y -r ; ' . . Published every Thursday by fAIEBEOTHER & HACKEE, Proprietors. OUcc-No.74 3IcPhcrson's Block, upStalrsj BROWN VILLE, NEBRASKA. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year . . One copy, six months One copy, three mouths READING MATTER ON EYERYPAGE MAtDALfcS. A mere girl ; One coarse curl Falling on her shoulder; Pale her cheek, ITer lips wenkt But her eyes werelboldcr. She no salute Glaring paint Daubed on every feature ; Gaudy dress All could guess A poor fallen creature. ! For no good Thore she stood, No one passing near her ; Space kept wide; Dress aside, Women seemed to fear her, ' Carrlage,crashed4pT ivwr Ilorsesdashed, . ja. ?a -Thare vtas wild confusTonTft EopieejBr At the md Intrusion. 'Mid the crowd. Shrieking lbuct In a voice of terror, A mother wild, A little child. Lost by some strange error. Ah! 'twas there! Its head bare, 'Mid those whirling forces. In the street, 'Neath the feet Of the maddened horses. Though all heard,- No one stirred Death would be the winner ! One brave eye ; , One sharp cry ; Twas the painted sinner! Quicker then Than the pen Could tell of half the datiger, . SheTisked her life, 'Mid that strife. To save a little strau ger. And I thought, As I caught A glimpse of her pule features, ',Mid the stall's Still remains Some good In those poor creatures ; And that we Should not be o eager aye to shun them, If we can Greet the man Whose wrong hath undone them. Kew York Ecening Post. OUE 1TEW YOEK LETTER. One Good Xllcl: "VVojiian Whnt Slic IJoes AVTitU Mer3Ioiioy Dtill Times The Snminer migration Bldtly The IV'eatlier. f irrpondence Nebraska Advertiser. New Yoke, June 20, 1S74. ONE GOOD KICK WOMAN. We read in Holy Writ that it shall be easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than" for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. I presume this applies to women as well, and I am in no mood this morn ing to dispute the assertion. The care of my estate so worries me that lam seldom in a. Christian frame of mind. Nobody know the anxieties attendant upon great wealth. Mr. Vanderbilt and I weep over it hours together. But there is one exception to this rule. I know of one woman who has great wealth, who will, when Azrael waves his dark pinions over her head, go straight to heavebr, and by the shortest possible route; and her name Is Stokes, the wife'of Anson Phelps Stokes, of the great house of Phelps, Dodge & Co. Mrs. Stokes has the enjoyment of exceeding great wealth. She might, if she chose, be the finest and most useless woman in Net? York ; she oould dawdle In purple and fine lin en ; she oould loll in carriages ; she could cover herself with diamonds ; she could live from day to day in lux urious self-indulgence, and die, final ly, leaving tio soul to- mourn her go ing. All this is being done by thou sands of fine ladies In ther circles in which she moves and adorns. But Mrs. Stokes does not happen to be one of that kind, and I fervent ly thank heaven for it. She is a strong, active woman, full of the no blest impulses and the broadest love for her kind. She ha3 a magnificent bouse up-town, and a more magnifi cent residence on that gem of thesea, Btaten Island. On that island she has had an immense building erected, which is in its way a eort of an asy lum. Now see what one good wo man can do with money. The chari ties of New York shelter and harbor thousands upon thousand-? Of home less orphan children, and durliig the eumnier they suffer in their necessari ly olo3e quarters. Mrs. Stokes takes seventy of these waif at a time down to her home on the Island this be ing the capacity of the building and keepsthem there a week. They have the freshest and best fruits, milk from her own cows, and the best of every thing that the market can furnish. On the extensive grounds swings are erected, playgrounds are arranged, and the children enjoy not only the pure air of heaven and the best of food, but all sorts aud kinds of Inno cent and healthful pleasures. Their week up, they are" returned, and an other seventy are taken down, all at her own expense. And this thing goes on from the time hot weather begins till the cold autumn makes it onneoessasy, this good, kind woman Euperintending it all. Would that wealth always fell into euch hands! Would that there were more such women in New York, and every where else ! Would there were more women who could so honestly wear the titlo "lady." Talk about M ill H a, i: flffir "' 'vSSTa ol fi v ' &$&k nfl rHBok yA. II Mk a'sS HP J i a. jU ?YlSk " H a A a Jfe. A Ll3 J , A M, A. ADVEiiTisiNG iUtes. t t CSSWB IB Kfl x m Hi I Wm V V R3 rV if T I lBe . - lr4 t?ify K?! A SV V i fcJ3lV5? ATxT Btf UM IHW HI YQWA THtn o ..,. . -. I . I Per I - V .1BH WH Bi H H ! v M ,;S M V ?-. ' r S?& ?5 '83 ! I&? ? jr I 32 v K ' 1 HI A l V """" " I " IMontb. mmrmmfKwxlJMm JwAWmMaIJ MAlAWAtzmA - !iii v r V v nt i-v-ry r fBFsr' 9W' ' r - 50 i ifce.. XABMSHED 1858. , Oldest Paper in the State.! position making the "first lady." Thousands of poor neglected children will in the dayg to come rise up and say "blessed" of this woman, whose goodne-ss was their first ray of sun shine. DtfLLNEdS. The oity is dull to a decree nevpr before known. There Is no business, positively none. There is no buying, no selling, for the reason that the farmer has no money to pay the coun try dealer; the country dealer has ho money to buy of the jobbers, and the jobbers' goods consequently lie on their shelves or remain hidden in boxes. The hotels were never so empty, aud hotel proprietors never Rooked 30 blue. Indeed it has come .. ,v,.uv rruoic a uuiei UierK win ao tb you may lmaginev-how'-'much. thev want to see people. And the trouble is, no one can prophesy as to the dur ation of this state of things. "When will business revive?" is the query, the ansWer ahVays being. "The Lord only knows." No huitiari can tell, for there was no apparent cause for its beginning. The country was strong and sound in September last, yet in a week a panio Bwept over the country like a tornado, prostrating the strong est houses, uprooting the most firmly established credits, fled with its long fingers reaching down to the most humble people. For it has affected the most humble. With the suspen sion of business everything suspend ed. There is no .building, and the builders are out of work. The con sumption of everything that goes in to the bowels, except whiskey, is les sened, and the coopers are idle. 'Men wear their boots longer, and the shoe makers are on their oars ; in short, it is distress and nothingbut distress. It goes even to the beggars. One placid looking, old blind beggar, who has a seat on Fulton street, told me yesterday that the panio had ruined him. His collections, he said with a whine, had dropped to $3 per day, but ho wouldn't care so much about that, but rents had fallen 30 per oent., and he had two houses and three stores empty, even at tliis reduction. The old fellow has sat on a sidewalk, and enough pennies dropped into his hat to make, by judicious investment, a fortune. TlfE SUMMER. Summer is on us at last. The sun is now hurling its rays direct upon the city, beating" the" pavements, heating the buildings, heating hu manity, heating animality. A great city is terribly hot when it is hot. The tall buildings not only retain heat, but they prevent the free circu lation of air that would otherwise mitigate it. The ten thousand dis tinct odors that smell to heaven make it unhealthy as well as disagreeable. Consequently all of New York that can get out gets out. Away ttf the mountains, to the sea-side, to sprlugs, to every earthly plaoe, where fresh air and trees are to be found the New Yorker and his wife and daughter go. The theatres, such as are kept open, are half filled with people from the country and the few desolate men who cannot get away. Houses are locked up and inhabited only by the one domestic left in charge. This is Biddy's-great time. For when "Mis sus" goes to the "counthry" Biddy is left to tafte care of the house. Don't her "cousins" have a' good time though! When Missus is at home Biddy has got to give her parties in the kitchen, and she is liable to con stant interruption. But in the sum mer it is different. Missus is three hundred miles away, and Biddy is supreme in the house. No kitchen for her now ; the parlors are not good enough. Dlnnis, Pathrick, Teddy, the divil, and all the rest of them, with other Biddies, assemble In the parlors in the evenings and enjoy high life in dead earnest. Refresh ments are spread in the dining-room, and such a time fs had as the "MIs- tress" never dreamed of. It is well. Why shouldn't they have their in nings? Possibly, many of these houses never see so muoh of genuine I iinnonfr smii iolitv when its lawiui proprietors are runniug"it. And it Is a question whether the masters and missusses in the watering places en joy themselves mforerthan the Dinnls es and Biddies do in the vacant hous es. THE WEATHER is gorgeous. It got very hot last week, but a succession of magnificent thunderstorms cleaned and purified the atmosphere, and lowered the thermometer tff a living point. It is fresh and good, aud existing is now a pleasure. May" it continue". PlETRO. . "Sambo, what's your, 'pinion ob f bankrupt law?" "Tink um fustrate, Pompey." "limply for the appellation myself. Just 'splain him's principles." . .-r . - 1 .Vrttrr ;.iof lcnUM wny, you seo o uuit,jUbu ... me dat half dollar you got for white washing." Pompey hands him he money, ana he deliberately puts it into his pocket. "Dere, np.w, I ows de shoemaker 3 shillngs, and you half a dollar, be sides de grog-shop bill. Now. dte half dollar are all de property I got t HovMa him according to de debt. ' Jfc. Vrf WW . w ' -J -"Sambo I takes dat half dollar j, - back." Sambo with amazement. "Vnn tlnkdis- ohile green?, -You. geUjap M i:e rr d share wid de oder oredUorg." C -.-fc LB - : & K1 w - n I - -. Jt . . .. -, "MAAJLUUlLin Ti I I I MK i - " i ,.--- i ,., , , i . ... , ,..,. i, . ...M "i-i .. rw' jlh. ' . w j r: cfc -it n a . nrnn h !, - - Ii...1l m4 ... .. i. Utfaml ' MZ&zzz&tt'tiZJ'.ti ". flhj:a yrny-war. wnn. -.'"""Twraeelrk pf.rirrttwtl5?JIS'i!!i't?pr . L . ' 1, V&1&2- .J iui you I Bfl HtJ 01 H H Wm K EX ISKvJl 114 3 IH & i 7P""?la tSJ? pel I i Sli' I Rq 19 'H Br sM mt H i Inch'.., ,,....- KEKP AMMONIA IN THE HOUSE. No housekeeper should be without a bottle of spirits of ammonllin'the house, for, besides its modicij value, it is Invaluable for householdifpifrpos es. It is nearly a3 useful as i bap, and its cheapness brings Ifc within the reach of all. Put a teaspoonful o ammonia to a quart of vsbxm Boaj suds, dip in a flannel oloth, and wipi off the dust and jQy speck? and see for yourself how much labor ifc'will save. No scrubbing will he needful. It will cleanse and brighten silver wonderfully; to a pint of suctemhc a teaspoonful of the spirits,' dip. in your silver spoons, forks, etc., rub with a brush, and polish with ohamofsskins. For washing mirrors and windows it is very desirable: put a fiwfdrb'Da of ommnn:. t -idtW--w. ... .a-i""1-" ?401 PW anQ " '. .l'Al . out grease fepotsfronr avefKfabrio-! put on the ammonia clear, lay blot ting paper over the plrce, q'd press a hot ilat-Iron on it for a .fewf moments. A few drops in a quarl, ofwater will clean laces, and whiten them a8 well; also muslins. Then it is !a mest re freshing agent at the" toilet. taMe; a few drops in a basiii of.wate), will make a better bath than pure water, and, if the skin is oily, if will remove all glossiness and disagreeable odors. Added to footbath it entirely destroys all noxious smell so often, arising from the feet in warm weather, and noth ing is better for cleaning t the hair from dandruff and dual For clean ing hair aud nail brashes it i? equally good. Put a teaspoonful of ammonia into one pint of waterltand shake the brushes through tile witter. When they look white rise them n water, and put them in the.sunshine, or in a warm place to dry. 'The dirtiest of brushes will come out. of this bath white and clean. 'fa For medicinal purposes' ammonia is always unrivaled. For the headache it is a desirable stimulant, and fre quent inhaling of its pungent odors, will often entirely renioe catarrhal cold. There is no better remedy for heartburn and dyspepsia, and the aro matic spirits of ammonia is especially prepared for those troubles. Ten drops of it in a wine glass, of water are of- Tj . ' . .. ten a great relie. ?The spirits or am monia can be taken in the same way, but it is not palatable. In addition to"all these uses, the ef fect of ammonia on vegetation is ben eficial. If you. desire roses, geraui-; urns, fuchsiaaij eto7i .to", become more flourishing, y.'ntry it upon tliem by adding five orelx , drops to every pint of warm water Vou give them, but don't repeat the dose ofteuer than once in five or six days, test you stim ulate them too highly. So bo Bure and keep a IargS bottle of it In the house, and have a glass stopper for it, as it is very effervescent, and also in jurious to corks. . QUEEN VlCTtfli&" INDORSES Mil. SARTORIS. The Washington correspondent of the New York" Journal of Commerce writes : . . . "Mr. Sartoriiis a descendantof the Huguenot refugees. His father, a conservative mud; one of the best known w foibers of the Carlton Club, is a prominent merchant, and does a large Eatt jn(iian business. His un cle, Mr. 'amUda, M. P., also of the Hugeno. refugees, is known as the largest sLIr builder on the Thames, and an atftaorlty in the navy debates in Parliament. It is not generally knowu hat Queen Victoria, as soon as sha, heard of the proposed mar riage, made inquiries regarding Mr. Sartorlu, and wrote, a letter to the Presidr-nt in which she confidently indorsed him. This letter probably arose - from the sincere personal at" tachmoat;vhich the Queen felt tow ard Mi is Graqt, and5 the esteem she felt fpr the President of this republic in hi3 official capacity. It is hinted by those cognizant of the situation that tl e royal heart will be moved to some especial mark of approbation in conn ction with this marriage. It is belie tii among Englishmen' who knot ,.ar 'affect to know, a littlo.about the jurt, that the" Queen will invite th& 3Upio to visit Windsor Castle andl ' '..! Kii:.. ..rr.r. fV.u con TeouieiiiiHui uuuiiuj- ufjuu mi- b"ij 3groom. There is confident be lie! that president Grant Vill visit Eu opa after his Presidential terra; am the fcett of tendering n:m ins fredaDiof the oity in such event is '5tM '. .. ...j it.. 5WI il 'ady. favorably tautea oi iu iuu L ada,cJabs. - ; . -s ' ' ' LMUSING SOEfNE. , fii.ncy scene occurred the" other iM3jj$ he Bowery Theater, N. Y. w erojfeu stage was occupied with It representation of ,a bed-room at n.dnigh:. with an old gentleman .r-adirig,a letter. To the sound of b owimujic a villain entered the room LnHurllinnoUil - AtrpAH finnroached. ,AS .- n,ntnMn ln h hnnd S tneTdld man. niutchins in I u a ill rv iiiixi.tta.ftk! a a a-a v - - - r- tiiitteclcg knife. He approach' slowly, and the excitement among the gamins, in the gallery became intense. Just a.' the would-be- muderer was aljoutto make the1 deadly plunge at the nsuspeoting vitrm, a boy who was eaning with open moutn far 'over the railing of the gallery sung out ?ith frantic earnestness, "Look beb? jd yo'uVguv'ner. There's a feller golr to stab yef.'r , T as assassin dropped his ltnife and roared with the audience, and the curtain was run down. b63y being murdered. without any- : ; r 'jjte usual, the inevitable fly is; said -fi&Sp committing exce'ssesrich'ewlnsr Virginia tobacco, f11 k nan.. b,SKVjfl-. . Tfe .9BJ?JV . . &I&WWILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1874. RECIPROCITY. THE PROVISIONS OF THE PROPOS ED NEW CONVENTION WITH CANADA. The N. Y. Tribune's "Washington correspondent gives the outline of the proposed treaty between this country and Canada. The propositions whioh have been submitted to the senate are understood to be substantially as fol lows: 1. The abandonraentdn the part of Great Britain and of Canada of all olaim for compensation on the ao count of the concession to the United States by the treaty of Washington of privilege df the inshore fisheries. 2. The free admission and inter change of all natdral products of the United States and the British prov-.J itices. ' 3. Thereoiprocal free admission of 'manufactured- !products''bf the'"tw.o "Countries speclflcSUy enumerated. 4. The new Welland and St. Law rence Canal to be built by the Domin ion. 5. The Saughnawega Canal to be built by the Domlnkm. 6. American and Canadian built vessels may carry cargo and passeng ers from any port on the great lakes she gave me not only nerseu, out ro and river St. Lawrenoe to any other stonjdto me my own old self, purified, such port. elevated, and strengthened. With 7. All canals on either side of the the tact, affection and charaoter of the boundafv to ha onan under the same fdeaV woman in whom we all believe, conditions tonitiznna of the two noun- tries. . 8. Lake Michigan Canadians as the St to be open to Lawrence has to Americans. 9. The Canadians may purchase American vessels and register them as Canadian, and Amerioans may purchase and register Canadian built vessels in like manner. 10. A joint commission to regulate the navigation of St. Clair lake and!! river. 11. A joint commission for the pro-" pagation offish. j 12. A joint commission for the regulation and maintenance of lights houses. 13. A joint commission for reg ulating the interchange of traffic- at custom houses on'the line. (. 14. The treaty to continue in force' for twenty-one years !l The treaty, a's has been alread stated, has been laid before the Senate by the President for advice and cotfji sideration, and according to the ad,- vice whicli the Senate may give will depend further ncfiou in the way of negotiation and settlement of details.' If tho -Senate report favorably, tbhconatant affection' treaty will be at once perfected and sent back for ratification. DIFFERENT KINDS OF EYES. No branch of science has been moro thoroughly mastered than opticj; The principle of vision must be es sentially the same in all e3es, but they differ remarkably, according to tifo habit of the animal. Birds of lofty flight, as tho condor, eagle, vulture and carrion-seeking prowlers of the feathered race, have telescopic visions and thus they are enabled to look down and discover their unsuspectj ing victims. As they approach noi3 lessly from above, the axis of vision changes shortening, so thatthe3T cab see as distinctly within one foot of tho ground as wtien at an elevation of one mile in tho air. This fact explains the balancing off a fish-hawk on its pinions, halfa mile above a still pond, watching for fish. When one is selected, down the savage hunter plunges, the focal axis varying always to tne square view of his Intended prey. As they ascend, the axis is elongated by a cu rious muscular arrangement, so ai to see far off again. Snails have their keen eyes at the extremity of flexible horns, whioh they can protrude or draw in at pleas ure. By winding the Instrucient round a leaf or stalk, they can Bee how m'atters stand on the opposite side. The hammer-headed shark has its wicked looking eyes nearly two feet apart. By will effort, they can )end the thin edges of the bead, on which the organs are located, so as to exam ine the two sides of an object tho size of a full sized codfish. Flies have immovable eyes. They stand out from the head like half fan apple, exceedingly prominent. In stead of smooth hemispheres, they have an Immense number of fi.cets, resembling old-fashioned glas3 watch seals, each one directing the ligl.t di rectly to the optic retina. That "ex plains why they cannot be appioach ed in any direction without feeing what is coming. The San Antouio, Texas, Herald1 alludes incidentally tosomo of the pe culiarities of that State. A ge ltle man who came several , hou saud miles to view the co ntry got, a .large 'sized redant on blm a few days ago, and stronger asihe was, he cavorted arouu and sedlappropriate language if ta had lived there all his life and mo fed in the best of society. The Denver Narrow Gauge rcilrbai rs now in. opperation for US mile, extends south from Denver along the Rocky mountain range to Pueblo, and is bound for New Mexico an 1 Hhe halls of the Montezumas." It ,dld business last year of $500,000, one-half of which was net profit. Its mana gers report a saving in oporatiu ex- nn006nuoi. tho, hrnad cause ofr35per nfni nnil ri Bavino in .i in;n nstinitlon : onH hnnm'mWt' of 37 Der cent, jon . i-j - .i3Tii; what a broad gauge 'would ha.ve c3t'fJuyerbqajo!,frorA the deok of a ves-j ifc AFPRETTY LADY'S FOOT. There Is maglo In a lady's foot. And well tho ladles know It; And bqo who has a pretty one, r 1$ pretty apt to show it. '$ At time? you too are martyred by, The piettlest little ankle, Thti shoots an arrow thro' your eye, WJthln your heart to rankle. Babwhen It trips along the street, Through wind and mud and vapor, By sheerest accident, you seo JEIow Beautifully they taper. Aril as It Bteps upon the walk, Amid the crowd to mingle, Two'rbgulsh eyes look up and say, I wander If he's single. TWICE IiARRIE2. Wlien,I married Eunioo Morgan I wftjftainjM Imwy own estimation and that miiSWof my frieuds, a ruined man; tib.aH money, talent, jind, culture, yet vn ..vSv ":.-- t.. ..- auonuoie'Horrow wmuu unmu w mo Bvoelira'befbre, and' whose memory had never departed, had made me a nerveless, purp'doeless misanthrope. Yielding to the solicitations of friends who thought a fit companion might restore me to the world, I solicited tne hand of Eunice Morgan, who had khovn me from early childhood, and i she made life Bweeter to me than the lostillfe I had bemoaned ; and the iaTlflce'of her noble self which she fmade for me seemed to fill her ?5L- !-l .Jk oV.Yuf.1 ?TT Sf A. few vears before, while I was re turning from the Continental tour (wbich followed my graduation, I met and worshiped AnitaLozatos, a beau rfiful Cuban. My position in society was unG.iceptionable, I was rich, aud I'pressed my suit with all the ardor o'fjli warm young heart and a fluent tohgiier So I was speedily accepted by Anita and her parents and we were tnarried. In one of tho charming vil lages near New York I built for my ! bride' an exquisite villa in a noble grove of old chestndt trees, and fur Sished it with everything whioh her desire aud caprices suir'rested. I was "still a student, and an ardent one, but ithere,?were lew nours in tne i .. m' ?were lew nours in tne nay in which I did not for a few moments drop my books, and Beek Iffiud adore my beautiful, my glorious Hwik. Slowly I learned the sad fact that Anita's fondness for me was only a passionate, fitful out-burst, instead of I had never in th'e"cboler moments of my courtship expected her to sympathize with my studious tastes ; but, When I compre hended that even my companionship was distasteful to her, and that I re ceived her smiles only in exchange for such pleasures as I purchased for her, I became a very unhappy man. Trying to gain her affections, if she I w,ere capable of bestowing such a sen timent, I abandoned my studies en tirely. I devoted my entire lime to the duly of pleasing my wife. I spent without Stiiit the money which had been left me by a rich father ; I filled the house with company, I purchas ed acity house, in which we passed the winter, and did all that a devoted and'anxious ftsart could do to win the love of the woman I held bo dear. "itnd I imagiued, poor fool! that I was "'succeeding. The painstaking audnxiety of several da3's devoted to procuring her some new pleasure were fully repaid by the parting of her rfpe lips, the light darting into her glorious eyes, and the clasping of her beautiful arms, which always in dicated my faii'c'c'esses'. Th'O" tiresom-'ness-o me of a large party of people jvlioVtould only dance, drink aud eat, vaaiolways relieved when, after the lastuest had departed Anita would draw me down to her and kiss me a dozfr. times, and tell me that I was herjdear, delightful old boy. Ai the close of one of the most bril liant entertainrrienfls'I had over given, I (ltd Btrolled restlessly through the dm??ibg.ropm, the verandas, and the consrVa,'tofy. looking for my darliu. ISmi had, been unusually beautiful thlro ighout the evening, and when I h m taught her eye it had been so full I "t " oi failing and tenderness that I had loifeed for the moment to arrive when wciaigbtbe alone, and Imight for till thousandth time renew my decla n.tin' of affection. She had gone sujffcenly to her room, the servant stftd. and had left word she would re- illri in a moment. I continued mj' aimless strolling, wK n enter.ng tho library, I found d he open volume I had been read iiig. aslip o? paper bearing a lino In Anita's delioate hand-writing. It lal'V ' ?' PbaniTol love you-, for you are too treat for poor little mo. I have found one I can love. God forgive mo and cle3s you." j fell atrd knew no more until days nfierwards when I emerged from the Jelirium of a fever. Against my will oovered, but my spirits, my high as and purposes, t aeemed I had je&t forever. I attempted to recom nfonce throng course of reading and fetbdy i haft determined upon when I lett college, but I found myself de vcid'tjf aim or energy. 'Fot,se've:ral years I led a desolate iije, neverMiearing of Anita, but hold Jtug her constantly and tenderly in my feuWt ia'Bpfte of her faithlessness. One itlft'y there appeared at my. villa a xx.Jugiwoua.njg ioreigner, wno saiu ne Was'irallor, and had been handsome .wpaid 'to bring me tidincs of the M&? olP ife. who had been wash- .i-T----- B ...v. .. w uu. wwwk. i. ... b. nr"- eel in the Mediterranean. He could tell me nothing more about her, ex cept that she was traveling alone at the time of the accident, and had left among her papers a note inclosing a large bank-note to pay for intelligence in the event of her sudden death at any time. I Informed two or three faithful friends of the sad fate of my wife, and they who had'been unwearied in their endeavors to rally me, insisted that I ought to marry again. At first I ut terly refused to listen to the suggest ion ; but so skilful and untiring were they that they finally prevailed upon me to re-enter society. Then, with an apology, I offered to Eunice Mor gan the remains of my former self, and she acoeptedJmeas.weetJasif'I had.beon in all of the cheerfuluaouhave lost cotdpletely, but the thought Lun.crouDiea y.outn. . A ti . ,,!j - 11 . s -. How she unmade and rewwlQ me-I cannot tell, for I was scarcely cousci oub of what was taking place. But so fully did she sympathize with all of ray old hopes and aspirations that I soon found myself at my studies with an energy and ability t had nev er before possessed. The constanoy of her sense and sympathy was even exceeded by that of her affection, wblcii seemed never to slumber for an instant. Finally, when, on my return from an enforced absence for a day, Eunice, from her couch, sweet ly handed to me a" wee, warm minia ture of herself, my cup of joy seemed to be full to overflowing. As Eunice recovered, she spent most of her time" iti the grove and j garden which surrounded the house. Theset to gratify Anita's tropical tastes, I had prepared without regard- to expense, and, now that all of the shubbery had gained several years of growth, one could roam about for days and still find new and beautiful com binations and effects. Thore whenev er I wearied of my books for awhile, I sought my darlings, and always found in their society exactly the reo reation I needed. One eveniug.as I wandered through thegarden iu hopes of suddenly sur prising Eunice aud he little name sake, I suddenly emerged from a groupo of shub'bery and beheld a scene that startled me. Eunice, who was to me the ideal of all that was pure, and faithful, and noble, sat in a rustic chair, and at her feet, clasping her hand, and murmuring passionate ly, was a slight, handsome foreigner, whose features were strange to me. Eunice, my trusted wife, was deeply oiTeotod aorauoh that the cries of her little daughter, who had fallen to the ground a few steps away, were un heeded. My footsteps-startled them, and the man, glancing hastily at me across his shoulder, sprang to his feet and bounded hastily away, while Eu nice, still tearful, maintained a com posure whioh astounded me and' gave me a scearching", pitying, tender look which completely bewildered me. For a moment or two I wrfs speechless, and then I asked : "Who was that man Eunice ?" "A poor beggar, Herbert," sho re plied. "He was very finely cheesed for a person in that profession," said I. Tho suspicion which for the time filled my mind propably betrayed it self in my tone, for. Eunice arose, proud, handsome, angry, and ex claimed : "Herbert : uo you uouot my word ?' Never, in her most tender moment, had I seen Eunice so perfect a picture of purity and nobility. My suspicions were disarmed in an instsnt, and, throwing ray arms about tier' neck, I begged her pardon, and expressed my pentinenco in the fullest term's I could command', until with her own dear lips she stopped my utterance entirely. From that day thore commenced a series of changes in Eunice's manner, which by turns perplexed, embarrass ed, grieved, and provoked me. At first 1 attributed her strange manner to my grievous blunder in momenta tily distrusting he ; so I was unceas ing in appoligiesand in my endeavors' to make atonement by showing evenf more affection than that which seem ed already to occupy my entire thought" and time. But, when she admitted that my mistake had been a rfully-jusSifiableoue, I became convin ced that there was a different caxise for her change of demeanor. Though more than ever devoted to my inter ests, hopes, and tastes, she seemed to shrink from the close and tender companionship which- bad previously existed between us. Little by little sho withdrew her self from me, until we were little more than polite acquaintances. Pretending that our Utile daughter might disturb my rest by her wake fulness, Eunice arranged for herself apartments near those vhich Anita had occupied. These latter had bfeen locked immediately after Anita's de parture, aud had never been entered by any one. Theu, though apparent ly in tho best of health, Eunice com plained of frequent indispositions, du ring which attacks she had her meals sent to her room, and our housekeep er remarked, casually that my wife has an unsual appetite when sick. Time after time I Implored her to tell me the cause of her sadness and strangeness, but ev&ry time I alluded to the subject she would look so unut ferably sad, and weep so bitterly, that out of regard for her T finally desisted j entirely. She said that I never made Vior linlmnnv thilt'mv loVft frtT 'hfiP- .. t. w..... l..T . r -w . had been- greater than she had ever VOL. 1S.-M). 52. believed could be shown by man to woman, and that sho had rather be my slave than the wife of any man in the world. But when moved by the passion of her words and looks, I begged her, for her love's sake, to tell mo the cause of her sorrow, and put it in my power to remove it If possi ble, she would burst Into tears even my caresses seemed to be unendurable to her. As for me, my own life became ui terly miserable. The idea of a dread ful secret sorrow in the life of thewo ihan I loved ao dearly was insupport able, yet there was ho honorable es cape from it. Any privation from her society I would have cheerfully eu-dured.if-I couldlhave thereby restor- ed to her.thtijhapp.inees she seemed to ,tbat ruy .suffering tta-$RiUB8jA.ny good Jo h&r only addedto my asteery. I lost my spirits, my IntoreBt in my studies, and finally my ability to Blee'p. Night .after night I spent on the veranda, or gloomily strolling un der the old chestnuts about the house, wondering, hoping, prayiug, oursing, sometimes almost determined to end Eunice's life and mine, and learn her secret after we were both rid of its blighting effects. One dark, windy night I was pa cing the veranda, loug after midnight when I was startled by a bright light appearing in the room which had been Anita's chamber. I Instantly determined that theives, having heard the story which every gossip in the villiage knew, had selected this night fn which to carry away some of my poor, erring wife's apartments. For years her memory had been to me a thing of the past, but now the idea that rudo hands could touch any thtng once dear to the woman I had loved, roused me to tho wildest fury. Hastily taking a revolver from my desk, and snatching from a case of f curiosities a two-pointed Malay dag ger, I softly ran through a passage which led to the room where the light was shining. I stopped at Eu nice's room to. warn her against un necessary alarm, but to my surprise Eunice was not there. Could she be in Anita's chamber, I wandered ? I crept along the passage, pausing at every step or two to listen. The door of the long clo3ed chamber stood ajar, and suddenly I heard sounds whioh seemed to stop my heart-beats. I heard the voice of Eunice, and a voice which vas hoarse, rapid, eager, and with a foreign accent. ItiTau Instant I was alraosS mad with Jealousy. The well-dressed for eign beggar my wife's sorrow and her mysterious conduot her with drawal from my companionship and my chamber her frequent indisposi tions the beautiful meals consumed at such times her aversion to my ca resses all that had happened since the day I laid surprised my wife and the beggar, linked itself together in one strong chain of damning evidence against my wife. She had loved the foroiguer she had brought him to the house of the man ho was wronging, she bad secreted him in the rooms she knew were safe from intrusion she had even fed him from her husband's table. A terrible calm quick fy succeeded my fury, but found me cruel, venge ful, and merciless. I would surprise them. I would quickly and surely slay them, and then, taking ray little daughter, I would fly from the home which had so terribly disgraced me. Hastily I threw open the door, but it turned noiselessly on its hinges without disturbing tho ocoupants of the room, and revealed to me a scene which struck vcie dumb. On the pil low of the dainty couch of my lost wife lay the worn, wasted, unmistak able face of Anita Lozatos! By the bedside, clad in white, with her gold en hair unbound, and rippliug over her face and shoulders, stood Eunice. Her e3'es were full of tears, while all the tenderness of pity, sorrow, and compassion heightened the beauty of her pure features into something al most angelic. Ono of her hands was tightly held by Anita ; with the oth er she was pointing upward. "Forgive me again' groaned Ani ta, hoarsely, "for the pain my pres ence has given you." "Ask forgiveness of God," replied Eunice. "I have only done my du ty." "The years of pain igave Herbert," continued Anita; "can he ever for give " "Ask God," said Eunice, still point ing upward. "Ah, yes, my sister'," said Anita, "but I am not a saint like you'. God had all his angels to comfort Him when I sinned, but Herbert was alone with" hi? sorrow. Do" you think he- will forgive my soul after it had left my body ?" "He will forgive you now," replied Euuice. "His is a noble soul, and he is 3'our husband. Let me bring him." "Oh, do not! I dare not meet him : Before I could tell him all he would curse me!" cried Anita, ohutfderlng and shutting her eyes as if to hide some dreadful sight. "You do not know him," replied Eunice. "He is honor itself. What ever Is pitiful, honorable, manly. Christian, that is Herbert. He shall forgive you !" "He will L" I QTted, advancing to the bedside. Eunice started t Anita. with a wjld cry, hid her face "in the pillow. ' "Your wife f3 dying." whispered 1?nnlra "Hlio Vina aitffiaraA- t-Avil.1i. AJUUlbU. J U W . U.J .JU-lW. I.U L.lilUlt. Be to her all you can in her few re- Per I Tear. $i oo $2 co r ti oo 250 -I CO 1 4 00 6 00 2 75 7 00 10 00 5 00 12 00 13 00 8 00 200c- ' 360o- 60 C3 100 0j' Iiegal&dveftlsexnents atlegal rates: Onesquardr (lOUneof Nonpareil space. or less.) first lusertloaf ?1.00;eachsnb3e(inentln3erilon', 50c; " ' jg3Alltran3c!ent advertisements most be paid forlnadvaace. OFFICIAL PATER 0F T3IE fJdtiSTY k maining moments." And In an Jny stant Eunice disappeared! Tenderly I raised Anita In my armi and kissed her brow. She opened her eyes aud gazed into rfilhd with a look at once glad and imploring! "Herbert," she whispered, "I was infatuated on that awfdf night, but f repented before I got outside thd" grounds. I pursued my tempter as li I were" mad. I hurried baulc to s0i cure my note beforo you Bhould see it, but I arrived only in time to seo yoti fali. Then I run away" I" know hob whore but I never dared to. cbmd back to you. I as swept overboard at sea once, and before I was rescued I was smitten by a terjible cold front ,-whftuV Inerer fecdvri0. Win? J Tmiult df T dri77ed,7iimtif iie'rV, d1sguisedin'iaaie'atUr0,tSai-- si you obcb guurs. ioui uvura . recognized me, atid I told lief fhy story. I couldn't help Jt it seemed' like confessing to a pure angel. She declared she would tell you ; tE&t I should have my lawful husband, and she would leave you forever. I only prevented her by vowing to kill my self if she did. Then she declared? these rooms were mine; that I should" live in them ; she forced me to come I did not want to. She hasfed mo she has comforted me; she has beerr doctor and priest to me. She ohK God!" Anita stopped suddenly, and srug gled for breath. I gently brushed her' heavy black hair back froni'bgr" tem ples. Again she spoke : "Herbert, hear my last words mr they are true, as I hopo for mercy. No lips b'iit yonfs ever touched mine no arms but yours Were ever around me. For a few hours my heart'forgot you, and for each hour I havo paid a year of suffering. Was it enough?" Her great darb eyes struggled? against their fate as they looked for" my coming answer ; her pele thin lips, once so rich and red, now twitch ed nervously. For an ihstantl press ed, her tenderly to ray heart, and" when I again looked at her her eye lids weredrooppfng over the' oyes iur which death's dimness could not hldo the love there was there, while her lip3 were breaking into the smilo which never ngafn ieffc them. A mo ment later "Anita Lozatof stood at tho bar of the Judge whor knew or hei' F atonement as well as her sin. I went in searcn of Eunice andt found her sobbing on her bed. ft kissed her aud whispered : "She is dead, darling." "3o Is my secret my terrible Be' cret." sobbed Eunioe. With mi' own hands I dug her' grave in a mnzo in the garden, wherer she used to spend many of her mo ments. Eunioe, self-forgetful, saintly Eunice, robed the poor clay in the dress it had worn on her wedding' day, and together we laid- her in- her1 last earthly home. None but Eunice. Anita and myself knew the key to the maze, so Shat ono evening! when I stole in to look at the ground where so much sorrow had found"" rest, anc? found the grave covered with forget-me-nots, I knew that Anita had ta ken with her alltbe misery that had! been poisoning Eunice's- life. New York Graphic. The Blair Tirae3 tells the following' story: "While at an Omaha hotel one night last week, one of our Blair bachelors Was by the mistake of a ver dant night clerk put iu room No. 15 instead of No. 13, and-soon was sleep ing heavily, all unconscious of tho fact thata fine looking. woman who,. in th' darkness of night, supposed the sleep ing, occupant of her bed was none other than her &usbandr quietly dis robed and was soundly sleeping by his" side. As both lay soundly anc? no' doubt sweetly sleeping, the small hours grew apace and the husband who had Indulged too freely with? boon companions returned making no a little noise to find No. 15. Oucein, a tempest broke Toose- arou'nrdf that bed, but the bachelor dimly compre hending the situation of affairs aud not wishing to "carry the- news to Blair," jumped through the window leaving the- Inebriated" hasband and: the now frightened wife to indulge in explanations, while he through the kindtfesfj-of a friendly policeman pro--cured the loan of proper clothing in which to-return home. Thatyouthsl" now fn town armed to the teeth, bufi Us in a quandary Whether to return and? shoot tho husband; tho nigbC eiork,. or the woman;" Any bachelor who would refesa to" wake up under such circumstances'' ought to ehoot himself, wo think. ,,&J' if Hi " A correspondent of the LVwisfior? Journal relates an Androssoggia le gend, whioh has-probably been mel lowed by time, though! the narator says he could give the nam'es, ifht choose, as he knew the paties fromr boyhood. It appea'fcrSbat on a clear f cold, quiet morning, some fifty yerira- ago, a family were seated around the table taking" their breakfast" vih'ecf a rap was heard tst the door, antf, ae the custom then web Che outsider was? bidden to "come' in." when a man past middle life eater"ef, andi after the usual ealutatior;, seated: f bimaeff la a chair. He was firauhrh- bor living some half a milo distant He was asked to ait" tsp-and take aomV breakfast, but he answered, "I don't suppose I ought to stop, for our house 13 on fire,, and- they sent me tc Sal? ypu .. Now that' the word "hymeneal"1 ia so commonly used in reference to weddings, it is suggested that births should bo headed "crymeneaP' andj deaths "d tome neat," 3 V ' I? ! Wi iSI i&XJBt - --- -M-iG ..