-Mj.i---ivt---.ui..f-r; TJL 9txmTXii&rl -r v - t iTTn ' Ti -j- - 2iStel! f 7 K -fl t -V S ! t k I v : I THE EED CLOUD-CMEP - - A. G. HOSMER, Publisher, JSED CLOUD, NEBRASKA. A m OLD MAX. oulilst thou have luck thy youth ayain?' I nked an aged man. " CoulJst thou not grainier ends attain, And better lire's whole plan?" -Xo. sin," he said: "I rest content. And calmlj- wait the end. One life alone to man is lent. To waste, or wisely spend. -' If. witli the knowledge years bestow. We started in the race. All plans mixht meet with overthrow, And shame us with disgrace. " So combination man can make insures complete success. The lucky winner takes the prize He won by random guess. " I would not siv chance rules below All Nature shows design: Life is not like the dice'sthrow Luck follows laws divine. -" Some men are born to jn-ace a throne, Some to a leper's doom: Yet c iuat light for both has shone. Their spirits to illume. - My life has run through light and shade The end is drawing near: I long for rest, all undismayed. And ak not back one year." Chicajo TrVmne. 3IADE OK.HAEEED. BY JESSIE FOTHERGILL, Author o "One of Tlirte." "I'robation." WeUflddA," Etc. 'The CHAPTER XXIII. Continued. These last expeditions were very pleaanL Philip drove, and Grace and Mabelle took it in turns to sit beside him, while Dr. Johnson shared the back seat with whichever of the younr ladies occupied it. They were happy hours which were passed in this manner, while Philip, when hard pressed, would relate sonic of his experience of the ""inconceivable hardships" which, he said, he feared were going to become historical in his family; and his sister listened, and did the questioning with that glance from her dark eyes which spoke of a love like that which Clara an Artcvelde felt for her Philip when she said: I've loved him him oft. much, and quarreled with And all our loves links and quarrels past are To bind us closer." And Mabelle listened, too, the more, perhaps, in that she said the less. Gnu e teased Philip on his newly-discovered capacity for laziness, and he said that man was celebrated for adapt ing himself to all circumstances. "Even adverse Grace. ones," suggested OCT "Even adverse ones, my dear, such sis the present." he answered. Sometimes Mabelle speculated upon Philip's rough analysis of his own character, which he had given her that day on the clifl. Nothing, he had said, could make him otherwise than rough and hard. Rough he was; perhaps, oc casionally rough, that is, in expres sion, rough in the sense that in a very relined crcle his manners would have been found wanting in polish, his bow in elegance, and his compliments wanting altogether as a rule. But hard Mabelle could discover no hardness for a long time. She thought she had never sci-.n any man whose manner and whole conduct toward mother and sister was so good and so satisfactory as that of Philip Massey. If he had certain old-fashioned ideas as to the sphere of a woman's useful ness, and the desirability of cultivating her culinary and household capacities, it was assuredly not because he imag ined she eould not worthily take her ;share in other things that was evident from top'cs which he discussed with Graee and her mother, and the weight he gave to their opinion. ' Once, when a lady with very ad vanced views on the subject of woman's .sphere had had an argument with Philip, and discovered what she con sidered his great and lamentable dark ness upon some important points, she suggested to Grace that man's wish for women to be accomplished cooks and housemaids so she expressed it cov- '- ere.l an abyss of selfishness not to be measured by ordinary standards. "Indeed!" retorted the indignant Grace. "You think Philip is fond of eating, and would rather 1 could cook -well lor him than any thing else I can tell you that he would rather eat dry bread than see his mother or me boil Mm a potato, if we were tired, or if it -were inconvenient and I have seen him , " do it: and seen him make tea and toast for me with his own hands, when I was ill at Iruford, because I didn't like what the servant of the house had made. If that is an 'abyss of selfishness.' 1 like selfishness." f Assuredly, thought Mabelle, these were not the traits of a hard character. Only, once, when his father was relat J ing" something concerning a woman, -one of his tenants, who had lost her child, parti)- through her own careless ness and had added: "She married her hu.-band for his position: there was .a young fellow whose heart she nearly broke four years ago," Philip had said, I -with what seemed to Mabelle a very cynical laugh: " It is a good thing the child did die. .Such women are not fit to be mothers." She stole a glance at him, and saw in Ms eyes what lie meant by saying his disaster had "hardened" him. Mabelle was rather sad that day. for in two davs more she was to go back to Irkford. "Angela had written some very 1 pettsh letters, in which she upbraided Mabelle for her selfishness, adding that if she did not come home soon, she, Angela, would have to come to Foul haven and take lodgings there. These letters Mabelle showed to Grace, and tiie perfidious Grace had revealed their .tenor to Philip, whose comment had a l)ccnt " Good Lord! Does she think she can keep Mabelle forever tied to her apron strings? What will she do when the child marries?'- " It will depend very much on whom the child marries," his'sister had grave ly answered, as she fixed her eyes upon liim, but found he was not looking at -ijJi?r. When at last he did meet her e? eyes, Grace laughed, and Philip laughed, too; upon which Miss Masscy callcd him a goose, anttwent away look iuirvcrvw If satisfied with herself, and A him. and the world m general. i m The day came on the morrow of which Mabelle' was to go tovIrkford. She and Philip and Grace had planned a last excursion with Dr Johnson in the pony carriage, to some fine old woods trom which they could descend to thj shore, and picnic under some huga cliffs an almost unknown, untrodden region, which Mabeile had a yearning to visit. It was September, yet the heat was great almost sultry; there was a dusky naze over sea and sky when the three would-be excursionists met at break fust. Their elders had finished long ago, for I do not supose any one will attemnt to dispute the fact that the present generation, as a whole, break fast later than the one immediately pre ceding them. Mr. Massey had been off in his iields by half past seven, and Mrs. Masse)- was at this moment in the kitchen, not exactly "eating bread and honev," but superintending her hand maids in the preparation of something which at the evening meal should far surpass in excellence any bread and honev that ever passed mortal lips. "Letters!" said Philip, strolling in last, as he simultaneously kissed his sis ter and took up a blue envelope ad dressed to him. " Good morning, Mabelle." he added, for Grace, as well as he, had discovered that the "Miss Fairfax" sounded un natural, and Philip had adapted himself to the circumstances which required him to call Miss Fairfax "Mabelle," while Mabelle adapted herself to the uncomfortable method of not calling Philip anvthing but "you." He read his letter, while Grace began to lament the necessity for Mabelle's early departure the following morning, and" was expressing the wish that she had not so long a journey to make alone, when Philip, laying down his letter and helping himself to an egg, observed in a well-feigned matter-of-course accent: "I shall have to go to Irkford myself immediately, so I may as well go to morrow a- the day after, and then Ma belle will have an escort." Gra.-e looked swiftly at him, while Mabelle's face Hushed, and the former sa-d: "Really! If you could manage to go together "it would be verv nice. "V hat calls ou to Irkford; Philip?" "A letter from Mr. Starkie. I've been expecting it, to tell the truth, for some days, xney are oiaunsuing a branch concern at Bradford, anil I had a hint that mo-t 1 kely the management would be offered to rac: so that the let ter is notexa -tlv a surprise: but I know Mabelle likes to have as little to do with me as possible, so I thought I would not make her unhappy with the idea of mv traveling with her unless it was ab solutely necessary. "What do you mean?" began Ma belle, but Grace interrupted: "Whv, Philip, you must be congrat ulated," mustn't you? Isn't it a very good thing?" "It wilf be by no means a bad thing, and it is very quick promotion." "Ah, but then, you have gone through the inconceivable hardships," etc "And Bradford may be a very dull place," he added. "Oh, the idea of thinking of that! Why don't you congratulate him, Ma belle? Don't you see that he is waiting for you to do it?" "Is he? I am sure I do congratulate you very much. I am very glad.' "If you are pleased, I am so glad, though" it seems to require a great effort on your part to make the nejessary speceh for the occasion," said Philip, unkindly. "But, considering the jour nev to-morrow, I will savno more about it." Mabelle could not answer the teasing remarks of Philip with her wonted clever little thrusts in return. She felt an uncomfortable sensation of groping in the dark. She wished that Grace would not keep looking at her so ear nestly; that Philip would not persist in talking about the journey to-morrow. Above all. she wished, and yet did not wish that that dreadful journey was safely over Very soon after breakfast the pony carriage came round, and Dr. Johnson, coming from the hall, where he had been waiting, summoned them forth and it did not do to keep Dr. Johnson waiting. They all went cut, Mabelle and Grace in their shady hats, and Phil ip in what Grace called "the Australian novelty" in white straw. They took sun-shades, little shawls, and a goodly basket of provisions, as to which Philip hazarded the inquiry: "Who is going to cat them?" "Never mind that, but put them in," said Grace, "and when we come back. I hope your blushes may not betray you when mother asks if we had enough to cat. Now, 1 think, we are ready." A parting wave of the hand; a "pleasant day, children! Supper at nine, and don't be late for it," from Mrs. Masse)-, and they drove slowly away. They passed a long and glorious day amongst the woods and on the sands; sands miles away from any house or habitation whatsoever, under dark, frowning cliffs, around and beneath which the sea thundered forever in sol itary splendor. Such yellow, hard, ribbed sands; such rocks full of strange fossils and pebbles; such crystal pools; unruffled as a mirror, reflecting the skv, and studded with anemones, fringed with fairv seaweed I I'AHUtlli; of every hue and every kind; in and out of which darted tiny gray crabs, and other minute marine treasures, more difficult to recognize and more ab strusely named. "It is like Heaven," said Mabelle, who had wandered with Philip to the water's edge, while Grace sat on the shingle behind, and fed Dr. Johnson. Philip and Mabelle stood at the very brink of the crisp white surges, look- j ing out to sea, with miles and miles of sand around them. To the south, dim and distant, might be seen the two stone piers anil lighthouses of Foal haven, and the Abbey of St. Ethellleda towering more grimly than ever; to the north more sands, shut in by a wall of frowning black elifl's. The air jfas fresh and pure and life-giving: intoxicating in its mingled softness and vigor. Not a sign of humanity beyond themselves was visible. Do these waves make all this thun dering when there is no one here to listen to them?" asked Mabelle, dream ily. " That is a curious scientific question A. which I can't answer; and one might make poetry about it, too. You should read about the great explosions which are always going on about the old planet Saturn explosions such as we can not conceive of, and no ear to hear them. 1 remember being struck with the weirdiiess of the idea when I first read of iu" "Yes, indeed!" sa'd Mabelle, turn ing her head and seeing Grace beckon ing to them. They went to her, and she said it was time to return. CHAPTER XXIV. AN ACCOUNT CLOSED. After supper they went wandering; again in the garden by moonlight, and the moths and bats were Hitting and circling round the light dresses of the girls. Not much was said. Grace had passed her arm through Philip's, and taken Mabelle's hand, and said: " What shall I do when you both leave me?" After which there was silence, till Mrs. Masscy's voice called to Grace, and she left them. " I must go, too, said Mabelle, re solved at once to take the initiative, and displav some firmness of character. Go why?" " Oh, my packing, you know." " Packiny! At least you have time to stroll to the cliff, and look at the Ger man Ocean by "moonlight. Who knows when we shall have another chance? Come!" He opened the wicket in time for Dr. Johnson, who had appeared upon the scene, to march unceremoniously be fore them, and lead the way to the cliff. "He knows, you sec,' said Philip, clasping his hands behind him as he paced beside the silent Mabelle. Thev did not speak until, suddenly, the great expanse of heaving waters was spread beneatn tneir eyes, wuu a silverv track of moonlight down ii long. silvery it a "High Cold path of duty, leadinjr to the sky." The sky was cloudless, deep blue: the stars were clear, the moon radiant, the air like balm. " How beautiful!" said Mabelle, soft ly; but Philip, instead of answering her remark, said: "Mabelle, why don't, you wish to travel with me to-morrow?" .j " "Is my company very distasteful to you?" " What a question! It was only "Only what?" "Angela will meet me at Irkford, audshe'does not know you are going there." " Is that all? She will be quite equal to the occasion. I am sure; and, I sol emnly assure you, I have the best hopes for aiy own presence of mind. Don't distress yourself on that account." "You "are sure you will not mind?" "I shall not-that is, I should not, if Mabelle, I told you a month ago that I was a married man after after that episode vou can not forget and so, in away, I was. I know how it spoiled me. " I know my nature got a warp then, and will never be quite smooth again, and I know I am more adapted to frighten a girl by my brusquerie than to win her love by "my amiability. . . . and I have no right to ask any woman to bear with me, and love me in spite r? .viy- rniKrlinpcs. ns mv deftrGraee has done, God bless her! but it seems thai " "." '""B" V - - - . .. - trouble three years ago did not secun me against ever falling in love again.' "Not with me'" exclaimed Mabelle involuntarily recoiling, and putting u her two hands, "you do not say it w with me? ' "But I do sav it is with you, n belle," said Philip, capturing her hanil and eutsping his arm around her, "an I wonder what just cause or impedime there should be to mv loving you. say that I love you now, very differen lv from b:it we 11 not speak ot tlm Only I would never have told )ou had not fancied that you would help me wipe out this old account, Mabelle, a: help me to become a better man than have been since that day you remer ber. I have often felt wicked when have thought of it; 1 thought you would perhaps go on making repara tion will you?" Mabelle's struggle between tears and smiles ended in a convulsive laugh, which would not stop. j Philip, deriving hope from this, and perhaps pleased with his own ingenious ' way of re 'ommeniling himself as a suit- I or, by painting hinibclf as not the best ' of men, and inviting his beloved to be i coutiuually making reparation for a wrong wh.ch she had not committed, was also struck with a sense of the ludicrous; sentiment and solemnity, moonlight and lovers' vows, were for gotten in jieal on peal of laughter. Dr. Johnson, conceiving that he alone was the object of a merriment which insulted and outraged his most refined feelings, gave three short barks, and walked awav in inexpressible dis gust. "But this ill-timed mirth lias prevent ed you from giving a proper answer to my question," observed Philip, when the laughter had somewhat subsided. "I don't know wat to say," said Mabelle, turning away, the confusion which her mirth had covered rushing over her again. "Say yes." "It seems such a wild idea for von and me to get married." "Well, let us have a wild idea or two. then." "What would Angela say?" "She would say that "if you had played your cards "properly, you might have done better like herself, bay yes, Mabelle! Say vou love me at least." "Oh. I do indeed!' "And these lips of yours are so true, and this right hand never yet held a lie in it." said he, kissing first one then the other. "Lot me call them mine, and you sha'l find that whatever else I may be, 1 am as true as yourself." Mabelle left her hand in his, and Philip only released it to put it in that of his mother, and ask her to bless her new child. On the evening of Mabelle's wedding day, Angela sat alone with her hus band, who had come out in a manner to surprise every one, on the auspicious occasion. The festivities had all been over for some hours: the last of the guests had departed, and they were alone. There was dead silence b .'tween V ...- - :..v - . - .l.-..i, '. - i -' : v- -,., -S- wwiiiiiii.irili iriiwfrte '' 'nl' ' llliw" '""""- '-1 '" them, till Mr. Fordyfc, looking up over his spectacles fronfjthe pages of a pamphlet entitled jFree Trade in Lanu," remarked, hpaevolently: Mv dear, there JrSfiomethinir almost ..avot...-?; in t'rftllf lift M?..'f. ...:.. .- iuiu.iiii.. i in j "i" V luJ auiaiiiagc. our ntw is not J irs war not ani though it lias en a runawav match, like ou Angela did not for a moment, and then she e said! I loormati It is a poor r a Fairfax, and a srirl so beautiful a abelle is. She ought to have done r, if I had been able to introduce her o the kind of societv she ought to h 31 O"" -" rrnnn mtn ii you meau me apnty ol persons in my own spnere, up: is all the so ciety I choose to have ij&ut me," said Mr. Fordyce, "you ff&fEjr me. But I think she has done D. There is something most attrace about that young man so genuinttgjj And'then, he has such go' in nim. Be is a regular Yorkshireman for that..j$tauding as he does high in the favorof a firm like Starkie & Grey, thtffir is no savin"- where his advancenifiMmay end. Your sister s husband, mye is a man she may well be prouoi- well be proud' Mr. Fordyce til riped them U aorning, a I ay I declare" ff his spectacles here Mr. and wi s quite moved heir happiness, this mornin and their evident y trust in each other.' t love tor and iev begin well, very well; and I wiyJ nnai pvpn iinaihlfi hem all happi- ppmess. May God bless them both!' w, .w., J .- 1 He returned to the,fperusal of his pamphlet, and Angela sat, twisting round and round a resplendent brace let with which her husband, in his de light at the happiness of the young geople, had that morning presented her. er face was dark; the angelic smile and languorous glance of yore did not now appear unon it so often. "Mabelle scarcely had any presents of jewelry," she was reflecting, "and I have quantities, and am always getting more But then, Philip dotes upon Mabelle, and will take her about wherever she wants to go, and how was I to know that he would' be so success ful? Some people have nothing but good luck in this world, and some none but bad. What is "the use of having pearl bracelets when there is no one to see them but " She did not distinctly finish this sen tence, even in her own mind, but her eyes fell upon the face of her husband, a b-nevolent smile upon his lips, his thoughts buried in his pamphlet on the LandQuestion. It was a homely, kind, good face, which in the early ilays of their marriage had often turned to her with a very loving smile; that expression had now grown much less frequent. Mr. Fordyce sighed oftener, and smiled seldomer.'and was wont to look at the young children of his friends with a wistful eye. Surely retribution had descended up on Angela Fordj'ce retribution Loth visible and invisible, in that she was de nied those things which her soul craved after; invisible, in that the sacred sor rows and joys of struggle and labor and hope, by the side of one who loved her, which might have been hers, had she chosen to take them, were now lost to her forever. The chance of growing better and worthier was sealed up against her for all time; isolated in a monotonous prosperity which she had bought for herself with lies and degra dation, she must now TYet it would be. diflimilt in all nontrv to find two wild animals more intimately asso ciated. The shambl'ng, fruit-eating, retiring, straightforward and mild-mannered "bear lias nothing in common with the agile, flesh-preferring wolf. Nevertheless, in poetry they are as punctually and arbitrarily bracketed to gether as larks and linnets, or apes or asses. Bruin has had to suffer much in consequence, first of all, of the igno minious familiarity which its dancing and being baited have induced: anil secondly, of its unfortunate personal appearance. But when it sets itself go ing after one it wishes to catch, tlw bear displays an agility and address which those who have been hunted by it declare to be amazing. And when it wishes to get beetle-grubs out of thi ground, ants out of their nest, hone; out of a bee-tree, fruit from a slen der bough, or birds' eggs out of a nest, it shows itself to be as ingen ious and skillful as any othe? animal that has to live by its wits. To get, for instanc, at the beetle-grubs, it scratches off the upper earth and theTa sucks them up out of the ground an application of a scientific process which no animal without a prodigious reservj of air-force could hope to accomplish. When it wishes to empty an ant-hire it knocks the top off with" its paws, and then, applying its mouth to the central, gailcrv of the nest, inhales its breath forcibly, thereby setting up such a cur rent of air that all the ants and their eggs come whirling up into the mouth like packets through a pneumatic tube. When robbing bees it does not gt stung, and when after wild apricots or acorns it ot only balances itself with all the judgment of a rope-walker, but uses its weight very cleverly so as to bring other boughs within reach of its curved claws. Nor while doing tlm does it conceal what it is about. On the contrary, when sucking at an ant heap or grub-hole it makes such a noise that on a still evening it can be heard a quarter of a mile off, and when up a iron, nnd not alarmed, it yoes smashina about among the boughs as if bears were not only the rightful lords of the manor, but as if there were no such things as enemies in the world. Bal gravia. . "Our boys." Pater "Knowledge, mv boy, is better than wealth'' "t'ilius " "Y-e-s. But, po' my word d'vou know, sir, I think I prefer the irt ferior article!" London Punch. 1.4 nritr fryfitdml THE LASKER MATTER. Action of the House of KeprescBtattf A Dignified Bebuke to the Gorninn Chan- oeller Confp-exsnieB Ocheltree and Uoa tor Kalogise the Dead Statesman. WAsniscTOX, D. C. March 19. Mr. Curtln from the Committee on foreign Affairs, submitted a report on the President's message and accompany ing papers in relation to the death of Dr. Lasker, in which the committee approved the resolutions of January Uth, and regret that they were not received in the spirit In which they were adopted. The report also compliments the State Department for its course in the matter, and submit ted the following as a substitute for ilis cock's resolution: Jicsoltcd, Thft the resolutions referring to the death of Dr. Lasker, adopted by this House January 9th last, were intend ed as a tribute of respect to the memory of an eminent foreign statesman who died within the United States, and as an ex pression of sympathy with the German people, of whom he has been an honored representative. Resolved, That a House having no offi cial concern with the relations between the Executive and Legislative branches of the German Government, does not deem it requisite to its dignity to criticise the manner of reception of the resolu tions or the circumstances preventing them reaching theirdestination after they bad been communicated through a proper channel to the German Govern ment. Mr. Reagan protested against any apol ogy by the. House for its action. Mr. Curtin demanded the previous question, which was ordered. Mr. Ochiltree took the floor for the fifteen minutes allowed to the opponents of the resolution, ami said that no man on the floor had more confidence in or esteem for the Committee on Foreign Affairs than himself; but this matter had assumed a phase which called upon every member to see his ' own dignity and the dignity of the House maintained. It was not becoming in the House to explain the meaning. The resolution spoke for itself. An apology was uuworthy the body. He then went into an eulogy of Lasker, say ing the resolution was a compliment to Lasker but a rebuke to Bismarck. Mr. Deuster, of Wisconsin, followed in a set speech. He said: "I sincerely re gret the hasty action of the German Chan cellor in refusing to transmit the resolu tion of condolence of this House on the death of Lasker merely, as it appears, on account of antipathy for a departed polit ical adversary. He knows, as does every sane person, that to place before the Reichstag a resolution of the American House "of Representatives didn't in any way imply the indorsement I of sentiments therein expressed. his oflice, so far as the resolution was concerned, was that of a medium rather than a master. His assumption of the latter was unfortunate only for himself. We can afford to cover the act with the charity of forgetfulness. "To err is human, to forgive "divine," we may say with Pericles. We are liberal in our pub lic administration. W ith regard to mu- tual jealousy of twe are not neighbor, if he please himself, our countenance, our daily pursuits, angry with our docs anything to nor wear on offeusive looks which are unpleasant. The though harmless Parliament and people of Germany are in possession of the letter and spirit of the resolution, even though the parchment upon which it was engrossed becomes moulded in the Chancellor's waste basket. The action of our State Depart ment cannot be too highly commended. It was not only diguilled, but. did not overstep the bounds of international courtesy, while at the same time admin istering a rebuke to what is justly con sidered an unwarranted usurpation of the rights and privileges of the German Parliament and people. "itr. Speaker, I was, I may say with some degree of pride, intimately acquaint ed witli him whose death has given rise to this controversy. I was among the last persons with whom he conversed, and in justice to his memory, I deem it my duty to make another statement. I have Dr. Lasker's word for it, that he had tLe highest regard for the German Chan cellor both as a man and statesman. They differed only on one question, a question, sir, upon which not only two political parties upon this- floor differ, but upon which the members of eachare not united. Lasker was a Free Trader. This was his only offense.' People uninitiated in German politics have stigmatized him with Nihil ism, Socialism and nearly all other "isms" in the vocabulary, simply because he was a Liberal ami believed in opening the marts of Germany to the competition of the world. It is not my purpose nor is this the place to eulogize my friend, but in mj heart I mourn his Ios as a man of broad views, grand inspirations anil a no ble heart, who, as an American citizen, would have achiced distinction as the advocate aiul guardian of '111511111110118 broad enough for his broad mind. As a German he claimed the right to expand beyond the boundaries of arbitrary pow ers, and the result is seen to-day. The resolutions were adopted. A Cat-Boilcal Inquiry. Springfield. III.. March 20. A dispatch was received yesterday from the Chief Veterinarian of the Agricultural Department at Washington, as follows: Kixsliiv, Kas., March l'J, 18S4. To Dn. Joiix II. Rauch, Secretary Illi nois State Board of Health Foot and mouth disease at Neosho Falls not spreading: no contagious disease among cattle in counties further west. D. E. Salmon. This is the first authoritative intima tion that true foot and mouth disease ex ists anywhere in this country west of Maine, where it was introduced direct from England. There is certainly none In Illinois, and in the hope that Dr. Salmon's dispatch may have been injudi ciously worded, Governor Hamilton has caused the following categorical ques tions to be telegraphed him : "Have you found veritable foot and mouth disease anywhere? If so, to what extent? In what localities?" m A ForcgoB Conclusion. CniCAOO, III., 'a-ch 19. A special from Salt Lake City say.s: An drew Petersons, a Mormon ex-Congressman indicted in 1882 under the Edmunds law for voting, is on trial to-day. Seven polygamist Mormons arc on the )ury with consent of Chief Justice Iluuter. One has three wives. All seven swore they believed the divine law superior to the laws of Congress, and believed polygamy right and revealed from Heaven. Defend ant admits his marriage, according to Mormon law, but says it was a proxy for eternity and not for time. A MISSING SHEPHERD. & Connrcttntt EiilTrnlit Flock Excreted Over tlio Unaccountable Disappearance of Their Sliephrl. , BninoKPortT, . oxn., M:in 17. Intense excitement prevails here over the disappearance of the Ilevrend John Lyon. Ills pulpit in the Unlversalist Church was not filled yesterday, and no lervices were held. Groups of excited people have been discussing the mystery ill daj', and the hotels and telegraph offices have been thronged by citizens seeking some satisfactory clew to the clergyman's whereabouts. For some time Mr. Lyon has been preaching against the evils of gambling, directing his batteries against the lottery policy dealers in par ticular. He upbraided the city officials and police, ami by his able discourses compelled the authorities to arrest and prosecute the policy dens. He has been repeatedly threatened by the policy run ners, and" since the cases have been tried and the players acquitted it is feared by some that one of these threats has been carried out. Mr. Lyon is a Scotchman. He left this city on Thursday for the pur pose of visiting the Grand Secretary of the Knights of Pythias on business con nected with Mithra Lodge of this city, to which Mr. Lyon belonged. The Grand Secretary telegraphed that Mr. Lyon called on him and transacted his mission and they both went to the Hartford depot. Mr. Lyon purchased a ticket for New York, where he said his wife was vKiting, and got on board the 3:30 p. m. train, and has not been heard from since. m A DISTURBED PEOPLE. rhe Manltobann, Smartint; Under Ileal op Fancied Wrongs, Kipe for Kevolt Against British Kule Annexation Talk. St. Paul, Minn., March 17. Winnipeg advices state that the agita tion in Manitoba, which originated with the farmers, appears to be having a con tagious effect on the commercial repre sentatives throughout the province. The general public are not aware of the strong undercurrent which is carrying on the agitation, and the serious earnestness and uuiet determination awaiting for an op portune time for development. That the business and agricultural interests are undergoing a severe depression is no longer a matter of argument, and unless relief is provided by the Ottawa Govern ment a crisis may be expected. Persons in a position to know, and who can sustain their assertions positively, are aware of the organization of secret societies in the city of Winnipeg, whose purpose it is to have thcOttawa government accede to their demands, or falling in this, to assume control of the Province and in sist on annexation. This society is com posed of influential and prominent bus iness men who realize that their life-time accumulations are greatly jeapordized, and their earnest and subdued conver sation is emphatic and determinedly sug gestive. At the farmers' meeting in Winnipeg, Saturday last, some of the men in the paid service of the Government insisted on controlling the convention, much to the disgust of the farmers, who promptly drove them from the hall. General Manager Van Home's reply to the farmers, to the effect that thiriraction was Ill-aUviscd, and that no concessions by the railroad would be made until after the fool-killer had visited Winnipeg, has only served to fan the flame. The farm ers in their resolutions advise against emigration until the wrongs arc correct ed. This information has been telegraphed all over Europe in the various languages, and can not avoid restricting emigration. It has been observed by" conversation with Canadians, always loyal heretofore, that there is a majority in favor of annex ation, and unless their grievances are heartland corrected exciting news from that province may be looked for soon. m SOW BY ST. PATRICK, It rtasaScurvyTrick to Allow His Admirer to Take Such n Tumble An Incidenc ol the Day at Chicago. Chicago, III., March 17. The rear guard of the St. Patrick's Day procession passed the corner of Twelfth and State streets at 3:40 o'clock this afternoon. A large crowd had con gregated on the sidewalks. Fully seventy people stood wedged together in a space hardly twenty-live by eiit feet. Under neath this crowd was a wooden side walk. As the last of the procession passed, the crowd began to move. Tiie sidewalk shook for a moment, the cracking of rotten timbers followed, and in an instant there was crash, and the mas? of shrieking humanity was dropped into the basement below, a distance of about ten feet. Those on top of the heap began scrambling out by standing on their less fortunate companions. The wreck was soon surrounded by a huge crowd. The patrol wagons were sum moned and the wounded, mostly women and children were rescued. A large number were removed to carriage and wagons while the police took cafe ol those who had no friends. A baby-carriage was demolished, but the baby, un harmed, was hoisted out and delivered to its bruised and frightened mother. A huge pile of hats, bonnets, green ribbons, shawls and a few crushed flags were carried into the shoe store and delivered to their respective owners. One man had his teeth jarred out. The only person seriously injured was a lady, who, being in a delicate condition, suf fered considerably, and was removed to her home in a carriage. Her name could not be learned. The police report the following persons injured: Maggie Kevcs, domestic, employed by Mrs. Reidy at 3G8 Thirty-first street; frac ture of right leg. Maggie Tracy, domestic, at same num ber; right ankle brokn. Bridget Farren, of UT1G Dearborn street, cut and bruised. Ellen Reilly, slightly bruised about face and body. Alice Walsh, of Hyde Park, cut and bruised. Delia Westfall, of 4642 Butterfleld street, both ankles sprained. A Missing Drnramer. Rochester, N. Y. March 17. E. 'Stephenson, a traveling salesman from New York City, came to this city a week ago Friday, and registered at the Powers Hotel. He drank quite hard Sun day, and Monday disappeared from the hotel and has not been seen since. He left his traveling-case open in his room. De tectives have been searching for him for the past two or three days. They now believe he is the man who jumped from the Central avenue bridge into the Gen essec River. He is about forty-five years of age, and has a wife and family in New Britiau, Conn. k r Kf ldf rf I P , .5 -t A J