THE HERALD. PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY PLATTSMOUTH,- -NEBE ASKA. On Main Street,, between 4th and 5th, Second Story. OFFICIAL P.VFER OF CASS COUNTY. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year , One copy, fix mouth..... Oiio copy, three mouths .$2.00 . 1.00 . .50 NE3 3RA ERA J. A.:. MACMURPHY, Editor. VOLUME X PERSEVERANCE COXQCERS." TERMS: $2.00" a Year. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 1(, 1874. NUMBER 10. THE HERALD ADVKUTISIXG ItATES. PACK. 1 npiuro.. S unmren. M column. 4 column. 1 w. i w. ! a w. 1 1 ro. ' m. ; m. t jr. ft (X) 1 W) J () ('J CO f 5 00 H(KI 1 12 OO I His S !M Ti 8 S' 10 ' a cm 9 r. 4 no 4 7r.j s nm (j (; 5 001 H Kl'lO 00 VI OK ! 00 ii (til JI."V ( S OO'U 0C1 li IH1 IS CVVS'. 00 40 Ull Wl CM) 1 colnniu.il! OO 18 00-' Utt 0O 4O do 100 00 IT" All AdvertlninR bills due qnarterly. Transient uvcrtlucracntB must bo paid (or In advance Extra coplon of the Hbhald for Hale hy II. J. Streisht, at tho I'twtotncc, and O. If. Johnon, cor ner of Main and Fifth street. HENRY BCECK, M1LEB IN Iuixxiitmxe, SAFES, CHAIRS. Lounges, Tables, Bedsteads, KTC.. ETC., ETC., Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. Wooden Collin:-? Of all sizes, ready-made, and eold cheap for caih. With many thauka for pant patronage, I Invite all lo call and examine my LAIU.E STOCK OF lU 111 itl 10 llll OofllllK. Jan-JS AND MEDICINES AT J. H. BUTTERY'S, On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale bl1 Retail Dealer In Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Patent Medicines. Toilet Articles, etc., etc. tSfPKESCHlPTIONS carefully compounded at all hour, day and nij;ht. 35-ly J. W. SHANNON'S Feed, Sale and Livery STADTiE, Main Street, Plattsmouth, Neb. I am prepared to accommodate the public with Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, AND A No. I Hearse, On Short Notice and Reasonable Terms. A II A Civ Will Run to the Steamboat Land ing, Depot, and all parts of the City, when Desired. janl-tf First national Bant Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, l'CTESOK TO Tootle, Ilium-i fc Clsii-U. .)'IIN KlTZUKRALU.... k. t;. ltovitv Ioiix It Clakk T. W. Evans PreridenU Yice-Prenident. C'a-stiier. . . Atsdiatant Cashier. This Bunk In now open for buinei at their new room, corner Main and Sixth streets, and ar pre pared to traueact. a general BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks. Bonds, Gold. Government and Local Securities BOUGHT AND SOLD. Deposits Received and Interest Al lowed on Time Certificates. DRAFTS DRAWN, Available in any part of the United States and in all the Principal Towns and Cities of Europe. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED MAN LINE anil ALLAN LINE OF ST1-LV3IK1JS. TfVrson wishing to bring out their friends" from Europe can rrBCHA. tickets rnox cs Tln-ouirli to Xln t t-sniout li. Excelsior Barber Shop. .T. c. rsooisrE, Main Street, opposite Brooks House. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ciTTixG i ini,im:vs hair Call and See Boone, Gents, And get a boon in a C? Xj 33 -A. XJ" JS H rHl-ly GO TO THE Tost Office Book Store, H. J. STREIGHT, Proprietor, TOR TOVR Boots, Stationery, Pictures, Music, TOYS, CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings, Newspapers, Novels, Sons Books, etc., etc. EPITOME OF THE WEEK. Condensed from Telegrams of Accompanying Dates. TOST OFFICE BUILDING. -1? PLATTSMOUTH, 'EB. Monday, July C On the 3d Count de Chainbord issued a manifesto to the French people eh-niuiiiling a truec to the divisions whiih dirtract that nation. - His address con cludes us follow: "I am now, as before, ready. Is it not time to restore prosperity and grandeur to Frunee with the venerable royalty? The French and Knglir-h press consider that his manifesto render it impossible tliut he should ever be King ef France. On the ."tli the political situation was considered serious. An attempt was making to force the resi tuition of the Minis try.... In consequence of the withdrawal of the troops to reinforce the army of the North, the Carlists have reoccupicd the forts in the environs of Bilbou.. ..One ef the col ored members of the legislature of the Dis trict of Columbia has been arrested for forgery ....Hon. Marshall Jewell, United States Minister to St. Petersburg, has accepted the appointment of Post master-t Jcncral ... .The Coroner's Jury on the Mill River disaster has rendered a verdict censuring the Legislature, tho mill-owners, the engineers, the contractors and the County ConJ uisssoncrs Allegheny City, Ph., was seriously cri)pled by tire on the 4th. One hundred houses were burned, involving a loss of i"i0,iM) Pontine, 111., was visited by a destructive conflagration on 4th, which burned up a large jiortion of the business part of the town. Losa $175,0(10.... The United States Circuit Court in session at Madison, Wis., has decided the Pot ter Railway law to be valid and denied the application of bondholders of the Chicago ii Northwestern Railway for an injunction restraining its enforcement.. ..The bridge aeross the Mississippi at St. Louis was opened to public tral'ie on the 4th.... A half- dozen 1mvs celebrated the Fourth in Chicago by filling a bottle with powder and setting tire to it. The result was the killing of Gilbert McKcon and the serious and probably fatal wounding of Willie and Werner Schafer. The day was very generally celebrated all over the country. Tuesday, July 7. All the operatives in the Belfast (Ireland) linen mills have struck for higher wages.... The Carlists were defeat ed on the 4th in an attack upon a post at Teruel, sustaining considerable loss i" killed, wounded and prisoners .The Postotlice De partment furnished Postmasters, during 187:5, bo.J,7;ES,4'20 adhesive stamps, worth over 24,(KK,I)()0 On the 5th a party or Sioux Indians attacked the settlement of St. Joseph, in Pembina, killing four persons and carrying into captivity a number of children Custer's expedition to the Black Hills started on the morning of the 4th V spark from a rocket fell in to a pile of fireworks in Washington Square, New York city, on the evening of the (th, causing a premature explosion. A terri ble panic among the spectators ensued, and a large number of persons were more or less injured ... .A train ran off the bridge aeross Stony Creek, Conn., on the morning of the titli. The entire train with the exception of the engine was precipitated to the boMflm. Superintendent Wilcox was killed and over 100 passengers injured, some of them very seriously ... .The Chicago it Northwestern Railroad Company lias determined, under protest, to comply with the provisions of the Iowa Railway law. Wednesday, July 8. On the 7th the French Assembly passed the Municipal Elect oral bill. The Moderate and Extreme Left and P20 Legitimist Deputies have formed a coalition to unseat the Ministry Alex. II. Stephens, of Georgia, has announced his de termination not to be a candidate for re-election to Congress, in consequence of fail ing health.... According to Washington dispatches of the 7th 0,OuO,0H) of the 5 per cent, reserves required to be de posited in the Treasury by national banks un der the new Currency bill had been received. Applications for new bank charters reached :.,0O0,0OO, and $-2,000,1X11) of circulation bad been surrendered The Lincoln (Neb.) Land Ollice has been removed to Bloomington, in the same State.... The new Commissioners of the District of Columbia have agreed uiwm a general system of retrenchment Bishop Whelan, Catholic Bishop of the Diocese, of Wheeling, West Va., died in Baltimore on the j 7th. ...An order was issued by the Illinois Railroad and Warehouse. Commissioners on the 7th, reducing the rate of grain inspection 25 per cent, and directing the insertion of the word " new" in all certilicates of inspection of a newly-harvested crop of wheat, rye and barley until the 1st of September; of oats until the 1st of August, and of corn until the 20th of April of each year A serums outbreak has occurred among the Indians in the Indian Territory. The Cheyennes, Comanches and Kiowas to the number of 2,000 have gone upon the war-path, and are clearing the country in the vicinity of the Ca nadian River of ranches and white men. A large number of depredations, attended by unusual barbarities, are reported. An urgent demand is made for troops, and this demand has leen indorsed by the War Department. Thursday, July 9. England has de manded $8, 000,0im from Spain as indemnity for the massacre of British subjects captured on the Virginius A crisis occurred in the Freuch Government on the Sth in consequence of a legislative defeat upon a resolution to uphold the septennial powers conferred ujion President MacMahon. The Ministers ten dered their resignations, but the Pres ident .refused to receive them.... A bill has been filed in the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and a petition for an injunction against the Chicago iV: Northwestern and the Chicago, Milwaukee fe St. Paul Railroads" directing obedience to the Potter law as far as it had been declared valid by the United States Cir cuit Court.... Information was received at Cheyenne on the Sth that a battle had been fought a few days before with the Northern Sioux, about seventy-five miles from Fort Brown, which resulted in the killing and wounding of fifty Indians and the capture of 100 horses. Three soldiers were killed and three wounded The Gohkn Aye of the 9th contained an editorial tauuting Plymouth Church upon the studied silence maintained in regard to the Tilton-Beceher scandal Ex-Gov. Shepherd on the Sth appeared before the Grand Jury of the District of Columbia to secure the indictment of Mr. Dana, of the New York Hum, for libel, and his arrest under the provisions of the Poland law The Board of Aldermen of New York on the bth adopted resolutions requesting Gov. Dix to remove Mayor Havenneyer, of that city, from office The Democratic Congressional Con vention of the Fourteenth Ohio Congressional District, on the Sth,after250 ballots, nominated John Cowan of Ashland, for Congress.. ..The great tingle-scull race between Brown of Hali fax and Seharff of ritti?burgli. Pa., was rowed at Springfield, Mass., on the Sth. The Cana dian won the race. Friday, July 10. In the French Assem. bly a message from President MacMahon was read on the IHh, informing that body that he was still President, and that he proposed to control atrairs until the expiration of his sev-en-years' term. A motion to dissolve the As sembly was referred to a committee On the 5th of June the iron clipper-ship British Admiral went ashore " on King's Island," near Australia, and of the eighty-eight persons on board all but nine were drowned Treasury gold sold in New Y'ork on the 9th at 109.81(3109.8. . .An attempt was made on the 9th to briTe Chief-Justice Ryan, of Wisconsin, by sending him a letter with $100 inclosed An earthquake shock was RU in Cairo, III., on the 9th. Noserious damage was caused A mail and express car was burned 011 The Atlantic, Mississippi & Ohio Railway on the afternoon of the 9th. The mail, which was an unusually heavy otie, was entirely con sumed Gov. Davis, of Minnesota, on the tth appealed to the Government for aid for the starving people of Southwestern -Minnesota, whose crops for the last two years had been destroyed by grasshoppers. Saturday, July 11. The French Min ister of the Interior met with the Committee of Thirty on the 10th, and gave in the adhe sion of the Government to the bill prepared by them. He suggested certain additions to le made the subject of debate by the Assembly. It was said on the 10th that the Legitimists, irritated at the President's recent mes sage, would oppose the septennat A London dispatch or the 10th announces the death of an aeronautic professor who proposed to fly from a balloon to the earth in a newly-contrived flying-machine. The contrivance would not work, and the professor was killed. .. .The Carlist Gen. Dor regary has issued a manifesto justifying the recent shooting of Republican prisoners Miss Shortwcll, who recently complained that she lost $50,000 in railway bonds at Chicago, has been indicted in New York for perjury and larceny A daughter or George Fulton, of Huntington, Ind., was burned to death on the evening of the 10th, in consequence of attempting to kindle a lire with kerosene.... A pleasure yacht was capsized off; Atlantic City, N. J., on the afternoon of the 10th, and six persons drowned.... A crisis has occurred in Manitoba, the Ministry having beeu defeated upon a direct vote of want of confidence.... According to a dispatch from West Hampton, L. I., Gov. Dix had decided to remove Mayor Havcmeyer, of New York, from his office A Brooklyn dispatch or the 10th says that Mr. Beecher had demanded an investigation into the charges prererred by Mr. Tilton and that it had been pending be fore a committee of Plymouth Church since the 29th ult A flash of lightning set fire to an oil tank on the oil docks of the Erie Rail road at Hoboken, N. J., on the evening of the 10th. Up to two a. m. of the morning of the 11th the flames were unsubdued and property valued at $100,000 had been destroyed. THE MARKETS. JCLT 11, 1874. NEW YORK. Cotton. Middling upland, 1714S-l"?ie. Live Stock. Beef Cattle $11.5012.50. Hogs Dressed, $7.87'i48.00. Sheep Live, $4.25 6 00. BREAlsTurrs. Flour Good to choice, $6.15 &.6.rij; white wheat extra, $fi.555? 6.75. Wheat No. 2 Chicago, $1.29(3.1.31; Iowa epring, $1.30 ii:Ai; No. 2 Milwaukee spring. $1.&&1.36. Kye Western and State, $1.0til.0H. Barley.... Corn Mixed Western afloat, 73&76'iC. Oats New Western, 60fi61lic. Provisions. Pork New Mess, $18.75(319.00. Lard ll'iOll'j.c. Wool. Common to extra, 4ry3fl8c. CHICAGO. Live Stock. Beeves Choice, $5.75(3 6.00; good, $.V4Oj5.00; medium, $4.75&5.35; butchers' stock, gl.75-t.50; stock cattle, $3.05644.50. Hogs Live, $5.75S6.10. Sheep Good to choice, $ 1.0OTi5.0O. Pkovisions. Butter Choice, 23g.25c. Eggs Fresh, 12'4ai3'ic. Pork New Mess, $18.s 18.90. Lard $n.311.25. Breadstckfs. Flour White Winter Extra, $5.7"xa7.75; spring extra, $5.0OSi5.50. Wheat Spring, No. 2, $1.141.14U. Corn No. 2, 60 f0c. Oats No. 2, 46464c. Kye o. 2, 8:874e. Barley No. 2, Wool. Tub-washed, 45fci.52c. ; fleece, washed. 4r,4 lc.; fleece, unwashed, WWZic. ; pulled 37339c. Lumber- First clear, $50.00355.00; second clear, $ 17.OOft49.0O ; Common Boards, SILUtKij 12.00; Fencing, $11.00312.00; "A" Shingles, $3.2.V&3.50; Lath, $2.25(32.374. CINCINNATI. BREABSTurrs. Flour $5.50-".75. $1.16. Corn 63Cc. Kye 95c. 5Gc. Barley Provisions. Pork $19.50(2,19.75. (12c. &T. LUt IS. Live Stock. Beeves Fair to choice, $4.50 6.00. Hogs Live, $I.OO6.00. BREADsTtrrrs. Flour, XX Fall, $3.0005.50. Wheat No. 2 Red Fall, $1.133.1.15. Corn No. 2, 6045?61c. Oats No. 2, 54435c. Kye No. s, 70vT( 72c. Barley Provisions. Pork Mess, $19.7530.00. Lard 10?ill?c. MILWAUKEE. BREADSTurFs.-FIour Spring XX, $5.705.90. Wheat Spring, No. 1, $1.191.19! i ; No. 2, $1.17 1.174. Corn No. 2, 5a59?ic. Oats No. 2, 45 45?ic. Kye, No. 1, 8889c. Barley No. 2, DETROIT. Breadstuffs. Wheat Extra, $1.471.48. Corn (RX3457C. Oats 503524c. TOLEDO. Breadstuffs. Wheat Amber Mich., $1.22 1.224; No. 2 Red, $1.191.20. 6:S64c. Oats 53.534 c. CLEVELAND. Breadstuffs. Wheat No. 1 1.25; No. 2 Red, $1.16117. Oats 5:13.54c. BUFFALO. Live Stock. Beeves $5.006.25. nogs Live, $5.756.50. Sheep Live, $4.003.00. EAST LIBERTY. Live Stock. Beeves Best, $6.006.50; medium, $5.755.90. Hogs Yorkers, $5.80 6.10; Philadelphia. $6.4O6.70. Sheep Best, $5.005.50; ood, $4.504.95. Wheat Oats 47 Lard 10 Corn Mixed, Red, $1.34 Corn 7071c. How They Kill Cattle in Texas. The ordinary plan of drawing the steer down to the block and striking him on the head with an ax is too slow for the wholesale butchery carried on here. About one dozen head are driven into a small pen, just sufficiently large to hold that many closely packed, and & gate forced to behind them. This pen has an open slat platform across the top of it upon which two men are stationed with poles and sharp-pointed knives fixed on the end of them. With a rapidity ac quired by long practice they plunge their spears into the necks of the affrighted and struggling animals, cutting the jugular vein, and each successively falls as if struck with an ax. The blood spirts out in in streams as if from a dozen fountains, and in less than a minute the whole penf ul are down, quivering in the throes of death and covered with blood. The door of the pen leading into the rendering room is then thrown open, the animals drawn out suc cessively, and a knife rapidly slits the skin around the neck and down the stom ach. A rope is attached to the upper part of the hide by a clamp, to the other end of which is a mule which leisurely walks off down the yard carrying the skin of the animal with him, and leaving the car cass still-quivering with animal life. A tackle hoists the body up to a level with one of the immense caldrons, and in less time than we have taken to describe the process it is in the seething and boiling mass. There are four or five of these caldrons, each large enough to hold a dozen beeves, and they are kept constant ly going during the killing season. The tallow is drawn off into large hogsheads and the remains of these great soup-kettles are carried out on what is called the " hash-pile,' consisting of bones, horns and the animal matter from which the fatty substance has been extracted. BnL tivutre American. " I would marry you, Jacob," said a lady to an importunate lover, were it not for three reasons." Oh, tell me," said he imploringly, what they are, that I may remove them?" " The first is," said she, " I don't love you ; the second is, I don't want to love you; and the third is, I couldn't love you if I wanted to." 2IIE LITTLE GOOSE-GIUL. Five giese a landscape damp and wild, A Hlunu-d. not oo pretty child, llencnlh a battered gingham; Such things, to say th- least, require A more than nverige Muse of Fire To adequately slug 'em. But yet Why should they? Souls of mark Havr pprung'rrom snch; e'en Juan of Arc Jladvcarce more graceful duty; Not alwavs (His a maxim trite) From righteous things proceeds the right From beautiful the beauty. Who shall decide wh-re seed is sown? For niiL'ht we know the germ was blown In this unw holesome inarish ; And what must grow will still increase Though cackled round by half the geese And ganders in the parish. The still, still years the term will keep. Although the issue seem to sleep As sound as Hurbnriwua : Long siuce. m.iv he. Uo scheme wna laid By which this little maid was mado A Maid of Saragossa. v. May be thi small, plain face may hide The mannish intellectual pride Of some prospective Necker; Perchance this undience auswerin'! Mav hisn (O trembling muse of mine!) May hiss a Lydia Becker! Or say the gingham shadows o'er An undeveloped Hannah More A later Mrs. Trimmer; Who shall affirm it, who deny? Sioce of the truth nor you nor I Discern the faiutest glimmer? - So then caps ofT, my Masters all; Reserve your final word recall Your a'll-too-buHty stricture; Caps off, I say. for Wisdom sees Potential possibilities In this unhopeful picture. Chicago Inter-Ocean. "411." "411?" "That's me, sir." " Let me see your arm." "It's all right, sir." "All right, is it? In my humble opin ion, it's about as wrong as wrong can be.' 411 looked down at the bruised flesh and broken bones he had affirmed to be "all right" with a half-contemptuous emile, and then, resigning himself to the inevitable, laid quietly watching the white hands of the j'oung doctor as he prepared splints, bandages, etc., and commenced the work of sett ing the bone, now rendered doubly difficult by the swelling of the bruised flesh." The light of the setting sun stole into the room, illuminating with a sudden glory the bare walls and comfortless sur rounuings, and throwing into strong re lief the two figures which gave life to the picture. The doctor s frank, good- humored face, slight, easy ngure, ana air of careless good-breeding could not have been out of place under any cir cumstances; but the other seemed strangely in unison with and yet in con tradiction to his surroundings. His mus cular frame might have served as a model for strength and beauty a Her cules in a prison dress! His hands, roughened and hardened by toil, had been as slender ana well-sliapeu as tne doctor's own. His face, bronzed by ex posure to all weathers, was still high bred and refined aquiline features; clear, brave eyes; and, above all, the close-cropped hair of a convict. He had that air of reserve totally distinct from rudeness which only well-bred people possess, and which impresses even the most vulgar and obtuse. Though the sensitive mouth betraj'ed his delicate, nervous organization, noth ing could be more stoical than the com posure with which he bore the torture he was suffering. " hy on earth, man, don t you say something, or cry out?" exclaimed the doctor, half impatiently. .Noticing the gathering whiteness round his patient's lips the doctor hastily poured something in a glass, and, bid ding him drink it, went quickly on with his work. Altera few minutes silence he looked up suddenly. 44 What's that?" pointing to a small blue figure on the brawny wrist. "That? Oh! my crest. 1 did it when I was a boy," said the man, indifferently. " 1 our crest? "Did I say that?" and a flush crept over his face. " I must have been dream ing; people do dream, sometimes, don't they?" The doctor did not answer, but looked keenly at him as he turned away his head with a short, enibarrassea laugh. " hat is your name?" "No. 411." "I don't mean that; I mean your nttme" persist el the aoctor. "Jim Hrown." Dr. Harris laughed. "Jim Brown! Why don't you say Bill Scroggins? One name would suit about as well as the other." 411 frowned slightly. "'Why should I tell you my name?" "1m sure 1 don t know," was the an swer; "unless because 1 want you to. That crest on your arm is very like my own. I thought perhaps we were re lated." "And if we were? You wouldn't own me. "Why not? I'm not a bad fellow in my way. neither do 1 think you are. W hy shouldn't 1 own you?" Ihe man raised himself on his arm ana looked searching! y in the doctor's face. "A outlet? he said, slowly. "Well," said the doctor, dryly, "I don't see much society except convicts, at present, and I can't say but what I like them as well as I do those who think themselves a good deal better. ve found out it isn't always the worst that are caught, by any means. I'm a ' radical,' you must know," he added, quaintly, " and very much disapproved of by the family." 411 looked out into the gathering aarK- ness for some minutes, and then said, quietly: v ell, sir, if you care to hear a con vict's story, sit down awhile. I've never told it to any one, and I don't know why I should tell it to you; Tiut the mood's on me, and I might as well talk us think, maybe; and then you've guessed my se cret partly at least, you know I'm not Jim Brown" and a smile flashed across his face. 44 How old do you think I am?" he continued. Dr. Harris looked at the powerful frame of the man at the strong, hard lines in his face. 44 Between forty and fifty, I should say?" 44 Thirty-six yesterday. I was twenty four the day I was sentenced; a pleasant way of celebrating one's birthday, wasn't it? There was a lot of stuff in the papers about my 4 youth,' and my being so 4 hardened.' Did they think I was going to beg for mercy? not I! I've been out here twelve j'ears now, and escaped twice and been caught again; but I'll try once more, some time." 44 You ought not to tell me that," said the doctor, smiling. 44 Why not? They watch me all the time, ; anyway. Just give rue some water, will you? Thanks. Well, I ought to commence with my name, I sup pose. It is Edward Tracy. I was the second son of a Northumberland squire, who had just enough money to keep up the place for my brother, and no more. A fine old place it was, and the only hap py days I can look bac k to were spent there. That was when I was a boy borne for the holidays, eager about pricket and foot-ball, and to whom a gun and the range of the rabbit-warren were perfect happiness. After awhile it was unpleasant enough. My brother a lazy, giod-looking fellow, who knew how to ride anil to shoot, and only that was the idol of my mother and sisters. All de ferred to him except little Mary, my pet, who used to follow me round like a kit leu. Poor Utile girl! I wonder if she ever thinks of me now. Younger sons in a poor family have a hard time of it. I only wonder more don't go to the- bad than do. Brought up as gentlemen, they are then thrown on their own resources, to live on their w its, cither in some beg garly profession, or as hangers-on where there are any rich relations. They must put up with being snubbed and thrown over whenever they come in the way made use of and then cast aside; at least, such was my experience. I was proud and passionate, and so felt these things more than others, I dare say. I wanted to go in'o the army, but my father said he couldn't afford "it 1 4 would be always getting into debt, etc. and sol was ap prenticed to a London barrister a great, pompous man, whom I cordially detested before a month w as out. He had a way of aggravating me whenever we came in contact that used to make me long for an excuse to pitch him down stairs. I be lieve in presentiments. 1 knew that man would injure me some day. I saw more trickery and underhand dealing while in that otuce than 1 had ever 6een in my me before. Mr. Pierson was a manoffwf, not talent. He had gained several good cases, which made his reputation, and he had a way of making people believe that if black was not just w hite it was cer tainly gray, which proved very useful to him. 44 1 was about twenty-two w hen I went into Kent for a few weeks, partly on business for Mr. Pierson, and partly to visit an uncle of mine. Am I tiring you, sir, with this long tory?" 44 .Not at all, J racy; go on." 411 started at the unfamiliar name, which the doctor slightly emphasized. His breath came quickly, and his voice was husky when he spoke again: 44 A ould you think, now, that a man could hear his own name so seldom that when it was spoken as you siwike mine it could make the past come back like a great w ave, "almost blotting out the pres ent? I haven t heard my name for more than ten years," he went on, musingly. 1 don't wonder it sounds strange to me. It was in the summer when 1 went to Kent; the time for 4 falling in love,' as it is called, and, of course, I did it. I don't wonder at myself, even now, when I remember all "that has passed. We were thrown very much together. Lucy was an orphan, living with a rich maiden aunt, w hose place adjoined my uncle's. I had always a fondness for playing the part of protector ; and she w as a cling ing, dependent little thing, with long golden curls and a delicate pink-and-white daisy face. 1 had never cared for any girl before, and from the first I loved her madly. It's the ' old, old story,' and I needn't make a fool of myself again by telling it to you. Before I went back to town we had exchanged rings, and she had promised fo love me through eter nity. A lengthy eternity it proven ! 4 Our engagement was to remain a se cret until 1 should become a great law yer, and then I was to claim her. This was L.ucy s idea. 1 wanted to speak to her aunt, but she begged me not, giving a dozen different reasons for my silence. 1 believe, even then, she thought it best not to bind herself too closely ; but, of course, I never suspected this, for, w ith all my faults, I had always been perfectly hon est and truthful. In the winter Mr. Pierson told me that the business I had been attending to had now to be complet ed, and that he was going down himself. I was, of course, very anxious to go, but he did not give me the chance. I.ucy met him at a couple of dinners, and, from what she said, I knew he had been very attentive to her. lie was a good-looking man, about forty, and could make himself very agreeable when he chose to do so. I wrote to Bucy immediately, telling her what I thought of him. She replied, ac cusing me of being jealous, and saying she w as sure 1 was prejudiced against Mr. Pierson, who had spoken very hiirhly of me, and to whom I found she had con fided the whole story of our engagement. I was very angry, and wrote ral her harsh ly to her, I lancy, for 1 remember she told me I 4 did not love her as I once did.' That was our lirst quarrel and was soon made up, and for a few weeks we corre sponded as usual. Mr. Pierson returned to London, but went back again to Kent in a week or two. He said he was col lecting evidence for an important case. 14 Soon 1 noticed that Lucv s letters grew shorter and shorter, and finally one came saying that she 4 had been thinking over our foolish engagement, and, as there was no prospect of my being able to support her, she had come to the con clusion that for the sake of us both it had better be broken.' 4 1 know every word of that cool, it-artless letter now. One remembers such things. Very soon after I heard of her engagement to Mr. I'ierson. I was a gentleman and he was a snob; but he had money and 1 hadn t. 44 W hats a gentleman born? is it shillin's an' pence?" quoted the doctor, softly. "Eh! what's that?" 44 Only a quotation from the Yvrkxhire Fitrmtr; go on." 44 V ell, of course 1 was furious: but what good did that do me? I thought if I only had money I would find some means of revenge ; but money w as just what I hadn't got. Alioul that time I met a man calling himself St. John. He was clever and well educated, and seemed to read all my w ild, restless longings at a glance. He led me on from bad to worse till it ended in, forgery; then he turned Kings evidence and 1 was locked up. 1 was alwavs very strong, and hnding one of the barslooose 1 wrenched it out and dropped from my window one dark night and escaped. - On my way to the sea I met this mau St. John. I might have got off if -I. could have let him alone, but I couldn't; I stopped him: he taunted me with my disgrace; told me that Mr. I'ierson had known of the plan laid to ruin me. 4 The young lady throwing you over was a prime trump m our hand,' he added, with a leer. I warned him to be silent; but he, as if blinded to his clanger, exasperated me in every way possible. I grappled with him, and, remembering a trick I had learned at school, soon threw him. My hands w ere on his throat. A half minute more and the earth would have been rid of one sordid wretch; but his cries bad been heard by some men in a neighbor ing field, and'l was overpowered. This man a ruined gamester, once a gentle man had changed me from an honest, honorable lad to a felon, and then, dis regarding the 4 honor' which is said to exist even 4 among thieves,' threw me over to save himself.; I would be content to give five years of my life nay, more, I would be content to mid five years to mv life could it purchase that one-half minute of which I was robbed. 44 My family disowned 111c and made no attempt even to procure counsel for me. All forsook me except little Mary, from whom I got a tear-stained letter in closing a five-pound note, her quarterly allowance, and telling nie that she would never forget me. My father had forbid den any of them to write to me or even mention my name; but Mary had dis obeyed him. 4 It can't be wrong to write to you, dear," she said, 4 for you are my own brother always.' "There was a "liaw in the evidence which my counsel took advantage of, but Mr. Pierson worked against him privately. collecting evidence for the crown, and I was convicted. Heaven grant there may not be many poor wretches who leave old hngland with the feelings with which left it. If I had had the opportunity 1 would have put an end to my miserable existence. I was taken in a cab, strongly guarded, from the tail to the wharf. We passed one of the parks on our way. had been in prison some time, and the fresh, green grass, the trees and flowers had never looked so beautiful as now when I knew I was looking at them for the last time. 1 thought of the hedge rows white with blossoms in Northum berlaud; the larks singing overhead; Mary perhaps in our favorite nook 111 the orchard, weeping bitter tears as a last good-by to 4 her handsome Teddy,' as she londlv called me. No wonder mv heart swelled when I thought of those who in the ught of God were guilty of my crime. - 41 As we went down the dock a child passed us w ith a bunch of cowslips. Just two j'ears before I had gathered them for Lucj' in the Kentish lanes: lhe chuu looked tin w isitully as 1 passed; presently she ran after us and put her cowslips in my hand. That was the drop too much in the cup already lull; to save my life I could not have kept back the tears which rolled over my cheeks. I was handcuffed, but one of my guards thrust a handkerchief into my hand with a tew cheering words gruffly said. That touch of sympathy and the child's gift saved me from utter despair. That was the last I saw of England. My life here has been the same, day afler clay, except the few nights I spent in the bush the two times I got oil. 1 hey mostly let nie alone now. I keep by myself, and I've never told a word of this before. 1 had almost forgotten I wasn't 4 Jim Brown' until to day. Did you hear how I hurt my arm? " " One of the men told me you were helping to raise a heavy stone, and that you let the lever slip in somc way and so got yur arm crushed." 44 That's true, as far as it goes; a gang of us were working on the road when a carriage passed. I looked up as I stepped out of. the way, and who do j-ou think 1 saw? Lucy and her husband! She was looking just the same as ever, only proud er. I was so near I could have touched her dress. She looked calmly at me I was only a convict, covered with the dust from her carriage wheels. If she had recognized me the color would have faded a little from her pink cheeks, I think. I wonder if she remembers the letler I wrote her before I was transported? I told her some truths then. She knows who is to blame for my wasted worse than wasted life. 44 Twelve j'ears didn't seem much to me. I looked after the carriage like one stunned. The lever slipped from mv hand jou saw my arm. I didn't think of it until I found I couldn't lilt it. Mr. Pierson has got some high appointment here, some one said. Of course his wife will be feted and flattered. I wonder how she would like to be reminded of that summer in Kent. How would she look if I should stop her carriage and re mind her of the time she swore to love me forever, or how often her bright head has rested on my shoulder? I can feel the thrill of her soft lips yet on my check. There, that's all. Do you be lieve in justice? I don't. The cause of evil should be attacked; now it is only the victim. That woman is more guilty to-day than I. She drove me mad and j et she rides by in her carriage, respect ed and admired, w hile I, in my prison dress, can never be anything but what I am 411." Oct rluid Monthly fur July. a an An Aerial Journey from Buffalo to the Ocean. The aerial voj'ageof the balloon 44 Buf falo" with which C'apt. King ascended from Buffalo, N. Y., on the 4th of July, was one of the most exciting, as it was one of the longest, ever achieved on this continent. The correspondent of the Buffalo E.rprr, who participated in the trip, says: After leaving Buffalo the bal loon passed directly over the little vil lage of Water Valley, left East Ham burgh a little to the left, and, sailing low, afforded its occupants a great deal of sport in conversation with people on the earth, and by the scampering of fright ened cattle. The town of North Collins was reached at five minutes past seven. A quarter of an hour later we sailed above the lower stratum of clouds and barometrical observation showed altitude of about 3.000 feet. Cataraugus creek was crossed, the bal loon passing into the town of East Otto at thirty-eight minutes past seven. Thus far the course was almost identical with that taken by the same party on Julv 4, IStiU, in the famous trip of the 44 Hyperion." We shortly rose to a greater altitude and for a time the earth was obscured from view by the clouds below. Mr. llolden continued to take observations of barometer and ther mometer until twenly minutes to nine o'clock. At twenty-four minutes past eight o'clock we beard the report of a cannon, followed by several others, which we attributed to a celebration at Ellicottville. It became rather dark and the 44 Buffalo" sailed on for about two hours between the upper and lower strata of clouds without much of the earth being visible, though many sounds arose to the ears of the balloon occu pants. The moon rose a little after eleven o'clock and was hailed with hearty welcome, as her raj's not only il luminated the clouds and "the landscape, but she served as a mark in informing us of our course, which continued in the same general direction, a little east of south. For a long time in the evening frequent flashes of lightning were seen, both below and above and around us, but we w ere fortunate in not encounter ing any storm. About midnight ranges of lofty mountains began to appear before us, which Prof. King corrcctlj' decided to be the Allegheny range. The balloon had little or no difficulty in surmounting any of them, and the cultivated valleys showed us that we were traveling over a civilized countrj'. Our location was guessed with considerable accuracy, though not with entire confidence, duriDg the remainder of the night. In the early morning the 44 Buffalo" found itself taking a more easterly course than before, and flying over scenes of unexampled beauty; the richly cultivated fields of York Countj', Pa., and the northern corner of Maryland. The views over this garden spot of the North beggar description. Our course became more easterly, and it was soon evident that we would approach the At lantic coast. We crossed the Susque hanna Hiver about four miles above Havre de Grace at twenty minutes past five, then sailing at a height of nearly two miles, and the splendid panorama of this sinuous river visible for a hundred miles of its length. The Potomac Biver to the south and Chesapeake and Dela ware Bays in front, with the Atlantic in the distance, were rolled out before the delighted eyes of the voj'agers. We crossed Delaware Bay at ii-.'dO directly over Delaware City, sailed on nearly east, though a little south, passed di rectlj' over Salem Citj', and at five min utes past seven Prof. King made a suc cessful though rather exciting landing among a lot of scrub oaks ubout ten miles bevoud this point. The balloon must have traveled about four hundred miles in thirteen hours, and the voyage is one of the longest aud most interesting on record. There are fifty-seven lodges of Odd Fellows in California, with a total mem bership of 3,015, MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. New Yokk thiftks it can muster 24,000 prohibition votes next fall. Fisaxck has rejected the match tax, and Italy rcTuses to tax pianos. It is no longer emotional insanity even Morbid impulse is the euphemism. The residence of the late Sir Edward Landseer was sold recent U' for I";54,'J.")0. Bismmick's daughter carefully collects all caricatures of him, and the Prince en joys them hugely. He who thinks too much of himself will be in danger of being forgotten by the rest of the world. It is said that Henri Bochrfort has re ceived from England an offer of t'S.OOO to establish a journal there. The trowscrs of a Columbus (Ohio) po liceman were stolen trom liim w hue he was on duty a few nights ago. Western birds are getting iuto the habit of late rising, as the woims aro to be had in abundance at all hours. 44 Polo" just now seems to be the popu lar game in England. Princes of the blood play it, as well as commoners. Colokapo is laughing in her sleeve be cause three or four newcomers think they are going to run the Territorial pol itics. A Boston thief went all through ti house and stole nothing but a towel. It was a sad 44 wipe" on the fatnilj' crashing blow. Nature is wondcrfullj' provident to all her creatures. It is now discovered I hut bald heads are Ihe natural skating -parks aud croquet-grounds or flics and mosqui toes. The people of Toulouse must be a hard set. A writer, speaking of the city, says: "It is a large town, containing 00,000 inhabitants built entirely of brick." The item that blacksmiths get eleven dollars per day and board in Arizona hasn't had the effect to start any Phila delphia editors westward. lhtnnt Free 1 rexH. The Vienna Choral Association of Male Singers (Mannergesangvercin) have been invited by the Mayor to visit enire next August, and have accepted the invita tion. An Oregon journal describes a re- ccutlj -elected member of Congress from that region as a jolly, social man of some abilitj', 44 but hitherto too lazy to become known." The people of Barton, Vt., are happy in the possession of a toad which stands un der a leak j' beer barrel and catches the drops as they fall, thus getting amus ingly drunk. A Maine man now sojourning in Odessa has exhumed a Homan Emperor and his legions, including several rusted stirrups, a splendidlj-cuparisoued mule, and a case of razors. Theke are two words w hich are intol erable to a Frenchman. If jou do not want a scene j ou must not call a man of the upper classes 44 un miserable," or one of the lower orders "cochon." The Jardin des Plantes, at Paris, has lately received two tine specimens of the orang-outang. The strangers come from the island of Java. They are male ami female, and about three years old. Washington Hies are bold and hungrj- fellows. It was only the other clay that one of them disputed possession of a strawberry with a man and kept up the discussion until he swallowed both of them. 44 ArrnoxiMATE homicide" is what the Brooklyn Eoyh' calls it when a man fires a pistol at another and misses. What is it when the pistol is pointed playfully at a person and doesn't go off but then it alwaj's docs go off? A Paisi.ky manufac turer got by some accident a severe cut across the nose, and having no court-plaster at hand stuck on his unfortunate organ one of his gum tickets, on which was the usual intima tion: 44 Warm ntt il S.0 ynl long: The marriage of the Princess Louise. eldest daughter of the King of the Bel gians, with the Duke Philip of Saxony will take place at lirusseis toward me end of August next. Grcat' will be given at Brussels to celebrate the event. London fashionables have given up in despair their endeavors to introduc e cer tain Bussian styles to English socielj'. Thev might have succeeded in their ob ject'but for the fact that the ('rand Duchess herself gave up the Bussian fashions. Time was when Brigham Young was wont to descant eloquently on Ihe sinful ness of silk dresses. Now lie has a card in the Salt Lake newspapers telling the sisters who wish to raise silk that he has forty ounces of silkworm eggs and any quantity of mulberry trees for sale at reasonable prices. The Cane Flattery Indians are now- engaged in halibut fishing and sealing. Ten miles out to sea is an immense hali but bank, to which the Indians repair in large canoes, and it is a poor catch if they do not return with from fiffj' to one hundred fish in each canoe. The sealing season is nearlj' over. Says an Arizona paper: "Small-pox need not be feared here it will not come here. The gnats and mosquitoes are occupying the entire ground, and are now working it vigorously, and un der the mining law extension no reloca tions can be made before winter." A cadaveiious, melancholy-looking man. in a suit of thread bare black clothes and a battered silk hat, excited considerable interest by rising in the la dies' cabin of a Brooklyn ferry-boat and solemnly observing: ""There are very few red-eyed widows nowadaj s." 44 When I was first married I was on my knees before my husband from morn ing till night. It was a perpetual adora tion, an incessant delirium, an inexpres sible bliss. I showered caresses upon him; I could have eaten him." "And now?" asked a friend. 44 I'm sorry 1 didn't." The Empress of Austria will go to the Isle of Wight alxmt the middle of July, and will remain there six or eiuht weeks before her visit to Brighton. The Arch duchess Marie Valerie, the jounuest daughter, will accompany her. The Empress will reside in a villa near that taken bj- the Crown Prince and Princess of Germany. The 44 Excelsior Magazine," one of the choicest and most artistic of monthlies, is published at fftf.oO a year. New sub scribers are offered a $4.50 field croquet set and the magazine for $4.40, only 10 cents additional. A liand.-omely-illus-trated Fashion and Etiquette supplement goes with it. Bare inducements to gct-ters-up of clubs in money or premiums. Sample copies 25 cents. "Office, IU111 .V., No. 157 La Salle street, Chicago, III. It is said that on one occasion as Miss Wordsworth, sister of the poet, was passing through a wood which the stock dove was filling with his soft music, she fell in with a countrj' woman, who ex claimed, 44 1 am so fond of stock-doves:" 44 Oh!" thought Miss Wordsworth, 44 at last I have" come on one of nature's poets, with a soul to appreciate the beautiful music of the birds." erj ruthlessly was the dream disenchanted bj' an explanatory remark of the wom an's: 44 Some likes them In pies and some likes them roasted; but for mj' part, I think there's nothing like them stewed with onions." Many of the country people living near Saco, Me., still observe the old cus tom of bathing 00 the beach on the 20tU - - - - (4 of June, under the delusion that there i a special virtue in the wafer for healing chronic diseases on that day.. The cus tom, however, is not half so generally observed as it was half a ccnturj' ago. Then, men, women ami c hildren, sound people as well as sick, thronged tho beach. The custom may have arisen from Ihe practice of bathing in Ireland on the 2tith of June for the cure of humors, etc., but there is u tradition that an old fortune-teller lirst got the people into the notion. John Paul ou Dogs. Foil the allaying of the popular appre hension, 1 purpose stat ting a coinpanj' for insuring iiirainst death bj' dogs. Tho premiums w ill be ridieulou-dj' small ; no questions will be asked of the applicant, and the dividends will be larger, if the public will but patronize, it, than ever mv insurance company paid before. Two years ago I was the unhappy pos sessor of a greyhound long and sharp of nose; like all long and i-harp nosed peo ple, he w as cross and uncertain in temper. One morning he didn't feel very well, and went off and laj down in his corner. Not then having learned that a dog by 11 11 y possibility' could object to being played with, even when sleepy and in disposed, I followed him up and rubbed heads with him, notw ithstauding that ho gave me several warning growls. Ho grabbed me bj- the cur and drew blood in several places. No excitement about mad dogs existed at 'that time, but there was an immediate commotion in tho family. As the first step, it was insisted that f kill the dog. This 1 did not do, because if he were mad 1 wanted to know it. 1 did not even whip him, for I thought then, and think now, that Ihe dog did per fccllj" right. Dogs and w iv es do not pass the bounds of reasonable requirements when thev ask to he let alone occasion ally, and if lliej' bit their masters oftcner and more savagely .they would be re spected more, and "their wishes would bo considered worthy of consultation once in a while. ( hi tii is occasion T was cruel to Mrs. Paul, and for the first time in my life refused to do as she w ished me. She, begged that 1 would send for the doctor tit once and have my ear cut oil", declaring that, if I did not she should not have a moment's peace. Arbitrarily perhaps brutally, 1 declined to grat if - her. In consequence) 1 tave not yet hud lhe bliss ol knowing what it is to bouud gayly through life with a b ather car. It may be that tho experience is sMll eh'slme-d to he mini, however, for since this mad-dog excite ment ri.a bed its present height Mrs. Paul frequenllj- asks me if T feel no symptoms. 1 cannot scratch the hack of my head without her placing a bucket of water before me to see if I show signs of bolt ing, and she often advances a skirmi.-h-liuc of iiuestions the drift of which is lo know if I do not think that 1 could hear all the good (hat is said of me and as much of sermons as I e are- to if 1 had emly one ear. It may be that 1 will have to lay both of them clown on the altar of domestic peace before we've done with it. Now. another word and I've done. As for the killing of animals, I have no se n- timcntal objections em that "core. In deed, 1 never se c a horse btaggering un der twice the burden that should be put upon him that I would not like to step mercifully up, and, while iiatted him ge-ntly with ones hand, put a swill and kind bul let through his head with the other. This would relieve the- poor animal from all injustice and misery, and perhaps his owner, ascertaining how inconve nient it was to drag his own dray around, might use his next horse decently, if ever ho owned one again. The poor dogs that roam the streets, hungrj' nud homeless, I would kill in the most painless way pos sible; ge t them all together, give them as full a meal as thej' could 'at, and dismiss them beyond the rca h of pain. More-, unj' dog" ill treate d by his maste r I would provide for in the same merciful fashion. And so with cats and all oilier animals, for I see no othe r w ay out of the difficulty no other means of gelling rid of Ihe shoe king scenes of crucllj' we cverj day witness, and, what is cquallj' bad, we know are going on eve rj' day around us, whether we see them or not. Inte-rfer-ence for the moment docs no good. Hep. rimand Ihe brute who is beating an over loaded horse or abusing a dog in the: street, and we know that, when he gels the poor horse into his stable or the dog inlo a cellar, he will revenge himelf upon us Ihrough them. Tin mission of the Society for Ihe Prevention of Cruelty lo Animals should be extended: it stops too short of a prope r re sult. It should be empowered to se ize and tenderly and kindly kill all homeless and ill ucd ani- ...... , . - - V I. inals 01 all Kinds even cats. j.tw iur. Tribune. A Burial at Sea. c:c th he Mu. II. II. Elliott, now visiting in Eu rope, writes U the -New Have n J'ufiiint- nm, giving the following uicicicni, wine-u I-. 1 .1... I'lirred on ine c.aniornia uuring mu iissage ove r: 44 We we-re in mid ocean In. 1, it u--w u liUiu ri'il ul. out that one of our number an unatlen.led ladj' pa-se n- 1 1 'I'l.n hi.trd -t.r.il 11ulf.nl I unit unit. i' .-i-'iv...,, ws will, through c abin and forecastle. and a hu-di re sted on the vessel, which opened as Ihe hours won- on. Ihe u-'iu 1 we 11 1 i :i rl v s:id The lad. ough Of a temperame nt, which unfitted r lor sea travel, had ventured me pas- ri. ,iw iii onlrr lo trratifv an him-cI inoihe r who w i-hed to sec her dauglijcr ... . . . 1 I tieforc she du d. r rom tne siariine laoy tad been very s'u k, and this, combined tviili previous serious ill-health and im- i.nwli.nl f.lf .iii ori n ( on llif- liassalTe. proved too much for a cb lica'e organiza tion. The burial, which took place on the elaj' loiiowing ner iieceae, wan a vt range and impressive occasion. Bcv. -Mr. Collins, ot llarttoro, one 01 our num ber condiietid lhe services. The en gines were stopped, the vast ship came .-,1 . I 4. 11... I a stand sun, tne snip s ocii wan ioim-u, and crew and passengers gathered aft about the rude coffin heavily loade d with ... . 1 r .. n liars w nu n containee! our uuionu- nafe passenger s remains. After the sol emn Episcopal service for burial at se a iid be en read, a isa!m chanted bj- a de ciuartet, and a few appropriate re?- i-l-u hi- Air Collin the coffin Was ,uly lowered to the w ater's edge, ropes . ret 1 1 fCf n t'i 1 miwI thi'ir liiinlfii disan nul v 1 " jv - ------ - A peared beneath the dull waves." 44 A SaiAT'X'A belle, who six months ago was so languid that she could scarce ly support herself at the allar now throws a flat-iron fifty-five feet and hits he r husband every time." What a libel on the sex are su:h items as this, circu lating through the provincial press. Ev erybody knowsthut acarclully-taouiaicu statement shews that ne Saratoga belle can 44 heave" a fiat-iron over fourteen and a half feet, and then it goes the way she didn't intend it tf. 111: m: slo w 1 Tnr fiti70na f f ihe Tslfind of San Juan have petitioned the Secretary of War against the removal 01 me c uim u . troops from that island. They fear raids from the Indians, who have expressed a. determination to retrain conuoi 01 1.. fishing grounds in the San Juan archi pelago Gen. Davis, in forwarding the petition, disapproved of it and says t here is no danger whatever from the Indians. Small as is lihode Island there are 13 "77 acres of unimproved land within Ft 3 borders, of hU-h WJfi'.) acres nre woodland,