ri i iil mMmmmmtmmmiimm s?srnst?c -rawjfiasEia?KL -A-. W- pi . i"ii n. i"Mil' ''"' ': yvH , mi mm n Mil J " ,m " IIJBB'J Wjl g,; H3i r.. Br' II - HE L --i !'-. 1 :' i . V- Jr j: .5-T' I y "-Sr-jsr THE BED CLOUD CHEF. X. U THOMAS, raklltkcr. BED CLOUD, - NEBRASKA. INSURED AND MURDERED. Why Joneph Kabcr Friend Drowned HJni-MM ThoBBd lollara of Iniir miic3 on a VorthIe Man' IAfeTh Four Holder of the l.llcl lllre Two Men to. Commit the Murder The .Six Men Fouad Onlltjr. CorreHpondcncc New York Sun. Lebanon, Pa., April 25. The trial of six men for the murder of another, an aged beggar on Whole life they had ob tained insurance amounting to $30,000, has j t been concluded here, and the accused, all but one of them woorfchop- Ecrs and grossly ignorant men, have cen convicted of murder inthefirat de gree. The scene of the murder was Indian town Gap, lying 15 miles from here in the backwoods country nt the foot of the Blue Hills. It is a wild and barren forest country, inhabited by woedebop IfeH, backwoodsmen and ignorant la borers, who burn chat coal for a living. Jndiantown Creek, a shallow stream, meanders lazily through a swamp. Kack of it stands a" high range of hills. Be tween the creek and the mountains runs a public road, and by tbia stands a log cabin, over whoso door are the words, "SfcJcseph's Hotel." Israel Brandt wss'ttie proprietor. He is a one-arm d marrow ith a shrewd face -and sharp eyes, tall and portly. Back, of the hotel is a famous well of water, surrounded by four lofty cedar trees. This well is known' as " St. Joseph's Well," and has furnished cool and refreshing drink for over a hun dred years. The surroundings resem ble a scene in the Holy Land. There are tall cedars all about, and the cabins have low thatched roofs. Three nun dred yards further on in the forest stands the cabin that, up to December 8th of. last year, was the rude home of Joseph Raber, the man who was nur dered. It is roughly built of logs, .and the roof is of hickory poles, covered with grass and mud. It has no floor; and a simple board-bunk, containing a few filthy quilts, is. the bed. Every thing here indicates the most squalid aod wretched poverty; yet, strange to Ssay, this cabin was the home of a man gupon whose life insurance-policies were heia amounting at one time to $30,000. Joseph liaber wa3 about GO years of age. He was penniless and without ffiends. He did what work he could at roil-burning and wood-chopping; but most of his time was spent tramping from place to place, begging and in idleness, ino insugauon io mu mur der of such a man was this : All abaab here prevailed a reckless mania for life insurance speculation. Every body seemed to be going wild on the subject. Young men invested their surplus earn ings in insuring the lives of old people. And it happened that once a number of -men came together and selected old Joseph Raber as a desirable man to in sure for their benefit. In the rude inn known as St. Joseph's Hotel, four persons living in the neigh borhood decided to insure the old man's life. These men were Israel Brandt, the landlord of the inn ; Hi nry F. Weise, Josiah Hummel, and George Techman. A number of mutual companies were found to take the various risks, and at one time policies were held by the four amounting to $30,000. These" men had the policies assigned to them, they pay ing the premiums, and promlfcing old Raber that when ho died they would provide him a decent burial. On the afternoon of Dec. 8 of last year, the dead body of the old man was : found lying in the Indiantown Creek, near a small foot-bridge, about 125 yards from St. Joseph's Well. It was given out that, while the old man was y crossing the bridge, he was seized with a fit of vertigo, fell into the shallow water of the creek, and was drowned. This was on Saturday afternoon. The neiglibors saw the body, but no one re moved it from the water. It was left there all night, and all of the next day until late in the afternoon, when the Coroner came. The Coroner held an inquest hurriedly, and rendered a ver dict in accordance with the statements made, that the old man had fallen into the stream while suffering from an at tack of vertigo. The body was buried, and the holders of the life-insurance policies had proofs of death made out and applied for their insurance money. About SO yards from St. Joseph's Hotel stands the humble cabin of an old man named Charles Drews. He was a veteran soldier in Sedgwick's Sixth Corps, and was rewarded for great bravery on the Peninsula. He is known as Charley Drews, and has a wide ac quaintance. His wife and six children lived in that little cabin on the day when Raber was found drowned. Drews has a daughter named Lena. She is married to a young man named Joseph F. Peters. Peters visited Drews's house about the first of last December. He came there on a 10 days' furlough, be ing a private in the United States Army, and stationed at Fort Adams, Newport. On the day that Raber was found drown ed, Peters and his wife were up stairs in Drews's cabin. From the front win dow can be seen the neighboring inn, the well, and the foot-bridge across the Indiantown Creek; and from a rear window can be seen the old cabin of Raber. Several weeks after the funeral, the young soldier, Peters, went before a country Justice, and swore positively that old man Raber had been murdered. The people were still more astounded when they learned that Peters had sworn that his -father-in-law, Charles Drews, was one. of the murderers ; and that the daughter of Drews herself, (Peters's wife) was willing to corrobor ate her husband's testimony. The home Constables took the case in hand, and from additional evidence were led to arrest Charles Drews, Frank Stech ler, Weise, Brandt, Hummel, and Tech man, all of whom were lodged in the Lebanon Jail. Drews and Stechler were charged with having committed the murder direct, and the other four (who held the life insurance policies) were arrested as conspirators and acces sories before and after the fact. The trial of the prisoners lasted more . than a week. .The principal witnesses v against them were Peters and his wife, "' the son-in-law and daughter of Drews. ,;; Peters swore that, on the afternoon of the day old Raber-was found drowned, he was up-stairs with his wife. He had heard considerable talk about the in surance on the old man's life, and had been offered money to kill Raber. On the afternoon in question he heard Ra ber, Drews, and Stechler leaving the house. He watched tnem nom ui wui dow. They went down toward the creek single -file, Stechler first, Raber second, andold man Drews last. When !,. Kxinhod thp. font-bridfire crossing: the creek, and when old man Raber was about in the middle of it, Stechler turned quickly around, caught the old man by the shoulders, kicked his feet j from under hin, Mid threw him side ways into the creek. Stechler jumped after him and held old Raber'shead n der the water antil he was dead. Old Drews was with the party and assi ited. In 10 minutes Drews and Stechler came I back from the creefc to the house, and ms wue went. uuwn-Buurs. oicviuct, whose clothing was very wet, was given dry clothes by Mrs. Drews. Both Drews and Stechler remarked that old Raber was very strong, and that it required great strength to hold him under the water until he was dead. Peters was asked by the counsel for the defense why be had not made the information sooner, and he replied that Drews had threatened to kill the first man who dared to say a word about it. Mrs Peters swore that her father said, before the death of Raber, that he (Drews) was to gel 1,500 to kill the old man, from Techman, Weise, Hum mel, and Brandt, the four alleged con spirators; that her mother had told her father that they might not pay him for the awful deed, and that herep'icd: "O 03, they will paj me. We had a hard bargain, and ws made out that the first man who would back out or go back on his promise we had a right to shoot down." The young woman was on the stand about five hours, and half the time was in tears. Her aged father sat in the prisoner' row, and lookod upon her with apparent in difference. When asked why she had not informed the officials sooner, she said that the entire family wife, chil dren, and all were under a threat of instant death if they told what they knew. The testimony developed the facts that, when $30,000 of insurance was ef fected on the old man's life, the hold ers of the policies could not hire a man lo put an end to him. On several oc casions they planned to have the old man pass over a lonely road at night? but this he did not do. Finally, they were unable to pay the premiumon. bo large an amount, and about 9 20,000 dropped through by default of making up the interest. The men became des perate, as.they saw a fortune quickly slipping from their grasp. All .their money had been paiu over xorpremi ums, and still old Raber was alive.. Mrs. Peters testified that Brandt acceeed her that it was her fault that the old man bad not been killed ; that the murder mast be done by Friday or Saturday, .Dec. 8 or 9, or all the policies would ceitainly fall. Other witnesses told, Elainly and forcibly, of offers made to ill the old man. The plot was no se cretin the Drews family, and was free ly spoken of before the children ; but they were all under a threat of instant death if they breathed a word about it "to any one. ; Drews is the eldest man of tM, prison ers. His head Ad face are a nearly per fect fac-siuiile of the famous physiog nomy of G. L. Fox as clown, in full clown make-up. Drews is yellow, how ever, instead of white. He is nearly hairless, has very small blue eyes, large nose and mouth, round chin, and very round and smooth head. He is about 02 years of age. His companion in the direct murder, Frank Stechler, is the youngest of the six, and is the only un married man among them. He is about 21. His uncle testified that the young man was induced to help Drews to do the deed under a promise of $200. There are in this region hundreds of cases where o'd and decrepitold persons have teen induced to have their lives insured, under promise that they would bu decently buried and have a nice gravestone. The policies are at once assigned to the person who pays the premiums, and who subsequently waits with an anxious heart for the death of the person insured. All the temptations for loul play can be readily imagined especially here in this wild backwoods country. An Ancient City. Ayodhya is one of the sacred cities of India in the province of Oude, and is the cradle of the Hindoo and Buddhist faiths. Three thousand years ago it was in its glory, but it is now consider ably run down. Nevertheless some ef the principal temples and other objects of interest are kept up. One of the chief attractions is the Hanomangarhi, or Monkev Temple. Within its -walls dwell 600 Disciples of the Silent Sect." They live as monks do, and pass most of their time in solid indolence. There are in Ayodhya seven cloisters of this order, each of which is presided over by an abbot. These are the " Silent Sect," the " Void-of .Affection" Sect, the "Naked" Sect, the " Ash-Besmeared" Sect, the " Dumb" Sect, the " Pa tient" Sect, and the " Provisionless" Sect. The men who compose these sects are supported by the revenue of land set apart for the purpose and by the gifts of pilgrims. Ayodhya contains a tomb of Seth, one of job, and one of Noah. Noah's grave is 27 feet long and 2 feet wide. The great Fair of Ramnammi, which is held annually at Ayodhya, has recently closed. It at tracted this year nearly a million of pilgrims. The name of the place means "The unconquerable city of God." Telegraphic postal-cards are an other new-fangled notion in Paris, that will be likely to prove a great conve nience. They are to take the place of telegrams, and are to be sent almost instantaneously from one quarter of Paris to another by the pneumatic-tube system already constructed and to be used hereafcer exclusively for town-dispatches. For 10 cents one can send a message of any desired length within the limits of a postal-card, to be deliv ered in half an hour after printing. Sealed messages may also be sent for a charge of 15 cents the forms on which these are to be written having twice the capacity of the postal-card. Telegraph ing thoughont France is dose at the low rate of about one cent per word, but the new system will make the average service in Paris much cheaper. In China, where the opium habit ruins and destroys many men annually, the efforts of the Government to abolish or diminish the use of opium have re cently been more energetic than aver. All these efforts have been ia vain, as were those of many prevkws years. The Pekin Government hava at last de termined to take the final, step in the business, and an edict has been, issued, which goes into effect next year, mak ing the use or sale of opium punishable by death. It is hard to say how the edict: will be met by the tarn million opium victims of the Celestial Empire, orwhat proportion of them will come to this country to enjoy their fascinat ing custom. Strawrerrv Preserves. Prenare the strawberies, weigh and use sugar pound for pound : heat the sugar hot- before you add the berries. They will then not mash up. If you wish to can them, of a pound oi sugar to the round of berries will be nlentv. Thar should cook 20 to SO minntesr Grama can be preserved in the same way. CAT TALES. Sot lUwarkahle Ttru IIlMtxmtlaK Cat's Teaacltjr of Ufa. A correspoadent of the New York Evening Post writes: The interesting account of the resuscitation of a cat given recently by Dr. Lambert in the Evening Post encourages me to relate some stories which may be entertaining, although my experiment were not made from motives of humanity. Many years ago I sailed from New York in the bark Black Squall, for the Cape of Good Hope by way of the port of Balii more, where we loaded the vessel with flour and wheat. Before leaving New York a friend had, as I afterward found reason to suppose, not disinterestedly presented mo with a cat. We had scarcely passed Sandy Hook when that cat proved to be an intolerable nuiaaace. Sailors have a superstition that it is un lucky to throw cats overboard. So as we anticipated a speedy arrival at Bal timore I resolved to keep ray disagreea ble passenger until she could be safely landed on the shores of Maryland.where the immigration tax would notiaterfere with my disposition of her by turuiag her loose upon society. She was ac cordingly put upon the wharf at Fell's Point. But she walked directly on board the vessel again. She was then carried a short distance up the street, but not far enough to give her any trou ble in returning. As I had taken up my quarters at Barnum's Hotel, about Uree miles from Fell's Point, I directed the mate, when he came to call on. me in the evening, to bring the cat in a bag and to leave her with the landlord, to whom I recommended her as an excel lent mouser. Fortunately for himself the landlord had not long the opportu nity of comparing her good and bad qualities, for on the next morning she was on board the ship again. "Kill her!" I then said to Mr. Crowell. He did kill her, and I saw him throw the body over a fence into a neighboring coal yard. Welsoon completed our cargo and sailed for Cape Town. Off Bermuda we experienced a terrific gale. The ship was deeply laen and labored fearfully in the heavy cross seas which were continually breaking over her and filling the cabin and forecastle. Worst of all,;she sprung aleak that ia creased so dangerously that the efforts of the men, who were lashed to the pumps, did not suffice to keep her free. As a last resource I determined to throw overboard some of the cargo. We took off the main hatch, and out rushed that cat, haggard and lean, but with fire in her eyes, as she took the decks to her self and flew fore and aft like an incar nate fiend. The crew were paralyzed, but our circumstances did not permit them to remain so long. The pumps were kept at work while sufficient cargo was thrown overboard to lighten tne ship, and as the gale soon afterward moderated and the leak decreased we were again in safety. In the evening our attention was given to the cat. We chased her all over the decks, up and down the rigging, and finally out to the jibboom end, where all track of her was lost, as she undoubtedly went into the water, not being aware of the guys, martingale gear and bobstays, on which she might have found her way on board. We crossed the line, and one beautiful night, as we were running through the southeast trades, the whole watch came aft in consternation, reporting that the ghost of the cat was on board, for they had heard her familiar, dis cordant me-ouw ! I tried to reassure them, and only partly succeeded. Again and again they imagined the same im probable thing, andthey were tenfold more scared than they had been in the gale when we all thought that the ship was about to sink from under us. We arrived in due time at Cape Town and discharged our cargo. Away down in the forespeak underneath the forecastle, as the last bag of wheat were coming out, we found the cat, more lean and scraggy than ever, and weak so weak now that she could scarcely drag her tail behind her. I was going to Stellen bosch, twenty miles from Cape Town, that afternoon to pass the Sunday. The cat was fed and put in a bag. I took her ashore, a distance of a mile, in the boat, then put her on the coach, took her to Stellenbosch and left her there. On the homeward passage we kept a sharp lookout for her, but if she had succeeded in getting on board again her previous experience must have induced her to hide herself effectually and to make no more noise. The old Black Squall was sold and was, I believe, abandoned at sea on her next voyage to California. If that cat was aboard and was, as may reasonably have been sup posed by my old crew, the cause of the disaster, it is to be hoped thit she was at last absolutely drowned even beyond the power of Dr. Lambert to restore her. I was telling this story with all the truthfulness with which I have again endeavored to relate it, one evening in the parlor of a New York hotel. My venerable friend Dr. T., of Connecticut, who.happened to be present, listened attentively, and then proceeded to re mark in his habitually serious mood : " Captain, that was an astonishing cat, but I have one at N M that is even more wonderful. She, too, always annoyed us, but we are now resigned to the inevitable. It is said that a cat has nine lives, but some cats never die. Three years ago I attempted to poison her with arsenic, and gave her a dose large enough to kill an ox. It had no effect whatever. I then tried strych nine, but was equally unsuccessful. As to croton oil, wnich was next given her, she would lap it like milk. In short, every thing in the way of poison being a failure, I went out to the pond near my house and cut a hole in the ice, which was a foot thick, put her in it and covered it securely with a plank. But she swam underneath the ice for an eighth of a mile and came out where the water was over the dam. "At last I adopted a decisive measure. I took a hatchet and cut off her head and threw it over the wall. But the wonderful instinct of that cat! When I came down in the morning to my kitchen, there she was, sitting in the chimney corner, holding in -her mouth the bead that she bad found." Without a word of reply I took my hat and left the room. At breakfast in the morning the Doc tor called me over to his table, and ex pressed his regret that I should have leJt so hastily, without waiting for the moral ' of his story. "Moral?" I asked. "What moral?" "I'Jltell yoo," he replied. "Over there at N M wenave an oki fellow they call Uncle Ben.' Oneraiay day Uncle Ben, who had been lieteaiag at the store1 to some remarkable his tories related by other gentlemen sit ting around on the counter and on flour barrels, was remiadsd' of something ia the range of his own experience. Waaa he had wound ud his exceedinfflv touch yarn, some one exclaimed: 'Why, Ua cle Ben, you know that is an infernal lie!" 'Well, what of it?" heianocenUy replied; a thought yoa were alllying!'" BCSSU'S BEIKX OF TERROR. fctow a DaUetlva Wa r.ntnpf-4 by III anattisc soeri. From tae Loniloa Tctetrrspb. A few weeks ago SeTga I,awrowiki, one of the ablest detectives attached to the Third Department, was sent from St. Petersburg to Poltava with instruc tions to get at the secrets of the Nihi listic organization there established. Ar rived at Poltava, Lawrowski displayed great activity in guiding the researches with the object of bctravini: him into their hands. After a fortnight's ardent courtship, Mile. AchriatolT allowed her self to be persuaded to give her admirer a rendezvous by night in a garden just oatside the lawn. When Lawrowski reached the trysting Slace he was surrounded and seized by ve masked men, armed with revolvers aad knives, who bound him to a troc and then cut off his nose and ears open letter in his pocket contained the following ferocious announcement: "We cut off his noso be cause he is a slenthhound, and his ears because, he has proved him self to be an ass, in that he paid court to one of Ua!" Mile. Achristoft" has vanished from Poltavs, and all the ef forts of the police to track her to her hiding-place have proved utterly inef fectual. Meanwhile, Lawrowski lies in a hopeless condition; and even should he rallv from the utter exhaustion in The 81. Petersburaer ZeUunn reports four attempts at assassination committed at Kasan, the victims of which have one and all been State officials of hkh rank. Three of the four persons attacked have died of their wounds. One of these lat ter, Novikoff, tho President of tho dis trict, walked into tho principal restau rant of Kasan a few minutes before he was shot, and said to one of the waiters : " Friend, give me a dram ; perhaps it will be the last I shall ever drink." A glass of vodki was brought to him, and the waiter noticed that Novikoffs hand shook as he lifted the liquor to his lips. Immediately afterwards he left the res taurant; but, as ho opened the door, a bullet struck him full in the breast, in flicting an injury which has since proved fatal. The agents of the committee ac tually engaged in these outrages have been arrested. Two are workingmen, one is a Boyar, and another a handsome and highly educated girl of 17. The latest news from Kieff indicates that the revolutionary propaganda is as suming extraordinary dimensions in that province. Eight peasants were brought into the provincial capital in chains from a village named Chramowko, about 16 worsts from Ktew, accused of dis tributing Socialist pamphlets and in surrectionary proclamations at the fairs and markets of the district. These men confessed under pressure that they had succeeded in circulating some 40,000 of these publications among the country folk. In another village, Toporowko, a secret printing press was discovered by the police ia the schoolhouse of the commune. Their search was instituted upon the strength of information sup plied by the scribe of the Mir, a man named Koprowski. Next morning ho was found dead in his bed with a knife plunged to the hilt in his breast. Seatence of a Young SoclalUt. From the I'all Mull Gazette The Russian revolutionary journal, Land and Liberia, reports that on the 12th (24th) of March sentence of death was passed at Archangel on a young subaltern in the army. Bobikoff, though ouiy &J years ot age, uuu uireauj, ior some offense unnamed, been sent to serve in a penal or disciplinary battal- ion, somewhere in Western Siberia; and his indignation had been roused by the publication of an order to the effect that . desertions from the disciplinary battal-' ions in Western bibena should, be pun ished by exile to Eastern Siberia for life. He himself deserted, and, an attempt being made to recapture him, he defend ed himself, revolver in hand, agaiust his would-be captors. The court formed CO try tne young man was compuseu oi military officers, under the presidency of (Sen. Mordvinoff; and Zand and Lib- trty declares that as the members of the special tribunal were leaving St. Peters- burg, the Commander-in-Chief, Nicolas Nicolaievitch, said to them: "I hope you will not sentence him to an honora- ble death." "The slaves," it adds, - uiu nob uisappuiui. i.ucii uuawi, oiuw they sentenced'Bobikoff to die by the rope." Only high funcUonaries were admitted to the curt, which was sur- ? 2ttZ!. ??iS IT. soldiers, so that the whole street was crowded with them. Bobikoff was brought into the hall by 12 soldiers. " His young sympathetic face," we are told, " . careworn and pale. On each side of him stood a rendarme with naked sword; whilo he aenaraied from the public by six soldiers with loaded muskets, and from th Jndcrea bv five soldiers similarly of tne local ponce.maue many acquaint- mtanres more tnan ;vw goofrrapnj cuir oi, ctnjht la arc, ances in different characters, being an miles; from th King's Pav. to the Pelly klllc! r the polwatd bail. expert in changing bis appearance and Banks is farther than from Pa'i to j Toward the laUrr end of March the his mission, when his evil foituno der its immoJiate influence w about t,- ndlt $ raafce m Ion?cT to the 1 nRnnt J dim In full 5n lnvn writh thp .VSO iWl tnirn miU nr mnm ihjn nnfl. b L . J .r !....... J pretty daughter of a priest, named Ach- third greater than the whole extent of H Hcw eoma m0viBC thrma ri3loff,.T6i? gir1, vnly 17 " f 8gCJ rMS , . . . . , ; the 'fore.! a motley Ihroti. The brac was affiliated to the associations a-d For purposes of trade the original mjircjl in front, too proud aad lxy to had been planted upon Lawrowski chartered territories of the Company, w MV ajB-but tlwir a. aad aot by order of the Poltava Committee, and the vast outlying circuit of com-- . ? , lh.. After thm m i. a ., .1 . ii'. . r ! : ... , Dieeomg aim unaoie io miouv icras- h esiern cmipiKus mo reiuui iii v .... tf-jj. separates the sutance, as fee baa been gaggca uy ins tne kockv Mountains, inrse iour ue iw tj,0 5tandin! v mutilators, ae remained woere mey leu parinieau are aain umueu inu iui - . Then he adds himtn an sgonv of pain until eny three smaller portions, cailea uisincu, . -m inoro-the muriiiuK, wai bcv.i v ,. ,a ,. -""V i V has got CO or 70 'Milns." anu all uufc ubsu iiulu iuss ui uiuuu. nu kulikiiuicuuuii; vkiuci. aui ik a m.u. . - 1mmm1 kt 1a Itnmfiiliarvn cttfTVtrnrl ftflt- I ar 4tta tltl rtl itVtUtd tlitt trn rt f h(l uucvi uj fcUD UI.UIUIHIKII ""y: "m ' " " w.r.. .. -w.. ,w wood, then looks abjut him lor ing that terrible night, ho will pear . three thousand omeers-coramissioneu M j th, c&rc(ujiy Miueous witness on nis msngurea coun-1 anu non-couiini.sionuu vojagcure, aim ttlnin'l!d' ami with each imrchane tenance, as long as he may live, to tne. servants sucn as is omy to no lounu in . h Bpparcnl lnCo iiiIau aiiMf ri tKAprkirtiva r?rifnmfttrft I th firmv. nr in fin nniriftnt iinil honor- . .. uiutoao biukvi irifaviifw -ww . v w - HJ " - -, ..v... armed." The act of accusation was I and expectoration going on all around read. Based on BobikofTs own avow- f one there are sickening. The band al, as made at the preliminary investi- , might be termed a performance on gation. it was conclusive, aad left him ' drums and cymbals, with an accompani no opportunity of exculpating himself, ment of wind instruments, for the Por "l belong to the Kussian Social Kev- taguese love a noise. Temple Bar. olutionary party," he had said, " and 1 1 kam inn iv best to serve it. But I Ccbeast Jellt. Scald the currants should aot have committed the act now ' Chargwq against me naa l no, ueea unv en to it by the harshness of the Govern- mtnt and ita officials." ' ment and its officials Called upon for bis defense, he was proceeding to give instances of cruelty " W-r?."" rr" .v. d " authorities, whem toat stopped him, saying that .his state- ts had nothiag to do with the of - i eofwhichhawaa accosed. Bobi- kofftheaaxclaiaaed that he had never expected justice from such a tribunal; that he had to deal aot with Judges, bat with execatioBers; that he did not ask for mercy at their hands, but that his death womld be avenged. Seateace of death was the passed upon him. The tribaaal, however, recommended cim to merer oa account of his extreme, yoath, aad it was uncertain, when the number of Land mud Liberty contain- iac these particulars was published, whether ba would be executed or sent to i thaSibariaaaiasiorliie. j A Uad af "Jlapallcral HUtaacfV The cadraxHM extent of ike mfritory over which the Hdo Bay Caaapaey camf5 on lis irauc, which depots aad poH can scarcely be com merely carforyclaactj. trom I etaoisa, on the Red Hirer, to Fort Aadcrwn. on the Mackenzie, a- great a distance w from London to Mecsa; the apace be- tweea the Corapaay'i post at Sialt Ste. Msrie and Fort Simnwn, on the I clc. .-- a tr" ..l..t mcrcial relation!!, are dintletl iulo sec tions called the Northern. Southern, Montreal, and Western department., Ot these, the Northern Deoartmrnt is situtsd between Hudson liay and the 1 lucky Mountains; the Southern be tween James Ba and Canada, includ ing aho Kast Main, on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay; the Montreal Depart ment comprehend.- tbu extent of the business in tho Can ados; whi'e the fo rt, to which all the supplies for the district are sent for shipment to En gland. Those district are again sub divided into numerous minor establish ments, forts, posts, and outpow. Over , each of theeo there U an oflber and from two to forty men, mechanics, laborers. and servants. Besides, the Company ., .. ' r, ' aide, the Company m of men as yoya. rftlnelS! employs multitude geurs, manning ana ' and canoes in oven part , tory. Tho discipline and etiquette t i maintained are of the strictest kiud, and able service The forts and .,. . . . .. irauuitr iosu ui iuo Company ro scatterec ed over iU im- asrininr mo uroau a:ateoi unio liiauiou . . .. . ..... . yv. . I 1 in the middle of the fur cjiintry. In that event the Company would build one trading post m it.-. M. llobuuon, in Ilancr's Magazine or Junc. Voltaire's Kemahis. Mr. Stewart's remains cm hardly have a more checkered career than those of a very different celebrity Vol taire. When he died at Paris in May, rl-,y pagno; During tho revolution the Na- Z nSffKrrtolSkand !- . Ii I 1 T - --. --w-, - . I !"r "" 'lu 'M '". " -i' - j - j . ho lttU,,r mav bj. And ho r j kw t .a (it JiklimniiJ wi ! ! i- ".y,""; upon selecting the .kin. VI r..Yl-v A- ; "T". V .k7. nd weighing balance am ui tuu.i ,-" !--.". " - . objects of dislike. Ho docs isoiaica uvea oi uieir kti9uu.i, uv uu-. .- : ..-, i- Tk e brought to Pari, and l.i,YneVine , Pl , i TiTl, lingly deposited in the ll,c P o of wcod, and aiks for fur L'reat pomp in 1791 ther ,ldv,inccN ho s owud to draw Lk. .. ti,hiJany reasonable amount; for, contrary I they wore accord . Pantheon with - -- --W .--...--...--,..--- . ...7 ...i. .... . .t t i i xuuner, too, presently came mo oouy . ..! ' ... .i:.i. t..i.. : t.. ' 1814, when the Bourbons were enjoying I their own again.somo of the fa tfifufc indignant that tho bones of such cue - : . ..i:: .,i...i.i : o.l r,m,r.A tkttlur , r.!l .nlt Jn- imi'ft ui iiTiik'iitii niiiiuiu ii'il in L:ifiiu. tn f, &. Rnrn.irriRd them to ,t noint : u ..u...t.r. nnn i.. ...i.A u... IU IUV9UUUIV3 I1U31 Uliibji nilLlU lUViS was a large vacant lot belonging to the city. Hore a holo had been already dug, and the contents of the sack were shaken into it and covered with quick lime. The hole was then lined in, and the conspirators trampled down the earth. Voltaire's heart had been saved bj a friend, in whose family it remained I until 1864. On it then being offered to me uovernmeni, rtupuicun 111. ueuiueu that it should be placed with the Indy. On consulting the Archbishop of Pans, that functionary suggested tho expo- J diency of verifying the actual presence 0( Voltaire's remains. An investigation followed, and the truth came out. The ( uCart wa3 then placed in the National j propriated by the surgeons at tho au topsv was publicly sola, its present whereabouts is unknown. New York Sun. Some Habits in Madeira. The Portuguese are not a clean pco- &:T 11" "2 rrt,"U "" r i.?i- 1 I .U .."- t ""-"'vf"o -- meir cusioms are very nssiy. xaav ex- "A;;;art nnl;,n; nn, Utn .,, zrzrx: vriTi: i;r" , ". i.r. Olf LiiaiVU IIU11IUIG lUTl.nil .- iaKe a horrible, o"gjn, wain- noise up the throat, which is very Dying. 'Ihey seem to do this once, i-iTtf two nr three minutes, and make L ing annovincr I in everv two or three minutes, and make quite an art of it; for little boys practice it, and young men seem to take pride in doing it well. There is also a great deal Qf hat lifting to one another among the men, and from observation I should say J that the art of expectoration, with the proper noise, and the art of lifting tha i nai, were two inings mai mu uauu male youth of Madeira first learned. The presence of a lady docs not deter Se men from the f ormer nasty habit, ?nd the. n J"?, "!. T:" known to indulge in it also, as they hang over the balconies, so that it is well to keep the middle of the street in walking. There Is a small public prom enade called the Piaca, laid out with trees and seats, where a band occasion ally plavs. The English seldom fre- , cuent it, but the Portuguese gather there, the men in groups together, and the women in groups. The horrible noises and let simmer until quite soft; then j strain wiuiouw sucwujg; -'s" flannel jelly-bsg; when the juice no longer runs squeeze what is left into a separate vessel, and finish separately, as it does aot make as pretty jelly, thosgh it is equally good-tasted. Put the juice n nn t& fi and let boU 4 or 5 minutes, removing any scum that may rise to the top. nave reaay in a dowi 1 pound white sugr to every pmt ef julOB, -pour urc uuuiajg jaxuo usi u, stir till it is dissolved, and poar at oace into molds. In 24 hours it will probably be ready to paste up. This is an easy way to make currant jelly of a very pretty color and excellent quality. ; - Thk puzzle whica careful mothers try to solve is how to team the girls, and how to restrain the boys. - It only costs 28 cents a week to feed a prisoner in the Western Penite&tiary c4 Pennsylvania, larflaa Traafff, aMjf. il tka fra n X(tTmhet. wfoft ,. ...-u km ni tWir winter teal, W)1 u . jeaaon. UdU trap -. r , . -.k w- ! the A of lkls wak u ach f -j of lha fin;r faw , . , f ., . lFnf ot t . . . jrr fttr.hr aria . J vw - ' '.-- . rm Mime the douaws. beodin under lod. a. m n uuiuw driving dog, or hauling hand fled laden with meal, ur, tanned dr skins, and inf aula. The puppy d- and inevitable babr never fail in IaUaa lodge or proccaalon. The cheerful spec taclo of the two picked tgcLber upon the back of a wnmsn U not of Intro qucnt occurrence. Dy alter dav the muugrcl party jiurncya on, until tha iort is reached. Then comes the trade. furs into lot. aluatlon upon the amounta to- trappcr that ho At the ini he bands his cutomcr Wor iU litlld bits of wcod, io that the Utter may know, by returnlg these In payment for the good for which he really barter.4 his furs. Just how fast his funds decrease. The flrai act of the Indian Is to cancel tho debt contracted for advances at the begin- coniracieu ior wivauccs ai . f fa ie then he la J5 bU - ! then he looks round kcts, eta. lodes to have a small white caputo for hi toddling bov. The price is told him, ai d ho , hands back ten of hi little piece of soma- irx- there uali ty between the amount, reccivou anu that irtven in tne Indian" opinion, una ... , ,., . .. :..i- ...... , ,. . r.. .. ... ,.-i..- ininuuK. mi luauvr wuifc vuu nuuo insll, too, Tho Btenlyanl hi especial not know i.t h(m Iah WI11L IUCU I IID .U.b n. M and sugar should bo balanced agaiiut a Hd merchandTc ,. fat mM thJ j gfl wm haa lho Xrlvr'n bit of iron, conveys no hlea oi tho tola- I goods and his own furs, until a new 1 light is thrown upon the question of steoh ards and scales by tho acceptance fof the proposition. Then, when he finds his tine furs balanced against , heavy blankets, he concludes to abide I bv the old method of letting tho white . ... . .... "ediciuo, which no bravo can un .. When the trapper has spent all his nnv i ;. , . . ... , ,. , .., f I to tho rule in civilized life, a debt Is ael. I dom "avo b.y lho d.tJatlJ of llf' n' , Slrt " . "", " , "' , ". . I . . ,J ' a Company's post at wbl-jh to trade. . I 1 hU COtUpaU The Company has always been a good ' fricnd lo bm .ttnd his. and ho pays when and his, and ho pays when knows that when ho Hqui- I ho can. lie uates his out ueut, ho can contract a new one jut as big. No attempt win ever made to cheat him, and there nover will be. When he is ill he goes to the nearest fort, and is cared for and at tended until ho recovers. When he doe his duty well ho gets a present, and ha never- perform any labor without re ceiving fair compensation. Such hu mane treatment strongly binds the In dian and half-breed to the Company. . iSx. Jloomson, in Harpers Magazine Jor Juixc Thc Boy Who Would Trarel With a Circa. The boy who woulil travel with a cir cus ba) been out about thrco weeks now. He ia homesick, and would like to get back to the old home again If he could, but he can't very well. They ain't paying boys much to go along with a circus this year, and he isn't in funds. Beside that, he dooon't know exactly what direction to take to get hrtrnn hui n tr m r - I mt tt At uia 1. 'i. viut wuisxuw. wnimwcu WHU the zig-zag route they have been taking Things haven't turned out precisely " no Pcu wncn ne ran away irom an a homfi J,n l bow. His ambition to a cfrcus hov wafl inflamcd hen be fi h displayed on the oM black,mhTshop J tho corner; ,. .. . v . . .... while on his way to school. Then the procession on the atret added lo his yearnings for the circus, and by the time the canvas was spread on the vil lage common he was satisfied that nothing but a life of mingled spangles and sawdust could ever satisfy him. TT . ? l.. f t . , ... . " ... ue goi in ujm nignt uy uomg some lit ., i h f .. - n..l', .. Li thi? JuUed w-XY rtf 252rm.7rP-t!!ir?, Vi. E?- hM af Sli&B"t on a Wagon and was carried lawaywith the rest of the paraphernalia. But be hasn't hat a pleasant time altogether. He has been kept at all manner of drudg ery ever since his presence along with the show was detected. He has been enffed about by rude hostlers, bounced off wagons by grouty drivers aad or dered around by every body. Once he was jolted off the pole wagon while asleep at night, on the road, aad near ly killed. He expected when he joiaed the show that he would be dressed ap in spangled tights at oace and be tasght to ride in the ring, having " the old clown" fling all manner of futtBy say ings at him for the people to lasgh at and applaud. If not that, hewoaldbe set to play the saara drasa ia thebaad. Butaoaeof these thiags casae. His chief duties were to assist the cook or carry water to tne elephant. Three weeks with a circa aad not yet ad vanced to the pcekioa of property boy. Poor lad! how have his aallaciaationj been dissipated! Actaal show life ia very far from hiswiee-eyed dress of it while atadyiactbe ctrces poster. We hope he will getThoaae all right at ks.. bnsring some netf al lassoes from his rough experieace. Bat the boy who ran after the show is but aa niastratioa of hamaa life, after all. How aaaay men have beea deladed by spaagka aad fouad that they were oaly carryiag wa ter for the e2epbani.--CtJiei4Mtf &vr day Night. a Thk British Adauralty hare iseued regulations that all caawrdetse for the naval service, whether oCcers, sees, boys or auriaes,aet produce acertia- c? are W to wim,or they willbeiaelipbk. u uik r u otlt hl irappins walk for i art. ub.i.5J, l , alfl whJck k i a Ha of prcetii ai , l0 . 1A miIe, ja , aat-J LIIUU ' WI13L luvuivinu m.w n. . ITStiCVr PARAGRAPHS A.h " old aW"th flood. A Nkvaia .ugmfcr y h ttpt on, of anT i: at of (roh v ' ( oaly ha a tnaj b11 aaI a v n jtpOOtt. Thk piacWity of rtprr-4on vnra ' sru wko ii " Rett ' in Ml Mt " I hop caa ik4 fc cronitf vl. tn faa old wali with hr fiy5 Jt ut i- Wiiw joa obrT ami :r i!t r; knr.r4Uk ao la upaa . tJwtl Times P a ....m !.1 MMVmtni a .ai t - church la IjncaSr, Pa.. r. ffi, wa. latnUad by a wH dfeW a aad bit MM ia the fac w r r book with forc that seal hsai rr lato the pallr. Look not apoa the irawbrrT - ' U U red. whrn It irvth IU c-.r - - ; iKmi run: mr a.un - - t - ....k.t..f t l .'-'Vi . t, w - .,- '-". . ' a jierrx'nt aal l lcdtptlbl? Wt, , W'fUh rarebit eaten at wwa. I Vork MaL I GlKl. (to hopkpr) " (an " w ' mocaangB of a Unxif --,. tar (to vni(hlng clrl with rHv . $ - nrt JvnRi-. niv Ctrl T tjH;ncl" (;iri "My mhhrr4 ' gio It lo you V thn mominj; " ; PAKTrCwhodewn'tknowmttrha j'oM) "And what do rtni ta. I horM on lh lrft hand id tint t L hookagKxliirt." lilvr "Uh.f I the off UH." Party "U i dear ntel It both fcM partf;,, 'Ioel" A max and hi wife can nrvr .- . ujon what oitwUtuu- a tidr . room; a woman will giw ' wken hn find hlf a iUn s ntump sticking to the ivtl niece, ana he can l ho exjnj?i"i i kit calm when ho find a bunch"! " cimblnga" iu hU havtng m PtiCk. Extract from young latly' Sc' Am! tlrt von know. Mcsd ! ! 'i ' quite nuro that Capt. Popplu hrl 'U far Uk much chiupKnB xu f " ' ho UHk out hi watch and In k i -. ' at the back of It and then nw . . Blesh myahoull I hadn't an ! wa that time o' night.' " A 1'ROMiwr.NT attornoy r-. ' v Syracmo, whll ll-htug dy r f since, pointed out to hi cijn' slgn-bonnl, remarking. Th U who put that up I a lHr " U anked hi companion. "lWmt Mjn rrad. No tlhing in thi ! nnd I caught tho Wt trout m nn directly under that boanl." . k. Union. " Wiikkk to strike an attark'n ! . Is thu told by iMmlnml H'ir roti hava tha irool fortune to w n' : 1 with a ahilhdah, do not, ny r Hutchinson, hit him am tin N A and eyes bear in mind that tlJ part of hU foruWs I a far n. -rr ncrable and itcnUlvc Mt On r t well appllotl blows upon that unpr-v ed place will geuemlly dim! -,r strongest dog." A pkiwmrtkk U a machine t-i a rarely measure tho dlstancii a p-' i walks In a given lime. Wl-.r-i -x ness man, nfmr supjMir, Saturily . ing, told his wife he w ' or I. .' down to the oflice toquiri lho ik . ' heriyly attached a je!'iiirr t t leg, anl when ho returned hi t " (Hllhat tho ollke wn Hi nln It m ! r house. P. S. -A night at hilinr U -' tails considerable pedolrianitm MhlHtrr irenl Orrhanl. The largnt orchard In the wr ! doubtlc triat owned and wi rr ! successfully by Mr, Hubert l K of Hudson, Columbia County, Tho orchanl la situated on the V of tho Hudson Hlver, on hj?l'. r- : table-laud, and contain ii'r- ' v l OOOapplo trerj, I.7U0 pnar. t riu. &J0 peacho. 200 plum, 2" . 1,600 vines, 0.000 currant, an-5 . chetnuUi. Tho varieties vvttn a Khoile Nland greening. ". H ! wins, G.000; Kingof Tompki . ( 4.000; A-itrachann, Wfi; .V.irth" 600; Wngener, 600; (;rav'i wu Cranberry Pippin. M, H" 1- '200; Duchew of Oldenburgh, I , w Jonathan), Hubbardton, Vandervccr, Pearmaln, lVrk' 1 ant, UOouncu Pippins, Kow'J, r others in le number. The peara are Hartlett, It d'V . Sheldon, Shekel, and lwren-e t Of cherries there are 'JH vantm orchard are remarkably thr Vy, the oldcwt trey are about -" renr a-.l 1 Tho sol! is dry, rolling grarr', w h some limestone; the Uw are af.' " 20 feet apart and do not by any ixjaj: seem to be crowded. The grjr.;l year and knt fallow; exrept "Vi thought advUable It U wlrl clover. The orchard i inr'-' ! by roads over six mile In leng'h f rt passage of wagon, and U buf;icl y a contJnuoua row of apple trf et. ' 'i feet apart for four milt and a bf f apple crop of laat yeari 30,CW tr'r Tweaty-four men and fourteen a '.c are employed hauling out the crop ' J plowing. The success of this orchard ha c t besa achieved, nor i it niamta. wltltOBt the cIotupervUlon an I rx. ' indatriou work. Sucker and up' - are removed a soon a ccn , th era are watched and followed mtb . ' ' Wirea are ucd to reach them a " burrow., and the damaged bar r moved with cawwl. As tra fa., ' '' are planted in their place. As the market for good fruit .- tending every year, and foreign ra era are seeking tupplie. the bu v growiag fruit can aot fail lo be y ble anapermaneat. Ko other ti 1- pay a bettor than this for the mot fol attention and management, is,-t - without tbe. it L vain to czp crop that will sell in the market ' BBunerative price. Good freit - ' self, and the grower U soon soagt: J r by the parchasers. Thoe who des " to take a lewoa la thiaga appena- to the buaiae-w, and to prove the '.-- of these facts, may well study the " aad meaas aad asethod of Mr. MK: try nod his orchard. Sural Uotm A Ckaaplea Whar. Spriag overcoats gaTe way to o-w yeaterday, aad at oae resort the gentry coaversatioa turaed upoa thecxtri severity of the past wiater, wbea -' gray-haired veteraa chimed In . " W ts erjsrtalkia about? Wheal was a' ia 1717 there was sixtees fsetot o oa Fiber's Ialaad, aad Joha Winthrop lost 1,100 aheep aader it whit er drowa-dead; aad ia April, mi. it h--ed blocks of ice three inche si-ar LoaJAaaa, aad killed animals browg ia the peatnre." The ceaversa:! ceased, and the oaly rtspottfe i " Let's take ap a sehicripuoa to gtt asedal for the oki man with a bU -ea' ory." Itwaadoae. Xorvkh &X1' rMH$ 7- s-?K J eijMi.fc) iiwaM!)aaaaaifc.'i fEL1"1? ' -"- - """ " ' " ' BmaaBaAfataaaMgafev-i rm mm&m HeaaaaaaaaapaMaajBaw pv,w-iV"-, ifrrt tf mWnrHaMMalfci PvaaaaaaM ,i . ..... 7SS3i5M'4.t!5.PW