GERONIMO 18 OUT OF THUS WAT. Now Come Rnmor * of Indian Trou ble * Outside c > / Arizona. Washington special : Nothing is known at the war department or Indian bureau of the alleged outbreak of trouble between the Indians on the Great Blackfect reserva tion , in southern Montana , of which ru mors and specific accounts have roachcc the western press. This reservation has the greatest number of fragments of tribes of any reservation in the United States It comprises an area of 33,830 square miles , or nearly as largo as tho state o Ohio , and contains 23.051,200 acres Upon it are three agencies the Blackfeot at which are gathered remains of the Black feet blood , and Piegan tribes ; Fort Peck agency , the rendezvous of the Assinaboine ' Brule , San tee , Leon , Uncpmpabgre unc Yankton Sioux , and Fort Belknnp agency about which aro gathered Gros Ventro , As flinabnine and a few river Crows. None o these Indians have any great love for each other , and if the bands from the diffcren agencies run across one another somebody generally loses a scalp. Information has been received here from time to time o brawls and drunken fights , but none as se rious as the last reported outbreak. It is feared that these Indians , especially the Blackfeet and Gros Ventre. who are espo cially aggressive , are preparing to go upon the war path against their neighbors ant thefe * whites in northern Montana this fall. The "war" could nob be very formid * / in P able , as there are not over 7,000 Indians of all tribes on the reservation , but it coulc be made very unpleiisant around the agen cies and for isolated whites until the mil itary forces could be gotten into motion. Assistant Adjutant General Kelton sail yesterday : "We have three regiments of in fantry and two of cavalry about tho reser vation , and I think if any outbreak wero to occur it could be handled without any greal difficulty. " f V SITUATION IN ARIZONA. It is believed at the war department thai the capture of Gcnonimo has practically put an end to Indian hostilities in thai country. An army officer talking with a reporter to-day saidthatit depended upon the conduct of tho whites and how the In dians are treated by tho agents on tho agencies whether there would be any further trouble. If the Indians were treated pro * * , perly they would probably all remain quiet. ' The capture of Geronimo clears Arizona ol hostilities. The Indians most likely to give trouble now are tho Uncompahgres , in the mountains of Colorado , and those in tho wilds of Washington terriory. These aro not particularly savage , but they are in re gions where it is easy for them to hide away , and they are liable to plunder. Ono trouble , he eavs , is that the whites are too aggressive. They try to take advantage of the Indians and to bully them. No dis patches u ere received from General Miles this morning and nothing can yet be learned as to nhat will probably be done with Geronimo and his band now that they aro captured. GERONIMO ORDERED HELD. San Francisco dispatch : General 0. O. Howard , commander of the division of the Pacific , received a dispatch from Lieutenant General Sheridan to-day directing that the Apache and Warm Spring tribes be sent immediately to Forfc Marion , Fla. , with the exception of Geronimo and other Apaches recently captured. All the latter Avill be taken to Fort Bowie , where they will be confined under close guard until the gov ernment shall determine what shall be dono with them. It is understood , however , that Geronimo and other hostiles will be tried by a military commission at that place. They will not be turned over to the civil authorities , as the district attorney claims to be unable to procure positive evidence. General Howard gives it as his opinion that to save their necks some ol the hostiles will turn state's evidence , as was the case with tho Modoc marauders. The Apaches at Fort Apache will start to morrow for their new home. GEXERAZ FEITS A2TD XOTES. The democrats carried the election in Arkansas. The New York emigration committee are allowing moneyed Mormons to land. Charleston. Knights of Labor have in creased the scale of prices 50 cents per day. The earthquake death record at Charles ton was : While , 11 ; colored , 27 ; total , 38. Bernardino Bondelli , the Italian philolo gist and antiquarian , is dead. Ho was 82 years old. Mrs. H. P. Ransom , of Lexington , Ky. , will sue the Globe-Democrat and Cincinnati Enquirer for slander. Supervisors Larkin , Gallaher and Car roll , of Brooklyn , are held for attempting to defraud Kings county. The lord mayor of London has opened a s fund for the relief of the sufferers by the re cent earthquake in Charleston. The city of Pittsburghas obtained § 400- , 000 from Dr. David Hostetter as security for Contractor Andrew Hartapel. State Veterinarian Casnell of Illinois has decided that the disease which caused the death ol ten or twelve cows near Decaturia Texas fever. It was brought to"Decaturby a herd of Cherokee cattle. They have been isolated and no further spread of the fever is expected. Sioux City special : Another new rail road project was made public here to-day. This is an air line from Sioux City to Den ver , tapping the great cattle ranges of Nebraska and Colorado. The. proposed road will cross the Union Pacific at North Platte and induce the building of a bridge .here across the Missouri. Bulgarian notables have joined in a peti tion to the czar. They ask whetherRussia will allow the national assembly to elect a successor to Alexander , and whether Rus sia will grant Bulgaria a loan. If their demands are not acceded to the notables intend to oppose the departure of Alexan der. der.The The Neue Freie Presse , in a leading edito rial on the Bulgarian situation , hints that Austria's action will be taken independent ly of Germany , and says : "Everybody is speaking of the impending occupation of Bulgaria by Russia. Perhaps it is not BO near as is generally believed. Austria has not spoken yet. " At a mass meeting of Knights ol Labor held to-night the following rate of wages for mechanics and laborers tvas agreed to , a raise -of 50 cants having been made in each class : Bricklayers , first class , $3.50 , second class , S3 ; carpenters ; first classl-T , second , § 3.50 and $3 ; tinners , $2.50 and § 3 ; laborers , 51.50 and $2. $2.The A'eics and Courier will publish to-mor row interviews with a number of prominent business men , all indicating a remarkable decree of hopefulness as to the business out look in this city. / - " It has been officially announced that the suspicions deaths In Netv Orleans hut week & were caused by yellow fever. \ IMPORTANT TO MAST FAK3IES8. Dtsrcyard of tfie Atlantic and Pacific for an Act of Congress. Washington special : A decision by the commissioner of the general land office is made publicwhich may prove of very great importance to many farmers in tho west It is upon the homestead claim of Danie Z. Rogers who tookupa small tract of lane along tho line of tho St. Louis & San Fran cisco railroad , but has neverbeen able to perfect a patent. The trouble is that the congressional land grants to the South Pa cific and its successors , the Atlantic & Paci fic railroad 'of Missouri , conflict with tho claim of Rogers. Congress first made a grant o ! the evon numbered sections along the line of the South Pacific from Franklin to the Mseouri state line six miles deep. Subsequently a charter was granted to the Atlantic & Pacific from Springfield to tho Pacific coast , giving them the odd num bered sections for a strip ten miles deep , with a provision that this grant should bo diminished by the amount already granted to the South Pacific. The condition wai ignored and the Atlantic & Pacific located all its land between Springfield and tho state land without regard to the previous locations made by the South Pacific. Ir this way the entire strip on both sides ol the track , including both odd and evon numbered sections , was taken up. Tho Rogers claim was located upon one of the odd numbered sections , for which tho gov ernment has given the Atlantic & Pacific railroad a patent. The decision of the land office is to the effect that patents for tho odd numbered sections were issued in direct violation o ! law , and are therefore void. Upon this ground the claim of If r. Rogers is sustained. This would be unimportant in itself , but the principle involved in thisdecision o ! the land office necessarily affects'all the land illegally located by the Atlantic & Pacific railroad , for which patents have boon issued. This is stated to aggregate 100- , 000 acres , and it is believed all the land has passed out of the hands of the railroad company to innocent purchasers for a val uable consideration. As is well known the land is thickly populated and expensive improvements have been made. The decision means that all these people aro occupying land which really belongs to the government , so that tho effect of the decision would be much more severe to them than to the railroad company. A similar case , presented in the case of a man named West , who holda about eighty acres , was decided by Commissioner Sparks about two mouths ago. In this decision he took the same view as has been taken by Assistant Commissioner Stockslager as announced to-day. While there is ap- paiently no reason to question the strict legality of the view taken by the land ollice , the grievous complications such a decision would cause were so apparent to Assistant Secretary Hawins when the case came up to him on appeal that the matter was at once presented by him to Secretary Lamar , and the case has been hung up. It is altogether improbable that any decision will be made by Mr. Lamar , and he will piobably refer the matter to congress when it meets. To sustain tho decision of tho land oliice would be in effect to throw all tlio land open to homestead and pre-emp tion claims , and Secretary Lamar will probably ask congress to pass a bill con firming the title of the settlers who are on the land , nndauthorizingsuittobebrousht against the railroad company. OKAIX IX THE NORTU1FJBST. Minneapolis special : The receipts o ! wheat are now very heavy from first hands in Dakota , but , considering the big yield , light in Minnesota. Thenumber of cars on side track in Minneapolis increased from 350 Friday to 557 to-day. Receipts here have grown from about 125 cars a day a week ago to 398 cars to-day. Still Duluth is ahead with 500 cars to-day , and an av erage of some 300 cars a clay all of last week. The reason of the large receipts in Duluth are partially because the Duluth re ceipts are in larger proportion from Da kota than the Minneapolis receipts , while Minneapolis gets the larger proportion of the Minnesota crop. In addition prices have been relatively higher in Duluth. The situation was similar a year ago , Duluth leading off early with a heavy movement" , with Minneapolis coming on the home stretch. Cargill Brothers , who operate a line of 45 houses on the Manitoba , road say that five houses oub of 45 on their line is full and closed. At one station 65,000 bushels have been received already , while the total receipts at the same station last year was only 125,000 bushels. Over half a million bushels have been marketed at the company's elevators already on this crop. A. B. Robbins of the Northwestern Elevator company reports their elevators full and iv orking from hand to mouth to make room for arriving grain. The Mani toba company is reported short of cars and unable to handle the wheat furnished , and grain men are anticipating a continued scarcity of handling facilities. Ib is said that Minnesota wheat is held and that nearly all receipts up to the present time have been Dakota. A prominent commis sion man yesterday bought about fifty cars for outside parties , understood to bo Mil waukee millers , and it is claimed that the dissatisfaction with the transit arrange ment , has made a twenty-five cent rate [ rora James river points to Milwaukee and Chicago , against twenty-three for Minne apolis. A SHORT XZEIO OF CORTf. The Chicago Farmers' Review in this week's issue prints the following crop sum mary : The frosb which prevailed throughout a jortion of the corn belt during one night of ; he last week causes very little damage to growing corn. Reports indicate that while ; he drouth and continued hot weather ueri- ously injured the general prospects of corn , t also accelerated the ripening of grain , and in sections of Missouri , Kansas , Iowa and Minnesota a portion of the crop has sufficiently matured to bo beyond a danger rom the frosts. Reports indicate that , as a whole , the corn ciop will bo out of the vay of frost within fifteen days , if not at- ; acked prior to then , and a large propor- ion of the crop cannot be seriously menaced even now. The general prospects for the output of corn showno marked improvement. The enor of the reports from all the states ex cept Ohio , Indiana , Michigan and Minne sota continue to predicate a short crop , n the four states named the prospects continue favorable for a full average yield , vhile the majority of the counties estimate .he yield at from 45 to G5 per cent. Re- ) orts from one-half of the counties would ndicate a general average of 62 per cent , leporte from one-half of the counties would indicate a general average of 62 per ent. Twenty-six Ohio counties estimate an average of 61 per cent. Kansas , Mis- ouri and Wisconsin give promise of about one-half the usual yield. The reports indicate that the pastures are rapidly drying up , though in portions ) f Illinois and Iowa late rains have served o renew the gross somewhat. Early ilanted potatoes are generally Rood , but 'he ' late planted are poor and in many dis- : ricts a flat failure. Hogs are generally re ported healthy with only scattering re- torts as yet o ! cholera. SEARCnUfG FOR I.OST TREASURE. A Doctor Tooklng for JITonejJJuried Near yeto Orleans. Now Orleans dispatch : Dr. George J. Adams of Massachusetts was arrested hero to-day charged with embezzlement by a number of persons wliom he defrauded out of money to search for hidden treasure. Adams claims to havo been a practising physician in Massachusetta. When tho war broke out lie joined company A , Twelfth Massachusetts volunteers , which were a portion of thecommand which came with Butler to New Orleans. In a foraging expedition three soldiers of tho regiment entered a dwelling on the Magnolia planta tion , twenty miles above New Orleans , on the right bank of the river , and carried off some § 30,000 in gold and silver. One thousand eight hundred dollars of it was in silver half dollars , $1,000 in dollars , and the rest in gold. Being afraid to enter tho city with BO much money , on reaching a pecan grove , about half a mile from tho locks at tho company's canal opposite Greenville , or rather the upper end of tho exposition grounds , they selected a tree , prominent for its size and some peculiari ties about appearance which made it con spicuous. At the foot of this tree they buried the money and took bearings , ono of tho party being a civil engineer. Each of the three men wero furnished with a copvof this and the marauders returned to New Orleans , intending to return after tho war and recover the money. His two companions were killed and Adams WHS desperately wounded soon after. Adams was taken to a southern hospital aud left it paralyzed and perfectly helpless. "When he recovered the use of his limbs , only a month ago , ho returned to New Orleans and at once began to search for his treasure. He found , to his dismay , that all the older pecan trees had been cut down and only young ones left , and was , consequently , unablo to recognize tho treo under which the treasure" was buried. Ho devoted himself , however , for three weeks , to delving for it. A few days ago he took several other parties into partnership with him , who advanced a better outfit for sur veying the land and digging for the buried money , but as he has succeeded in unearth ing no treasure his partners had him arrest ed to-day. AN IMPROVEMENT NOTED. September Report of the Department of Agriculture. The September report of the department of agriculture showed a better yield ol spring wheat than was expected a month ago. There has been an improvement in the northern belt of Wisconsin , Minnesota and Dakota. In Nebraska there has been a decline , and in Iowa but little change. The general average is 84 , an increase of four points. The average yield of the crops , so far as the results of threshing aro reported , exceed eleven bushels , and may reach eleven and a half bushels per acre. Threshing of winter wheat iu the Ohio val ley gives better returns than expected at harvest , and there is some improvement in Missouri and Kansas. In the middle and eastern states the percentages of July are not materially changed. In the south the harvest was disappointing , and rains in jured the product in shock. Returns indi cate an average yield of about twelve and a half bushels per acre. The entire wheat product will apparently exceed that of last year by 80,000,000to 90000,000 bushels. The exact determination of the area har vested and the result of threshing are easily equivalent to a variation of at least 2 per rent. The crop has declined from 81 in August to 77. In the states of the prin cipal production the status is as follows : Kentucky , from .87 in August to .90 in September ; Ohio , .88 to 89 ; Michigan , .80 in northern returns ; Indiana , .91 to .92 ; Illinois declines from .77 to .72 ; Missouri , from .75 to .62 ; Kansas , .72 to .62 ; Ne- 'braska , .76 to .68 ; Iowa , .73 to .67. The loss westof Indiana was caused by drought. In the south Atlantic states there has been no improvement. On the gulf const there is a slight improvement , oxcept in Texas , where the droughts has reduced the condi tion of tho present crop prospect , with no further decline it is 14 per cent more than last j'ear and indicates over twenty-one bushels per acre , or nearly sixteen hundred million bushels. HE KTLT.ED HIS WIFE. d. Woman Shot , Keiny Mistaken for ylar. Word comes from Carlinville , 111. , ol a terrible tragedy which occurred there on the 5th at the residence o ! J. B. Willoughby. Two burglars entered the room of Mr. and Mrs. Willoughby and while searching the room they awakened Willoughby. Both thieves immediately attacked him and struck him over the head with a revolver. He seized the revolver and succeeded in wrenching it away. Tho room was pitch dark , and in the struggle Mrs. Willoughby was knocked down and beaten. Her screams almost maddened her husband , and as soon as he secured the revolver he turned it in the direction he supposed the burglars were standing , and fired five shotn. One of tho men dropped , but immediately arose and both jumped through a windovr and made their escape. The husband then lighted a lamp and was horrified to dis cover the body of his wife lying on the floor with a stream ol blood flowing from her left side. Her white night garments were sat urated with her life blood and the room looked more like a slaughter house than anything else. A physician was called and pronounced Mrs. Willoughby's wound fatal. She was accidentally shot by her husband v , hile he was firing at burglars. The bullet passed through her body , and death will re sult. One of the burglars was shot as he lefb a bloody trail for some distance Neither has been arrested. SUCCESS THAT IS PLEASING. Washington dispatch : The treasury offi cials are pleased with the success that has thus far attended their invitations to hold ers of 3 per cent bonds to surrender them for redemption. Of the SIO.000,000 in cluded in the new form of call , about $1,000,000 have been presented for re demption. The purpose of the new de parture was to obtain bonds for redemp tion from individuals and corporations willing to convert them into cash to use in nore profitable improvements , and thus obviate the necessity for ealling bonds held by national banks , thereby forcing a sur- ender of national bank currency. The jonds redeemed under the treasury invita tion were surrendered by parties other than national banks. It is now expected that the entire $10,000,000 n-ill be surrendered within tho time specified , but whatever amount is thus presented will Have the bonds of the banks to that extent. It is > roposed to continue this policy of invit- ne the surrender of 3 per cent bonds , and t is probable that a rule will be adopted under which holders of such bonds may present them at any time and have them redeemed with accrued interest to the day of redemption. The highest peak oo the Wand of Galita , off Tunis , Is in a state of eruption. It has been supposed to be extinct * ft JUDGE ZUBIA'S DECISION. Why tho Mclcan Jurist Held Cutting ns Guilty of n Crime. Crrr OP MEXICO , Aug. 13. The Eiario , the ofllcJal government organ , to-day contains Im portant documents regarding thcCuttingcasc , including the lull text of the decision of Judge Zubia at Paso Del Norte , which show dearly and unmistakably that the court held Cutting for a crime begun on Mexican soil , and continued simultaneously in Texas ami Jlexteo. This puts a new phase on the case , as it shows Judge Zubla regarded the case as one continuous act. In passing sentence on Cutting , the judge said the batis of the crimi nal proceeding against the defendant was the first proof before him that he had committed an offense classed as a crime by the law , the evidence of which was afforded beyond dis pute , by a publication which app-ared In 1 CetttiiieUa. on June 6 last , a paper published on Mexican soil ; secondly , that although it WHS true there was on act of conciliation which would have satisfied the offended party had it been complied with , it was also true this act of conciliation was not fulfilled and , there fore , the crime still stood ; third , proof of lack of compliance with the aim of conciliation is found in a communica tion printed by Cutting in the El Paso Sunday Herald in which he renewed his defamatory charges acaiust Medina , and at the same time published an article in - Y CeiUhiella on Mexi can soil , in which he suppressed the capital letters and put the name of Medina in microscopic type in order to make its reading d.llicult ; fourth , the renewal of the charges did not constitute a new offense but was con firmation of previous charges ; fifth , this being so the criminal responsibility of Cutting arose from the publication in El C&ittiiella , which was renewed iu a Texas l > aper , his renewal or ratification not constituting a new crime which should be punished with a different penalty than that which corresponded to the first publication. The judge further says : "Even supposing without conceding it , that the crime of de famation had bee"n committed in Texas , the fact that Cutting had in Paso del Norte copies of the El Paso Suwiay Herald of which Medina complained , and which were by order of the court seized , on the premises of Cut ting on Mexican soil , constitutes properly a consummation of the crime accot ding to the penal code. " Judge Zubia lays special emphasis on the fact that Cutting actually circulated on Mex ican soil his renewal of the libel published iu Texas , and declares that were the case revers ed he would be punishable under the present code in Texas. A. P. Gushing , an American lawyer , sums upZubia's decision thus : Cutting was con victed of a repetition of the libel first pub lished in Mexico and reprinted more virufeut- 1 > in Texas , which he then brought over and distributed in Mexico and it was the distribu tion iu Mexico of the second libel and not the printing of the same in Texas for which he was convicted , the libel having been read by three or more persons , as required by the statutes of the state of Chihuahua. Cutting pleaded in bar to the jurisdiction of the Mexi can court that the paper had been printed iu Texas. He did not , however , deny that the paper had been circulated on the Mexican side , which was a fact , numerous copies hav ing been seized there by order of the court This aspect of the case takes away the phase Of a conflict of law of the two countries. The publication of a full text of Judge Zubias' decision is regarded here as putting the case out of international controversy. CONTRIBUTIONS FOR CHARLESTON. Catholics Culled on A Good Sum from New 1'or/- , Baltimore special : Copies of the follow ing circular letter have been sent to all pas tors o ! the Catholic churches in province ol Baltimore : Rev. and Dear Sir : In this hour ol distiess the stricken city of Charleston appeals to our pity and our practical char ity. We cannot better convey to you the end story of her needs than by quoting the \i ords of a telegram received from the Rt. Rev. Bishop Northrop : "Everything wrecked. Churches , con vents , schools and residences are totally destroyed. The ruin is impossible to de scribe. Sisters , priests and orphans are camping out. Wo need all the assistance we can get. " It is our bountlen duty to come forward promptly to the succor of the victims of this terrible calamity , to assist those whose miseries are so great and whose wants are so pressing. A collection will therefore be taken up the last Sunday of September (2Gth ( jiist. ) , in the churches of the arch diocese , for the relief of the sufferers. Please read this letter on the Sunday fol lowing its receipt , and on the clay of the collection , and e.xhort the members of your flock to give willingly and generously. We trust th.it each of our faithful children will be mindful of the injunction of holy writ , "If thou hast much yivc abundantly , if thou have little , take caie even to bestow willingly. " Pleat > e .send the proceeds of the collection to the chancellor of the arch diocese. Very Faithfully yours in Christ , JAMES CARDINAL GIBBONS , Archbishop of Baltimore. Of A. HAD CONDITION. CHARLESTON , S. CSept. . 9. A sharp out harmless shock of earthquake occurred be tween 1 and 2 o'clock this morning , but the city is quiet to-day. Shelter has been pretty well provided for all the homeless , but the ex pected rains will cause much suffering. Ra tions are being issued to all persons who are recommended by any reputable citizen. Charleston will also furnish rations in the game way to destitute persons at Summerville and Mount Pleasant , Mayor Courtenay to-day issued a second addrees to the people , in which he says that he can testify to the large damage throughout the whole ex'tent of the city , and that it can be truthfully said o the community as a whole that their moral courage and heroism were equal to their great dicaster. He shows in brief what was accomplished in the midst of the crisis , and mentions particularly the devo tion to duty of the firemen of the city , the " ' constancy "of the police force , the fide'litj of the telegraph operators and the zeal and courage of the municipal medical corps and private physicians of the city. In conclusion be offers the following advice for the best in terests of the people : At Wie end of sixty days we must surely expect ooW weather ami I am alarmed nt the consequences to follow the ue of tents and frail ste'ters In our streets ami public cua > s , which must lead surely to sicklies , ana calamity. I returned this day to occupy ttve antajured part of my brick house , and In all such cases where ictnrn to their homes Is po < 8lule , I earnestly Invoke the Immediate and united action , of all my fellow citizens. Where Immediate return la impoorilnle by reatou of the dauzcrous condition of the home. I recommend a temporary refuge In tbe Interior of the state or elsewhere. \NO \ MORE EVICTIONS. DUBLIN , Sept. 9. The troops engaged in the Woodford evictions on their return to the barracks atBlrr protested against the work of forcibly putting helpless , infirm and starving people out of shelter into the roadway and declared they would in future refuse to per form such an obnoxious duty. No effort on the part of their superior pflicers could quiet the determined indignation of the soldiers , twenty of whom were placed under ai re t oa a charge of mutiny. AN AMERICAN IMPRISONED. LONDON , Sept. 9. An American citizen named Perdicaris , resident in Tangier has been fined and imprisoned by the American asul for offering armed resistance to native officials , aud officials from the American cou- Hilate who were endeavoring to enter his house to arrest a moor accused of extortion by the consulate. The commissioners of immigration at Castle Garden , having been sternly criticised for ad mitting polygamists , have decided to recog nize no more Mormon ship-loads , but deal only with individual immigrants. REV. JAMES BEECHER. A Description of His Hermit "Life and Ilorailt Home In tho Cats- kill Mountain Region. The suicide of Her. James Beecher , writes Halston in The New York Times , ends an extremely uniquo career. Six or eight years ago I inot him away up in tho Catskill Mountain region ; he had built him a homo there in the depths of the backwoods and was liv ing the life of a hermit. Once ho was a power in his church , an ornament ol the pulpit , noted less than , but much akin in eloquence to his half brother , Henry Ward Beccher. Ho was the pastor of the First Congregational church of Poughkeepsie at the time when the accusations against his broth er , of the Plymouth church , began to be bruited about. Before Henry Ward was called to court James is said to have sought him at his Westchester county home with a result that was not inspiriting to the visitor. Ho re turned to Poug'hkeepsio to lock himself in his study , and for days he refused absolutely to sec even his staunchest personal friends. When ho did come forth to tho world again it was as a changed man ; geniality , sunny nature , jollity had given way to a manner that was curt and a disposition that had a large proportion of sadness in it. His church offered him a vacation ; he quit it for good. He went to the Ulster Catskills and built with his own hands in the Hardonburg forest the home where I found him. Col. Judson ( Ned Buntline ) was one of the self-exiled preacher's friends , and it was largely through the inlluenco of a letter that Buntline wrote me that I managed to find time on a short va cation to hunt up "the genius" Bunt- line's title for him. I found him one of the most entertaining of men ; a little careless of the world's doings , but full of pleasing anecdote and reminiscence. I am tempted to copy an extract from the letter with which Ned Buntline first interested me in James Bcecher. It has a double interest now its descrip tion of the hermit home and hermit life of the erst prominent priest , and tho fact that it is a bit of work of Ned Bunt- line , who so lately lay down his pen forever , work that Ned Buntliue dashed off to a friendly correspondent Bunt- line in undress , if you please. This is the way the letter ran : . . . "His track of land is densely wooded and covers an area a little more than a mile square , but Hardenburg land , according to the Ulster county tax roll , is not the costilest in the world , [ its average value bjingG3 cents an acre , ] and this tract would not have been over cheap at the price of a dozen trade dollars. A beautiful lake of good size occupies a portion of the property , and there is in all the Cat- skill range no scenery more pleasingly . 'Beecher's Lake the picturesque. , na tives call it , and on one of the mountain cliffs commanding a line view of it the preacher built for himself his home , do ing all the work himself. It is a story- aud-half structure , plain , neat , and comfortable. At the time of its erec tion there was no wagon road within half a dozen miles , the nearest hamlet and postoffice were ten miles distant , while it was about three times the lat ter distance to the first railroad station. He finished his house before winter really set in , and there till spring lie lived a life of thorough solitude. He had no neighbors , and aside from his faith and his thoughts he knew no com panionship but such as was given by the winter storms and the night cries of the mountain wild beasts , iiis wife and daughter were not with him yet. They were not to come till spring time , though meanwhile they were faithful correspondents , and when the little hamlet of Ttirnwood received its week ly budget of mail matter Jamos Bocch- er was always among the fortunates. Everv Friday he tramped ten miles through the snow for this favor. With June came Mrs. Beecher and the little daughter to the Beccher lake homo. There all three have since remained there the elder ones are likely to re main so long as life shall last They have cut clear from the world and for good. They seem content and even happy in the forest , and there is every reason to believe that there is no earth ly inducement which could induce James Beecher to enter ag in on his old-time career. "The few neighbors who have gath ered about his lake fully appreciate him , " so Ned Buntline's letter ran on. "He is 'queer , ' they admit , but for all that they love him. They are hardy , rough , unlearned mountaineers big-hearted as they are uncouth. Mrs. Beecher they almost worship. She enlisted herself for their advance ment , and established what had hither to been unknown , a school. It is a free school in spirit and in truth. Mrs. Buecher teaches , and is allowed each year for the service about $50 from the state fund ; to th s amount slio annually addsS100 on her own account , money sacredly set apart for books and clothes for the boys and girls of her backwoods friends. " Mr. Beecher used to preach to the natives in his school-house on every Sabbath day , and the country for miles around turned out tp listen to his teaching ? . For years he never missed but one Sunday , and the way he hap- penud to m ss that single appointment Ejives the text for a good story. When he first moved into the wilds he kept the run of time by cutting a notch into a stick as each day went by. Of course this required a good deal of care but Mr. Beccher was sure that he was care ful. One morning ho started for his school-house to preach his usual Sun day sermon , and whim he came to the cabin of one of the most devout mem bers of his flock found the housewife liard at work over her washtubs. The shocked man of God promptly , and somewhat energetic.illy , probably , re proved her for tier open desecration of ; he Sabbath. The woman rubbed her eye ; ? , and scrutinized him half sus- oiciously , to break out finally : ' La. Air. Beecher. this an't Sundav ; it's Monday. " And she convinced him that she was right , whereupon he ejaculated : "Then I'm the culprit , for I never did a bigger day's work in my life than yesterday. " He had misled one notch ix that almanac stick. WOMEN DON'T OWN BABIES. A Startling : Kit or Information for tho Mothers of tho JLand. Millions of mothers all over tho United States gather their little ones around thorn , never dreaming that by tho law they havo no right to these children. They do not know that tho sole legal right to tho children rests with the father in all except three of the states. Most men do not know it. A majority of fathers , if they did know it , would never assert their right as against the mother. But now and then a father who is as bad as tho law knows his legal rights and assumes them. Not long ago , within a short ride of Boston by rail , lived a young man and his wife and their 7-month-old . - - baby. Ap parently they were at peace and pros perous. One day tho husband told his wife at noon that a certain family had sent her an earnest invitation to spend tho afternoon. Tho wife said she "had too many things to do that day to go to visit. " But the husb.ind said : "You ought to go when they send for you. I will take care of the baby. " Thus urged tho wife made ready and went. A G o'clock she came home. Tho house was locked , husband and baby gone. There was no letter to explain tho sudden and unexpected absence. Tho neighbors knew nothing. Over whelmed with grief and heartache for her nursing baby , the poor mother con- consulted a lawyer. By his advice sho forced an entrance to the house. How empty and desolate it seemed ! It was evi dent that the husband had exorcised his legal right and taken tho child where he pleased. All the neighbors sympathized with the wife. Men said that "if the wretch ever returned ho would deserve to be tarred and feather ed. " Execration was loud , deep , and abundant , but one quiet woman who knew the law said : "He is only as bad as tho law which allows him tho sole right to the child. " But every man said there was no such law. It was only after reference to the statutes they could admit that here in Massa chusetts a married father has a right to rob his wife of her children , and that men who were so cruel , mean , and dastardly wero only as bad as the law. There was but one opinion of the law and of the man. But that could not restore the lender helpless babe to its mother. If others could sleep or rest , there was neither sleep nor rest for her. The parents of this husband lived in Canada. It was most likely he had taken the child to them. She had been to their home and knew how to find it. Making such arrangements as wero possible , she started "for Canada. Tho same night the husband returned. Not finding his wife , he surm-sed that sho had gone for the child. He had carried it to hs parents. He telegraphed them to take the child away and hide it. This they did. When the young moth er appeared at the door of the parents of her husband , with this measure less grief in her heart , his moth er met her at the door. One would suppose that the heart of tho old mother would have melted in sympathy for this grief-stricken young one. But not sc. She sympathized with her son. It can not now be told how it was managed , but she found the little one in a hot attic , evidently not having been even washed since it left home , and she too'c ' it to her own father's house , where she is to-day in dread of what may happe.i to ht r an-1 to it. The brother of tli's crujl father took his child a few years ago away from its mother. Her relatives guvo him § 700 to bring it back. It is supposed that this man hoped to make money by a similar torture of of li s wife. There was a givat deal of indigna tion , both among men and women , in the ca < e quoted above. But what does it avail ? It is evident that there is need of women to help men make laws that will protect women and children. But the icpresentaUva from the town where all this happened voted against womanuft"rage in the Massachusetts legislature last winter. It is to bo hoped that the voters there will see to it that he does not have the opportunity to do so again. Meantime the reproach of all good citizens , men and women , should be so poured out upon men who wrong mothers and little children that they will fiee as other thieves and rob bers flee before honest people. Lucy Stone , in JJoslo-i Globe. Little Drops. In Limestone , Ivy. , the water is so iard that the inhabitants use plates of it for window-grass. The drought in Arizona is so severe ; hat the water in a mint julep rustles ike a bunch of dried leaves. It is so dry in Wheeler County , Tex. , that the people have to sprinkle the water before it is wet enough to drink. The drinking water in Philadelphia n summer is so thick that it is custom- nry to slice it up with a knife and serve t with ice. There is a stream in North Carolina so clear that a stranger walked right nto it and was drowned before he cnew the stream was there. The ducks which frequent a water course in the drought section of Mis- L-sippi havo been laying hard-boiled " eggs for the last three"weeks. . * The intense dry weather in Sangamon county , 111. , has made it poss.blc for the citizen to wipe their hands and faces on a sheet of water. Wubfcngtoii Critic. A Wayward Father. "What is the matter , Johnny ? " ask ed a Texas widower of his little son. "You are not acting right , father. You are not behaving as a father should. You have secrets. " What have I done. Johnnv ? " "You have engaged yourself to Miss Jones , without consulting me. I had already picked out a wife for you , but as you make your bed so you must lie n it. All I can say is that a wayward ather is apt to make a bad husband. " 1'exas Sif lings. Thought it Was a Goat Fight. "This honest butter fight has keen a ong one , hasn't it ? " she asked "Yes. indeed , and both sides have spent lots of money. " "Sav. John , which o-oat whipped ? " ' Tid'lttis. !