THE HERALD. rUBUSIIED EVERY THURSDAY PLATTSMOTJTH,"" NEBRASKA. OFFIOBl Oa Main Street, between 4th and 5th, Second Story. OFFICIAL PAPER OF CASS COUNTY. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year $2.00 One copy, six months 1.00 Oiw copy, three months .50 NET BRA SKA EJRA D. JNO. A. 1IACMURPHY, Editor. " PERSEVERANCE COXQ VERS. TERMS: $2.00 a Year. VOLUME XI. PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1875. NUMBER 1. THE HERALD. ADVERTISING RATES. BPACK. 1 squaie.. 8 squares. 8 squares. X column. 1 column, i 1 w. aw. s w. 1 m. ; 3 m. 8 m. 1 jr. $100 $1 IW f JOO $3 50 f5 00 $8 00 $12 r 1 IV) 9 00 5 01) 8 Of) i on a 7.m a 2:11 6 60 10 o S 75 4 00 4 75 8 CO 13 00, u nix tit m i'i no 'in no m no 19 C IS 00 IH Wl J5 00 40 00 in of too 5' Ml OK 15 00 18 00 21 )0,i 00 lb 00. W) O0 U0 OP tW All Advcrtialiifr bills due quarterly. tfT Transient advertlscmcnU must bo paid fo( In advance. Extra coploa of tho Herald for tale by II. J. Strotehf, at the Poototflre, and O. F. Johnson, cor ner of Main and Fifth streets. HENRY OCECK, DEALER IN IruTi-iaituiJFe, SAFES, CHAIRS, Lounges, Tables, Bedsteads, ETC.. ETC., ETC., Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. "Woodon Coffins Of all f!zc?, re ady-made, and fold cheap for cash. With many thanks for jmst patronage, I invite all to call and examine my LARGE STOCK OF Iiii'iiitm-c? iiimI Oofliiiis. jani MEDICINES AT J. H. GUTTER Y'S, On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale auJ Retail Dealer In Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Patent Medicines. Toilet Articles, etc. etc. rSJTKESCRirnONS carefully compounded at all hour?, day and night. 35-ly OTSHANNON'S Feed, Sale and Livery Main Street, Plattsmouth, Neb. I am prepared to accommodate the public with HOUSES, Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, AND A No. I Hearse, 0a Short Notice and Reasonable Terms. A II A C Iv Will Run to the Steamboat Land ing, Depot, and all parts of the City, when Desired. j.Oll-tf Firsflionar'Bai Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, friction to Tooilc, Tluiimi fc Cliir-lt. JOHN FlTZ'iKRALD K. ii. lOVFT a. w. r i.Aiiui.ix.... John O'UociiKK President. Vice-President. Cashier. Assistant Cashier. This Bauk i now opon for linines at their new room. comtT M.iin ami Sixth stri-els, aud arc pre pured to tra&facl a ywiicml 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 ai! the Vrincipiil Towns and Cities of Europe. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED INMAN LINE ai ALLAH LINE OF JSTILV3IiaiJS. Persons wishing to bring out th-ir friends from Europe can ri'Rcni'I TICKETS FBOX C9 Tltl-OllCl to Illt JSlllOlllll. Excelsior Barber Shop. J. C. ISO OX K, .Main Street, opposite Brooks House. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO 'n( 1 ini; Clti Id rcii's mid Kadlcs' Hair. Call and See Boone, Gents, And get a boon In a CUE -A. TJ" SZZAVI3. nll-ly GO TO THE Post Office Book Store, . J. STBZIOHT, Proprietor, TOB TOUR Baals. Stationery, Pictures, Music, TOYS, CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings. Newspapers. Norels Song Books, etc., etc TOST OFFICE BUILDING, PLATTSMOTJTH, NEB. O. F. JOHNSON, DEALER IK Drugs, Medicines AND WALL PAPER. All Paper Trimnel Free ofClarse ALSO, DEALER IN Books, Stationery 3IAGVZINES AND LATEST PUBLICATIONS. "Prescriptions carefully compounded by an - experienced Dmilst. a REMEMBER THE PLACE, Cor. Fifth and Main Streets, PLATTSMOUTII, NEB. THOS. W. SHRYOCK, SE1LEB IN Main St., bet. 5th and Cth, PLATTSMOUTII, - NEB. ALSO UNDERTAKER, And has on hand a large stock of Metallic T3virial Cases, Wooden Coffins, Etc., Of all sizes, cbeap for caeh. Funerals Attended on Short Notice II. i. WATERMAN & SON, Wholesale and Retail Sealers In PINE LUMBER, Lath, Shingles, SASH, DOOES, BLINDS, ETC., On Main St., cor. Fifth, PLATTSMOUTII. - - - NEB. fOr your croceries GO TO J. V. Weckbach, Cor. Third and Main Sts , Plattsmouth. (Guthmann's old stand.) He keeps on hand a large and well selected stock of FANCY GROCERIES, Coffees, Teas, Sugar, Sirup, Boots, Shoes. Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc. Also, a large stock of Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Crockery, Queensware, Etc., Etc., Etc. In connection with the Grocery is a BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY. IIIkIicU Price TalJ for Country Produce. A fall stock at alt times, and will not be undersold. Take notice of the Sign: "EMPIRE BAKERY AND GROCERY." nlyl WILLIAM STADELMANN Has on hand one of the largest stocks of CLOTHING AND Gents' Furnishing Goods FOR SPRING AND SUMMER. I invite ererybody in want of anything in my line to call at my store. South Side Main, bet. 5th & 6th Sts., And convince thcmseWes of the fact. I hare aa a specialty in my Retail Departments a stock of Fine Clothing for Men and Boys, to which we in rite those who want rood. I alo keep on hand a large and well-selected stock of Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Etc. Jarlyl PHILADELPHIA STORE SOLOJIOX Ac NATIIAX, DEALERS IX Fancy Diy Goods, Notions, Ladies' YmMiig Goods. Largest, Cheapest, Finest and Best Assorted Stock in the city. We are prepared to sell cheaper than they can be purchased elsewhere. GIVE TJS -A. CALL And examine oar Goods. tStore on Main St, between 4th and 5th Sts., PLATTSMOUTII MILLS, PLATTSMOtTTH NEBRASKA. Coxkad H us zl, Proprietor. FLOUR, CORN MEAL, FEED, Always on hand and for sale at lowest cash prices, The Highest Prices paid for Wheat and Corn. F articular attention given to custom work. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Campiled from Telegrams of Accompanying Dates. Monday, April 12. As official dispatch from Cheyenne Agency to Gen. Pope gives tho particulars of the revolt at that agency on April 6. 'While the guards were attempting to iron one of the Stone Calf Indians the prisoner broke away. The guards fired and hit him. This pro voked several shots from the camp of the hostile Cheycnues, causing great consterna'ion. The hostile Indians, men, women and children, to the number of 2,000 fled to the Sand Hills. The friendly Indians stood true. Capt. Rafierty, in command of sixty cavalrymen, was gent in pursuit of the fugitives. lie was reinforced by Gen. Neill with three companies. Ow ing to the depth of the sand, the troops had to dismount and charge on foot. The Indians held their position in the hills until night and then retreated under cover of darkness. The troops were repulsed three times, with a loss of six mortally and ten 6lightly wounded. Gen. Pope at once started all the available troops from Ilayee, Dodge and North Fork cantonments to inter cept the fugitive Indians, who are mostly unarmed. Toe vote in Connecticut at the recent elec tion was as follows: For Governor Ingersoll (Dem.), 53,7S5; Greene (Rep.), 44,301; Smith (Pro.), 2,809; scattering, 114. Total, 101,009 Ingersoll's plurality, 9,484; majority, 6,G61. For Congressmen Democratic candidates, 51,093; Republican, 47,311; Prohibition, 1,909. Total, 100,313. The vote for Governor in Rhode Island was as follows: Hazard (Ind. Rep.), 8,717; Lippitt (Reg. Rep.), 8,341; Cutler (Dem.), 5,169. IIox. Beit. Wade has written a letter de clining to be a candidate for the Governor ship of Ohio. He gives three reasons: First His voice is so used up that he is not able to make a speech. Second lie has recorded an oath that he will never take the stump for, or in favor of, an office for which he is a candidate, and this oath alone would bar him. Third He cannot well afford to take the position. Paul Boytos started from Dovcr, En gland, on the morning of the 10th to cross to France in his life-preserving dress and ar rived at Bologne in the evening. He was oblieed to leave the water about five miles from France on account of the darkness and the boisterous weather. It is reported from Estella that the Carlists have shot eight Alphonsist prisoners in re prisal for Carlists recently assassinated near Taflalaque. Richard Gibbs, of New York, has been ap pointed by the President Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Peru. Tuesday, April 13. The explosion of a boiler in the gingham mills at South Adams, Mass., on the 12th killed three men and fatally injured two oth ers. At Clinton, Mass., on the same day, a grocery 6tore was destroyed by fire and a Mrs. Dinsmore and her father, who occupied rooms over the store, were burned to death. The residence of P. P. Clifford, at New Haven Conp., was also burned on the 12th, and Mrs Clifford, who was 6ick and unable to leave her room, perished in the flames. Is his direct examination on the 12th Mr. Beecher denied in detail each and every state ment contained in Mrs. Moulton's testimony that referred to any admission or confession on his part of the crime with which he is charged. He said he never had any conver sation with that witness in which the alleged crime was the subject of discussion; 6he never advised him to make a confession to the church, and he never made a threat to her of suicide. Several warrants have been issued for the arrest of clerks in the Postoffice Department at AVashington implicated in the recently-discovered frauds in that department. J. J. Hinds, the contractor implicated, has given bail. Two clerks who confessed their partici pation in the frauds are held as witnesses against persons who persist in denying their guilt. A Salt Lake dispatch states that the trial of John D. Lee and W. H. Dame for connec tion with the Mountain Meadow massacre will not take place the present term of court. They have been arraigned and pleaded not guilty, their counsel asking for immediate trial, but the prosecution was not readj. Mr. W. IT. Harper, the Chief Grain In spector of Chicago, has been suspended from office by the Governor of Illinois because of certain alleged discrepancies in his fiscal ac counts. He has, by advice of his bondsmen and lawyer, refused to yield up his books and assets. Treasurer Spixxer has recently received an autograph letter from the President ac cepting his resignation as Treasurer of the United States and expressing for him the warmest sentiments of regard, personally, and a high appreciation of Lis probity, patriotism and official integrity. The United State9 District Court, at De troit, has sentenced DaDlel Pratt, convicted of writing obscene matter on postal cards, to the State Prison for two and a half years. The Bessemer steamer constructed to over come the motion of the sea has made a satisfactory trial trip from Gravesend to Calais. At the recent annual Mormon Church Con ference at Salt Lake Brigham Young was re elected prophet, seer, revelator and Pre6i dent. TnE Humane Society of Boulogne has voted its gold medal to Paul Boy ton. Women are now eligible to appointment 86 Notaries-Public in Illinois. Wednesday, April 14. A Yorxo man named Fred Brandenburgh, aged aboht eighteen years, wa recently found dying from starvation and exhaustion under a pile of lumber in San Francisco. He stated before Lis death that he had crawled under the lumber nine days previously. Other lumber was piled around, stopping his egress Mr. Beecher's direct examination was concluded on the 13th, the witness making a broad and emphatic denial of ever having committed, or proposed to commit, the crime charged against him. Mr. Fullertoc then be gan the cross-examination. A TOtrxo girl named Katie Hess, living about eight miles north of Kirby, Ohio, a few evenings ago poured kerosene oil on the cook-stove fire. The usual results followed, and she was burned to death and the house and its contents were entirely consumed. Recext South American advices report that the Jesuit College at Buenos Ayres has been burned by a mob headed by a Spanish priest. Several of the priests were wounded and three have died. The condition of affairs in the mining re gions of Pennsylvania is said to be improving. The strike is thought to be about over. The National Industrial Congress met in Indianapolis on the 13th, twenty-eight dele gates being in attendance. Commaxder Lebot Fitch, of the United States navy, died at his residence in Logans port, Ind., on the 13th. It is reported that the cholera has made its appearance at Oude, India Thursday, April 15. The Industrial Congress in session at In dianapolis has adopted a declaration of prin ciples, and has also unanimously passed reso lutions condemning the lock-out of the men employed in the mining regions of Penn sylvania, 44 by a combination of six monster coal-mining and carrying corporations, because unwilling to accept a reduc tion of 30 or 40 per cent, of their wages, for which reduction there is no real justifica tion ,w and requesting all organized bodies of workingmen throughout the country to for ward to the treasurer of the congress as gen erous financial assistance as their circum stances will permit, to be applied to the relief of victims of the alleged conspiracy on the part of said companies. The Louisiana Legislature met at noon on the 14th, and a New Orleans dispatch of that date says it was t he most orderly for many years. The Conservative members were sworn in. A resolution was adopted in the House referring the claims of those who are included in the award to the Committee on Elections. Both parties seemed to accept the award without opposition. Gov. Kellogg's message was long and elaborate. A dispatch from Wilkesbarre, Pa., says the miners of the Lehigh & Wilkesbarre Com pany, of whom 10,000 are idle, are fully de termined not to resume work unless their demand for an advance of 10 per cent, is granted. o outrages have been committed by these men. Business is badly prostrated throughout the valley on account of the long continued strike. The Postmaster-General, it is said, has dis charged all the clerks in the Postoffice De partment implicated in the recent mail con tract frauds. It Is reported in Vienna that the Turks have murdered 270 Christians in Roumelia and Bulgaria during the last three months. Tub Carlists have recently surprised Port Aspe, near Santander, and carried off 200 prisoners and four pieces of artillery. Friday, April 16. The Louisiana House of Representatives has, by a vote of 89 to 15, accepted the Con gressional award according to the terms of the Wheeler compromise as a basis of settle ment, and the members unseated by the award have withdrawn. A resolution has been adopted 89 (45 Democrats and 44 Repub licans) to IS (13 Democrats and 5 Republi cans) declaring that, without approving, the Legislature will not disturb the Kellogg State Government, nor seek to impeach the Governor for any past official acts, but will yield him support in enforcing the laws and maintaining the peace of the State. There was a lengthy debate in the British House of Commons on the loth over a peti tion praying for the dismissal from the bench of those Jijflges who sat in the Tichborne trials, on the ground of partiality and cor ruption, and for the impeachment of the Speaker of the nouse of Commons for similar reasons. On motion of the Premier the peti tion was rejected. The Postoffice Department in Washington is iu receipt of information that parties who had secured contracts for a large number of mail routes in the Western States were sys tematically offering to sublet them, thereby assuming in effect the position of mail-route brokers. The President and Mrs. Grant have left AVashington to attend the centennial celebra tion of the battle of Lexington on the 19th. Owixo to the illness of Mr. Fullcrton the Beecher trial was, on the morning of the loth, postponed until the 19th. The 100th anniversary of the Peifhsylvania Society for the Abolition of Slavery w as held in Philadelphia on the 14th. A foot axd a half of snow fell throughout New England on the 11th, obstructing the -iilroaJs. The Illinois Legislature has adjourned i'n die. Saturday, April 17. Ax Omaha dispatch states that owing to high water travel has been entirely suspended on the Union Pacific Railroad between Lara mie City, Wyoming, and Ogden, Utah. The water is six feet deep in many places. It is impossible to predict when travel will be re sumed as the canons are still full of snow. The Union Pacific officials advise travelers for Utah and California not to start until no tice of the blockade being broken is given. A party of three persons ascended from Faris in the bulloon Zenith, on the ICth, for the purpose cf making scientific observa tions. The bailoon attained the extraordi nary height of over 26,000 feet. Two of the aeronauts were suffocated to death, and when the balloon reached the ground the third was almost insensible and so severely affected that his recovery was considered doubtful. A second attempt in Providence, R. I., to elect a Senator and nine Representatives in the General Assembly has resulted iu a choice of the regular Republican ticket, supported by the liquor interest, by 350 ma jority. This probably secures the election of Henry Lippitt for Governor and the repeal of the Prohibition ary and State Constabulary law. A fire at Charlotte, N. C, destroyed about 8,000 bales of cotton, the depots of the North Carolina and Charlotte, Columbia it Augusta Railroad Companies, and a number of private residences. Loss $250,000; about two-thirds insured. It is stated that Capt. Mix's company, who were sent after the mining party at Harney's Peak, have secured the whole of them six teen men, one woman and a boy and will soon return with them to Fort Laramie. The Louisiana House of Representatives reorganized on the ICth by electing Estelle (Compromise Conservative) Speaker. The ballot stood sixty-six for Estelle to thirty -five for Wiltz. Madrid advices state that the Carlists have seized a number of women and children in the province of Soria, and threatened to shoot them unless they were raasomed. THE (1AKKKTB. New York. Cotton- 16K17c. Flour Good to choice, $3.50a5-fO: white winter extra, 5.90i& 6.50. H heat No. 2 Chicago, S1.21&1.34: No. i Northwestern. $l.iiai.4; No. i Milwaukee Spring, S1.S4&1.2K. Bye Wcxtern. Wc&Sl.OO. Harlt9l.Xa,.. Corn tmii'JSc. Out Mixed Western. 7347c. Pork New mess, $22.20 Ct-ii.23. Lard I.SI&loc. Chttte 104l!c Wool Domestic fleece, 4&60c. IStevtB $11.00 (J13.00. Hog Live, $ isheep Live, Si.aife8.C0. Chicago. Beer Choice. f;5.856.25; frood, $5.505.75; medinm, $5.00&3.Mj; butchers' stock, $3.753io.25; stock cattle. $3.504 4.75. Ifog Ltve, pood to choice, $8.0l fe. - 00; fihetp Good to choice, $5.755J5 75. But trr C'nouo yellow, SKftSJc. Eqj Freeh, lnflc. Pork Mess, $21.40 21.50. Lard $lVlV3.15.a0. CAwf-5ew York Factory, 17'4ai8c: Western Factory, 17fiU7Hc Flour White winter extra, 5.(Xd7.t)0 ; spring extra, $4.tHS5.25. VThtat Spring No. s!, $1.14 ((J I.Obii. Corn Ho. , 7i 7Hc. Oat No. . 59lV4c. ltye No. 2, $l.(g,1.10. Bartty No. , $1.0831.15. Wool Tnb-washed, 4.V558c; fleece, washed, 5-Jc; fleece, nnwashed, 27"j-T7c. Lumber First-clear, $52.00'i5.00; sccond-ciear. $4ti.00 &50.00; common boards, fll.oa&li.OO; fenc ioz, $13.0K18.W; "A" shingles, $3.(XXa3.23 ; lath, $2.XX&2-J3. Ciwcinwati. Flour $5.105.S0. Wheat Red. Sl.lJffjjl.li. Cort-liiaToc. Rye 1.13. Oat 65a70c. Barley S1.25&1-S5- Port $21.75222.00. Lard 15f,&15Kc St Louis. Cattle Fair to choice.$S.63(.15. IIog Live, fi.7otfj8.50. Flour XX Fall. $5.00(53 5.U'i. Wheat "So. 2 Red Fall. $1.5t74i&l.i. Com No. 2. 7:ia.76c. Oats No. 2, tvi& i.5c. Bye 1.5&1.. Barley No. 2, $1.85 1.9). Pork Mess, $21.7oii.OO. Lard U Wt3 Milwaukee. Flour Spring XX, $4.fl0rti5.2O. Whfat Spring, No. 1, $l.OT5-1.06'4 ; No. 2, $1.P23 r02'4C. Corn No. 2, 74'75c. Oats No. 2, 5H'4 c. Rye No. 1, $1.0W&1.10. Barley "So. 2, $1.091.10. Cleveland. Wheat No. 1 Red, $1.2031.21; No. 2 Red, 1.151.1. Corn-High Mixed, 77 78c Oalt No. 1, 68at)9c. Detroit. Wheat Extra, $1.241.24. Corn o. i, 7b77c. oauo. l, ttt.v&tibc. Toledo. Wheat Amber Michigan. $1.19V44 l.au; jno. iteu. Sl.lWriWl.iM. corn liin Mixed, 73780. OaU No. 2. frlaG4l4C. Buffalo. Beeves $X50&R.M. Hogs Live, 53.33(0.8. va. sntep Live, stt.uuQ7.:. East Libebtt. Beeve Best, 6.25(??.R.75: medinm, $5.40(05.50. Hoqg Yorkers, $8.00ia 8.50; Philadelphia, $9.44X29.00. Shee2 Bust, $6.507.10; medium. $5.50j.25. Kidnaping a Boy. " New York. April 9, The New York Witness, of this even ing, tells a remarkable etory of the ad ventures of a lad who was kidnaped. locked tip in a dark room, imprisoned with a savage dog, and left in a wood at Tremont, about twelve miles above this city, all night. The story is most ex traordinary in many respects. It may, indeed, appear too strange to be true ; yet there seems to be no good reason for doubting the authenticity of the particu lars related. The boy's name was George Durban), and his mother resides in Broome and gains her living by selling papers, lie was, it appear., on his way to St. John's School, in Varrick street, last Tuesday morning, when he was ac costed by a man who had dropped some thing at the entrance of an alley in South Fifth avenue. The man professed him self unable to stoop, and asked the lad to pick the article up. On his proceeding to comply with the request anolher man came up from behind and, suddenly snatching the boy by the collar, with one hand over his mouth to prevent him from giving any alarm, carried him into a rear house, locked him in an almost empty room on the first floor and placed a dog in the room to keep watch over him. After a time a large packing-case was procured, into which the poor, frightened lad was placed, and afterward the dog was thrown in, the two being nailed up together, and later in the day conveyed in a cart from South Fifth avenue to a wood beyond Harlem, where the child was taken from the box, placed in a hole in the ground (which had been previously prepared), covered over with a large flagstone and left there from about six o'clock on Tuesday evening until some time after daybreak the fol lowing morning, being then released on his captors ascertaining that the boy had no rich friends who would be likely to pay for his ransom in the event of de tention. Stealing a Ball Dog. One of the New York papers states that somebody the other day stole a very valuable bull dog from the Central Park menagerie in that city, and 1 have felt ever since as if I would like to get ac quainted with the thief. A man who is capable of stealing a bull dog has talent that is sufficiently remarkable to entitle him to thoughtful consideration. I sup pose for a small inducement such a man as that would pick up a couple ol Bengal tigers and a hyena and walk off with them, and if I owned a good wild-cat I would not like to leave him alone with it. I think this man must be related to a boy in Pottsville, Pa. It is stated in one of the Pottsville papers that " a boy of thirteen ran away with a circus from this place last week." And this, it seems to me, rather lays over the oper ation ot the embezzler of the bull clog. He is a boy of thirteen, who disdains stealing a single animal, but actually confiscates an entire circus and decamps with it. Destiny points to a career in Congress for this boy. When I think of the manner in which he would put through a salary grab I feel as if the country was entitled to his services at Washington. He might prove to be in valuable if he should take a notion to steal the Washington Monument, or to elope with the Patent Office just before the annual avalanche of reports descend upon the country. Max Adder. A 'ovel Wedding Ceremeny. A Syracuse paper saj's : " Fifty years Lgo the first day of the coming month a very strange scene was enacted on the big hill at the rear of the University campus. Syracuse was then in its larva state. The native forest trees studded the landscape. One bright Sunday morning a young woman and a young man wended their way to that hill be fore daybreak for a very romantic pur pose. They stood facing the east and then fell on their knees." When the sun was fully up they arose, saluted each other with a kiss, and clasping left hands raised their right hands to heaven, and thus wedded themselves: 4 In the pres ence of God and the light-giving sun, we pledge to each other our love, our lives, our steadfast fidelity, so long as we shall inhabit the much-nourishing earth.' They saluted each other again with a kiss, and then returned to town and breakfasted at Cook's coffee-house. After breakfast they took passage on the canal-boat De Witt Clinton for the western part of the State, and were never heard from there after. Tradition says that they buried somewhere on this hill a box containing their names, why they preferred such a method of marrying, and whither they intended going. This box was found twenty" years afterward, but the writings were obliterated beyond legibility." How We Look to the Han In the Moon. Bchns wished that we could Sec onrsel's as ithers see ns; and a writer in the British Quarterly un dertakes to realize that by a lawful li cense of fancy, lie transports himself to the moon and supposes it to be night there. HU description is a beautiful one: 44 Night sets in. Gratefully it comes after the sun has gathered up his smiling beams and gone to his rest. All at once we are plunged into comparative obscu rity, for again there is no twilight to stay the steps of departing day. At one side comes the dark. But, looking up to the sky, we behold a vast orb which pours down a milder and more beneficent splen dor than the great lord ot the system. It is such a moon as we terrestrials can not boast, for it is not less than thirteen times as large and luminous as our own. 44 There it hangs In the firmament, with out apparent change of place, as if 4 fixed in its everlasting seat. But not without change of surface. For this great globe is a painted panorama, and, turning around majestically on its axis, presents its oceans and continents in grand succession. As Europe and Africa, locking the Mediterranean in its em, brace, roll away to the right, the stormy Atlantic offers its waters to view, and then the two Americas, with their huge forests and vast prairies, pass under in spection. "Then the grand basin of the Pacific, lit up with island fires, meets the gazer's eye, and, as this ice glides over the 6cene, the eastern rim of Asia and the upper portion of Australia? sail into sight. The Indian Ocean, and afterward the Arabian Sea, spread themselves out in their subdued splendor, and thus, in o ur and twenty hours, 4 the great rotun dity we tread' turns it3 pictured counte nance to the moon, and grandly repays the listening lunarians by lepeating, to the best of its ability, the story of its birth." The fact that the moon is not hab itable by human beings such as dwell on this earth does not forbid one to give it eyes for the sake of drawing a compara tive picture like the above. An imagina tion stimulated by the study of astrono my becomes familiar with the finest and noblest poetic fitgures. Youth' Companion. ALL SORTS. A man named Thompson, living few miles out of Fresno, Cal., is said to have lost a set of false teeth very myste riously in looo, and given them up as stolen. About three years ago, as a local paper tells the story, he caught a severe cold and since then has been troubled with a painful cough, accompanied by irequent, nemorrhage, and it was leared tnat he was a victim of consumption His physicians having pronounced his case mcuraole ne traveled for some time and finally settled down to die. A few months since, however, in one of his vi olent fits of coughing, he ejected from ins throat several pieces of a bony sub stance. The next day some more were thrown out, and then came a piece of shiny metal. His medical advisers were again summoned, and with their assist ance he succeeded in relieving himself of the remaining fragments of his set of teeth, which it now appears he drew into his windpipe during sleep nearly a decade ago and has carried about within him ever since. Lucy Hooper, writing from Paris to the Philadelphia Press, tells of a joke that occurred there. A prominent fami ly had dined on veal, when a note was received, reading: "JIme. X I have just learned that the meat which was serveu to you for dinner to day was not veal, but how can 1 write it? a piece of the little nephew of the butcher. He assassinated the poor little boy, and to conceal his crime cut him in fragments and sold the pieces to his customers. I dare not return to the house." Mmc. X. went into hysterics; M. X. was taken deathly sick, and the four children screamed in terror. The police were called, the butcher arrested, the case in vestigated, and it was found to be a scandalous hoax an incipient 1st of April affair. Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, is report ed to have met with a serious pecuniary disaster recently. He went security for a brother in a Southern city, who failed, leaving him responsible for a sum ex ceeding $50,000. The Senator assigned all his property at Atchison for the pay ment of the debt, pledging his salary as united states senator lor one year in ad vance, and is still held for '2o,000. His little property was accumulated by the industrious labor 61 twenty years in Kansas, and he is said to feel his reduc tion to poverty deeply. A novel proposition for the suppres sion of crime has just been make by the Surveyor-General of British Prisons. This gentleman believes in the exist ence of a criminal age, which he, guided by census statistics, finds to ex tend over the period of life between twenty-five and thirty-five, and accord ingly he suggests that persons whose careers display marked criminal tenden cies shall be either locked up or kept under supervision until they reach the age of thirty-nine. The modern Damon and Pvlhias arc living at South Abingdon, JIuss. They arc the two oldest living graduates of Brown University, it is said, and are both over ninety years old. They were born in the town, are members of the same church, were partners in practicing law, served together as Representatives in the Legislature, and are connected by family ties. They are both in good health. John Boarke, of Danby, Vt., eloped with a girl only twelve years old. Her father caught them just aficr the mar riage, and the three talked the matter over calmly. The upshot was a tripar tite covenant that the bride should go home and live four years, when the hus band rnaj' go and get her. About one hundred years ago fag ging prevailed at. Harvard L Diversity, seniors selecting freshmen for menial services, and there is a tradition of one of the latter throwing indignantly at his tormentor the Doots he was ordered to clean. Fleas are among the annoyances here. They are all over 3ou before jou know it and leave an itching little spot where they bite. I feel one now inside my boot on my leg, but he won't be there when 1 go for him. Pioruta Letter. The Boston papers are a novelty in journalism. They compliment each other with loving friendliness. The Traveller the otaer day called attention to an ar ticle in the Advertiser which it thought everybody .ought to read." And now those indefatigable Califor nians are going into the cultivation ot the sumac tree, the product of which is used for tanning, and, when prepared, brings from $70 to $130 per ton. Success is said by a Western sage to greatly depend upon the possession of three qualities grit, grip and gump tion. Those Germans who went back to Fatherland because of the hard times here find nothing to do at home. A Spelling Match In Burlington. The Burlington (Iowa) Uawk-Eye fur nishes the following base ball report of a spelling match recently held in that city: Gen. A. C. Dodge and the Rev. Jona than Turner acted as judges and Dr. Stone gave out the words. Mr. Turner read the rules. Gen. Dodge hoped that decorum and good order would prevail, and Dr. Stone called the class to its feet, the umpire called "play," and the doctor sent a slow ball, " abasement," to Dr. Beardsley, the South Hill Captain, who took it beautifully. The words for the next yard or two rhymed with 44 abase ment," and the class got along swim mingly until the tune changed, and the pitcher sent a low grounder to Miss Acfllk, of North Oak School," way-lay," and she went out. Y? Because she spelled it with only one y walay. First tally claimed and allowed for South Hill, which smiled all around its eight rows of seats, while its friends outside the bounds took odds and offered fivejto any thing on the Lexicons, with no takers. This was the only out in the first innings. Play went on merrily, md it was de lightful to gues3 what people were think ing of by the way they spelled. County Superintendent Snyder, a North Hill Dictionary, was told to spell 44 speed ' and he spelled 41 feed," and when Dalhoff spelled " beef " instead of "seed" there wasn't a dry eye in the wigwam. Dr. Stone shied 44 lubber" at McCollough, a South Hill Encyclopedia, who spelled 44 lover," but was allowed to. stand, on the ground that the two words were synonyms. This decision was reached solely because the majority of- the spell ers were old married men. Very appro priately the word " curfew" closed the first round, and the pitcher wafted 44 money" at Dr. Beardsley, and it was wrth a year's subscription to hear the doctor close with it triumphantly. Dr. Salter was put out on 44 badage," but the D. D. claimed a foul and was reinstated when it wts discovered that the 31. D. meant to Bay 44 badge." The orthograph ical Esculapius then sent a hot one to Foster, one of the Dictionaries, and put bim out on "bleyme." Another tally for the Encyclopedias, who doubled their bet3, but immediately began to hedge when Burdette went down on 44 seize," putting the i where the e should be. He was dragged out by the police, but his evil example demoralized the Encyclopedias, and a lady sat down be cause she would spell it "lactery." Another South Hiller sat down in great 44 embarrassment " because she spelt it with one r, and fhe choir rose and sang "Tbou R't so near and yet sofe R.' Hummel, of South Hill, made such start ling 41 disclosures " by putting in an extra c that he had to step down and out. Miss Derby, of North Hill, "abbreviated' it by one b, and she joined the innumcr' able caravan. Granger, of rorth Hill, was set out on 44 perillous," but one of the authorities justified the extra 1, and he stood up again. William Ellery spelled it 44 sanguin," but afterward added an e, and explained that he misunderstood the word, thinking that "sangwtw," and not " sanguni," was given out, an ex planation which could not fail to be sat isfactory, and William stood up. The "myrmidons" got after H. B. Scott, and laid him out because he gave that one i'd word two i's. Music " Y am i so faint and weary." A North Ililler got mad at his " dia phragm" and left the 4'g" out of it, and the medical man who was giving out the words was so horrified at this anatomical mutilation that he put Lim down. Mrs. Hedge, of South Hill, started 41 serous" otl with a 44 c," but the umpire couldn't c it, and called "out." A South Hill lady left corroborate one r short, and sat down amid ejaculations of 44 11 rible!" Bodeman, of North Hill, 41 declinaled" with two e s, a two ec-sy way of spelling it to be good; Isrnsser.of bouth Iliil. was 44 resuscitated" into his scat lor want of a c. Music "My bark is on the c." Frank Parsons, of North Hill, went down austerely because he put the ee's too close together. Dick Stockton was f-ectually knocked down by a new breed of 44 builalo" w ith onlv one. Music F I were a butttrtly." Manning, of North Hill, was rapped down because he tried to 44 enwrap" him self in orthographical glory without any w. Jlusic " uii, rap the nag around me, boys." Robert Allen, of South Hill, spelled "scxtile" all right, but as he put the 44 e" in an appendix he was sent down. John Fleming spelt 44 synony mous" all right so far as it went, but he only got three syllables in. Mr. McCol lough's 44 inflammation" lacked ODe 44 in" of being a case. Music 44 Honor is an Mty bubble." Phil M. Crapo, of North 1 1 ill, made a 44 heterogeneous" mess of it by spelling it "ious," but he made a second dive at it by substituting an 44 e," and after some discussion he was allowed to stavin.with the understand inn that he should ante the next time before he showed his hand. 3Iiss Sadie Turner, of South Hill, put a 44 c" in 44 parasite," and Charley Martin 44 telescoped" himself with two " o's." Miss O'Brien, of North Hill, examined her 44 horoscope," but it was 'r-rid, had two 44 r's" in, and she joined the ones who had gone before. E. G. Wright was floored with a 44 holly hock," in which he inserted an 44 i.". About this time it wa3 beginning to feel near midnight. It was eleven o'clock and the audience began to scatter, and some of the best spellers on the Sou'li Hill side went home. In considerable confusion the congregation rose to its feet and began to make suggestions, but nothing definite could be arrived at. Dr. Stone couldn't make himselt hard, and in a general hubbub and squabble the meeting dispersed and the contest will be finished at some future day, the time of the concluding match to be announced hereafter. When the last word was given last evening fourteen South Hill ers had been slaiD, and twelve North Hillers had been laid low by words that no sensible man would spell as they are in the book. The Death of Trof. Walker. The death of Prof. Walker, of Brook lyn, who, with a different motive, drank like Socrates a fatal draught of hemlock, has already been mentioned by tele graph, but it is a case so curious that it will bear amplification. Suffering from spasmodic contortions of the muscles of the face Prof .Walker had sought the art of many celebrated medical practitioners, but without relief. A scientist himself, he entered thoroughly into the investiga tion of his own case, and finally, other remedies failing, determined to try that of Prof. John Harley, of St. Thomas' Hospital, London, the" use of conium, or fluid extract of hemlock. Under the advice of a local physician he procured a vial of this poison. His instructions were to take fifty drops at a do?e. The immediate result of such a dose was fully explained to him. Reaching home he took the medicine, and, for the pur pose of having a correct statement of his symptoms, asked his w ife to note them as he detected them, she to follow exactly his dictation. These memoranda were the result: "At ten minutes past four p. m., fifty minims Squibb's extract of conium. Twenty minutes to five p. m.," effects very decided dizziness and relaxations of the muscles and limbs; fifty minims more then taksn, and immediately diffi culty of walking and want of power to control movements; lorccd to he down, but no mitigation of spasm ; limbs weak, unable to hold up the head, speech thickening some, pain and heavings in top and back of the head, pulse fifty-six. Fifteen minutes past five p. m. took fifty drops; some nausea, some tremor at base of clavicle and in muscles across the chest; no dim inution of spasms about the eyes, more of photophobia (dislike of light). Twen-tj'-five minutes past five p. m., drowsi ness, inclined to sleep. Twenty minutes to six p. m., eyes difficult to open and speech difficult; difficulty in the throat, prostration nearly complete; diplopia (double-sightedncss) vastly increased. Ten minutes past six p" m., nausea, twitchings on right side, unable to articu late, eyes closed, fullness almost to suf focation in the throa4, pulse about sixty, in fact six water! water! water!" On this frenzied appeal his wife hur riedly left him to procure some coflee. Returning in all haste she found him dead from paralvsis of the spinal mar row. Prof. Walker was about sixty-five years old, and had led an eventful life. He was a journalist at one time and the intimate friend of President Johnson. He served in the Union army during the war of the rebellion, and in attempting to capture a Confederate spy w as stabbed almost fatally in the abdomen. He was poisoned at the National Hotel, Wash ington, in 1857, and had various other 'scapes by flood and field. His final taking-oil was as sad as it was curious. Chicago Tinm. Is an account of the last hours of Vas quez the San Francisco Chonicle says: 44 About half-past eight he again asked Sheriff Adams if he could see his coffin. In compliance with his wish a profusely ornamented casket was brought into his cell. Without a tremor Yasquez gazed upon the ghastly affair and deliberately began measuring it by spans. He seemed to take a childish delight in the silver screw-heads, and remarked as he took a cigar between his teeth that it was 4 away up.' At his request the coffin-lid was removed. He pressed the cushions and made a critical examination of the trim mings. 4 1 can sleep there forever very well,' he said, and the casket was carried out. Upon being complimented on his Derve Yasquez shrugged his shoulders and cried shrilly, What would you have? If I am the other way it will do me no good.'" He was an old man of eighty, and he said that he'd figured and calculated and pondered, and had come to the conclu sion that the man w ho drives the band wazon around town had a perfect right to look down in contempt on bankers and mill-owners. The Source of Solar Heat. Prof. S. P. Lanoley, whose distin guished services in the department ot solar physics have been recognized at home and abroad, recently delivered a lecture on the 44 Sources of Solar Heat," before the Stevens Institute of Tech nology, at Hoboken, from which we con dense as follows: 44 Wc hear so often nowadays," said tho speaker, 44 of the perfected achievements of science that we may'overlook the fact that results which seem clear, when es tablished, are usually reached through the hard lessons of wearying failure. Wo so commonly, hearing only of the final buccss, forget that there is no known rule to guide the search for it, that I may bring before you something of new inter est if I ask you to look with me at a problem which, though it U of the high est importance, scienc e has only partly solved, and with many of whoso diffi culties her students are still struggling. This problem is that of the source and probable duration of the heat of the nun and of the degree of its temperature." After this brief but suggestive preface Prof. Langley entered at oncu upon tho consideration of the subject to which it refers. As the address wa essentially a popular one, the speaker adopted such methods of illustration as should bo readily comprehended by the audience. The sun is a globe 108 times Hie diame ter of the earth, and about 1,250,000 1 inn s its volume. From this globe there is now pouring upon the cartli that nearly measureless radiation which is sufficient to sustain all life on its surface, from that of the date-palm in the scorching glare of Sahara's waste to that of the sea weed at the bottom of the deepest ocean cave, and yet the heat and light in terrupted by this earth are but a minute fraction of the whole amount given forth from the sun. With a view, if possible, to give some conceivable idea as to the whole amount of this heat, the following illustration was given : 44 Let us imagine that all the ice in tho world could be collected and stored upon a plain till it formed a pile thirty-five miles in diameter, and high enough to contain the ice from the arctic and ant arctic poles and all the supplies of the temperate zones. Let this be supposed to be shielded from all warmth until the ice-product of the world thus piled thcro winter after winter lntd formed a column thirty-five miles in diameter and reach ing out in space to the lunar orbit, so as to form a bridge to the moon. Now let the bent which the sun is constantly send ing out be turned wholly upon it. It is the subject of a simple proof that to first melt it all and then boil the oceans of water it might be melted Into, and finally to dissipate the whole in vapor, would occupy the sun's ordinary radiations not quite one second." Again: 44 lhe coal beds of Pennsylvania would probably supply the entire world's con sumption for centuries; but I rind that. if the source of the sun h heat (whatever it i ) were withdrawn, and it w ere possi ble to transport these coal-beds there and burn them fast enough to keep up the present rate of emission and no more, they would last considerably less than one-thousandth part of a hecond." From these illustrations of the amount of the sun's beat the lecturer advanced to the considerations of the several theo ries propounded, w ith u view to solve tho great problem as to its true nature and source. The first of these theories is that the sun is, as it were, on lnc, and that the heat wc experience is that given forth by combustions of matter on its burfacc. This theory is regarded as untenable, for the reason that, were the process one of simple combustion, the matter consti tuting the sun w oqld have been con sumed long since, supposing that there was present sufficient oxygen to keep up the combustion, which is not the case. A second and certainly curious story ad vanced by 44 an eminent natural philoso pher is to the effect that the heat is the result of certain vital forces that are still active on the sun's surface, and tho action of which may be kindred to that which produces the light of the firc-lly or the heat of the b.dy. Passing from these two theories to the third, the speaker presents what may be regarded as certainly the only reasonable explana tion of the problem. The body of the sun is in an incandescent state ; that is, it is w hite hot, but not in a condition of actual combustion. Assuming this, it is possible to conceive of its great heat-radiating power with out an actual exhaustion of tho matter of which It is composed. The question then arises: Whence proceeds the heat by which the vast mass is kept hot? It is in the answer to thi-t question that Prof. Langley defines his views, which indorse those originally presented by llelinholtz. The sun's heat is, ac cording to this view, strictly " a mode of motion," itself renewed to a finite but al most inconceivable extent by the shrink ing of its mass; that is, the heat given oil bv the sun is due to the matter of that body settling toward the center; or, in other words, the contraction of the sun's mass, as it tends to cool, keep the temperature nearly constant at the ex pense of the volume. This, then, may be accepted as the most reasonable theory regarding the heat of the sun ; and, re ceiving as it has the indorsement of one so eminent - as Prof. Langley, may bo accepted as authoritative. It "is yet pos sible, however, that continued obscrva ti(9 may bring to light facts that will callfor a more satisfactory theory. Till then the reader may be safe in accept ing this view as best standing 44 the test o( external computation." AppUlon's Journal. Forrest's Last Appearance. A writer on the late Edwin Forrest says: 44 His last engagement was in Bos ton. He had had an attack of pneumonia which affected one of his lungs. Mr. Oakes, his life-long friend, implored him not to go on the stage again. He was ill all the afternoon so hoarse that he could scarcely speak. The play was 4 Riche lieu.' All the entreaties of his physi cians and friends could not keep him from the theater. Too feeble to walk, he was led to the dressing-room and arrayed himself for the part. The physician had given Mr. Oakes a small vial of whisky, telling him that if Forrest showed signs of suffering to administer it to him. When Forrest beard this he said : 4 If I die on the stage 1 will die, but they sha'n't find any rum in me.' A chair was put behind the scenes, and when he was called he was led to it by Mr. Oakes. When his cue came he was raised to his feet. 4 Steady me,' he said, 4 steady me, and let me go on.' Tottering on the stage, the sound of the applause of tho multitude seemed to put new life iDto him, and he went through his part accu rately, and so to the end of the play. When he finished he was led, half-fainting, to his hotel, and he never appeared upon the stage any more. The next night the play was 4Virginius;' but hia physicians and friends absolutely for bade his playing the part. He struggled until the last moment, resolved be would not be governed by either menus or physicians. Finally the doctor said, 4 If upon the stage you win uic. for a moment, burst into tears like a child, and submitted himself to be put to bed. This was the Globe Theater, Boston, and he never acted again." A plea-beix' A lawyer. ,fi n n