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Show BY TELEGRAPH Jusctiok by uie Atlantic .OflBM fic Teief;ri'" Good- Incmest in tlio Case! rich Murder Stoddard Supposed b Shielding Roscoe ! the Real Murderer Two Colored Murderers Executed TTate T0 ! of Railroad jrrestThieves ! Sleeping Car Jumps the Track ! AMERICAN. New York, 12. was resumed Goohrich inquest Tbe at the Brooklyn Court House, by The alleged murdereCoroner Witchell. alias Amy Stoue, Stoddard, Kate ss Win. C. DeWitt was rewas present. Mrs. tained as counsel by tbe prisouor. she testified, that recog-uiic- d Lucelte Myers tbe watch chain and seal as having She also belonged to Charles Goodrich. rec0gUized a small charm upon the chain. She could not identify either She bad the pocket book or tbe diary. seen the pistol before in the hands of She saw it in the man named Koscoe. to the murtime some hand previous his He week tbe previous. perhaps der, When time. at tbe street the was in asked what communication she had with and Roscoe ot the timo, she hesitated not answerCoroner: could she gid Is it for fear you will criminate yourself?" Witness: "No, that is not it. It Tbe will defeat the ends of justice." She was witness then recoguized Kate. was positive that she knew her as Amy The Coroner Stoue, or Kate Stoddard. then asked the witness if she would go on and give tbe jury any information tbe possessed, wben she replied that 6be bad nothing else to state, on tbe ground that it might defeat the ends of justice. She bad seen this woman Kate and Roscoe together on several occasious. Question: "Why did you eay on a previous lamination that you did not know Kate Stoddard!" Answer: "1 had certain reasons for 6aying eo." The next witness was Miss Adeline Palem, who was engaged to be married Tbe witness was very to tbe deceas ed. nervous and almost fainted. She was shown the articles and continued: "1 recotrnize the watcU and two seals. The ring had been worn by him, but I bave never seen the charm or chain. The pocket book was his. I fail to identify either of tbe pistols. There is a lady present 1 have seen before. I have seen this one, Kate Stoddard, before. It was in New Wk, at 217 Kat loth street, in compa ny with Mr. Goodrich, referring to this ladj when be said it was bis sister. He This occur (aid the lived in Brooklyn. red in June, a year ago. I never had iny conversation with her at any time." David Goodrich, father of the murder ed man, was next examined. He men tilled the watchchain, etc. The pistol he did not recognize as one he had seen y pistol shot wound in. the bead. inflinf.J by Lizzie Lloyd Kinir'. alias TTnt dard, with intent to cause death, on the evening oi tne win or 21st day of March. 18(3, at his house in Deirraw utrepL Brooklyn." Thejurv accomtmniixJ iT,ir verdict with some geueral remarks, asserting it to be their conviction that the Coroner's Jury ia an institution for the discovery of crime or detections of criminals has outlived the period ot necessi ty or useiuiness, and fay its place could oe lueciuany supplied by some legally designated criminal or health authori ties, or both combined. Tbe Coroner's Jury is more liable to aid in the escape of the prisoner than to result in bis dis covery and detection. It is also urged that while tbe present system exists, the body should be inspected by the Coroner's Jury as soon as possible after the discovery, and that a pest mortem ex amination should follow, and not precede , L bucu inspection, in answer to the usual questions of the Coroner, the prisoner said her name was Lizzie Lloyd King, uiai sue was :o years oi age, ana was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts, that she was a bonnet maker; but declined to say anything in relation to the charge against ber. She was taken to jail by the sheriff. Kate Stoddard, the confessed murder- es of Goodrich, last evening spent the time slaving on her piano in the caD- tain's room at the station house in Brooklyn. The police of the station say that she is an educated, refined woman, but a little touched. Roscoe's capture last night was considered certain, as there was a large party in search of him. The police commissioners are under the impression that Kate Stoddard is assuming the responsibility in order to Blueld another, they believe, and that person is Roscoe. - with his son. Handler testified she had been looking for the prisoner and then related tbe story of the arrest. It was supposed that the prisoner would be put on the stand, but she was not under the direc tios of the counsel. The accused will make no confession of guilt. It took but a few moments to create among the bystanders the impression that they were looking upon on insane woman, and this woman is undoubtedly insane; if ordinary indications of lunacy are to be relied on. She sat there fully half an hour, smiling and cbaltingp'eas-autly- ; a strange wild light beaming from her eyes all the while. It was impossible to converse with her, although she talked sensibly, without being almost absolutely convinced of her insanity." Miss Handley, in an interview with the reporter, stated that the prisoner was ix years a lunatic and an inmate of a lunatic asylum, and that the insanity was caused by disappointment in love. hen the Chief of l'oliee asked the prisoner to hand him tbe locket, which is a ery large one, she was at Erst loathe to comply, but seeing that resistance was Useless, she passed it over. On receives it, the Chief took "hold tb open it. ''Oh, be careful, be careful!" 'said she; 'here's mineral in that' which I don't att to lose." Despite the utmost eare, bowever, little portion of the mineral, M she called it, fell upon the floor, and Ibis, to the Chief's surprise, she picked UP promptly, put it in her mouth, and wallowed. "What did you do toat the Chief. Looking steadily jato his eyes she said: "That is Charles Uaodrich's blood:" and sure enough, the locket was found to filled with congealed blood. A few leg' ions elicited the fact that on leaving Goodrich's house, on Friday morning, bad taken away with .her, among !ia?r "tides, a cup full of blood, which ooted from the brain. This blood, ngealed, she had been eating a Title ery dRJ from the tJnf of t J Miss - m Francis Joseph and Ills Frail. s,i . " ? Public ' gossip in Vienna represents the Emperor and Empress as by no means very happy in their con jugal relations. Her photographs in the windows show her to be a very handsome woman, about thirty-fiv- e years 6f age. She is said to be of remarkable intelligence and spright-lines- s of manner. The royal palace is in the heart of the city, and the Eaiperor resides in one wing of it and she in another, living entirely apart except when they meet on state occasions. He lives a very loose life, and, like the Kings of the olden times, has an abundance ot royal : e. i e, to-da- y. Hardware, Hoots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Crockery, , i 1CUIS UUU liOlJ S JiCUCUJ ItUUlC VlUUUtHJ, vAKIEli. OKEAT CELEBRATED SINGER SEWING MACHINES, . it. ni ttt.00U ..J S UflampiOIl and VY . jsam, . ,, Ti HIT IiXCeiSlOT lYLOWefS J Tl aiM reapers, , fl nuew.ncr aiiu MuucuaKer nagons, -A- LSO,- Winehester and Democrat IJglit Spring Wagons, ltviner. AND EVERY DESCRIPTION OP Story of a Lost Heir. Implements. Jr The following story of a lost heir CV T7TI 1 Tl a Dv told is lasraanian paper, the Cornwall Chronirle: "About seven Buggies to Order on Short Notice. years ago, in the City of London, a cheesomonger died, leaving cash to (Jail lOniM aild (jOllCOrU IlarilCSS MM HnmCSS the tune of 100.000 to be quarreled over, fought and disputed for, by the Advertisements reputed nntl Slioo DFimlinjjH. were inserted at different times in the English newspapers, and many a All Kinds of Produce Forwarded to Any Point on the Shortest Notii o. claimant a la Tichborne was forthcoming. The lawyers, however,were ill Ordert Sent to M. TllA TGIIER, Xojyan, tcill Receive not satisnea tuat any ot tne numer Prompt Attention. ous claimants were the 'right men, and what has just transpired proves they were correct in their judgment, as the 'right man has turned up in the person of the deceased cheese monger's brother, George Hutley, who arrived m this colony about for ty years ago. lie was discovered by oo- r . fctevens, a lctonan barrister, splitting,up iu the ranges of that col- WE HAVE OPENED IN LOGAN k OGDEN, BRANCHES OF OUR WAGON and MACHINE DEPARTMENT, so that the people of the Northern ony, taken to Melbourne, shipped on board a steamer, and brought to Counties can purchase without coming to Salt Lake City. Launceston, and then taken to Ho& bart Iowa, wliere he was identified WE GUARANTEE as the vei itable George Ilutley, who Supplied to thse pofnto aa betas the bcitt, aftr much itudy and e xpvrience, aiid know that Pun hawH arrived at Tasmania some forty years cau rely on tliii Tecommendation. ago. After all the necessary docu- - WIIITEWATEU, A NTUDEUAKEIC ments are procured to prove, without a shadow of doubt, the man's identi ty, he will proceed to England to claim his inheritance, Trimmings heir-at-la- Leather H. li. CLAWSON, Superintendent. z. CM. I. V - WAGONS II MACHINERY IX anil WAGONS, A Scaly CIIAMriOX; WOODS, EXCELHIOK ami WOULD 3TIOWEIIS, Droppers or Scir Jtakcrs. Baltic. , A stransc battle occurred at Far Rockaway, Long Island, last Tuesday morning, about 4 o'clock, ia front of the Nelson House. A school of , TIIIIENIIIXG MACHINES and SULKY ItAKIlS. The Cnlebratwl THOMAS SMOOTH I X HARROW, warrant.! to muke the Wnt PeM to be tbe best cultivator for gram, grain, corn or potatoes, yet InventoU. Our Iwtl 'iutnr can hare a Harrow on trial. Tbnee Department! will alto rWe information and receive ordem for TURBINE WHEELS, SWT Red and deaths from cholera are reported drumfish were chased into shallow water by a school of porpoises. . The MAClUXH,GKISTJid8AWMILU, orotlitrartkleenutueuully kii tiuitwk. The weather very warm. ; The Indianapolis, Lafayette and Cin- drumfish tried their best to getaway, cinnati Railroad Company, have lately but the porpoises pursued them so I MOSES THATCHER, AGENT, LOOAN. lost large quantities of goods, stolen hotlv that a number ot the former ARNARI WHITE, AGENT, OGDEX. from the depots and cars along their driven ashore. The were of peoplo line. Detectives were put upon the track 80tf H. B. CLAWSON, Superintendent. and traced a large amount of stolen the hotel were awakened by a great property to Delhi Ohio and North Bend splashing and a noise somewhat sim Arrested nine negroes, who are thought ilar to but less distinct than the grunt to belong to regular organized band of of a out Looking frightened hog. railroad thieves, who live in the vicinity saw the windows the of Bend. they porpois of Delhi and North es striking the drumfish with their AVhite Sulphur Springs, W. Va., 14. GROESBECK'S BLOCK, SECOND SOUTH STREET, Soon after the porpoises turn A sleeping car of the Eastern bound tails. train on the Atlantic, Mississippi and ed and left. The porters at the hotel Ohio R. R., jumped the track near New and some of the fishermen secured and rolled this G. F. River bridge merning boat-hooabout twenty-fiv- e over the bank. A brakesman was killed, with the sleeping car conductor's leg was dead drumfish, and a large 'number broken and six passengers were badly are still floating wound Jamaica Bay. CULIEE & CO., SALT LAKE CITY, ks burnt. The drumfish secured weighed from thirty to seventy pounds each. Some were sent to Canursie for exhibition and others to Fulton Market for sale. Sew York Sun. . id fol-""ri- , Glassware, Notions, Ac, uc. Stoves and Tinware. Drugs cV Medicines Two 1 j RETAIL to-da- New York. 14. was arrested in Dougherty George Brooklvn for fatally beating hii wife, and attempting the murder of an officer Baltimore, 14. was executed colored, Albert Sanders, in Frederick County, Friday last, for the murder of E.A.Burdell last December Thos. Jackosn, colored, was hanged at T.onnurd inwn Saturday last, tor tne murder of Postmaster Schofield in April lea Kate Stoddard, who confessed to the mnrdArof fioodrichnent the time last in the Cap evening flaying on the piano tain's room at tne oiauon nouse The police commissioners itrnnklvn. . th imnrepsion that she is a lbttimeofhpr,.nnt., v...inir ihe resDonsibilitv of the Good TheCoroner'e Jury returned the rich murder, in order to shield nother, verdict : We find that said ttit ib nerson is. ther believe, varies Goodrich came to' Lis death bv a Koscoe. for?-sa- AND Dry Goods, Groceries, i' Philadelphia, 12. bia WHOLESALE lack of virtue is the predominant trait ot the Court oi the Empire. Tfiis nf, losiKf rlu fronornl rnnriK. tion of the people, and judging from the tact that there are annually born in the general Hospital from five to six thousand illegitimate children. o V lenna may fairly be set down as a . :... luaun waura w vy uic vciy 1, j iws viuuB of life. Thev are ouite a different class of people from the staid and solid population of Prussia and Northern Germany, more resembling the French and Italians in their habits and modes of life and ways of The Orangemen's parade took place here this morning. The different lodges formed in line,' and, escorted by a strong police force, 'marched through the main streets. Three bands accompanied the Orange procession and played a variety of tunes, "Sweet Spirit," "Croppies, "Lie Down," etc. The Orangemen lum bered 700. New York, 14. The commercial period under review has been one of general quietude as far as the California Freighting Company's business by various routes is concerned, via. Cape Horn. Affairs remain very dull and there is no immediate prospect of an early improvement, although it is anticipated that when the movement for the spring trade does set ia that it will prove to be quite active. The managers of short routes are hesitating to make overtures to shippers who would give them freight throughout the entire sea son, provided they were guarranteed that the rates of freight and time trans portation would be uniform. Perhaps change in the management of the short routes, which is hinted at, might prove beneficial to bjth shippers and the companies interested iu rates for freight under the present difficulties in obtaining vessels to follow those now loading. Although tbe movement is very general, there is no proposition to make concessions. A meeting of the Directors will be held early neit week to decide what shall be done. Numerous rumors are in circulation, but it is difficult to know what degree of confidence is to be reposed in them. The latest is that the Panama R. II. Co. probably assume the direction of the line to Aspinwall in consideration of advances made, and to be made, by monthly installments in the next seven or eight months. Cincinnati, 14. The number of deaths for week 178 against 220 during the preceeding week. The Zoological Society with a capital of $300,000, was incorporated at Colum- lil. I. 2a " t Brailcli, Log aii Mr. Felton'sCor. in the Baltimore American.' .,.lr IIAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE AND VARIED STOCK OF Groceries Window Glass, AND borne one ongbt to hsve' been at hand to say "Don't swear," to the Alabama burglars who worked three Which they are offering at lower prices than any other house in the oodays at a sale and lounu enly twenty A nine cents m it. Inrge Ntoek of city- - -- A business man in Adrian, Mich., fortunate enough to find in the gutter in front of a bank i crumpled envelope belonging to himself, and containing two $100 bills, which had was English Varnishes OF ALL KItiDP, AT MIa"r3?'OTT3E:t333LS, 4JeJ. beeu dropped and swept out from th bunk two days before.1 Orders from Freight the country Promptly Filled. PRICES, |