THE HERALD. rUBLISOED KVEKY THURSDAY PLATTSMOUThT NEBRASKA. Oa Vino St.. On. Block North of Main Corner of Fifth St. OFFICIAL PAPEK OF CASS COCSTV. Terms, in Advance: One copy, one year , 00 Olie CODT. aix months -' One C9D7. tore months " " f .CD j WEBKASKA Ell B JN0- A MACMURPHY, Editor. PERSEVERAXCE COXQITRS.' TEEMS: $2.00 a Year. VOLUME XL PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1875. NUMBER 21). THE HERALD. alvkiiti.i:vo nxig.. fACC. 1 Kpiaru.. 3 uiinrt'i 8 'iiarm. it column. J column. 1 column. Iw. If, S w. 1 1 in. I S m, 6 m. 1 jr. l Oil f 1 Wt tl 00 f Bfl'fSOO K 00 f IS i rn; a i a 7-i a s.r. bo 10 on is ot a 8 7!i 4 Oeil 4 7&I Ce'1.1 00 'J 5 (n h on 10 on i a ) of) on 8VX 8 CO 13 00 IB 00 1H (41 S!l 00 40 OH UlmJt i: Mvm oo aj nous on o now on 100 i l'15r" All Advertising tills duo eitiarterljr. 'raiiHlout advcrtlHtDic;itn xnupt betiftidfof In advance. Extra coii of the IIehali for tale by M.S. Htrcf'.'hf. at the Pnnfflre, ami O. F. Johnson, cor ner of Ataiu aud KifUi treta. HENRY BCF I ruLniture, ange, Tables, Bedsteads, Hk. BTO., BTO, Of All Descriptions. METALLIC BURIAL CASES. r. i i wooden Coffins Of U ilzea, ready-made, and told cheap fer cut With many thank for pt patronage, I tnrtt U X call and xanu my LARGB STOCK OF ITiirnitiir and Cofllns. AND MEDICINES AT J. H. BUTTERY'S, On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth. Wholesale aid Retail Dealer in Drugs and medicines, Paints. Oils, "Varnishes. Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, etc. etc. nTTRESCRIPTIONS carefully compounded at all hour, day and night. 35-1 y J. W. SHANNON'S Feed, Sale and Livery Main Street, Plattsmouth, TJeb. I am prepared to accommoi-( the public with ZEISS, Carriage?., Buggies, Wagons, AND A No. I Hearse, On Short Notice and Reasonable Terms. A HACK Will Run to the Steamboat Land ing, Depot, and all parts of the City, when Desired. Janl-tf First National Bank Of Plattsmouth, Nebraska, erccsssoB to Tootle, Iliiimrv Sz Clarlc. foRH Fitzgerald E. a. Dotet A. W. McLauhlis... John O'Kocm President Vice-President. Cashier. . . . Atitant Cashier. This Bank is now open for business at their new room, corner Main and Sixth streets, and are pre pared to traDbacl a general BANKING BUSINESS. Stocks, Bords, Gold. Government and Local Securities BOUGHT AND SOLD. Deposits Received and Interest Al lowed on Time Certificates. DBAPT8 DRAWN. Available In any part of the United States and In all the Yriucipal Towns aud Citiea of Eurupe. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED DHUN LINE ail ALLAH LINE OTP STEA3IERS. Tereona wiahlng to bring out their friend from Europe can rmriAsi ticket mo rs Xliroujjli to Plattsmotitli. Excelsior Barber Shop. J. C- BOONE, Main Street, opposite Saunders House. HAIR-CUTTING, Shaving and Shampooing. ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO Cutting Children's and Ladies' Hair. Call and Ses Boone, Gents, And get a boon In a pjl-ly GO TO THE Post Office Book Store, H. J. STBEIGHT, Proprietor, ro Totra Bcols. Stationery, Pictures, Music. TOYS. CONFECTIONERY, Violin Strings. Newspapers, Novels, Song Books, etc., ets POST OFFICE BUILDING PLATTSMOUTH. NEB, C. F. JOHNSON, DEALER Uf Drugs, Medicines, 4SD WALL PAPER. All Paper TrisMFree of Charge ALSO. DEALER IN Books, Stationery 31AGAZINES AND LATEST PUBLICATIONS. Mr Prtscrlpt'.one carefully eompoonded by an experienced Drnryiat- ti REMEMBER THE PLACE Cor. Fifth and Main Streets, PLATTSMOUTH, NEB. THOS. W- HRYOCK, DBALBB TK IT arniture I Main St., bet. 5th and 6th, PLATTSMOUTH, - NEB. UNDERTAKER, And baa on hand a large stock of letallio Burial Cases, Wooden Coffins, Etc., Of all sizes, cheap for cash. Funerals Attended on Short Notice II. J. VATER1IM & SOX, Wbolenale and Ketail Dealer In PINE LUMBER, Lath, Shingles, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC., On Slain St., oor. Fifth, PLA.TTSMOUTH, - - - TEB. FOR YOUR CROCERIES GO TO J.V.WECKBACH Cor. Third and JIaiu Sta., riattsmouth. (Uuthniann's old Btand.) , lie keeps on hand a large and well-selected 6tock of Fancy Groceries, COFFEES, TEAS, Sigar, Sirup, ETC., ETC., Also a Large Stock of DRY GOODS Boots and Shoes, CKOCKEltY, (JUEENS WAKE, Etc., Etc., Etc. In connection with the Grocery is a BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY. Hichest Price Paid Tor Country Produce. A full etock at all times, and will not be undersold. Take notice of the Sign: " EMPIRE BAKERY AND GROCERY." nlyl WILLIAM STADELMANN Haa hand ene ef (he largest stock! of CLOTHING AUD Gents' Furnishing Goods FOR SPRING AND SUMMER. I inrite trrrjhotj in want of anything in my line te call at ny store. South Side Main, bet. 5th & 6th Sts., And conrinc thrnwlres of the fact. I have as a pecia!T in my R-til Departments a stock of Vine Clothing for Mrn and B.iys, ( which we 1b Tite those wb want eeudi. I also kef p en banil a large and well-selected Itock ef Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Etc. Jarlyl PLATTSMOUTH MILLS, rLATTSMOCTH NEBRASKA. Coisas Hbisil, Proprietor. FLOUR, CORN MEAL, FEED. Ilways en hand and for sale at lowest casli prices. The Highest Prices paid for Wheat and Cora. Particalar attention iirea to custom werk. CURRENT PARAGRAPHS. The Massachusetts Prohibitionists bave nominated John J. Baker for Governor D. O. JIili-s haa been chosen President of the Bank of California under the new organization. for i hk receipts irom internal revenue the fiscal year up to the 2d were -2i),.! 087, and from customs $44,42-VM. Tun "Garden House," near "West minster, England, valued with its con tents at over $'2,500,000, has Lccn totally de. ttroyed by'fire. The celebrated trotter "American Girl" dropped dead on the track while trotting a race at Elniira, N. Y., on the 2d. bhc was valued at !f:50,000. The United States Assistant Treasurer at New York Iiuh been directed to sell $1,0(30,000 in gold on each Thursday of the present month ?4,000,000 in all. The jeaches sent by the steamer Cana da from New York to London arrived at the latter port on the 5th in good order, and met with ready sale at large prices. The New York Supreme Court has con firmed the decision of the lower court de nying the motion to vacate the order of ar. rest on the $J,000,JOO suit against William M. Tweed and ordering $3,000,000 bail. The Sublime Porte of Turkey has de creed that durirjg five years from Jan. 1, IS tb, the interest on and the redemption of the public ilebt will be paid one-half in cash and the other half in 5 per cent, bonds. TKl" l.illa have been found by the Gradjury of the District of Columbia painst Benjamin B. Ilalleck, "William II. Ottman and T. "W. Brown for having been concerned in the $47,000 robberj of the United States Treasury. The official canvass of the votes on the New Jersey constitutional amendments shows that all received a majority ot more than 40,000 except the twelfth amendment, known as the "Five-County act," which received a majority of G.731. At the recent session in Cincinnati of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America Very liev. Patrick Byrne, of New Jersey, was chosen President and James "W. O'Brien, of New York city, Secretary of the society for the ensuing year. TnE United States Supreme Court has recently decided, in the appealed St. Louis Minor case, that the new amendments to the National Constitution do not confer the right of suffrage upon anyone, and that the Constitution and laws of the sev eral States which confine that right to men alone are not necessarily void. EPITOME OF THE WEEK. CONDENSED TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. The Secretary of the Treasury has given notice that the principal and accrued in terest of 5-20 bonds of the issue of June 30, 184, to the amount of $2,500,000, and of registered bonds to the same amount, will be paid at the Treasury at "Washing ton on and after Jan. 1, 187(5, and that in terest on said bonds will cease on that day. The Bank of California resumed opera tions on the 2d, the opening of the doors being loudly cheered by a large concourse of people. Large amounts were deposited in and drawn from the bank during the day, the former exceeding the latter by about $750,000. Announcement was made that $7,930,000 had been subscribed to meet the indebtedness and liabilities of the bank and continue its business. According to the ruling of the Poit oflice Department, anything whatever, except the address, printed or written upon the sido of a postal-card intended for the address renders such card unmail able, and the same cannot be legally for warded unless prepaid at the letter rate three cents. But if by inadvertence it reaches its destination without such pre payment it is chargeable with double the letter rates, under the provisions of the Postal laws. The Labor-Reformers of Massachusetts met in convention at "Worcester on the Gth and nominated "Wendell Phillips for Governor; Vm. M. Bartlett, Lieutenant Governor; Israel "W. Andrews, Secretary of State; S. B. Coffin, State Treasurer; John F. Fitzgerald, State Auditor, and II. B. McLaughlin, Attorney-General. Reso lutions were adopted favoring a reduc tion in the hours of labor and a system of factor3" inspection ; condemning the ac tion of the manufacturers of Fall Biver; favoring the greenback currency and the retirement of National Bank currency. The following ithe public debt state ment for the month of September: Six per cent, bonds Five per cent, bonds . Total coin bonds Lawful money debt Matured debt Leeal-teuder notes Certificates of deposit ...... Fractional currency Coin certificates Interest . $1,070,610,1(10 . $1,703,431 1 4.O0O.OII0 .M:i.WiO 374.011 ,- 60.fWI,HIO 40,71.575 ll.ti4.VJHU 30,?,04.i4 . $:,255,74U,e9j Total debt Caen in Treasury Coin $ti7.fi33 316 Currency 4,7tW,35 Special "deposit held for the re demption of certificates of deposit. 60,66n,oro Total In Treasury $133.383.(8 Debt less cash in Treasury... l)ecreae during September. Decreaxe since June a0 Bonds Issncd to the Pacific Railway Companies, interest payable in lawful money, principal outstand ing " Interest accrned and not yet paid. .. Interest paid hy tbe Vnited States.. Interest repaid by the transporta tion of mails, etc Balance of interest paid by United States $2.122. 4tJ S27 3,312.rttt e,-jaa.4M $64,623,512 Ht59.S.V2 6,396,524 21,806,283 The exact relations of matrimony and money bother the brains of economists. They think love ought always to go with good bank accounts but it don't and that bairns should le born where there is bread to feed them, which is oftentimes very far from the fact. Marriage is one of the things that does not get regulated by prices current, and the less people have of worldly goods the more reason there is for their joining hands to get and save. Mar riage does more to educate thrift tliiin thrift to make marriages, and people who seek a fortune first and a home afterward seldom get anything more than the shell of either. Golden, Age. The Sutro Tunnel is advancing at the rate of 100 feet a week. The Comptroller of the Currency re ports that eighty-three National Banks have been organized since the passage of the act of Jan. 14, 175, with capital of ;,234,OO0, to which circulation has Ix'c n issued amounting to $3,023,730. The total amount of additional circulation is sued since the passage of the act is $10,- 218,000, of w hich $1,740,000 has been is sued to Pennsylvania, $114,000 to "West Virginia, $3()!,(K0 to Kentucky, $234,000 to Ohio, $331,000 to Indiana, $100,000 to Illinois, and $121,000 to Iowa. The total amount of legal-tender notes deposited for the purpose of retiring circulation from the passage of the act of June 20, 1874, to Oct. 1, 1875, is $25,042,749. The amount of National Bank circulation out standing on the 1st was $347,803,742 be ing $2,000,000 less than on June 20, 1874, and $4,000,000 less than on Jan. 14, 1875. The mother of little Mabel Young, the victim of the belfry-murder at Boston, has lost her reason and has been placed in an insane asylum in that city. TnE new mint, it was conceded at Washington on the 3d, will be located at Chicago. China and Burmah had, according to a Rangoon special to the London Times, formed an alliance, offensive and defens ive, to oppose the demands of Great Britain. Lord Napier, it was reported, had resigned his position as commander of the British forces in India. Dispatches of the 3d from Belgrade say the insurgents had been defeated in an engagement in the northern part of Bos nia. The Turks were reported to have burned the town and church of Misch- kovac. A San Sebastian telegram of the 3d says the Carlists had on the preceding day thrown 150 hot shot into that city. A railroad train between Saragossa and Barcelona had been stopped by brigands and all the passengers robbed. Among them were seventeen officers and seamen of the United States war vessel Franklin- Gate steamer which reached London on the 3d brought intelligence of the rind ing of a 150-carat diamond in the South African diamond fields. Necotiations with the Sioux Indians for the Black Hills country have failed, and the commissioners have abandoned al efforts in this behalf. A Cheyenne disl patch of the 2d says great dissatisfaction prevailed among the bands of Indians who had been assembled at the lied Cloud Agency. The Third Avenue Savings Bank of New York city has failed. Amount due depositors, $1,340,000. The failure is said to be a bad one. A San Sebastian dispatch of the 4th says the Carlists have offered to discon tinue the bombardment of the town pro vided the citizens would pay them $100, 000. The steamer L. J. Bager, running on the Baltic between Lubeck and Copenha gen, was burned on the night of the 3d. Twenty-four passengers and eleven sett men perished. A religious procession in Toronto on Sunday, the 3d, was attacked by a mobt and when the police attempted to disperse the assailants the rioters turned upon them and firing ensued, several persons being wounded. The police then guarded the procession through the streets and were firKl upon at the crossings, and ser eral other persons were wounded, some of them fatally. DisrATCiiEs of the 4th give accounts of a horrible outrage and murder at Suncook, N. II. The mutilated body of a young lady named Josie Longmaid, seventeen years old, had been found in a piece of woods half a mile from the road over which she had started in the morning to go to school. The head was missing, having been entirely severed from the body. Memorial serv ices in honor of the late President Johnson were held at Nash ville, Tenn., on the 2d, and were partici pated in by citizens from many portions of the State. At the recent town elections in Con necticut the larger places generally voted for liquor license and the smaller towns were about equally divided on the ques tion. Hartford gave 1,100 and East Hart ford 2 majority for license and Danbury voted no license. Vice-President "Wilson has been counseled by his medical advisers to abandon his intention to lecture this season, as it would prove too serious a strain on his constitution if undertaken in addition to his otlicial duties and the com pletion of his book. An immense meeting to protest against Vaticanism was held at Glasgow, Scot land, on the 5th. The taxes remitted by Turkey since the beginning of the trouble with its Christian provinces amount to over $30,000,000. The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions of the Congregation al Church met in Chicago on the 5th. The attendance was large, representatives to the number of over LJOO being present from all the States in the Union and from Canada. The Comptroller of the Currency has called upon National Banks for a report exhibiting their condition at the close of business on Friday, the 1st of October. It was reported on the 7th that the in habitants of Arran-Valley had inaugurated a general rising against the Carlists on ac count of the exactions of the soldiery, and that the latter had been compelled to take refuge in the mountains. The epizootic in a mild form has broken out among the horses in Cincin nati, Chicago, St. Louis and other West ern cities. Memthis dispatches of the Cth report serious disturbances as having occurred at Friar's Point, Miss. It is stated that at a Conservative convention on the night of the 2d Senator Vloorn severely criticised the ofiicial conduct of Brown (colored), Sheriff of the county, and the next day Brown used severe language in reply, when Alcorn threatened to shoot him. Brown then summoned a number of ne groes, who prepared to come to his as sistance. On the 5th all the women and children were sent f rom Friar's Point, and the place w as attacked by a force of 500 negroes, who were repulsed by white forces under Gen. Chalmers. In the skir misn eifftit negroes ana one white man were wounded. At the recent election in Connecticut the State Constitution was amended so as to change the time of the State election from the spring to the fall of the year and to make the Governor's term of office two years. The failure for a large amount of Brown, Stevens & Williamson, heavy su gar-refiners of Glasgow, Scotland, was an nounced on the 7th. Owi.vo to popular outcry the British Admiralty on the 7ih suspended the cir cular of July 31, directing the surrender of fugitive slaves found on British ves stls. The hog-cholt ra was playing sad havoc at Columbus, Ohio, and vicinity on the 7th. Six thousand hogs had already died so far this month in Franklin. County. President Grant and party arrived at Denver on the 7th from Southern Colo rado. Special telegrams from Friar's Point, Miss., on the 7th state that Gen. Chal mers was driving the colored forces under Pease (colored) and was determined to capture him if possible. In the skirmish es which took place on the 5th a white man was fatally wounded and three ne groes were killed and one wounded, prob ably fatal 13-. Senator Alcorn on the 7th sent a dispatch to Atty.-Gen. Pierrepont staring that there was no question of poli tics in these disturbances; the whites were to a man for defense, and the negroes who had leeii misled were fast being reconciled. He stated that his name had been most ridiculously associated iu the matter. The Bishop of Berlin has been deposed hy the German Ecclesiastical Court. THE MARKETS. Octobkr 9, 1875. SEW YORK. Live Stock. Beef Cattle $ 9 .00312 01. Hog Live, $S.25(&8.37',i- Sheep Live, $l.i5.73. Breadstuff. Flour Good to choice, $tj.203 6.65; white wheat extra, $6.6V37.60. Wheat No. Chicago, fl.261.27; No. 2 Northwestern, fl.aSai-27; No. 2 Milwaukee spring, $1.) 1 30V4. Rye Western and State, 8S0.ic. Bar ley 1.15Sl-20. Corn Mixed Western, OS 69c. OaU Mixed Western 44345c. Provisions. Pork Mess, JJ.25&2J.40. Lard Prime Steam, 13?i13?ic Cheese 6;4S12!Jc. Wool.. Domestic Fleece, 43a6:c. CHICAGO. Live Stock. Beeves Choice, fi.505.7o; good, $4.753 .00; medium, $1.154.65; butch ers' stock, $2.&0&3.75; stock cattle, $3."0 3.75. Hogs Live, $7.758.80. Sheep Good to Choice, $ l.25(&4.73. Provisions. Butter Choice, 31.3-31C E.jijs Fresh, 22223c. Pork Mess, 322.6yS22.75. Lard $13.15313.20. Bhe adptcffs. Flour White Winter Extra, $5.75(37.50; spring extra, f5.00aii.01. Wheat Spring, To. 2, S1.08&1.0S?.,. Com No. 3, 57li 57',ic. Oats No. 2, 32'i52C Rye o. 2, 72(&72;.c. Barley No. 2, 9:QV7i. Lcmbek. First and Second Clear, $13.00 45.(0; Common Boards, 3iO.5nflll.OO; Fencing, $10.50&H.00; "A" Shingles, $2.50i32.90 ; Lath, $1.752.L0. EAST LIBERTY. Livb Stock Beeves Best, $ -.50(gi5.75; me dium, SSSC&'i.TS Hogs Yorkers, $7.00(7.65; Philadelphia, gS.S.fSS.rO. Sheep Best, $5.00-3 5.S5; medium, $1.50 1.75. The Recent New Hampshire Horror. Concord. 11., Oct. 5. The terrible outrage at Suncook, re ported late last evening, has aroused in tense excitement all over the State, and hundreds are thronging the trains in their eager curiosity to visit the sceue. The discoveries of "to-day have, however, been few. Miss Josie Longmaid, eighteen years old, daughter of James T.Longmaid, w ho resides a mile and a half from the Pem broke Academy, left home for the acade my at eight o'clock yesterday morning. The road is a lonely o'ne, and in that dis tance there are but ix houses. She was seen to pass the house of Mr. Amos Hoyt, a fourth of a mile from her home, but after that was not seen alive, nor did she reach the academy. She was not missed till evening, for her younger brother sup posed that she had remained at home. Her father at once aroused the neighbors and a systematic search was begun on both sides of the road. Shortly after eight o'clock Mr. Cope, one of the party, came upon her headless body in a dense undergrowth of birch, about three rods from the road, a mile from home. The father was the third or fourth man to see it, and as his eyes fell upon the sickening sight he ex claimed : " Oh, my God!" and threw him self beside the bloody corpse, alternately kneeling beside it and embracing it. The ground and leaves for quite a space were completely saturated with blood, as was the butt ot the tree. The clothing of the girl was torn into shreds and her under clothing torn and saturated with blood. Her dress and chemise were stripped to her breast, and three bones of the right hand were broken, as if the hand had been struck when vainly attempting to ward off a blow. The head was cut off cleanly, as if cut by a large, sharp knife. The spinal column was severed between the first and second vertebrae. It was the unanimous opinion of the physicians that decapita tion was performed or begun before the girl was dead, because of the evidence of her having bled freely. The body was otherwise horribly mutilated. Two rings, one of plain gold and one rubber, and a gold-enameled breast-pin and ear-rings were not to be found on the body. The body -was taken home, placed in the same position as when found, the right leg doubled under the left, the right arm laid across the breast and left one under the back. At dawn search was begun by a large party for the missing head, books and water-proof cloak. About eight o'clock Horace Ayer found the head part ly rolled up in the water-proof about seventy-five rods northwest of where the body was found, in the . same piece of woods. It was partially uncovered, rest ing on the water-proof, which was care fully thrown over it, but not quite con cealing it. There was a wound on each side some inches long, and a cut on the top. On the right cheek there was a well-defined print of a boot-heel, medium size. There was also a cut on her cheek, jii3t front of the left ear, that was probably made by some sharp instru ment. A few minutes later the books were found, and near by a heavy oak stick considerably stained with blood. At about ten o'clock Deputy-Sheriff Hildreth txk one William Drew, of Pem broke, into custody on suspicion. Drew is a young man, twenty-two years of age, of dissolute habits, and lives alout a half mile back of the woods where the murder was committed. He is married to a woman fully as dissolute. It was thought advisable to lock him up. Though there is as 3-et no direct proof pointing to him as the assassin, Officer Hildreth was obliged to draw his pistol on the crowd when he locked Drew up at Suncook. A negro nanred Charles Woods has also leen arrested on suspicion of being con cerned in the crime went and A distracted Staten Islander who has lain awake all night for several weeks past proposes to offer a prize ot $500 for tle best treatise on "How to make out-door life attractive to mosquitoes." The Boy In Church. He was playing at the gate as I past, and I heard his father call out: "Boy, you want to irallop in here get ready for meeting " "Shi:" brklly repeated the lad. " Shi! I'll shi you, young man, if you don't trot in here lively! You'd be as bad as Jesse Pomeroy if left without a father for three months!'' " I w ould, hey V" " No, sass, young man it's time you were getting ready fur churc h!" The minister was giving out his text when the boy and his father came in. There was considerable improvement in the lad's looks. His hair had been greased and combed, he had on his Sun day jacket, and there was a religious look in li is eyes as he fell into the pew. I ought to have listened closely to the sermon, but 1 cud not. lhe loy and his father were in the pew next ahead, and 1 couldn't he lp but watch him. I have my opinion alxjut forcing boys of ten or twelve years ot age to listen to sermons which not one adult mind in five can fully grasp, anil i was willing to chtmce mv theory on that boy's actions. lie got along very well for the first ten minutes. Then he asked his father what time it was, and when the parent replied with a warning shake ot the head the boy cast around him for something to interest his mind. The preacher settled down to his discourse and the loy settled down to his plan of wearing away the coming hour. He reached over and got hold ol his father's silk hat, and was trying to re move the band when the parent took it awav and bent over and whispered: ' Boy, if vou don't pay attention to the preac her I'll break your neck w hen we get home!" lhe lad hxed his eyes on the clergyman. He saw that the pood man had auburn lair, blue eyes, florid complexion, and was wen uresseu. lie neuru mm make use of such words as "fortuitous," "un exampled," and " repellant," and without being able to tell whether they referred to a new kind of string-ln-ans or the Gospel t Christian light, he reached out and secured his father's cane. He punched it several flies, crammed the silver head into his mouth until he turned purple in the face, and finally reached over and jabbed a woman under the left shoulder. His father then grasped the cane, laid it away, and whispered: "ioungman, 1 11 tan the hide olt'n vou when we get home!" The words were intended to make the boy paj' strict attention to the balance of the sermon. He straightened up, looked at the preacher again, and tried hard to understand the discourse. The good man was trying to explain the difference be tween , theoretical and practical Chris- ianity, and in two minutes the lad's eyes were fixed on the chandeliers. He couut- d the number of burners over and over, and forgetting himself for an instant he began to sing. His father gave him a kick and leaned over and whispered: Oli! boy, I'll make you hump the minute we ret into the house! ' Knowing that his father would keep his word, but 3'ct hoping to break the force of the pros pective " peeling" by being real good lor the next half hour, the boy faced the clerffvman again. He knit his brow and plainly showed his determination to un derstand and interest himself in all that was said. The goxl man was drawing a parallel, and a dozen of the church mem bers were halt asleep. It was uiseourag- nsr, and alter two or three minutes the b y got hold of a bit of paper, wadded it up, stinted it into ins mouin, and cneweu t awhile, and then balancing the wad 011 his thumb, he elevated it ten feet toward the ceiling. The law of gravitation applies to paper- wads as well as to iron weights. This one came down in a short time, and, as luck would have it. it struck the bald pate of the half-asleep sexton. The victim gave a start of alarm, whirled quickly around, and the boy's father pinched him savagely and whispered: " Oh! I'll fix you fortius! Just let me get you home once!" I couldn't see how thebo3rwas to blame. He couldn't understand one word in ten of the sermon; he saw a dozen men around him asleep ; it was a hot day ; he w as a nervous boy and used to moving around, and his own father had been gazing out of the window in an absent way for a quarter of an hour. He made a last grand effort. He braced his nerves, shut his teeth hard, and sat as erect as a new hitching-post. The clergyman seemed to look right at the boy as lie used twenty big words in suc cession, and the lad gave it up. He opened the pew door and was Drying to en tice a small dog to come in when his father awoke and whispered: " You wait oh, j-ou just wait!" The exerc ises closed just then, and the boy walked home behind his parent to get a dressing down for not having the mental calibre of a f ull-grown man, and for not sitting still and ging to sleep like his father. Af. Quad, in Xeio York Graphic. dressed to us bearing upon such a view of the subject may perhaps be sufficient to induce those having the power to maku the alteration, but they ouirlit not to bo permitted to intluence our judgment in determining the present risrhts of the par ties litigating lie fore us. o argument as to woman's need ol suflrage can lie considered. We can only act u.xm her risrhts as. they exist. It is not fur us to look at the hardship of withholding. Our duty is at an end if we rind it is within the power of a State to withhold." The United States Supreme Court on the Woman-Suffrage Question. In the Supreme Court of the United States at Washington, Oct. 4, in the case of Virginia C. Minor and Francis Minor, her husband, plaintiffs in error, v. Reese Happcrsetr, in error to the Superior Court of the State of Missouri, Chief Justice Waitc delivered the opinion of the court to the effect that the Fourteenth Amend ment of the Constitution does not confer upon women the right tovotc. The court affirms in the decision that women have always been considered citizens under the Constitution and entitled to all the privi leges and immunities of citizenship, but in the admission of this general point the court decides that suffrage is not one of the privileges and immunities of the citi zen, and that it is nowhere made so in ex press terms, and even further than this, that suflrage was not coextensive with the citizenship of the States at the time of its adoption. Appling these general facts to the constitutional amendments, the court shows that the framers of the Fourteenth Amendment never contemplated that it conferred the right of suffrage even upon the colored persons because it invested them with citizenship, and, taking this view, they framed the Fifteenth Amend ment to prevent any State denying them the right ot suffrage because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Upon this point the court said : " The Fourteenth Amendment had al ready provided that no State should make or enforce any law which should abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities why amend the Constitution to prevent its lieing de nied on account of race, etc.? Nothing is more evident than that the greater must include the less, and if all were already protected why go through with the form of amending the Constitution to protect a part." The decision closes with the following statement : ' Certainly if the courts can consider any question settled this is one. For nearly ninety years the people have acted upon the idea that the Constitution, when it conferred citizenship, did not necessa rily confer the right of suffrage. If uni form practice long continued can settle the construction of so important an instru ment as the Constitution of the United States onfcssedly i3, most certainly it has been done here. Our province i- to de cide what the law is, not to declare what it should be. We have given this case the careful consideration its importance demands. If the law is wrong it ought to be changed, but the pow er for this is not with us. The arguments ad- FACTS AM) Fl (JUKES. Georgia's debt is ft, 105,000, and she owns property worth 0,000,000. The velocity of dec trie waves through the Atlantic cable has liecn ascertained to be from t,000 to S,itM) miles pt r second. The increase in coal shipped from the Lackawanna region this year, as compared with 174, footed up f'lSS, 1 .() tons, Se pt. 11. The United States Minister at Stock holm states that 30.000 pupils study horti culture or forest-culture m the common schools of Sweden. Catti.e-uaisino in Brazil is subject to much greater development than exists at present. Ihere are estimated to exist 111 the Umpire about 20,000,000 head of cat tle. It is said that among the statutes of Massachusetts is an unrepealed law which tines a young man for walking out with his sweetheart after sundown. The population of Minnesota, according to the census just taken, the population of liamsey County being estimated at 3t,0K), is 003, K50. This is an increase of about 104,000 since 1870. In the Monongahcla coal-trade there arc now engaged 125 steam tow-lxiats and 3,000 barges and lioats, having an aggregate tonnage of 1,300,000 a tonnage greater than all the rest of the Mississippi Valley. The embezzlement of Paxton, the gay and festive teller of the Mechanics' Bank, of Montreal, is swelling its fair propor tions. As far as now ascertained, the amount is over $100,000, with some back counties still to heir from. The most dangerous mines in the United States are in Schuylkill County, Pa., one man being killed there lor every 35,000 tons mined. One man is killed in England fur every 13S,000 tons mined, one in Pennsylvania for every 88.HH) tons, and one in Ohio for every 133,000 tons. This destruction of human life ought always to be considered when making complaints about dear fuel. No doubt the price-soften charged for coal are too clear, but the excess of charge s is'onthe part of those who own the mines, and never on that of those w ho work them. In 1SG0 Russia had 100 foundries and machine shops, only 52 of which were provided with steam. At the present time there are 302 of these establishments, 7'J of which are exclusively occupied with the manufacture of agricultural implements. Statistics are to hand concerning 1 7'J shops only; these employ 40,528 workmen. In lScM there were 222 locomotives made in Uussia; last year the number was 708. A large number of English workmen are employed in Russian engineering shops, but they complain of biding treated as naturalized Russian subjects that is to say, their personal rights and liberties are but little respected. With 9,000,000 bushels of surplus wheat this year Kansas farmers will re ceive !f!),(K0,000 clear from that crop alone. For their 51,000,000 bushel of surplus corn they will get at least !?13, 000,000. Allowing them only !5,000,M)0 for other marketable crops we find that they will have $27,000,000 to pay debts and. make improvements, besides begin ning another year with ample provisions to last their families and farm stock till another crop can be raised. How is that for a " grasshopper country" settled since the war? In live years from now the un organized! counties of Kansas, that do not at present contain a single human habita tion or agricultural implement, will be shipping more wheat thau California. Leavenworth Times. Her First Beau. You knew at once by her general appear ance and the manner in which she smiled and the giggles she giggled and the way that she talked that this was the first time that she had ever had a beau. She was, in fact, very much excited, and, like a per son stricken with the first shock of numb palsy, didn't know exactly how to use her tongue. The blood rushed to her head until there was a tremendous buzzing in her ears, and she recognized all her ac quaintances, old and young, and called them by name in a loud tone of voice, and wore at the same time a very triumphant expression of countenance. It was a mo ment of intense ecstasy (to her) a moment looked and longed for ever since she got in her teens; and all the heroes and hero ines of all the dime novels she had ever read went trooping across her vision like a row of bees in swarming time. Apples and peaches and hollyhocks and mush rooms aud pumpkins and hedge fences, as they hung on trees or blossomed on stalks, or grew in the grass, or tore her new dress as she swept by them, borne almost lrom her feet by an electric force all passed as an accessory panorama of bliss on her w ay to the circus, that glorious, grand, never-to-be-forgotten noondny of her new exjK'i i ence. Did she enjoy the show? Did she remember how the elephant etood on his hind feet? Did she follow the flight of the great, unsurpassed, unrivaled, wonder ful, astonishing, most daring bareback rider in the world, as he dived in a doubled-up way through two hoops and alighted on the horse again right side up? Was the music the most delightful she had ever heard? Of course! But some how these things got all mixed up in one glorious whirl of delight, in the one glo rious fact that she had" a beau a nice beau in black cloth and a red necktie and a stovepipe hat, and who smoked a cigar and bought peanuts and candy and lemonade every time the man who sold it came around and whispered his goods so softly that the noise of the band and the best ten-year-old joke of the clown were drowned out of hearing entirely. Oh, how her little heart went pit-a-pit and trobbjty throb and bobbyty-bob on her way home that glorious afternoon! Jlodiester Chron- A Man of Nerve. On Monday forenoon a numlcr of trot ters were leing exercised at the driving park, among them Effie Deane, driven by the well-known horse-raiser, Alden Gold smith. The horses were trotting at a live ly pace and were all bunched in a heap whe n one of Effie's reins broke, and Gold smith toppled over backward, and every spectator expected to see him drop from the sulky and man sled by the feet of the crowd of horses behind. This tragedy was prevented, however, for Goldsmith, whose feet caught in the foot-rests of the thills, recovered himself and then gave an exhibition of nerve that was most thrill ing. The mare, released from the restraint of the taut reins, broke into a run and flew ahead like the wind, leaving all of the others behind. While she was going at this rate Goldsmith crawled over her back until bv reaching forward he could get hold of the snaflle of tbe bit, and then, ly in? upon her neck, he brought her up with a sudden pull that carried her almost perpendicularly in the air. He was heart ily applauded by all who w itnessed the daring deed. Kinji-tva (X. V.) Freeman. Sunstroke has numbered few victims during the present season. SEXSE AM) XONSE.VSE. The Constable who had an attachment for a widow was informed with dignity that his affections were not reriprocatctf. Thk fishe ries in the Gulf of St. Law rence this season have proved compara tive failures so far as nun kered are con cerned. In a certain New York whitlow ia dis played this suggestive notice: " 15oy want ed, that has fully rested himself and is not too intellec tual." A NEwi.YCoMri.ETEn Danbury house has folding doors. The man designed single doors, but his wifes preferred the former. She said they were so handy in case of a funeral. Ik you see any young lady careless in Iter apparel jut now you may conclude she's curtailing expenses so as to go in heavy on papa when the Emperor ol Brazil comes. I'iie crisp weathe r which calls for fall overcoats appears to have snuffed out the sea-serpe nt. He hasn't been heard from for three weeks, and this is a good year for the sea-serpents, too. Boston has a " Soc iety for the Encour urciiicnt of Studies at Home." Imagine a stubby six-year-old, with a nose that needs attending to, a member of a society with a name like that! In one of the large London hotels they have introduced steam machinery for washing the dirty plates and dishes, and also lor cleaning boots and knives and forks. It is said to answer well. In accordance with the provisions of the Connecticut Fac tory law an officer took eight children from a Daniel sonville (Conn.) mill recently, and or dered their parents to send them to school. "Two FsnocB Falls (Minn.) men, driving behind a team of mules, discov ered a glitter on the hoof of one of them, examined it and found a gold ring which the mule had stepped on and sccuml with the cork of Ids shoe." liomance set afloat by a designing Coroner. The Lynchburg (Va.) Tlejnibliean, reports squirrels migrating southward in large numbers, saying " they may le seen aliove and below the city just before nightfall crossing the river on their bark boats, using their tails as sails w hen the wind is favorable." Teaching the young idea how to shoot: A son of Capt. George M. Bailey, of Grot on. Conn., was shot in the hand by the accidental discharge of a pistol whic h he was examining in sc hool the other da', and investigation showed that four other . pupils present were similarly armed. The Wichita (Kan.) Benson says that a ninety-pound watermelon has been raised within gun-shot of the editor's back-win-dow. This may lie true, but it must have been within gun-shot of the owner's buck windejw, also; it would be too much to ask anyone to believe that, it was ever al lowed to reach maturity otherwise. Chi- Mfjo 1 imes. I he business of selling degrees purport ing to be granted by medical colleges In Philadelphia still flourishes abroad; and then; is a standing advertisement of sue h degrees in the English papers. The charge for the degree of Ph. 1)., from the "American University of Philadelphia" is 20, which includes a handsome diploma. J. B. Smith, a Boston colored caterer, presented a check at the bank the oilier day, aud the teller asked him if he had anyone to identity him. .M r. hmitti, a toiiishcd, said : " Young man, don't you know me?" The teller confessed he did not. " Then." said Mr. Smith, " it is evi dent that ymi have not moved in the first circles of society." A man in Oxford County, Me., misse-d his pants in which was his wallet con ing if 100. He went to a fortune teller to find out about the missing property. She said that the money was Dear some water, and described the person who took It. About an hour or two alter he left, his wife, on making up the bed, found the pants tucked in between the miltress and feather bed, with the money all safe. At Eufaula, Ala., lately, a mulatto, about twenty-three j-ears of age, died from a rather unusual cause, home time ago he attended church, and some of the fe males became excited, and were surging and plunging about, and lie undertook to hold one of the more violently ffected, but in so doing she threw b;ick one of her arms with great force, striking him a meist violent blow across his chest and nearly killing him outright at the time. He recovered slightly, however, but con tinued to complain, and frequently had hemorrhages from lhe chest, or blooel spitting, and died a few days after. An enterprising undertaker in a town near New London, Conn., discovered one day recently that a wealthy stranger in town was dangerously sic k, and, scenting a job, went to work without any orders making an elegant coffin for him. To his disgust however, the sick man, soon after the ceiffin was done, began te recover, and the undertaker's friends be-gan to laugh at him. The invalid, however, had a re lapse on account if sudden exposure and fell awav again, but. seeing his end was near, desiretel his wife to take him to his home in Western New York to die. This stirred up the undertaker and he went to the woman and urged he r to buy a coffin to take with her, as lie might die on the way, and it was best to be prepared for any event. His eloquence prevailed and tiic coffin was purchfised. A pretty tableau in real life was re cently arrange:d near Ore gon, Holt Coun ty, Kan., where a young lady named Al ice Carson encouraged the attentions of two young men named Kretzcr and Wheeler. Having agreed to marry both of them, she named the same day for the wedding and trusted to luck to decide whic h should be the happy man. AVheel er arrived first w ith a traveling minister, and hardly had the ceremony bee n per formed when Kretzcr appeared with a dignified Episcopalian rector. Kretzcr insisted on an explanation, while Wheeler declared that his wife should not explain her actions to any other man except him self. Pistols were drawn and knives bran dished, so that there seemed every reason to expect that the lady would be left with out either lover. The wrath of the disappointed Kretzer was finally ap peased and he was about to retire, w hen it was discovered that the two ministers were involved in a heated contest over the right of the outsider to collect his fee with out paying royalty to the regular resident clergyman. The proposition for having iTesiding Elders elected by vote of the ministers, instead of appointment by the Bishops, Is now being djscussed in the Methodist pa pers. Another change is also proposed by Dr. Potter, in the New York .4txeaj, that negotiations between congregations be al lowed and encouraged, and that the way lie opened to all alike for private arrange ments, subject only to the asent of the Presiding Bishop, who would be expected to sanction all such arrangements, except w hen decided unreasonable. The present plan of appointing by the Bishop was well, he thinks, in the old condition of things, bi't the new condition fully justi fied the proposed change;. The new plan will release the Bishop and iTesiding Elders of a vast amount of lalior and so licitude, will lessen the chance for rebel lion and w ill secure more satisfactory ap pointments. The British branch of the Evangelical Alliance has issued an invitation to its members and other friends of Christian Union to attend the next annual Confer ence at Belfast, Oct. 19 and the days following.