wnuunijl. R THE ADVERTISER THE ADVERTISER G. W. FAIEBBOTJtBE. T. C HU.CKI3J. a.W.l-AIKBSOTlrKB. T.CHaaXEB. FAIRBBOTQEB & HACKER, Publishers and Proprietors. JTAISBROTIKCil & SAGBJE-k Publisher z Proprietors. Published Every Thursday Morning AT BE0WNV:LLI.E, NEBRASKA. ADVERTISING RATBS. Onetecb.oee f m?a 100 s Tws teefeee. one year . Saab sacceedlast titeh. per year- TEK.3I8, IN ADVANCE : Oneoonv. one year SI 50 Xegal advertesaeBts at least rate- OsejAaar. nnaearNBBar9l.eresftjnt tesertte,U- each subsequent iaeerttoe. Me. JS3AHtrane(eBtadvert6e&ieatasiBsi tie path for is advaace. One copy, six mentis. 1 00 SO one copy, three months. 3T No paper seat from the office until paid for. ESTABLISHED 1856. i Oldest Paper in tie State. J BE0W1STVILLE, NEBBASEA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1877. VOL. 21 NO. 2 READING WAITER OXEYERYPAGE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THBGOITSTY PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ATTORXETS. S. A. Osborn, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office withW.T.Rog ers.BrowBVlte.yet. T. I. Schick, A TTORNEY AT LAW.-XAY BE CONSUET A ed la the German lantroage. 0ee aext oor to OsMtyClerk-BOtace. Ooert House BatM- n s.BrowaviHe .Nebraska. I-EJ J. S. StnU, A TTORNEY AND OOUNSKLOK AT EAW. J. O&ee, over Hill's store.Browavle.N eb. J. H. Broady, A TTORNEY AND OOUNSRWR AT ' TMW. A Oftie over State Bank. BrowHViUe.NeD. E. "VV. Thomas, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office.front room over Steveaeon xeroses Hardware Stere.Bruwn v ile.Nea. "VV. T. Rogers, A TTORXEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. V Will cive dlttaent atteeUen to any .eal BHiiDesatmtedwhlicre.OaicelaOoertHBse B.Idinc.BrowBvllle.Neto. PHYSICIANS. AS IIOLLADAY.K.D.. Physician. Sergeon . audObwetrldaH. Graaaatedla 18H.JLca ed In BrownvUte 1S. OfStoe. Ltt & Cratehs rrnctore. VcPheraon Bloc. Special attention pairf tc Obstetrics and diseases of Women and Children. 16m H L.3fATHEWS.PhyleftB and SarReon. Office . lnCttyDntrStare.No.SSMalastreet.BrowB vlIIe.Neb. BLACKS3IITHS. .1. IV. Glb.on, BLACESStlTH AND HORSE SHOET.. First reeOetweenXfn and Atlantic, Brownvllle jceh Workdoae to-order aad satisfaction guaran teed. TAILOR, BROWNVIL.LE, .NEBRASKA. Catting, or Catting and Making, done to -order on hort notice and at reasonable prices. Has bad long experience and can -warrant satisfsctior. Call at nib shop at residence on Atlantic street. AUTHORIZED BT THE V. S. G0TEKX3IEXT. THE FIRST NATIONAL 6i 0 P 2aid-ii2 Capital, $100,000 Authorized " o003000 IS PREPARED TO TRANSACT A General Banking Business BH AND SELL COM & GUEEEEGY DEAPTS on ail the principal cities of the United States and Snrope "Or: arproved carlty only. Time Drafts dscoHt Tii. and Bpdal accom jndatniw rrrnit to deposit -rs Dealers in GO"ERN3ENT ROND6, 5TATE, COUNTY &. CITY SECURITIES DEPOSITS Received payable on demand, and INTEREST al g wed on ume certificates - deposit. I mFCTORS Wm T.Ien. S. X. BftMey. K.A. Jiandly. Frank E. Johnson, H. M. AtkiBSOB W12. Prazier. OOifN L. CABSOX, A R IAVLOS. Cashier PresWeat. J.CJicXAUGHTOX.Asst Cashier. OKGrANIZED, 1870. STin BUK rf HEBUSU JLT BROTtXTILLE. CfJPXTJL, ;ioo,ooo. Transacts a general b Kins besiness, sells Drafts on all the princ' leitles of tho TJIOTED SPATES MD EUEOEE JE3- Special accommodations granted te depositors. STATS, CGUJST'2' &; CITY SECI?3ITISS, BOUGHT AJST5 SOLD. OFFICERS. W.H.McCREERY, j : President. W.W. HACKNEY, : Vice President. H. E. GATES, : : : : : Cashier. DIRECTORS. L. HO ADLEY . J. C. DEUSER. . WJC.H. HOOVER, l". 3C KAUF FlIAN, "W.W. HACKNEY. H. a LETT, W.H. 3ICCREERY. a Undertaking a Specialty. Keeps a full line of IIETALIC AInD WOOD BURIAL GASES. 5G Xain Street, BR0W2TVTLLE, XEB. JOHN CKADDOCK. W. T. CEADDOOE. CRADDOCK &, SOX. 7 GZ, 7 SJIMJLM&S! BBEECH-LOADIXfi SHOT GUXS, RIFLES, Carbines Ammunition and Sportlnc Goods. GurtS xnadezc order, and Hepairms neatly done. II Main St. Brovrnville, Keb. JEAKZ HEL2ISR, f AGON &jjLAGKSM!THHQP ONE DOOR WEST OF COURT SOUSE. -fYTAGON MAKING, Repairing, W Plows, and all -work done in the best jiianneraBdirtMrt neticc. Satisfaction Buaran d Give him ucii. I-ly. Dealer In "FII WITHIN 1 &a 1 gj ilia!3 x TiLiJS' SSe J. H. BA.TT Manufacturer and Dealer In -Blankets, Brasiies, Ply Nets, &c. B3 Repairing done on short notice. The cele brated Vacuum OH Blacking, for preserving Har ness, Boots, Shoes, c always on hand. 64 Main St., Brownville, Keb. B.in.SOTXDIEK,, ilanlifacturer and Dealer in HARNESS, SADDLES, WHIPS, COLLARS, BRIDLES, ZIXK PADS, BRUSHES, BLAXKETS, Kobes, &c. EROW3TT1I.L.2, NEBRASKA. Pall stoek ready made goods constantly on hand. PASHIONABIaS - m&$mt 0 " VX'' BOOT AND 8M0B CUSTOM WOEK ! H.IDE TO OKDEK, ASD FITS GUAKAXTEED. 29 Zilnlu Street, BROWXFI1LI.IL, KEBRASSA. J. MAROHK, MERCHANT TAILOR, and dealer in FinoEnslish, French. Scotch and Fancy Cloths, Vestinss. Etc., Etc. BroiYirville. Nebraska. HATS "YOU SESET P1ITF F Having purchased the 'ELEPHANT" 1 1VEQY AND FFEfl QTARI C I wish to announce that I am prepared to ? that I am prepared r business. Josh Rogers, do a first class livery Dusmess. Artirar IT. Walsh, BrownTille, Xebraslia. IB. STEOBLE, AT CZTS" BAESEY, Dealer In PAMLLT GEOGEELES, TEAS, CAXSED FRUITS, CANDIES, GLASSWARE. TOBACCO. CIGABS, BEEKSCHAni PirES, ASD iiUSICAL mSTimiESTS. FRESH OYSTESS HOMIWOOp MILLS Havingl n my employ Mr. HEKRY SHIFFER, inowledged to be the best miller in the tate. I am prepared to furnish GOOD FLOUR In any quantity. Every sack war ranted. Mv Flour Is for sale at all the principal stores in brownville. GEO. HOMEWOOD. Snerldan Mills, April 1st, 1S75. ENTISTEY.' JE. jJl. scwxjsrsr, An experienced practitioner, will fill and extract teeth for all -who wish, at reasonable rates, at bis residence on Main street, next door to Bratton's store. $1 Oadaratheme. Arent? wanted. Oatflt and L terms free. TRUE tCO., Asusta,Moine. S Sfev ?$ ffi1 I CD y cawDS I rLt? In air f r few S f a rv & I ! Ibnj-mybeer S3 S I don't, by Jake. mm j sFrzzt - w&jv I FMf h TIP fiiiGl 111111 1 . 4s SILENCE. There Is no ripple on the lace, 2sb breath upon the hill; No sound the sleeping echoes 'vrake, The aspen leaves are still. And in the dim and peaceful wood I feel the silent solitude. The fall-orbed moon looks coldly down On the untrodden snow; Beyong the slumb'ring town. The frozen stream below; Above the solemn dome of night Liftsupward to the infinite. Intue Soul's deep, there, too. Is rest ; Love needs no voice, no token Faith calmly sleeps on Hopes bright Truth's promise is unbroken, breast, "While Angel Patience, smiling still, Unconscious valts the perfect Will. THE OR Wlio "Will Save Sex? CHAPTER III. (Continued.) "You, the daughter of Benjamin Darknoll, parish clerk, once lodge gate keeper, brought rue for a mar riage portion five thousand pounds." "The gift of iair Hugh Wen tworth," said the woman, with a contemptuous toss of her handsome head. There was no heightening of her rich color as she said this, no beating of the heart or quickening of the pulse. It was a coarse nature endeav oring to face out and beat down a coarser nature. "You were n wife to be welcomed at any price," continued the calm lawyer with one of his blandest sneers; "but you were none the less welcome for the money you brought. I was a poor devil of a lawyer's clerk then; I am now Mathew Bookwood, Esq., with five clerkB of my own to badger and bully." You admit I made your fortune?' 'You assisted In doing so, yes ; but men of my talent are not easily kept under. I gave Mrs. Mathew Eock wood admission Into society, made her respectable, In short. In return, she gave me, judging me wisely to be a rising man, live thousand pounds. Don't lbse your temper. Nothing's got by losing the temper. Think your self in a witness-bos with Eawkius at work uponyou, and keep calm whatever you do. In a happy hour you told me the story of Philip's birth.' For a moment, the proud head drooped. For a moment onlj. 'You found it out for yourself,' was the reply. 'I guessed it all along. Benjamin DarKfioIi Is u close saving man, but j lodge-keepera do not usually dower their daughters with five thousand pounds. !)n our marriage-day, Di ana, you thought you wore a robe of mystery bah! I haven't followed Old Bailey practice for nothing; your robe of mystery was as transparent as a pane of glass.' 'Aud knowing all this, you married me ' 'It was an investment, my dear, without there being the slightest probability of my suffering n loss.' 'You played upon ray woman's weakness, my woman's vanity, my woman's sense of undeserved wrong. Besides, I loved you then, Mathew Rockwood.' Tne woman uttered a heavy sigh, the lawyer's eyes twinkled. lTte7i." he repeated emphasizing the word. 'Thak you, Diana thank you very much !' 'You know with what cruel pa tience and cunning you gathered up thread by thread of my story.' 'Old Bailey practice, my dear Old B Hey practice! It's a maxim with r that s thread picked up to-day may beec-lne a pair of hand-cuffs to morrow. You love Philip Went worth, who, in ignorance of the con nection between you, is unaware of your very praiseworthy devotion. Urged by you, I have lent the foolish spendthrift money, much money taking security, of course. That Is to eay, I have peculated largely upon him, and so am deeply interested in him aldo. Sir Philip Wentworth, in possession if the estates, will represent to me a good round sum,' he tLrjw his arms abroad, aud gaily snapped his fingers. 'For that reason, the estates must come into his hands, and into no other.' 'And tho girl this Gertrude? Ugh ! how I hate the name ! What is to become of her?' asked Mrs. Rock wood. Mr. Rockwood rose lightly from his chair, and, standing with his back to the fire, touched his wife several times lightly on the arm, with a con fidential air. 'A question not just yet to be satis factorily replied to, but it is one un der consideration. A girl'tf life is but a fragile thing at most to stand be tween a man and large estates. The speaker's eyes met his wife's dark orbs fixed sternly, iuquiringly on his face. No words were necessa ry ; they understood each other ; the soft, panther-like, smiling man the handsome, terrible woman. Romance, indeed ! Why, in this nrosaic age this ago of telegrams and penny postage this praotical age of 'free breakfast tables' of religious 'platforms' and tract socities here we have Macbeth played over again, in a snug dressing-room, near a blaz ing fire, in the house of a highly res pectable, and remarkably well-known, Bedford Row solioitor. Crime has no epoch. Sweet Au- lilEVTiHflDTII burn has its resident Borgia, and hearta as black as any that beat be neath embroidered satin or slashed velvet are covered by the latest inven tion In modern stays, or 'the last thing out' from Poole's, in the shape of coats. 'Should Sir Hugh speak I mean, should he, moved by his new-born af fection for this girl, speak the truth V It was the Mrs. Rockwood who put the question ; her husband replied to it thoughtfully. 'It would be a bad thing, my dear ruin In fact; but hitherto, Darknoll your worthy and intelligent father, has had no fear of such a result. In falling from hia horse, Sir Hugh in jured the brain, and it was to have been hoped that a country doctor wouid have done the rest. I leave this place for Wentworth Abbey to morrow or, rather to-day, for the clock i6 marking the small hours al ready.' 'You! But you know Sir Hugh won't see you !' 'I shall not Intrude upon his hospi tality. Your father will give me house room, from whence I can watch and direot. I have myself al ready provided a doctor and a nurse, both of unblemished character and highly experienced. There is not an M. D. in all the London Directory in whose hands I would sooner trust a case thau in those of David Mal- yon's provided they were steady enough to hold it.' 'And to that drunkard she commenced ; but he stopped her by an authoritative gesture. 'Nonsense nonsense, Mrs. Rock wood! Don't call names! I pick out my own agentB, and trust whom T please. I can trust Maiyon perhaps because he is a drunkard. At any ratebad he not been one, I should not hold him under my thumb as I He put his thumb down firmly on the table, illustrating his meaning; then, with nothing apparently dan erous about him but his cruel, shiftly eyes, went on his in light, jaunty way. Have we forgotten to say that Mr. Rockwood's hair was pale gold and curly; that his moustache and beard were flaxen also; that bis skin was pale and much freckled on the cheek bones ; that he was a colorless man, in faot, pretty and fair to look upon, but all want of color was made up by play of expression, and a restless ac tivity of movement Mathew Rock wood was seen at his worst when un conscious that he was being seen, which was rare. 'We are about to play for high stakes, Mrs. Rockwood, and each must carry out, without scruple or question, the part allotted. Maiyon will report on Sir Hugh's state to-day or to-morrow, aud upon hi3 report I shall act. We meet at your father's. By the way, I shall want you to make the acquaintance of a certain Mrs. Prudence Catt. She goes down with Maiyon as a nurse, highly recom mended. A very worthy woman, and one likely to relieve Miss Ger trude of much trouble. 'And my part in the plot?' asked Mrs. Rockwood, on whom the very mention of Gertrude's name had the effect of the spur to a fiery horse. 'The most important of all !' said the lawyer, speaking now very seri ously, as though he wished to im press every word upon the memory of the listener. 'The one great obstacle to our success at present is Philip himself. I look to you to remove that.' 'I don't understand.' 'But you will you will; only have patience, and listen. Selfish and heartless as I know him to be there, there, don't let us quarrel over a dif ference of opinion he would throw us over to-inorrow, if believing him self to be the rightful heir, he found himself once in possession of the Wentworth estates. True I have him tight enough in parchment fetter and bond but it is my custom to make doub ly sure. He must play the game with us play it with his eyes open. He must know that we make him what he is to be, but can as readily unmake him, should he prove rebellious, and I fear, I am very sorry to say, it is in his nature ungrateful.' 'What! Philip know?' She here started angrily to her feet, but the eyes of the lawyer never leaving her face for a moment kept her sub dued. 'Either from your lips or mine. Make your choice. As I said, we play for high stakes. When all are dip ped, the game is both safe and sure.' 'And the details of your plot?' said the woman, after a long and, upon her side, painful pause. 'You have not told them.' 'I shall be governed by circum stances,' he laughed. 'We are all in the same boat, my dear, and you may be snre of one thing the Wentworth J estates shall not go out of the jam- 1 T- - xiy r He turned to the clock, compared it with his watch, which he wound up with a yawn. And now, Mrs. Rockwood, with your permission I will take a few hours' rest before starting on my journey. In less than a dozen hours from this I hope to be within a few minutes' walk of the bedside of Sir Hugh. Philip is sure to call in hot haate to-day. I will leave a letter for him ; you must do the rest.' He replaced his waich in his pock et, turned sharply on his now moody, wife, laid his hands womanly in their .long, delicate formation, and spark ling with rings, upon her shoulders, and said, 'Once and for all, listen to me, Diana. In suoh a matter as this, the first thing necessary is a head that head must be mine. Work with me, and the ambition of your heart shall be gratified. Upon his conduct will depend our chances cT success.' And Gertrude?' she asked almost savagely. It was the second time she had ask ed the question. Rookwood removed his hands, and ligthly caressed his beard, and laughed. Why, how a woman's jealousy magnifies matters! Miss Gertrude Wentworth is an obstacle, no doubt, but one that vnll I make disappear, be assured of that.' With these words Mr. Mathew Rockwood relighted his chamber can dle, and betook himself to rest. He had a good digestion, and was not troubled with dreams, so we have no doubt he slept well. Not sq Mrs. Rockwood. She drew her chair up to the fire, and rested her feet on the fender, and looked down brooding into the coals. Morning dawned damp and chilly. She was still there ; the fire had long ago gone out, but she had not stirred, nor had her eyes once closed. Motionless as a statue, she sat on, the knitted brows and clenched teeth alone denoting the tempest that was raging in her breast. A mournful sight, that handsome, brooding, desperate face, with the eyes fixed uuconsciously upon the fireless grate. All is not gold that glitters, and all is not happiness beneath the roof of Mr. Mathew Rockwood, of Bedford Row. CHAPTER IV. AMONG GREEN LANES. A stretch of English landscape, very beautiful to look upon, glittering with sunbeams, and bright with gold en mists. A foreground of lofty trees, shed ding cool shadows down upon a pleas ant labyrinth of hedgerows full of bloom and beauty, glossy leaf, and pleasant scent. To the lefta magnificent park slopes downwards in gentle undulations to a sparkling river. To the right a wilderness of copse and thicket tending away into the thickerand more majestic woods. A thoroughly English scene; the blue smoke o' farm-houses rises above the tree top's; 'their windows glisten in the sunlight; and the bleating of flocks, the lowing of cattle, is every where enhancing, rather than dis turbing, the stillness of the ecene. From amidst a great clump of state ly elms rise a cluster of turrets aud chimneys, the turrets dominated by a grand square bell-tower, surmounted by a huge weathercock, around which the quaint old chimneys, of every conceivable fashion and shape, clus ter, shouldering each other, as if ea ger to take their time from the old white-faced clock whioh solemnly ticks, as it has ticked for a century past, in their midst. A narrow, well-kept road, bordered by carefully trimmed hedgerows, leads to a railway station, of which the white gate is just visible, with the tall signal-post stretching out its arms against the clear blue sky. The name of this station is Dripsey Bridge ; the village just visible from our point of view rejoices in the same name, while the mansion with the many turrets, and huge clock-tower, is Wentworth Abbey, one of the old est residences in the neighborhood. A gentleman, very young, and what the fast young ladies of our day would call 'awfully handsome,' is seated on a gate at one of the many entrances to Wentworth Park. At his feet is a small valise, whioh he impatiently taps with his walking-stick, an occu pation only varied by the rattling of his heels ag'ainst the gate. He cer tainly is very.handsome, though not at all pretty-looking. A fine tall lad of about twenty square head, a broad forehead, around whioh the curls cluster thickly ; honest, fearless Sax on eyes; a well formed nose, and a chin which, like the rest of the face, denotes energy and power of will. Though not exactly one of those 'athletes' so bepraised by our lady writers, this young fellow's figure was full of nervous strength ; every movement was graceful but wiry withal ; a strength which iu a few years would develop into a perfect manhood. 'The train can't be far off,' he said, speaking to himself, while he beat the valise with redoubled ener gy. 'Not but what I would lose twenty trains rather than lose the chance of seeing her. Who knows when we shall sleet again ? I would have had a talk with her long ago, but that old villian Darknoll haunts the Abbey like an evil spirit, refusing either to permit an entrance or to de liver a message. 'Sir Hugh mustn't be disturbed!1 he croaks; 'as if I wanted to disturb him! Not but what if Sir Hugh were up and well, I should be admitted readily enough. I think she'd coming!' He stood upon the gate', and gazed wistfuily down a winding path that, half hidden in the tall grass, ran like a ribbon through the park. After a careful survey, lie resumed bis Beat with an expression of much disap pointment. 'Now if old Bleek had played me false about the letter, and not deliver ed it, I'll never" trust in human na turethat is to say In the power of money again ! The moment I slip ped a sovereign into her horny palm how she did promise ! Note, number one, when starting in life, the enormous number of promises a sov ereign will purchase! Note, number two, to be proved the amount of per formances likely to follow ! And, af ter all, what harm.is there in me? As if every soul in dear Dripsey Bridge, God bless it! didn't know me! from my noble tutor, the rector, down to Peter Applethwaite, who carried my bag when shooting, my rod and flics when fishing, filling up his va cant time by a little nocturnal poach-incr. He paused a moment, musing ; then again the bright, frank smile broke out upon his face. 'And I know they all love me; ev ery man Jaok of them except, per haps, old Darknoll, who looks as grim and ancient as n battered Death's head on a moss-covered tombstone.' He had resumed his tapping of the valise, and was again about to recom mence his attack upon the gate, when a slight figure the figure of a girl, who had glided under, cover of the hedges, unseen, behind him laid a small gloved hand on his shoulder. 'If Mr. Everard Corbett fails in thi3 world, it will not be for want of hav ing a good 'opinion of himself.' With a joyous bound the young gentleman addressed as Everard Cor bett leaped off the gate, opened It, and with a flushed face and rapidly beating heart, welcomed the new comer. 'Oh, Gertrude ! Miss Wentworth thi3 is jolly ? Is it you ? I had hard ly hoped and yet I dared to hope that I should see you once again be fore I left Eugland. You were not the girl, I knew, to let a fellow go without saying good-b3Te!' 'You are going a long way, Everard to Bombay, is it not?' asked the young lady, in a quiet, musical voice. "Well, it is a precious long way, when a fellow doesn't want to go at all. My mother died when I was born a nice business of profit and loss that was. I wonder my guv'nor didn't strangle me. Then, you see, there is the guv'nor.' 'Colonel Corbett,' said the young lady. 'And he's a devil of a martinet, he is all curry powder and black pep per, so they tell me; but for all that I know he's got a heart as big as the old Abbey yonder, or he wouldn't have been so good to me. What happy days I've had at Dripsey, to be sure ! The dear, cozj rectory, and jolly Rec tor, with -hl book aud his pipe. To think of exchanging all ibis for a scorched-up bungalow, a muddy river and scores of crocodiles !' And he kicked the much suffering valise fiercely into the road. Nonsense! I won't stay with you another moment, if 3ou taik in this mad wa3". It is but natural your father should wish to see you before he makes up his mind as to what you are to be.' 'I mean to be a barristar a barris ter at law in England, of course. Why shouldn't I be? I've eloquence i Tho young lady interrupted him with a little laugh, which sgaiu brought the blush to his face. 'You've a great deal of conceit, Mas ter Everard,' she said ; 'but young as I am, you must take one rule of con duct from me 'Obey your father iu all things.' ' 'In all but one thing, I will,' was the steady reply. 'I have your pledged word, and you have mine. I marry none but Gertrude Wentworth. Oh, bless you! I know the gulf at present between us; but, with ruy energy, I shall be a Lord Chief Jus tice in no time. And, though I know your brother hates me-and, indeed, hates you ' 'Everard! 'You shall soon be independent of him if there's virtue in law-books and parchment. We've plighted troth, my own dear Gertrude, and that bliss ful memory will run like a golden thread through the dingy spider's web of the law.' It was very pleasant 10 hear him talk thus so strong, so hopeful, so full of youth a great, generous spirit opening out upon the world, yet one, when deeply stirred, as ready for at tack as for defence. He drew her to--ward him, she girlishly unresisting, in full confidence in her own and Ev erard's honor. 'Oh, how happy we Shall be, darl ing! There never was such a bright future a3 ours shall be! And Oh! how good you are, my own dear, dear Gertrude, to say you will wait for me a thousand years, if necessary !' Ten thousand, if necessary." was her laughing reply. And will never love any one else ?' Never!' And thus the boy and girl talked on, painting everything with the rosy tints of youth, and building blissful castles in the sir. 'Your father, asked Everard at last, as having forgotten something, which he certainly had! 'is there no change for the better?' Her head drooped on his shoulder, and her voice was scarcely audible as she answered, 'None. Wo expect a great doctor from London, a nurse, and other peo ple. Benjamin Darknoll, who has arranged all, says there is nothing to fear aa yet, and you know he loves my father devotedly.' For a moment the strong-, open face of Everard Corbett looked no longer young. His forehead was furrowed by two deep wrinkles, and his voice was stern and harsh. I have never found anything to like in Benjamin Darknoll, or any body that he liked. I believe him to fee a very bad man.' 'But you have no proof.' 'No, I have nothing to urge against him but my personal dislike. Now tell me, Gertrude, for that horrid train will be here in a few minutes, you will let me write to you every day of course I mean every week, or every mouth, at the least telling you what my father says, for I shall tell him all about you, and what my plans are for us both, and how, loving you as I do, I am bound to get on. and should things go badly with Sir Hugh, take you from your brother Philip's j guardianship,' be could not repress a shudder as he uttered Philip's name 'claim you, with my dear father's consent, for I shall know how to make that sure, and claim you as my own.' 'I shall read all the letters you wyte to the good rector, and if they con tain enclosures, I dare say Mr. Mild may (the rector's name) 'would read them out to me.' 'We are sure to be happy, Gertrude;' and the brave, confident lad snapped his fingers in defiance of all the powers of evil. 'If we could on ly have been near each otherl' 'But that can't be !' said the sweet, calm voice. 'Not just for the present Why, no, and the light again faded from his face ; 'that's true. But' and he rais ed her hand passionately to his lips 'I solemnly swear as I have often swore before that Everard Corbett takes no other wife but Gertrude Wentworth, or goe3 unmarried to his grave! They were, a3 we have said, bat boy and girl speaking like this this in that quiet autumn evening; but there was something not so much in the words of the boy. as iu the face which wore the stamp of manhood and truth that Gertrude a3 seized with a vague foreboding of danger, cluDg to him. 'Oh, Everard, you know I trust to you ! We have grown up together ; and I suppose It's always thinking in the same grooves that we have but one heart!' 'But one!' he anwered, folding her to his breast. 'Don't give way, dear! don't give way! His own head was averted, to hide the fnst-coming tears. 'We ought both to be happy, believing, as we do, in each other Won't you kiss me, dear, before I go?' 'Why, not?' Two tender hands were raised fear lessly to his face r and, half laughing, half crying, two lips, like rose-bud3, met his twice. A railway whistle had sounded ; a train the down train from London had come and gone; but the lovers, in happy oblivion, iiad neither heard the whistle nor counted the flight of tiine. 'Love took up the snnris of Time, and turned it in his glowing hands. Every moment lightly shaken ran itself to golden sands.' Bright recollections of the past, as to whether it was at the Manor House or the Grange they had first met, where Gertrude oh ! how hotly she denies the accusation! was flirting with a handsome Guardsman, though she admitted she was jealous of Ever ard's attentions to a red-faced, snub nosed girl in blue. Both accusations end in a confession of love at first sight, and a vow, taken again and again, with clasped hands warm kisses, and tearful eyes, of love eternal, and therefore always ; and so, whispering of fond hopes for the future painting bright piotures on the broad and temping canvas which Fancy had spread out before them repeating sgaiu and again that word so ' betters weet, farewell they were startledbv the sound of footsteps near them. TO BB CONTINUED. Gold in the Air. The Oregon pajiers describe some boiling springs in Wasco county whence flow streams of chloride of sil ver. The waters are so surcharged with feoapy gray silver that a stone will not sink in them, and when a crowbar is forced down into a pool the specific gravity of the mass will throw it back into the air like an arrow shot ' pose an absurdity. Fiction is most from an Indian's bow. The amalgam I powerful when it eontaine most truth ; is worth $9,000 a ton, and there are 160 j and there is but little truth that- we acres of these springs. As a matterof! get so true as that which weflnd iafle course, the Comstock lode will be tion. So long as history is written by abandoned and all Nevada will move ! partisans, and science by theorists and to Oregon! A Gold Hill reporter philosophy by hobby riders, the faith springs to the rescue of Nevada. The ' ful studies of human life, as we find streets in the town were macadam ized with silver ore of low grade from the waste of the rainejand are literal ly paved with silver. A handful of irravel which the reoorter Dicked up In a trench yielded $2,35 gold and S,75 silver, the average being G to the ton. The rarity of the atmosphere in these Western towns seems to favor etustie ity of imagination. Ex. A gentleman making a speech at the opening of a cookery school in Edinburg, Scotland, said that every young woman before marrying should be able to exhibit a diploma showing that she is a good cook. It was Mr. Choate who once refer red to Charles Francis Adamsras 'the son of the last of the Adamses.' Robert Burdette is the name of the funny man of the Burlington Hawk-eye. Facts aud Figaers. From tbe Chieago Tribe as. The official returns of the late elec tion bring to light a number of inter esting facts whieh are well wonth giv ing to the public. The Democrats are in the habit of saying that the Re publicans have declined in strength, but the figures below exhibit a very different condition of things. We copy the New York Tribtms tables : In tbe&nowhfeutbtotkePrefctoBtialTete of th RbMIwbs la the twwty-tw 5rta ern States ks eeatrasied wtj tfcIxnesvta efer before east by tfeai pasty la tfeese Statee: Ifetr Catt ornlajMO tMG MM MJM Con Bactfem ) 7J lUlBVlL. IjMtt lowaW5 Xaiae we; MaoacpBseMBulgM Xtrtitgan ty in i.ra nut C8 7U7 m7 255 Nevada- JK3 New Yrk wsi N. Hampafeire ut New JenMjr MC OMo 'M'y Otmkm KG Peanayrraata ...MS Rhv9 JltaBtlt&IH Vermont UK Wtnrmwlii Ti m Total feJS ynM7 BM H 533 UW,7 M,! la Mala and Vermont Um OMtMve eiws t loos were hM in Sapcamber. mm! tfee Re publican vote in both States -wag mMh lar ger than ever before, though tbe FresMeBtlai. vote wm not gaite full. Compare those great gains wfth the election in certain Socrthern States where the White-Liners applied 'dis oouragements' to Republican voters with the view of 'causing them not to vote; oBHtat. Arkaaaaa. vtnenua Texas Alabama ., XtWnnlput 1BT2 9I.MC njm sua Total M4M1 Mt3 lWVtt Instead of this lee of more than a hundred thousand votes, there ought to have .baeit an inorwaee of at least that many, awu" could have bean but for the illegal obstructions the Tliden ites placed in the way of Republicans going freely to the poll. TfWea. by foree an fraud, has secured a Majority of the popular vote in the South. Tho New York Tribune, commenting thereon, says: 'We congratulate him upon a ma jority obtained by diligent use of knives aod revolvers, whips aud ri fles. Many men would eeora U countenance stieh a terrible erime by claiming an oftiee as its fruit. Mr. Tilden, it seems, raises tn more ob jection now than he did ia 1S6S. when the State of New York was robbed." The Voio of JttiiieoS. Buehauau's bloody-banded Dem ocracy rushed from all parts of the Solid South, some years ago, to brew- beat and intimidate Kansas into giv ing a pro-slavery Deoiocratio vote. Hundreds of white Republicans (thero were no negroes there) were murdered iu cold blood ; their houses robbed and burned; their steek driven off; their wives and daughters .ravished before their faces, and then left to perish like wild beaate. The town of Lawrence was sacked and burned, and ite streets ran with blood, in a raid made upon its principal citizens by Quantrell, the Democratic guerilla. President Bu chanan and Samuel J. Tilden lodked with approval on tit ia method of prose lyting Kansas to Democracy by the same taeties white Deaooeraoy have preserved for the last ten years in Leufeiana, aud especially this jieac and last. And now Kansas, redeemed and disenthralled from the military des potism of Buchanan Demoeraey, with not a soldier in her , borders, and ex ercising her local freedom to the ful lest extent, gives Haye forty thous and majority. Every county in the state has gone Republican. Let Louisiana Democrats take warning. The day is not far distant wben not a single parish in her' boundaries will give even a Democratic vote, for Dem ocracy will become more odiotts there than it is in Kansas. For every Rep ublican murdered there, for opinion's sake, will come a hundred to taka'his place. The pelican Is now feeding her young with her blood. ZomsvUts Cominkreial. The Truth of Fiction. To suppose that netted oouM per manently appeal to so auuiy glasses of mind if it were only fiction, is to sup- them in the best noyels, are the truest things we have ? and they can set fail to continue to be theeoureeofeur fav- J orite knowledge, our beat amusements . and our finest inspirations. Dr. J. (7." Holland; Scritmcrfor December. Charcoal has been discovered to be a Eure cure for burns. By laying a small piece of charcoal upon the burn the pain subsides imraediatly. By leaving the charcoal oft one hour, the wound is healed, as has been demon strated on several oeeasioae. A young widow was asked wbpshe I was-going to get married fio soon after the death of her first huebaact. 'Oh, la!' said she, 'I do it t present fret ting myself to death on aeeotrnt. of dear Tdai. Adam Smith said : Man k as.aaf-f mal that makes beffgttias.' Sodees whiskey mafee ber-gaias in at Vtm Year. jmivtomswoH. ML MB JllCt IIIH nat ' MJM M mm sues au