THE HERALD. PUBLISHED EVERY THUKSIAY PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. Oa Vine Bt., One Block; North of Main, Corner of Fifth St. OFFICIAL PAPKIl OP CASS COUXTV. . Terms, in Advance ; On copy, one year f 2.00 One copy, six months'. 1.00 0n cwpy, three mouths '. 50 KEMRY BCECII, PUUB IK 8 A PES, CHAIRS, ' . Lounges, Tables, Bedsteads, iTC, arc, ztc. Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. Wooden Coffins Of all sizoa, readj-madr, and told cheap for caaa. With many thanlcs for pat patronage, I turtle all to call and examine my LARGE STOCK OF Furniture uutl Co flints. Jan-'S MEDICINES AT J. H. S'JTTERY'S, Cn Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale ai.d Rpt.nl Draler in Drug's end iTcdiciacs, Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Patent Icclicines, Toilet Ai-ticlcs, etc., etc. f5fri:i:sCR;:TIONS fareriilly cnionTiledat a'l ho-ir, d ir and eijht. 35-ly I- Feed, Sale and Livery Main Street, Plattsmouth, Neb. I am iireparcd to accommodate the public with Carriages, Buggies,, -.Wagons, AND A IMo. I Hearse, 0a Short Notice and Reasonable Ttrmi A HACK Will Run to the Steamboat Land ing. Depot, and all parts of the Citjvwhen Desired. Jaul-tf ' ' ' Vs ' ' ' First national Bant Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, arcctssoR to Tootle, Iliiiiiia. te Clarlc. JollS FlTZOERaLD. E. C. IOTFT A. W. M-,AC;HLl JoH.V O'KoL'UKE resident ....Vice-President. Cashier. ..Assistant Cashier. This Bank ! now opon for business at their new room, corner Main and Sixth streets, and are pre jiarod to traur-aci a general BANKING BUSIOTSS. Stocks, Bords. Gold. Government ' and Local Securities . UuCGIIT AND SOLD. Deposits Received and Interest Al lowed on Time Certificates. ' -CBAFTS " DRAWN, A ratable In any part of t':e United States and in all the Vrincipal Tuwu aud Cities of tarope. : AGENTS FOR TKS -- CELEBRATED INMAS LIKE anfi ALLAH LINE " OF tSrX'iV3Xiaii- Persons wUhing to bring out their friends from Europe can '; Xlii-oujrl"'- XMuttssmontlt. Excelsior ; Barber ;S!fop. .T. C. BOONE, tTain Street,' Opposite Saunders Honse. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ZSrECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO Ctitlln? .Children und "Ladies' ' Hair. Call and See Boone, Gents, And get a boon in a CIiB J. 1ST S3 XI -A- """7" 13 . n41-lr GO TO TUB- Post Office Book Store, H. J. STEEIGHT, Proprietor, Torn Tora Boob. Stationery, Pictures, Music. TOYS, CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings, " Newspapers, Novels, Song Books, etc., etc POST OFFICE BUILDING, PLATTSMOUTS, SE2. JNO. A. MACMURPHY, Editor. PEIISKVEUAXCK COXQCERS.' TERMS: S2.00 a Year. YOHUME XI. NUMBER 21. THE HERALD. AI)Vi:UTIJI ItATKH. rrt.t r.. 1 1 w.i 2 w. . w. . t m. ii m. , 8 m. 1 yr, 1 nnare...''MHM U) t J W f ,M'V' ''" V W .V "-ninjnn.i'p i'tr U f "1 ' '"' :ir' column' (..) )2'P J . li'J Txi ? fKi in (K't C(oV. 1 column. 1 OUlrt (m Lt Ifi g.-.J" "" 1"" i Wil lui' qunrtcrtjr. . ""iT" TrnnnlMrt ! vcrtlM'iii' nt iaut bo iald fi lu .'ulvaiit'C. ' ' ' Extra Coi!c fiftho IIerai.!) for pnln hj H. .T. Strvllit. at the JVmtnttirc, and O. V. Johtioon, cor ner if Min and Hfth trei?L. O. F. JOHNSON, DEALER IS Drugs, Medicines, . , i .. ; j"- T"T- k WALL PAPER. AUFaper TrimmeiFree of Charge ALSO. DEALER HI Books, Stationery ASCIIS ES AND LATEST PUBLICATIONS. SS7Preecrlpt!ona carefnlly compounded by an experienced DrngiLJ EEJIEMBER TOB PLACB Cor. Fifth and tVTaln Streets, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. . ' V! " 'I THOS. W- SHHYOCK, Main St., bet. 5th and' 6th, . pl, ATTSMOTin:, - 3Nr:23. atso j UNDERTAKER, Aad lai on hand a largt itock of; r !MetalliG T5urial Cases, Wooden Coffins, Etc., Of all clzeo, cheap for cash. Funerals Attended on Short Notice II. J.TATERMV&SON, , - - . f v Whole?al9 and Befall Dealer, in PINE LUMBER, Lath, Shingles, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC., On Slain St., cor. Fifth, PL A.TTS 510 UT H, - - - NEB. ; FOR YOUR GROCERIES CURRENT PARAGRAPHS. James B. McCkeehy t was inaugurated, as Governorof Kentucky -tn the 31st ult. The jetlow-fevrr has "cntirelyj7lLj:ip peared from Barrancas and Petmcola, Florida. Tripoli has1 apologized to the United States Consul for the insult offered to him and his wife. The fourth annual session of the Louis ville (Ky.) Exposition opened on the even in r of the 1st. . -. Tue British iron-clad Vanguard recently collided with the Iron Duke in the British Channel and sunk. No lives were lost. Gen. Gekshom JIott has heen appoint ed State Treasurer f New Jersey-, in jdace 'of Sooy, charged with . eralezzle ment. ' ) , ' Four children of a Mr. Mier, of Vscen sion Parish, La., were poisoned ly Fre nc h worm-lozenges on the 1st, and, died in a few hours'. EPITOME OF THE WEEK. CONDENSED TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. After being idle for seven weeks then Atlantic cotton-mills at Lawrence, Mass., employing 1,000 hands, resumed opera tions .on the yoth ult. j " ""' i ., : ' : . O ' - The business portion of the town of Heynoldsville, Pa., was destroyed by fire on the morning of the 29th ult. Loss over $100,000, with an insurance of but $40,000. .1. M. TnATcriER, United States Com missioner of Patents, has sent in his resig nation to take ; effect Sept. "30, E3tfCon gressman -Duell, of New York, will be bis successor. A colored servant girl in the employ of a family tit Pleasant i I IillIttj 4tdeav ored a few days, ago .to. hasten! dinner by pouring kerosene on tle kitchen lire. The can exploded 'and "the ''girl was fatally burned. w v,The. New. York? JIa-'iti. h-js recently published an accownf of an interview with Mrs. Mosher, in 'which she declared her firm conviction that Charlie Ross was still living, but declined to give her reaon for so believing;.- r The funeral of the late Bank-President Ralston took place , at Sal Francisc o oa the SOth ult.', and was largely attended, at least 20,000 people liejug present. The ceremonies we're of themost. imposing and nuressive. cliaracteV.. . r Tm-rSerretary'-of tlie'Trcasncy'has de cided tliait pine timber, commonly known as "squared" or "sided,"- is subject to duty at the rate of 1 per cienl. .per cubic foot, and not 20 per cent, ad valorem, as heretofore held by the department. Jessie Yorick, a servant-girl of- Pitts burg, Pa., attempted to start a Tire a few mornings ago by pouring roal-bil from a can upon .the, smoldering coals. -The usual explosion followedand the -girl was so terribly burned that death ensued in a few moments. The building was "entirely destroyed with all its contents. " ' J. V. Weckbach, Cor. Third and Main Bts., Plattsmouth. 1 (Gnthmann'a old aland.) . , , Ha keepa on hand a large and well-eelected atock f FANCY GROCERIES, Coffees, Teas, Sugar, Sirup, Boots, Shoes, Etc., Etc., Etc., Eto. Also, a large atock af Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Crockery, Qxteensware, Etc., Etc., Etc -1 Is connection with tha Grocery is a BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY. Hiichrt Prira Paid for Country Prodnre.: ' t A. fall atack at all time, and will not be undersold. Take notice of tha Sign: "EMPIBJS BAKEBY- ASD GROCERY." WILLIAM STADELMANN Has ea hand one of the largeit ttocka of S CLOTHING ' - - 1 1 ' - - - AND ' ' " Gents' Furnishing Goods TOR SPRING AND SUMMER. 1 I Inrite everjhodr in want of anything In' my line to call at my slure. South Side Main,t.-.5th k6h Sts., : . m- I X 4 , And eonrince themselves of tha fact. I have as a fpecialty in my Retail Denrttnenta a stock of Fine Clothing fur .Men and Boys, ta which we In Tite thoo who ant olls. I aloojteep on hand a large and well-eelected atock af Hats, Caps, BootSj Shoes, Etc,' jarlyl ' PHILADELPHIA STORE SOLOMON fc XATIIAX, SIM.IBI IH t Fancy Dry Goods, Notions, Laiie Furnisliins Gools.' Largest, Cheapest, Finest and Best Assorted Stock , , , . , . In tfre citj. We are prepared t rellchesper than they can be purchased elsewhere. GIVE ITS A. O-A-IX. And examine oar Goods. EfJ-Store on Main 6L, betweB 4th and 5th Pte., Platumoath, Neb. 16tf I'LATTSMOITII MILLS, PLATTS MOUTH NEBRASKA. Cosbxd nets el. Proprietor. FLOUR, CORN MEAL, FEED, Always o hand and for eale at lowest cash price. The Highest Price paid for Wfeeal and Corn. Par tic alar attention giTtn t tuwn wttk. A ten-year-old daughter -of JlichacJ Glavin, of Jules, Mich., poured kerosene oil from a can on some live coals in the stove, on the 31st ult. The can exploded and the burning oil m;hs . thrown over her and her little sister, ten nionihs old, who was clinging to her .clothes.. The babe was burned7 -to death'--and the- girl very badly injured in trying. L .save the child. The Secretary of the Treasury has is sued calls for redemption of $1:3,000,000 of 5-20 bonds'of 164, $3,000,000 of whic h are on account of the sinking fund. The principal and accrued- interest will be paid at the Treasury of the Lniteu states or, at the office 6f the Assistant Treasurer in Xe lork, Dec. i, ISTo, Interest to cease that dav. on Geo. A. SxiiTn, Se'cpncTPrcsident of the Mormon Church, and . Brighani Young's t hief adviser and counselor, died at Salt Lake City on the morning of the 1st, aged fifty-eight j'ears. "He leaves 'five wives and a large number of children. Accord ing to the, rules of the Mormon Church George Q. Cannon, Delegate- to Gmijress, will sfceceed . President .Smith, he being next in age and position. i -. On the night of the 1st the Planters' Na tional Bank of Louisville; Ky.,was robbed J of over f 100,000. The teller, Louis Rhem, stated that three rhen'had.taleiThlin from his house -during the-night, eompclled him to go to the. bank and . produce the keys to the safe, which tlley then robbed. iie,c'xhibteoI some, slight-wound winch he alleged they in'jrtorl'u'pOn him. The bank officers' d iTrviied hi story and accused him' of committing the theft. After repeated decjarations of his inno cence he afJiist conijpsfcd rtwvhewas 'the thief and that he had committed the -pob- 'bery-hef ore' midmghVand buried lh6 pro ceeds under his house. The stolen prop erty ivas all recovered on the 2d and Rhem was lodged in jail. 4 , It is said that a majority of the jury of inquest upon the bodies of those drowned when tlit Queen's yacht ran Into the Mis tletoe have recommended that the officers of the royal 3 ;uht bc'prosecutcd for man slaughter. . . " ... The foot 'and mouth disease was re ported on the '28th to be spreading among the cattle in Cumberland and Aberdeen shire, England. Caule telegrams of the 2Sth state that over 3,000 Turkish Croats. had crossed the l)anube into Austrian territory. Military preparations were going on steadily in Servia. The-inhabitant:.--of 2ovaroseh had revolted and burned the chief town of the province. A Ragusa dispatch of the 2!th saj-s an insurrection had broken out in Albania. One thousand Servian volunteers had entered Herzegovina to aid the insurgents. The insurgents had rejected the advice of Eu rojean powers and demanded the inde pendence of Bosnia. A dispatch to the London Times of the 30th says a force of Russians had taken the field against Kho jend. The rebellion had extended to the southern districts. ' '; , A dispatch from Berlin on the 30th ult. says Bosnia was lull of rebellion. The llerzegovinian insurgents had estab lished a national governments j Advtces from the Polar expedition were received in London on the'30th ult. The two vessels had sailed for Upernavik on the 17th of July. All well: The publish ing-hous.of Lee & Shep ard, of Boston, and -the brttneh house of Lee, Sh'epard' &: Dillingham, of New York, have failed. Liabilities estimated at $1,000,000. i '. The trial of Westervelt, who is charged with being an accessor' to the alxluetion of Charlie Ross, was begun at Philadel phia on the 30th ult. . The trial of the negroes charged with insurrection in Georgia commenced ' at Augusta 'on the 30th ult. . Acconpixo to dispatches received in London on the 31st uit., all the insurgents in Bosnia who had not lied into Austrian territory had surrendered to the Porte. Late advices from Egypt state that great excitement existed there in ' conse quence of military movements. Besides the dispatch of a' large, force to tc Abys sinian frontier, the Khedive had been re quested to send troops to aid the Porte to suppress the llerzegovinian trouble. All officers on furlotigh ha.d"been recalled.- Rach'sa telegram of the. 1st says' the Turks had compelled -tha. insurgents to leave Trebigne and retire to the mount-, ains.. """ - - ,'TiiE Bishop "of ..Padefbor'n Germany, has-'befeu -outlawedby Jiiuisteriid order, becauso'without .leave. .he. left the city to wluy,h.he had been restricted. . .' . ' The news from .Herzegovina, received in London on the 2d-j was'conflicting, but its general tenor was unfavoraUltr to the insurgents, who had been unsuccessful in' L several- reecrit engagements. Ox the 2d an attempt was made to inter in the Catholic cemetery at Montreal. the remains of Guibord, who, at the time of his death, about a year ago, was a member of u '.secret society, and whose burial in consechrateil ground had been forbidden by ecclesiastical, but after considerable litigation .directed by the' civil, authori ties. - A mob of 2,000 persons drove off the hearse and its attendants. The exact amount of the deficit of Sooy, tlier defaulting New Jersey Hatc Treas .urcr, has been ascertained to be $ ll.lKi. He was on the 2d committed ' to jail in default of $75,000 hail. " ' ' .".A!. hiPATCH from St. Louis on the 1st -J ' - - a. says j the investigation . of the charges tigainst-Indian-Agent Gibson, at -Osage Agency, Kan., has been concluded so far as the taking of oral testimony was con corned. ' and the Commissioners had ad journed to Lawrence to examine certain documents and make up their report. It is said the evidence against him was very djHnaging, and his removal would proba bly be recommended. " . v Dispatches fro.iu San Fnuicisco on the 2d indicated Hi at the Democrats had car; ried California -at the kcceiit election .by a large plurality,, and had probably secured all of the four Congressmen. They would also have a plurality, if not a majority, in both houses of.the Legislature. The elec tion in iSan Francisco was , very close, the Independents claiming niost of the citv omccrs.-' f ' - .TnElvrchants' Exchange Bank of San Francisco resumed business, on the 2d, I). O. Mills had autlipf iie$ the statement that capitalists' interests ur-jthc Bank, of California would - be - fully protected and funds subsf rihccLt Ji jUace 'tlje bank . in ii' condition to . pay . 'all .demands and put -it""cm a sound basis. Flits assurance: had an excellent ,eJlect;.diihusincss pns- The stateinent of.the condition of the public debt Sept. 1 is as follows: -t Sit percent, bonds. ...I. ...i. $l',(t.8r,5,'BO Five per ent. bonds - vf 62 l,u'.2.7E0 BBaD8TurP9. Flour XX Kail, 5.75afi '-I3. Wheat-No. 2 Red Fall. 81.42K&1.43. Corn No. 2, 61S61HC. Oata No. 2, 35'-t&Mc. Rye No. 2, 74S75C. PaoTi8ioN8.--Pork Mees, S 1 -50x21 -75. Lard 12anc. MILWAUKEE. BnaADeTtrrrs. Flour ttpring XX; fl.75ii&.00. Wheat Spring, No. 1, fl.2,,(2.1.2ili : No. 2, $1.14 g.1. 15. Corn No. 2, 60tiJ)lc. Oats Nik , 34V4355.- Rye 'So. . 1, tastc Barley No. 2, $1.0031.10. . ' ' ' : ' ' ' i ' . r " DETROIT. ' -i ' BRADfTtttw. AVheat Kxtna, $1.41 31.-12 Corn NO. 8, 73S74c. O.U-No. .1, 363iv4c. TOLEDO. - - Bbeadstuipb. Wheat Amber Michignu. $1.3-S1.32!4; No. 2Ued, S1.34iSl-33- Corn UiRh Mixed, GbhiQWc. O.ite No. 2, '4S3!:. .CLEVELAND. BksABSTurrs. Wheat No. 1 Red, $1,453 l.-W; No. 2 Red, $1.21Vi'31.2). Corn High Mixed, 70a71c. Outs-No. 1, 4 li.lz. BUFFALO. Live Stock. Beeves $i.30 J7.12-4. Hogs Lire, $7.75'j.2.,S. Sheep Live, J4 MKa5 50. EAST LIBERTY. Livx Stock. Ucoves Bi-et, 6.2b'g6 50; me dium, $5 2".50. liops -Yorker?, $7.908 80; Philadelphia, JS.75&9 00. Sheep Best, $5.25 S.50; medium, St-75.'3.o 00. The Croat Bank' Excitement in . Francisco. San THE MARKETS. Total coin bonds. . . . Lawful money debt.". .. Matured aetit r. . LetraT-tender. notes-.. j .4 ''C'Jjrtificateaof deposit.. Fractional currency, . . ; Coi n "certificates : . . Interest. Total Bebt: . ....... r Cash m Treaeary Coin Currency .- Special deposits, held foi the re demption of certiiicates of deposit. Total in Treasury Debt lss cash in Treasury. . Decrease during August . .. -Decrease since June 30 $l,7t.p! fi.snn 14.H7S.0iiO 17.!il.2 874.ni5.Fxir) tl.7W).(Xl " 41.1:i7.lS 17.Blt?.5' ..' ;Sb,919.7S:J. 82,2til,'i08,42U 871,117.272 4,r02,:W5 Ct,7S0,0T0 $n4;w.6,7 Silio.sxs.wi .......- . i..b.ms - , -2.H7H,i-t Bonds issued to the Pacific Railway Companies, interest payable in lawful money, principal -outstand- ins Interest accrued and not yet pai(L.. Interest paid by the United States.. Interest repaid by the transporta tion of mails, etc Balance of interest paid by United States $64,623,512 - t4,2: 2S,-Jr2,SJ7 . 6,3M,017 21,894,760 At Brownsville, Tex., bees have be come troublesome in a number of grocerv stores. They have taken possession of some stores and hid.to be driven out with smoke. The place where sugar is store? is alive with them, and they have driven custom away in consequence; of children bejng stung. They have become a nui sance and the storekeepers show them no mercy. Large numbers have been killed as the only remedy to get rid of them. SeptE-MBER 4, 1SH. ' . ... -VN'fcw YOKK... - : '' 1jv sVotK.-'Beef Cattle $11.5012.75., Hops Live, $i-J5l8."50.' Sheep live, $4.00&6.25. ; BKxyTCrra. Flour lood to chtiice, CP-V& 60; w hite wheat extra, 2 t,503.7.0."..WheiatNw. 2 Chicago, $1.2!iai-i0; . No. . 2 Northwestern, $t.3l!3.1.':i2; No.'. .2 .Milwaukee, spring. 1.:3 I. 34. Rve AVcstern and State. POe Bar ley $l.t;5$.t.4Q. Corn Mixed 'Western, 7c. Oats Mixed Western, 57&i9c. - ' t Paovjsioss. Port New .AIupb, $A)gl.00. Ijud Xrime Steam, 133i'2il3ic. . C&ee.-4'i lt'We. ',.,;.. Wool. Domestic fleece. SuSM.tc. i . - CHICAGO. '- LrvB Stock. Beeves Choice, '$5 75.8.25, good, $5X025.63; medium. SI.25&5.U); butch ers' stock, $2.754.00; stock cattle, $3 0034.00. Hogs Live, $7.85a8.00. Sheep tlobd to cnoice, $4.253.5.00. ' Protisioss. Butter Choice, Si5S,W. Efs Freeh, 13'i14c Pork Mess, $20.6Oa20.65. Lard $12.6C12.85. '. -'. , : BBEiDSTcri-s. Flonr White Wlnte'r Extra, 6.2S7.50; spring extra, $3.2T,'a5.25. Wheat Spring, No. 2, Sl.llv4ijl.15. Corn No. a, 62's tile Oaw No. , 34'4fe35c. Rye No. 7S379c. Barley No. 2, $1.091.10. LrxsER. First Clear, 15.00WOO; Second aear, $13.00(45.00; Common Boards, $10.0ia II. 00; Fencing, $10.0C(r11.00; "A" Shingles, L .5Ui23.00; Lath, il.75&2.00. CINCINNATI. BREansTOTrs. Flour $fl.40a.75. Wheat Red, $1.30?fcl.35. Corn 70&'.3c. Rye SO 85c. Oats 4e50c, . - j- Pbovwfons. Pork $20 ',531.00. Lard 143 14c. . STi LOUIS. " Lit Stock. Beeves Good to choice, f 5.25U 6.23. Hogs Liyc, $7.25&3.00. It was not until one p. m. that the ofTlcials of the institution became much alarmed. About that hour several checks for $100,000 or f2VOt0lH1, or similar amounts, came to be cashed 'from deposi tors not usually- disturbed by rumors of financial trouble.' All these were paid without a murmur, but they kept on in creasing. The scattering drops became a quiet palter, and the patter became a heavy shower. By two o'clock the steady with drawal of funds had quickened into a ' run,"' which attracted attention and drev a crowd of spectators about the doors. The news ran along the street like a prairie tire, causing the greatest commotion among brokers and operators, who rushed toward the center of interest, some with bank-books in their hands, others simply inspired with a desire to join in the ex citement. As the news-spread to the adjoining streets, and into the quarter of th city devoted to heavy business, it aroused everywhere the same attention. Stores and workshops were emptied of their occupants, either to see the. excite--ment or to enable a withdrawal of deposits before the hour for closing the . bank, which was now 'at hand. The people thus , led by curiosity or intorc? t strea-maxl from all quarters toward the corner of California , and Sansome streets, filling the f-p;tre in that locality for a squnre . in- every direc tion. At half-past two the excitement cul minated in a scene of extraordinary inter- . est, which could. be taken in sit. a glance from an elevated position. The streets were thronged as far, as. the eye could reach, the crowd being qUet - in certain places, in others alive willi. motion. The steps of all banks and ofliccs were packed with" spectators. ' A pale face was seen at every pane of every window. Wild men were rushing in nil directions, papers llnt tertng in their handle; andamong them the inevitable bank-book. Pale women, with disordered hair and dresses, began to ap pear, giving the scene a little variety of color, and striving vainly to reach the nar row entrance at the door of the Bank of California,-besieged with crowding.stxug-. gling, obstreperoi3, white-facdei, lncu.' , - The sceno at the bank-door was so wild, eager; confused and' tumultuous that it can be but imperfectly described. Po licemen, in uriifortHS and without, were scattered about in all available phices to keep the crowd -in the. best order possible under the circumstances. The great iron door was closed,, and - through the little narrow door in the center, 1 ike the-en-! trance to a prison- cell, the pau.ic-stri,cken depositors crowded pressing their way between serried ranks of ragged, moneyless spectators, to whom the failure of all the. banks' in the world would not have been a matter of the slightest consequence. An effort was made to keep out those having' do business inside, but if was only par tially successful. Those - who came for deposits were largely brokers' clerks and the representatives of business men in the lower part of the city. . The scene inside, the bank was even more intensely exciting than that outside. A crowd lined the counters from end to end, nervously shoving checks under the no? os of tellers, who glanced at them and, as'thcir only answer, shoved over- to the excited men who brought them little piles rtf gold or great -piles and boxes of silver. Every Idler had a while, scared look, and the.biok-kerper.s- and' the faces-of clerks, seen at thedislant desks, looked ghastly. snow-drifts in the moonlight. Now and' tli en a bank trustee was seen flittingabont in a ghastly wa,. disappearing in thtVdi rection of the looms 'bclnnging- to "'the officers:' The old' Chinese clerk, who must have been contemporary with Con fucius, sat on a high stool, gazing wisely: through his spectacles, which are large as watch-crystals, at the half-crazed crowd pressing forward for their money. .Great, piles of gold and silver coin glistened on shelves just beyond the reach of those so vociferously demanding it. The clink of coin fairly drowned the din that came from the thronred street through the iiarrow entrance. The crowd increased rapidly from two o'clock until half-past two, when there was scarcely room for them at the counters. Then tile manage ment decided to slop payment, and so tel-' graphed to their Eastern correspondents.: At 2 :3. - the little lopr swung to in the faces of several, anxious depositors.. An effort was made from without to push it open, but the policemen with strong arms 'shoved it to. and drew the heavy iron bolts, forbidding, further ingress, .Then the Crowd began beating a fierce tattoo, to which the tellers and clerks who stood still jn.theirplaceS listened with a faint smile of satisfaction and a deep-drawn sigh of relief. : But the mission of the great Bank of California was ended. After the: Imnk had closed its doors a .woman', having evidently'crossed the ltu bieonv but ghastly with paint and rouge, vainly .endeavored to climb into the bank through a closed window, declaring she would have her money, every cent of it, and if her John wasn't out to Sister Abi gail's, in Amador, he'd see that her hard earned savings wasn't stolen, you bet your life he would. Only desisting after find ing that entrance was entirely 'U of the question, the frantic woman departed,, wringing her hands and protesting amid torrents of tears that never again, - no, never 1 would she put hermoney in strange folks' hands to keep for her as long as here was a spade to dig a hole in the ground with to bury it. There! And so the perturbed female' departed and was lost to view from California street. While the run was at its height an old Californian, having the highest faith in the Bank of California, struggled vainly for entrance, declaring that he had $40,000 which he would deposit if the crowd - would open its ranks and allow him ad mission. But the throng, drunk with ex citement and alarm, paid no attention to tke protesting individual, who struggled and shouted until he was exhausted and speechless, when he strode away breathing husky anathemas upon the " plaguy cow r rds who thoutht the bank was goingo bust!" JSan Franciico Chronicle, Aug.27. -The publisher of a paper in Boston having missed or lost about $2,"iOO which had leen sent to him by .mail, and being fully satisfied that the trouble and the thin were in the Boston ofliee, applied for as sistance in Catching the rogue. Decoy letters were used, but the brilliant officer in the PostoiTice took particular pains to mark the envelopes, and the thief, seeing some strange mark, let them alone. The Failure of the Bank of California. A San Francisco 'dispatch of Aug. 27 says: " The failure of the Bank of Cali fcnii, hi!e immediately caused by a de positors' run, whs dinn tly the outcome of a conflict between two t-luAses of Califor. nia spe culators one of the Bank of Cali fornia party, headed by Mr. Balston and Mr. Sharon, and the "other headed bv Messrs. Flood, O'Biicn and Ilidenfeldt. The latter partv have established a Kink in San Francfsm -called- 4 The 'Bank of Nevada," with a c ish capital of $-"i.ooy,C'.0 gold and the right 4o increase to i'JO,))), too. .Incidental to t lib-light there have been the mining propeiiics known a- the Savage, the Caiedoni.i. the California, the Ophimnd thc(Vn.-olidatcd Virginia. The three latter are kn m n 113 the ' Uiir Bonan za Mine,' and tLic Batikol California pi ty obtained cunU-ol of them. In netting this control the stock of lhe California was run up from !0 'Jo S00, and was then multiplied bv " five, which would make the highest price 1:0. It has since declined to The Ophir stock, while they were' getting control, advanced liom 80 to 7.00, imd was multi plied by five, making 7.00, representing 140 in new stick. It has . since declined to 4l. The- Consolidated Virginia, dur Ing the process of getting control, ad vanced from !s( to 7M. It was yesterday 'io7. 'That the bank had been strained of lute and pinched lias been evident to bankers here, .who have . slimmed their bills from the fact that in . the last sixty days. most of the bills offered in this mar ket have been those of other institutions indorsed by the Bank of California. Th" inference has been that the Bank of Cali fornia hid hypothecated securities with those who lent their-bills; and that this borrowed exchange, was used to obtain funds needed to carry on the large opera tions of the bank. The borrowed hills which have so appeared were those of the Bank of British Columbia, and the Bank -f British North America." Capt. Webb's. Great Swim. ' London, Aujj. 21. Capt. Wnr.n started- ej-rerday on his swim across the Channel, at the rate o twenty strokes to the ninu)e. The weath er was calm. At"i::!0 he lunched on ale and beef-tea, and at eight o'clock beef-tea and beer. lie then rested, floating on his back.' At nine o'clock he was troubled with floating seaweed. At eleven o'cloc k cod-liver' oil was given him. The moon rose at one in the morning. He indulged In brandy and- tea. 'At this time Webb declared the accomplishment of the feat a sure thing. At three. he partook of coffee, then the tide, turned, running north ward, and the C Captain 'appeared exhaust ed. His triuner stripped,' ready to render' assistance, but ,Wcbb laughingly declined his services: ' Ilff'FtrokeB 'at' this rime Were at' .the rate of twenty, per minute. . "Fears arose-that the' northern tide wonld drift hinl abreast of the -Calais' sands, and, as the sequel proved, he had four miles further to swim. IJU light-broke at four, o'clock, findiiiirhuu drowsy, when he in dulged in coffee and 'brandy. At M0 IUdcii's buoys Mere sighted, and their position located,. At seven .. there was 11 westerly breeze and chopping sea, re tarding in their 'influences,' and it- Yhs only indomitable pluck that injured suc cess.' A skiff was kepi 011 .the wcaf.hc.r side, Webb swimming slowly from this time. - lie indulged '.in brandy straight every twenty minutes. Soundings- were taken at eight o'clock, and ten fathoms re ported. Steamers now made their appear-" ance from Calais, and 'steamed along the weather side of the swimmer, breaking the sea. Cheers rang on incessantly, giv ing fresh hope to.the. gallant' swimmer, who laid a direct - course for Oahus sands, westward of the pier. At 10 :;) o.Vlock lie was in shallow water, and at 10:40 to-day, incredible to relate, the brave Mlatthew Wcbb stood on land. lie was tired, but soon recovered and was . conveyed to a hotel in a carriage, where he was rubbed down and put to bed, and at one o'clock, when the correspondent sailed on his re 'tttrn to Dover, tranquilly slept. The doc tors have no tears of serious consequences. Captain ebb, naked, beats i'aul JJoyton about two hours. - In London the wildest enthusiasm prevails. It is -pronounced by the press the greatest physical feat of the century. FACTS AM). FIGURES. THE FAMILY It E CORD. 44 At, write it clown In black and white The date, the a, the name; For home has never seemed so clear As since our baby enine. No child before was half so sweet. And never babe so wise; -And, John, the neighbors say, indeed, ' It has its faiher'a eyes." 44 Xav, wife, I'm sure they're like your own ; The rogue's his mother's boy. How strange that such a tiny form Can t-:ius such boundlet-s Joy! And you tm7 have him named I'onne? Come, think it o'er again; For '.John' is but a homely name " 44 Nay, do not drop your pen, "For 4 Jolin shall be his name, my dear, It is his father's own; And though a hundred more were given, I'll call him that alone. His father's eyes, his father's face, His father's form, I'm sure; God grant he have his father's heart, .- Lite's hardships to endure!" "Well, there; 'tis written down at last; The record is complete. Henceforth we'll lay our loving hearts Beueath our baby's feet. - Ab, wife, our home's au humble place We're humble folks, that's true; But I'm a king with boundless wealth In that young rogue and vou. 14 So, baby, wink and blink, my boy. Your mother's eyes 41 Nay, John, They are his father's eyes, indeed ; Thatl insint utKn!' 44 Well, be that as it may, his mouth Is waiting-for a kiss. Ile'a like you thdre, at least, my dear. Say, do I jude amiss?" TjfK population of Portland, Me., is 37,000. - . -', ,:. ;..' Boston deposits over .'; $74,000,000 in savings banks.. . , ., Tub wealthiest man in Atlanta, Ga.' ii w.orthbut $400,000. . .'''.' TiiEltE are 800,000 acres of soil in India under jureculiivai ionrr - .Solomon Eaton, of Irasburgh, is said to have the largest hop-yard in Vermont, lie; has.8,000 hills, covering ten acres. 'Tin: estimated annual income of the London: Times' from advertisements- is $'2,1."0,000, and the profits of the paper therefrom are computed at $7."0,000. The lumber surveyed - in Bangor, Me., from Jan! lto JuTv 1, amounted to 43, 9SG,.r:"4 feet a decrease of ir,02:,..017 feet as compared with .,the .same period last year. , ' ' " V The est ini a tecf-'coinage of the Chifcd States mints at Philadelphia, San Fran cisco and Carson City for the present fis cal year is as follows: Gold, $:4,000,00O; trade dollars, $. 000,000; subsidiary sil ver 'coinage, $, 000,000;, minor coinage, $2"jO,OOU; total, $40,200,000. . In Cape Colony about bOO miles of rail way are 'about to be constructed, at a cost of four or five millions sterling, and in New Zealand there are 5f0 miles . of rail way in construction iu4 :70 morq author ized. India has;.ahejMly -0,872 miles, of railway open,-while 1,827 miles rera.aiujto be completed. ' . - - -j ' ' The Bell-Punch Company Exacts a royal ty on each punch of Irrcnty-AVe cents; a lay, or !)1.2-5 a year. .There jre at present 1,100 in'actual use, an3,"for "whichroyaJty is paid. This number give's an income to the punch company of $27" a daj', or $100,37-3 per annum." This, it will be re membered, is only for the use of the punches, which must be re turned to the owner as soon asthe royalty is discon tinued. The punch costs alout $-3. Reports of 117 cheese and . butter fac tories in the State of New York for. the season of 1S74' show the following partic ulars : Aggregate of . average number of cows for .lire btjison employed by these fac tories, 3(5,-129 ; milk received, 118,093,222 pounds; average per cow, 3, 2 11. 73 pounds, or 377,42 gallons; lowest-average number of cows for .the-season employed by a sin gle factory, 5-;' highest, 800; general av erage, 311 1 averace'Mengtli of factory sc-;v-son; a-Wfageii ofi the number of factories without Tegaud- to size, 0.24 months; re garding the average number of cows, in each, .4t months. Of the 117 . factories five are exhibited as devoted wholly. or! in large part to "butter; 112 show an average of 331 pounds of cheese per cow; average amount of milk required for one pound of cured cheese, 9.82 ounds. These 112 factories also report 3(5,141 pounds of but teraveraging 1.02 pounds per cow. Four factories, averaging a season of -V.ttii t months, exhibit l,3iy cows as the average number for the season, and4,3.KJtximcls, equivalent to .307.2-3 gitlloa-Mof milk per cow; each cow averaging 4-31.8 poundiof cheese and eight pounds of butter. A little girl in' Gal ion, Ohio, has de: Teloped parts as a. dentist. She tied a string to her little brother's tooth, tied the other end of the string to the btore eg, and then touched rt red-hot coal to the little victim's nose. The tooth ame out. ' ILLUSIONS OF THE SENSES. . The little chiUl-who watches with de light the moon scampering wildly through the clouds of A windy night, and wonders why it does not sooner finish its race, and come down upon the far-oil" trees, is not the only subject of illuded sense. His brother who is old enough to accompany their father on a journey, and who, on crossing a ferry for the first time, sees the bank strangely moving away from the boat, and the Lrcc$ and heavens spinning around overhead as the flat swings down stream with the current, is another sub ject of illusion. And so is their father in many a thing, although, being more learned in the ways of nature, the decep tion under which he labors iriay not be quite so palpable. - In truth, scarcely a day passes in the lives of most people in which, despite all their intelligence; there Is not more or less illusion of some of tiieir senses. A laboring man w ho had lost a leg used to complain bitterly of the itching cf the missinc toes. - - 44 My trouble is,?saidhc, "that, bad as I want to, I can't tcruU-k ';." Of course the feeling excited was whol ly nervous.,' ' ' " '" 1 j ."A similar nervous trouble, though of ;:t more dignified character, occurred in the case of a young lady whfi suH'crcd intense ly from paiti in tho point of a' fort-finger. Her physician, 'orrLug in his diagnof is of the case, endeavored, without success, to relieve it by. .poulticing, blistering ami, apj dying anodynes. One day a med ical friend Oeing present whose neurologi cal information was of a higher order, he re marked to her jocosely : 44 1 think, Miss M- , that you are mis taken as to the seat of the pain." "What, doctor!" she exclaimed, 44 do yon-suppose I do not knoy where it hurts me?" ' 44 1 do," he, replied; 44 and if you will loosen your dress so that I can re;u h )ur spine 1 think, you will soon agree with inc." Thcrpnportuuity being afforded-, be. put liw ringci:, upon -out; of the vertebra: be tween the shouJder-.Mades and gave it a gentle pressure, wlien.shrj sc reamed : ' ''"Doctor, you are right! The pain. is 4) my buck.'1'' " 44 Well, now," said he, 44 having discov ered the seat of the pain, I lhink we can relieve it." He applied a counter-irritant directly over the ailing spot, ami in the course of few days tfiejinyer was well. Among the illusions of the sense of feeling we must not forget to mention that cur:us deception, familiar to most boys, in which they cause one marble to seem to be two by rolling it in the palm of one hand by two of the fingers crossed of the other. , t Another deception of this sense is not so generally known. If three tumblers Ik filled with water ne hot as the ' finger will bear, and one cold as can be ob tained, and the third, the middle one,-a lukewarm mixture of the two and a finger of each hand be held for a minute, one in the hot and the other in the cold tumbler, then both plungod together into the tepid, the water in this last will seem, at the same moment, hot to one finger and cold to the other. .Illusions of the senses of smell and of taste seldom, if ever, occur, jossibly from the fact, in the first named of the two (if it be a fact, which no man with a faithful nose can easily believe), that we have no recollection of. odors. That illusions of the sense of sight should so greatly out number those of any other sense or of all the others 'combined may Ik; readily ac counted for by the fact that impressions on the eye are so much, more vivid ; but this reason leaves us at a loss to account for the fact that illusions of the sense of hair- inn are so few in proportion to those of sight, and especially that they should be few compared with the usual fy-supposcd-less-vivid sense of feeling, unless we adopt the opinion held bv many that the sense of feeling, so called, is not one sense, but many. Leaving, these points, however, without discussion, we proceed with our main subject. . . We watch .the.ma. jestic rising und pet ting of the sun, and wonder what jwnvcr there is in the atiifosphere near the hori zon to mianiftf so greatly his apparent di ameter. :,We can .readily conceive that the refraction of.- bis jjnys .will render the face visible .sonic minutes iK-fore'the'actiial 1 is ing, and will keep it visible for as many minutes after lhe actual netting, but what rs there to increase so greatly the general diameter? It is'with almost incredulity we learn from those who test this phe nomenon by : careful-instrumental meas urement that .the, apparent increase of magnitude is all aii illusion, and that the sun's disk subtends no greater angle at the horizon than, it . does w hen,, in mid heaven, it appears to have shrunk to one half or one fourth its size. The only ex planation offered of this mysterious differ ence is that at the horizon the eye makes an unconscious comparison with objects whose dimensions are familiar, while in mid-heaven no such .objects are visible. The same is true of, the moon. On a cloudless evening soon after sun set it is not unusual to see the heavens arched from west to east by alternate .stripes of light and shade, convergent at '(.heir termini, but spread widely apart overhead, like the seams which divide the lobes of a cantaloup, or the plugs of a peeled orange. When, however, we learn as, in the course of time, we probably do that the dark stripes arecaused by shad ows thrown athwart the sky from" small clouds intercepting the sun's light below the western horizon, we are convinced of having experienced another- illusion. Those lines tore, jt arched, as they seem to be, but are fn right lines, as are all other nrys of light and shade; and they do not diverge from the west and converge to the east to any perceptible degree, but are virtually parallel, and their appearance toi the contrary is attributable to tne erect ot d istance. No optical illusion's are more common than those connected with magnitude and distance. The magnitude of oljects per ceived by the eye is usually calculated by the angle which they m blend, corrected by the conp-eturcd distance; for, the near er the object, the greater the angle. And the distance of objects is usually con jectured front the angle they subtend, taken in connection with the brightness or haziness of their appearance; for dis tant objects are usually dimmed by the in tervening atmosphere. It .syui -times hap pens, however, that an object close at hand is dimmed by 1111 unobserved haze, so its to seem to be at, a distance; in which case, unless the spectator able to correct the mistake by the lon e of reason, the ob ject will assume in his concqion gigan tic proportions. A lew ycais since a gentleman, well educated an 1 by no means nervous, in t illing along a pubjjc highway, saw in an adjoining field w Ut seemed to him to be a wild beast ot terrible aspect and monstrous proportion-.. Its ld.y, equaling that of a half-grow n hippopotamus in size, far exceeded it in uncoiithness, ami resembled nothing ever seen by him before, or described in books of natural history. Contrary to a'l rules of ani mal structure, its enormous body wan nimbly borne by legs disproportionate ly long and slender. And what was strangest of all was that this enormous creature was suspended in the air by a rope, to which it citing by some contriv ance in its feet, and by which it, slowly descended until, having reached a den or hole in the midst of a distant thicket, it plunged therein and disappeared. lie was so astonished by the unearthly vision that he stopped bis horse on the broad highway and watched the scene to its end. How was he to account for it? For, how ever incubus-like the scene, it was no dream, but a reality, to which his senses testified as positively as to his own cxist- ence. lie walc'lieu ami rcasoneu, ;mu soon the mystery was revealed. The mon ster had disappeared, but the rope along which it had so strangely traveieu was still in view. Carelully scanning that rope through the; misty air, he discovered that, instead of its overhanging the field afar oil', one of its ends was attached to 11 twig distant from him only a few steps, ami that, instead of his having looked upon a monster comparing iusie with the hippopotamus, he had only been watch ing the motions of au enormous spider, which had passed down one of the c ables of its web to the cntranuo of its den. Oh, the relief to his mind! 1 lad he not held on until the mystery was explained he must have labored to tin end ol lite under the impression, that cither he had been mentally deranged or that he had beheld a monster such as was never before seen on earth. Persons traveling upon a railroad for the first, time at the speed -f forty or fifty miles tho hour will sometimes b; horn- lied and sometimes amused at what they seem to sec. For inslauc-, in rushing ut this rate through a rugged "cut," if they will fix thj eyo sU -adily upon a projecting crag or rock on luo side of the cut and uponii level jwith the eye, it will apiieur to iucrea.se. in size so .rapidly thatthe mind, unaccustomed to obstrvc such rapid inovo lneiitd, can account. fur'H- inert -ae only on the supposition that (lie rock or crag is jtrojMctl nt thcin, and tiny will be tempted, under the vivid impression, to draw themselves quickly back from the? seeming missile, or, hi. other words, to dmlfie it. , Also, whoever, while traveling at this rate, will occupy a phice on the rear platform ami let his eyes skim along the rati directly beneath, will hardly be able to escape from the conviction that the rail, 'instead of being a fixture on the road, is not running forward at a speed al most equal to Unit of the car. In passing by rail over a wide, grassy prairie, or by i-teaniboat through the im mense leve ls "of green marsh bordering our Southern , seaboardthe head becomes al most giddy with the ceaseless whirl which Is visibly" around anvpoint as a center on which the. eye happens to Ix fixed, all objects n-arer th.-'n the point seeming to run rapidly back,. -ami all further objects as rapidly 'forward. This gyration U so graceful that the observer is temple! to watch it long. Altera lew minutes, however, unless forewarned, be is liable to experience an illusion whic h for a mo ment or two may give him serious dis turbance ut least such Wiis the experi ence of the writer. On a bleak winter's day he was passing by steamboat through a wide and beautiful marsh, and was en joying the apparent motion just described, from the warmest place attaimible.on deck, which was to the leeward of tlu hot iron chimney. Suddenly turning his eyes from the green marsh to a spot on deck above the wheel-shaft, he was startled to see the planks apparently forced from their fastenings as il by some slow, resist less power, which moved them past each other at the rate of several inches K-r sec ond. Having not loubl (for ''seeing is believing") that Serious derangement had happened to the machinery below, and that the floor would soon b a total wreck, be sprang hastily awuy from the danger ous neighborhood, anil nt u safe distance turned to watch the progm-s of the acc i dent. To his surprise there was no break whatever. The planks occupied tin; Hume relative position, although they permed even y t to be slightly niov'ng. At this moment the thought occurred that the seeming motion of the planks was a re versed resemblance of the seeming whirl of the marsh, and was to be accounted for by the persistent impression made upon the retina. Hundreds of times since has lie enjoyed the illusion and called the at tention of others te it , many of w hom had never observed it before. There is another optical phenomenon, not euite so 'much of an illusion, ye t, being only a tceminff, must be put into the same category. When the sun shines brightly u 1 xm the floor of a piazza or of an open bridge, causing a strong contrast between the- illuminated faces of tin planks n,'l the jVirk lines of division be tween, if anyone w ill walk firmly across these planks an! Inte-r-tires, keeping the line of tight steadily fixed downw ard and forward atari angle of about forty-five de grees with lhe floor, he will prlf,ri see a strange quivering of the planks, as if the ll'Mir was about to give way. The epiulilying adverb " probably" is used be cause, although some persons discern the quivering oh their lir-t trial, : others can not discern it alter repeated attempts. The quivering deje.s not take pla o within the circle of perfect vision, but just iuti1i f ft, yet, so great did it appear to the one who first observed it, that he thought the bridge on which he. was walking was about to be shaken to pieces. This illu sion is explained by remembering that the inferior of the eye ball is partly filled witli fluids, which, "being jarred by the heel striking firmly upon the floor, cause a wavy" motion of the retina in till tho-- parts not kept steady by the muscles of the eye. We give no notice of those remarkable, and in some, iustanccs terrible hallucina tions at'endant upon a fctate of disease hallucinations in which the individual sees as plainly as with the real eye the figures and fac es of friends far distant, or of persons diseased, or of strangers never seen Ieforc, and, in cast s h (Irfirimn tremrn, of fierce demons haunting the sight or clinging to the person. The omission has been intentional. The ob ject of the writer was to describe only those cases which hive fallen under his own observation, and in which all persons may feel a practical interest, for the reason that they occur in evcry-day 1 nl ""' greater "part of 1 hem may be verified, by anyone who will keep the eyes open at the proper time. '. Jl. Hcnhhhy.in Ajq ?rtn' Jwrttiil. A question, to come before the Texas Constitutional Convention Is that of the establishment of corporal puni; .-hub -nt t y the whipping-post and stocks.