I, THE HERALD. TUBLISIIED EVERY THURSDAY PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. OFFICEi On Vine St., One Block North of Main, Corner of Fifth St. OFFICIAL PAPER OK CASS COfSTY. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year $2.00 One copy, nix months... 1 .00 Ona cepy, three months SO EBJBLA SKA ERA JNO. A. MACMUEPHY, Editor. I'ERSEVERAXCE COXCiUElTS." TERMS: $2.00 a Year VOLUME XL PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1875. NUMBER 18. THE HERAju ADVKIlTISIa RATES. 1 r'iiar., 2 iuarcn 8 niunre. M column i column lw.llw.ltw. i in. 3 m. m. I 1 yr. $1 00 $1 1 f J HO $2 50 5 00 foo fol m tw 85 1 en tm S ttl S 75I 4 00 4 7!i H Ml 13 00: Kim h mi1 in no ii nri i nn M no S OlVla 00 IS W IH 00 U.1 00 40 INI -3 VriliIIII.I n 14 I.J I O ""1 ' 1 coiiinin.li: 00 18 on ai 00 aft on 40 no no oo loo QP All Advertising billn due quarterly. fv;- Tranelont advertisements must be paldfrf In advance. Extra copies of the Herald for sale by II. J. Streit'lit, at the Po-tonVe, and O. F. Johnson, cor ner of Main aad Viftn street. . were listening. The revulsion of hopo was too much; my faculties all iHcaino dim and hazy. I fired oil" in succession tJie two barrels of my gun. My next recollection is that of u knot of colliers in semi nudity, w ho hud just left their workings and mine through tho brattice which divided their portion of tho pit from the disused part, and were nUnd tng around me with their safety lamps. They had fled, they afterward told me, at first, thinking an explosion hail taken place in the Abandoned workings; and it was long before tho " butty" could per suade any of them to follow him. But when they once saw my deplorable con dition, agonized with hunger and thirst, grimy from head to foot with coal-dust, thin and cadaverous with anxiety, no Sis ters of Charity could have been more ten der in their ministrations. Warm tea and bread in spare morsels were given me; and then I was raised and carried to tho workings, put in a wagon and drawn by one of the jut-horses to the pit-head. Never shall I forget the delight of being brought up to "bank" and once more feeling the blessed air of heaven blow on my haggard checks. And if any day my resolution not to shoot again on a ork. shire moor w ere in danger of being shaken by the hospitable invitation of Willis, my nightly dreams would soon force me to abide by my vows. SENSE AM) X0XSEXSE. An air of importance One's first breath. Vested interest Money in the waist coat pocket. Cohtini havingbecn cort, thencxtfhing is to jiunish him. At an Elmira (N. Y.) funeral eight la dies officiated, as pall-bearers. "China has appropriated 40,000 tacls to the Centennial. Pig taels, probably." An "accidental but serious accident" was recorded recently by a California paper The celebrated Sutro tunnel in Nevada reached a length of exactly 10,000 fect July 4. This is the season of the year when in dustrious housewives can all the fruit they can can. The potato Iwetle has appeared in New Haven, Conn. lie probably wants to cu ter Yale. - The drowning season has ltegun in earnest. Where's Boyton with those rub ber suits A Pennsylvania man was mean enough to hang himself with Lis wife's bilk apron. Ask a Milwaukee woman her age, and she instinctively looks around for a broom stick. Detroit Free 1'rexs. Fancy flourishes send many a letter to the Dead Letter Office, aud many a mortal to the alms house. A blind man in Southern Illinois can play checkers, but can't 13 ml the woodpile if his wife wants an armful of wood. The editor of the New Haven Journal thinks the mosquito is a much-slandered individual. He ought to have a bile. A farmer of Hampden County, Mass., freed his potato-patch of beetles by sprinkling them with soft soap and water. In deciding questions of truth and duty rememlMT that the wrong hide has a crafty and powerful advocate in your own heart. The new motor may be a big thing, but for an impulse to send a boy oil' to school give me the slipper from his mother's foot. A man fought an army of black crickets at Miner's Bridge, on the Payette River, Idaho, and succeeded in driving them back. Johnny (just from the fruiterer's) 44 Mamma, if I cat dates enough, will I grow nj to be an Almanac?" Botton Journal. The chief editor of the London Tima is Mr. Delane. Doesn't that sound like muzzlin' the press ? JVVe YofkCommercial Adtertiwr. A minsthei, manager advertises for a tenor singer "who knows how to work, up a laugh when the end man is getting oil a joke." "Cheap- laltor" comes up in a new form in San Francisco, where a Chinese young lady is an applicant for a vacancy in a public school. " For midsummer what could le sweeter than a linen lawn?" asks an ex change, and some young ladies will an swer, " A croquet lawn." The Peruvian Government has com missioned the United States mint to " coji jm t its j)ile'' to the extent of three millions of one and tw o cent coins. No doubt the happiest dogs that ever lived were the two taken aboard of Noah's ark for they had but one pair of lleas be tween them . Jrunwich:r. " Papa, are you grow ing taller all the time?" "No, my child; why do von ask?" " 'Cause the top of your head is looking up through your hair." A CniCAGO man excuses himself for not going to some watering-place by say ing that he fell into the river last May and got enough to last him for a whole year. A Oeokoia Sheriff delayed an execution fifteen minutes to let the crowd see which dog whipped, and it is evident lliat human ity yet holds a tender place in the American heart. A Brazilian bank has failed to the tune of $2,r)00,000, and now where is tho boasted sujerior civilization of America that we've all leen talking about so loudly? " Garibaldi Rorespierre MtHAT Scp peta" is the rather hefty baptismal name which the city of Naples has bestowed upon a young girl whom it recently adopted. An enterprising youth has started for Harney City, in th Black Hills, with the material for a newspaper office. The new venture will be known as the Black Hills Tribune. Seven Arkansas Indians are to be hung in ScptemlKT, and the jailer "hasn't the heart to go in and separate them when they get into a heated argument involving hair pulling. Bismarck wouldn't go a rod to see the best game of base-ball ever played, but let a circus come into town and he jumps for his hat and shouts for the children to come on. Mr. John Jay, late Minister to Austria, favors a postponement of the Philadelphia Exhibition for one year, in order to com plete the necessary jreparations for its or ganization. A sharp-talking lady M as reproved by her husband, who requested her to keep her tongue in her mouth. " My dear, ' she said, "it's against the law to carry con cealed weapons." TnE Brooklyn Aryva says that a Phila delphia man can be generally recognized from the fact that he makes it a joint to have as many buttons on his coat as there are letters in " centennial." "When GOO jeople w ill jiack themselves into freight cars and ride twenty miles for the sake of eating a cold lunch in some old pasture, it is not tor any journalist to fling insults at the game of base-ball. At Middletown, Del., an immense peach refrigerator is to be built, capable ot hold ing 2U0.U00 baskets of fruit. It is expect ed that after the Centennial Philadelphia will rent the place to cord off in. The Louisville C wrier-Journal tised a whole column of spare the other day to in dict that a man has a legal right to marry his step-daughter. All right, go ahead with your splicing. Detroit Free rress. HEINlRY bgeck, , DEALER IN SAFES, CHAIRS, Lounges, Tables, 'Bedsteads, ETC.. ETC., ETC., Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. "Wooden Ooflins Of all ?!, ready-made, an l fold chcup for cash. With many thanks for pa t patronage, I invite all to call and examine my LAUGH STOCK OF Xiiriiitui'o jumI Collins-. jal)28 O. F. JOHNSON, MEDICINES AT J. H. BUf TERY'S. On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale ai.d Retail Dealer in Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Patent Medicines. Toilet Articles, etc., etc. rTUESCRIPTION'S carefully compounded at all hour, day and niht. 35-ly J. W. SHANNON'S Feed, Sale and Livery STArtTiE. Main Street, Plattsmouth, Neb. I am prepared to accommodate the pnhlic with Econsms, Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, AND A No. I Hearse, On Short Notice and Reasonable Terms. A II A G K Will Run to the Steamboat Land ing, Depot, and all parts of the City, when Desired. janl-tf First National Ml Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, srcrEsoit to Tootle, Iliiimsv Sc Clarlc. John Fitzuerald K. J. Do vet A. V. Mi L.U';iu.in John O'Kolkke , President. . .. Vice-President. t'ai-hier. .Assistant Cashier. This Bank i: now open fur hUHinct at their new room, corner Main aud Sixth streets, and are pre pared to transact a general BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks, Bonds. Gold. Government and Local Securities UOUGUT AND SOLD. Deposits Received and Interest Al lowed on Time Certificates. DRAFTS DRAWN, ArailaHie in any part of the 1'nited States and in a!) the Vriucipal Towns and Cities of Europe. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED IMAM LINE ail ALLAH LINE OF !STlI.V3IiaiJlS. reron wishing to brinj out their friends from Europe caii rrUCHASE TICKETS FKOM V3 Tlii-oiifjli to PlnttKiiioittli. Excelsior Barber Shop. .X. C. EOOXE, Main Street, opposite Saunders House. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO Cnttiii Children and I-swlies Hair. Call and See Boone, Gents, And get a boon In a CXiEAN SHAVE. n41-ly OHO TO THE Post Office Book Store, . 3. STKZIGHT, Proprietor, roa TOUR Bools. Stationery, Pictures, Music, TOYS. CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings, Newspapers, Novels, Song Books, etc., etc 1'OST 0FJFICE BUILDISti, rLATTSMOUTU, NEB. DEALEU IX Drugs, Medicines v. WALLPAPER. All Paper Trimmer Free ofCtarse ALSO. DEALER IN Books, Stationery MAGAZINES AND LATEST PUBLICATIONS. J"tF"Prc8cript:on carefully compounded by an experienced Droggipt.j REMEMBER THE PLACE Cor. Fifth and Main Streets, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. ill Jfea THOS. W. SHRYOCK, DEALER 1 Iiar-nitTiie ! Main St., kt. 5th and 6th, PLATTSMOUTH, - 1ST E 23. ALSO UNDERTAKER, And ha on hand a large stock of Metallic Uurial Cases, Wooden Coffins, Etc., Of all sizes, cheap for cah. Funerals Attended on Short Notice II. 1. WATERMAN & M, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in PINE LUMBER, I.ath, Shingles, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC., On Main St., cor. Fifth, rLATTSMOUTU, - - - NEB. FOR YOUR GROCERIES OO TO J. V. Weckbach, Cor. Third and Main Sts., Platteniouth. (CJutbmann's old stand.) He keeps on band a large and well-selected stock of FANCY GROCERIES, Coffees, Teas, Sugar, Sirup, Boots, Shoes. Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc. AIho, a large stock of Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Crockery, Qneensware, Etc., Etc., Etc. In connection with the Grocery is a BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY. Highest Price Paid fur Country Produce. A full stock at all times, and will not be undersold. Take notice of the Sign : " EMPIRE BAKERY AND GROCERY." nlyl WILLIAM STADELMANN lias on hand one of the largest stocks of CLOTHING ANI Gents' Furnishing Goods FOR SPRIXG AXD SUMMER. I invite everybody In want of anything In my line to call at my store. South Side Main, kt. 5th & b'th Sts., And convince tlientselvee of the fact, I have as a specially in my Retail Departments a stock of FineClothin for Men and boys, to which we In vite those who want goods. I a'so keep on band a large and well-selected tock of Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Etc. jarlyl PHILADELPHIA STORE SOLOMON & NATHAN, DEALERS IS Fancy Dry Goods, Notions. Ladies' FnrnisliiBZ Goods. Largest, Cheapest, Finest and Best Assorted Stock In the city. We are pre oared to sell cheaper than they can be purchased elsewhere. GIVE TJS -A. CALL And examine oar Goods. rT"Store on Main St., between 4th and 5th Sts., Plattsmouth, Neb. ltitf I'LATTSMOITII MILLS, PLATTSMOUTH NEBRASKA. Conrad Hkisel, Proprietor. FLOUR, CORN MEAL, FEED. Alwaj s on hand and for sale at lowest cash prices. The Highest Prices paid for Wheat and Corn. Particular attention given to custom work. CURRENT PARAGRAPHS. The Nebraska Republican State Con vention -will meet at Kearney on the loth of September. L. Q. C. Lamar lias been renominated for Congress by the Democrats of the First Mississippi District. The Supreme Court of Connecticut has decided the local-option feature of the Li cense law constitutional. The St. Louis United States District Court Grand Jury has indicted Chief Clerk Avery, of the Treasury Department, for complicity with the St. Louis distillers in whisky frauds. The German Government has ordered that declaration of submission by the Cath olic clergymen to the new laws shall be kept strictly 6ecret, to secure them from persecution by the Ultramontanes. IIeru Sigei., editor of the Ultramontane Valeriana", and Baron Loewe, distinguished Ultramontane speaker, li'c been sen tenced by a .Berlin court to ten months' imprisonment for treasonable utterances. Jesse Pomeroy, the Boston loy mur derer, very nearly tueceeded in escaping from the Charles Street Jail a few days ago. He was expecting to cut through the prison walls on the evening of the day on which his attempt was discovered. Alexander asd "William Cat.lie members of a lately-suspended London firm, hare been arrested on a charge of having obtained "si, 000,000 under false pretenses. They were held in . bonds of 40,000 each. The woman-suffrage question has been settled in Connecticut for the present by the indefinite postponement 102 to 82 of the bill giving to women the right to vote at a Presidential election. This de cision was reached by the House of Representatives. Geo. N. Jacksox, the cashier of Col. lector of Internal Revenue Buckner, of the Louisville (Ky.) District, died recently from the effects of poison. Since his death he has been discovered to Ik? in de fault in his cash accounts to the extent of about 75,000. The Maryland Democrats have nomi nated John Lee Carroll for Governor. In their platform they declare against a high protective tariff and protest against an increase of the circulating currency, and demand that Congress shall pass such measures as will result in a resumption of specie payments at the earliest possible moment. TnE Postmaster-General has confiscated to the use of the Government three certi fied checks, amounting to fl,G:JU, depos ited according to law by Matthew Draper, a failing contractor. This is the first in stance in which the department has con fiscated such checks. The Postmaster General has also commenced a suit against the bondsmen of over forty failing mail contractors. The Massachusetts boy-murderer, Pome roy, has written a history of his life. He retracts his former confession and denies his guilt. He claims that he was goaded hy the police into making a confession of being guilty of the crime for which he was first arrested, and that he was entirely innocent. "With regard to the death of Katie Curran, he says he made a false confession that his mother and brother, who had been arrested for the murder and whom he knew to be innocent, might go free. TnE statement of John D. Lee confirms the previous reports concerning the Mountain Meadows massacre. He says thirtj- Mormons, with the assistance of a large number of Indians, decoyed the emi grants from their entrenchments by a Hag of truce ; that all were murdered except seventeen children; that the deed was done under orders from the leader of the Mor mon Church ; that he took the news of the massacre to Brigham Young, who de plored the transaction and said it would bring disaster on the Mormon people. A Bankers' Convention was recently held at Saratoga, N. Y., at which resolu tions were adopted favoring immediate specie resumption and calling upon every citizen to hasten the day when every prom ise of the Government to jjjiy a dollar should be redeemed in coin ; calling for a repeal of the war tax on banks ; urging Congress to issue coupon bonds in ex change for registered bonds; demanding the abolishment of the two-cent stamp tax on checks and vouchers; favoring a permanent organization of national bank ers. A resolution opposed to the Usury laws was also adopted by a close vote. The Xew Treasurer's Autograph. Some time ago the Indianapolis corre spondent of tiie Cincinnati Commercial furnished that paper with what purported to be & facsimile of the new United States Treasurer's autograph, which was ex tensively copied by Western papers. The Chicago Timca of a recent date publishes an altogether different and much better looking signature, which is probably genuine, and which we reproduce with the Timeg' indorsement, as follows : Now that a new man has taken charge of Uncle Sam's money-bags and a new name is to be affixed to the Government's circulating medium, there is a pardonable curiosity in the public mind to know how he writes. To gratify this curiosity the Time has procured, and prints below, an exact facsimile of Mr. 2sew's signature. It is a bold, characteristic "hand," and will hereafter ornament the greenbacks and national currency precisely thus : Treasurer of the UniUd StaU$. The experiment made by M. Proust, revealing the fact that fatty matters can be extracted from cast-iron when the latter is dissolved in certain acids, has lately leen tested by M. CUex. On separating these materials in a pure state their analysis re vealed the interesting fact that they con sist of carburets of hydrogen of a certain series, and presenting the various terms thereof. This, it is stated, is a veritable organic synthesis, realized by the aid of substances purely mineral, and is suscepti ble, consequently, of important application. EPITOME OF THE WEEK. CONDENSED TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. Loedeu, indicted for perjury in connec tion with the Tilton-Beecher case, was ar. raigned in the Brooklyn court on the ICth, and pleaded 44 not guilty." Price was not arraigned. Prof. Donaldson, the daring aeronaut, who has been traveling in company with Barnum's Hippodrome and making bal loon ascensions after the conclusion of the afternoon performances, made his second U ip from Chicago on the 15th, 'accom panied by Mr. Newton S. Grimwood, a reporter of the Chicago Journal, After ascending into the air the balloon took a northeasterly course, sailing over the lake in the direction of Muskegon, Mich. About seven o'cloc k in the evening it was sighted by a schooner about thirty miles northeast of Chicago, at which time the balloon was skimming the surface of the lake. The schooner followed after it until it was observed to rise sud denly into the air, when the chase was given up. A very severe gale occurred on the lake about midnight, and, as no further tidings had been received in Chicago from the balloon or its occupants up to the morning of the 17th, grave apprehensions were felt for their safety. It was the opinion of ex perts that the balloon could not possibly have reached the Michigan shore before the storm burst upon it, and that the aero nauts perished in the lake. It is said by some that the balloon was a rotten, patched u p affair. A London dispatch of the 18th an nounces the death of Lady Franklin, widow of Sir John Franklin. A meeting, attended by over 12,000 people, was held in Hyde Park, London on the evening of the 18th, to protest against the grant of 150,000 to the Prince of Wales for his Indian journey. Emmeline, one of Brigham Young's wives, died on the 17th". Mns. Henry Peden, of Indianapolis, Ind., used kerosene oil to kindle a fire, on the 17th, and was fatally burned. Up to the morning of the 19th no defi nite tidings had been received in Chicago from the missing aeronauts, Messrs. Donaldson and Grimwood. A vessel Cap tain reports having seen something floating in the water which had the appearace of being a life-preserver and a basket, and an other Captain thinks he saw the body of a man in the lake off Grand Haven. The report that Donaldson's balloon was a rotten and poor affair is indignantly de nied by the managers of the hippodrome with which Donaldson was connected. According to a London dispatch of the 19th the American rifle team had decided not to shoot as a team at Wimbledon. The ties on the 17th at the same place were shot off on the 19th, and Fulton, of the American team, won. In the contest for the Albert prizes Sir Henry Halford won the first prize with a score of 105, and Col. Gildersleeve took the second with a score of 92. - The dispatch says the excellence of the Americans' marks manship caused astonishment. Commissioners to Herzegovina, sent by the Porte to tranquilize affairs, reported by telegraph on the 19th that the whole country between Mostar and the Austrian frontier, as far as Ragusa, was in a state of revolt, and that the insurgents had threatened death to all who refused to unite with them. Prof. Marsh, of Yale College, on his return from the Indian Territory a few weeks ago, wrote to President Grant, charging that supplies furnished to the various Indian tribes were inferior and improperly distributed. He also charged Secretary Delano and Indian Commission er Smith with being cognizant of these frauds. In regard to Indian Agent Sa ville, of the Red Cloud Agency, Mr. Marsh declared that he was wholly unfit ted for his position and guilty of the gross est frauds upon the Indians in his charge. This letter was accompa nied with samples of the . goods furnished. The President called the attention of the department to the letter, and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs straightway came out with a positive denial of the charge of fraud and corrup tion, so far as his own department was con cerned, and said the commission appointed to inquire into the condition of affairs at the Red Cloud Agency had completely exonerated the Agent. A New Haven dis patch of the 18th sa3's that notwithstand ing the alove denial and explanation Prof. Marsh has reiterated his former statements and charges. A special commission appointed to investigate these charges met in New York on the evening of the 19th. It consists of Messrs. Faulkner, M. C, of West Virginia; Har ris, M. C, of Massachusetts, and Fletcher, M. C, of Missouri. The meeting, which was strictly private, was organized by electing Gov. Fletcher Chairman. Prof. Marsh and Indian Commissioner Smith appeared before the body, accompanied by Gen. Fisk, Chairman of the Board of Indian Commissioners. Mr. Marsh pre sented his charges in pamphlet form, which had already been printed. Inves tigation will take place at the Red Cloud Agency. It was officially reported in Madrid on the 20th that Gen. Dorregaray, the Carlist chieftain, hail been wounded and had taken refuge in France. A cocncil of delegates from all the Presbyterion churches in Christendom met in London on the 20th. Many repre sentatives of American and . Canadian churches were present. Thirteen miners and four wagons were captured forty-five miles north of Fort Laramie, en route to the Black Hills, on the lGth, and taken into the fort on parole. Preliminary steps were taken on the 20th for the impeachment of Mayor John son, of Cincinnati. The chief charge against him is to the effect that he endeav ored to control the labors of the police contrary to the law in force when he was a candidate for re-election. Maj. Ftltox, of the American team, won the American cup at Wimbledon on the 21st. - Heavy rains and inundations occurred at Leicester, Greenfield, Forest of Dean, Godmanchester and elsewhere in England on the 21st Gathered and growing crops were destroyed over a large section of the country. The Carlists deny the truth of the re port that Gen. Dorregtiray had been forced to take refuge in France. According to a Madrid telegram of the 21st over 4.000 Carlists had been captured since Julv 1. A remarkable scene occurred in the British House of Commons on the 22d Mr. Disraeli had given notice that the Government had abandoned the Merchant Shipping bill for the session, when Mr. Plimsoll, the humanitarian, arose in his seat and with violent gestures and insulting speech declared that such a course would be the destruction of thousands of human lives. Being called to order he repeated his remarks, and declared that certain members engaged in the shipping interests were villains. He was ordered from the House and re tired sharking his fists at the Government benches. It was thought that Plimsoll had become temporarily insane. President Grant arrived in Washing ton on the 21st, and at a Cabinet meeting held on that day the subject of DisL-Atty. Fisher's official conduct was under discus sion, and the conclusion was unanimous ly reached that he should be re quested to resign after he had been al lowed sufficient time to complete the busi ness then pending in his office. It is said the President in asking the Attorney-General to suspend his request for Fisher's resignation had merely desired to afford the latter an opportunity . to reply to the complaints against him. The charges against the Interior Depart ment were also, it is stated, fully discussed, the President expressing in strong terms his confidence in Secretary Delano's ca pacity, integrity and faithfulness as an of ficer, and assuring the Cabinet that he would not allow the attacks on Delano to injure him the least in his opinion until the charges of his dishonesty should be f ully proven. The President returned to Lon.2 Branch on ihe evening of the 21st. The confession of John D. Lee, who was concerned in the Mountain Meadows massacre, not being satisfactory to the Prosecuting Attorney, Lee was, on the 21st, placed on trial under the old and three new indictments. A jury was im paneled on the 22d, composed of eight Mormons and four Gentiles. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK Jclt 2:1, 18T5. Liv Stock. Beef Cattle S1L60O13.50. Hots Live, $7.503 .6S!4. Shuep Live, $4.T3S6.2',4. BRBADSTurrs. Flour Good to choice, (6.403 6.f; white wheat extra, $6.8'JS7.b0. Wheat No. 2 Chicaco, S1.31&1.35; No. 8 Northwestern, $1.341.35; No. 2 Milwaukee spring, $1.39 I. 40. Rye Western and State, SScSSLu".- Bar ley $1.251.30. Corn Mixed Western, 87 90;4c Oats Mixed Western, 6-Jati3c Provisions. Pork Mess. $20.90321.00. Lard Prime Steani, 13?i14c. Cheese 5(&llc Wooi Domestic Fleec, 50G3c. CHICAGO. lav Stock. Beeves Choice, $6.00a6.25; good, $5.50t&5.75; medium, $1.75(5.25; butch ers' stock, $3.504.E0; slock cattle, $3,003 4.00. Hogs Live, $7.25&7.65. Sheep Good to choice, $4.'.'534 75. Provisions. Butter Choice, 20325c. Egs Fresh, 13'4HV4c. Pork Mess, S2L0O21.19. Lard $13.0313.24. Bkbaustufps. Flour Whlto Winter Extra, $5.75(37.50; spring extra, $5.12i5.75. Wheat Spring, No. 2, $1.2jtf31.27. Corn No.2,75 276V4c. Oats No. 2, 51 ,&52c. Rye No. 2, $1.0231.03. Barley No.2, $1.17(31-20. Lumber. First Clear, $45.00 16.00; Second clear, $43.00(343.00; Common Boards, $10.00(3 II. 00; Fencing, $10.0OU.O0; "A" Shingles, $2.0032.60; Lath, $1.75(32.00. CINCINNATI. Brkadstctts. Floor $6 00S8.15. Wheat Ked, $1.40(31.43. Corn 72374c. Rye $1.15(31.20. Oats 58361c. Provisions. Pork $19.75C0.00. Lard 12? ai4c. ST. LOUIS. Lit Stock. Beeves Good to choice, $5.40Q 6.40. Hogs Live, $6.7037.41. BRAjsTurrs. Flour XX Fall, $4.75(35.25. Wheat No. 2 Red Fall. $1.34(3135. Corn No. 2,68i68V4c. Oat No. 2, 60;46lc. Rye No. 2, 979'Jc. Provisions. Pork Mess, $20.62'i20.75. Lard 12X13c. . MILWAUKEE. BRBABSTtrrrs. Flonr Spring XX, $4.5C4 75. Wheat Spring No .1, $1.12S31.25V4 ; No. 2, $l.iyi 1.27. Corn No. 2, 71!472c. Oats No. 2, 4954 350c Rye No. 1, 9lV495c. Barley No. 2, $1.1431-15. DETROIT. BRKADSTUrFS. Wheat Extra, fl.4231.42VJ. Corn No. 1, 76377c. Oats No. 1, 55356c TOLEDO. BRBADSTtrrrs. Wheat Amber Mich., $1.354 1.36; No. 2 Red, $1.35H31.36. Corn High Mixed, 7K371KC Oats No. 2, 543544c. CLEVELAND. Brkadstutfs. Wheat No. 1 Red, $1.35l4 1.36; No. 2 Red, $1.30V&1.1. Corn High Mixed, 77378c. Oats No.l, 6061c. BUFFALO. Liv Stock. Beeves $3.0036 85. Hogs Live, $7.5037.75. Sheep Live, $4.5035.20. EAST LIBERTY. Lrv Stock. Beeves Best, $6.75(37.25; me dium, $5.753t.00. nogs Yorkers, $7,403 7.50; Philadelphia, $7.6037.75. Sheep Best, $5.0035.SO; medium, $4.50(3.4.75. Then and 'ow. One of the most interesting features of the excavations in the buried city of Pom peii is the discovery of many homely do mestic articles, of which we have counter parts. It is astonishing how many things in common use now were in use then. Here you will see almost every kitchen utensil portable cooking-stoves, jelly cake and butter molds in the imitation of birds and bowers, pots, kettles, crocks, dishes, cups and saucers, spoons, knives and forks, dippers, skimmers, sauce-pans, frying-pans, lamps, lamp-stands, fiesli hooks, braziers for charcoal in a word, pretty much every kitchen, dining-room, or chamber article found in modern use enfeVed into the economy of the daily life of Roman antiquity. All tlfc articb?s of a lady's toilet, including jewelry of all kinds, gold and silver ornaments, corals and precious stones, were found in the houses of Pompeii. Taken from the retail shops were steelyards, balances, weights and measures. From a doctor's office were re covered a full set of surgical instruments, including "pulikins'' for extracting teeth, and trepans for drilling holes in the skull. There are any numltcr of shoe maker, tailor, carpenter and blacksmith tools, and, indeed, implements of almost every present mechanical operation. The collection of articles taken from the dead city is a surprising revelation toevervone, showing that the ancienU invented and perfected 10,000 implements and articles of common life which we still use with little improvement thereon, and without giving them credit for. It is said that vines and plants are best protected from insects by applying buck wheat flour. If sprinkled on cabbage at the time the leaves begin to curl to form the head, it will surely protect it from the cabbage-worm. The California State Teachers' Asso ciation have adopted a resolution in favor of the allition of the offices of State Su perintendent and of County Superintend ent, on the ground that they cost more than they are worth. MY AXGEL. BY EMI LV nCNTINGTON MILI.EK. Slowly the night is falling. Falling down from the bill, And all in the low green valley The dew lit-s heavy and chill; The crickets cry in the bedsres. And the bats are circling low, Aud like ghosU through tho blossoming garden The glimmering night-moths go. Hand in hand through the twilight Conit the children everyone, Flushed with their eairer frolic, Tawny with wind and sun; Home from the sunny uplands Where the sweet wild berries grow, Home from the tangled thickets Where the nuts are ripening slow. They mock at the owl's weird laughter And the cricket's lonesome cry, At the tardy swallows Hying Late through the darkeuing sky; And silently gliding after, Through the dusk of the shadowy street, Comes their little angel sister, fetar white from her head to her feet Never crossing the threshold, Come they early or late ; With her empty hands on her bo3om, She stops at the cottage gate. I stretch out my arms hi longing. But she fades from my aching ight, As a little white cloud at morning Vanishes into the light. And spite of the shining garments Folded about her now, And spite of the deathless beauty Crowning her lip and brow, I wish for one passionate moment She sat on my knee again ; On her feet, so spotless and tender. The dust and-thc earthly stain. For missing her morning and evening, The bitterest thought must be , That safe with her blessed kindred The child hath no need of me; And counting her heavenly birthdays, I say in my jealous care: " The babe that lay on my bosom Hath grown to a maiden fair; 'And now if out of the glory Her face like a star should shine, Could I guess the beautiful changeling Had ever on earth been mine? I 6bould veil my eyes at her splendor, But never forget my lack For the clinging hands of my baby. And the mouth that kissed me back." Tet though In my human blindness I cannot fathom His way Who counts in His glorious cycles A thousand years as a day Whenever the cloud is lifted, Whenever I cross the tide, Mine own He will surely give me, And I shall be satisfied. Ar. Y. Iiidepcnilerit. AX ADVENTURE IX A COAL-PIT. Trifles often lead to great disasters, and it seemed but a trifle to me when, one No vember morning, a telegram was put into my friend Willie's hand as we were pre paring for a day's shooting. His pres ence was demanded in London on some trust business and he had immediately to give up all idea of sport. He begged me, however, to take Rover and the keeper and pursue my recreation as if he were with me. I was not eager to make a large; bag, so I determined to discard the man and take a long ramble on the lonely hills le hind Bradford, in the hope of picking up a stray woodcock, as well as a brace or two of grouse. Perhaps I was a little tired of partridges among the turnips and wanted an excuse for a walk as much as anything. The day was somewhat gloomy. Torn wisps of dark cloud hurried over the hills at the back of my friend's house, but I did not mind a wetting; so started with Rover, my pointer, who frisked about in as exhilarated a state as his master. Soon I gained Baddon Fell, the highest point in the district, and turned to look on the tall chimneys and smoky pall of Brad ford. Thence my course lay over hill and valley, succeeding one another in gentle accfivities. Neither grouse, which were very wild, nor woodcock fell to my gun. At noon I rested and ate a couple of biscuits by way of lunch . Then on again ; aud on a rising slope I beheld a small scrub of brambles, spruce firs and larch, with a holly or two intermingled, sur rounded by a dilapidated fence. It was about a hundred yards across, and none of the trees were more than ten feet high ; but it was a sheltered spot, and was just the place in which a womlcock would rest a short time after his flight. Rover divined my intention and pushed on a few yards before me. No one was in sight. A few sheep dotted the face of the opposite hill. Rain had begun to fall, and the whole landscape was cheerless to a degree. I climbed the slight fence and followed Rover into the brushwood. A dozen steps, and I suddenly felt rnyself slip forward. I caught the stem of a larch, and, to my horror, glided down, with a crashing of sticks and a howl from the terrified dog glided down as it might be for a moment or two, through bush and brake, then, with an awful plunge, we all disappeared into darkness, while bushes and earth rattled over me for another few seconds. To this succeeded a crash and a stunning blow, and I knew no more. After what seemed an age I came to myself, weak and sorely numbed; even limb aching and my head splitting with acrony, but without any broken bones, as I discovered when able to stand up again. The fact of my having slid down on the mass of debris had providentially saved my life, but the disentangling myself from the bushes and briers which had al most smothered me took of itself some little time. Slowly recollection returned with the glow of blood in its old channels, after having liecn frozen as it were by the shock. It was pitch dark, and awful si lence reigned around. Higix up I coiuld discern a patch of gray sky, but it was ev idently the hour of twilight, and soon it, too, faded out At length I gathered my senses and the conviction then flashed upon me that I had fallen down the shaft of" a disused coal mine, and that, .too, one situated in such an out-of-the-way valley over the bleak hillsides that jescue was extrcanely improbable. Willis, I now re meml)ered, had mentioned these old shafts to me a few days ago and had told me that scrub and brush wood were usu ally planted over the site of them on some rough planks and hurdles loosely thrown over the yawning mouth of the pit. Alas, his cautions had lecn thrown away! Striking a light with a fusee, I found it was six o'clock, so that I must have been unconscious for some hours. A few drops from my brandy flask greatly restored me and I began to move about, for though much oppressed with the horror of my situation I wanted to circulate my blood and attain my full powers of thought. I settled at once that it was no use to give in and lie on the heap which had fallen with me till death came by inches. Per haps if I fired a shot it might attract no tice and enable me, at the same time, to see for a moment where I was. According ly, I took aim in the direction I conceived the shaft was, and drew the trigger. I shall never forget the result. For an in stant the vast caverns that seemed to yawn around me on every side were lit up, and I could catch a glimpse of huge buttresses reaching up on high, like the arms of Atlas. The roof I could not see, owing to the momentariness of the flash, but The noise was appalling. The explosion echoed and re-echoed round the dark vault, and then fled away in muttering thunders into the unknown darkness, seeming to be caught up and buff eted be tween the buttresses, and, for several mo ments after these repercussions of sound had ceased, to linger like the recurring undertones of some monstrous passing bell. r am not superstitious, but it seemed just as well not to le ringing my own knell, so I determined to waste no more powder in utterly futile attempts to make soinclKdy hear. A low moan of pain at my side now made me start, but, on calling to Rover, I found it proceeded from him. He had fallen with me, but, less fortunate as I found him while sc rambling to where the moans proceeded from had broken his back in the descent. It was piteous to feel the poor animal licking my hand, and to know that he was powerless to drag himself a yard. Even in the upper world there would have been no cure for him, and, sorry as I was to lose his companion ship in the utter darkness which enveloped us, I knew it was more humane to put an end to his sufferings. There was agony in the thought, but what could be done? Immediately the faithful creature w as no more, and mw I was left absolutely with out a friend in the bowels of the earth. I in a measure encouraged myself, however, by flunking that after dinner had waited an hour Mrs. Willis would probably lie come alarmed and send out to scour the neighborhood. But who would dream of looking for me in a deserted coal-pit ? and who could track my Heps over the barren moors to the point where the earth sub sided under me? And then once more hope awoke strong and irrepressible with in me. Being greatly exhausted I could no longer resist sleep, and when I awoke and struck a fusee I found it was again six o'clock; six a. m., I supposed, of the day after my accident. Shortly after the watch stopped, and I was for the future obliged to guess at the lapse of time, as the watch key had been left on my dressing-table at home. Energy returned after my slumber, and together with a burning thirst, drove me to leave the mouth of the pit and search for water. I left my gun and pocket-book be hind me, having first scrawled a few words on a page of it, in case rescuers should de scend in my absence. I walked on loldly from the mouth, where, high alxive, the circular patch of sky was once more ap pearing with dawn and affording me a ray of hope. When fairly in the darkness 1 stopped to listen, and the silence was awful. Again I pressed on through what seemed light sand, but which 1 well knew was dry coal-dust, which invariably car pets a pit and extends up to the ankles of anyone walking in it. At length I heard the pleasant sound of Mater trickling down, and immediately I was on the edge of a rill, at which I had a delicious and refreshing draught. I lay for sometime by the rill, and left it invigorated and once more, strange to say, hopeful. How to find my way back was now my difficulty. Hunger admits of no parley ing, and I was now resolved to appease my appetite on what had before seemed so re volting, the flesh of poor Rover. Stagger ing back to the spot where he lay, there was a hurried rush past me of an army of small animals. The truth flashed upon me. Poor Rover's body was being gnawed to pieces and devoured by rats. Strength of mind again almost forsook me. These frightful creatures, 1 thought, were waiting in the gloom to pick my bones as well. Though this were a dis used working, the presence of rats, I felt assured, pointed out that there were worked portions of the mine at no great distance. If they did not muster up courage enough to overwhelm me by numbers 1 might yet be saved. Now 1 took my gun as a pro tection, and resolving to give up what I had previously regarded as a treasure of inestimable value, the rill of running water, prepared to strike boldly into sin opposite working and take my chance. My flask was full of water, and with it I might support life for a couple of days, if the worst came to the worst. I tightened my waistband a plan to appease the crav ings of hunger which I had learned also from the Indians and dipping a finger of my kid-glove in the fla.k, bydint of chew ing it made a sorry meal, but yet one that greatly relieved my Jiangs, and opened the salivary irlands, to my wonderful re freshment. My new track led to a floor of very uneven nature, and over which the root' could be felt. I concluded that this was rather a forsaken working than a thoroughfare, so to eieak,of the mine, and turned to one side where the roof again rose. This I supposed to be the passage leading to the abandoned working from the main adit of the mine. On the more level and dusty floor, 1 here kicked some thing which sounded metallic, and picked up what I made out by reeling to be an old safety-lamp. The padlock was still on its siUe, and the ring at tne top was not eaten aw ay or rendered less easy in its play by rust. Clearly the pit had not been many 3'ears abandoned. And then a brilliant thought struck me. With hands trem bling from excitement I opened my pock et-knife and forced oil" this little padlock with some little trouble. Then I drew out my fusee-liox, scarcely daring to allow to myscit that there might te suincicnt ou left in the lamp to admit of my obtaining a light, if it were but for a short time. There was but one fusee left. All my hopes, almost my existence, seemed cen tered on it. At length I plucked up cour age to try to strike it. It fized for a mo ment and then went irrecoverably out. dashing all my expectations to the ground, and leaving me once more in utter dark ness, both outwardly and in my heart. Worse still, as I turned the lamp I felt the precious drops of oil pouring over my fingers. I would then have willingly given all I possessed for another match. After this disappointment I once more legan to despair; and yet, determining not to give in without another great struggle, 1 went on. blindly hoping to light upon some clew which might perchance lead me to a working still actively prosecuted, tor I knew that much of the distric t underly ing the hills over which I had wandered was honeycombed by the operations of the colliers. At all events, this was my only chance, and it seemed well to keep up hope to the last. All at once I fell over a hard projection, and on stooping down found it was an iron chair yet in tit". Thouirh the rails and transoms had ljeen removed, here was a discovery (though I would not build too much on it) which kindled hope, and I felt in front of it till I kicked another, aud then another. These successive chairs showed that I was on the track, at all events, along which I could hasten with out constant fear of running against the walls of the pit, and which, so long as 1 was careful to keep touching these chairs, might lead me to a trequented part ot the pit The most intense listening disclosed no sound. It was quite possible, I thought, if I pursued this track that it might bring me to a level entrance into the pit. I must have rambled on for an hour, pursuing my monotonous task of kicking these iron chairs, which regularly succeeded each other at inter vals of tour yards, till, to my great joy, I reached a rail fixed on the chairs; and a few yards further, finding the rail con tinuous, I began to feel certain that I was on the right mode of escape. Taking the last draught of water which remained, I made a mental vow not to lie down, for I felt I should never rise again if I did. Fortunatel-, the end was at hand. Was I dreaming, or out of the body in Hades? Did a dull knocking strike upon my cars, or was it the lalKred thud of my heart's slow beatingthat I heard? I shook oil" fancies for a moment, and realized, as I stood there leaning against the wall, that repeated blows, smothered bv distance, were iK-ing struc k before me. The knoc k ing continued, two or three blows loing given, and then a momentary halt. I recognized the sound of colliers' picks, and manfully strove to penetrate to them, but my knees would no longer support nie; I staggered on and fell prostrate. Still it seemed so awful a death to die within reach of succor that I shouted as loud as I could, and was entranced when the knocking ceased, as though the colliers