LEAVE iVEEKLTS T X t: JL llVi. LEAVEXWQIITH, KANSAS, THURSDAY JUNE 5 1S79. 1. tt.Ani!ioiiy..ntinrr. IMU.J NUMBER ,-70- THE NWORTH !.i R : i K & n v- ,. . "" i -r w 4 t? 5 " c2 xa THUBSDAY JUNE 5. 1879. ;oix; noi;tii. A colony o Massachusetts emigrants are about to pitch their tenia near Manchester, Coffee county, Tennesste. There ia a fine water-power there, and in time they may male it the centre of a prosperous trade. TOKAlC. A terrible and destructive tornado visited Marshal county in this State, about one hundred milea west of Leavenworth, Fri day evening last, resulting in g'eat destruc tion of life and property. Full particulars will be found in our telegraphic column. iirrajii.y; to so.mi: pruposi:. The Leristown (Mo ) Journal tells a long story of a venerable and respected citizen of Sooth Paris, Mo., who dreamed that he had found a quantity of -liver money in a marshy place on his farm, and taking hi shovel in the morning went out and dug up about 51.S0O in silver coins. A NTR(X; PAPKIt. One of the strongest papers, that has been given to the public in connection with the crusade against Senator Ingalls, is the open letter from f fon. James F. Legate, pub lished elsewhere this morning. Mr. Legate knows all about the "true inwardness" of this case, and he gives the conspirators a broadside which they will find some trouM: in answering. acts vmtsrs itit.i;. The stamp sales of the Leavenworth Post Office, during the first quarter of the year 1679, from January 1 to April 1, 1879, amount to the sum of SC,243 50. Atchison has the sale of etsmps to two railroad com panies, and yet the Clmmjtwn does not pub lish the sale of stamps at that office, and will not. They can brag and blow but they never come down to facts and figures, par ticularly when the truth or falsity of their statiments are to be proven from official re ports. A KAXSAS PAPIIIE. Oar system of writiDg up the different counties of the State is proving a great suc cess. A gentleman from iiolton told us yesterday that hf sent some copies of the paper Est referring to Jackson county, and that he knows ot five families who were influenced by it, and are now prepar ing to move to Kansas. The Times aims to be peculiarly a State paiier, and we know of no better way to ktp posted in regsrd to Kansas history and Kansas matters than to read our State news department and the letters of our corres pondents regularly. si:.Toit ic;ai.i.s. The dignified course pursued by Senalrr Ingalls iu refusing to demand an investiga tion of the charge preferred again-t him by a few characterless fellows, is approved by tLe leading Republican papers of the country. The Cincinnati Times says: Several Democratic papers are indulging in bitter abue of Senator Ingalls kcau-e he did not demand an investigntion as toon as the charges of bribery and corruption were made against him in the Senate, and for filing a statement demurring to the jurisdiction r.f that body. The t-'enator's course is iwrfeclly projier. It needs no de fense. He was acquitted at.d completely exonerated by the Kansas House et Ilepre sntatives, aller a searching investigation. .Now, if he is to be harrsstd by a further inquiry, instituted by malicious enemies and conduct) d fur psni-an purpose, the whole burden of the disgraceful business should rest on his accusers. tiii: m:v thkatiik. Now that the motey is sub. cribed for the building of the new theatre, and its con struction is certain, the first question to de cide is its location. All parties agree that the correr of Fourth and Delaware is the very best loca tion, but as it is imosible to get that place the next 1-est is as near that point as it ia practicable to secure the lots. The places named are Delaware, Muttn Fifth and Sixth, east side; Main, b.-tween Delaware and Shawnee; ee.tiih or north side of Shawnee, between Third end Fourth; north east correr of Delaware and Second streets, and southwest corner Cherokee and Fourth streets. The first two places are generally considered as too much on one side of the center of business; any one of the three-last would be acceptable. A location on Dela ware, west of Fifth, would be very much like the location of Odd Fellows Hall, would not be worth fifty cents on the cost, and would not accommodate the peop'e. wk m:si:itvi: it. This is the fifth or sixth case of hanging by the mob that has occurred in Kansas since any thing of the sort has happened in Missouri. Only a couple ot months ago a negro was hung and burned by a mob in Fort Scott, and now Leavenworth county comes forward with the lynching scrape. Thus two of the finest and most populous counties of the eastern tier, where a hand come schoolhouse sits on every knoll, and where the traveler is rarely, if ever, out of sight of railroads, churches atd Tillages, "have shown thein-elvea as lawless an the counties out on the plains. Kansas City MaiL Itis rather humilitating to the citizens of Kansas to be obliged to read such items as the foregoing, and especially humilitating to read them in Jlitsiuri papers. The Fource of the rebuke intensifies its sting. But we cannot deny the justice of it. While we are boasting of our own superior civilization, and wringing our hands in agony over the acts of violence that we read of in the south, we are furnishing to the world specimens of lawlessness equal to the average act of barbarism that every now and then we hear of in the south. . BKTTKIC TIMES The Philadelphia Times discovers un mistakable signs upon every hand of the return of general and fubstantial prosper ity. One of the signs referred to is the fact that there has been a decided advance in silks, during the last teu days, and another, and very important one is that cotton and other goods of prime necessity haTe been steadily advancing also. The general aspect of trade, and especially the trade that supplies the sreat mass of the people with their wants, points to a certain and permaccnt advance in prices, proving that the demand is rapidly growing, and that the ability of consumers to purchase is eteadily increasing. This condition of the market cannot be in any degree specula tive. The mirti of business where con sumers of fabrics deal, have none of the qualities of gunbling Block markets, and and the one explanation of increased demand and increased price is the increas ed prosperity of the country. Unless all signs are at fault, we think, with the Times, that we may look for a steady advance of prices, not only for silks and articles of luxury, but for all other goods which enter iato the daily wants of the community. It is quite probable that the cheap prices of the present will not be known again for ten or twenty years to come, as the country never was better prepared for a long cireer of the Bost healthful prosperity. EAaU.MS BBAKD. Thera appears ia the loptka CrmnomnuIA notice of a meeting of the Medical Exam- Kansas Medical Society on Monday next, at Topeka. This Board is provided for by a law enacted last winter intended to regulate the practice of medi cine in the State, and was appointed by the Kansas Medical Society at its recent meet ing in Atchison. The Board consists of the following named physicians who are well known to the profession throughout the state: D. ,V. Stormont, of Topeka; W. Cochrane, of Atchifon ; C C. Furley, of Wichita; K. Morri, of Lawrence ; C. H. Grubor.of Beloit; G. W. Halderman, of Paola; and S. F. N'eely, of this city. The law provides that every practitioner of medicine, according to the Allopathic School, ehall b possessed of a certificate issutd by the Ibard, which he shall have recorded in the effice of the clerk of the county in which he resides, in a book kept for the purpose which shall be open to the public for inspection during the regular effice Lours of said officer. The law provides for two forms of cer tificates. Oae for iersons in possession of diplomas or licences, the other lor candi dates examined by the Board. The penal ty for not complying with the provisions of the act in a fine of not less than ?30 or more than 5000, or imprisonment in the county jail for a period of not hs than 30 days nor more than one year. Those who propose to practice medicine in the State according to the homeopathic or eclectic schools are not required to go before the allopathic board, but will have to pass examinations btfore boards designa ted bj their respective societies, as provi de! by the terms of the law referred to. The statute should be rigidly enforced, that the people may have whatever protec" tion the law is able to give them against hnmbuggery and empiricism. The Itcst anil JIomI Itelinhle. Junction City Tribune, 2. X. K. Stevens and John Coulter have been In this city. In the Interest ot the greatest newspaper f the S'ate the TIMES, of Leav enworth. 1 Ills entcrprisiugjournal has con cluded lo lead all competition, and Its agents now hunt in couple, and either Items aud p-rrousge by wholesale. Stevens aud Coulter have been wisely chosen as comjoadeuts and solid ore They leave no stones unturned In advancing the general interests of the State, by timely and encouraging words through the sreat Journal they help to mate. The Times pajs the heaviest postage bll's on Its circulation of anv paper west of ht. Ixials, showing a heart J preclntlou on the part of the public. It is onn of the best and most rel'abledallks that comes to our table. That Would he .lust I.iUeThem. A wife sues for twenty thousand dollars damages, the los- having lieen ctused by alien ition of her husband's EllVctions. Now, it would be just like all the worthless hus bands in the land to become conceited at the idea of having a money value in female estimation. !le a Little More Careful. Sew York Tillies, . If your letters aldresncd to prominent cities go astray try lo realize that New York and "an Francisco are the only great towns whose names have not been adopted by any others. So write the name of the Mate to which yonr letter is going, even if the Ktoffice be Boston, Chicago or Phila delphia. The Kar Itearhiiix Wabash Hand. .st. Louis Uepubllcau, 30 Jay Gould seems determined that the helping hitd with which the Wabish deco rates its circulars and hand bills shall spread out wide enough to cover the entire West. If there is any obscure little town that has not yet been brought under the Wabash hand, it should stud in proposals at once for a connection. I.it.ely to be 1'retty Well Off. Gould is forty-three years old. He was prominent as a gold speculator fifteen years ago. For a young man he then had a cheerful start in life and with umi'ual in dustry he has "managed to keep the wolf from the door. If he li?es thirty or forty years more until he is as old as Vander liilt when he died he may easily be the riche.it uiau in the world. A rrat Xatinnal luetiod .Settled. 1 L'u 1 lad ei pli ia i'i iu t s, 13. J V any a doubling heart, oppressed by the searching sadness of dire uncertainty, will find gladne-H and hope ia the positive an nouncement that tfce new Governor of I'oumelia will wear cot a hat but a fez; there is every reason for believing that he actually did wear a ftz yesterday when he made his formal entry into PhilippopolLs. ttrasH Muttons on the Clrrirnt Cloth. Kansas City Journal, 31 From the experience of Bev. Henry Ward Beecher, as chaplain of the Thirteenth Brooklyn Uegiuient, at Montreal, on the oc casion of the Queen's sixtieth birthday, it would be a good thirg to put more of our divines in uniform. He was the central figure of the entire eccaion, and preached a S'rmon with the world as an audience. He was one of the boys from lie'inning to end, but he brought the entire fete up to his level, and went through it all,without color of reproach to the clerical cloth even if it had brass buttons on it. They Will llnr to be Taken Care or St. Loots Uepubllcau, 30.J If the exodus manipulators think their whole work will be done when they send chartered steamers down the river, to run off all the deluded negroes that can be enticed from the Southern plantations by the glowing promises of free farms and free mules in Kansas, they are very much mis taken. That is a device that cannot be let alone to work of itself when the negroes have been got to Kansas, and if it is, will most surelv return to plague its inventors with a vengeance. They mu-t take care of the people they lead oil from their homes for something more than two years, or they will furnish the best sort of material for working up campaign literature in the next presidential campaign. secretory Shfrman'n Scheme, llo&lon Ad vertlser.l So we say that the Secretary's letter is chiefly significant for its adrnitsion that be is not unwilling to be considered as a can didate tor the Presidency. It might appear that his aspiration to unite all the national elements that contributed to the suppres sion of the rebellion is something more; but there is not much in this. That is the desire of all Republicans; but the way to do it without vieldinz all that would make the union worth while has not yet been dis covered. Lincoln, Johnson, Grant and Hayes each aspired to the same thing in different ways, and failed. What is Secre tary Sherman's scheme? He does not tell us. The letter is vague, after the fashion of such documents. Perhaps, after all, that is a merit. It is too early to announce a programme or construct a platform. In order to interpret the general phrases in the letter, we must have recource to what we know of Mr Sherman's record and cast of mind. If he should happen to be chrsen as the laading Republican candi date next year, he will be able to be more explicit. A Fight With a Rear and a Lneky Shot. Away over and up in Pouglas county, Oregon, on Wedneeday two weeks ago, G. W. Smith shouldered bis Henry rifle and strolled into the woods. There was snow on the ground and tracks bear cracks on the snow. Two miles across a valley and np a hill the hunter followed the trail. All at once a huge cinnamon bear appeared in the path, walking leie nrely along. The crack of the Henry, a sharp reverberation among the crags, the thunderous answer of the beast, and the hunter took to his heels. On bounded bruin Smith turned. In a ter rible taoment the bear clo-ed and knocked the rifle into the air and its owner upon the grouijd. As he fell Smith heard the clear report of a riflle. Stunned as he was he thanked his lucky stars that some kind and friendly bat-d had made itself felt in the rick of tiaae, for the bear was lying by hfs side dead. Recov ering, Smith looked far and near for his rescuer. He saw so one. Much puzzled, he picked up his rifle and looked into the but eight bullets, and the mystery was explained In start ing on the hunt, he had put ten bullets in, had fired one shot, and no it must have been that the rifle discharged itself in the lall, providentially killing the bear. Rankrnptey of India. London Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph. It is tt -rly forty years ago that Macau lay astonished the men of his day by de claring that India wa, in reality, poorer than Ireland, if this were the case in 1S41 how mueh more so is it in 1S79! For thir ty-eight years IndK has steadily been growing poorer; both taxation and debt have increased, while the wretched mtllicns whose government, without their having a voice in the matter England has undertak en, have been growing year by year less able to support the intolerab'e burden which an Imperial Government imposes upon, them. Few Englishmen have anv adequate conception of the wretchedness of the poverty-stricken wretches from whom JCo-3,000,000 is annually squeezed. The India Government has, at length, awoke to the terrible pas to which it has brought the country, and announces its intention of at once inaugurating financial reforms. If the Government is really in earnest, and not merely playing with the matter, the nature of there reforms will be to reduce the extienses of the countrv by employing natives more extensively, Euro peans at lower salaries, and the cutting down of the monstrous military expenses. Should such a policy as this be purrued radical it may be termed we may look for most strenuous and combined opposition from all clashes of "vested interests," who will risa to a man at the cry, "our craft is in danger." India sutlers from a kind of absenteeism; she is connected, it is true, with England, but witha result disastrous to herself. The mother country receives every year about 30,000,000 of her pro ducts without returning lo her pauperized dependency any commercial equivalent. The great Radical Political Economist, John Stuart Mill, foresaw the crisi, which we are evidently now approaching, over twenty years ago. His voice was not heeded, but the truth of his prophesy is every day becoming more painfully appar enL The CSS Train. IKardette. It was during ;h reign cf the good Caliph when Abou Taruerlik came to the City of Bagdad, threw his gripsack on tl e counter, and, as he registered, spoke cheerfully unto the clerk, saying: "A sample-room on the first floor, and send my keyster up right awsy, and call me for the C:2S train east in the morniDg." And Basler el Jab, the clerk, looked at him, but went away to the mirror and gazed at his new diamond. And Abou Tamerlik hied him forth, and went into the booths and bazars and laid hold upon the merchants, and enticed them into his room, and spread ont his samples and besought them to buy. And when night was come he slept. Because, he said, it is a dead town, and there is no place logo. And before the second watch of the night Kbumul em Uhp, the porter, smote on the panels of the door, and cried aloud : "O, Abou Tamerlik, ari.e and dress, for li is irain-tinis. - And Abau arose, and girt his raiment about him, and hastened down stairs, and crept into the 'bus. And he marvelled that he was so sleepy, becau-eheknew he wi-ut to bed exceedingly early and marvellously sober. And when they got "to the depot, lo ! it was the mail west, and it wa 10:2-5 r. M. And Abou Tamerlik swore, and reached for the orter that he rai;ht smite him, and ne said unto him : "Carry me back to my room and see that thou call me at 0:-S x m., or thou diesL" And, ere he had been asleep even until the midnight witch, Rhumul cm Uhp smote agaiu upon the pinels cf his door and cried aloud : "Awake, Abou Tamerlik, for the time waneth, and the train stayeth for no man Awake and haste, for slumber overtook thy servant, and the way is long and the 'bus gone 1 ' And Abou Tamerlik arose and dressed, and girded up his loins, and set forth with great sjieed, for his head was anxious. Nevertheless he gave Rhumul em Uhp a quarter, and made him carry his grip, and he cursed him for a driveling laggard. And, when they were come to the tram, it was 11:46" p. in., and it was a way-freight going scuth. And Abou Tamerlik fell upon Rhumul em Uhp , and smote htm, and treated him roushlv, and said : ' O pale-ray as of all aies, the Prophet pity tine if thou calltst me once more before the G.'IS a. m. east." And he gat him-elf into his bed. Now, when sleep fell heavily upon Abou Tamerlik, for Le was sore discouraged, Rhumul em Uhp Licked fiercely against the panel of his door and said: "O Abau Tamerlik the dramms.Ii, awake and dret-s with all s;eed. It is night in the valleys, but the day star shines on the mountains. Truly the train is even now due at the depot, but the 'bus is indeed gone." And Abau Tamerlik the dm mm ah swore himself awake, and putting on his robes, and hastened to the depot, while Rhumul em Uhp the porter went before with a lantern. For it was pitch-dark and raining like a house fire. And when they reached the depot it was a gravel-train going west, and the clcck in ll e steeple tolled 2 a.m. And Abou Tamerlik fell upon Rhumul em Uhp the porter, and beat him all the way home, and pelted him with mud, and broke his lantern, and cursed him. And he got him to bel and slept. Now, when Abou Tamerlik awoke, the snn was high, and the noise ot the street-car rattled in th: street. And his heart smote him, and he went down stairs ,and the clerk said to him: "Oh Abou Tamerlik, live in nesce. It is too late for breakfast and too early for dinner; nevertheless, it wou't make any dif ference in the bill " And Abou Tamrlik the drnmmah sought Rhumul em Uhp, the porter, and caught him by the beard, asd said unto him: "O chuck cl eddcJ pup ! which is, ''Thou that steepest at train-time" why hast thou forgotten me?" And Rhumul em Uhp was angry, and said : ''0 thou Tamerlik the drummah, hasty in speech and slow to think, wherefore shouldst thou get up at daybreak, when there is another train goes the same way to-morrow morning?-' But Abou Tam-rlik would not hearken unto him, but paid his bill, and hired a a team and a man to take him to the next town. And he hired the team at the liv ery stable, and he cursed the house that he put up at. Now, the livery stable belonged to the landlord, all the same. But Abou Tamer lik the drnmmah wist not that it was so. Unconiiuercd. Otalona Southern States.1 There is a parcel of bastard Democrats in Yankeedom who have forced their way to the front icats in the political syna gogue, and who seek to make it seem that they and they only are anointed to speak for the Democratic party. These jobernowls and knaves are forever proclaiming that the South has accepted the amendments, recognized the results of the war, bowed to the arbitrament of arms, and all the rest of the windy and witless fiddle faddle that you and we and the re mainder of mankind are constantly seeing in their public prints. A majority of these misbegotten party followers never saw a cotton plantation nor' a canebrake in the whole of their tricky, truckling, treacherous lieves. There have been no ways, no means, no circumstanced by which they might lorm a correct judg ment of Southern life, and thought, and be lief, and character. Yet, hark ye and mark yej they have the blank assurance to stand forth and attrib ute thoughts to the Southern mind and feelings to the Southern heart that the Southern man would scorn with a holy scorn to think or feel. We want these renegades to understand, right now and here, once for all, that our people are not coward, they are not slaves, they are not whipped spaniels to lick the hand that cuffs them. No I By the everlasting God they never will cringe or fawn at the feet of the Federal power that marched over the bleed corpea magazine. He found j and broken hearts of our people to its glit - i tcrtug acd guilty triumph, Our bloody-thi: re7ilers are right for once whry they sav th it the South is still r-icotqrered ; that see is timing tier time; that she proposes to re-tore the republic to its antebellum orbit at the first fivorab e opportunity. Yes, sirs; they are right far once, we re peat, when they say this, and when the de spicable bastrrd Democrats sing out that we have turned our backs on the psat they simply mrke an assertion that Time, our Avenger, will prove to be as false as the fale hearts in which it was spawned. The South has not yielded one whit or trifle of her high and holy cause, and what is more and better, the never will. She still believes in State Rights. B?ar witness her late, long and finally successful struggle for hom rule. She still believes in white supremacy and intends to maintain it at all hazirds. Bear witness in the way she has rid her self of the last black or yellow ruler within her borders. She still believes that the amendments are a crime and clamity. Bear witness how her Representatives are working to repeal the laws and statutes that lend force to tho e infamous enact ments. She still believes in the rwbt of secesion. as time will prove when th test is made. It is the only redrc-a a State has against wrong, tyanny and destruction. The mills have only been set goirg at the captured Capitol, and you will tee plenty of fine grinding before the stream is turned off, and the rattle and din and thunder of the machinery become silent. The South has no hope, no fear, no in terest, that is not our hope, and fear, and interest as well. Oar very hearts and lives and souls are wrapped up in her welfare. We will Ftand by her, and, if the worst comes to the worst, we will fallby her. Her peDp'e are our people, her fortune our for tune, and her God our God. There can be no divorcs between her destiny and our own. A blow at her is a blow at us. When she is taunted we are taunted, too. When she is insulted we feel the insult tingling through every fiber of our frames. This is whv we confront the bastard DemccratB in this manner to day. They have tried to humiliate her in the eyes oi" the whole earth. Thev have represented that she has proved recreant to the dead who died for ber has turned from the consecrated altars of her ancp'tors and flurg herself J rone be fore the false gods set up by hands that reeked and dripped with the gore of her children. It is a lie. The South is the old South still, thank Heaven! and all the storms and passions that ever tore across our planet can never make her depart to the right hand nor to the left. It is well known that we have clung to the Northern State-Rights Democracy with d-alh-likc tenacity iu its darkest hour of J.1MID1. We stood by it in the William Allen cam paign, when to do si was to be denounced as a fossil and a fool. We stood bvit at a time when almost our whole people had loot faith and hope in the Caue. We have promptly rented every assault male upon it by fr,end and foe, and trreit ed, as far s.s in us lay, every threated de parture to form a new alliance. We have stood bv it agiinst all odds and under all c:rcuuitarces, tpau'e our brains and our hearts approveJ its fundamental doctrines. To day, and up to this hour, we stand unflinchingly by the Nortlcrn fctates Riehts Democracy. But the Democrat who will not assert the principal of States Rights, and While Supremacy in Congreis tr out, in the North or in the South, is a deserter, and we braed him as a traitor to a cherished political conviction of his party Such Democrats we spew out of our mouths. In conclnaion, the S let asks ni odds at the hands of the bastard Democrats of Yackeedoin. We know that the7 will report to false hoods; we have proof that they will resort to forgery; we believe that they are capable of doing anything that is dishonest, nn clean and criminal to mi'repre.scnt .the South and weaken ihe usefulness of this journal. But we fling the gaun'let in their teeth, and defy them to do thsir worst, for we have appealed to Time, the great Arbiter, and his verdict ntver went ami. 3itt. ixiiiMX iv:ti'.it:o.v. An Open Letter From Jame-s T Legate. Leavenworth Press 31.J Hitherto I have said nothing about Mr. Iogalls, the investigation, nor of the parties who are Fell-constituted prostcutors; but this man Egger.s and Mr. Stumbaugh have signed what they call an "answer" to Mr. Ingall' statement, and in that "answer" they have eeen fit to use my name in a manner which compels me to take notice of it. On page twenty-three of their "answer," I find the following language: "When James V. Legate Immediately moved theaiioptlnunf the majority report; when Mr. Simutl Itlss, a lut-mheror the Jlou-e from Douglas county, called for the readini:of ail tho evidenc taken by said committee, except that re.ating to Hossaclc, whica had already lieeu lead, 'this was ob jected to by Legato and others, and after a deba.enfsome two hours under I ho opera tion of the previous question, moved by James F. Lniate, the majority report was adopted by 01 ayes to 1 1 tihk, without any of the testimony bavins been read except as, above slated. And we here notice that Mr. Incalls says "LtgHto voted tor Morton ;" and we add thst Mr. LcgHte, after bitterly denouncing Mr. IngallsMsacorruptlonist, wassudden'y con verted to the cause of 31r. Ingalls between two days, by what means we Know not, un less it in ly u Inferred from the fact that Mr. Legate Is the same James K. Legnt who, as It apjiears by the report of theCjiuinltteeon I'rlvileaes and Elections, received !l,i00 for his vote for Mr. Caldwell Seo 'Constresslon al Itecord," vo'. 1, pae 31, extra session of tbetsenale, 1S7S. I desire to notice the last paragraph first. In that last paragraph Ifind two bare-faced lies, with a third maliciously designed in inference that I acted from motives other than honorable. Messrs Stumbaugh and Ezger lie when they say I was "converted to Mr. Ingalls between two days." They lie when they say I ever "bitterly denounced Mr. Ingalls as acorruptionist." The fight on Mr. Ingalls was conceived in malice and carried on for the sake cf ven geance. The jeople whom I represented were anxious that Gov. George T. Anthony should succeed Mr. Ingalls in the Senate, and I sought to use those hating Ingalls to aid me in the election of Anthony; but I re fused to be used by them to gratify their malice agaiust Ingalls. With reference to my receiving one thou sand dollars for Toting tor Mr. Caldwell and "See Congressional Record, volume one, page thirtv-one, extra session of the Senate, 1873," I have this to say : That one witness swore that Mr. Caldwell and Mr. L.T. Smith told him that Mr. Cald well had to give me one thousand dollars to vote for him. Mr. Caldwell and Mr. Smith both denied that they ever said bo, and Mr. Caldwell stated that be never paid or offered or was asked to pay me anything, and I swore I never received a cent or de manded a cent ; bnt the report referred to was made. I have no comments to make upon the report, but Bay this: that some thing like a year afterward I spent an eve ning with Senator Morten, who made the report, in company with Governor John Burhank, and during that time we con versed upon the Caldwell case, and I told the Senator the injury he had done me by his report, and he promised me he would look into the matter and if he had done me a wrong he would maka it right. Soon thereafter I received the following letter from him : U. S. "ESATE ClIAMUKR. 1 Washing ro;, April 19, 1871. j Sin: In our conversation a few evenings since, yon called my attention to an Injury you claimed bad been done to you In the re port or the Caldwell case. Since that time I have examined the testimony, and I am frank to say that I find nothing tojustltythe statement that yon received money for your vote for Mr. Caldwell. I am glad yon called my attention to the subject. I only sought Justice. I did not de alzn to iDjireany oue. I hope this statement will be satisfactory to yon. O. P. Xoetos. Jaxks F. Legate. Esq. If any man lfving ever paid me anythirg for any official act of my life. I ask him to say so at any time. This is defending my self mors than I ever did before, though I have been in pnblic life for more than twenty yean. Now, to the first paragraph. While - he Ulis a technical truth he tell a. bald lie. in connection with what is said elsewhere , in this 'answer," one would infer that the j members of the House knew nothing about ' tne testimony, ween the tacts are, through the connivance of Stumbaugh and others everything that was hsd in the testimony was printed in the Kansas City Times, and each member of the House had a copy and had it for more than one day before the report was adopted ; and that calf for "reading all the evidence" (which would take not less than five hours) was simply to prevent a vote on the report. After Mr. Ingalls was elected, I was invited to go into a caucus lor the purpose of fixing and arranging a plan to investigate him. I promptly declined the invitation, and said to those who invited me tnat I should oppose investigation for the honor of the State, and to prevent a lot r.f men from committing perjury, which I knew they would. 1 desire to say right here, as to the man ner of getting up the investigation: The leaders of the movement were Sidney Clarke, who had been refused the indorse ment of Mr. Ingalls to make him United States Marshal, and was vindictive to In galls therefor; Chas H. Miller, who had been removed under charces preferred at me instance ot Kidney Clarice he was full of vengeance at Mr. Ingalls becouse he could not save his official head; L. F. Hgg ers, who obtained a position as register in the land office at Hays City, the price of his vote in convention fjr a member of Congress he hrd been turned out for tak jng illegal feerand through Mr. Ingalls' instrumentality, he was cot pn secuted; he was violently opposed to Mr. Ingalls be cause he cou'd not get another office. And there were several other who had been turned out of effice and were mad at Mr. Ingalls because he did not interpose in their behalf; and last, but not least was ex-Senator S. C. Pomeroy, filled to the brim with venom at Ingalls, because Ingalls succeeded him when he was Yorked. Pom eroydidallhe could to beat Mr. Ir.galls before he was elected, and all he could to dishonor him after he was elected. Mr. Ingalls had a majority of the votes in the House, and some means had to be de vised to pass the resolutions to investigate. So, after these choice spirits had b?en in council, tney concluded that they must no tify certain persons that charges had been made against them and they would be ex pected to vote for the resolutions to investi gate or not vote at all. In that way the in vestigation was commenced. It was intended as an inquisition, but the Hoti-e ordered the commitue, aftera fight lasting for two-days, that when any testimony was taken which reflected upan any member of the House, or Senator Ingall?, or any senatorial can didate, they should be notified and author ized to appear, and cio s examine the witnesses and present counter testi mony. It is a well known fact that Mr. Ingalls was never notified, and therefore under the resolutions of the House, no report could lie male against him, and the report written for Mr. Hall and presented by him was not in order, if that question hail been raised. The committee was run by the enenms of Mr. Ingalls, and if there existed anything against mm, wnicn could be lound, it would have been. Foiled by tbcirown committee, they privately solicited the disap;ointed members to sign a memorial to the Senate of the United State', charcinir fraud in the election, and ex Senator Pomeroy was charged with the duty of not allowing Mr. Ingills to be sworn in. But that failed. 'I heir memorial was sent, but their case wa bad, and something had to he done;-so they filed supplemental charges. About the men mentioned iu the supplemental charges, I think I have some iersonal knowledge, and the reaooas for their con duct. Mr. O. G. Richards, Clarke claimed as the "man," that he would do as he wanted he should Clarke was manipulating all the time to combine the opposition upon him self to become Ingalls' successor, and that trial so disgdstcd the opposition element that it drove more than a dozen men from "-. ..iu(..i.: u..Aut: o.s uiruaieu n, .vital I Clarke was saying about him jhat he open ly pronounced in favor of Ingalls. U. K. Ballard's first choice was Judge Horton, second choice Ingalls so known and ncojcVd. He waited for something to turn up favorable to Herton until no one thought Horton would be nominated, and then went to the Ingalls men. Not, however, till the "opposition" caucus had Wen in session for hours, and Clarke per sisted in being a candidate when no one there expected it to scree. L E. James is a D?nv crat, elected in opposition to Gov. Anthony, and finding Ingalls could beat him cast his vote for him. G. W. Greaver is a D inccrat. from the same county with Mr. James. He was also opposed to Gov. Anthony, favored Col. Phillips, but when Phillips went out of sight, he said publicly he should vote for Icgalls, and did so. The artion of both trerc men has been endorsed by the county central Democratic committee of their county. Geo. S. Bishop had been promisfd noth ing, was ejected to vote for Phillijia first and Incalls second, and did so. Mr. Blackburn was elected to vote for anybody who would defeat Gov. Anthony, with preference for Phillips, but voted for Ingalls. L. P. Hamilton said in the opposition caucus, also in the Greenback caucti", that if the question came between Horton and Ingalls, he should vote for Ingalls. In ex planation of his coune, he said, with much feeling that Judge Horton, "while upon the bench, had misused his fa'her. John M. Price was nominated to vote for Ingalls, was instructed to vote for Ingalls, was elected and did vote for Ingalls. Senator L. O. Savage, personally, did not like Mr. Ingalls, but alter Judge Horton was nominated, Senator Grass made an appeal to him to vote against .Judge Hor ton and detailed what he regarded as a great crime Judge Horton had committed against Montgomery county. The two men are warm personal friends. Savage believed him, and did vote for Ingalls, and has been endorsed therefor by his con stituency. Now I ask, in all fairness and reason, is it right that a man like Eggers, who bas been denounced by his constitu ency and hung in effigy, a man without character; old Stumbaugh, who, if he ever hsd any character, left it in Pennsylvania when he came to this States these men.with Sidney Clarke and S. C. Pomeroy.whobave covered this State with infamyis it fair, I ask, that they should le paid by the con tributions of Charles II. Miller", and other haters of Ingalls, to stay in Washington to defame men's characters, two thousand miles away, dishonor the State by theit ma licious falsehoods about its citizens and give them our tacit a&'ent by remaining si lent ? I answer no. " James F. Legate. A NTIt.VXUK KOHAXCK. KMranscment, Marriage, Divorce, nnd a Happy Ilridal. Troy Press. Komancists glean the material for their books of fiction from the events of every day life and by metamorphosing facts and places, and with more or less always more mbelli-hment their productions are given to the world. Many plots, where villainy and deception are interwoven are used, but the denouement is always happy. We question, however, whether any ro mance was ever written but could find its counterpart in life's realities. The follow, irg very romantic storyjis but the substance ot what happened in our own city many j tars ago. The characters that appear as principals have passed away from the busy scenes of life, but their descendants yet live among ns and occupy honorable positions in society. Two young men who had passed through college and graduated with honor were studying for the profes sion of medicine. They were fast friends and were almost inseparable. They enter ed society together and were well received in the best houses. The? were together one evening at a reception in one of the wealthiest mansions of the city when a new star appeared in the person of a niece of the hostess who had come from Massachu setts, and this was her first appearance in society. She was handsome, and reports ageee in saying that the was as good as she was pretty. Hoin ol the medical students were smitten, and for the first time in their lives a feeling of estrangement came be tween them. The nature of the two young men were essentially different. Oce was frank and open as the day, while the other was taciturn and reserved. Both paid court to the lady, bat she soon manifested a choice far the more frank character and they became engaged. Thna far every thing hadpatsed happily with the IoTers. The defeated suitor seemed to bear his disap pointment resignedly. ArranctmenU had 1 been made that the ecgaged couple should be married after -M. 1). had securest his diploma and becomed settled In time the lad v went home and the successful suitor went abroad to complete his studies. While absent, fetters were receive,! by the girl concerning ner lover waica creiieu iue leelmg that he was lalse to her, and hnally one came in bis own hand writing bidding her farewell, and stating that he was to be married to a lady ol rant, i his proved almost a death blow to the giil, but she soon rallied and sought ia every wav to mn.l h tre nf cri-i. ""he defeated Buitor was a: hand and again pre- waW-iylrgln the yn! close toMhe Louse, ferredhis homage to his friend's chosen, aua foaml th9 nlein tbe eras and al and finally in a fit of pique, sh married , ftfcunp. whe ItctW, him. Had this been the hnaieoj the story hrnr-t -he child cry and we..t out nd lonnd there wouldbenoromr.ee. It was no: j the snake honj on to the cl-i d's hand. Dr. Ion" after the wJdin- uefore the lover re- - "-Carter asaittej,aud wini a i.eu ionaa.ierine weuuio oeiore ineioYerrt ofwMOy aou sot the, little suaertr oat of luiueu. lie vouiu mii ut: iiauc v ii,c that the one he loved was lalse by nature. He reasoned that there was caue for her change, and like a sensible mac he at once commenced the task of unraveling the mystery. After much trouble he obtained an interview with the wife in the absence of her husband, and as an answer to his upbraidings she handed him his letter of renunciation. She was happier than she had been in many days when she learned that the letter was a forgery and thit the lover had always been true to her. She at once renounce 1 her hu'bacd, and soon opportunity offered and she procured a di vorce and was united to her first and only love. The husband and r"f o"' ' d iwn in this city, and here he enj ji ; lo. : acd successful career, and when he died lull of years and honor, he was surrounded by his wife and family. The false friend who, by his wicked machinations had wrought so much sorrow, removed to Lansingburir, where he became a physician of note. He afterward remarried, atd his posterity tj day occupy honored positions in the State. There are some of the relatives and descend ants of both these families in this citv and vicinity who will recognize the parties at oner. And in two family bibles in this city the; marriages are recordvd aniorg the family archives. KANSAS NEWS. Cottonwood Falls is pre pa-Ins to cele brate the Fourth. Jack rabbit bunting Is reported cood In Marshall couuty. Tho Clay JCenter I'oatoEiw Issued week 101 orders, averaging 512 H latt Chief Jiistlco Horton Is to deliver the Fourth of July orat'on at 1'eabody. Three men havo been killed Iu the vicin ity of Kmporla within a spaca of three weeks. Somebody down In Ford county has found a "Won the wing of thu seventeen year old locust. Well Fixed IlionlerfctMr, S.I Columbus lias eight restaurants and dining hails, besides thu hotels and bxird'.ng houses, A Iteuiarkalilp 'ae. ISentca Courier, D". Peter Hclnults' mare lias last given birth to n mule colt, after 1 year aud lt days Interval iroin couccpiiou. Corn in Itutler -)inity. t Augusta Gazette, .J Judge Akin has a MeM of corn, on his farm In the Wnitewater Valley, which will aver- ago inree reel in uigui. jlore thna asi:v:rctc.l. I Walnut Valley Tunes, TO. Harvesting will commence next week. If not the latter part of tills, liutter county will hnvc much more wheit than was at first supposed. Western Fun. IWlnfield Coii'le-V-l Some galoots suppostd to be from Arkansas City, have lately been In the habit ofpas-ina lythMebool houses between that city nnd U iutleld, and tiling pistol balls through the school houiu doors and walls. , A 1,'oikI linlev. I Walnut Vally Times. SO The fees on money orders nt the Eldorado postolllce aggregated SsO.lo and the orders paid over JT.nm) for tho quarter eudini; Mnrc!i 31. Thu postolll-o Is a Roml India: 'of the growth ol thu town aud vicinity. A Serious C'lmrst. Miami Kei.ubllcan, zu. A man named Hoberls, charged with saw ing bridges on the ban Francisco and St. Louis railroad, was arrested on Saturday eveulni; by a detect: vo of tne aauio of Itrlims, and taken to Swings, 1J, ilo., ou Monday. A liaise In Kates. IWoixlson County IWjL It 13 rumored that the Missouri, Kansas A Texas has passed Into tho control of a Chi cago company. At any rate, tho price of n csr from hero to bt. Louts has risen this this w.ek from sVveuty to ntutty dollars. Jay tioiild niccts With a 3JNlia:i. Topeka CommoUKealth, S Jay Gould and party passed through the city yesterday, over the K. 1. roid. At Solomon, his engiue Jumped the track and delayed his train aim too ieguiar pasenger aooui two hours. The I'irst t'otoreiltlarrlaseiiil'av.'nee County. Larned Optic, S3.) Judge C. C. McComas married the first col ored couple ever married In the county, a few days ago. They were both sprightly young mulatocs, and weru good-looking withal. jIoroTlian is Known. Eldorado (Itutler County) Press, 23. There Is more good wheat In this county than many think there Is. Numerous fields are extra good. Another notable feature Is that the wlieaton the uplands promises as lino a yield as that In thu bottoms. A Heavy Defalcntlon. Illne Itaplds Times, 2a.) West. Wilkinson, of theSeneca Cbn-,and Postmaster, has Just had a settlement with tho governmsnt for tour years and three months service. He was Indebted to tho government Just oue ce:it. The money was raised with no great delay atd tho govern meutsavedfrom bankruptcy. (Joins' for the Fish Catrhcrs:. Topeka Commonwealth, SO. D. B. Long, Flsli Commissioner, has In structed the County Attorney of Wyandotte County to prosecute all parties engaged In catching shad In the K insas I'.lver. A con siderable number of them have been taken. Mr. Iinz has lust deposited some fine land locked salmon in se vera! streams In the State. M ho Said It Y Washington Itepubllcan.SO ' I. The recent bountiful rains nnd the favo' ble Iweather everywhere in tho Sta'e, give Kansas tne cheering as'urance of another grand crop this season, and this will make flvo full crops In the past five years which Is asiarDacc as our personal Knowledge ex tends. Who was It that told us that crops al ways iaii in ivansasT Small Pox Preferable. Seneca Courier SO. There are several cases of a malignant type of scarlet fever In Corning. There has been two deaths In one family. The citizens should take some steps to check Its spread ing. hmall pox Is preferable In any commu nity, to scnrlei fever. Small isjx can be quarantined by vaccination; the other can nct. I'nlversallsts Convention. The Kansas Universalis Mate Convention will hold Its annual meeting at Seneca, com mencing Friday evening, Jane C, 1370, at 7 o'clock r. M., and contlaneover the following Sunday. Delegates by rail can go over the SL J. & D. C. railroad, or on the Central Branch railroad to Centralia, where convey ances will t In waiting to take them to Sen eca, a distance of nine miles. A lit J ah WrxLs. President. S.M. Peice, Secretary. .V Itrutal Harder. JBntcblnsou Interior. 3.) A few days since the wife and daughter of Mr. Champion, a citlisa of Barbour county, while crossing a creek In a wagon were met by a Texas cow boy, wool t Is supposed was drunk. Ashe passed them being on horse back, he drew his revolver and fired at them, the ball taking effect, killing the daughter Instantly, He was arrested by the itarbour county authorities acd brought to his place, and afterwards, for greater security, taken to Lyons, Itlce county. Burled Beneath a Falling In -Ont. Lamed Optic, 301 John J. Brady, living twenty-two mile8 south of this city, was killed May 17th. by the falling In ot the roof and will) of his father's house, bnryln; him three feet deep. His father sw the houso cave In: and with the help ot passing neighbors, the de-rU was removed tn about two Hours. Tho son onlyi , wlchlta narrowlv escanetl with l.ltiif. Itasped once, after being taken out- He was j ot" icnim, narrowly tsped wlta bl-llfc. uueiyrrom aieuuion., Jiame, anj. was res- I pecteU by all who knew htm. A Painful Accident. ICIay Cenur Locallst. 2.VJ John Cain was at the IjocalUt oSIce oa Tnursday afternoon last, sound and lively. On returning home he attempted to mount a , I wlMNh colt, and when partly on his bact, . w las that he must be thrown, attempted to SJfnV khEi.w&.ankV a font of the breattlns i me. nones so badly t Sat pit ces were thrust mroau tne skiu :tltte:i Ity a ItattlesiiaKe. Seneca Courier, W.J I. Jacobs. Il!ng in "S'enchatel township, I -a-t his Mule boy. three years old. bitten by . rattlesnake last weeS. Tho little fellow- ,aii uactr Arrested for Iti-aciy. sjeutea Courier, 30. Jas. F. Barnes, a new farmer living south of Centralia was brought before Judge Gra ham on the SJ by a writ of habecs corpus He had been arrested by Hherifl Martin upon a letter from the deputy sheriff of Will coun ty, 111., who charged him with the crime of bicaniy. Mr. Con will appeared for Ulrnt-s, and J K. Tayloi represented tlieMxte. After a hearing, Jadceeirahm released Mr.Ksrces not deeming the information upon which Vuiitre Ilwker had bsued the uarraut lor his arrest suillclenl to hold htm. An Alleged Forger Arrcoteil. WlnfleM Semi-Weekly, 2i. a e tenlay there was an Interesting case un der the liabejs corjnis act. .Last week a man by the name ot Lotus Kinney was arrested ou a telegram from the slilrlfT of Mariou county, JCcw Yo.fc. The trial was to show cause forsu'h capture and detention, and was before Juugu oaus. X. C. Cold well tor the prisoner and b. J. Webb opposing. Tho prisoner was discharged but was rearrested on complaint ol deputy RherllT Finch and Is now in J ill on the char-re of loritery. There la but llltle doubt of the prisoner's guilt Sex en AVolACNiiiOiic Iciu Junction City Tribune, . Two little sons of J.tmss Tully.sged nine and eleven years respectively, were herding cattle, and camo across a wolf den. Oue CUirded the hole while the other went for a UK Hint lliedogs. When the divine had imdeconsideralt eprore-s theuiulher wolf Its! to i ou excavation, which she accom llshed nt a side hole from the den. bne wnt for reiuforce'eent-s, aud boon returned with tlielasi jeai's imiitly, but tha bosand tliedo-s neldthd fort." and tin illy klllut f uryonn woUesaud captured three others une. M.ikiiij: seven wolves nl ono haul, Iu j-ji te of the mother aud all her friends Drow ne-d. Eldorado Times, 3) 1 Stnllcy Sample, aged IT, was drowned In the West Branch, near the junction, nt noon, Wedne.day. The facts, as near as wo could ascertain, were about as follows: About six or seven boys, smiley probably being tho oldest, went from ichool at noon to b ithe or sa-im. Unlley could swim but a short dls. tauce, beiuc only a beginner. Alter being in the water a short time he attempted to swim across tha creek, and when about ba.f way g-ueoutnnd began to go under. Tho boys attempted ti sie him, but he struggled so th-y were forced to let him go in order to s-ive tlieinse'ves. They mv ho went down rUcor.-ix rules before anally dl-appeariug. J'rosjierlus Kirwiulii ef, -V From the cenus taken by the C.ty Mar- sh-il, J. 1. 1! irnird, by authority of the City Counc I last week, Knwtu looms up with a round population otl.ll). Anil, if tile tide of Immigration cor tinues for tho next six months as It has fot the last six, Klrwln will have n population of from l.GCO to 2,000. Our business Interests aro keeping pace with the Increase of bopulatlon. New men are con stantly coming Iu, and'tho scarcity of busi ness bond's is tiU'te a drawback. Our rail tosd piosi-ects lor its early completion aro the must llittering, aud ne conclude from what Information we Iihvb received from n .tellable source, tliatOc'ober 1st, next. IU see the roul completed aud regular trains ruuiiU):;. A Curious Combination of" Sixes. (Topeka Commonwealth, 3). In tho case of Fasnacht vs. Kungle, In which the parties wero suing for a small amount, trlol In tho District Court d.iy be fore yesterday, the Jury were unable to agree, atid at two o'clock in tho morning Judgo Morton dismissed the Jury and entered the cilsu as a mlstrl tl. There was a cur.ous coin cidence of "sIxes'Mn theease. The Jury were evenly divided six and six. Six were In fa voVof a verdict of six cents for plaintiff, and six for n venliet of six cents for defendant. The Judge aiijournt d the court to six o'clock the ne-xt morning, aia' It Is understood that he will appoint six re-frrees :u the case, with Instructions to report their findings to the court ou thu sixth day of September. V.'aUed I";i by a Horse. Border star, JO. Aconpleofonryruus men, whllo return ing fiom Cherry Creek, Sunday evening last met with a s.id, tut not serious" accident. It seems that they were driving afons about three miles from town, when b.lti fel a-leep, nnd the horse lu trying to keep out of the mud. turned out of the road, upset thu buggy, throwing tha young moil out, Iwiii alighting In tin- mud hole After picking ttiemseivertiiponeot inemsiarieu on tne o ick tnckona run. but discovered his mistake and made his wiy tiack to his companion. who hial tho presence or rnlml to im.il t e horse. Arter mutual observations they righted f bo baggy and onco more started tor town. rrl lug nt an early Hour in me morn' lug, covered with mud. Itrutal . Linn County Clarloi, 50. HA brntejln the south part of the county by tho name of Smith, camo near killing his wlfo ono day last week. As we get tho ac count of the occurrence. Smith was setting out hfdgu plants on the farm, and lacking some to finish out a certain line, he called to his wife to bring them to him. It being vomo illstanco from tho house, sho under food him to ask her to bring him some water, and started at once with some In a pall. As soon as she arrived tho Inhuman wretch, instead of thank 'ig her for her kind ness, struck her a b'ow which telled her to the earth In n Insensible condition. The appearances indicated for sown time that sho would not receive r. She was carried to the house by other parties, and mi sure was the vllllan that he had murdered his wife, that lef'iresheshoaed signs of retsivery he cummeuced inaklnspreparatlons for escape. A Close Call. I Emporia Xcws, 3 J This mornlns as Justice's corps of steel track layers were proceeding to their work west of the city. In hand cars, and were two rnlleawcstof town, and while running at a rapid rate on a down grade, John Fllnn fell otr In front of the foremost car and was con siderably hurt. Not on'y tho car he was on but one following closely passed over him. Fortunately be fell In such a position that his tsxly was under thecals. His left hand and foot fell upor the rail and In theso he re ceived the principal Injury, both being con siderably crushed. Xoimportant boneswero broken, nnd with due care lie will soon re cover. He was at once bronght lock to town and taken to the resldenccol John Hamilton, where be boards, and where a physician was called and dresses! his wouuds Mr. Fllnn Is frr m aalinn, where he has a famiiy. ilu had u narrow escape with his life. The Saonserfest. Topeka Commonwealth, CO. The Saengerfest at Iavenworth promises to eclipse this ytar, all tlio'o which havo preceded It Large delegations will be there from cities a'oug all the lines running Into Leavenworth. TheTopeka Cornet Hand will run excursion trains on Sunday, the 8th of June, and from all we can hear, there will be a general exodus from the city on thatday The pleasure of getting away from homo will b4 added to by lh- dlversltvof amuses rnents which will be presented for the bene fit of those who go. The hand's excursions are alwas success, bnt this year, there is no donbl there will be more fnu than evrr. Such a great carnival of musle oar people win not be permitted to enjoy again soon. We understand that the committee having in charge this chief depar ment has been more than umilly sne.ces.sfnl. Other com mittees Iihvo not btea stow, as their work will show. Arrested lor Kilrfiery and Attempted Harder. Emporia News, 23. Thlsmornlng the conductor of freight train No. C, on the Santa Fe road, second division. coming from the west,recelvtd tho following dlspitcb. from IVabody, when he arrived at Cottonwood : "Two men in a coal car on your train robbed a man nnd then threw him ofl th-train be tween I'eabody and Florence. Tney took his watch, which was marked - vf. D." on outstdeof case, and R.0 lu money. Tbelrln tentlnn was m urder Catch them and deliver to officers. The mau is beio to convict them." Th conductor at once dicovered the men In a freight car and nal.ed up the openings so as U secure the birds. He then telcitrsph'd to have Sheriff Moon meet him at the train on his arrival here. The sheriff did so, and found a third man bid away under or behind b pile of bides. He took chargeof the gentle men and lodged them tn Jail. He held the freight car here, and will await furtbi-r devel opment. He found some motiey on their persons but not the watch alluded to A Xarrovr Ksrapf. Lawrence Journal. D. Mr. A. S Embree, a young minister of soma reDUte In this section. more'-eeentlT- --' "-i "- --"- --"- i"'"i "-"--i where he Is stopping for the benefit or his health. The Dally &n.'n.e. rt that platv.of Tuursday. sajs bo was wxlfeiug In the wexxla aboat a quarter of a mile back from Belle vlew Cottage, beyond thtfpaik, anil stopping forest a while he leaned hlmse-t against a treefora few mluntes, when therwan re port of a pistol heard, and he felt a J ir si 'Hi lar tut hat producesl by a gun shot. Mr. Em- bree was alone, and of course he felt an In clination to change his bsse pr.-tty quickly, wnlchbedld. On examining hlsclithehe found thst h shot, su pposfsl to be a pistol ball, nad pased throush the lo-ver ptrt n the breast jvicket of tits coat, penetntlrs putly ihmni,tH pscksgeof I ttrs and glADC- mg ou .Mr tniDreeciiii-t e v snyeiue to the p'r y who tlrett the snot, nor has h an enemy lieinsr but slightly acquiluttd there that he can suspect. He did not therwrsou wlm tlreei nt hlm.thenntlcr rnwth being ! thick, tut hetblUEs lie whs unite bear him. A tJirl t'orser. IWlcfl.-ld Count". ; Lst Monday a young gtxl, it-o jtae her namessJcrnte S'av, vresent'Hl an order purporting to be from Frank Williams ta J. IS. Lynn fo.-530 worth ot goods Mr. Lynn, not liking tho IooSs or the onler, put it tn bis pocket and told her to "call again aud he would see aboat It." The girl went out nd fixed up another onleron Mrs. W hitchetd tor E3. on the slreugtb. of whtclt she began to buy hats. ribbons and millinery "truck" lcdls crlmlnitely. When the order wa presented Mih. W.thought something was wrong and dispatched one of the ladles of the establish ment to Mr. Williams with It, and it wils found that he had no knowledge!, the niHt ter whatever. The ctrl.it eenl, had hlnst at tne Wlldams House some time last fall, but Mr. W. not liking her actions, bad ells charged her. Sue sajs that sho rms been stopping at dlffoient places in this county fur sometime and that the orders were given to hei by a Miss Graham, who has lieeu work Ing at this place for some time, Tbeiitrt ap pears to be between 17 and IS yesrsold. and not seeming to understand the nature of the crime she had committed, she was givm some gotxi, wholesome advice aud told toMo her way and sin no more." T'io storm in 3larshnll Count-. Frankfort Special to the Atchison Cham pion, 30 J A tcirlble rain storm visited this place this afternoon about six o'clock, lasting over two hours. Several small buildings were more or less damaged. I", S. Newell'a ice-houso was unroofed ; also the awning of tils store. Joseph M irshall's stable and cairloge honse were b!o-vn to atcms. There were two horses In the stab'eat the time, but escaped unin jured. F 15 Taylor's warehous? was torn to pieces, but no damage to the Implements or ma chinery. Mr. Khodes" barn was partially destroyed. The bouses of Mr. Fox, Mr. C"e-cn, and Ir. Vaugn, living threo miles northwest ef of this place, wero blown down, and the in- uistes more or less Irju-ed, anil now here re ceiving the attention of phvslclars. The damage sustained by these unfortu fainllles is not known. Mr Fox's house and ellects wero blown In to t he river. Mr Newell Is damaged about one hind red and fifty dollars. Mr. Marshall about tho same. LATER. A messenger Just from Irving brings the following particulars ot th-storm a: that place: Sixteen liriises were b'owu to atoms, kllllnir u gbt pe-isiins ; there are aloiit twenty-llva lrjured auu stivera! more aremlsirg. Auioui lue houses destroyed ire Ti-nr w. Worden's resWence, Mr. Armst-ns's resi dence, W. J. .Hiatus- r . nenee Mr Itininp urn's -e.lderus', tud al-out twelve edhers te tally demolisned The Presbyterian rVm b. p"b"c se' not building and the Irv.n levator were nil cornplettly destroyel. Theeau sps-i rt the rnll'oad brUl e - Ing the Hue Uivir at this point was ai-o blown down. i.ti:k-oci:a. iaai. The IVjsc Project Adopted in Com tiiittc KrwYork Herald, Z3, A fortnight ago to-day the InUrccvnaic Cantl Congress was formsl'y rjeceil in Paris. The distinguished President elect, M. de Leseps, pronounced an address of welcome, which was highly commendesl !y the European press. In it he ventured upon the following prediction: "In a week you will have concluded your labors and established the precise oint where the Pa cific Ocean, guided by your hands acres's the Americaa i-thmus, will niing! ii waves with tho-w of the Atlar.tic It is science, and since alone, which should direct your efforts. On Thursday next, when we separate, it will bu amid the ap plau-e of the world that you will utltr that word, so long expected, which will re movp the last barrier of progress and send out the peoples to the eocijuect of thc future." 'lhat M. de Leseps should have mi-cal-cnlated the probable duration of the Con gress, is not in itself a tenons offence; (mi the abave declaration stemed so chsractr isticof the man sml of tl.e jitinty spirit with which our Ktirupratt breiheren assem bled at Paris, have asmmed to decide off hied a mitter of the deepest importance fur ev-ry AmericenS:atr, ll.at it naturally setrul that the ''iti u ;, i ei" wuulu h .e sounded better at t'ie clo-s? than at ti e be gicnirg of th" (Joi grers. Hut ie Lswe : evnieiiiiy ur.uer.ianus ueuora'ive t dies , -. !..! It, .- , ,- as well a he does canals, and it is tjiite probable that under me guise ol cneerlui commonplace he w is talking from the basis of an understanding carefully matured be fore the Congress was called. A matter cf national pride as an isthmus cinal un doubtedly istode Iaswps may also le a matter of bu-'ine-11, and the engineer of the Suez Canal has kept the latter feature of the subject most succe-s-fnlly in sight An old employe of his own abti-ed, in ihe Com mittee on Techniiitie, all plans bnt Wyse's, and not a continental engineer answered him, while the American", parity localise of surprise, but more probably on account of not having ready command of the Frew h language, were equally silent. Then the que-tion of the recommendation of the routs suggested was put to vote and carried by a hand-Kime majority, ami the Congre-s w'ill doubtless sustain the committee. Ij Les?eps is indeed an engineer; politics lost a rare manger when he went into mere mechanics. The decision being annourced, a ques tion will be eagerly debated by the sup porters of the rejicted routes as to tin pre cise measure of authority to be attached to the views of the Corgress. Eich one will maintain that his own favorite route was ignorantly or unfairly treated, aid the decision of the Congres will be stigmatized as a notorious job. The comj;teccy of that body as a court of last resort will be vigorously denied, and an appeal taken to a more authoritative tribunal. Ins'ead f proving to be the end of all doubts anil uncertainties itis likely to iro7ethe begin ning of an agitation which may list fr.r year?. The exactness of the estimates fer the cost of each of the projects will be chal lenged, the competency of manz engineers will be called into question and new sur veys will be undertaken for the purpose of dispelling adverse criticism. The time when the best route for the Interoceanic Canal can be definitely selected is still in the future, and the decision may finally rest with a congress a'embld in an Amer ican city and consisting for the nxs: part of Americaa enigneers. STILL A CITV. The Federal Court Declares That Memphis Still i:Ists. and 32ust Pay up. Iu entering the dfcree in the case 03 to which of the two IUxi7era were to take charge of the effocU ef the late city cf Memphis, Judge IJaxter, of the Federal Court, held, first, that the act of the legis lature repealing the cha-ter of the city of Memphis is absolutely unu,nntitutional acd void;second, that the act creating the tax ing district is likewise unconstitutional and void; third, that such was his deliberate opinion after cartful and elaborate investi gation in the questions involved; that it was not necessary, however, for him to so hold in these cases, for he might concede the constitutionality of these two acts so far as their elT-cts to dissolve the old corporation and create a new one is concerned, acd be com pelled to hold under the State and na tional Constitutions; that tie two tea were ineffectual to prevent the collection of debts due by the City of Memphis through the Federal Courts. After the delivery cf an interesting opinion the court gave di rections for the demurrers interpo-.ed to be overruled, and for judgment to go againt thedefendant tar-psyers for the amount claimed. This was in answer to a request that Mr. Merriwether, the State Receiver, be recognized as K-cei7er, and "it recognized only Mr. Lathan, the Receiver appointed by Judge Easier several months ago. In addition to holding all back taxes subject to the satisfaction of the judgments against tae city, Judge Baxter held that the Fed eral Court oucld. if ti.e L.sl - tin a,.y re ceived were iiwctSeiest. g forward and levy and collect uses f. .- the ,)B.-j,se of paying.!!?. This last opion, how ever, the learned Ju.4g- t u.l th it hi held merely Vt aiai r,,, : proper case for the divi-i,.n . f r.;.inie,o, is as to obtain jtgment of the supreme court Ca thcitnes- tioi). Ite recogn.zJ. sml stated that he would follow, d-ci-iccs ef the supreme court hold that fee'e.-al c urt could not levy ami collect t .i s; bat as there was a ilepo-ition in the federal supreme courts to review their dec Mods ou this point, anJ, as it would . likfiy tx come vital cpaes tion ia cases now before him, ho de cided in favor of the powsr, merely to pre -nt the question anew to the" United States supreme court. This virtually set tl that matter, as fir a Judtre 15 utter is cooeerneel. He, however, said, amrng other things, that the Stale supreme conn ought to elecidu the Q3tter, and that, in b's judgment, it could only be decide- one way. This court's decision is looked for on Saturday next with greit anxiety. JL'uif:: diiTlo.v. What Justice 31ilcr Says vUU Kc UurJ to that Jurist'- Ite-sisuatlon. Dcs Moines, Ms. 3. A AVjiWer report er interviewed Jostive Miller, of the United States .upretne court, with regard to the mmoreel resignation ot Judge Dillon, of the United States circuit court, and learned, substantially, the following facts: Judge Miller premis-sl his statement by saying that, so far as he knew. Judge Dil lon had not yet resigneiL The law de partment of Columbia college, Xew York city, had for many years beeu under the control of Prof. Dwigh, and had grown in reputation and in the number of students in attendance until the trustees of the college determined to reorginiza thnt branch of it by cre-ating an additional profes- sirhip, which has been ottered to Jtidje liilloa at the annual salsry ot fi.OT. JuiUe Dillon's name was suggested for the place by a gentleman living in 2ew York, who is a craduate of the 'school, and who had practiced in Jtule Dillon's circuit, when conferring with a fe'low graduate, who was a trustee. This sttsgestion was seconded by Hon. Ahbel Green, an emi nent lawyer of ICew Yurk. Mr. Hamilton Fish, thairman cf the executive coiuniitteo of the bjard of trustees, iu consequence of th'te suggestion", wrot- to Judge Miller asking in coiti.lrce what he thought of the matter. Judge Miller unhesitatingly repiinl that a better man for the par pom could not be found, but expresseil a doubt cf Judge Dillon's accept ance. The correi-iioailer.co thst took place 1st th n Mr. I:sh and Judge Miller, in which the salary was suggesteel as STj-jOO ar.d a declaration made that in that institu tion the tenure was practicably permanent, though uneler the control of the trustees, was sect m its entirety to Jude Dillon. This (svrrespocdeBee contained a letter from Mr. F.0i rcqneaUcg secrecf until Juile I? 'on" i ilt ."ii..an vm mialeup, because the tr,. v.i j ,i r..t U i'. keowr, if the in I t . .. .. . t i r .it - , t . '. it !iad beei -.- fu-w'il by jaiiev I' . n. and because .h ni',;.t Eot 1" willing i mve another ciaa the same amoont ct salary that they vo-.J ;rier Jadze Dillon. As the board cf trustees w-sto meet m April, to act on the rernotmemlatioa of tho executive committee, Jmlge Dillon replied that he could not act on so important a matter on such short notice, and if he were rt quired to promise to accept before the ttiKiecs acted, he must decline; bnt if they would give him some time to consult his family and visit New York, .-e might ac cept, The board unanimously elected hint without a pledge, paying hi t the high compliment ot dispensing w' allot. He went to New York ttie week and then to Washington. While . latter city he did not see Pecritsr jt, and in his interview with te I' which lasteel Liu ten minutes, i . wss spt.ken of the resignation. JuJj,e Miller believes thai. ., . . .i.on owes it to his famiir asei his l a. i t ac cept the professorship, as he .- .r .rum rich ar.d is weariDg ont his con ' '"Of in th-s hardest kind of work. Fit t' i. wt,rk ho gets a salsry of it'-.CW per :.:nun. out cf which he must p. y all t travtliiig ex pends over this, large circuit t'r.oc a year. The salary of the professorship, wiih his reputation ami opportunities to write new law bocks aril other matters that have been eflVrfd. will bring him an assured revenue of $15,GoO to S18,(KK) a year. The duties of the professorship will leave him more than half of his time, ami with no traveling etnses the cost of living will be no more th-n he now paya. Ifecan beathome with bia vci.n family, who need his care, and the I bor in not hall as much as he is now ' ing. It wculd be supreme follv todeclino r -ut rf ihe fo! tiial could ia no w y etiet Jude Dillon's character. Nu oi e h Js ever 1 r a D'omeut believed that icuth man guilty ot any conduct unbecom ing a j iJge. He is not on trial, and his reputation is fir above the necessity of any vindication. Judge Dillon had been en tirely too sensitive oa the subject, though such sensitiveness was the best evidence of the delicacy cf his rense of honor. The offer of the professorship was the strongest evidence that his standirg had suffered no diminution by the slander which even the newspapers had cead to notice. The place opens to Judge Dillon a wider fame on a metropolitan theater, and is especially attractive as one which was held by the great thaccellor Kent. AI.I,I. NTAi: TIicMnsiiIar Conduct nfa jle-mb-rnr Carl Itova's Troupe, Daytox, May 31. The gentleman hose insane freaks here Wedniselay night brought him to the clutches of the police sud into nnpleasaat notoriety in the news papers turns out to be a man ol considers, blo iai parlance in the operatic world. A dispatch from Chief of Police Amos Clark to Chief Wappcnateia, Cincinnati, soon brought word, yesterday morning, that the Inck!ew gentleman was none other than Ifixry F. Pickard, a leading member of the Carl IJosa troupe. The eiispatch two dajs ago gave the particulars of Packard's qtier conduct on the train, his hurriel flight from the policemen a tenement hrue down town, whither he had tl.il for refuge. His satchel contained a variety of items of value, and papers which indicated that their owner waa Henrv F. Packard, etc , hut then the man lackid identity with Packard.on the nonce and he was sent down for safe keeping and investigation. Packard's baggages a mammoth trunk fed a variety of inggage was checked for Hamilton, O., acd iu the course of the investigation that was quietly instituted, it transpired that the musician was on his way to that city to visit a young lady, also a prominent member jx the Carl Kosa tronpe.tc i.K:i- . i:':-r-.vl he wa3 betroth ed. As it ia iai -e -uian j rouabie that the yoowt lady's name w.'ll transpire ia thu U"p)4. in. rr i rt'.' uelento s.tterrr, t to pr -ervi ii : e-. . r will sav that i ,i Mis'fJ iv loni who i mentioned. Ij is assert ed that Packsrd's disability was caued by a too free indulgence ia heating beverages this hot weather. The surgeon who exam ined into his condition ea-erls this with confidence, though it is barely possible that he msv have been mistaken in his diagno sis. Tbis afternoon the brother of Mr Packard arrived here frcm Cincinnati, and later in the evening the two took a traia for the South. When we cons'der the cir curaatanc) involved we are led to say that this incident is a painful ami unfortunate one. Miss Julia Gas-lord and i. from Hamilton to-night ti wboe condition is ranch asserts that he lias no reco. thing traaspirirg since Jet the 24th. A socd deal of sympathy . for Pack ird, who u said to tenor of the world. He w.' his brother to CiLcinnati to-n. er came up Packard, 'vd. He jf any- lasy on i oitVsfed :. .'"-ading; - jpanjr 'ot ri lieveraf". "They ere rot a bever&ge, lui a medicine, with curative properties of the highest de gree, coctairirc no poisonous drugs. They do not tear'iown aaalresdy debilitated sys but build ' :-. Ore bottle contains more hops, that is, mora ral hop strength, than a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist, in Kcchester sells them, acd physicians pre scribe them." Kechca'er Rentnn Fr-.. on Hop Hitters. w M h - Irun s . iVI' siSsv SU.-si .. e" ?"5f V-J-- i i- - n- .AlCUl! -s r ' -- - --Ji -"- -V-'s-"' T-.-.r-.-.iW-: iLSZh - 7.-C". ".- -,.- --. e-C-'-