Mjyii II ii mljlfj r" "' ' "?5?SStev yjScSeirW? " inf IK PI s Pi'iim i TxxrT3"rmTCti7ir .(.. a. . , K.i , . or a - . .. TiTJ"i7 rp ADVERTJSEE Q.w.rAiKgaoTKia. T.c.K-cxJt. FAIRBROTHER fc DAC-EB, Publisher- at Proprietors. ADYXJ-TISIIVG KATES. OneIncn..one ycar P Ea.cn scceetog,tncls.Tr 4ai One Inch, per month t neo- Each additional inch, per, naouta. egal advertisement xUcpcl rates Onesqre ( 10 lines or NonparfJKor less) first lcertion.fi 6 each snbseqnent insertion. 5c ES-All transient advertisements must be -pat forls advance. VOL. 22. IT. 24 OFFICTAL PAPEtf-OT TJCOlf-VTY inn, a u v is rv i in n ii. -isrii .m a kf 9 . x.'i rrsfi fiw nw r m ni nv 'rr- TJIUaiS, IN ADVANCE: r J V ) L ' ? Onpeopr. oHeyear 82 00 J 'J , Onecepy, six moalbi 100 ""iiii - " " - .-,-. Cine eepy, uiree memos ... - . . . - OtT N papr sent from the office cntH paid for. TTTnIS Eg?5J!L BEOWFVILLE, NEBBASKA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1871. 11 z'-.- V" -.--- ...- w - , MrBqrmBmrrBS:afrfcaBaB&l&aEBB5RBKI&BBBBS&z'- .11M -- J .!'' ..,-, im-ihhm .. - r OBHCIII DIEEGTOEY. District OfScers. s b rouxn f.KO S. SMITH . - WILLIAM 3L HOOVER. p . CECII Judex. , .IMstrlrt Attorney Rstrlct Clerk, i )epHty Clerfc. County OfHcers. J at. VIS s. CIIURCII -.County Judge VVIIJSON E. MAJORS Clerk and Recorder Treasnrer Sherlfl rnnmer eurvcyor x n r.rr:MORE UVII-ON PLASTERS. -R. K.EBRIC1IT JAMES ii. 1OKEG JOHN IT-SHOOK. . JUN HA. XllUi-C J U.PEKRY. r Cenxmlssloners City Officers. J.S STCLI , 1RHKIJHT J.R JJOCKI.B . V,' T. KOOKRS KO. II. LANOX X nir-iiAitis. i j'KtPirwnY.f ' , 'Mayor Police Judtre ert TreSBrer larhl 1st War- W A JUDI-I-5. J J. ilKR'-KR, ) T.EW1S HILL C NEIDIXART. 2nd Ward 3rd Ward PBOrESSIOKAT- CARDS. OT ULT- & THOTklAS. O AT'J'OI-VICSS AT 1.AAV. OWcc. orer Tb-orc Htll A Oo.'.. stre.3Jr a YllftX . T "L. SCHICK. . ATTOIUVETATliilV. Ofllre rcr J. . ll5tit Brtt'tn-ore.-rwwnviUe. yebraokc.' T H. KROADY. U .. -Attorney and Counselor at aiv, omrfOTertatt? Ba.n .Bro-nvllt .. T T. I.0ERri. r Attorney nntl Counselor Rt Law. Will'Nye-illc'i'i attention toan lealbls entriiedtohtecare. Oflcin the Ry building, I-f.-wnrl-e. yh. . i S. HOLlrADAY. tl . Physician, Surgeon. Onfitetrician. , ..j,w in ii Tjt-d In BrownvillelSSS. K-i--il Ktteirtion. raid to Obstetric- and diseases i .,fV.eieii HHdChlldren. Office. -It Xal street. s: A. OSHOTIX. ATTOUSEi ATJiAV.. t2ice. N. 61 ilaln trJaro'vnviic. .--. I T HT. CLIIv. FASHION .-OTIONART.E rrP-j M) SHOE XAKEll pU , BOOT A . t rSTOil OUK nurtK. to .orocr. a ""'" ! . . !. ...! jruaranuitm. HHwinni; rt. j---. .Shan. o.'tJ 3Iiit itreet. RttwnviUe.-. - .. j- - I a.. aM. timntnut lijeii. .-J V, GrBsON. BLACKS JIITH A.VD HORSE SHOEU. -T--..i-rn- ni- rvH tUfertfnn smiranteed "Ftrnt strict, botweirn iun and Atlantic. Uronn Allll.i0,W. i ' 1). MARSH.- " ' TAILOR, , IlKOWN'VILLE, - - .NEBRASKA. iuttip,"-r Cnttiiip mud Making, done to orfler on .-.hort mUee rihI t re-frnaWe pri-e. -"Has liad'tonj; eperienee and chu w.irMiit hHrisfuctioc. Sliop In Alex. Kolilon' old stand. '.t-ACOB'MAnOHX,' .MEESHANT TAILOR, and dealer in Tlne-.'nrlish-.r'ienrh. Scotch and Fancj Cloths, ...". -Testis?. Etc., Etc. SroYVi-viile. Xclraslia. ,'TOSEPH SCHUTZ, .JjtAL-R IN Clocks, Watches, Jewelry 2C i. SB.'Maln Street, nUOAVNVILUE. KEimASICA. -v. iCVette -onstantly on ( large awl well V"& as-ortedstooW ot -enlnes-ileles in his hue 5" .rAEepairint-. f Clocks, -.Vatcj.efi and Jewelry ""'iloac on short notice, at reoable rates. '-' "ALL irOi-A' WARRANTED. J. R. HaTvImis, ' TONSORIAL AETIST, i .; ', 1st door west First KUowU Bank. ! 'iSrctc-itvillc. - 'c2'ash'(t. ! jsa ir---tx- . t Shavinjr. Sii.impooinu. Hur Cnttiiijr, Ac, i tlna In Mf !liJlt stvlf of ti-e Art J "-YOUK PATRON A'.E SOLICITED. IX BIWWXTILLE TUB AST IfJZEE OFJZACH : . 3IOXTK. I AT HEWS . DENTIST, ' ROVXVlIE, NEKUASK4, Fi E1! Ppr a good -Tire call at tlie : oxl.ee of tiie i - n en risiyipi! where'you can get all kinds of " COAL, FL. SCOTT, ;'. .RICHMOND, : 1 C , ANTHRACITE. jJ. -BOBISOU, MHBsMM, DEALER IX OOTS AND SHOE CUSTOM "ft'ORK -MDE to order. "Repairing Neatly Done. '-W JfctH ? - V7i-f7' wnt postpaid to any address. Every needle JLf otiililllC - .f,s7.tarriint0(Jo:t,lc,(.tqualJ. 95 Main Street 1 O " rt - s S . 0 ' s I 5 I. c CI A W - H Pi Q Main Street ESTABLISjLEB IK 1856. O 3D E S T EEAL ESTATE AGEiSrCY I2V ISTIi--3R-Sl.. William II. Hooker. Ioe a general Heal Estate liublnes. Sells Lands, on Commission. -akes Leeds, 3IortgBost niptc nr?nln!nt' In Ihn trr Lands on Commission, examines Titles, end ull Instru ments nertninlntr lo the transfer of Real Ea- ----- mt Tf n n -- Complete Abstract of Titles to all Ileal Estate In Isemaha Comity. AirrnoitizED by the u. s. uotekmiekt. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK O F BROTVlVlrXI.E. Paid-wp Capital, $50,000 Authorized '' 500,000 lis PltRAKED TO .TRANSAITT A, , a, , j .HO1 ibUSineSS i BUY A-vD SELL COIN & CUBEEKCY DEAFTS on all the principal cities of the United States and Europe MONEY LOANED Oh approved security onlv. Time Drafts discouiit I wl. aim special aecommodtMs granted to depoalt j org. Jealers in GOVltXIENT UO--DS. state, COUNTY & CITY SECURITIES DEPOSITS KecejVwj pyww,, e demand, and STJRKST nl- DIKHOTOISS. Wm.T.Den, JJ. -U. Bailey, M.A-Handle-. Kraut E. Jolmstiu, -Luther Iloodley. Wm.'FratSfcier. 30H' L. CAl.SO-N, A.K. DAVlSOIt.Oafiliier. President. I. C.SIu-n AUGHTO. Asst. Cashier. ORGANIZED. 1870. BROWXViLLE. CAJKJT!, !1OO-0mQO- TransaclK a general bt Draftbou all tiie priiic' cln: business, sells Icltleb of the UATI1D STATES AND EUKOPE ? Special accommodations granted ts depositors. STATS, GOU-3T"3r & CITY SECTJHITIES, SOXJGJI: JSI SOLD. OFFICERS. W.H.McCREERY, : : President. W."W. HACKNEY, : Vice President. H. E. GATES, : : : : : Cashier. DIRECTORS. Ii. HOADLEY. J. C. DEU&BR. wii.H. hoover, c.:.kat:ffiax, W.-W. HACKNEY. H. C- I.ETT, -W.H. MCCREERY. FEAKZ EE3MER, AGON &)LAGKSMiTHHGP O-CE BOOR WEST OF COURT HOUSE. WAGON MAKING, Hepairing Y i Plows, and all work done in the besi best i manner and on short notice. Satisfaction su-ran-f34-ly. eed. Givehira&caU. 3 Please Temember, if you want any Sewing , machine repairs of any kind, or any ma- chine, or any attachment, needle, oil; or if ; yon want a new machine, or a new cabinet , put on an old machine, orn. rebuilt machine. you will save from 2a to i per cent Dycauin? Rrownville Neb ' RX "O The Victor. Florence, Isew Davis, 1M . w. &AV. Needles, coc per dozen, all others 50c. per doz. Assorted numbers Mil FipIiJTITEBMIrflFllBn i ! AT LADI Blowing Babbles. As noltered through the village. I saw children at their play. Blowing bubbles in the sunshine From a penny pipe of clay. I had passed them with a greeting. But their gladness charmed me so, Tbatl turned to watch the bubbles Sailing through the summer's glow. Thongh they seemed not half so brilliant As In boyhood I had blown, 'When the smallest of my babbles Hold a Talnbow ol Its own. Yet my little friends grew merry As each tinted, air-blown toy Floated upward, and the baby Clapped Its chubby bands for joy. And the girl her arms outstretching. As if begging tbcm to stay Said, "I'm sorry, oh, so sorry. They so quickly fade away !" But her brother Jooked right manly As lie shouted with delight, "It is easy, very easy. To blow others just as bright! ' And he blew with such good fortune That, before his task was done. You might count a score of bubble: Floating gaily In the sun. Then her eyes with pleasure sparkled. As the crystal phantoms played, And she quite forgot her sorrow That they each so quickly fade. And she paused where I was resting In the shadow of a yew, And in tones of laughing wonder cried, "Can't you blow bubbles, too?" As I knew not how to answer. There I left them at their play. Blowing hubbies In thesuushine, From a penny pipe of clay. THE GIEL MUTIlinBER. Toward the close of au October daj' in .777, a vessel sailing in a south westerly direction crossed the fifty seventh degree of north longitude. Her keel plowed the waves of the North Atlautic, and her destination seemed to be the Azores. She was sailing before a strong wind, aud the arrangement of her sails indicated flight. If flight, from whom? The naked eye could perceive no pursuer on the bosom of the ocean; but the sea-glasses leveled by a number of British officers, who graced the clean decks, revealed a dark speck on the watery rim of the Northern horizon. iue- uu,- wauiH " ". "" Ti.fa disfnnt nhfent nMnslnnprl no I in "euce the chain of tyranny, with little anxiety among the officers. A silence which had reigned among them for many moments, was sud deuty broken by a man whose bear ing might have proclaimed him an English Admiral. "He still follows," were the words tbat fi'll from his lips; "but by the help of Neptune we'll outsail him in the night." Though the officerRj.oke with much assurance, there lurked in his tongue a latent fear which his companions detected, and exchanged significant glances. Over the face of the deep, night was setting, and the vessel kept straight before the wind, to the joy of its commander who had lately spoken. The shadows gradually veiled the far away pursuer from sight, and when the officers separated, expressions of triumph were on their lips. The British vessel was the Meteor, a fast sailer, whose armament consist ed of twenty-eight guns. She waa a well-built double decker, and had seen much service in the Avar which had raged almost three years between Great Britain and her American col onies. Her speed and her formidable armament had made her a te ror to American vessels in European waters Her commander, a sea-born English man, named Guilderoy, was au officer of undoubted courageand cunning, to which he added a vindictiveness that rendered bim obnoxious to many of his own crew. The Meteor was flying from a new and very formidable foe flying with ahold filled with booty. On the day preceding the one that had just closed upon her iu flight, she had captured an American cruiser, after a spirited contest. The prize had proved one of value, and Captain Guilderoy did not wish to risk an engagement with the vessel following in his wake. Captain Conynghaui, the pursuer was a second Paul Jones. He was one of the most daring spirits of our then infant navy, aud his name bad become a terror along the coast of England. He pursued and captured a number of British ships, which he either burnt or sent into friendly ports ; and when he descried the Me teor, fresli from her victory, he hesi tated not to crowd on all sail and give chase. There were men on the decks of the Revenge, as Conyngham's vessel was appropriately named, who watched the flying Englishman. Much spec ulation concerning the result of the chase ran'th rough the several groups, and Conyngham smiled when he turned to reply to the words of a youthful lieutenant who stood be side him, sea-glass in hand. "We can outsail her, Gilbert," the American captain said, with empha sis. "This wind favors both of us alike, and in the calm that will soon prevail, she must lay by till day." The young officer turned from his captain, aud again his " eyes were strained to make out the form of the ship rapidly disappearing among the now prevailing shadows. Conyngham did not return the glass, but watched the face of his youthful companion. "I am confident that Miss Temple is on board of the Englishman," he said, at last. Uf course she is I" exclaimed the ' UtenaDt With a flash- " know that she was on board the Mischief ; wnen it fell into the Meteor's hands I nrt T nm itifi,i k -v.-. -:n ' I . . . ,, mains a prisoner." -,-. ... -...u uu oo ami re- The fairest prize old Guilderoy has captured in many a long day?" re marked Conyngbam, with a laugh at the lieutenant's smile, and the flash that lighted up the depth of his anx ious eyes. The conversation was interrupted by an unexpected veering of the wind that paled the oheeks of the numer ous watchers on the deck, and the of ficers separated. IS"ow, having learned something of the -Vlsteor's pursuer, let us return to the English vessel. Tne calm prophesied by the Ameri can captain fell upon the ocean short ly after the descent of darkness. It worried Guilderoy, and he held fre quent consultations with his officers, now on deck, now in his state-room. He held consultations in the latter place over a bottle of choice wine, and under the liquor's influence he soundly cursed the Yankee priva teer. Becalmed on the water and beneath the stars the Meteor lay like a huge slumbering leviathan. Her lights were hidden, and the spectral figures that trod her decks conversed in sub dued whispers. In a small apartment not far remote from the couacil cabin stood a beauti ful voung girl. There was a look of sorrow in her dark eyes and she was quite pale. She appeared to be listening, for her ear was bsnt toward Guilderoy's room from which direction came a fuint murmur of voices. "I know that we are becalmed," she said to herself In an audible tone, "and I know, too, that the officers are worried about it. The men ? I know thatagreatmany of them hate Guilde- roy. Didn't I hear the helmsman say t last night that the sailors would re fuse to fight for the man who rules them with a rod of iron, and when he had spoken thus, didn't he remark to a fellow tar that the prisoners did not know their strength ? Yes, that he did. The men think of mutiny, and the man at the wheel is now read' to rise against the captain of this ship. which their captain has bound them. I will spring the mine. I will lead the Meteor's mutineers, aud the Re venge may have our prize." Adaliue Temple spoke with stern determination and clenched her handt. The observer would have laughed to think that she had decided to head a body of mutineers that she a fra gile girl of uineteen, had resolved to rob the English navy of one of its best vessels, or to perish in the at tempt ! She left the room with a resolve well formed, and steadfast in her de termination. Like, a spectre she glid ed down the darkened corridora of the vessel, and at last, climbing upward with care, reached the deck. Captain Guilderoy and his lieuten ants were below, discussing the situ ation over teveral bottles of wine. Adaline saw the stars over bead, and turned her face to the va rious points of the compass without greeting a breeze that would have pleased the British captain. The man at the wheel having noth ing to do, seemed to have fallen asleep, for he started when Adaliue's bund fell upon his shoulder, and his hand made a rapid movement toward his belt, when he saw her figure. "I want to talk with you," she said in a low tone, making no display of the knife whose hilt she clutched a knife like the helmsman's. "I want to say a few words, and are you going to listen? I heard you use mutinous language last night, and I could have you hung at the yard by sptJaking to the tyrant Guilderoy." He was her man ! "You are harboring schemes of mu tiny at this very moment," she con tinued after a pause, "and you are not alone in the diabolical work. I can tell the captain before an hour, if Adaliue paused a moment, and heard the beating of the sailor's heart. He stared into her face like a man suddenly frightened by a ghost, and she finished her sentence with lips al most touching his ear. "If you do not obey me !" Then the helmsman's lips parted. "For the love of heaveu do not throw us poor devils at the feet of Guilderoy," stammered the sailor. "He would hang every one of us be fore morning. Do you want us to mutiny to-night? Our time has not yet come. There be but nineteen of us now '' "But the prisoners sixty-two men, strong and brave." "They are Americans !" "Nevertheless, they will not hesi tate to rescue gallant English sailors from the tyranny of the captain of this ship. To-night! If you say no, I will drive this knife to your heart, and have your comrades hung at the yard before day." Tben the helmsman saw the knife whose blade flashed vry near his breast, and the next moment he stood on the deck. "We'll do it V1 he said. "But Ches ter is wouuded hurt yesterday by a ball from your ship. Chester was to have led us." "I will take his place," said Ada line. "Now let us strike I" Captain Guilderoy, unsuspicious of the mutinous spirit on his ship, had placed watches who had belonged to the Chester party. Adaline soon dis covered this, and at length seven de termined sailors, armed with knives and pistols, prepared for the fray. She stationed two of the strongest at the door of the council room, while as many more guarded the hatches. Then the prisoners were called forth, one by one, until 62 strong-limbed Yankee sailors stood nn deck, ready to do their duty. There was a tumult among the cap tain's party when the mutiny was dis covered, and the officers were appriz ed of the state of affairs by the dis charge of several pistols In the hold. Mutiny!" cried Guilderoy, spring-1 ing from the table; and the next mo ment, having opened the door, he found himself flung to the floor by one of the mutineers who guarded the! portal Another British officer was knock ed down, when several prisoners made their appearance, and the inmates of the cabin were secured. It was one of the most startling and successful mutinies in the annals of the British navy ; but the most thrilling part was yet to come. "Now three cheers for the English sailors!" cried a stalwart mutineer who bad ably seconded the patriot girl. Three cheers were given with a will. They swept far into the night and startled the tenants of another vessel's deck. "No more such cheers!" suddenly cried Adaliue Temple in a tone of command. "The Meteor is to bear the flag of the American Congress at her mizzen peak. The British mutin eers will lay down their arms. Yan kee sailors will prepare to shoot those who refuse to obey !" A moment's silence was followed by curses, and thenineteen mutineers looked into the faces of the men whom they had armed with English pistols and cutlasses. Obedience alone would save their lives, and in a few moments the Britrsh mutineers were prisoners like their former com rades, and the good ship Meteor was in Yankee hands. Before dawn rockets revealed the Meteor's position to her pursuer, and the astonished Conyngham stood on her bloodless decks! Then theyoung American lieutenant encountered the heorine of the hour the girl on whose finger he had already placed a shin ing ring, r "I knew that jou were near in the Revenge," she paid to him, "and I thought -I- would-present you with the Meteor. Why, Gilbert, if I had not led the mutineers, I might have run away from you as I did yester day!" Gilbert Farley assumed command of the valuable prize, aud in many of his cruises he was accompanied by the gallant girl whose fame was suug on the decks of every vessel in our little nav3. After the war well, the reader can guess what happened "after the war.' jIOCX -CARRIAGE. How a Young Lady Unwittingly Be came a Lawful Wife. Mr. and Mrs. David Manneriug, who live at Lorimer and Jackson streets, Williamsburg, have au only daughter, Clara. She is a brunette, seventeen years old, with bright, black eyes and dark curling hair that) flows in waves over her slight but j II .1 1 1 C CM . J I wen u-veiupeu ugure. oue ictuiu-u a few weeks ago from Orange county, N. Y, where she has been spending the summer. About ten days since, Mrs. Manneriug, while looking over the contents of her daughter's trunk, which had not yet been unpacked, discovered a roll of parchment, richly engraved and ornamented, and held together by a blue ribbon tied in a true love knot. She opened and read a certificate by the Rev. William H. Williams, of Uuionsville, Orange county, setting forth that John Bruu dage and Clara Manneriug were mar ried on the 25th of August, 1S77. Hardly able to believe her eyes, Mrs. Mannering questioned her daughter. With some blushes Clara explained that, when two or three people came together in the Catskills, the favorite mode of amusement is the perform ance of a mock marriage. On the evening of the above date she bad at tended a party given at the house of a young farmer named Bruudage. Accordingly she stood np with Mr. Brundage before one of the guests, who volunteered to play the part of clergyman, and the pair were pro nounced by him man aud wife. Hard ly had the words, "Whom God hath joined together, let no man putassun der," been pronounced, when Brun dage, declaring the marriage was a real one, and not a sham, claimed her as his wife. The supposed bogus cler gyman, he said, was a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and the ceremony he had performed could not be nullified save by a divorce obtained by due process of law. All this was done in a joking way, however, and not even when she got the certificate of the ceremony did Clara realize that the affair wasnotahoax. She brought the certificate home with her as a memorial of the mock marriage, but, so she said, had forgotten there was such a thing in existence when her mother brought It to light. The mar riage has been pronounced valid, and, as Mr. Brundage is a man of wealth aud good habits, and as Clara does not seem much worried about it, the cer emony will probably end as do wed dings usually. iV. Y. Sun. Gingerbread. The following is an excellent recipe, and was brought to Hollidaysburg by the wife of ex- Gov Cur'tin; Two oupa of Orleans molasses, one cup of brown sugar, one oi jaru, two orsonr milk orwater, one; tablespoonful of soda, one of cream of i - tartar, one of ginger, one of cinna-j mon, one teaspoon of cloves, two eggs improve it, and currants, raisins, and citron added make it as nice a fruit cake as a person would Tfih for. AARON BURR. His Dnel With Hamilton His Blan nerhasset Treason His Flight-Poverty- Power, Return aud Ignominy. Cincinnati Commercial. Perhaps there is no one net which shows the mental characteristics ofibe waa finally imprisoned at Itich- Burr more fully than his duel with i Alexander Hamilton, and none ap pears in the life of Hamilton which shows such weakness as his consent to meet Burr. If we stud v the Ian- guageused by Mr. Hamilton we shall find nothing more worthy of a person al conflict than wa3 common iu those days, aud more so in ours, against po litical opponents; but Burr determin ed to kill his enemy, and Hamilton was unwise enough to let him. I was much interested one da3 in a diserip tion given by an old gentleman who bad been a carpenter in 1804, of Burr's practice for the occasion. Ho occupi ed a shop adjoining a bowling alley -which Burr had reuted, and in which he daily practiced shooting at the fig ure of a man until he could hit it where ha pleased. He saw him through the cracks in the partition, aud the intense interest he manifest-Pfe; ed in the success of his shots wfl fiendish. From thatdatehis fortunes changed, j wbo in their turn influenced the He lost thB prestige of previous hue- I world. In France, for years virtually cess. The be3t uf his friends fought a prisoner, equally poor, except when shy of him, and he was .compelled toicuarit:r n the shape of loans kept fall back upon the support of a faw.of uim iu clothes and food, he exercised whom the Swartwouts were the moat noted. Restless and ambitious, the scheme of a grand Southwestern Em pire wa3 his resort, but the elements were so few and weak that toauy oth er mind than his the project would have been utterly hopeless. Dissatis faction with the Government existed in Kentucky and the Southwestern States, but it was by no means univer sal. He believed, and doubtless with reason, that Gen. Wilkinson would favor hisAiewa, aud a3 he had com mand of-the army, ho thought him an important acquisition, but he mainly relied on his own personal power, and his thoughts must have been of a wild and peculiar character, when threading alone the forests of the Allegheuies toward a fancied empire and glory. Whether the Morgans of the upper valley really gave him encouragement and then were the first to turn State's evidence, or merely sat silent under the picture he drew so vividly of a great nation to be born, history will never make certain, but Burr evident ly believed he ha 1 in them friends to his scheme. His uext decent was upon Blanner hasset, whose name thus became more generally a household word in his adopted country than that of anyoth er man of his position and capucitv. My first visit to the Island of Blan- nerhasset was in 1SS5, and I confess it i rather dampened the ardor the glow- ;,mnlnl,,rn WMIInm UJt h,l l.i.nJ ." ,.. v "-.'"- in his splendid defense of the proprie- t-r T ftirwi flic istanri Kith n.if tha -, . T. ,ii ii Eden. It waa good, level corn laud,! ,. , tt tltnnf a r rr nr tl nturu I honilh fhnn any other islaud in the Ohio, and not as much as thousands of the bottoms ! that border that beautiful stream The view of it from the mouth of the Little Kanawha, two miles above the island, to a painter presents a scene rarely equalled, but I could not imag ine it especially attractive when all wa9 in wilderness, as it was when the simple-hearted Irishman selected it as his home. The farm houses, cot tages in the ravines, the meditative cow3, the corn-fields, "The orchard, the meadow, the deep tangled wild wood," aid much in the picture, aud why Blannerhasset should have selected that spot is one of these things "a fel lah can't most alwavs tell." When I visited it, there was no vestige of the ' residence except the well, moso-cover ered, a well as the "old oaken buck et," and a small tree was growing where I was told the hou.e had stood. The eround wa3 mostly in corn. I There were a few persons who re membered the gentlemanly proprie tor, aud some of the militia who went down to arrest him. The house was described by them as a long rambling structure, whose principal comfort in summer was the wide but unsubstan- l tial porch. The house itself was a sort of toy house on a large scale, built by a rough carpenter, whose on ly previous occupation had been to cut cord wood and haul it to town. Flowers, some shell walks and the va rious little trinkets and needle-work with which the mistress of the place had contrived to adorn it, made it, however, a wonder of beauty and ele gance to backwoodsmen around, but few of whom had ever been in a house at Marietta, fourteen miles above. The house was used for sever al years after he left for the storage of hemp, and was burned by carelessness in 1S11. The old Bettlers said chat Burr was first seen by some fishermen, coming to the island in a skiff in the early evening. How long be remained no one knows, but he was from time to time seen by the servants, and rarely by others for eeveral weeks, during which time he may have made some long excursions. He found in Blan- nerhasset an easy dupe. too honest himself to expect fraud in others, and evidently too simple to distinguish clearly between xight and wrong, un-j less the line of demarcation was os wide as a turnpike- That Burr final- Jy succeeded in exciting the ambition necessary to his purpose in the clear er mind of Mrs. Blannerhasset is evi dent, but that he was able to win her from her allegiance to her husband was not believed by the most intelli gent who. knew her then or in after Jife. We leave to biographers the story of his failures and arrests, his life in the wilds and swamps of the South, until mond to be tried for his Jife. la t-pite of all the disgrace attached to his ut ter failure, of the position in which he then stood before a people, almost f aI1 of wbom were patriotic, of the de gradation aud even the prison-cell, le uoor OI ine Dea roora- -" seeing Aaron Burr became, among the ac- nis wife WnB dressed on thebed ha compllshed ladies of Richmond, the i imaS"ed she-bad laid down to take a man of all others the most courted aud sympathized with. I remember hear ing Hon. B. W. Leigh say that he was more popular than Jefferson, had good things sent him enough to feed a regimeut, and whenever he spoke all appeared, llko Capt. Scott's cook, to come down. Yet, although acquit ted for want of proof of the crime of treason, his escape to Eugland was only a secret flight. In England, feared and suspected by thoae In pow- I er. so Poor that he often found it dif- ficult to buy the potatoes to maintain yet he was often iu the society of the Greatest and most famed, and strongly biased the opinions of many, the same influence, and finally ob tained his pass-ports by the same "one-man power." From his arrival in Boston his se cret movement to New Y'ork, his al most isolated life there, and forxhe last yeare on Staten Island, until his death in 1S36, the world knows little, nor is it apparently worth knowing. It comprised the las. dreary years of a long life of one possessed uf immense personal power, of exalted talent or genius, failing from a total want of j principle, truth or true honor. His will, made when he was 79 years of age, shows the ruling passion strong in death. He willed more than he owued, owned more than he willed, and among the legatees were two il legitimate children, one two, the oth er five years of age, by different moth ers. Of Aaron Burr, more than to any oue of our nation, cau the couplet be truly applied: "He left a name at which the world turned pale. To point a moral or Rdorn a tale." He was a splendid enigma, capable of the greatest achievements, with the highest personal force, alwaya physically temperate and mentally active; has left a name that will long be remembered, yet accomplish ing nothing. The Bnruing of Michael Servetus. When he came in sight of the fatal niiB the wrfifnhe(i SprvPtiw nrnstmtprl . . ,, tl . . , ... j himself on the ground, aud for a while was absorbed in prayer. , . advancing a few oteps, - Rising and he found him- self iu the hnnd of the executioner, by whom he was made to sit on a block, his feet just reachiag the ground, j Hia body was then bound to the stake behind him by several turns of an iron chain, while his neck was secur ed in like manner by the coils of a hempen rope. His two books the one in manuscript sent to Calvin in confidence six or eight years before uis sinciures. aim me one lately priu ted at Vienue were then fasten- cu iu uia naak. uuu ills UCUU v. s eu- .w? .s.:- ...: -,,! u:i i en- circled in ruockerv with a chaplet of , . . . , ., straw and green wigs bestrewed with brimstone The deadly torch was then uyyiieu iu 1 ue mgguis uuu iiasueu iu his face ; and the brimetone catching, and the flames rising, ruug from the vintim Hllfth a nrr nf nnmiish n cf-nif.b L .:.... .i j- " , i terror into the surroundinc crowd. After this he was bravely silent, but the wood being purposely green, a long half hour elapsed before he ceased to ! show signs of life and suffering. Im mediately before giving up the ghost. with a last expiring effort, he" cried aloud, "Jesus, Thou Son of the Eter nal God, have compassion on me." All was then hushed save the crack ing of the green wood; and by and by there remained no moie of what had been Michael Servetus but a charred and blackened truuk and a handful of ashes. Thus perished a noble man of whom his age was not worthy the victim of murderous religious bigotry. But the crime thatbad been committed shock ed the humanity of Geneva, even in that dark period, and before the year was out Calvin waa driven to self-defense, and displayed -the remorseless traits of bis character by libeling the man whom he had slain. It is said that in this persecution unto death he only manifested the spirit of hid age, ':,.. . .. ... -. -,.,-f v, t a a i, . . . a .telling whathe would havedonehad he and must be judged by that standard. ' f. r. . ----- ,. .. ... ? . .. . , . 1 been there. I have noticed that some- Wh nt 113 mgpha tniu , t ia nlcA (ton- . --. .. , u - . 1 ' r . - pily true that in the lapse of centuries better standards have arisen, by which the character of Calvin will be given over to execration, while that of Ser-! vetus will be increasingly honored as that of a heroio Christian martyr. Science Monthly. Everv farm should own a eood far'011' woulu suow UR6 lr cau mer. " 1 A Temperance Sermon. Ies3 than a year ago a quiet wed ding oceurred-atSt-Stephens Church New York, followed by,a brilliant re ception at a Fifth Avenue mansion. The parties were Mr. Robert Stuart, son of LieutejiantRobect Stuart, U S. N., and Evelina Terry Marks. There was wealth on bntk sides, and until within a month ago their life was happy as a story. About that time dipsomania, "inherited from his father who died a drunkard, took possession of the young man. His position as assistant cashier of the Gallatiu National Ban c waa lost, and Inflate he was constantly under the iufiuence of liquor. His wife, unable to cope with the constant shocks of fered her high strung sensitive nature determined upon suicide. About 6 p 31. on Sunday Mr. Stuart entered his apartment intoxicated. He opened 1 naP- He Ia!d down on tbe &unge in the parlor and slept till 6 o'clock nexs morning when, feeling cold, he-determined on going to bed, believing thai his wife had undressed. When he Pflned the bed-room door and saw that his wife Btill lay dressed on the bed he vaguely apprehended that all was not right, and stepping to the side of the bed, shook his wife's arm. This failed to arouse her, and lifting her head, he found that she was in sensible, pale, and breathing heavily. He endeavored to set her on the side ol e oea, out ne was still under the innuence or liquor, and her inert form slipped from his gra9p arid slid to the floor. Dr. Hubbard, who was sum moned, found the patient too far gone from narcolfc"poisoniug to rally. Mrs. Stuart died about 8 oTclock. Her last moments were inexpressibly sad. I None of her friends or family had been summoned, and her husband' became bisterical, wrung his hands, cried bitterly, innocently charged himself with having caused his wife's death, and heaped curses on his own head. Mrs. Stuart was only 8 years of age. The following bit of harp worldly and religious practice occurred recent ly at Edinburgh : A great Sawney, at la charity sermon, put a five-shilling piece by mistake into the plate, and was about to reclaim it. when the'col lector, who kuew his man, said, "Na, na, Sawney, mon you're in for the siller." "I meant a penny, sir," was the pit iful rejoinder. "It can't be helped, mon; I say you're in for lheIHr," was the hard reply. At length Sawney gaveup, and said with a sigh, "Aweel, I'll get credit for it in heaven." "Na, na, mon," continued the hard dealing collector, "you'll only get credit for the penny." A fourteen-year-old girl was a wit ness in a recent Indiana divorce suit, and a portion of the evidence was na follows: "Father got mad because mother starched his stockings; moth er picked up the stockings and hit father on the head with them, and it sounded as though they were, sticks of wood. Father tben stuffed a hot wheat cake down mother's throat, and then mother set the dog en fath- , er, and twisted the dog's tali to make I i him bite harder." When you. see aJadv In the etieefc j stop and auddenly kick and reach backward and downward, don't be alarmed, it's not a brickbat she is af ter. As soon as she shakes out the old oyster cans entangled in her trail, that same sweet smile will return : and everywhere the street contractor hails the woman with a trail as a blessing, l 4 ,!, ,Jj ..t i , . -, ,. . , . . , ... ... fer's atEdinburgh twelve ladies drink- in - porte of ad & Qf 1 14takinga boltle of SlonL At the counter two misses in their teens were paying for three brandy-and-sodas. School girl3 there, he avers, take nips of cherry brandy. Two prominent young men of Fort Howard, Wis t made a wager on the result of a recent election, the terms of which binds the losing party to make his round of New Years calls, on the 1st of January, in a gcart drawn by a hog. The widow sits by the vacant ohatr. A combing her strand;; of yellow hair, While her soal by a thought is v$xei. Not of the man who sat thre last, ' Not of the joys of the buried pas$. Bat of who wookl sit there next. Louisville Ceurter-Jtommal. - Said the great Napoleon, "A jour nalist! That means a grumbler; a censurer; a giver of advice; a regent of sovereigns; a tutor of nations! Four hostile newspapers are more to be dreaded then a hundred thousand bayonets !" A veteran observer says : "I never 1 place reliance on a man who is alwavs ihow.tIs kind of people never tret lL cc .bcb there." There was once an old lady who, speaking of Adam'd naming all -the animals, said she didn't think bede served any credit for naming tbehor him. 1 - 1 i iiaJti-Matiitfri , -a--....-..---.. --' -11 ti ii'V-- nir ftiiKiHii