137

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Facsimile

Transcription

WATTERSON

Says Cleveland Must be Nominated by the Democrats at the Next Convention.

Mrs. Parsons Grows Wrathy and Asserts a Desire for Independence and Freedom.

Lynched in Indiana by an Angry Crowd - Lost in a Snow Storm

Land Decisions.

WASHINGTON, July 10. -- A general principle of long standing and considerable importance in the administration of public land matters is reaffirmed by Acting Secretary Muldrow in his ruling upon the case of James Young, a homestead entry man of Salt Lake City. Its purport is that no amount of cultivation and improvement and no showing of good faith in other respects can stone for the lack of actual....

court room and then the crowd walked away leaving the body swinging.

Married but Once.

OMAHA, Neb., July 19. -- A Washington dispatch to the New York World of several days ago in relation to Buffalo Bill and his married life does Mr. Cody great injustice. Mr. Cody was married but once, some twenty-five years ago, to a German lady at Leavenworth, Kan., and his daughter by that marriage is now with him in London. In the first place, Mr. Cody never married Col. Whitely's widow, and, in the next place, he never knew her. J. C. Richmond, a young lawyer in Washington, became acquainted with Col. Whitely and his wife before the colonel's death. Subsequently Richmond came West and located at Pueblo, Col., in the practice of his profession. After the Colonel's death a correspondence took place between Richmond and the widow Whitely, which resulted in their marriage at the Grand Central hotel in Denver is in th early '70s. After a brief period of bliss in Pueblo, Mr. Richmond obtained a divorce from his wife. She went west, and soon after died in San Francisco, Cal.

Notes and Questions

Nobody has written a note for this page yet

Please sign in to write a note for this page