New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
January 15, 1879 · Page 2 of 9
OCR Text
ffi7~H MINNESOTA LEGISLATUKE. _grtijpy.) i|r jjtM^. ,_. ^-i*f%ipe rnn motinmr um IIIJIIM-.^L 1 -f the Tear Ending Bee 31, 1877, and Months of 1878. Jdhn Jacob Astor's fortan^whcovAe died MMfr^l at 13 M., Lieut. Gov. ~WaWfieirpT^dm# in 1848. In 1875 Mr. Stewart's city real es tcT_3,^sl_ foifj. rarVood, of jg?wwa^-s^~^ ceivmvzo vote! tatesituated for the meet put below Union ^sArac^rrTuoi7h St. Paw. M. pD^Waihfy', cCAwaloniia, was (.lxp inc. 1,1878. squarewis a_eessedrar9$212 ?e0 at_t a c-bew. time the aaMMed valoatian reraesented only X*?_- tin, of WinoniJM^tne-iwnM^wte^^. coali 60 par cent, of the Teal vatte^^tl-t' the tion had been attempted between the Democrats, then actoal value of the realestate was $10*- 1 if3__cbMt*fta4,^*r Greenbackers and Iudependent Rfpub- L,-- T^ 4 4|' ***$ ^S,M6 354^500, which forms but an eighth of his ft licans which received thermal Ana. offices.!_,___ 7.517 ^r" 61,44100* 3 75 $ dfr.C.M.f8.P 581 estimated wealth. Mr. Stewart, however, 7,448 178^00 With the sixteen Democftite, Pa^el rfrf)lm 3 37,844 3U66 00) 34,968 sted, (Greenback) rWfBf&a&lKi!Qrari ownedxealeBtete in nearlyevery cityin. whioh !~sss 87*686 5 *l '978,678 6^44 837,918 164,081 3,698 3 75 4' 47 -(Greenback) Brown, of Douglas, (Indepen he had dealing*. He owned a number of 4*W 693,704 100,695 .&'D.mmp] ent woolen and thread nulla in tins eountxy '61^958 55 361,404 62 744,245 2,174,154 2y033,3U 4 5 00 feibitk* 91,326, 1,368 7X687 18*374 631,487 00 among them the Mohawk and Mbcenf, at 7l9 4~ea_,6J)0__ 1,010,756 'Sv3et. JUQAt 46,570 can) 1rt*e'"" exi 72,177 i 802J9Q1 00 681 3*144433 440 c_h,6j00 time little Falls the New York mills, at Holyoke 8 12J456 &S ^,5o,o721^: 183,218 862,128 00 630 would hawMgiven e coalition twentyftfid 3,245,932 V& 660 V*|74^1t "J***25 51,386 00 the Woodward mills, at Woodstock the !k___t '*"9HE 14.15T 405,756 20,000 4 13 )1 8 50 405,719 ^One votes anajtontn Senate. On* 15,010 Yamtioo mills, in New Jereecr the Washington *two offices of enrplIL,, and engrossing? el- '""^188 J4ji*j 1,499 i|U it $*"'__ mills, at New Hartford the Catekill and it was successful* def #,568" iWPwater & St. 5JQ0to8JM Waterville Woolen mills. There'are also & Dolutb, and James YSSnttam 7,487 54,36100 ^_^jso*f^ffip witi& large mills at Nottingham, England, and '64,734 the Republican nominees, and electing C&wA 3i#7M28 aotadjt'd 587 900 Glasgow, Scotland. The property of the Winona A Cressup and 4W. Powers. The remainder 99,570 ._..^^..i boose of A. T. Stewart & Co. is greatly scattered. of the Republican ticket electeda ollows: It owns property in most of the 1,737,388 $1,262,377 8,587,9371 1,780| 247,187 10.1~,858| 480,902 65 Sergeant-aarms^fi. M. Pdgh jaa^tanfc Si Total huge cities here and abroad, and has continually sergeaitf-ajUajnuvfXM, Resse explain, Eav. 877 include* interna, stampage and payments on sales of former yean. AH of tbe lands of the ChicagofcSt. Paul, part of the k in its employ, outside of New York, S. C. Galb^f%orlifieidr^aeQ.vKante^n %BP aMt,9adpaxta the St. Paul&Dutath weie Stateamp lands. All others C~gresaio1 grants. For Barney lands see B.B. over six thousand persons. There are branch St. Paul, and Cyrus Wilkin (cefcred), of Min" Balance inure te^Bxtenaion oompany. ncapolis, were appointed messengers. houses at Bradford, Manchester, Belfast, called1 HOUSE, Jan. 7.This body was Paris, Lyons, Berlin, and Chemnitz in Saxony. The transfer by Cornelia M. Stewart, %rjm, _fimt&" widow of the late A. T. Stewart, to Gilfillan. C. A. GilmM, of St^Cloud war Henry Hilton of all her interest in the firm Gjr^Karaip^.and jppenttiag Expenses of Bailromlw in Minnesota for the Tear Ending Jane 80, 1878. of A. T. Stewart & Co., gives Mr. Hilton a conspicuous place among New York millionaires. Deakin, of Goodhue second aasj KABanros OTZB Oroes Earnings by Claas, Total and Ber MUe.^, Wiltsie, of Fillmore ^ifS^J^T] Per OPXBATIRa ^ai Ofl_ZDn KXPBHBB. Probably Mr. WiUiam H. Vanderbilt is today cent, Geo. E. McKibben, of McLeod engrossra of Total clerk, Eugene Smith, of Benson the richest man in New York. He inherited Earn- loss. Per postmaster, Lyman D. Baird, of Mower ser-" Per the bulk of Commodore Vanderbilt's Total. Freight. TotaL Mtsceuan's. TotaL ing*. Per mile. Mile. Mile. geratafr-falpis,.Frank, H. Dayton, of Wasli- fortune, who, at the time of his deaths mSmSVte asi^iinjCler^an^l^arnWOhris, was accounted a richer man than either of o. _, tm.t., wv. Y. 1 tian Johnson, of Ot*er Tail, received 87 Totes, 180r47 $ 56^3896 $ 845,167 65$ 6,501 29 531,520 27 $ J395JB94 47$ 492,244 22 i 4,088 62 62-7 $313,647 38 ^2,413 87 the present Astors. With the single exoepion and Mr. Churchill, of St. Paul, 10 votes. mt 147-52 819,414 48 5,574 25 499,492 56 605,676 66 I.&M.dlv. 3,397^ 186,848 02 61 819,921 93 2,176 34 of Mr. Wm.H. Vanderbilt, our chief New There was quite a lively contest for chaplain. 87,390 63 1,179 74 H.&D. dtv 74-14 .48,322 59 73,013 29 (T 9,775 81 37*15 15,38? 84 206 59 York millionaires draw their revenues from 80^314 00 1,212 00 Rev Tagm Brooke, of tit. P^ul^ winninid the C. C. Dubuque & Minn. 25 17,533 15*T 1,77131 31,1200 1,245 12 51 $ 814 55,39163 Central .$ 1.430 30 39 34,510 01 628 46 44 the rents, income and profits of real estate, pnze. "After drawing for se^sf the 80,681 00 79184 48,38150 B.C. B.fc'KJjrthern 1 3,79ft 52 jil2-6 11,765 65 l, 2,217 74 30,940 50 41,408 24 2,475 24 65 17,441 00 1,315 28 adjoftned vfli "f, which has shrunk fully one-third since 359,850 55 Miuneapoli& St. I*,... 2,925 61 112-3 57,187 52 241,938 98 296,872 66t,, 1,966 98 117,911 67 968 63 6,790 37 ]|5aiiB|jr&i%^f. 1873. If the Astor fortune was then $90,- 689,468 99 2,7*9 79 ,253-5 156,605 60 328,467 31 499,561 92 1,295 73 47-7 361,001 68 1,438 07 f,3ft 33,301 47 si. tltiM, S_uS xa\ 595,836 54 2,878 39 188,497 64 359,217 45 362,374 10 1,735 35 44,954 80 60-3 000,000, it is to-day worth not over $60,000,- 236,609 09 1,143 04 T'lTlt' Ba&A't|e 4,623 63 '76 351.395 57 121,834 27 188,689,61 167,833 21 2,208 32 40,872 29 47-7 183,663 364 2,415 31 000, and so on throughout the list. Since i yin. & 45,71 1 6 1,166 21 21 141,113 73 52,689 70 86,574 40 1 1,848 6} 95,40109 788 43 377 77 MV 36 1825 New York has grown with a rapidity Bishop Whipple's health is repotted i^fj f'j, 3ilro(e lto* 1,103 05 20,863 66 13,189 33 28,394 70 2,380 73 36,433 72 786 74 78 8,039 03 223 30 ^St-iPanl& Dulnth 3,046 33 408,057 42 169 86,667 67 514,833 14 398,489 83 hitherto unknown in any of the great centers ,.20,098 05 2,357 92 77-4 116,333 81 688 36 8t.'Paul Sioux City 6,088 77 461,692 95 121-27 630,839 70 113,711 09 2,280 94 25,425 66 851,474 83 56-6 369,354 87 yOSy-y{JiH^,M 2,207 83 u, TOv.jB.ff,,^ yl^jB^--, of population of the world, and this growth has Been" 8ioux City 4c 8Wf aul. 2,753 20 Ja^svi1fe,v 129,723 98 1,731 00 The Keliaace mills, at i_fc.38.805 09 183.396 88 66-25 115,335 90 62-8 68,160 98 1,037 30 04,867 81 0 gave wealthto the fortunate few who bought St. P., S. & Taylors Falls 42,094 38 2,378 00 ^26il 106,259 91 4.431 66 23-8 67,073 78 37,664 28 49,386 13 2,053 69 sbxtt'dowii ieX repairs, i Southern Minnesota 704,024 41 2,147 12 or inherited city real estate. Their descendants 853,148 44 119,515 35 5,093 42 167-5 359,643 00 .29,608 68 42 493,505 44 2,946 30 Western,- 50.833 34 ,38,044 69 1,536 00 47,174 95 60-5 92,963 01 4,035 01 779 00 45,788 00 756 00 $hre bsMegs failures.hivglkfely b^ea are among our richest citizensChief "Wleafe Wisconsin 51,213 58 3,493 04 fcU-V U\ r. 28409 98 83,785 21 89,119 51 22-8 3,760 31 3,401 65 6.334 annonnceaM^P^ibaiili1 2,14 8 3 0 among real estate owners Winona & 8ti Peter t\ i 55,691 19 2,883 19 1 351,519 83 831,801 68 619,784 76 ,,288-5 24,590 66 74-5 212,016 92 734 89 3,90103 51,307 44 who rank as millionaires 1,098 37 Winona, & NeVtfM: 418 87 2,^81 77 KA 3-75 10,878 87 229 66 6,760 John Kakowsky was arrested in Dnluth 66,581 53 2,417 93 Worthington & S 15,848 06 44 31,216 17 2,197 83 84,637 42 819 89 87 54,41125 L526 04 are the Astors, the Bhinelanders, the Goelets, the other day for selling whiskv to an Indian. Mrs. A. T. Stewart, the Lorillards, the 2097-84 $1,845,833 75$4,681,330 43 $388,25120 $7,431,199 29 $4,482,048 77 59 8% $2,958,871 90 13,918 l^aaaatb' ottBrm akaplv^^BMjaud^attle, Schemerhoms, the Lenoxes, Kobert J. Liv contvij^sigi.b^rep^a b? e^ smutty Minneapolis fr S Louis includes business of branch to White Bear Lake. The whole inlin to Albert Lea was opened Nov. 1, 1877, hence report does not ingston and Frederic Stevens, who is the give an entire year's business of whole line. Burlington, Cedar Bapidafc Northern operated only eight months. Worthington & Sioux Falls has not been in youngest millionaire on the lust, and who occupies, operation the whole length for a year. The same true of St. Vincent extension, and Western. The sleighing is very poor in most parts of on the corner of Fifty-seventh street the State, and.in some portions there is none and Fifth avenue, the finest private residence TAXES. MXKSTB2SOT2a7 in the city. It is a singular fact that of all ataii. [in \\\,u GOTHAM MILLIONAIRES the gentlemen we have named who, together Wolves destroyed some forty head of sheep represent certainly between $100,000,- in' Birch Coolie, Benville county, a few days 000 and $150,000,000 of real estate, Attract of the Tax Lists of the Several Counties of the State for the Year Personal Sketches of Astor, Vanderbilt, 1878 not one concerns himself personally Stewart and LenoaeHow They Acquired 4 TJp to Dec. 21'thereceipts of wheat at Benson about municipal affairs. This reflection Their Money, and How They JCept It and the present season amounted to 271,400 addresses itself with peculiar force, not only Added to ItPeculiarities of Their Business bushels. I /i to millionaires, but to our moderately wellto-do and Social RelationsTlteir JLivtna Bate of Value of Value of Town A tramp at Beaver Falls slept in a straw Average No. of acres classes, and to all those who own property Total taxes Total value. taxation Representatives. taxable Per- and City Lots, value of land ex- stack a few nights since, and had his hands assessed. in the city. If a sharp remedy is not sonal Prop- including struc- clusive of per acre I New York Times.7 bacUy frozen. ft Mills. erty. tures thereon. town lots. quickly applied to the present uselessly and The founders of the great New York fortunes A son of J. C. Congdon, of Brainerd, fell criminally extravagant modes of municipal 3,334 64 26.6 124,427 of the present centuryJohn Jacob 14,522 2,710 48,938 2 18 Aitken through a window, the other, ,evening, and 28,47139 1,497,309 19 0 government, the profession of millionaires 451,306 427,948 187,949 3 47 Astor, Kobert Lenox, Alexander T. Stewart Anoka 19,460 39 250 740,186 was badly cat by the glass. 187,441 131,543 56,993 will soon become extinct, and the preservation 377 Becker and Cornelius Vanderbilthave all passed 282 90 6 0 KJSRO 29,843 189 (s BeltraL..... of accumulated wealth at this centre Mrs. Ole Jacobsonyof Ha,wley^Gja county, 16,640 58 260 639,696 77,600 133,365 137,652 3 18 Away. Benton..'^... can be classed among the lost arts. i 637 80 had one of'his legs broken by being thrown 84,521 61,780 7,670 4,845 3.64 "Big Stone.... John Jacob Astor arrived in this city at a 17.7 137,136 25 7,630,873 1,354,022 453,855 1,391,211 10 76 from a carriage a few days since., Blue Earth.i. period of great depression, in 1784. Daring 15 9 47,295 19 2,956,288 538,044 282,490 370,839 724 Brpwn....... Mr. Stark has built and jjust commenced 2 7 5,159 37 22,121 the latter part of 1783 some 15,000 refugees, 10,438 343 Carlton. KILLED HIS SISTER. 15.5 43.627 71 2,941,999 655|689 ,j running anew steam saw mill in Mankato. 134,721 231,255 ,1017 Oarver men, women and children, left New York, 11.1 7,375 93 664,498 2,932 3,692 2 17 Cass The engine If forty horse power. Long Island and Staten Island for Nova [Johnstown Tribune.! 210 17,254 21 578,696 196,439 12,108 83,133 '\4 45 Chippewa.... 27,40262 16 8 1,620,048 Scotia and St. John, among them many persons i) i A number of perBpns in Spencer 'Brook 152,976 347,690 4 74 One of the saddest of tragedies was that Chisago 20,264 29 23 8 847,345 207,590 121,060 129,547 400 CJay. of fortune and estate. These estates and vicinity," Mille Lacs county, are afflicted on Friday evening at the home of Mr. Richard 19,105 97 215 728,577 237,832 31,512 90,980 604 CettonwooiiL. with a virulent type of the measles. Astor began to buy whenever he could spare 7,875 17 360 Hothem, near Hillside, Westmoreland 209,325 54,696 109,027 19,929 228 Crow Wing.*. "-mP8tC9BS|n3ent structures pnenof i Southernt Mux- 96,260 17 14 9 6,421,171 The Ghatfielfr dbpo^is the bes and 1,302,318 the money as soon as he got a little ahead in 611,233 357,498 12 49 county, Pa. Mr. H. and his wife went away Dakota 61.878 78 135 4,599,179 832,228 409,537 274,892 12 22 'Bodge. the world. John Jacob Astor's first purchase on a visit on Friday, leaving at home tbeir 281,329 35.879 93 21 2 1,550,794 135,463 306,704 1 3 98 Douglas V-' of city real estatetwo lots on the 73,54113 16.7 son Joseph, aged 22, their daughter Mary, 4,052,145 nesota, so claims IKe'ChatnelQ Zgwwcrw 610,123 393490 Farlbaulte.r 734 115 108,652 18 9,441,493 Bowery lane or road, near Elizabeth streetwas 1,885,523 Fillmore. 642,871 749,965 13 53 aged 19, and two other daughters, 9 and 11 13 3 83,978,43 6^09,894 791,346 312,879 894,127 20 66 made in August, 1789, and from that ^esly|fJ%#efat years of age respectively. In the evening 13* 178,322 49 12,974,841 2,595,244 486,854 16 51. date to the time of his death, March, 1848, Joseph attended a spelling "bee," cautioning 26.5 11,374 06 413,323 100,012 6,385 90,776 3 37 irant 20.4 683,056 66 28^594,496 he was a steady and constant buyer of real 5,652,628 15,311,053 S-349,228 ,22 13 his sister Mary, as he went away, to beware ennepm 66,203 36 9.97 4,441,030 958,106 387,665 ""340,830 908' HotMtanav^ estate. The last conveyance to John Jacob of tramps. At about 9 o'clock he started b- ^oiiTiiiaitfMtiired.tbjre: 13,837 37 23.0 602,107 100,964 3 68 12,220 iantL, 189,317 Astor was made shortly before his death in for home, and as he approached the house the 1,930 98 7 4 260,942 2l02 tasca 128.721 beijhiiK)eji wesUjnstead., o' 23,835 49 314 1847. The conveyances made to him during 765,314 171,125 418 15,666 barking of the dogs alarmed his sisters, as 1 ^388 abac. .4. 17 0 6,963 31 360,783 19,138 2vJ5 the fifty nine years which elapsed between 1154,197 Joseph was not expected back ac so early an 12 7 ,47,073 16 2,433,565 621,081 543 170,626 330,383 tatofri his first and last purchases of real estate in hour. It is probable the young man intended 7,753 68 20 8 I 1,45 372,769 129,670 3187' 4,834 2,186 32 this city form seven pages of closely printed 16 5 113,893 lB8r 2,662 to test his sister Mary's courage, for he 70 63 61,846 02 18 0 3,483,943 983 -06,368 366,884 matter in the index of conveyances on file pulled his hat down over his face, and otherwise fJrtaflB 1,833 59 224 76,242 -w 42,612 3,095 20,395 17 I in the register's office. These wise investments disguised himself. When he was withnn 302 671,727 199,288 60,873 tbSUfecrdrlIo_lafe, ^9ri|itgfa.,m*jm 17 0 46,483 have with time swollen into enormous 2,692,437 443,946 a few rods of the boose Mary appeared in 151,912 21 1 25,765 65 1,219,336 243,461 1 60,280 wealth, and the Astor fortune to-day, as ^oasda&fqiwte*! xa^es tct^tc| tbertmm the doorway and hailed him: "Is that you, 4S6 asw,0oo 15 5 42,316 92 2,735,231 453^56 235,445 Tltf?#^^.4ft Heajeanhrt the,Btion in time, represented, by Mr. John Jacob Astor and 684 K"5 Joe?" Bat he did not answer and continued 10 9 5,389 86 493,514 40,942 3,185 89,923 2 'WwffMseMadry frt$3?fmiIri| pjr. William Astorj (grandsons of the first 24 1 20,406 87 845,099 125,260 to advance. The girl, now worked up to a 217^96 27,941 443^2 7 Mo$HsohMi.S^ 313 104,120 15 7,231,940 14 0 !S35S?T.J 1,140,896 Astor), is one of the'greatest fortunes of the 550,030 high pitch of excitement, again hailed the 1248 Hfe 10,626 34 300,042 27 0 91,034 59,271 1,832 liOT^e.flli^1n ,Ife-r3i_lg8, w'lTttte world. At the time of John Jacob Astor's 3 50' f3 advancing figure with, "Who are you?' 44,521 47 3,405,526 1 17 703,534 334,094 8 98* death, in ,1848, his fortune was estimated at 30,642 84 29% 24'1 773,134 Still no answer, and Mary shouted again, i'|HV*4 237,976 ^a Mr. aiid-M-. .Dibble^, qf Mar- 90,854 l70 13.2 136,473 78 "F* 418,'* 10,337,473 from to $40,000,000, and he was 2,167,163 -16 32 1^82,330 "Is that you, Joe?" and ran into the house 258 60,844 76 1,970,169 3-03- 133,799 408,083 counted the fifth on the list of"rich men, and armed herself with a shot-gun. Routining 343 21,012 89 611,521 43,468 2 25. &423#.,2B9 35,738 Thi Baron de Rothschild, Louis Philippe, the !a 251 8,96121 356^11 to the door she discovered to her 150,633 3 64 66,670 21,337 IS Duke of Devonshire and Sir. Robert Peel 1,039^16 17 1 213,108 1 8i70^ 6,543 surprise, the strange man standing on the l^ottra^pnViol 316^9069 12.8 24,704,092 5,748,694 18 13*- 17,491,536 only exceeding him. steps, and as soon as she appeared be advanced 32,346 78 21.2 1^42,885 235,976 vi ?5 82/ 71,038 1196,362 44^90 00 The late Mr. Robert Lenox, like Mr. Astor, 373 toward her. "Stop," she shouted, 1^08,316 388,972 492 12^571 162J72 16 9 121^32 43 7,534,883 1,930,965 ^1,383,587 was a self-made man. He was, whan he "stop, or I will shoot you!" He took another 308 36,106 82 761,824 4V823 first began, an entire stranger in this city, step, and at the same instant the girl 282 35,712 12 125,647 1,267,484 J3 ASAtAd4aK^jj^77 where the name of Lenox is now so greatly ice in crossing the lake and river, but fortu 14 5 'i 46,889 27 raised the gun and fired, and he sank down 617,554 8,199,525 257,899 T*10 87V 16 5 11,806 27 149,691 715,902 177,136 293 45,519 Sherburne. venerated because of the noble deeds of on the porch, groaning, "Oh, my dear sis- 13.8 ,48,092 63 496,557 3,350,175 8 57 103,265 Sibley, 309,034 charity and the lavish donations for religious 90,645 40 ter!" "Oh, my dear brother, I have killed i 18 6' 4,548,566 487 614,483 639,643 and literary purposes of bis only son, James "The light fantastic toe," whatever 14.1 63,616 69 you!" the poor girl screamed as she threw 495,244 1190 474,047 889/133 263423 20.0 15,372 27 664,420 Lenox. Mr. Robert Lenox commenced 65,876 149,930 LV be,Judging from the notices of one: ^107^98 *rT down the gun and carried him into the Ft. 21.9 22,704 42 71,663 780,315 333,857 -8,743 business in 1783the year before John I^Mhl^ialdcal plpersnw^yei^ numerous house, where he soon died. 26.6 20,131 59 ,2^14 8,277 787,iT6 239 98,594 Toddv. :s: Jacob Astor arrivedand remained here permanently 580^2 i^hdut^^rie 'State Jof .'Minnesota on 115 233 72, 30,336 2 70 4,470 Richard Hothem, the father, is the man Traverse-.'. "35 until his death, which occurred in 18.7 125,836 56 6,705,351 Christmas JEve. Wabashaw... 1,136,390 13 36 who, in 1861 or 1862, picked up a fortune on 31.2 4,194 28 I34494 Wadena 35^95 40,426 250 December, 1879, in the 81st year of his age. _^\Jrff'.^ the railroad near his home. He was On Christmas day as O. M.Bornstadt was iWasbca. j.... 59,984 38 16 5 3,607,374 i? 558,474 10 46 262,825 For many years his operations greatly exceeded ,l kt^il3 120,724 61 19.8 6,097,843 walking along the read and saw a 1,496,793 243,889 1147 driving a'span of colts in 3^tke'I 303,366 those of any other merchant in the 18,660 98 ale^h'^'*tonwi 18.3 938,782 122,423 339,078 5 38 1^04,914 folded newspaper, and on picking it took fright and ranaway, upsetting the 7,882 01, msts 19.0 844,837 country of that day. He became, eventually, 88,401 393 62,985 N J,f..!L.. up found enclosed $50,000 in bank notes. 135,438 90 13.3 10,099,635 and hurtings Mr. Brunstadt severely. His 3,224,258 Winona 13 00 40,961 one of the most successful merchants in the wife whowa w^t him? 57,863 14 as not hurt.] 17.1 He took the package to an attorney and ffi 466,041 193,323 Wright... 729 3^67,180 20,37110 United States. Mr. Lenox invested his accumulations 19.7 167,312 64485 Xellow Medicine. 483 866^629 sought legal advice. Advertisements were S. Hv^Daniehi .had stored 161 barrels of 131,306 chiefly in city real estate. In inserted in the newspapers throughout the 8^95,133 09 16.4 floup_-e^'d^pot warehouse at Rochester, 54^08,4751$ 464ra304l$229,791,0_ 16,714^48 K.Wvr 7 72M 1817 and 18J,8 he bought, for less than in country, in the hope of discovering the loser Olmsted* couht^i When, ^n^rknig i^he barrels, "$7,000, about thirty acres of land, running of the money, and for over a year diligent preparatory to shipment, he found thai from Sixty-eighth to Seventy-fourth street, jLanesboro ^scaped another dis astrous conflagration^ and striking the conductor, Henry Spalding search was made far and wide but no one .twenty-five barrels'had been abstracted. between Fourth and Fifth avenues, known as i -ih (who was endeavoring to stop the affray) on ever appeared to claim it, and Mr. Hothem the "Lennox Farm," much of which is now the left arm, between the elbow and wrist, evenually appropriated it to his own uses. Hokah Blade: We heard Mr. J. C. Easton covered with first-class brown-stone houses. nearly breaking his arm. The poker cut A short tune previous to the finding of the say^WjluJeiOomjqg on the frain from La home with his .family when "bis team rani The enormous increase in the value of this throngh hjs, overcoat, undercoat, shirt sleeve money a large express robbery had been perpetrated Crosse Wednesday, that the Southern Min-' away,' breaking Ins right leg below the knee. land, sold for the' most part at topprices between and the flesh to the bone, arid for some time near Harper's Ferry, and it was the ve-nesota Bailway company intend before a 1861 and 1872, gives Mr. James Itfif! and his wife's ^eft arm. Others in, the the bone was thought to be broken. Had it general belief that, being closely pressed by Lenox a high rank among New York milionaiires. jr, hide at the time were not injured. pursuers, the thieves had thrown the money The Lenox farm to-day, without (m* The Dnluth Tribune of Deo. 27th, says: from a car window, intending to return for a brick on it, would be worth $8,000,000. "People abroad w^o suppose that navigation it on the first opportunity of eluding the detectives. While the Lenox fortune is modest indeed, through a splendid-oountry and will make^a Upton: Diptheria tt.ottjI^ejStnperioi is closed, are mistaken. ladhmadeita^pearanoe Ellis,n i this seo- Hon.^-be family of H. B.i who lives when compared with the colossal accumulations paying feeder to the S. M. railway, Perky Johnsonleaves early l*fthr?fanding.e next week on th ****$ of the Astors, Vanderbflts and Stewarts, John Krock, a German, Siskiwit, with a cargo of beef, pork, poultry, What householder who can get no rec Mr.! Hokah Blade/ 1? on the Oronoco road, are down with it A we venture to hazard the opinion that lJ 0/ ompense for improvements from a grasping f[#flM* aged abotft 6^p*ears, living in the townof son aged 16, and a daughter are already dead. Mr. James Lenox has quietly given away ^^^A^espkdkit wrin^tton, Vicksburg, Brownsville, was killed last Friday landlord will not sympathize with The disease was contracted in Owatonna, as much as the late Mr. Peabody. His donations Bpnville county, says that town^ has dim^n JftfLof a large' limb from a, tree which the writer of this? "Wanted immediately, and, if the doctor was correctly understood, in land and money to charitable, ished 100 per cent.' during 'the past year. was cutting down. _$g skull? 'was badly to enable me to leave the house which I two or three of Mr* Ellis? neighbors have literary and religious institutions situated on "There used to be one-store, ,npw there is fractured/ and -he lived only a few hours. caught the plagne. ,j^ have for these last five years inhabited, the Lennox farm alone, amount to over none./' The correspondent pluckily tfddsV Dr.Mc&erina, of Caledonia, was.called to $2,500,000. This is a noble example to in the same plight and condition in Dnluth TrtbuneT Capt. W. P. Spalding, ho wield the great fortunes of New afsire'deal lire_!2bi see him, but he could afford" no relief! twn,we feel as those which I found it, 500 Live rats, for which & the famous silver man, who has a homestead big as anybody." Krock was a weljrto-do farmer, and leaves'4 York. It is to be regretted that the name of I will gladly pay the sum of five pound on wht is-believed to be a, valuable :lfhje family.' Lenox, so far as the founder or the family J^ looieaboTO J'ournat: The Carrolton mills sterling and as I cannot leave the farm silver claim, down the north shore, about in this city is concerned, dies with the present "of this place, belonging to, White 4 Beynon, Brainerdi Tribune.'' A fracas occurred on attached thereto in the same order in twentw-five miles north of Grand MTfliy Mr. Janes Lenox, a bachelor now ad' caught fire At d^o'olook Wednesday morning, the Dnluth train on Thursday, between two ,1,170 feet above Lake. Superior, came up a which I got it without as least Five Millions vanced in years. As long as New York exists and woutd have been totally destroyed had n-H-ranley 'and Sargentin which day or two ago to "prove up."' He came all of Dockens, I do hereby promise his memory will be remembered and j|l ,no^Qeorge Hyde made a timely discovery of a lantern, a chairand some articles of freight the way from Grand Mar&is in a small boat the same sum for said number ot Dockens.N. cherished. itf (then devouring .element The, flame was __ __e in the ear they occupied war demolished, with two Indians, and sajled all night, Dec. B. The rats must be fullgrown iW'the'r and^, ^^'ti^W^^^km4i^ -thuk andstruolk^ at^ poker The fortune of A. T. Stewartof quicker ot employes mill Sargent's head, missing him ffi jfltt&Wfr i 31st, w^th the mercury at 14 degrees below three5 'or ^J*!*?* Aatorwas accumulated and no cripples."Chamber's Jour- t* ^1rf^itt,a 1 .^Bi* i, ^i^PI "ttf rVjp i&V ,*f*4* tm]0l&*k gas* ?*8*^rl JJ. ^f^ s-olli