iJcc*was I drew from him his side of the story.He said that he had become ac-sit-?ed3er-nd,l0 | quainted with Miss McMahon in Oct-me I °^er la8t» and that his attentions the young lady had been sanctioned by her parents until last January, when he became involved in a scrapewis with Mr. George Lea, the proprietor rs, of the Delaware House, who had hadied visited him, and on his return to or I Port Jervis, he had been forbidden dse | by her parents to call at the hoflse. , dm I Miss McMahon, however, he claimstnd permitted his attentions and he met the her frequently. This fact coming tothe knowledge of her parents waswn the cause of frequent quarrels be-aee tween the mother and dadghter, and ch- Foley’s story is that on Tuesday lastAl- a quarrel more violent than any of the the preceding ones, in which the ind I mother had struck the girl, caused the the latter to leave the house. Shevillage for that purpose. He says t0 that he boarded the Monticello train**■» and rode back to the depot, and sent Ift0 es pressman to her home. He•bls claims that he can produce witnessesmm ^ ^ Hey, | him arrested and convicted of an at-the tempt to beat his board bill at the ive hotel. He served sixty days in Go-?ht shen jaii for this offense, during j pO hat which time he claims Miss McMahon1hat went to New York and stayed with a of | friend. Who this friend was Foleyrefused to tell. She returned to Port i u e'de- Jervis on Wednesday, but not to her tonty home, spending Wednesday night.?rs, with a friend whose name also Foley | '.rn- refused to reveal.upure | On Thursday morning he met her,and she told him of her trouble, and I ]they went to the woods on the banks of the Neversink, where he left her, Preturning to Port Jervis for sand-1 (wiches. On his return to her she T asked him to have an expressman go ere 1 to her home and get her trunk, va-1 ,lise, etc., and he started back to theset%£tei