Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 December 1878 — Page 3
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BEY. WILLIAMS.
1
A True Photograph of Him.
Interesting Developments May be Expected to Follow,
The Police Sews' Picture.
The above is a very accurate portrait of the celebrated frau and confidence man "Rev" William*, alias Walker, Hill, Harlan, &c., &c., whose exploits in the confidence line, in this citv and vicinity, have brought him 8b prominently before our citizens. His particular victims have been widows, and he appears to h^ve succeeded to a wonderful degree in obtaining their confidence. their sweetest smile*, their best room, their sweetest preserves, their nicest hot buscuit and tea, and the soft side of the susceptible widows generally, in a manner that completely outdoes any other scamp on record.
His original name is believed to be Charles Harmon, and he has a
legal
wife living in Darwin, 111., who is represented as a worthy lady, and they have a son of about twenty years of age, who, some months ago, was employed in Thomas' jewelrj store.
The Gazette has given very complete descriptions of his personal appea-ance, and his adventures,especially hereabouts, from time to time as the fa»cts became known of hun but a short repetition is here given. He is aWout fifty years (he says he will he fifty next June the
17th):
he is about five feet six inches
high of slender frame pale countenance, sympathetic features, has long wavy brown hair, which he wears in Byronic *tyle, large, light blue eyes and small hands and feet. In fact, he has been, and yet is. quite a handsome man, and this has been his stock in trade. He traveled on his bhape and cheek.
His first appearance in our city was about two months ago, when he called on the widow of ex-policemen Wm. Piper, at her home, on stnith Second street, under the name of Williams, and producing a formidable package of papers covered with scribbling (which proved to be nothing but ink marks) claimed he was in search for her, and had a large amount of property in trust for her, lelt her by a deceased relative in Canada. Now it so happens that she has expectations of such an event, and therefore very readily listened to him, admitted him to her home, where he immediately assumed all the relations of an old tiu.e, familiar friend. At last suspicions became aroused about him, which brought officer Vandever, our deputy city marshal, who, assisted by police-lieutenant Dan. Fasig, at last put an end to his fraudulent career about here.
Finding his game was discovered he managed bv adroit movements to escape capture ar.d fled across the river, leaving a valuable overcoat, in- the pockets of which the mysterious papers were found and they proved to be nothing but senseless scribbling, and showed up the real character of the fraud. He took refuge in a cornfield, west ot the river until a carriage with two ladies came up, and with his apparent good luck with women, he made th^n believe he was a minister of the gospel and had been robbed on the road.
He "took them in,"' and they took him in their carriage to their homes and fed him, &c., until he left for Illinois, and for a time was lost to sight and trace, though still to memory DEAR.'' But officers Vandever and Fasig had him in their mind all the time and watched out for him, and one day they heaid a farmer's rumor about a man at the residence of a widow named Walker about
4
miles east of Charleston, and
they determined to go over there and investigate. Proceeding to Charleston they engaged a buggy and started to ride out to tne farm of the widow, when to their intense astonishment and satisfaction they met the old fraud contentedly riding on a horse.
Investigating the matter, the officers found he was passing under the name of Walker and claiming to be a Methodist minister, the same as he did here, and that he was the custodian of a large amount of money for the widow or her sister (also a widow living on a farm near by)- He has assumed complete charge of the innocent widow's farm, had discharged her old hired man, was selling her hogs, was wearing the nice black broad cloth suit of her lamented dead husband, in fact he was right in a field of the richest clover. But he was nipped, the officers quietly put the irons on him and brought him to this citv, where he now lies the county jail.
Meantime direct information has been received by the authorities of seven wives besides his legal wife, proving his crime of bigamy, and that he has "traveled a few.'*
One wife is in Texas, one in California one in Kansas, one in Missouri, one in Illinois, (besides the real wife), and two in Indiana,.
And
letters from all over the cuntry
keep, arriving describing him and his games played upon the people,especially the women, and more especially the widows,until our officers have dubbed him
THE WIDOWS' FR1RND.
The above cut was obtained by the "Illustrated Police News," of Boston, and placed at the disoosalot the GAZETTE bv them. It was obtained by Officers Vandever and Fasig by a shrewd stratagem, after much (rouble, for he struggled violently and did his best to prevent the photographer's getting a locus,and finally the photographer became terribly frightened and, backing down, refused to take the picture.
This made the Rev. fraud happv, and he accompanied the officers, smiling at his success. But they were sharp. They found another photographer of nerve, had him take his camera up in the police court room, and get all ready then they marched the fraud up there, and before he hardly knew what was intended, the quick operator had the above picture. tp
WAS HE JUSTIFIED.
A ROMANCE FROM RURAL LIFE.
Somewhere in Fayette township is a town and in that town dwells a man whom we will call Smith, chiefly because it ain't his name and secondly because it is an excellent alias under which to hide a real man .Mr. Smith keeps a stcre and as he is a genial, accomodating man he keeps for sale everything which the good people of the country can reasonably expect him to keep.
Particularly has it been the practice Mr. Smith to keep a barrel of whis yon tap in his cellar. One in the fall and one in the spring will generally carry him through. He is very careful to whom he sells, ard so far as is known, the authorities have never given him any trouble.
One day Mr. Eliphalet Spooner (another false name) entered the store with a slight protuberance visible upon his left breast. Mr. Spooner was a Deacon, and a most proper man. He called the merchant aside, and asked him if he had ar.y good whisky. Smith nodded in the affirmative. "Will you let me have a pint?" and the Deacon pulled from his breast pocket a pint bottle. "Certainly," said the trader and forthwith he departed for the cellar. When he returned he brought the full bottle, carefully wiped and corked.
5
What is to pay?" *?***$*£ "Fifty cents. Mr. oooner handed him over a
50-
cent silver piece, and then, in a hesitating way,- drew the cork. He placed the bottle to his lips, and tasted, just a drop, to test the quality of the liquor. He did this twice, and the expression on his face was one of hesitation and doubt. "Mr. Smith," he said, "I'm getting this for my wife. Is this the very best vou have?" "Oh! you want it for medicine! "Yep, certainly.'' "If that is the case—" The sentence was finished with a smile, and reaching for the bottle.
Down into the cellar went the storekeeper again. There was'no need that he should empty the bottle to refill it, for he had but one solitary barrel from which to draw so he took a turn around and soon came back, wiping the bottle afresh. "I shall have to charge you
87
cents
for this, Mr. Spooner." Having paid the extra charge with the utmost cheerfulness, Mr. Spooner placed the bottle again to his lips, and tasted critically. "Aha!" lie uttered, with a bright smile and a grateful nod "this is something like!"
And he went away entirely satisfied. And Mr. Smith, also, notwithstanding the fraud he had perpetrated, appeared to be satisfied, if one might judge by the quiet smile that illuminated his rubicund visage. 9
NONSENSE FROM PARIS PAPERS. Jean Baptiste, discussing his master with a newly arrived cook: "Yes, my dear, that monster beats his wife like plaster The poor creature has received so many thrashings, so many thrashings —that her very eyes are blue from it !%:.• "Aren't you ashamed of yourself, Julia? You've scarcely been here a week, and here you are stealing from me al ready." "I'm very sorry, ma'am. I beg you to belive that I'd have deterred it it I could, but it was absolutely impossible."
A policeman, seizing a man who is about to blow his brains out, cried: "Unhappy, what are you going to do?" "Kill mysslf my misery is too great" "But reflect then! If you commit suicide now, what will you do if times become worse?"'
How beautiful is Science! A few days since an Academician, rising in his place, made in a tone of the deapest earnestness the following announcement: "Gentlemen, it is with unspeakable satisfaction that I have the honor of informing you that, thanks to the most persevering efforts, M. ,onr correspondent of the Maritime Alps, has succeeded injinoculating a man with the mange of a dog, a cutaneous disease which thus far has seemed wholly incompatible with the human temperament." (Prolonged enthusiasm.]
A WOMAN'S WORDS.
logersolf and Phillips Contrasted as Orators and Men.
I can very well understand the enthusiasm of the naturalist, and do not wonder at all that he sometimes 6its for hours entirely oblivious to the world and its doings, absorbed in the study of a bug impaled on a pin. I have an equally strong penchant (the word "hobby" would perhaps express my meaning better, but it doesn't sound quite so well) for studying eminent people, and never lose an opportunity of indulging it when I can avoid it-
Some of them, after being impaled for awhile on the point of a critical observation are found to be veritable big-bugs, in the truest and best sense uf the world. Large in their views of the world and in their methods for its bettering, large in their influence, and large in the results which grow out of their actions. Others turn out to be nothing but humbugs—all sound and no sense, all pretension and nothing solid on which to base it, all glitter and tinsel, which will not bear the strong, pure, light of day and which, on close inspection, shows but too plainly the tawdry shams of which it is composed. The last two weeks have furnished me as many lecturers who are worthy to lead the van of those two classes of celebrities. Of the latter class, Col. Ingersoll of the former, Wendell Phillips.
Ingersoll, whose ready wit anu native shrewdness are continually debased in pandering to the fast increasing taste for change, no matter of what nature a taste which, if it is not checked, will soon lead us to emulate the ancient Athenians who did "nothing else but strive to hear and learn something new."
He is the present head and front of that large and—but for the presence of its opposite-dangerous class of malcontents who are continually in defiance of and bent upon destroying the old, no matter how well-tried and true, merely because it is old and equally determined in their efforts to inaugurate a new order of things, no matter how wild and visionary, merely because it is new and novel. He relies for his popularity, mainly, on the approval of people whose practices are not in accordance with virtue and morality as they are taught in the Bible, and who, therefore, are not sorry to be furnished with an excuse for throwing off its restraining influence.
He denounces as hypocrites and counterfeits all those who cling to the religion of our forefathers a religion which was strong and true enough to carry them successfully and triumphantly through the grandest struggle the world has ever seen, and inspired them to form the purest and wisest government on the face of the earth.
And he persistently ignores the logical conclusion that the very existence of a hypocrite presupposes the existence of something true, which he more or less successfully personates and that a counterfeit would be an utter impossibility, but for something real which it strives to imitate. Col. Ingersoll'* attitude toward everything which Christians hold to be pure, true, and worthy of acceptation, is one of chronic defiance. His arguments are a conglomeration of ridicule and swagger, bombast and braggadocio, held together by a ready thinking, and becohe fane/ of the unber conviction is mej to them what soto those of stronger mental calibre. That he has adherents, may be further explained by an apt quotation ffom a recent sermon, which was live in itself, and enlivening in its effects. "If you 6ay a thing long enough, and loud enough, and with sufficient enthusiasm, you generally can get some "'people to believe it, no matter how absurd and how false it may be." Col. Ingersoll doesn't lack persistence for the "long enough, nor strength of lung for "loud euough," and. the cool thousands which his peculiar views have coined for him will, perhaps, explain the "sufficient enthusiasm." The inordinate craving for "something new," which has been referred to before, accounts for the "some people." If I were a minister of the gospel I shou !d not argue with him. Such a course only tends to dignify his rank, and give it the semblance of reality. The only argument necessary, it seems to me, is to call attention to the logic of facts. Let the civilization of Bible lands be compared with that of those countries where the religion of Christ has no controlling influence What more is needed? But the superlative degree of all things unreasonable, inconsistent, and suicidal, has certainly
been
reached when a woman indorses such sentiments as those Col. Ingersoll advocates. O, yes, I know all that is said about the happy family life *h'ch is held up as the result of his infidelity, and I don't believe one word of it He may be iast as good a husband and father as he is represented to be, but, If so, it is not by reason of his principles but spite of them. And then one swallow doesn make a summer by any means.
SVe have no way of judging the future save by the experience of the past and this being no guide as regards causes and effects, once let such sentiments as those he holds gain sway and woman inevitably
loses
her piesent position and sinks again into a drudge or a toy. With what relief we turn from the contemplation of this strong, but perverted character, to his successor on our lecture stand, Wendell Phillips stood before his audience on last Monday evening the embodiment of stern, unbending adherence to principle, through forty years of public life, and against such strong and, at first, universal opposition that the stoutest heart might well have questioned the expediency of continued effort. Through all these years he has wrought with hand and brain natientlv
but
TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE
VH. J.
Two Lecturers From a Woman's Standpoint.
persistently to overcome
the evils of day and
foundlt'" SftatfiJErtta? Sd„s with no high rounding rubbish hnt pave his views on the issues of the datSainly, simply, and with no striving
after
effect, or waiting tor applause, and however much we may find in hii senate tn disbelieve we cannot fail to be impressed with th. rn.je.ty of hi. strong
purpose. His presence isin itselfimpressive. His appearance most emphatically indicates the intellectual man. While pondering on the early education, the probable advantages, and potent circumstances which moulded this noble character, and contrasting him with hoary ignorance, or crime, examples of both of which are painfully numerous in the world, I was reminded of a passage from Thoreau: "We are all sculptors and painters and our materials are our own flesh and blood and bone. Any nobleness begins at once to refine a man's features, atiy meanness or sensuality to em brute them." And what could form a more valuable object lesson for the youth of our land who have reached an age when they must choose whom they will serve through life, and what they will become, than to take some broken, tottering wretch, the wreck of a once strong and comely man, whose dismal plight is the direct result of wickedness or crime, and stand him up beside this noble specimen of manhood, the outgrowth of a long life spent in the earnest effort to preserve the divine likeness in which he was created. The contrast of this spectacle would preach more powerfully than words."
In his earlier years, he and a small but a determined band of comrades, waged fierce war against the then existing giant wrong of centuries. Their members were ridicuously small, their sentiments dangerously unpopular, and their cause seemingly hopeless. But he has lived to triumph as it is not given to many reformers to do. No wonder that he has courage to attack the wrongs of the present. The poet gives us exhortation and a promise thus:
Do then thy work it shall suoeed In thine or in another's day. Thou may'at not win the victor's meed.
But thou shalt earn the toiler's pay.
Wendell Phillips, however, is 60 ex ceptionally favored of fate that the "victor's meed" is his in his own day. An in all his works we find no evidence of selfish or sordid motive. In this partic lar he is a worthy son of our revolutio ary sires—he strikes for the right, he" understands the right, relying for strength upon the Almighty arm, and is willing
10
Altogether his character is such that, although we may not always agree with him, we are still forced to admire his devotion to principle. A devotion so marked and undeviating, that he is worthy to be held up to our children as one whose example it would be well for them to follow.
He is not so "amusing" as Col. Ingersoll, it must be confessed, but still it is a pity that his utterances—the emanations of one of the master minds of the age, and the result of years of careful study and earnest thought, should have been wasted on such an array of empty seats.
TWO COURTINGS.
But it is the story of Ursula's courtship, as she herself once told it to a teasing and favorite child, that the reader shall have as that of another "woman who dared."
It happened in thiswise. Mr. Matthew Griswold, tall, shy and awkward, but scholarly and kind, early in his life wooed a lady in a distant town, who had another string to her bow in the person of the village doctor. For a long time she had kept her Lyme lover in a state of uncertainty, in the hope that she might draw out a proposal from his professed rival. After some months of this dallying Mr. Griswold determined to have the matter settled, and so one day rode to the town, entered her house, and once more tendered heart and hand. "Oh, Mr. Griswold, you must give me more time," said the lady. "I give you your life-time,, miss," was the indignant reply whereat the youth bowed himself out, flung into the saddle and galloped awav forever, leaving the maiden who maiden was forevermore, as her bird in the bush never was caught.
To Matthew, disconsolate at his beautiful home amid that magnificent grove of elms that still shelter the old Griswold homestead at Black Hall, on the shore of the Sound, just east of the mouth of the Connecticut River, appeared soon after his cousin Ursula, a little his senior in years, but inheriting the beauty, pride and ready wit of her grandmother, Mar-
She "came, saw, conquered," but, warned by his past experience, Matthew was slow* to speak, though his looks and actions betrayed his feelings toward his pretty cousin. Things ran on this way for a space until one stormy day, near the close of her visit, Ursula, descending the dark, old oaken staircase, suddenly encountered her cousin ascending. Meeting him more than half way, she, stopping suddenly, said sweetly: "What did you say,Ceusin Matthew?" "Oh, I didn't speak I didn't say anything." "High time you did, cousin high time you did."
The future Governor was not blow to take the hint, and speedily found his tongue, and this is how Ursula Wolcott became Ursula Griswold and for twentyfive years always had a near relative in the Governor's chair in old Connecticut.—[Sunday Afternoon.
AN IMPORTANT COVERNMENT "SUIT. 't St. Louis, November 30.—Tfhe
Pedge
let the consequences take care
of themselves. It would be better for the safety of the Republic if there were more like him.
\IN in the right side, under the of the ribs, increases on pressure sometimes the pain is in the left side the patient is rarely able to lie on the left side sometimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in the arm. The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness the bowels in general are costive, sometimes alternative with lax the head is troubled with pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part. There is generally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation of having left undone something which ought to have been done. A slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant. The patient complains of weariness and debility he is easily startled, his feet are cold or burning, and he complains of a prickly sensation of the skin his spirits are low and although he is satisfied that exercise would be beneficial to him, yet he can scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, vet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LIVER to have been extensively deranged.
McLane,
United
States District court has rendered judgement for the government against, George Atcheson, for failing to account for the between fourteen and fifteen thousand dollars, placed in his hands as an army officer, for distribution among the Indians in Minnesota, in September 1S70.
Frequent demands have been
made by the government upon Atcheson to refund or account for the amount stated, but no attention being paid to the matter by him, suit was entered and the defendant failing to appear when the case came on, judgement was entered for the government in default.
Scene in a prison. Visiting clergyman: "Tell me something about your past life, my good friend. Tell me what brought you to this dreadful place.' Prisoner: "A peeler, sir."
EX-crescents—the old moons.—[Lo well Courier.
Nothing
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45 Years Before the Public.
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DR.
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AGUE AND FEVER. DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, IN CASES OF AGUE AND FEVER, when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy, results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to, sr after taking Quinine. We would advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a PAIR TRIAL.
For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. .• •, ,•
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FOR THE CURE OF
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DVSParSIA AND SICK HBADACHB.
Symptoms of a BiiMMd U«r,
The genuine MCLANE'S LIYRR PILLS War the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS, on the wrappers.
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spelled differently bat
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