V i i OaW.V---;-, , 7 DO YOU WANT THE WORTH OF YOUR MONEY? thei suEsati:z rex The Wool CKx JOB PRINTING. VOL. VIII; $2.00 Per Year. INDEPENDENCE, POLK COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1C91. Five Cents Per Copy. NO. 42. .02.00 . . i THE WEST SIDE West Sii3 Pdsij Cqwy 8USCHIPT(0N HATES. Ml MiMtlhl , Thro Month . , l. Jt All mmt (nil rimtn nmin not ee int n line. tui l (Bwiwl m. All ir nr im iii rhm n ! , n, tri4 ntiliunr r-otuu,,. win twvkitnwl M a the rale , .pllne. Addre iUI MMnmunimitnnn puhllihw t r Wart Hin. mid mull ml roixiiiiuixw pvl to 111 loutiij Nl)llbln cum. liHM8agaiiii MMWKwmesmsm General Dirkctorv. r.MTl VTATIK PrakiVut .Benjamin liarrlaon Vic PreaiiUMl.. Morton Sea. of Slat, ,...,, ..Jam 0, ltlnlnr tec of Tran ry ChM F.wUi .Wtnaater General . , , Jabu Vniti.et tirf Interior., Jobii W.N..lil, Bo, ol War . , , , IteUoeUI Prneiw 8eo.uf N....,..,B,imi F.Tmej Allow ttrl..,.,.,U. II. Miller (to. of Atfrumllitre,,,, , , Jeremiah llti.a Own. of Education. V. T. Itarrk. dm. ( ruatutMi., , , ,0. It lUiim lUtl'd, 00011. Uuvartmr.,., .......Sjltealer roi).i)r Bee, or Mt. Oro. W. MeRrM Trenanrer , lbil Metohat. K.ipt..f Pub, Im K. It ,MKin Ally. Oeaeral ...... Oen. f , Chamberlain Slat Printer, Frt.uk tlaket P. 8. fwualot i. I J-.l.n H. JkliMH.ll ) J. -V Mk Cougreaaiaan ...Bltgr Hermann (IIS. Si,!,,. 8titn Cimrl., , i W, K bunt ( It. 8. Bean Hupttif Penitentiary.,, .U. 8, Jinlti Bupi. if Aj lata .L. L. Rowland i o. w. o.i'iu R.R. Com. J Hubert 01 ( A. N. IUrulltm. Clerk... frank Millet i k. a ud. iw , K.C Campbell Flab Com. ( Uu. J, l)t FiM-lCom.. .....W. VV. Bkr Ciwail Joafc. R P. Ilulac lhirc Alt; Ooo. 0. Biagbin rut eocsTY. fciw- -.jS:feBC Cunnt Ju.lk .J. SioglTrr Coaaijt CuwttitMuiucr, . . . Sinpia tUMrUT. ...W. t VVrlta Clark..'. c o.d-a Tmutrtr .". KR Toroar tkbuul HPrluUodl. . . W. I. Ilrjm.KU Awaaaor N (lartloar Humyot T. Bullt-r Corutr..,..............B. L. Kttobnm ircDcfisuixt'l. Utfor. ...W. P. Cooy Kaeortler J.T. FurU Mrbal T. Faonall Trrwarmr.. & T. JUeukl CITY COl'HCIU U. A Wielfr Krfip-I Jirel Vard,. """ K K. Kretiu!l i J E. 0, Paallai E. 0, IVdIIrdJ I M. Mi O. W. IIM. ThlM Ward. erwm Mbiutt aCHOOl. tialH.Tt)IM. !U C. (iilroo (I w. Hjiiiin I. 0. Oilrourf Clerk... . M. L NVbita CHURCH directory. FtwiT Brrirr.-SiiDdBr School 10 o'cla a M. Pracbiu)iaYer 8ndr 11 aicaptiDg the Ural, (bioh tarfica ia giteo lo Oak View.) and twtj Btiudy Yetiin. Young pauple'a mecliDg one JioorbfurfarYioiDibeafuiMg. Prayar Bwtirg afar Thorada, eini)g. All ourdially tot iled to attend. CAtYaBY PaaarTuiAW. Preaching crvica w Sondi. rorting at 11 and ilaa In the aeoing at 8 o'clock. Bonday h.i.I t U o'clock. ImmcdmMY after preaching. Praver mating nery Wedn.a Ja Teniiia. A eordial ioyiUHod a- (ended lo all, specially atrnngwra riitliig thacily. BM,A.F.ioTrlp.U)r. M. E. Cui'at'H lioiiTH.- lWlmig ry Hondiiy mornmit and evening. 8n HyHch.'.lal8ool!klu tbe afiernnou Prayer meetiug ery Tboraday ocning. AlllnYited. REr RE PniPM,pMtor. n.lav Hohool at 10 Jm Auai" " o'clock A. M. PreviUing erery aecond an fonrth Snndaya of the month at 11 A. w .,,,1 rv Sunday evening at H p. m r . .(,,, i, Tntaday evening. All reapectfully Invited to aftend. Kav.A.8. Copatt. Pastor, r..iriA. -Sundny School every Knn day at 10 o'clock. Preacbiug Ibe Brut ,,.i,d Snmlwa of Ibe month morn ing and eveninc. rrayer meeting i Weilncadny evening. Bav. R, L. Siihm-by. Pmtor. HKL'RKT BOCIETIEH. . S vmu, every Monday nlaht In vLJtobSC AH aiming bnrtl.er,l..vlWl , UKU. W. HI1INN, Reoordor. VALLEY UllKiE N0.4X 1,0,0 F.,tnala In M ionlc hall every Thurndn, cordially Invited "w.'!!. WHEELER, aecreiary. L0N LODOE, No. . A.-J mid com rmi n lea- lon'a on or before full tnin 'onJ " ...n,h and two waeka thereafter. J. w.ou.wr,''.-. i..l,.KeU:hum,Heo. T T.. HATCH, .. HOffSlnlrtrUHle.Or. A1 kind, of banding, moved l iow.. M l- In w 51(1 and W Wmn,"'"T: .-J iaII dealer L WATCHES, cK w,v . a h. him laemrraved f,an All Ullverw r" VI, ' - lfrl, unit "Dootia 1 All LEE & BUTLER,"1 FHYSIGIiMS 10 SlIlEOn, tAl0t- U. 8. IXAMININQ SURQtONS. om.il, Wl till uf MrIii hu. INDW'RJIDKNCn. . . . OttKOON. DR. J. K. IXK'KE, Physician', and Surgeon. nana VlaU, Ortn. J. M. CROWLEY, Physician andSurgeon MONMOUTH, OR. DR. J. B. JOHNSON. Resident Dentist All work nmiiM to lv ibt bwit I HlUfkcUuu. INHKI'KN PENCE, OltKUON ATTURKBY&- A. M. HURLEY, Attorney and Counselor at Law. iKcm fix to IndepoBdvnr Nm'l tlnnk. InilHBdn,Or. B.r.llimliiun. U. N. IUyon. W.H.HdmM I0RH1M, HOlMEt I HlTDtN. ATTORNEYS AT LAW orrim ix mmii a hi.ovk, Bvlwimi Hmii, and Court, KAI.KM, on. m luuiiuvntuu ai. C.S.McNALLY, ABCBtTECT AND 08 AU6HTSUAN RUOMI (AT ntail-ttRKtMAM MLOCK, COMMCItCIAL HT, HAl.r.M.OR, BANKS. rull!.td by Nalkmal Aulliorlly. FIRST NATIONAL BANK. vt Indcpendux, Orrtuu. CaalUl Staak, t80.000.00 $10,000.00 Surflua. J. B, ruoPKR, U W. KUIIOIWUN, PrMldenU Viae Praaldeat W. II IIAWLRY, Caahlar. DIBCCTOBS. J. ft, awpur, U W. Ilolwrtaoa, towta llvlmlck a. W. Whltwkw, W. W. Colll. A ivaerel banking xunmm mowctcd Buya ant walla ehiuii all Important pulnt. Iwprn. mwlvM .utUi tocnori or on lini-ate of dpolt. Colletlon mt. OlSt' btinra; a. m. te I p. m. THE INDtl'EXDEXCK National Bank ! Capital Stock, Sjo.ooo.oo. II. HIIUCIIBERO, pnlilrnL Vice Pwaldant . Caablrr. ABRAM NKWOS, W. P.CONSAWAY iwnaralbanklncand aichama Inwlnwn tranaaeiadi lu made, Mill dlarounwd.eora marolalcradluiranlad: depnalU racalved on current account auhjwt to check, Inleraal paid on tlma dnpoalU. DIRECTOKft Joabua MoDanlal. II. II. Jaaparaon. A. J, Ooodman, H. Utrnclibar,. A. Nalwn, T. i. La. I. A. Allen. INCORPORATED UHOEd THE UWI OF 0RE60N. MONMOUTH, OR. i. a. MAnnt'M , p t . cam pnKi.1. Ill A V? POWKtb ta.hler PAID CAPITAL, $26,000. DIRECTORS. I.A.Meernm, P. I Campbell, J. II V, Butler, J. H. Ht'P, Jumpb Craven, I. M.Win pane K. H. Powell A Miieral banking and exchange bnalneaa E2E lon made, d.-,iu reived aubjeta Ui eheek or on eerinioawoi uei.,., '"i".",;" vault a.rd bur'glar proof .afe, eeuredny ibi OinoaHour.: a. m. to p. m. (Bitubllahed by Nalloial Authority.) -THE Capital National Bank Or SALEM OREGON. CapM paid vp, $50,000,00. Surplus, $15,000. R, B. WALLACE, W.W.MARTIN, prcldenl, Vic l're.ldent. J, H. ALBERT, Caahlar, LOANS MADE To Farmeraon wb.atand other mercbantabl. Zduce.con.Hned or In atore, either In prl t uranerle. or public warehonae.. . !rnwn direct on New York,rhlcn(1, I g.o Vanol.cn, Portland. London, tarl.IBn ' .,. iinnrKnnirnnd Calcutta, OREGON STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, MONMOUTH. OREGON. Mm IUrd at ItoernUt Kiale Knard of Kdnratlnn, i44nlu; III a:cllriiiy, Unv.rni'r Mylvwir rVuni,yr, liortiori Hun. lira, W, M, Mrll, i4ry f aiaiei Hn. K, Ik Mi'Klmv. Huiwrln. I.Mdriil publlv lnlwll,.; Itfiijttiiiln Ht'hulnvld, lirwldvnii J. II, V, Uultr, w'lyi Kullv (ummltl, Hun. J. J, l)ly, Hun. IV VI, llaly, , H. V, Buller, Janiu Vi,rl,pw.. J I'. Wblla, AI. Irrd Lawy, A. Xultitvr, W. II. lluliun. STAND NOT UPON THE ORDER OF GOING, BBUT -TO HEHKLE & WALKER, Tli People' Grocera, who keen a flmt claaa alm k of Urocerlea and Prnvlalona, aara and Tolceo, Cmckert and aiaatwara. Cwinlry produce taken In exchange for good. a, raaacorr. Prescott & Veness, rkorkirrow or Independent Sauu mill. turrCTVa, . . ia FIR AND HARD WOOD, ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER I A. Waaaxaa, Ifangr, H ROOKS dc l-IAmtITT,' 94 8TATC ST., 8ALCM, OHtGON, Guns. Fishing Tackle, Sporting Gcads, Dill Curisges vrioriprjuw. : bai.i uooiia, ut TKai. i hooi rr, riAcia, nitr inAtKKita and rmic WOKIta, wJ-Only otmptete attH-k of Oiin and Portland. Hood good and low prlece. U.H. ParraaaoN. P.P.PATTaao PATTERSON Bros., -DULU IX- IMTCHES, CLOCKS JEWELRY. INDEPENDENCE, ORKQOS. BEAD And be Convinced. 72 8twl tooth iron harrow, 120. 5 and 7 tooth cultivator,. Tho bwt ham nhuflliif'. 1 The Ixmt io Iron Steel or Wood AT - Best price paid fti Old Iron and Castings. Min ft,. Tndnpendnncn, DRUGGIST E. E. Erengel s. The hwllng Nurmal Ht liniil or the Nnrtliat. lhautirul aud lieallh nil location. NoiliHim, nitw liulld Inga, New aiiaraiiia, full fteculty, light pkMiiMa and laririiatlendancu. Normal, Advanced Normal, Hua-Irn-aa. Art and Muetfl di artmriila. Hiiwlal atlctiilon given di idiyalml iralnlng. Volunlwr mllllary nr uanliwtlon. Ttiiwe receiving tllpliNtuta are au tliorlniHl to tacli In any (Miunty In thcalale wlllnmt further examina tion, Tuition iu the Normal and txial lir diMartmiit hiia Ihii nxluitsl fiiini 4U lo fO iwr vear, anil In the Suh-Nomial, froin i'lU U A vear at achiwl for lino. N mal and liuatueae, $ li8 ar term til leu weeka. Htih-Ntirmal ft per term. Hoard at Normal dining hall II fit) per week. KuriiUlmd rouma, wlih light aud fire, II jterweek. Hoard awl lodging In private fum- lllea, .t,ftt. Flrat term open Kept. 22, 1RUI. Hludenu can utr at any time. For catalogue, add reaa, ' P. U CAMPUEI'L, A.R.,Prea. J. M. POWKIX, A.M.V.Pree, I A. YINUi Independence, Oregon. HHirtlng tluMla In lh atnle aonlh of G. W. SHINN, HOUSE, SIGN and ORNAMCNTAt Pnwr llanaliif . Prnwulni, Klo. laml pwni (,pallr Jtmim' Hialilaa, IndniK-ndfO, MRS. A. M. HURLEY, Hillinerj; Faacj Goods Matt lo latUpaad.nea Hatloaal Bank. biDirtDaca, Oaiooa. Mitchell 8c Bohannon Manufaetnrera of SASH AND DOORS AumarnoiXRAWtKO. Itainatrmt . . Independence. rjflfJTED ! Strawbf'rrlw, IwpborriM, Blacklwrri(,Ooow)l)crri(!S,Clifirr.,oa AM) Good Fruits of All Kinds AT THE SALEM CANNERY. KOI FOR THE HIRVEST! . OF 1801. SVARVERUD & CO. Who lmvo recently located In InuYnon dunce, aud are hero to stay, have on hand n ltiru;c ntock of the light running PLANO ' . BINDERS AND JON K' CHAIN DRIVE Bi Wa arc prepared to upply aU with TWINE at a very low flguro, , Call and get price before purchasing else where. Next door to O'Donnelr. MAIN ST .1NDEPENDENCK BRICK YARD. J. R. COOPER Of IiuIepKiitlnnon, having a atttum engine, brick imu'liliie and aoveral aorin of flnmt (day, Im now pntparod to keep on hand a fine quality of Ilrick, which will lie aold at renmiti able prior. HARNESS Good and CHEAP.- We have the larirrat and BFvST Stock of Uarntwi ever broujftit to thia Biwtion. illOirlb 'isifirfire. Our Whir are direct from the Factory and are the teat out of 150 Btylef. Trimming at reaiionable Prioen. Beamer A. Craven. DAMON & HUBBARD Sueaaaaaea te ELKINS & Co., pnOPJUETOIW OP CityTrnck ami Transfer Ce. Hauling of oil Kind Pone at Keanonablft Kate. Mill Feed. Oak. and Ash Wood FOR SALE. vjrCulIiH'iloii" Mudo Moiithlyl INDEPENDENCE. OREGON Caanaatlaa, l"l. laiu." lu.lra,iurraMa,4. irfNMH.Miml TAYLORS Cash Grocery & Bakery OS 0 STREET. firth Bread, Pla. aad Take, ea hand tvaty day S leapt aundar. Wnrk ol eanaed rend, anar. a. .eaVa, aaaw, aaadlaa, alien and lueaoeoa, a B. TAYLOR, Protwletat Wagon Making AND Carriage Repairing f . I. WEMBENROTM aa..,n .ni. In ih. mum eulldliit wlU. B. a. K .i,irl'a lil. l.mlih .hop. H. tt aa rtv awed workman liavln. learsHl ki Uada la Ku-oi. Me anlleita a .hei at tk aaieaaaaa uel luarante. aallatarUau. S. A, PARKER, Manufacturer and dealer In Sash, : Doors, : Mouldings, : Etc Full atnek of Olaaa. all !, kepi eonatantly on hand. Hpedlal ratea on onnlraeta. Paetory on B, It. .treot uear depot. CITY HOTEL, C 8U, Independence. JAMES GIBSON, Prop. Firat-elaaa In every reaped Piwcial attention given tranaienl cu.tomer. A anmple room for commercial traveler. Oavatta, and Trade-Mark, oto.laed. and all Pat ant bn.lneaa murine! ed fr a..t. F.e. Our 01 o. I. OpaetH. U. 8. Paten ,0lca, and w. ran aernr patent In leu lima than Ibe. remot. fnim WaaklnRlnn. Hand mndel. drawln ar photo., with deaetlp tloa. We adlaa, If patenlahla or got, fre of eh.re. Onr fee not due till patent la eecored. P.aihl.t. "How to Obtain Patenia," with name, of artaal tllenl. In your State, county, or town, lent free. Addraaa, C.A.8NOW&CO. Odi.II. P.I.M OMm. Wuhlatta. 0. 0. Te enraeMtlvaneaa the madlela naaiat kaaaoroiaan a purf att. Tabaaiaf aaauaat. It inuai eeatala Tonlo. Alterative and Cathartic Properties. Tw.l'a rilla BMmawa the.e ajaallUaa I at eaaiaieBi. aiearrM, mmn Speedily Restore a eawaia imir uainai fioriaaauaai a, oaaoaiilal lo refalarlt jr. Sold Everywhere. MIDCC Cat.. Cat., l.i.. RraaekHIa, LUllLO Hii'HMU, Wkea.i, taik.Cima, Yk,al. Iilhal. ami v,v alt.rtMM e IM YliMt. L.nal and CMll. IikMim Til its Pills A pamphlet of hrtoraietloa and aa.r " , J V,.trol of Ibe law,alioln How to f : 4T OMaln faiauta, llaTeaia, Tratl. V Mra, Oopyriirtiu. will fnt. 7 ) M1 Hroadway, Jr f Jew YerkV IZID-O CO i:jly cf It d a Fn cf Its bt (ra bib. LIFE IN "FLATS. it A Fictura cf Ufa b Tt::j Fcp ;6Crlli3Ita j:fcrfcrL- "All out for sing sing," rang out aharp and clear, and we atepped down from the cam to tbe atrag. ghng little hamlet, which ia the moat fauioiw of New York'a penal colonlea, and tbe name of wbioh ia known a the Mecca of crime and ain from tbe rising to the going down of the aim. Far away to the uorth rlaet bold against the akv the grin ontlinea of the Shango niountaini, and in the dim perapec tive tbe grand old Oatakills tower toward the clouda. Ia front of yon. to tbe wert, tbe green bills rise blulffrom tbe abining river; at your rear, to the east, the hilla riae harp aud abrupt, their auninuta being crowned with tbe costly country houses of our city million aires, who here neck repose and re enperatiou from tbe turmoil and excitement of trade and 'change. Hut it is not with them that we have to du to day; for nearly to the south rises a straggling mam ol granite and brick, bantu and for bidding. This is the prison of tbe state. A sharp turnup tbe bill, and the Via Dolonm, or tbe way of sorrow, begins; it leads to Hit- prison gate. Sorrowful way, In deed. How many thousands ol weary fuet have trodden It forth' last time, a they toiled sorrowful!) ou toward the gate which led to living death a . gate they wert doomed never to repass till tbe sil ver cord was loosened and tbe gold en bowl was broken. What gloomy chronicle can ever tell of the bitter agony, the sorrow, and tbe scald ing tear with which every step ol tbe path was consecrated. Over this road, on the way to tbeirdooni, have traveled men of every degree. Generals who stood in the battle's front and won immortal renown; mluiatcni of Christ who preached the word acceptably to admiring thousands; railroad presidents whose names were known through out the land; bank cashiers who have handled millions, and who in an evil moment fell all have trod den this sorrowful way. Arriviug at tbe brow of tbe hill, the portals of the prison opened before us. A slight descent past an iron door, and we are sharing the shelter ot hundreds of tbe most notorious and daring criminals that the world has ever secu. Previous to entering the doomed enclosure I stepped into the office to obtain permission of the warden for my visit A waitof a few minutes, and a pleas ant faced gentleman clad in while flannel, aud touching the fifties, advanced towards me. Ibis was the warden, W. B. Brown, the hero of the late successful electro tuition, and a few weeks ago the best abused man in the state of New York. It needed but a mo ment to make known my request, which was to nee the prison. It was granted at once, and consigning mu to the charge of bis son, whom he directed to see that I was put upon my way, I was ushered into the prison yard. The granite build ing where most of the convicts are confined is Btrong aud substantial enough, but most of the workshops where the convicts are employed have an old, worn, dilapidated ap pearauce, an absence of all modern conveniences, and, iu brief, are a disgrace to a great state like New York, which has laid out between fifteen aud twenty millions of dol lars on tho most ill-contrived cap itol to be . found in the United States. But it was not the build ing I went to see, but many of those whose criminal history has been told in these letters for several years back. Just as I entered tho jail, Ferdinand Ward flitted by with a paper in his hand, appar eutlv as unconcerned as when he occupied his elegant offices in New York and was the chosen friend and companion of the foremost general of his age. What a change from the society of the richest and most exclusive set in this great metropolis to the base companion ship of murderers and thieves; from his elegant home, rich in cost ly furnishing and gems of art. to this narrow priaon cell with its bare walls of atone; and instead of a rare company in hit magnificent dining room, with its retinue of servants and it service of silver and gold, marching to tbe lock atep between a negro thief and a white murderer to his tlu enp and bis tin plate, but with an appetite for bis food that perchance be never knew in his more prosperous days. The con vlct are ou their way to dinner; down they come, file after file, their striped clothe making them look like a huge snake, as with low waving they sweep along. Who is that fonrth from tbe bead ftbelinet Tbe face ia changed, bat I am sure that I have seen it before. God of mercy, it Is Jaebne! I uave not teen mm alnce lie was president of tbe Board of Alder men, holding power potential over a , million and a half or people, and having at his mercy property valued at three thousand millions of dollars. Not far behind him in tbe line oomes DeBaun, once tbe oarililer of the Park bank, who, if it had not been for the discovery of bis crime, would have been presi dent of one of tbe most reliable fi nancial institutions in the country; but tbe man was an ingrained thief, and be has but found bis level. But here oomes another band; the man in advance, who gives the step, waves bis bead to and fro and almost dances as be moves along; it is a brutal face, marked and scarred with tbe heredity of crime. Here they come, white and black; sin has reduced them to one common level. Here is the negro murderer George Foster, who slew bis paramour on Thompson street, and behind him marches tbe Eev. Mr.. No, I will not tell bia name. Wicked as his crime was, to tell bia , name no can do no good. "Let the dead past bury it dead." Oncebemin Istered to one of the most fashion tble congregations lo tbe city; hi had a lovely wife and family; hi bad tbe love and respect of all who knew him; a happy home, brilliant prospects, everything to make lift desirable. But tbe devil lured him and be fell. Tbe lovely yonne wife of a member of his congrega lion infatuated him, and in an evil hour be forgot wife, children, home, and God. Then came tbe discovery and flight Stranded in a strange city with her who had led him down to ruin, ha added forgery to his other Crimea. Detection and swift retribution Boon followed, and now be toils sorrowfully on, eagerly waiting for tbe day which shall be 'The be all and tbe end-all here." But what of her who shared his Bint "Found dead," is the brief chronicle that closes this sorrowful history. Who is the ninth in the line, in the fourth company, that files int He keeps his face well averted, for he evi dently does not care to recognize bis old friends. There can be no mistaking that villainous profile, for in the assemblage of criminals in front and behind him, there is nothing meaner or more despicable thauhe. This is tbe famous Law yer Dunn, who robbed the friend who trusted him, Scott, the thiev ing bank cashier, who stole a quar ter of a million from his bank and trusted two hundred thousand to Dunn, who robbed the thief. It is an old saying that there is honor among thieves. Dunn broke the record; and notwithstanding all his legal lore and all his smartness, here he is, for some years to come at least There were many more in that liue whooe history I could sketch, and may, at some future time. A prison at best is not a very pleasant place. It is not suggestive of enjoyment; but rigid discipline has made it as bearable as any place of punishment cau possibly be. Down back in a sequestered corner is the fatal chamber where stands the electrio chair, and near by, the cells of those who are condemned to die. Flanking them to the east is a lovely little garden, and a broad swath of green sweeps up towards the hill. On this side is the warden's pleasant house, cov ered with creeping vines and sur rounded by fragrant flowers. It is indeed a pleasant' and delightful home, and it is hard to recognize in the kindly and hospitable gen tleman who resides there, the terri ble ogre of the New York Tret, who stood the boys np at the muzzle of a Winchester on the dead line, and, served up a reporter every morning raw for breakfast Four more criminals await the stroke of Jove's swift messenger, and it is safe to say that when the time oomes, undeterred by paper bullets, or tho terrible thunderings of the press, Warden Brown will be found at his post of duty, ready to carry out the law as be understands it Usually the grave covers all, and secures beyond recall the secrets of tbe past; but this week . death has made disclosures more startling titan the wildest romance. Tbe I'erei val Flat, on 4 2d street, are among the awelleat in town The prices are high and the occu pants are supposed to be rich. It ia not everyone who la admitted there. Yon must have good references to s a re apartments. On opposite sides of tbe same floor resided two very nice gentlemen and . their wives. One bad two children, girls; tbe other couple were child less. They were handsome, fash ionable people, unknown to each other to all appearance. One of the gentlemen waa a broker, ; the other a merchant The merchant's wife went west with their children, In tbe absence of bis neighbor on the other aide of the floor, the yonng merchant attempted to enter bia wife's apartment, and, it is said, insulted her. The outraged young wife, on her husband's return, told him with tears in her eyes the in dignity to which she had been sub jected, and he, to vindicate his wffe'a honor, killed the man who had insulted her. That story reads well; but bold on. Ten years ago, not . tar from the spot where the murder took place, flourished a very beautiful young girl, whose wild and way ward conduct made her the talk of the town. It was not long till the police knew her, and she might be seen . nights in a disreputable dan en the west siiie known " Bohe mia. She did not lack admirers, and among them one of tbe most ardent was tbe man wbo was killed this week. They were together a few years ago at a fashionable wa tering place called Larch moot, on the sound. While there he fell desperately in love with the wife of a bank cashier who was spending the summer there, and he induced her to leave her bos band and live with him, and as man and wife they took apartments in the swell Perci val fiats. The beautiful girl, mad dened at being abandoned for a rival, hung on his track like an avenging Nemesis, and finding a rich gambler wbo was smitten with ber charms, induced him to take a flat immediately opposite her rival. These people, whose lives were so inseparably linked, were to all ap pearance strangers, and this chain of crime baa led at last to murder. What a fraud what a cheat what . a sham were the lives of these twa fine gentlemen and their elegant wives in this fashionable up town fiat! one a low gambler, and his so-called wife a disreputable ad venturess; the other man the mean est kind of a thief, who, under the sacred shelter of hospitality, en tered his friend's house and robbed him of his wife and children. He has paid tbe penalty with his life, but got no more than he deserved. He was not slain by the man he bad wronged, but he fell by the baud of a gambler in a miserable squabble for a wanton. Unfortu nately, New York is full of these double lives. The dark portals of the tomb does not hide them. Death seems to turn on the search light. Bboapbbiv. Hlography ol a Pollttclaa. The following "Patagonia", by the Denver Sim very lucidly de-. scribes the beginning and end of a ward politician: Weight, ten pounds. Cootsey-Toowey. Baby boy. Mamma's darling. . Papa's little man. Jimmy. James. Jimmy tbe Kid. , Young Mr, Jone?. James Jones. Mr. J. Jones. Clerk of Election Jones. Committeeman Jones. Alderman Jones. The Hon. James M. Jones. Ex-Alderman Jones. James Martin Joues. Joues. Jim Jones. Jimmie Jones. 'Steeuth Ward Jimmy. Jimmie tbe Bum. Jim. Whiskey Jim. Old Soak. Cell 90. Coronet's office "Unidentified.'' The West Side learns that the churches of Indiana are now pa;, ingoff debts by ''hugging societies." For fifteen cents one can hug a six. teen-year-old girl two minutes, ten cents for a short squeeze. Old maids, three cents a piece or two for five. Editors pay in advertis ing, but can't hug anything but old maids and school-marms. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. .Jmeateaalern P',','",