give , give me hope dud love from tho columns of the paper, end I will bless God for him that guides such e paper as that; but bring me nothing that stirs up the worst feelings of man's nature. That which is not fit

The family is the unit of measurement. The newspaper ahonld be guided by the waaU of good, honest, manly, Bound hearted people that mean well end strive -* " Every good newspe^ir

should strive to n

I 41

cheerful, care le borne, life

. present full of

uty, and the future full of immortality. It is not a very high standard to set,

rd toward which some

bright, the skit trouble easier t< fall of hope, the

i futurefa

but it is a standard to

papers are reaching, wl will some day resell tha

Sioio'm

ration progreases, the great moral trath,jnaoA frimera, integrity,

to the paper, end those ]

qualities, 1 or drift d<

not imbed themselves

will naturally be thrown o

the power, the influence, end that to i ^Sadies and gentlemen—T trust th—, though I cannot speak from knowledge, I believe that yo* are the most fortunate of your local journals. I believe that the gentlemen that have eon Kethor in this convention wiU all to their spheres of labor, many of them *—' Esome sphere*, with apurpooe to journalism a profession, and a ■don too in which truth, manhood,

toconrey'to tos wito in the ftovrere ese 1 ' "

» -bolnilnt in search of jore stiiAs which ^ti

erj^BSai hardly a word a tiered. The Celestials

- pair of baggy , black pigtail was arranged wit

as the corpse wanting i ~ wooden shore tojnako

i journey to the “

— ..ithout e coffin — , mortal remains of Ln Ching Choc * slowly and silently down the .. .v- ,—V followed by his

pair of wo invisible jo

re easy its I of Fiow-

o laundry, folk) Celestials fijetl of)

wed by a jinf Then the into:

the rdeee burial the Celestials filed off in good and nearly formed e drele around

the grave. La Ching Choo followed by a jingling

ravers. Then the interpreter, icd to superintend the burial

' pile of paprre the grave. Eec!

i, lighted a

pile by throwing other piece* of en jt. They honied joes stick

, sticks and

into- the grave, departed might

of perpetual happiness. After th ering of the grave, prayers were tend, end two-cent end ono-oent. distributed among tho spectators.

Escape of the Murderer Wagner. Advices from Portland, Me., say that two new.watchmen were put on.d^utj to

neX.

vas lying very stilL At three, o'clock, ibeerving that the prisoner was in " - same position, the watchman made _ investigation and found a broomstick dressed in Wagne^ clothing in tho place of Wagner, and on further exami---‘-'-n it was ascertained that Warner two other prisoners had sawed off

bars guarding a scuttle leadi . etry on the floor bell hearty meal and departed, good ilia promise that ho offloers good-by eoon. ,

The announcement of the escape i Wagner is not snrpriaing, in view of little incident which happened at tin jail a few days ago and before Wague. waa convicted. On Tuesday last ho remarked to a deputy sheriff that ho could —-il>e from the jail when he liked, but

io would bid the

a (Wagner's) hereupon Wa

lo desire to 1 __. d_ him that he was misWarren had said tliat ill was perfectly secure.

,uju*

officers, desiring to hnmor him, stepped

‘ if the alloy and so around the cc o another passage-way, where, infinite surprise, Wagner joined in about a minute's time. The m paper which reports this cirtance adds that it is stated that on

the night previous to thiseveutthedoor leading from the main corridor to the jailer's rooms was loft open ; that Wageasily have passed from his — M rooms, and that then a leap from a window would have given him freedom. Perhaps he made his escape

this way after all.

Wagner, was captured by a fanner in Farmington, N. H., about thirty mile* from hra prison. rr - -• *■--

fanners for something to cat; pec ted, and arrested, and wi

back to his old prison.

taken

oor, justice i Christian f

this land,)

arr.

heart, aoul with aonh

stand high her profre-

loulder, heart

Life in the Indian Territory, aimers and superstitions in the In-

dian Territory are. in many re*peels,

Indian. Hospitality ia

, — as soon aa an Indian of wealth and station takes a wife, ell her relatives, even the most distant, come to live on his estate, and remain forever, or until they have impoverished him. The tyranny of mothers-in-law in the Tetri lory is something frightful to contemplate. One Indira gave as his reason for not wishing to get rich, the torments which hie relatives, in case be married, would reuae him. Food ia simple throughout aU the nations. Corn, ground with mortar and pretie, famishes the material for bread ; a few vegetablet are grownrad game, hogs, and cattle are abundant. The hog of > Indira Territory is a singular ar L Having run wild all his life, he diatjagulaticd for thinness as are h

— ffsetoraat the dsr hra beat a

hihMnarajMlW -i* ah

- r

detohia have jatt iasaed. "A* Light ia tha bt>

of the ittoita

Frftoto^torLdta^if toive brief, but comprehensive; biographies of the Apostles, tho Prophets, **-- Martyrs, rad tho principal Holy ! rad Women of the Jewish dispensation and the early church. They are admirably written, and contain a vast reading, coraring alftLe.ground from

St. John to the Reformation Added to them is al

, . history Jews, embracing the entire narrative of the Scriptures, and extending it down to the beginning of the present eenf This constitutes a very attractive fei if the book, rad will be eagerly iy all There ia nothing so uifore: IT thrilling in all the range of rom . aa the history ef the chosen people ol God. Then follows a series of aketchei

neirial religions denomi: irld, in all ages, which

are free to add our testimony to this remedy. It is a domestic medicine, and no household should.be without it—Cbm.

of tin.

of instruction end valuable ence. The book close* with a Chronologies! table, by means of which th —*— is enabled to follow the progres Gentile world whilst Israel ws

tg out her destiny.

Two noted literary men died in New York city last year, and it was supposed they both died poor. Each received a salary amounting to more than 83,000 a year, for many yearabefore ho died. In

deceased to obtain the burial expeni

— Miliman, Dr. ...... James Ferguson, Lord Arthur and others, on whom the editor he has drawn freely for hie m Altogether it is the moat thoroi

... boojj o( y,,,

K 0 s A D A L 1 S

Physicians whe .. — been introduced. It will positively cure SCROFULA in ill rartova itaor*, KHEUMA T1SU, WHITE SWELLING, GOVT, GOITRE, BRONCHITIS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, INCIPIENT CONSUMPTION, and aUdiscases arising from an impure condition of the bleed. Send for ourBosAiuua Anaswac, in which yon will find certificates from reliable end trustworthy Physi-— * •*--

Dr. J. Walker's California Yinepar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the unlive herbe found on the lower ranges of lie Sierra Netada mountains of Callforila, the medicinal Properties re extracted therefrom withoi

'f Alcohol,

laily asked. “

without the v

K2

Publishers have placed it at such a lo~ price that it is within the reach of every one. The work is for sale by subscription only, and tho publishers want (agents in every county. National PnbHahing Co., Philadelphia, Pa.—Cbm.

•old Deacon B

nan nis^eye on Mrs. W , lingered on the borders of the grave, A *-w days after tho funeral of Brother ' the deacon made a friendly call i tho widow, and in the oonrse of th? Held. Eu nvereation remarked that he proposed offer her the consolation of nia hand ! Cnspr* id heart, which he hoped would not, . -- “‘'I''" *“ 1 ‘'" >U ■* ' .moolb. by luting the J

o late: EM,

Official Report of the Wheat Crop. The Agricultural Bureau al Washington issue the* following official report

-..a *‘V- whoa:

.oaUyha

Crist ado no's Eicm-aroB H eea ro oalren^ljwltaowledgeil Ua

CONSUMPTION Inn j ATlCl xts 01X1*0. mX YPYULSOIVS Carbolated Cod Liver Oil

have been received, 202 are above tho average, 168 average and 881 below. Of 800 counties reporting spring wheat 103 are above the average, 115 average rad 68 below. The average of winter wheat ia somewhat increased, though , many fields have been winter-killed 1,

and ploughed up for sprit other crops. The acreag wheat ia very largely in

MdO^ta^rraCklto.

SrEir |

FEVER AND AGUE.

sc