University of South Carolina Libraries
w fii / .Mi bp 1 A %L. ^■rvjzss. gwf .y—^ SBABLES e. B. BRAYTOX, 3 ■pdk □ C.; TUESDAY, AU<? GUBERNATORIAL KACE. t'lTZ JOU> i'OKTA.-f.S liVAlit/MYX, ifcder "WIIAT T» SAID ABOUT IT BY OVK DKIiUXi.lTlO.N IN WASHINGTON. BhsppnrtI, RfdiardsoD and Coker In a Baneh Ahead of the Field—McCra- dy aiso Mentioned—Whai Colonel Simon ton Think**—The Delegation ly Cautiooa about Kxprcsi*> Choioe.. Koton, July 20.—South Car- tm afe very guarded they say about the approach- r ' 4 gubernatorial contest. All of them, however, agree that" the race will probably hp bet wee A Governor Bheppard, State Treasurer Richard- pon and Col. W. C. Colter. From the information received here Governor Sheppard appears to have a alight ad vantage, owing to the fact that be is considered bright, active and proeres- plve andih accord with the policy of his predecessor. ’His only weakness appears to be his personal unpopulari- Py L » ^y-JDumnbers of the delegation Ills ACTTTty ahd Integrity, harles H. himonto^; of Char leston, who is here, was at the Capi- tol talking fcjtato politics with Hamp ton, Hargan,* Hemphill * and -other members of jthe delegation- He says R is difficult (to na;n^> the winner at present owing to thoTact that so many men are mentioned as possibilities. The present Governor has the advan tage of being in po-tsc^sion, uiui is en dowed witli political shrewdness and euecutive ability which he will use for it is v^orth. Bo far as personal rit; goes Col. Richardson robably be the choice of a of the delegation, and his would be recognized as a long and faithful service. k«T and McCrady alsphave m admirers among the delegation, as before stated, the latter are not lined toexpressany decided choice :i the matter. J.EAKINO AXMOCKNTTENT. The Senate to-day completed the /Bonsideration of tlie deficiency bill, leaving but one other approjiria- flon bill (fortification) to oonside’s JUM)f of A Dangerfins Bide Over tfco ate Camp In War Times. Atlanta Comtitulio, “I suppose you have “heard Jfavn Porter’s balloon ride,” sal old tffc^ny officer. ‘‘Well, it wasoj the mofK romantic events in the lift that galfAnt soldier. He was with McClellan irk the Pennsylvania cam paign and was r^stinguislied for his in- intelligent activity. Porter conceiv ed the idea that balloons could be made very useful in ^oconnoitcring and at hia request GCnei^’McClellan obtained the necessary eqmiAnaent for this eervice. The balloons and appa ratus for the manufacture of the £as were procured without much difljeufe' ty, but an aeronaut was not so easy to obtain. Borne of the officers of the engineer corps agreed to make the first trip in the balloon which was to afford a view of the Confederate oper ations. -Porter watched their prepar ations with kgen interest. Just as they had everything ready he stepped into the basket of the clumsy gas bag to see that every thinghad been proper ly prepared. While he was examining the machine it slipped from the grip of the men who held it and shot like an arrow up into the air, carrying Porter as its lone passenger. He had never been in a balloon before and knew nothing whatever about mau- eging one. “A stifl breeze was blowing and the great bulb flew like a bird away from tlie astonislied camp, uutil it became a mere speck in the sky and then fad ed completely from sight. Not a man who watched it disappear expected that lie would ever see Porter alive again. He started on his wild flight at 7 o’clock in the morning. The day wore away with the camp in a state of great cpinmotion over the probable death of its favorite oflicer. When night came and nothing had been seen of the balloon it was the general conviction that Porter had eitherb^en killed by a fall from bis ba>hSon or had been captured by iUfe/Confeder- algs. Abcut daybreak morning a picket challanged a man coming to- the Federal line and a moment WIDHfiPUEAD DI3A WITHOUT niRZns, FlTY. -Governor Moses Dying In a Foil? Cell. The Crops in Georgetown Completely Ruined I»y the FEkwI—People Al ready in Want of Food—IntttiecllatoJ Aid Necessary. ,* Atlanta ConutUution. Georgetown Enquirer. j Behind the bars of a gloomy cell in I .returned home this morning to ; the Massachusetts penitentiary there find the country one mass of wajer. is a shattered wreck of a man who is When I left I could look out from my j face to face with death, door over hundreds of acres of green j pitying eyes look into his; no fields and busy laborers, all sugges-j friendly voice utters a word of com- tive of prosperity and plenty. To-day j fort, and no kind hand ministers to r*^rv GO TO SUF.BP. Alt the other bills are in the hands'^,,, recognized General Porter, pf conference committees, thus allowl ij^the 2 houses ho discuss other mat-‘ awaitfng-the reports of the committees. The Morri resolution will a -raofrow in t saving the dis^^ Km -* ur ^ith the SFcrotaiy of Senate E/^ kan(1 otllyr ’will fightjt “®hth and nail, >r'threu^'*^ 8 may be eon- it. Final adjourn- xueut wiu. cerUvinly be readied by Monday or Tuesday of next week. NO WAR WITH MEXICO. The Cutting Con. plication in Process of Amicable Settlement. El Paso, Texas, July 27.—Consul Brigham, of Paso del Norte, says that no headway has been matte in the His on had carried him clean over pufederate army." Ho was fired dozim-feimef) by the Confederate ry. At night-the wind chang ed and brought him back, and when Tvesaw that he was over liis own army he let out the gas gradually and safe ly descended, after being twenty-four hours in the air with a horrible death constantly before him. After this strange adventure no more experi ments with balloons were made in McClellan’s army. How to .Destroy Rats. An attempt to catch rats by traps or by poisoning them suddenly will fail. Old rats know too much, and can only be caught by kindness. To destroy Jbein, give them a good meal every Do not put any poison in the I look over the prospect and beholfl only one dull, dirty, yellow mass of water. No sign of life presents Itself, except the fast-running current and the birds of prey that soars overhead. Men have been to me already, ask ing for work and saying that they had &.iten the last in their houses. I can not jlnd them work. Thousands are in the 3^me condition, here and else where. ^it£e disastrous result of last year cropping' caused many to begin this year in debt,and they are estopped from what they might otherwise do. What are we to do? The disaster is widespread. I do not know that it will be as severely felt in other sec tions as here but Imre we stand to-day on the brink of a fai,iine. What are we to do? The State is the only power we can appeal to. She is the legitimate protector of her citi zens. It is her part to .secure them in life prosperity and liberty. We should have concerted action, and we should act before the dire emergency of a starving people is on us. Let the Legislature be called togeth er to devise the ways and means. Borne will say it will cost top much. Well, if the necessary relief £an be given without this expense, by all means let us have it. If not, the ex- j peuse will be but a bagatelle in compur j ison with the relief to be given or in contrast with the sufiering that will ensue. There are yet three and a half months to the meeting of the next Legislature and in this space of time relief oughtto be found for many. I offer these suggestions in order that attention may he directed to the condition of affairs and some means devised for relief. Respectfully, BexJ. Allston. Exchange, July 13, 188G. the wants of this suffering outcast. This utterly friendless man, who ip left to die like a dog, was not always a felon, and in other days he had troops of friends. In the first flush of his bright manhood Franklin J. Moses was regarded as one of the most brilliant of South Carolina’s sons. But his good fortune was his ruin. Success maddened him. He became the-most prodigal ruler that ever sat in a Governor’s chair. In bis vain desire to give his State a dazzling administration he fell an easy prey to unscrupulous flatterers who knew how to make thrift follow fawning. The Governor of a great commonwealth became the accom plice of swindlers. Disgraced and scorned by his own people he left the executive mansion and became a wan derer on the face of the earth. His recent history is painfully fa miliar. Time and again within the past few years the penniless exile has yielded to temptation, or to necessity, and lie has paid the penalty. From jail to jail, and from prison to prison this broken man lias gone, never escaping the consequences of his pet ty transgressions. Now, at the age of fifty, when he should be in his prime, he is cut oil' from his kindred and the friends of his youth, and forgotten and uncared for, is left to die a felon’s death. * Men will say that it is just. They will^ay it is a warning example. It is more than all this. It is the sad ending of a waisted life, and it is im possible to contemplate it without pity- will says rrot ihe case against Editor Cutting, uow in progress under the ^supervision of the Chief Justice of ’ ihe .State of Chihuahua. But by this lie only means that no conclusion been reached and that TbeOblgJ^ <ra5 “ f Ch hU “- hua ,s a c,eycr " 1 — a man of high legal at- He speaks English flu- P igh in his State and •iepublic, and is a par- with the American ^Chihuahua, most of isiness is in his hands. Le^who know’ him are confi- L-^ent tliBbi 0 decision will ha correct pud delayed. Goverphr Torres has arrived here on bis way home from the City of Mexi co. H« saysJhat the Cutting trouble Will all come out straight without in volving any animosity or bad feeling between the two Republics, and he ex presses himself as being regretful of any complications or questions be tween the authorities. He said that Mexl^xj^iust n^odernize her laws. ABomnnmbulist’s Rath. Savannah News. /Shortly after 9 o’clock Monday pight the attention of the watchman on board of the British bark Lom bardian, lying at the Savannah, Flori da and Westorn railway wharf, was attracted by the cries of some one in the water. On looking over the side of the vessel he discovered a white woman in the water clinging to the. spilling of the dock. The watchman ^mmediafely lowered the ship’s boat and rescued the woman from her patiloys position and assisted her to th^pcKTBhe was in her niglit cloth ing, and gave as a reason for being in that dress that in a fit of somnam bulism she get upout of lied and won dered down to the wharf. Not know ing where she was going she walked overboard. The cold water and the plunge awoke her ami she managed to catch hold of one of the spiles pro jecting outWrom the wharf. Bhe was very much frightened over her bath and did not give lier name. She was taken to her home In the southeast ern part of the city. Her disappear ance had just been discovered before 3he returned. She \valked over half a inile while asleep. A Young Lady Dead In Her Red. .Qreenwood, July 23.—The house hold of Mr. and Mrs. John Brunson, near Parkville, vas tnrown into a ter rible state of excitement this morn ing. Upon going tothe room of their daughter. Miss Nettie Brunson, they {ound her dead. Dr. Loo was called, fend he alt rihuted her death to heart disease. Miss Brunson was oiHy 23 years of age, and was highly esteem ed by all who kuew'hor. ‘She leaves many relatives and friends to mourn her loss. .' for food, but simply prepare a dish them daily, as a free Junclnero of corn meal into whioh>^ egg aDd a 1Ittle Balt (to ATis been beaten. At first they may not touch it, but keep it before them, making it fresh daily. They will soon try a little, and if not inju rious their suspicions will be allayed. In a week or ten days they will ex pect it, and every rat on the place will be at the appointed spot for the treat* Give plenty of it, §o as to induce all the rats in the neighborhood to join in. Do not be in a hurry to poison them. If they eat all the food, give them » larger quantity next time. As soon as they have thrown efT all sus picion go to your druggist, get some phosphorus paste or other rat poison, mix it with the food and be sure you give them enough and something to spare, so as to induce all to eat. They will either be killed or become so sus picious of all food as to leave, and not a rat will remain. Hence to destroy rats, take plenty of time, gain their confidence and finish them when they least expect it. Social Classification in Jail. Detective in Globe-Democrat. There is noplace in the world where there is such a distinct classification of society as in jail. I found that out when I was cultivating Mr. Max- well’s society and pumping oncS'nfes- sion out of him. The aristocracy are the fellows in for murder. They, as a rule, maintained a dignified reserve, and are addressed Mr. jgo-and-So by the other prisoners. On the other hand they call their fellow-prisoners John or Bill. The next grade are the pro fessional crooked men. There is a great rivalry between them and the murderers as to which really form the j creme-de-la-creme, and the conse quence is coldness exists. They speak j of each other’s crimes in a slighting manner and depreciate one another’s villiany. The lower classes are represented by the sneak-thieveg, the tramp crooks and amateurs. They are looked upon with contempt by those who have progressed further in crimes, and not associated with. On their part they recognize their unworthiness and are meek and lowly, esteeming it a favor to do the boss criminals some little ser vice. There is an unwritten law estab lishing these grades, and ir is never violated. ' A young lady in Chambersburg shows her fondness for pets by bring ing up a young pet pig. She fged + the little porker with candy,an i often when lie is lyiugasleep ‘ beyoung lady i fans him to soothe his slumbers. A Machine That Retains Speech and Repeats it Whenever , Wanted. Wasiiingtox, July 21.—Professor TalnLoi , at tbo Bt’l 1 .aLciutory, to day gave a private exhibition of bla curious invention, the graphophone. The machine is an improvement on the Edison phonograph. If is of the simplest construction, consisting, ap parently, ofa small brass cylinder and a couple of rubber-bound wheels con necting with another smaller brass shaft and operated by a small balance wheel, with a thumb crank. On the larger cylinder or shaft is placed a close-fitting tube, covered -•♦iiK wax and paraffin** —HnrTower shaft, i*>*rr-fTfches distant from and parallel with the other, is cut a fine screw thread. On this rest a gutta-per cha tube, the lower end fastened in a socket piece,which fits to the threads, the upper end jresting lightly on a wax cylinder. Close inspection shows that the upper ends of this gutta-perchei tube has a small lancet-like knife, and this connects by fine silk thread with a vibrating diaphragm. To this dia phragm, which corresponds to the drum of the ear is attached a speaking tqbe about a foot long, in the flaring end of which the operator talks. As he speaks he turns a wheel, the wax cyliner revolves and the thread ed shaft carries the gutta-percha lever along, the lancet cutting a fine thread in the wax corresponding with the spiral thread. The depth of the cutting is regulated by the force of the sound waves on the diaphragm through the thread connection. As soon as the operator has concluded sneaking the tube or receiver is removed and a sounding tube is substituted. The lan cet tube is set back at the beginning, the wheel turned and the knife run ning through the same lines of the wax gives back the same sounds. Tiie professor read from ("a newspa per in a natural tone of vtoce and the same tone was repeated loud enough to be heard by every one In thj room. He then talked in a.rich the rising and fall ing inflection, and the iilBfc&HBlenc? peated it as many times as it was ground over. Then Mr. Maguire, Professor Bell’s private secretary, sang “Annie Laurie” to it, the sweet strains being given off afterwards at the will of the operator. The voice of the singer and every peculiar intona tion would have been recognized by those who had ever heard him sing It is proposed to run the machine by A List of Cajulidates Nominated for the iBtate Offices. Columbia Record. The following citizens have been placed in nomination by their friends with or without'iheir knowl edge, for the State offices; for which nominations are to be made next month. Probably the list is not com plete, but any omissions will be cheerfully made good: Ju.l;,o W..!!ree and Ex-Governor Perry have positively' iTectinvCt to be candidates for the nomination for Governor, and Col. Tillman, it is as sumed, desires to remain in Congress. It is not known whether Col. Coward desires a renomination as Buperinten- dontof Education, as it is understood he seeks the nomination for Congress in the Fifth district. General Mani- gault has not indicated his desire for reaomination, but is supposed to be in the field. FOK GOVERNOR. W C Coker, of Darlington; Edward McCrady, Jr., of Charleston; B It Tillman, of Edgefield; John Bratton, of Fairfield; J P Richardson, of Clar endon; \V D Johnson, of Marion; G J Patterpon, qfChester; B W Edwards of Darlington; Joseph Walker, of Spartanburg; B F Perry, of Greenville (declined;) G DTillman, of Edgefield, J C Sheppard, of Edgefield; W H Wallacp, of Union, (declined;) A C Haskell, of Richland. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. D 8 Henderson, of Aiken; C J C Hutson, of Hampton; W L Mauldin, of Greenville; Knox Livingston, of Marlboro; J 8 Verner, of Oconee; R A Childs, of Pickens, and C S Mc Call, of Marlboro. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE. It It Hemphill, of Abbeville, W Z Leitner, of Kershaw; B H Massey, of York; \V \V Humphreys, of Anderson FOR COMPTROLLER GENERAL. W E Stoney, of Berkeley. FOR TREASURER. Richard Singleton, of Richland; I S Bamberg, of Barnwell; J B McFad- den. of Chester. J H automatic motion, though in this ex periment it was by hand, occassional- ly fast and slow, and worked admira bly. • The utility of the graphophone fi use as an amanuensis, doing away with a stenographic expert. The re ceiver may be a mere copyist. Pie or she sits in front of the instrument and writes out from it fast or slow as the occasion and rapidity of the writer may require. The wax thread cut on tlie cylinder is a matrix, from which the sound can be taken at any time.) The cylinder has a basis of paper and : can be mailed ami the talk reproduced j anywhere from a similar machine, j Newspaper dispatches maybe dictated and taken from' ft by the telegraph operator without going through a j stenographer and written out. The! FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL. C R Miles, «>f Charleston, and Earle, of Sumter. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF EDUCATION Charles Petty, of Spartanburg; J G n; D A Town- sendT’oT'TFnTouuJ^^^UMjii&Si °f Rich land; R M Davis, of Faafield; D B Johnson, of Richland, FOR ADJUTANT AND IN&PEOTO M L Bonham, Jr., of Abbevil! Marshall, of Richland, and Cli St. G Sinkler, of Berkeley, nighi Scene In wMeli James anil , '-Wife 1'Jaj the LeadingiiJies. •Cincinnati Enquirer. L There was an article'-ftoiu*? the rounds entitled “How the girts*^ 0 to sleep.” The manner hi which the, go to sleep according to the articled can’t hold a candle to the way a hi®| ried woman goes to sleep. Instead of thinking what she should have atr tended to before going to bed, she thinks of it afterward. While she is revolving these matters In her mind, and while snugly tucked up in bed the old man is scratching his legs in front of the fire and wondering how he will pay the next month’s rent. Sudr deniy she exclffinje: “James, did you lock the door?” ’ “Which door?” s^s James. “The cellar door,” say she. “No,” says James. “Well, you had better go down and lock it, for I heard some one in the back yard last night.” Accordingly James paddled down the stairs and locks the door. About the time James returns and is going to bed she remarks: “Did you shut the stair door?” “No,” says James. “Well, if it is not shut the cat get up in the chamber.” “Let her come up, then.,’ James, ill-naturedly. “My goodness, no!” returned his wife; “she’d suck the baby’s breath ” Then James paddles down-stairs again and steps on a tack and closes the stair door and curses the cat, and returns to the bedroom. Just as he begins to climb into his conch his wife observed: “I forgot to bring up come water, suppose you bring up some in the big tin.” And so James with a muttered curse goes down into the dark kitchen and falls over a chair, and rasps all the tin ware oflT the wall in search for the “big” tin, and then jerks the stair door open and howls: “Where the dueceare the matches?” She gives him a minute direction where to find the matches, and, adds that she would rather go and get the water herself than have the whole neighborhood raised about it. After which James finds the matches, pro cures the water and comes up stairs and plunges into bed. Presently his wife says: “James let’s have an understaqding about money matters. Now, next week I’ve got to pay “I don’t know what you’ll ha pay, and don’t care!” shouts J no I ure ii os 'iffWfiW- anil "ja against the wall; “all J^want sleep.” “That’s all very well for you,” his wife, as she pulls the covej ly; “you never think of the^ trouble I have. And th< ta, who, Ido believe, is ft “Let her take ’em,” says James,^ Hereupon she begins to cry so" but about the time Janies is fal into a gentle doze she punches the ribs with her elbow and says? “Did you hear that scandal about Mrs Jones?” * “Where,” says Jamesyfeleeplly, “Why, Mrs. Jones.” v “Where?” Inquires James. “I declare,” said his wife, you'"•re getting more styLpid-evfcry day. You know Mrs. Jones that lives at No 21 ? Well, day before yesterday Busan Smith told Mrs. Thompson that Bam Barker had said that Mrs. Jones had n Here she paused and listened. James is snoring in profound slum ber. With a snort of rage she pulls all the cover off him,wraps up tn them and lays awake until 2 a. m., thinking how badly used she is. And that the way the married woman goes to sleep. "star and G R&su citizen dered n by County demand bf ghan,of Pe the charge was taken fforn tlie Mexican eight hours after his incareeratioi carried two miles below Pedras Negron with his hands tied behind him and brutally shot and buried at the ctirn mand of Mondraghan. •* ♦ The murdered man had taken out papers of citizenship on August 15, ^ ir 1873, and prominent men fr Eagle Pass and Pedras and Negras bear tes timony that Rasures was an unrighfcj honorable man. The secret underlying this infamous outrage is that Rasures had won the affections of a woman of whom Ch*e£ Mondraghan was enamored. Mondra- ghan, swearing revenge, detailed two of his trusted lieutenants one night to murder his rival. Rasures badly disa bled his assailants and escaped to Eagle Pass. Mondraghan, however, determined upon his removal, trumped up a charge of horse theft against him and had him extradited and shot. The night that Rasures was delivered to the Mexican authorities, Mondraghan left for Saltillo, not, however, before having delivered orders to his Lieu tenants to execute Rasures. The victim, in a pathetic letter, ap pealed to United States Consul Lynn to save him, saying that he was an American citizen, guiltless of any trangression against any law and that Mondraghan had had him arrested to gratify his vengeance. This letter was delivered to Consul Lynn ten hours after its author had been basely shot. Prior to receiving the cpnimunicatiott Consul Lynn.had already appeared before the proper authorities of Pedras Negras, and de- maMxi that, inasmuch as Rasun wnsVan American ^ciUzi u, and beeiC illegally extradited without pi;opc!lyajiy^ffmtanbn or hearing, he ho I Ibrei iptfrto \xig lohg poles co^iktile. Mr. D gtiged in exeavat the^spoj where the ded, and ho intends { to the .surface, if i.ii.irT'.nsriiT'w was" his case having liiiher court, lave snai Ad Al Last Fric Sumter com yelling and caij his cotton field, and three negob men who wort they probeeded to the’ disturbanCMknd foum alligator waTOio cause, fight, and the part weapon the ’gator eoufi charge and they would hai before. his formidablf mouth armed with throw knocked out suarian, and all^pai^ armed with hOes, fig the brute was stpm drawn to tho hei the head cut off, ►Vheuthe'cro wt earcasarat night to’] .■cad opbiigd its, fled., (he bj uia-: S rming the Stai !iat the reported on riean citizens on the Rio n Mexico were not exag- e, and suggesting vigo- i^fhon the part of the gen- wmc to ate it, teak is as good, beef. They made] f thp meat, wliieh argro^b^-. .j 1 of them, the sport ^jf kill! plcmyof enjoymt lent for tiieir protection. de am go rated, but rous action eral Gover: The excitement hero over this terri ble outrage is at a dangerous pitch, and tlie county officials who were par ties to it arc denounced, and will be summarily dismissed. Bustucsa Mefliods in Farming. It is not possible for any one. writes W. J. Barton, of Rome, Tenn., to tlie Nashville American, to handle money successfully iu any business who is lacking in the art of erupting capital. en tie the of the young e, who first veu- u borrowed capi- ey lacked kuowl- their busi- rience and V4n- Ibowa' Nine me tured .fill cam edge They had Traveled. San Francisco Chro “I am sorry you two ladies are' all that distance alone,” I said to some friends going east some time ago; “if we see anybody on the train I know I’ll you in his charge.” “Don’t ;T rattf- er not,” one of them answered: “Why?” “Because you always get more attention from strangers. We are all right. If we have any chaper one he’ll bojbored to doath,and he will the way. If we in on the traliMvih Lud he’ll onl^Hl 'That’s At th Don’t rise from meal is finished. Don’t break an egg into a cu glass, but eac it al ways from the shell? Don’t smear a slice of bread with butter; break it into small pieces, and then butter. Don’t spread oi|t y- u you. are cutting your your elbows to »ui Don’t carry yYir. or codec cup; this frequ Let th Don’t oi? eat them w to eat anythin be eaten with a for now often eaten with a Don’t devour the last mo soup, the last fragment of brea< last morsel of food. It is not expect^ & that j’our plate should be sent away cleansed by your gastronomic .exertions. Don’t, when you drink, elevatoyour glass as if you were going to stand it inverted on your nose, as some do. Bring the glass perpendicularly to the lips and then lift it to a blight angle. Do this easily. Quite Sane. Boston Courier. Harry—I hear that yon have your father. Allow mo to express^ sympathy. sigh)—Than! jut the ion noth disastrously to our terest as/that of allowing free run^n thp banks under t}ie mor gage system.' A temporary show ot prosperity might be made Tn erecting new buildings and drersitig up the farms: but the inevitable result in the majority of the cases would be /ore- riroperty to t li as th 5cl her. Bhe shot him in a church where the pagan Roman or Greek would have spared an enemy. She not only shot him, but vindictive ly followed him as ho was Joying eseapd, snapping her pis titles before he fell.” hitched statements no In Newberry a woman was tried for infanticide. Tho evidence was cir cumstantial. Tlie child was found in a well, but there was no proof that il had ever lived. She was convicted of murder and sentenced to bo hanged. In Barnwell a woman admitted the deliberate, premeditated killing of a Cultii man to whom she had been and her only req N, July 29.—The House Committee on Fore’ga Affairs to-day, considered Repreceptative Lanham’a resolution calling on the Department of State for correspondence touching the Cutting ease. Mr. Lauham read a letter he had received from Secreta ry of State containing an assurance that Cutting would without doubt ho ex-i released within a l.w dajy ' 1 witr the wesT through the" from tho urougi western counties and in quest of work. They" gloomy accounts of tho condit tiie crops and lack of water for stocT Hundred of families are abandoning their cattle and homo and going east ward to keep from starving to death. The situation is eriticai. Rain seldom falls in that district during August, and by the time it comes there will bo, it is feared, lictlupf left in tho country.” iOf H.—I heard that his inti ing to his illness, was some\| ble during his latter years, any probability of tho tested. J.- No, father was quife sane he made his will, lie left everythin! to me. — ■ .j-—.■ lo several as the trial go £r a»>.«c Tner-. ourt house hg and bols- part of friends QUth CnroMnn, J m pn n i ty ar/Tb take any fur- t'W action on tlie resolution. The committee had adjourpued until next session. I tell yon, it’s a great thin*- fco have Knows enoug-h to warn a a tzlrl who with -ir Imprisonment 1 Ft trial, sUoot down :nty nian / follow o* nim dunger.” rppiirftjfl,ha« slandered her ? e fi st ' s ’ Can >u¥e, Upright wo- -rM Have you?” i n<JU i re <i one of t , company. ‘Yes, indeed; Julia TheMaS3.ac!iugq^t3 Legislature has passed a UiJi appropriating$2C,000 for) entertaining I're^ideut 'J^Jeveland In case he should pay a visit io Massa chusetts this summer. Tb« Governor has signed ths hill. — v i machine Is about as big as tiie- eariy I Im nd sewing machines that were fast ened to a table. Ex-Prc sklent reg ’.inhic. A rtluj, "IdTiT Tliirty-flvo eggs woreswallowed at a fitting by a young man who partici pated in an cjM-sucklng contested s* Bedford, Iowa. sahi to be fjfiite rapidly. Vlunately he had a comparative ly unkown doctor, who decided lo i his patient for advertising aid who would not publish any oulletins about his condition. He iV'obably remembered how Garfield and ^nrriflcod to prof**#- use purposes, i es, it rented my I _ ”gtt to have to discharge poor Thomas. He was a perfect pnra- jeoxof a eouMunun, and has been hj | the family for degenerations.” Mrs. Boodle: “Why were vou eoin- JH-Jied to part with him?” Mrs. Mushroom: “It was impo 5 hie to keep him since F have pj mourning for dear Horatio: is a blonde, so I let him we have a lovely nig«rorj black as my crane v«^jl. ,l uened b\ ; mother were Ja3-in< Hiderar.— j night, when p|,i thing Hi-ges fb„f q:i;*e a^nrf,iher of Icials Jmve l«Vv thbe-n up theh residences In Canada. J„ st Vero , t striKes us as rather remarkable that most of tho definiter* „ V . 1 itiamters copus from the Northern an-. EnitoS, eUL. must speak volumes for thh integrity * ,mr w- 9 father ami for me tho other n, V tap at tho ^ « i UI (1 . Han’t think.” just sat down at the pi;„, n , m ,d Home. Von can just bet I didn’t call that evening. > 11 Economy wUelydir^tc.] not stingy nor mcan. but tfn^ Hint makes benevolence r *^** T * V giving possible. ^ "' generous >■> 'Si I a# V *W, r rS£: jMki A,: