Newspaper Page Text
H1TKSI 07 ADVKUTI8LVO.
HV I Mion jrr -1)00
-yhr oliimn on jrr . . . ! "
JtntlrM, itr tin It
IuIsm OarJ of tint mor than nix
hr tit jru ' I CO
Uftrrmft tnl dn!h nnti-i fret.
aw. i ....... 111 " ' J ' ' "
, J.' A. PEN ROSE.
DIALS IX
iORY -OOODS,
OTIO.V4, HOOTS, &KOCS,
PSKNSWARJ? AM) GKOCERIE3,
, . ciixrnn KTitcfr, .
r wM of Aitxandtr'a iOruj; G'.orf,
M'ConnolBville, O.
[New York Correspondence of the Erin Dispatch]
Treasure Trove Extraordinary--
A Couple of Walkers in the
A Couple of Walkers in the Sewers of New York--"Pay
A Couple of Walkers in the Sewers of New York--"Pay Dirt" Struck Heavily--Diamonds
by the Bushel.
-Scvtrat ycars'tig" a little German
Jew, named Schwartz, believing that
in the sewers of X-mv York might b.)'
found mu:iy ai till. cjf Viibn .vliich h id
becu lout, entered them, and for thre'!
days wandered through the lain riotl..
H was very btuco:-.(.ful, picking up
om 27,0oJ worth of jowclery. spoons
torks, ic; but having lost his way tin
first day, he hcdifycl be might have
found much more, could be carried outj
b is ( i icinhl j ! n, h ii h wp -lo v if 1 1 lb! t li
find Madiaou avenue-, and jiroadv.ay
and tho Vier.itby puiii':.s of li.o iiy.
0 treat, however, weiv tbe iifii-.".iities
td danarei wbieli h :rio lunli'Ted.
that iK'tl.iii! could induce him aaintol
Vit.It '"Xcw i'orlc under-'roiin I.'1 Hi.'!
adveiitaro lor a ti:..o real- 1 .juito a
littL-nti.' iliwii. but th-'M .ver-i none
.Tentiu-out ttwuyh to utttn.pt a tcuwd
vnlil Vrr.5.u-daj ..f l.,Nt w.!v. wi.cu
md udventuroui-a. ty of thr.;e entered
the sewer ofJIouotot": nlrect, attho f.-r-
ry on KaM iJiver, intending to remain
lor 0110 week, during which time they
viniting every portion of th'e
city where Iheie teemed to be any
tbunco ,f f.ndir.ir tivaure trov". Tiio
party consoled of Jli-s Mary 7uli.er,
a young Jady of eighteen, 'her bi'oUu.r
Janiti, agtd bi.Ntesii, and Michael
Urady, an old man of about til'ty. Tin
project originated with Misrt Walker,
and the ' how'' of it is iu this wice:
Some two years ago, JauieiYt'aikcr, jr.
was a merchant, doing n good business
at Pi'J Ilowery. He was getting rich
fabt, but in an evil hour be whs pre
vailed niniii Lv friuudti (?) lo uso Home
of his money which had Leon ' -aall.'.d
dOTrn'.' in speculating in ,.o!d. The
result was sasv to to tbreaeen. JK-h.t.
Toreqover he' took money from hid
l..,:nes: A i.n in l. 1oht. Mis l.usiaes.;
becuir.e euiLirrnssad; in despair he
committed eu'.cide, and Mitii WhI'-.oi-and
her brother tound th'mselvod ix
moutjm ago the inhabitants of a room
on the uppov'Koof of a double tenement
ilOO.iiixtii street. Miss Walker so mo
mouths ngo, in on old pnper, wrapped
sroiind a parcel which she was taking
liume f: oiu a ''slop-ifl'.cp," sA'y rn io.
count of f: chwHru'a r.ndw tak,irg and
resolved to imitate it. Maps were ob
tained nnd the city stnni?d csreMi
iiaeh di'y's work for hvruelf. her brotli-
ir, and Cramly, who was lotmcrly
bP' fat l.er's employ, whs- curcfully
f -marked out. Kvery p-.-cparntion which
limited knowledge could prepare for
was matin, and tlte adventurers started.
I wish that I might have root. i to toll
the story of the week they passed,
ray manuscript warns me that T must
.condense. Each day they reiideivoused
several times iu the chambers at the
street corners. On Sunday they had
filled all the bags they had taken with
them, some fifteen in number, and Miss
Walker returned. James Walker and
Orudy continued tlioir feai-di; empty-
ing six ol thou-bags at the comer
Twenty-second street and Filth avonuo.
On Wednesday mornihg nt a very ear
ly hour, and before-people were stirring
Miss Walker was at the place with
wagon. On reinoving tho iron plnte,
which nt each stree t corner leads into
a small chamber connect ing with
sewer, sho found her brother, but
Jrady. Ho Lad started otl'on another
irip, although the six bags had been
filled in Madison avenue
The loose
trensuro'wns placed in extra bags,
tho whole driven to n Broadway iewe-
ler. Tho rest were takon from
places 011 Thursday morning. A wntch
was aet for Grady, but up ta thiatimo
q writing nothing has been hen.d front
bim, and it is feared that he baa per-;
bd. .. .
The remit cf the vcuk'e search
r
HE
CONSERVATIVE.
VOL. 1.
M'CONNELSVILLE, JANUARY 4, 1867.
NO. 23.
roughly estimated nt 81,000,000. 1 Raw
tin) treasure jotordn3 piled in three
lic:ip.i on tlio floor, nnd the jeweler in
formed nio that it must have tost over
$',!, 00 0,0'. 0, liut in consequence ot old
fashioned 1 3-1 of sotttnc, its bruised,
battered i.nd ecrrodml condition, its
value was reduced about ono half. A
iiit'it overabushcl (how queer it sounds
to talk of of jewelry by the bushel), has
been ecrted.ynd among it bus been found
one diamond ring valued nt SIO.OOO,
two more valued r.t .i.'00 nnd halfn
d.r.on valued at SO OuO r.nd upward.
The mo,t curious isaplain gold ring, in
scribed en tho inside in Dutch, "Peter
Smyvcsant to wife." It was an heir
Llootn cftho fitiiyvedatits, mid wati)Iun
with ether jewelcryl last March, by
burglars. How it cmnoin the sewer
is a problem fur philosphers to specu
!nt ' about. . Mis Wttlkor and her
in. 'titer, who find themselves thus
suddenly lilted from penury to great
wealth, intend to proceed to England,
where they have relatives. This ad
venture i talked of everj'-where, and
already there are others preparing to
follow ill their footsteps.
Married--Divorced--Re-Married.
1 Ou ll.y lt day f January, 1S2, in
.
i
Jvn. Dhio, where they ton-
j ! " !;v t-g. ib.-r till soino timo
1-Vbruary, 1SG5. On the L'Dih of
! M.'-rth. l-.r,, Mr. Wood filed n petition
j divorce in the Court of Common
of. Columbiana County, olicgirijr
tliwt bis wile. Polly bad been guilty of
' vHrvaio cruelty toward him in Februa
proposed ! ry prrcedii.-,and nlso'lhat shehad been
j fc';"y r neglect of duty for threo
tii. county .f J5;aver and State of i'en-i.M-'.v.iij;a.
Azarii.h Wood and Polly
ave themselves to each other
ibrl'iew Year'e ift.s lr better or
woi ' ;br ail tunc to come. In the
pour-:" of true love they removed to
I'oily st that tiniu appears to have
1.4-en living in Portago county, nnd
A z:, i:i'u brought her into court by
pii'jlii.ivioii iu a newspaper. Tho caeo
came on for trial at tho May term, nnd
ing Azanaii ".nil ail mo rignis, vi
ciyi, nppurtenances and hereditaments
of a (single man. Tho proof was ample.
Polly iiud run at him with 11 bulchc-r-knii'e,
and had maltreated him in divers
01 the msiiai.h.'. liut bo maintained
hih v. idowed condition for a year and
t""1 8ullJry " lhe lov"'K
treatment of a devoted wife. W 1 .a
A-'" WM U,"(l from tho
t "'.'l'-'""i', w ''H'l supposed let fill
'lo-l:C-r worst, be would not again put
in I
a decree of divorce was granted, invet t-
halt; and then wit'..
from, with nsgood fib'to bait ns
the world to choose
ever
were caught, he returned to Polly, re
counted his wrongs, forgot forgave
ro-married and in again living happi
ly with the first -chosen of his heart.
;Juiae pet that did. not put the climax
to his lines, hath said : '
;''T'. litainr lo lisve lovut ami ht,
Thmi UflX tr l.t l.jveit ul (ill."
Jrue life, vital ronmuev is en im
provement on fiction. 'Poetry floun
ders in the sea of thought . beside the
swift nailing facts of real life. To have
loved and lost is well; lost, love re
gained la Paradise.
[From the Alta-Californian.]
[From the Alta-Californian.] The Bell is Ringing--Look Out
for the Locomotive.
Tho bell is ringing on the Sierra
Nevada and in the Valley of the Plat-
to; it is time to look out for tho locomo
tiv nnd prepare for its approach. Tho
Pacific Paiiroad is no longer a wild
,iroam Cr nn untrustworthy promise; it
',ns' ,een placed on the bas's of a sound
j pecuniary investment, and its prospects
ol ; arc gl) KOocl that it is progressing with
a
tho
not
n apnea almost unequaled in tho annals
cf railway history. It has already ad
vance 1 so far ns to have on important
economical vslue; and before twelve
mont hs we may expect to see travelers
go and come acrossthocontinent every
day with the hlpof tho rail..
The two nominal and intermediate
termini of tho route nre, Omaha, on the
Mississippi Eiver, anl Sacramento,
! nlthoiiirh a larger city than either can
and grow tobemust be the unltimato and
i real terminus or end. Traveling wast-
the ward from Omaha, we reach Fort
Kearney in 258 miles, the Forks of
Fhttte in 350 miles, .lulesburg in 150,
Denver in 600, SaltLake City in 1,200,
Austin in, 1,000, Virginia City in 1,800,
J and Sacramento in 1,975 mile.
is; But the road is ow iu runniDg or-
der from Omaha to Fort Kearner, 250
miles, nnd the eastern end, and from
Sacramento to Alta, oerenty miles, ut
the western end, so that 1,505 miles
only are built; and the Union Pacn
Ilailway Company has promised lhat
tho cars ehall run to the Porks of Tlnt
to on the 1st of Jannnr'; so the distance
will have been reduced another hun
dred miles by the beginning of 1807. !
Peculiar influences are driving the
work ahead at both ends , n the first
place, Congress; has provided that each
company shall havo as much of the
road ns it can build; so that tho rom
pnny which ndvancca with the most
rapidity pots the most. And the trade
of the interior of the continent makes
it of vast importance to get ns mneh as
possible. It is now evident the J acific
Pai!road is to be ono of tho most profll
tabbi invcslimcntsin the country.
Stages can avarnpe about six miles
an hour, and at this rate tho 1,(155
miles of stage road between Alta and
Fort Kearney can be traversed in less
than twelve days, while the trip from
San Francisco to Alta can bo mndo in
tei. hours, nnd that from Fort Kearney
to New York in less than four days
Thus we see that in caso of noed, tho
trip from the metropolis of the Fast
to that of the West of our continent,
can be made regularly within seventeen
days. l'y two hundred miles of addi
tional rail, ono day's time is saved, nnd
before the end of next J"car, the trip
will be made to New York regularly
overland, in fourteen or fifteen clays,
and so many travelers will go that way
that the stago company will find it
profitable to make better time and pro
vidobetter stages along the road. It is
not improbable that within three years
we shall be able to make a continuous
trip to New York by rail. So letimbe
prepared for the approach of the loco
motive.
[From the London Pall Mall Gazette.]
Curious Chinese Stories.
a
There is a well known Greek btory
of a penniless man, v.-ho, going out
with n ropo in his hand to hung him-
j fo(inJ ft purso of money, which in-
duced him to throw the rope away,
whereas the owner of tho purse coming
back to look for bis property, nnd
finding the ropo instoad, straightway
hanged himself. A still more curious
tale, of a bimilar kind is told by the
Chineso papers.
In tho native city of Shanghai the
parontsot n young "lady lately married,
having fallen into distressed circum
stances, applied to her for assistance,
and her husband allowed her to gtvo
the;n a coat for the purpose of boing
; paw ned. The daughter, however, bo-
ing anxious to render further aid. with
out .her husbnnd's knowledge, secreted
10 in tho pocket of the coat.
The old man did not discover this,
nnd took it to u pawnbroker, who, no
ticing the money on unfolding the gar
ment, kept his counsel, and (jnietly ad.
vanced two dollars. Soon after, tho
husband discovered that the wife had
given the sixteen dollars to her father
and made' so-much noise nbout it that
the young lady .disposed of herself
liundi'ng. In this way, tho news
tho robbery committed by tho pawn
broker became known to the parents,
and tho old mother took the matter
much to heart, that eho poisoned her
self with opium.
Lastly, the paw 1. broker,
alarmed on hearing that his dishones
ty had .already caused two deaths,
drowned himself in a well. This story
is very characteristic of the Chineso
feelings in regard to life, and similar
incidents not (infrequently occur.
Some years ago, for instance, an
young lady at Canton, who
had been unfortunately married to
coarse and tlupid husband, was bewail
ing her fato to a party of sisters
female cousins, and declared her
of committing suicide. On
the other ypung ladies declared that,
since such was married life, they would
die too; and so the whole bevy of them
joined hands together, nnd walking
, t0 fish-pond, delibexately drowned
i themselves. Again, threo men Impris-
oned in IIonK eol on a charge
of piracy determined to make away
with thomelve rather than have
, bother of a trial.
At some height in the cell where
they were imprisoned was a mall win-,
do-jr guarded iy two iron brs, and
problem which these three worthies
had to solve was how the three of them
were to be hanged upon two bars.
From the position in which they were
found in the morning it would pcem
that tlio third man hud assisted the
two otl.era in hanging themselvesfrom
the bars by their tails; that then he
had cut down ono of them by gnawing
through the tail with his teeth ; u'id.
using the dead body as a stool, to be
afterward kicked over, he had con
trived to suspend himself. All this,
too, was done bo quietly na not 10 at
tract the notice of a sentry w ho was
pacing outside benenth the window.
Making Castor-oil Out of "Culled
Making Castor-oil Out of "Culled Pussons."
The Washington City Star Bays :
as sxrangn as 11 may appear: mmy
of tho colored people here cherish the
belief that there i a class ofphrsicians
whe practice 'burking,' nnd nre ad
dicted to tho dissecting of live human
subjects for tho purpose of manufactu
ring castor-oil, and that for this pur
pose the doctors prefer bodies with a
dark cuticle. This opinion is so firm
ly impressed on their minds, that no
amount of reasoning will remove it,
and we know many of them, particu
larly jurcnilo Africans, who will not
budgo n foot outside their dwellings
nfter dark. An otherwise intelligent
Topsy,' employed by us, destribrs the
motlux cpnondi of these imaginary
ghouls, by Haying : 'Dey steal upon
culled pussons unawais, dap a plaster
over deir tnout to keep urn from hoi
lerin, nnd dren drag uni away to w har
uey lay um on a tabic, and cut um up,
and den bile urn down for ile.' This
is a cheerful notion for thoso invalids
who uso the oil of tho palma chrieta
bean as a cathartic.
"Tho Annapolis (Md.) Republican
states that a similar belief prevails
nmong the colored people in tbnt sec
tion, and it probably exists elsewhcrs.
How it originate 1 it is impossible to
tell."
The Booth Family.
by
of
ao
The Booth family, at present, con
sists ofths following members: The
widow of the elder Booth; Lucius Ju
nius Brutus, tho eldest son, and a tra
godian; Fdwin Booth; Joseph Booth,
who, at the breaking out of the wnr,
..... . ... . .
was a tneuieai niuueuc in cnarieseon,
atuaying in ino oiueo 01 jr. v,. .ivtga,
and is now asistant treasurer in toe
Winter Garden; and two daughters,
one a middle nged lady, and tho other
the wife of Clarke, tho comedian, man
uger of tho Winter Garden, of which
and Edwin are lessees. Mis. Clarke
a most tulcnted lady, and is author
a biographical sketch ot her lather
well written and most . interesting
work, published recently. Edwin
Booth has been a widower for about
the pretty little Edwina tan wish
m vain, and ''iloultrio" has whiled
away many a weary moment in l'steu-
tail, the beauty of the dresses of
three dolls. New York Correspon
dence Charleston New.
threo years, aui ha jne child, a sweet
little fcur year old prattler, to , whom
her father is most devotodly ttacliJ;
there is uol a single wavelet ia lite sea
of toys, either bore or eluewnero,, that
iug to the prattle of this extraordinary
nnd intelligent child, as she displayed
her toy and described to him, in do-1
Literary Discovery.
ac
complished a
nnd
in
tention this
in
Jint of
The Paris Cosrcspon
London Star gives nn. account of a
literary discovery:
Archicologists have been thrown
a state of i m mouse excitement
eouseaaence of the discovery,
j any portion of theso documents
tho work of deciphering tho whole
the contents of the ohest is accomplished.
i He has been requested to wovk a
idly a possible, in order that the
riosity of the literary world may
the ' atisfi4 in tho shortest tiro
month, of nn iron box, filled tvith car-'"bears'
tularic and diploma on parchment,
among a pile of old chest in the mu-1
niment room of tho Louvre. These
histroricul treasure bear tho dalo
. .
the thirteenth century. Tho work
deciphering them ha been intrusted
to one 0 tho most talented faleogra-
nhista of the dav. who is. moreover,
r- " . '
member of the Institute. The most
profound ocrocy bus been enjoined
tins erudite gentleman, who ha
to abstain from revealing
How New Yorkers Make and
How New Yorkers Make and Lose Money--Speculation in
Leases-The Lord Bond Robbery
Leases-The Lord Bond Robbery--Brokers and Robbers--
Leases-The Lord Bond Robbery--Brokers and Robbers--The Triumph of the Bears--
The Eastman and Case--The Jumcl
The Eastman and Case--The Jumcl Estate--Nelson Chase.
[Correspondence of the Rochester Democrat.]
NEW YORK, Nov. 29, 1866.
Among the methods of t-pcculation
to be fonnd in New York, that of tak
ing leases of property is a very sue
cessful one, and thoso who understand
it have thus made large fortunes. The
plan pursued is to obtsin long IcnT
in localities which promise future im
provement. A rnnn destitute of capi
tal, nnd without infesting a dollar may
thub obtain control orer larg" lended
interests.' We know of ftn indiv; b-.l
who commenced years ago Jeasing'xuch
(iorc(, tlH i,c i0iil.t f-et fi.r ten years
These he immediately re let on short
lenses at the same rates ; but when
that time hud expired be conl.1 increase
and perhaps double on tho rent. One
man now bos several rich leases on
liond street, which yield him an in
conio of 610,000 per annum, l.'efil es
tate men aro lately more cautious and
it is difficult, to get a kaso for morn
than three yearn, whereas they vevo
formerly given for ten nnd even twen
ty years is better thnn a fee. ini'smuch
as within that time the vahio of a prop,
erty may be completely changed by
by the migration of trade. AAn idii.
tration of that migration is shown by
the condition of Front street. Jn i-ll
when the writer of thU was cleric fr
Fdwin P. Morgan now United Slates
Senator our rent w 2 0d:). Subse
quently the grocery trr.d moved ino
Broad street, and our store sank to
halt its former value, and for one year
stood empty. Then tair.a the wnr,
which expanded the tinanc.au world,
and which, for want 01 rewn in Y.'all
street, entered Broadway street, and
drove the grocers out by overbidding
them in rent.- The latter retired
again to Front struct, and the store
above referred to now bringn 21.00':
per year.
While speaking of brokers, we arc
led to refer to tho case of Frank Ilel
lcn, recently arrested for having in
his possossiou n part of tho bonds sto
len from the office of Kufus Lord, the
millionaire. Mr. Lord wasau obi man
who. Ihouch ostensibly a b.")her, del
I r.
j nU mon tlvan coUcct his in
. , b f 000 ,. wt,t.kN :lnj ,.cinve.
it. His ollico was last Janu iry myste
riously robbed of a million dollar'
worth of bonds. A year has passed
away, and the bonds me tnu-ed to tho
possession of Frank Hcllon, 11 YJ1
street broker. . Y. e presume that nttw
is
of I rentlcincniy fc;i0w8 of this craflhad
a , their evcg on t)0 olJ u,uvtr fur u l,jUg
,, ull(1 ,,., ,, VIi,ma inn, from
- 1
day to. day, under the cover ofbuii
ness transactions. It is well under-
BtooJ tilttcrlain So called respetlablo
. vrM strW)t Bt0fck l0u,C9 ,re a,.ting in
conL.eJ.fc w:th burglars, and tha: tho
; boU(Ja tf,en ft.om the epuntry banhs,
d f n faT il0l,9l)Sr0 r:,i,idly pass:
ed into the hands of tlio foriuei, .and
thus , disposed of. Tho p'dice havo
made a becrinninir in tho case of . M'
! jrnon " nd .we irt.r that they will
j lQaktJ ft ce)in wort 0f th'o.so villalt.s.--
u , tl t 1 0 0,u. K.,,rcHtion. and
..
gonn at once through Wall street wit
search warrents, Mr. Iord s bonds
S ftm"-1
might have been discovered long
T. 1, n,.llAttArr.,ir.rft tl...t 1,111 Atl'Hct
1V .
theiia101 ' ' li"3.,""j"-"'u "
got to State l'rison is young iveici.um
who is, porhaps, the least guilty of
whole crowd.
in
to in
last
Speaking of Wall street, we may re
mark that the recent triumph of
rap-
ou-
be
wasa-full componsatioii
' their defeat last summer. Last weok
stocks came down as rapidly i-s thoy
bad so lately advanced. Such are
of profits of Wall street. It; the summer
. ' . . .. , . . - -1 1 r ... ..
of , the bull make twenty 1u111.cn utn.
I the bear j in the fall the bear make
I twenty millions out of the bulls. Last
a summer tlio bear were inn pa..tc,
' . ...... ..
white the bull wore mica wiiu joy
the bulls took tl cir tarn
on
nn
dertaken a panic, and the bears danced with
rl..n "Who would not be a broker ?
Amontr the Miinful scenes connected
t - r
with mercantile misdemeanors
rcctntly presented by the Eastman
case. An aiin-npt was made to Inv.di-,
1 ,, , ., ... .
dato a mottgago ot fcio.000 ptven
. Smith Eastman to protcctu claim
by bis father. It was averted that
mdr? ! fi.!d.!:ilcht. i;'...ijch
the latter was n poor man, lirivn with
hi son. Having long known. t!i-s
pari?s, we were deeply tn termite ! in
thernse-. Twenty years f.go Smith Fast
man wns n thrifty mei'-'tsnfVanJ waa
getting rich in a lopit'mat hi.'esp.
his father was a book-keep' on a s:d
ary of 5500, nnd when ho ben-ie sa
p' i.i'mn'pd he went io-Vive w''1 n.a
son, where be rem air.'' to t!,o -prc-t.it
day. Smith Fa'tmaif s ' prn:i. was
steadily npwnvd. IT 0:1c "of thi
committee of young men who present
ed tho gold medal to MenrV 'C1.it: Ho
become otm of tho authoritie."';i,.fv,l; .
!yn. and li-c l m thef tyU Veo.nirg a
city magnate. Jii.t Mr. Ikistnnm was
not gcllin,' rich fust enough, a.idhenco
he entered Wall street and 'beoann a
speculator. Tho result was loss, j
cover which as a tempoini'y recti no,
fraud was resort-.! t. J.o..h"s cent!
;td. and iVftiid ber.rinfl n p""riianei
evpcdicitt. When fraud Willi liO h
rrer to cou'-ealcd, l!.ti'.nir.n eltoEu
rope, v-hi'e bis p'r 'hl fad, or, now
fourscoi e. w.ta cu icl to get tip a nioil-
-afti, Avliich sborb! protect n littlcfrotn
the general wroi k. The lug'. live be
came insane whil. in Fr !:, i.ii.l was
p'.'.cd in nn asylum l y tho A ase.-'na
cet.'-il. ile has "nice co'fic i.o;.v u
brokon down man. and i'l fact a v ic'dc
in mind and hrtun. S ieh is the e:T
cct cf speculation on on of the r-'Os-,
prrnrsimr voir g n.en we ever mot
during a fjtnirtor c -ei.tiiry of New York
experience. The decisi. n i.i tho case
has not been giver, but o-d ac iiiaii.ted
with the circiimstarcis cr.n seo iirjw
a'nsurd (he claim must be, sine" Levi
Eastman, the lather, so ihr fVom: be:n
tiie pose.or of S2J.ni:0, bus bec:i i'er
yi.r" suppouod by the son ss an act
of filial d :ty.
'lo pa-H t'l-ttu ''.. .i!:!"r:ial to real e?
t itc li'ig.ttio::. v o r.'.'ny remark tb; f
the wimling ui of the Jumcl suit pct i
some .sharp p": tieo c.n the j'art ot ore
ie,lfi;..
of ths br.ii a. This man,
Chnsn, viri r.r.i:e br, t oecr.r-i inal y
t'.g.i.tu in connection with tho. cnfc,
.nnde, nt an early dstc, tundry
tempting ofcra to tho ether be.!;'.
Tho latter fearing that t!: viil
v-ould bo ausliiined, f id tho ' e.-,:rs
ch'.im.s to Ci.iw ft r ?"'no. Ti t ::
surprise and chagrin may well be im
agined when th'-y behold tho will
nr.r.l, unl nn ci-tat'i of one mi'.liuii
dollars ias-ing into Mr. Cha?o'a hnm.s.
This individivtl is now tho owner ofth
entire Jn.e.cl propertj', for wh'tb 1, j
In-- p-i I, iu law fees and of her espou
ses, n litt'o over ItM'ooo. and f.-f.'i
being :r bc;.'j.r!y hr.nger on Pt tba
Madr.rie's manrdon, bo now 0;.? of
th" chief t ai 'jitalf lords of tho valley
tvlS'-tn.
Things in New York.
Tho l ow year bids fair tobo ushered
in with an irrupt'on of now journalis
tic cnu r1irif,i.s. S'.voot ter, late- of tbo
Round Table, nnnojnoes tho debut Of
the Evening t.nzette. The. Protestant
C.'tiurchmii'u i to bo revived, as tho
organ of the Evangelical Episcopalian,
with P.ev. lh Tynf en (Jit) ai princi
pal editor. Then there h talk aL r.it n,
distinguished politician, forine'.-'y act
ing with tho Kepublitan, but now
couscrtitig with the lk-Lcc-cracy, rxr
cliasing oil-: ' i'lj.e dowiv-tovi. ivsuin'j
i.!.pcr,,witii a .vievr .of making it a soift
. ( Ailw:.v Ai-'uh; besides jvhiclt it ia
ipi-obablo Mr. C'iiSric.s A.-Dana will bo
showing, hie baud Soon in. tho 1 asm
line ol bus'ntss. It is to .te- liorti
that all oftite.se clever gomlemon -will
i moct with the tw'.-ocM t'e;f cnterj.risj
! .,,,1 reajcs to snond U. e:it:'e
..... ,
1 t; lm to. As, however, there are tut
f0w, even of tie r.luct't joutiia.s, juet
now, making much mouey,. tiiey . had
bc'ttr lay in a good etoek of cour-x.e
nnd coi.lidenco, tts well can . il'.ir.);r-
bio buptdy of greenbacks. Exc'ui.. gv.
The Pope and Cardinal Antonelli.
ml!!.
A torevn
tfr rava : Tho Po-e ia
the j ralil01. n 1 . u-m o'd man. In 's'r
he is short ami thick, though not cor
pulent. His full faeo i thcHi.'-it i".
and
:.r.
rather than benigca'H.
His dark eve wes too t estless
saw hint tocxpres benignity.
tor
the
; el. ju, ticn wore h:bitunl cvn-r-
.. .. 1 1. .1 1
. i , stou, or v.,in-i "-r ti ,t, tai
!:.. ''.. . ...
; ryliS t imt visa-e, the manogany y.ji.t
lastwoek in Uloxion, tho largj eyes, tho barring
L'.:. 13
giv-A lnm u looit v uneasiness, T.,4
can decide whe havo froqueu'.l f"1
him. Thel'-po cout'-astj 6tri-;..,'.'
...r-. 1, ii.-i-
in aiipi:'ii'anto witn e;:iriinat jnt jji 111.
, tellect, yet larnnpelite
brow, the largo moath and ' ff.'l , lips,
rasrlc the latter as a man of ';r,.?y
was j cj-An assnuk, according to h t1'jT-
( English decision, is cominit'.e.i 'A-i-:
' -r khv.r Uy smo.
. 1 anotu-ii- n fiio an intorpretat.. unf th i
by , common U,T n of dwp tntjP ,j4
held to tho entiri e.ynt.annity thob wb) J
thm and, tho who do not antoke