THE HERALD. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. On Main Street, between 4th and 5th, Second Story. OFFICIAL PAPKIl OF CASS COCJfTV. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year $2.00 One copy, elx month 1 .00 Uu cepy, three montha SO EIRA JNO. A. MACMURPHY, Editor. PERSEVERANCE COXQITIM.' TERMS: $2.00 a Year. PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1871, VOLUME X. NUMBER 25. THE HERALD. AIVKIITIUU IIATKS. trxen. 1 w. I 9 w. I 3 w. t m. 3 in. A m. 1 yr. 1 iwpiare.. 3 iiinri' 8 )iiarn. V column. j column. (l no ft wi fioo fa nit tsoo f son f is no 1 Ni- 3 !M i.r) S X i B no lit iMti in iff ( 1 4 mi' 4 7.1! (0 1.1 on 5 on h on in on l i no an i as no 8 00 14 (Nl 15 (Ml H tm a,-, ( 40 (Hii Ut (at i n lid m oo 1 colinnn.ii: (' 18 (to 1 on a oo to oo iiit oo loo no AH Advertising billit duo quarterly. I 7" Transient ndvcrUsenicuts must bo (mid fur in advance. Extra copies of the Hkhald for sale by II. J. Straight, at the I'ostotrlce, and O. V- Johnou, cor ner of Main and Jfiflu atraei. HENRY BCECK, SEALER IX jET'uLxiTit"LTi?e5 SAFES, CHAIRS, Lounges, Tables, Bedsteads, ETC., ETC., ETC., Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. Wooden Coffins Of all sizes, ready-made, and sold cheap for each. With many thanka for pant patronage, I Invite all lo call and examine my LARGE STOCK OF Jiii-ni 1 1114 iiikI Oofllntx. jan-M MEDICINES AT J. H. BUTTERY'S, On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale atd Retail Dealer la Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, etc., etc. rerritESCRimoNS carefully compounded at all hours day and night. 35-ly J. W. SHANNON'S Feed, Sale and Livery STA.nXiE. 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 C IC Will Run to the Steamboat Landing-, Depot, and all parts of the City, when Desired. jnnl-tf First Mional Bant Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, SUCCESSOR TO Tootle, Ilmiun Clm-lc. Jniti KiTr.oEnALn K. G. JtovEY , .I.IIIN 11. I'LAKK T. V. KVANS President, ...Vice-President. Cashier. . Assistant Cashier. This Bank is now open for business at their new room, corner Main and Sixth streets, and arn pre pared to transact 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 State and in all the Principal Towns and Cities of Europe. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED MAN LINE and ALLAN LINE OF STILVMKIJS?!. Persons wishing to bring out their friends from Europe can itrchas tickets from rs Tlii-oitfjli to X'liittMitioutli. Excelsior Barber Shop. j. c. i500i:, Main Street, opposite Brooks House. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO CITTIXC CIIIEIREV$ HAIR Call and See Boone, Gents, And get a boon in a CIjE -A. 3NT SZZ.VU. n41-ly GO TO THE Post Office Book Store, H. J. STBEIGHT, Proprietor, TOR TO IB Boob, Stationery, Pictures, Music, TOYS, CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings, Newspapers, Novels, Song Books, etc., etc. POST OFFICE BCILDIG, B-tf PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. EPITOME OF THE WEEK. Condensed from Telesrams of Accompanjin; Dates. Monday, Sept. rt. A recent cable dis patch state that the Carliats had fired into two German men-of-war from Gueterari, near San Sebastian. The Germans replied by shelling the town The order removing the head quarters of the army to St. Louis in October ha been recentlypromulgatcd.. JlSioux City (Iowa) apcciul says that, in consequence of Gen. Sheridan's prohibitory orders against infring ing on Indian reservations, the Black Hills expedition organized in that city has post poned its contemplated efforts to penetrate the Black Hills country until Government permission is obtained.... Prof. King, ac companied by five persons, representa tives of the press, made an ascension in his mammoth balloon "Buffalo," at Cleveland, on the 4th. After an interesting voyage of nearly 5H) miles in twenty-four hours the party effected a landing near Smith's Creek, ten miles from Port Huron, Mich.... A Shreveport (La.) dispatch of the 5th says a message haa been sent to President Grant, signed by the leading men of that city, deny ing that any resident of that parish had par ticipated in the Coushatta affair, and asking that a commission of fair-minded men be ap pointed to visit the State and ascertain the truth. The Democratic, and Conservative State Central Committee has issued an ad dress to the country asserting that the recent acts of violence in Louisiana had been insti gated by Gov. Kellogg and his coadjutors, and that the disorders that had occurred had been magnified by the Radical leaders in or der to "forge lightning that there may be thunder at the North." A special from New Orleans of the 5th says the man Abney, whose letter denying that the people of Shreveport had iK'cn concerned in the Coush tta affair had been published, was a prominent member of the White League, and had previously in dulged in threatening remarks. It was feared that twenty-live colored men held by the Coushatta mob had been killed. An attempt was made on the night of the 4th to burn the State House. The private office of the Attorney -General was broken open, the papers, chairs and books- piled on the floor, saturated with oil and set on lire. Owing to haste and a lack of air the lire did not spread to any extent. A Washington telegram of the 5th says that the places in Louisiana desig nated for troops to prevent outrages are New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Shreveport, Alexan dria, Monroe, Harrisburg and St. Martins ville.... The Democrats of the Twelfth Mis souri District have nominated J. W. Glover for re-election to Congress. Tuesday, Sept. 8. A recent fire in Meiningen, Germany, destroyed nearly half of the town, inflicting a loss of 3,000,000 thal ers, and rendering 700 families homeless.... Notice has been issued that the Arabian ports on the Red Sea are infested with the plague ....The answer of Henry Ward Beecher to the complaint of Theodore Tilton has been re ceived in New York and served on the plaintiff, with a notice of trial for the term of court be ginning the third Monday of September. . . . The members of Plymouth Church are con tributing to a fund for the relief of Mrs. Til ton, and (1,700 have so far been collected.. A Milwaukee (Wis.) dispatch saj's the Su preme Court will not deliver its decision until the 15th on the application for an in junction to compel railroads to obey the Potter law Allert Keep, President of the C. it N. W. R. R., has addressed a letter to the Wisconsin Railroad Commissioners in reply to a statement made in a recent speech by Gov. Taylor that the Commissioners had paid that under the Potter law the railroads would lose less than 5 ier cent, of their gross (turnings while doing the same amount of business as last year. Mr. Keep says his company would, under those circumstances, lose at least 25 per cent, of its gross earnings.... Indian cut rages are reported in the upper Missouri country. Three wood-choppers were mur dered at the mouth of the Muscle Shell a few days ago, one of them, Dutch Chris., being burned at the stake. Wednesday, Sept. 9. An open letter to persons contemplating an invasion of the Sioux Indian Reservation has been published by the Interior Department. It recites the treaty stipulations with the Indians, and says that the Interior Department has no discretion but to obey the directions of Con gress. All expeditions to the Black Hills are therefore forbidden until the country shall Iks thrown open to settlement by Congress. ..A call has been issued, under the auspices of the Republican Congressional Committee, for a convention of Southern Republicans to tc held at Chattanooga (not Atlanta, as first announced) on the ISth of Octotcr. The call sets forth that it is for the purpose of con sidering the condition of affairs in the recon structed States and the issuing of an address to the people of the nation concerning the same. It was rumored in Washington on the 8th that a similar gathering of Southern Dem ocrats would lie provided for, to disclaim all sympathy on the part of the Democrats with recent outrages. ..Congressional nom inations on the 8th: Republican Third Ohio District, J. Q. Smith, renominated; Fourteenth Ohio, Win. W. Armstrong; Sev enth Illinois, Franklin Corwin, renominated; Ninth Tennessee, Barbour Ijwis, renomi nated. Democratic Tenth Ohio, G. E. Seney. ....The Missouri Republican State Conven tion is called to meet at Jefferson City on the 23d hist. Thcrsday, Sept. 10. The Democrats of Massachusetts have nominated William Gaston for Governor and William S. Smith for Lieutenant-Governor The Republican State Convention of Minnesota has nominated S. J. R. McMillan, the present incumbent, for Chief-Justice, and F. R. E. Cornell for Associate-Justice. On the question of finance the resolutions adopted declare that the preserva tion of a sound currency against anv ruinous inflation inspired by speculative interests may be hailed as a sure guaranty of the earliest pos sible return to specie payments consistent with the just rights of the debtor and credit classes of the people.... The Michigan State Reform Convention was held at Jackson on the lth. Henry Chamberlain was nominated for Governor; for Lieutenant-Governor, Je rome W. Turner; Secretary of State, George II. House; Treasurer, William F. Hewitt; Auditor-General, F. M. Holloway; Com missioner of the State Land-Office, Chauncey W. Greene; Attorney -General, Andrew T. McReynolds; Superin tendent of Fublic Instruction, Duane Doty; State Board of Education, Carroll S. Frazer. Resolutions were adopted advocating the election of all Federal officers by the people; speedy return to specie basis; free banking; a tariff for re venue.... The Democrats of Ar kansas have nominated Elisha Baxter, pres ent incumbent, for Governor. They invite all persons in the State, regardless of past issues and differences, to unite to secure the equality of all men before the law; the speedy and just punishment of every crime; the purity and freedom of the ballot; the advancement and preservation of the public credit, etc At a recent meeting of the Iowa Woman's Suffrage Association resolutions were adopted setting forth that the temperance question would never be solved until woman had the ballot The Nebraska Independent Convention, at Lin coln on the 9th, nominated J. F. Gardner for Governor, Henry Weib for Secretary of State and J. W. Davis for Congressman. The platform adopted favors the resumption of specie payments as 6oon as possible, as also cheap transportation; opposes further land granU to railroads; favors a reduction of taxes and tariff for revenue, etc. ...The Liberal State Convention of New York met at Albany on the 9th and adopted a platform and adjourned, without making any nomina tion, to the 29th. The resolutions declare against a third term for the Presidency, and that sound policy requires that no President should be re-electc" , that the return of the country to a specie basis is of paramount importance, and that the business interests of the country require that a free banking system should be established.... Thomas M. Pattcraon (Democrat) has been elected Delegate to Congress from Colorado by between 1,000 and 2,000 majority over Jerome B. Chaffee, present Delegate.... The wife of Wm. Stonehouse, of Grand Rapids, Ohio, attempted to hurry up a smoldering fire with a dose of kerosene. She survived the experiment two hours.. ..Rose Dennis, of Sterling, III., was recently kindling a fire with kerosene, when the can exploded and the unfortunate girl was soon enveloped in a mass of flames. Mrs. Dennis tried to assist her daughter, and was herself fright fully burned. The girl lived only two hours. Mrs. Dennis died a few hours after Congressional nominations on the 0th: Democratic Gen. John B. Clark, Eleventh Missouri District, renominated; Hon. Milton Sayler, First Ohio District, renominated; Gen. Henry B. Banning, Second Ohio District, re nominated; Col. H. Casey Young, Tenth Ten nessee District. Reform and Liberal E. St. Julien Cox, Second Minnesota District; Prof. D.G. Pinckney, Fifth Illinois District; Free man Kelly, Seventh Indiana District. Fkiday, Sept. 11. Prof. Winchell, State Geologist of Minnesota, who accompa nied the Custer expedition to the Black Hills, in his official report says he saw none of the gold reported to have been found by the miners accompanying the expedition, nor did he see any of the auriferous quartz. He takes the gold reports with a large grain of allow ance. Prof. Donaldson, who also accompa nied the expedition, entirely coincides with Mr. Winchell on the gold question .... The Nebraska Democrats have nominated A. Tuxbury for Governor; John Atherly for Secretary of State; R. C. Jordan for Attorney General, and J. W. Savage for Congressman. The resolutions favor the adoption of gold and silver as the basis of currency, and the resumption of specie pa3-ments as soon as possible without disaster to the business in terests of the country; the right and duty of the State to protect its citizens from extortion and unjust discrimination by chartered monopolies, etc.... Congressional nomina tions on the 10th: Republican Lloyd Lowndes, Sixth Maryland District, renomi nated; Wm. S. King, Third Minnesota; H. B. Strait, Second Minnesota, renominated; Stephen A. Hurlbut, Fourth Illinois, renomi nated. Democratic Henry Boyle, Sixteenth Ohio; W. A. J. Sparks, Sixteenth Illi nois. Reform and Independent Col. Jef ferson A. Seay, Fifth Missouri; A. V. Pendleton, Sixth Indiana; A. G. Cook, Second Wisconsin; Alexander Campbell, Seventh Illinois.... The Michigan Democratic State Convention met at Kalamazoo on the 10th and made the following nominations: For Governor, Henry Chamberlain; Lieutenant-Governor, Frederick Hall; Secretary of State, George H. House; State Treas urer, Joseph M. Sterling; Auditor General, John H. Graus; Commissioner State Land Office, Chauncy W. Green; Attorney-General, Martin V. Montgomery; Superintendent of Public Instruction, Duane Doty; Member of the State Board of Educa tion, E. W. Andrews. The resolutions de mand the abandonment of all efforts to rule States for corrupt party purposes; the re peal of the law increasing salaries, and the "gag law;" a reservation of the public lands for the benefit of the Union soldier and sailor and of the actual settler; the repeal of the Legal-Tender act, and a specie basis and free banks with a secured currency, etc The Prohibition State Convention of Nebras ka has nominated: For Governor, J. S. Church; Secretary of State, W. G. Olionger; Treasurer, Thompson Bissel; Vttorney -General, p;escnt incumbent, J. R. Webster; Su perintendent of Public Instruction, J. N. McKenzie; Prison Inspector, C. B. Par ker; Congressman, J. G. Mil'.er; Contingent-Congressman, J. A. Fairbanks.... Gov. Baxter, of Arkansas, has peremptorily declined the nomination tendered him by the Democrats of that State, and A. H. Garland has been placed on the ticket in his stead.... The President of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company has been notified that five suits have been entered at Burlington against the road on the charge of violating the State law and for the ejectment of passen gers from trains. THE MARKETS. September 11, 1874. NEW YORK. Cottoh. Middling npland, 17175c. Lite Stock. Beef Cattle $10.73313.0O. rios Dressed, $8.50!).;. Sheep Live, $4.0iK&.no. BxiAUHTDrrK. Floor Good to choice, $5.W) 5.85; white wheat extra, fo.8jffje.40. Wheat No. 2 Chicago, $1.13&1.17tf ; Iowa spring, fl.lW31.lH; No. i Milwaukee spring, $1.21Q1.23. Rye West ern and State, 8f,!!4c. Karley ... &.... Corn Mixed Western afloat, fti!Wc. Oats New Western, W7c. Provisions. rorkNew Mess, fiJ.0na2i.25. Lard 14414'4c Cheese 10'43-13?4C. Wool. Common to extra, 45(&G6c. CHICAGO. Live Stock. Beeves -Choice, $5.00Q.6.40; good, f5.2j5.75; medium, $4.505.33; butch ers' stock, fi.50a4.00; stock cattle, $2.-25 3.75. Hogs Live, $6.757.50. Sheep Good to choice, $3.754.62',4. Provisions. Butter Choice, 2833c. Eggs Fresh, 1516c. Cheese New York factory, 13V414c; Western.tJilSWic. Pork New Mess, $ii.75ii.00. Lard 14V414c. Breadstcits. Flour White winter extra, f5.505i7.50; spring extra, $4.755.50. Wheat Spring, No. 2, 9595!4c. Corn No. 2, 76 7t'c. Oats No. 2, 48484c. Barley No. 3, S9c&$1.00. Rye No. 2, 81I&8-JC. Wool. Tub-washed, 4555c. ; fleece, washed, 4048c.; fleece, unwashed, 2735c. Lumber. First Clear, f50.0O53.0O; Second Clear, f 47.00(49.50; Common Boards, $10.50 12.00; Fencing, $10.5O&12.00; A" Shingles, f3.003.50; Lath, f 2.002.25. CINCINNATI. BRKADSTrrrs. Flour f5.155.35. Wheat Red, $1.10. Corn 79&S0C. Rye 90c. Oats 4t352c. Barley $1.051.10. Provisions. Pork f 23.0023.50. Lard 14(315c. ST. LOUIS. Lrv Stock. Beeves Fair to choice, $4.00 6.00. Hogs Live, f 5.75a7.50. BRKADSTCTr. Flour XX Fall, $4.254.75. Wheat No. S Red Fall, $1.151.16. Corn No. 2, 7575V4c. Oata No. 2, 5050!4c. Rye No. 2, 89.0c. Barley $l.ai.l5. Provisions." Pork Mess, $24.00.24.10. Lard 14?,l5c. MILWAUKEE. BaBADSTurrs. Flour Spring XX. f 5.25Q.5.50. Wheat Spring No. 1. $1.02&1.03; No. 2, 97 9Sc. Corn No. 2, 67674c. Oats No. 2, 46Vi3 47c. Rye No. 1, 84aS5c. Barley No. 2, $1.00 $1.02. DETROIT. Breadstttts. Wheat Extra, $1.201.2O!4 Corn 79aOc Oats 85'4c. TOLEDO. Breadstuffs Wheat Amber Mich., $1.09 1.08; No. 2 Red. $1.07l.O8. Corn Mixed, 7980c. Oats 5152c. CLEVELAND. Breadstuffs Wheat No. 1 Ked. $M11.12; No. 2 Red, $1.07l.OS. Corn 2&$3c. Oats 4950c. BUFFALO. Live Stock. Beeves 5.006.40. Hogs Live, $5.757.50. Sheep $4.404.50. EAST LIBERTY. Lrrx Stock. Beeves Best, $6.256.75: me dium. $5.506.00. Hogs Yorkers, $6.50 7.10; Philadelphia, $S.258.40. Sheep Beat, 5.00&5.25; medium, $4.O04-75. Another Statement by Mr. Moulton. The New York Graphic of the 11th contains another leusthy statement by Frank V. Moul ton relative to the charges against Mr. Beecher and In rcplv to the explanation made hy the lat ter before the Plymouth Investigating Commit tee. This Ktatement was begun immediately after the reading in Plymouth Church of the committee's report, and after its completion was submitted to Mr. Butler, who insisted upon its modification in many particulars, bernie it was so violent In laii'n'ac. The statement was re modeled accordingly- Mr. Motilton recounts in detail how strenuous ly he labored to prevent the exposure beiii! made before the committee by Mr. Tilton; and how he and Mr. Tracy Mr. Beecher" counsel acted tv ;rethtr to this end ; but owing to their inability to prevent the nun-ting of the committee on the ap olnted eveninz their effort was a failure Mr. Tilton having promised that if the committee was not prepared to receive his statement on that par ticular evening he would defer making it for the time being. With regard to Mr. Beecher's statement that theonlycopy of Mrs. Tilton's confession was torn in piercx in his own presence on the night or the 30th of December, 1STO, Mr. Motilton reiterates his assertion that the document was held hy him and returned to Mr. Tirum after the tripartite agreement, to be re turned to Mrs. Tilton that she might destroy it. Mrs. Tilton's letter requesting this return is again published. With regard to the interview at the time Mr. Beecher gave up the confession Mr. Motilton says: "When I demanded the refraction from him, he axked me. ' What will you do with it if I give it up?' I answered: ' I will keep it as I keep the confession, if yon act honorably. I will pro tect it with my life, as I would protect the other with my life.' I may be allowed to say here that at this remark I made" reference to the pistol in my overcoat pocker. which I always carried in the night, as emphasizing the extremity of my de fense of the papers. Yet Mr. Beecher says: 'He made no verbal threats, but opened his overcoat, and, w ith some emphatic remark, he showed mc a pistol.' Why misrepresent ? Is it possible that he gave his coiitldence at once to a man who ex torted the paper from him with a pistol. Yet Beecher's committee make a point of this prevar ication in their argument for the acensed." With regard to Mr. Beecher's letter of con trition, Mr. Motilton explains at length the cir cumstances under which it was written. He says, us before stated, that it was written out according to the dictation of Mr. Beecher; and that the exact language of Mr. Beecher was used in the letter. He ( Motilton) was not in the habit of using such language, and could hardly have composed the letter in question. He says: "I should not have used the phrase 'Humble myself before him as I do before my God.' I was not used to that kind of expression; nor the phrase 'Toward the poor child lying there pray ing with folded hands.' I never called a woman of nearly forty years old a 'poor child' in my life. I did not know she 'was lying' anywhere with folded hands. Beecher did", because he says in his statement to the committee that ' She lay there, white as marble, like a statue oflhe Old World, palm to palm, like one pr.iv ing.' thus reproducing four years afterward al most the identical phrase and picture which lie conveyed to me. and which I put in the ' letter of contrition.' 1 could not have used the phrase ' I have her forgiveness,' because I did not know whether he had it or not. except as he told me. and if I had acted niton my belief in the matter I should suppose that he had not. This letter, after being prepared by me. was read by him lie fore he put his signature to it. The ex planation put. by Beecher in his statement that this paper was a mere memorandum of points to be used by him (me) in setting forth mv (his) feelings; . . . hilt they were put into the sentences by him (ne) expressed as he (1 1 understood them, not as mv (his) words, but as hints of my (his) figures and letters, to be nsed by him iu conversing with Tilton. It is a mere string of hints, hastily made by an un practiced writer, as helps to hfs memory" in rep resenting to Mr. Tilton how I felt toward his family.' All this explanation is a mere after thought made up for the purpose of explanation merely. Beecher always treated this letter as his own iii all the alter conversations upon the sub ject with Mr. Samuel Wilkeson, Mr. Beecher's friend." In a subsequent conversation with Mr. Motilton Mr. Beecher had alluded to the document in question as his (Beecher's) letter to Mr. Tilton, and asked Mr. M. : "Can't we hit upon some plan to break the force ofmv letter to Tilton!'" etc. Mr. Motilton again brings forward his proofs that Mr. Beecher and Mrs. Tilton renewed their intimacy after the confession was made, and after both had given assurance to Tilton that they would not meet excejit through him. After again printing Mrs. Tilton s note to Mr. Beecher. con cluding with the expression "Of course, I should like to share with you my joy." Mr. Motilton produces another letter from Mr. Beecher to Mrs. Tilton, which is as follows: " The blessing of God rest upon you. Every spark of light and warmth in your own house w ill be a star and a sun in my'dwclling. Your note broke like spring (sic) upon winter, and gave me an inward rebound toward life. No one can ever know, none hut God, through what a dreary wilderness I have wandered. There was Mount Sinai; there was the barren waste, and there was the alternation of hope and despair that marked the pilgrimage of old. If only it might lead to the promised land! Or, like Moses, shall I die on the border? Your hope and courage are alike amazing. Could God inspire you to re store and rebuild at home, and, while doing it, to cheer and sustain outside of it another who sorely needs help in heart and spirit, it will prove a life so noble as few are able to live, and in an other world the emancipated soul may ntter thanks. If it would be of comfort to you now and then to send me a letter of true inwardness (sic), the outcome of your inner life, it would he safe, for 1 am now at home here with my sister, and it is permitted to you (sic) and will he an ex ceeding refreshment to me, for your heart-experiences are often like bread from Heaven to the hungry. God has enriched your moral nature may not others partake?" "This." says Mr. Motilton, " is in Beecher's handwriting, but without direction or signature, but the note inclosed in pencil tells us the direc tion of it, as the words 'Your note broke like spring upon winter' tell also to what note it was in reply, because that quotes the words of Mrs. Tilton,' Spring has conic,' asking him to 'share her joy,' she being ' all right' now. The inelosure is on a slip of paper marked 'O,' hut which I do not produce here, reserving it for preseutat'nui before another tribunal. Was there ever a plain er case of renewal of intimacv, to say the least, than this? Mark, also, amid the prayers to God contained in the longer note, Beecher's sugges tion that Elizabeth can write him now with safe, ty, because he is living at home with his sister, i. e , his wife is away."' Mr. Moulton then gives in detail Beecher's al leged confessions to him of his adultery with Mrs. Tilton. lie says: " It has been said that, being a man of the w:orld, I drew inferences from his tlteecher'si pure and unguarded expressions which they did not. authorize, and therefore as to these letters I have left inferences to be drawn by those who read them in a light which dates and facts have now thrown upon them. But to answer this criticism in another direction, and to show the impossibility that 1 could lie mistaken, not seek ing to shelter mvself under any supposed misunderstanding, hut taking all the burden of veracity between Beecher. Tilton and myself. 1 now proceed ti give such portions as are neces sary of some few of the conversations in which Beecher made confession of adultery. I have be fore stated that the first confession was made on the night I went for the ' retraction' of Mrs. Til ton; that I there told him: 'Mr. Beecher, vou have had criminal intercourse with Mrs. Tilton, and you have done great injury to Tilton otherwise,' and 1 say further in my published statement 'that he con fessed and denied not, but confessed,' as he did not deny this charge so explicitly made by me. Whatever inferences I have made from his words at other times, he certainly could not have mis taken mine at this time. When speaking of the relations of man and woman, 'criminal inter course' has but one legal or literal meaning, even to clergymen. It. however, seems necessarv that I should go still further, which I do, and 1 say that on that evening he confessed to me his relations with Mrs. Tilton in language so vivid that I could not possibly mistake or forget it. He said: "My acts of intercourse with that wom an were as natural and sincere in the impres sion of my love for her as the words of endear ment which I addressed to her. There seemed to be nothing iu what we did together that I could not justify to myself on the ground of our love for each other, and I think God will not blame me for my acts with her. I know that at present it would "he utterly impossible for me to justify mvself before man." Mr. Moulton then calls attention to the asser tion made in his former statement that in the presence of himself and another witness, whom he stiil feels reluctant to bring forward (of course, not Mr. Tilton), both Mrs. Tilton and Mr. Beecher admitted, in language not to be mis taken, the truth of the charges against them, and asked advice as to the course to be taken by them. With regard to the question of blackmail. Mr. Moulton says it had never occurred to him that the procedure br which money was ob tained for Mr. Beecher was an extortion. He (Motilton) himself, his business partners and others were subscribing money toward sus taining the Golden Age, and he had no thought that Beecher was doing anything other and difl'crent from what the rest were doing, except that he (Beecher) had. perhaps, an additional per sonal motive to sustain an enterprise which all favored, and the results of which wen; looked npon as an honor to journalism. A careful examination of Mr. Beecher's statement will show that the suggested payment of f.YOUO first came to him (Moulton) fnini Mr. Beecher, and was not made by Mr. Moulton to Mr. Beecher. He (Moulton) told Mr. Beecher Mr. Tiltoo would not receive the nionev if he knew it came from Mr. B.. and therefoie it was arranged between them that it should be given to Mr. Til ton in small sums, as coming from Mr. Moulton. The letter of Mrs. Morse Ohrs. Tilton's mother) to Mr. Beecher, in which the addresses him as her sou and signs herself " Moth er." is given in full. After stating her pecun iary difficulties, she writes: "Do come and see me. I will promise that the ' secret of her life,' as she calls it. shall not be mentioned. I know it's hard to bring it np. as you must have suffered intensely, and we all will. I fear, until released by death. Do you pray lor me ? If not. pray do. I never felt more rebellious than now; more need of God's and human help. Do vou know I think it strange you should ask me to call you 'son? I have told darling I felt If you could, in safety to yourself and all concerned, you would be to me all this endearing name. Am I mtofcaken!" Mr. Moul ton then says : " This letter hears date Oct. 24. 1 fix the date'to be in 1871. because it was at that time that Mrs. Morse had the house, for w hich she was paying $l.Atk rent, and in the time w hen Til ton w as allow ing his wife $40er week for house hold expenses. This letter was given me by Beecher as written, by Mrs. Morse, Elizabeth's mother, and is a call on him for money, which may explain the necessity for mortgaging his house otherwise than by paying .),(JU to me. It is the outside family that is always the most onerous to a man. The trouble is, Beecher mistakes the persons who blackmailed him. It was Mrs. Morse and Bessie, and nobody else, and thev are now repaying him hy testifying in his behalf"." If to obtain advantage to one's self hy using the unfortunate situation of another is black mail, then Beecher himself was a blackmailer. He protected himself from Bowen by using Tillon to get the tripartite covenant out of him, and yet he puts the facts in a light exactly contrary to the truth. Beecher in fact used Tilton's position with Bowen to extort from Bowen a certificate of good character after he had preferred several grave charges against him, one of them being de scribed as brutal rape. It was not Tilton s accusations hut Bowen's that Moulton had in charge, and the real point was to avoid "an appeal to the church and then to the couucil." Moulton then gives the charge of rape as contained in Tilton's letter recapitulating Boweu's cause of offense against Beecher. and then significantly asks: "Could an innocent clergyman have allowed such a charge to be made, and more than once reiterated, however guardedly, by a leading mem ber ol his church, and rest content until his inno cence was fu Hy and clearly established, if in no other way, in a court of justice ?"' Mr. Moulton said that," iu his former statement, he endeavored state the facts of that brutal offense with as much delicacy as their wickedness would allow, but that his very reticence had been made the ground of accusation that he had mistaken the purport of what Mr. Beecher had said, or that, if ho were telling the truth, he would give his exact words. He was therefore compelled in relating the cir cumstances attending the affair, to ovurstep the bounds within which he had set himself In his former statement; and if something was pub lished w hich ought not to be published, it was not his fault, but a uecessity made by Beecher and his friends Tor his (Moulton's) ow n vindica tion. Exactly how the matter came about was as follows: He showed to Mr. Beecher the letter of Tilton to Bowen, bearing date Jan. 1, 1871, con taining the charges alleged to have been made by Bowen in the presence of Tilton and Oliver John son, and Beecher deemed it necessary to tell Moulton the truth concerning his adulterv with the woman to whom he supposed Bowen referred. Mr. Moulton here gives Beecher's confession or narrative of the atHiir, which, in the interest of decency, is here sup pressed. He suggested that unless Beecher obtained a retraction of the story from the woman he would some day find himself at Bowen's mercy. Such a paper he obtained on the loth of January, 1S71, but it was not so direct or satisfactory as the retraction he obtained from Mrs. Tilton. Beecher denied the allegation of rape, hut did not denv the fact of adultery. Mr. Moulton also stated that that connection and in timacy was still continued, as he believed, but declines to give either her name or copies of her letters in his hands, because he did not wish needlessly to involve a reputation which had thns far escaped public mention by any of the parties to the controversy. The last episode of crime had been related to him iu the presence of witnesses. In relation to Beecher's proposed suicide. Mr. Moulton states that Mr. Beecher told him. and showed to another in his presence, that he had within reach in his own study a poison which he would take if ever the story of his crime with Mrs. Tilton should become public, lie told him of a visit he had made to a photog rapher's gallery, when he learned that one of the employes had mistaken a glass of poison for a glass of water, and, having taken and drank it, had fallen dead with scarcely time to drop the glass. Mr. Beecher said that was what he wanted tor himself, and, under the plea of making some photographic experiments, he procured some of this same poison from the photographer, which he told Moulton he intended to use if an intima tion of his crime should be made, and then he said: " It would be simply reported that. Beecher died of apoplexy, but God, and you and 1 will know what caused my death." If those who blamed Moulton could have looked into Mr. Beecher's grief-stricken race, and listened to the tones of his voice in great emergencies, in which he said there was no refuge for him but in death, they would have felt impelled to do as generous and open-hearted a service as he (Moulton) had practiced toward him. It would have taken a harder heart than his, hein" witness of Mr. Beecher's sorrows, not to forget nis sins. The remainder of the long statement is only interesting not important personal matters. State Elections, State elections occur in the order and for the purposes stated in the following table. The highest State officer to be elected is named, and the asterisk denotes Legislatures that will elect United States Senators: Sec. St Congress Sec. St. Leg. Congress Sec. St. . . . Congress Gov. Leg. Congress Leg. Leg. Congress Treas. Leg. Congress Gov. Leg. Congress Gov. Leg. Congress Gov. Leg. Congress Leg. Congress Oct. 13. Ohio, " Indiana, " Iowa, " Nebraska, Oct. 14. Georgia. Oct. 22. W. Virginia, Nov. 2. Louisiana, Nov. 3. Alabama, " Arkansas, " Delaware, Honda, Georgia, Illinois, Treas. Kansas, Gov. Keiituckv, Maryland, Mass'ch nsctts.Gov. Michigan, Gov Congress Leg. Congress Leg. Congress Congress Congress Leg. Congress Leg. Congress Minnesota, Sup. J. Leg. Congress Missouri, Gov. Leg. Congress Nevada, Gov. Leg. Congress " New Jersey, Gov. Leg. Congress " New York, Gov. Leg. Congress " ' Pennsylvania, Lt.-Gov. Leg. Congress " S. Carolina, Gov. Leg. Congress " Tennessee, Gov. Leg. Congress " Texas, Congress " Virginia. Congress " Wisconsin, Leg. Congress The ArMinsas Constitutional Conven tion (now in session) has provided for an election of Crovernor if the new con stitution be adopted; otherwise Gov. Baxter holds for two years longer. The California election of Congress men has been postponed to September of next year, when si Governor, Legisla ture, etc., will lie chosen. llie .Missis sippi election of Congressmen has like wise been postponed to November of next year, when a Legislature will be chosen. The New Hampshire, lihode Island, and Connecticut elections of Con gressmen occur at the regular spring elections next year. Chictigo Tribune. The White Man's Tarty. The Democratic party, prior to the war, under the leadership of Jeff. Davis, Vallandigham, and that class of pro slaveryites, resolved and re-resolved that " this is the White Man's Government." This was the motto upon all their ban ners and the watchword at all their gath erings. Those who declared that human slavery should not be extended into ter ritory then free were branded as " negro worshipers," ' amalgamationists," etc., and the Democracy declared their deter mination to assert and maintain the su periority of the white race, and its right to make servants of colored races, whether from Africa, China, Japan or the forests of America. The Democratic party is the same to day that it was before the M ar. Its prin ciples have not changed. In the Demo cratic Convention of Louisiana on the 23th inst., the declaration was sent forth that the Democratic party is the " "White Man's Party." That is to be the watch word of the party hereafter, just as "this is the White Man's Government" was its motto prior to the war. It repre sents that prejudice against the colored race which ever characterizes conceited ignorance, and the party, in adopting this motto, plants itself squarely in the midst of the lowest and most gross elements of society. " The White Man's Party!" A party which makes merit of color, and as sumes that the Creator, in giv ing a dark skin to some of His children, designated them as inferior beings, only fit to be the slaves of His white children. The day for such obnoxious doctrines has passed. When slavery was in the height of its prosperity and power when the people were blinded by prejudice and custom this war fare against the colored race was popular; but tolay such an effort to trample upon human rights and liberties in the -persons of colored men, women and children will be rebuked by every intelligent person throughout the North ern States, and every true Republican at the South. The people of this countrv have declared that all men are created free and equal, and they have sealed that vow with their blood and treasure. The' old, fossilized pro-slaveryites of the South, and their dough-faced allies at the North, like Frank Ilurd & Co., may emblazon upon their banners that theirs is a " White Man's Party." but the intelli gent people of the country cannot be in duced to lock arms with, rebels in a war fare against loyal colored people. Toledo BUule. Affairs at the South. Special Telegram to the Chicago Inter-Ocean. Nbw Orleans, Sept. 5. The man T. W. Abney, whose letter is quoted in the press dispatches from Shreveport yesterday, is the most promi nent member of the White League in Ked Kiver Parish. In a letter from Sheriff Egerton, written a few hours before his murder, to Senator Twitchell, he says: "Abney and Pierson are back from Natchitoches, and say they arc for war. Pierson says we are staking our all. If we win, we will gain what we want; if we lose, we lose all. If the negroes vote for or at tempt to sustain any Republican in office it will cost them their lives." In another letter Egerton writes: " If the Govern ment wants cases of murder to act upon, there are plenty in De Soto, where they have murdered seven colored men just to see them kick." One of the last victims at Coushatta was the Postmaster, Andrew Rosier. It is feared that the twenty-five colored men held by the mob have also been killed. Thus far twenty-one deaths are reported. A school-teacher from Compte, by the name of Vundusen, has disappeared at Alexandria, and is doubtless murdered. His life had been threatened several times. The telegraph office at Shreveport is still blockaded by the White League Superintendent and President. A desperate attempt was made to burn the State House last night. The private office of the Attorney-General was broken open, the papers, chairs and books piled on the floor, saturated with oil, and set on fire. Owing to haste and a lack of air, the fire did not spread to any extent. Gov. Kellogg has appointed, according to promise, one clerk from the opposition to each of the registration precincts, and says that there shall be a fair election in this State. He has no fears as to the result. Yesterday an Intcr-Ckenn. reporter had an interview with an Arkansas official, who is here on a visit to a prominent cit izen. This gentleman is in a position to know exactly how things stand, and he freely gave expression to his views on the Southern question. He says it is the general opinion in Arkansas that the White Leaguers have for their sole object the defeat of the Republicans at the coming elections. To attain that end they will employ every means in their power, and will not hesitate at the " re moval " of a few negroes. Their chief card is to intimidate the colored people and keep them from the polls. The Con gressional Committee appointed to in vestigate Arkansas affairs lias had a de terrent effect upon the White Leaguers in that State. They fear theWnterference of Congress, and are working less openly than in the other States. No doubt, how ever, is entertained of the strength of the organization. Incidents are constant ly occurring which prove the bitter feel ing against the "despised" race. In Pulaski County grave appre hensions exist aB to the influences brought to bear on the Grand Jury, which meets to-day. The Judge is a favorite of Baxter and the jury is considered a packed one. An indictment of all the officials is looked for. Other counties are also at the mercy of Demo cratic Judges, and the people rely upon Presidential interposition to save them from disaster. The reporter was in formed the gravity of the situation could not be over-estimated and the col ored people are anxious to tide over the crisis in a peaceable spirit. On their part there is no desire for a "war of races." Their orderly, law-abiding hab its are misconstrued into acts of aggres sion. The whole body of Democrats seem united against them, and the dis patches to the newspapers are either exaggerated or colored to their detri ment, so that popular sentiment may be misdirected. "What the result may be," said this official, "God only knows; but of one thing I am certain: the negro is free from the animus imputed to him and wishes only that the cause of good government may prevail." These, in brief, are the facts communicated at the interview. Inter-Ocean, Sept. 7. Partridge's Mistake. I iiave before mentioned the fact that it is a common practice in Philadelphia to build thirty or forty houses all precisely alike in a row, so that a man who lives in the middle has to begin at the corner and count in order to tell when he reach es his residence. My friend Par tridge, who occupies one of these houses, has been spending the summer in the country, his residence beingclosed mean time. A few nights ago he happened to be in-.town, and passing by his dwelling he saw lights in the second story. He knew at once that burglars were engaged in routing out his valuables, and he in stantly Hew to the jiolice station and ob tained a squad of policemen to capture them. Two officers were sent around into the back yard and the others pried open the front window-shutter, and to gether with Partridge entered the parlor softly with the intention to surprise the burglars. The parlor and hall were dark and the squad proceeded quietly up-stairs, feeling that that they had ev erything in their own hands. Just as they reached the first landing they met one of the burglars coming down in the darkness. They grabbed him, and as he yelled a good deal they knocked him on the head a few times," and after man acling him laid him out in the entry. Proceeding to the front room they broke the door open and found nobody there but a woman who was scared half to death. The officers were about to seize her when Partridge came in and recog nized her as Mrs. Kellogg, the wife of the man who lives two doors below him. In fact it was Kellogg's house, and Kel logg was lying below in the entry with chains on his legs and a lump as big as an egg-plant on his head, and mad be sides. Partridge's house was as safe as ever. Then the policemen swore some and went home and Partridge remained to sooth the Kelloggs. It cost him $ 400 in cash, and even then they were down on him. He is going to move. He wants to find a pink house with a green cupola in the center of a thirty-acre field. He wants a conspicuous house that he can recognize at a distance. Max Adder, in Dtinbury New. A correspondent of the Country Gentle man, says: "We moved into a frame house, about two years old, and my con sternation was very great to find it thor oughly stocked with bed-bugs; there was not a crack or crevice that was free; they were under the base-boards and over them. After fighting them eight years I learned from a girl that had served as a chambermaid in a large boarding-house that bugs can be entirely exterminated for all time. I immediately followed her directions, which was to take grease that was cooked out of salt pork, to melt it, and to keep it melted (the vessel can be kept in a pan of coals) and to put it with the feather end of a quill in every place I could find a bug. It is necessary to see that the bed cords are entirely free from the pests, and I will warrant there will be no more trouble. It is more than thirty years since a bug has been seen in my house." MY LITTLE ONE. A I.1TTI.E hand warm, dimpled, velvety, Slipped rrom my own. A star-like luce, rose-Hushed and petirl, shines fair lp in the other home. The restless feet so small thev both could nestle Kosebnds, iu a mother's hand. With their light touch will scarcely bend the flowers In that celestial land. The rippling melody of the little voice Is unshed and still. No more the music of her broken words my .Empty heart w ill till. "Oh, 'tis not well," I cried hen sorely lttcn Itv Ills just rod. "To take from me my darling pure from Heaven My gift from God! " But after many days II peace came to me. So deep and still That patient and meek my stricken heart made answer. "Thine be the w ill."' It Is well with her, the little one I cherished. In that fair land. The baby lingers slipped from my own into Her Father's hand. Gariift Alymtr. " J MIGHT HA YE DOXE." Is there a sadder word than this! I might have done! I might have tilled life's cup of blisn At least for one ! I might have done! I might have ma One life so fair It eft from iis robe of somber shade Kach thread of care. I might have done! So simple joy. Love's word, or wile, Bobs life of hair its sail alloy. Makes life a smile. I might have done ! While young life strewed Her prescient seeds; Each folded germ with life endued To bloom in deeds. Oh, love-fraught hours, sail mutely on. Die one by one ! 'Tis life to sigh when all are gone, " I might have done." Mary CUmiiter Anu. . iJUicvjo A1 ranee. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Kickino babies are rebels in arms. Sklk is a poor center for a man's ac tions. The best thing to take before singing Breath. Wooden necklaces (Swiss goods) are fashionable. Thev ar so eusy in Kansas that they spell it 11 worth. Fans arc universally worn dangling from the waist. Dcty ox Duy Goons That of bus bands to buv them. A TiiuEK-MONTiis old oyster is about the size of a split pea. Milwai kek styles Chicago her "run- fingrationary suburb." The Journal of lliuilth says it is wrong to get up before you feel like it. A Belfast (Me.) girl was seized with spinal meningitis on her wedding day. " The silent majority" is Junius Henry Browne's expressive designation for the dead. It is a curious fact that the color of the eyes of newly-born infants is invari ably blue. NoTE-siiAVEits succeed financially be cause they " take so much interest" in their business. A Veumontkk advertises "unprece dented, unparalleled, unapproachable, unadulterated confectionery. Black silk walking-dresses with stripes of beads down the front width instead of velvet, as was the rage last winter, will be in favor in the autumn. A Sahatooa belle was thrown into con vulsions and her health seriously im paired because her beau wanted to dance with her without wearing gloves. A FitENcif scientist claims to have dis covered an insect which makes its home in the middle of cigars. That insect is morally certain of being smoked out. The people of Carthage, N. V., un mindful of the fact that courting is very solemn business, object to the young people carrying it on in the village ceme tery. An enterprising reporter in Arkansas, who was recently sentenced to the State prison for horse stealing, applied to his employers to be continued on the journal as Penitentiary correspondent. A ' tiihee-cakd-montk" expert is re ported to have offered the Directors of the Union Pacific Railroad a bonus of $10,000 per annum for the exclusive right to play his little game in their sleeping-cars. An inquiring man thrust his fingers into a horse's mouth to see how many teeth he had. The horse closed his mouth to see how many fingers the man had. The curiosity of T-uch was fully satisfied. The age of miracles has not passed. An editor has just died in Vermont whose estate amounts to M)0,0O0.H7. PitUburnh Vmnmerrial. Throw off the first six figures, please. Why be ridicu lous? liwhexter JJetn'H-rnt. A doc. belonging to Thomas C. Folsom, of West Epping, was recently shut up in a room for eighteen days without food and drink, but when found had strength enough to stagger out, and by careful nursing his life was saved. Tiiehe is one recent decision of the Treasury Department in which a thank ful public, or the adult portion of it at least, will readily acquiesce. It is that children's whistles, tin horns, etc., etc., are "not musical instruments." The Excelxior Magazine, a very choice and entertaining monthly, is published at $3.50 a year. Every effort is being made, by securing the services of the most brilliant contributors to periodical literature and the best art critics and es sayists, to furnish a highly desirable family paper. A handsomely illustrated fashion and etiquette supplement acconi panics it. Subscribers are very easily obtained, and rare inducements in money or prizes are ofiered to getters up of clubs. Sample copies twenty -five cents. Office, Rooru 59, No. 157 La Salle street, Chicago, 111. Two oentlemen residing in Sacra mento, Cal., were startled a few nights ago by loud screams proceeding from a room occupied by a ladv member of the family. Inquiry elicited the information that " there was a centipede on her bed." The gas was at the time turned down quite low, but the men could see the insect on the bed, and, doubling a towel several times, one of them cast it over the centipede, and clutched it tightly to prevent its escape. One of the gentle men was somewhat of an amateur scien tist, and desired ardently to preserve the centipede as a specimen. Accordingly, the captured insect was carried in the towel to a drug store. The druggist poured chloroform on the towel to stupefy the creature and to prevent the possibil ity of its escape, and one of the clerks stood by with an uplifted club, to strike it should it attempt to get off. The towel was opened, and the expectant lookers on were astonished to find that all the fuss had been made over a little strip of calico. Mrs. Fannie Baldwin, a poor but re spectable woman, residing at the foot of Blue Ridge Mountain, in Oconee County, S. C, recently walked from her home to the residence of her father, near Pendle ton, a distance of thirty-f our miles, carry ing her babj', six months old, weighing twenty-one pounds, in her arms. She left home at about six o'clock in the morning and reached her father's at five o'clock in the afternoon, making an aver age of a little over three miles an hour, lor eleven consecutive hours, over a mountainous, hilly and rough road, with the thermometer standing ninety six de grees most of the time. Nootlier motive induced the walk than parental affection the pleasure of seeing her parent. Considering the sex of the performer, the. weight carried, the distance, the time, the nature of the road, the temperature of the weather, and the absence of un exciting motive, this walk has scarcely a parallel in the history of pedestrianism. Mrs. Baldwin is about twenty-six years of age, rather below the medium height, though thick set, and the mother of four children. The Celebrated Spouting: Sprlngn of Iceland. Bavahd Tayiih writes as follows to the New York Tribune from Iceland: We all fell into a condition of nervous expectancy which could not be escaped, comical as were some of its features. There was a pile of turf perhaps a cart load beside the Strokr, which lay just below our tent, find we were told that the caldron would be compelled to spout for the King as soon as he had finished his breakfast; so we sat down contented to the second plover-stew which Mr. Gladstone and Dr. Hayes had provided for us. The farmer from whom wc had procured fuel sent us several bottles of delicious cream, and a large salmon for dinner. The Strokr is a pit about five feet in diameter, and eight feet deep to the ordinary level of the water, which is always iu a furious boiling state. Prof. Stccnstrtip assured me that it is not con nected with the tireat Geyser, as the analysis of the water shows a difference ; but the people are equally convinced that it is, and that to provoke its activity diminishes the chances of the former spouting. However this may be, the royal command was given. The jile of turf was pitched Into the hole, and all gathered around, at a safe distance, waiting to see what would follow. For ten minutes we noticed nothing except a diminution of steam; then the water gushed up to the level of the soil in u slate of violent agitation; subsided, rose again, spouted the full breadth of the hole to a height of fifteen or twenty feet, sank back, and finally, after another moment of quiet, shot a hundred feet into the air. The boiled turf, reduced lo the consistency of gravel, filled the jet, and darkened its central shaft, but I did not find that it diminished the beauty of the phenomenon. Jet after jet followed, sending jiiume like tufts from the summit and sides of the main column, around which the nar row drifts of steam whirled and eddied wilh a grace so swift that tin; eye could scarcely seize it. At such moments the base was hidden, and t Me form or the fountain was like a bunch of the Pampas grass in blossom a cluster of feathery panicles ot spray. The performance lasted nearly ten minutes, anl was resumed again two or three times after it seemed to have ceased. Two or three of the last spout ings were the highest, and some esti mated them at fully l'.'O feet. Finally, the indignant caldron threw out the last of its unclean emetic, and sank to its normal level. The King, who had turned aside to salute our company, was in the act of expressing to me his admiration of the scene, when the Little Geyser gave sudden signs of action. There was a rush of the whole party; his Majesty turned find ran like a boy, jumping over the gullies and stories with mi agility which must have bewildered the heavy officials. It was a false alarm. The Lit tle Geyser let off a few sharp discharges of steam, as if merely to test the press ure, and then, as if satisfied, resumed its indolent, smoky habit. The cone of the Great Geyser is not more than twenty feet high, and appears to have been gradually formed by the deposit of the silicious particles which the water holds in solution. The top is like a shallow wash-bowl, thirty feet in diameter, full to the brim, ami slowly overflowing on the eastern side. In the center of this bowl there is a well, indicated by the in tense blue-green of the water, and ap parently eight or ten feet in diameter. It has been sounded, and bottom or at least a change of direction reached at the depth of eighty-five feet. At the edge, where the water is shallow, one can dip his fingers in quickly without being scalded. Small particles placed in the overflow are completely incrustcd with transparent silex in a day or two. Prof. Steenslrup informed me that the water has important healing properties. The steam has an odor of sulphuretted hydrogen, but the taste thereof is so soon lost that where the stream becomes cold we used it for drinking and making coffee. Peace at Home. It is just as possible to keep a calm house as a clean house, an orderly house as a furnished house, if the heads set themselves to do so. Where is the diffi culty of consulting each other's weak ness, as well as each other's wants each other's tempers sis each other's wants? It is by leaving the peace at home to chance, instead of pursuing it by a sys tem, that so many homes are unhappy. It deserves notice, also, that anyone can be patient and courteous in a neighbor's house. If anything goes wrong, or is out of time, or is disagreeable there, it is made the best of, not the worst; every effort is made to excuse it, and to tdiow (liiif it iu not fi-lt or if felt it in nttrih- uted to accident, not to design; and tins is not oniy easy, out natural in me house of a friend. We will not, there fore, believe that what is so natural in the house of another is impossible at home, but maintain, without fear, that all the courtesies of social life may be, upheld in domestic societies. A husband as willing to be pleased at home and as anxious to please as in his neighbor's house, and a wife as intent unmaking things as comfortable every day to her family as on set days to her guests, could not fail to make the ir own home happy. The sweetest, most clinging af fection is often shaken by the slightest breath of unkindness, as the delicate rings and tendrils of the vine are agi tated by the faintest air that blows in summer. An unkind word from one be loved often draws blood from many a heart which would defy the battle-ax of hatred or the keenest edge of vindictive satire. Now, the fchade, the gloom of the face, familiar and dear, awaken grief and pain. These, in the elegant words of the preacher, Read, are the lit tle thorns which, though men of rougher form make their way through them w ith out feeling much, extremely incommode persons of a more refined turn in their journey through life, and make their traveling irksome and unpleasant. Jlow careful ought we to be not to darken and mutilate the sweet imaces of hone and joy and peace that might gild the cur tains oi our companion s me iy sum-ring these spots to mingle with them these shadows of upas leaves to be col lected in the stream. Of all cruel words or deeds those that would darken hope are the most cruel. The word " penny," as applied to nails, is supposed to be a corruption for the wor1 " pound." An eightpenny nail was a nail of such a size that 1,000 of them would weigh eight pounds, a tenpenny of such a size that 1,000 would weigh ten pounds, and so on. It is nut known who originated the method of description.