the nt aska era - nebraska newspapers...hair-cuttin-g, shaving and shampooing. especial attention...
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THE HERALD.PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY
PLATTSMOUTH,"" NEBEASKA.
OFFZOBiOn Vine St., One Block North of Main,
Corner of Fifth St.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF CASS COUXTY.
Terms, in Advance :Ono copy, one year $2.00One copy, six months 1.000n cepy, three months so
HENRY BCECK,DIAiER IX
6AFES, CHAIRS,Lounges, Tables, Bedsteads,
TVO,, BTC, TC.,
Of All Description.
METALLIC BURIAL CASES.
Woodon CoffinsOf all sizes, ready-mad- e, and aold cheap far cask.
With many thmks for past patxonaga, I tnvitaall t call and. examina my
LARGE STOCK OF
ZITnrnitiir unci CofXlns.Jan28
MEDICINESAT
J. H. BUTTERY'S,
On Main Street, bet. Fifth and Sixth.
Wholesale ar.d Retail Dealer In
Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils,Varnishes, Patent Medicines.
Toilet Ax tides, etc., etc.
tTTTRESCRIPTIOXS carefully compounded atall hours, day and nijht. 35-- 1 y
J. W. SHANNON'S
Feed, Sale and Liveryg31.A.TtTs3S.
Main Street, Plattsmouth, Neb.
I am prepared to accommodate the public with
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons,
A No. I Hearse,On Short Notice and Reasonable Terms.
A HACKWill Run to the Steamboat Land
inj. Depot, and all parts ofthe City, when Desired.
Janl-l- f
First National BankOf Plattsmouth, Nebraska,
8UCCESSOB TO
Tootle Ilunna &z Clarlc.John FmenALSE. CJ. DotktA. W. McLaughlin...John O'Koubke
AND
President.t.
Cashier.Assistant Caabier.
Thla Bank In now open for business at their newroom, corner Main and Sixth etreete, and are prepared t transact a general
BANKING BUSINESS.
Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Governmentand Local Securities
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Deposits Received and Interest Al-
lowed on Time Certificates.
DBAFTS DEAWN,Available in any part of the United Ststes and in
all the principal Towns and Cities of Europe.
AGENTS FOR THECELEBRATED
INMAH LINE and ALLAN LINE
OF STE(.METIS.Tersona wishing to bring out their friends from
Europe can
rUBCBASB TICKETS FROM VS
Tliroiijjli to XMitt twin oiitli.
Excelsior Barber Shop.
J. C. I300iSrE,Slain Street, opposite Saunders House.
HAIR-CUTTIN- G,
Shaving and Shampooing.ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO
Cuttluff Children's and Ladies'Hair.
Call and See Boone, Gents,And get a boon in a
CIjE 3NT SHAVS.n41-l- y
go TO THE
Post Office Book Store,H. J. STKEIGHT, Proprietor,
roa ionBoots. Stationery, Pictures, Music.
TOYS, CONFECTIONERY,
Violin Strings,Newspapers, Norels,
a
Song Books, etc., etc
POST OFFICE BUILDING,
PLATTSJIOUTH, NEB,
NTJNO. A. MACMURPHY, Editor.
VOLUME XI.
O. F. JOHNSON,DEALER HI
Drugs, Medicines,Ain
TT atijsrwlT ,''l"'Jl,ii"" ' """
WALL PAPER.
AllPaper Trimmed Free ofCtane
ALSO. DEALER rjf
Books, StationeryBL.1GAZINES
AND LATEST PUBLICATIONS.
ST!TPrescrIptiong carefully compounded by anexperienced Druggist art
REMEMBER THE PLACE
Cor. Fifth and Main Streets,PLATTSMOUTn, NEB.
SITHOS. W. SHRYOCK,
DKAI.EB I!t
Fnrnitnre !Main St., Let. 5th and 6th,
plattsmotjtb:, - web.
UNDEETAK-ER- ,
And on hand a Urga tocli of
letallic TJtirial Cases,Weed an Coffins, Etc.,
Of all size?, cheap for eatfe.
Funerals Attended on Short Notice
II. L WATEM1Y & SON,
WholeKal? and Retail Dealer in
PINE LUMBER,
Latli, Shingles,SASH, DOOES, BLINDS, ETC.,
On Main St., oor. Fifth,PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.- - -
FOR YOUR GROCERIESGO TO
J.V.WECKBACHCor. Third and Main St., riattpmouth.
(Gnthmann's old stand.)
lie keeps on hand a large and well-selecte- d
stock of
Fancy Groceries,COFFEES, TEAS,
Sugar, Sirup,ETC., ETC.,
Also a Large Stock of
DRY GOODSBoots and Shoes,
CROCKERY, QUEENS WARE,Etc., Etc., Etc.
In connection with the Grocery is a
BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY.Iliirliest Triee Paid for Country Produce.
A fall stock at all times, and will not be nndersold.
Take notice of the Sign :
" EMPIRE BAKERY AXD GROCERY."nlyl
WILLIAM STADELMANNHas on hand on of th largest stocks of
CLOTHINGAND
Gents' Furnishing GoodsFOR SrRIXG AND SUMMER.
I invite everybody in want of anything in mylino to call at my store.
South Side Main, bet. 5th & 6th Sts.,
And convlnco themselves of ths fact I have asspecialty in my Hi-ti- l Departments a stock ofl ine Clothing for Mtn and Buys, to which we In-vi- le
thoo who want goods.I aloo keep on hand a larga and well-selecte- d
stock of
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Etc.jsrlyl
PLATTSMOUTH MILLS,PLATTSMOUTH NEBRASKA.
Cos bad Bbissl, Proprietor.
FLOUR, CORN MEAL, FEED.Always on hand and for eale at lowest cash prices.
Toe Elghest Prices paid for Wheat and Corn.
Particular atUnUon glvta to custom work.
23, 1875.
CURRENT
Ex-Sexat- Scnuitz arrived at NewYork on the 14th from Europe.
IIok. Henry T. Blow, of St. Louis,died suddenly in Saratoga, N. Y-- , on the12th.
The daughter of Prince Bismarck hasbeen betrothed to the Prussian CountWendlzuenlarberge.
Eleven persons were recently killed bygas at the Dowdington Wood colliery inShropshire, England.
A Coli'MBUS (Ohio) pedestrian namedMike Scully recently completed the taskof walking 1,000 miles in 1,000 hours.
The charge for messages betweenAmerica and Europe by the new DirectOcean cable is twenty-fiv- e cents currencyper word.
A Montreal (Canada) dispatch says thatin the Church of L'Evectree on the 12th,the Bishop of that city cursed the graveof Guibord.
The Nebraska Republicans have nomi-nated George B. Lake, T. F. Ganlt andSamuel Maxwell for Judges of thepreme Court.
Su- -
TnE bank of F. B. Hancock, at Green-ville, Ky., was robbed, a few nights ago,of nearly $35,000 in United States bonds,currency and gold coin.
Commodore Perry's flag-shi-p, the Law-rence, sunk in. Erie Harbor sixty-tw- o
years ago, has been recently raised andthe bottom found to be in a good state ofpreservation. She is to be exhibited atthe Centennial.
The Legislature of California is composedas follows : Senate Democrats, 19 ; Inde-pendent Democrats, 5; Independents, 9 ;
Republicans, 7. House Democrats, CO;
Independent Democrat, 1; Independents,7; Republicans, 11.
Dr. II. T.IIelmbold has begun suitagainst the Pennsylvania Hospital for theInsane. Drs. J. Littell and J. Gordon Maxwell, Aid. John Urcan and others whowere concerned in his incarceration inKirkbride's Asylum.
A freight train on the Grand TrunkRailroad was thrown from the track onthe morning of the 14th and totallywrecked, and several of the employes onthe train were killed. The ruins took fireand a large number of cattle were roastedto death.
The "Wisconsin State Temperance ticketrecently nominated at Janesville is as follows: For Governor, II. C. Tilton: Lieutenant-Governo- r. D. W. Gilfillan: Secretary of State, H. Y. Brown; State Treasurer, D. W. Ball; Attornej'-General- , Will-iam Monroe.
While Mrs. Uda's patent aerial ladderwas being experimented with in NewYork city on the 14th, and after eight orten men had mounted the structure, whichwas elevated to the height of neatly 100feet, it suddenly snapped in two and theoccupants were precipitated to the ground,three of them being instantly killed andas many more dangerously, if not fatally,injured.
The Rev. W. E. McLaren, of Cleveland,Ohio, has been elected Bishop of the Epis-copal Diocese of Illinois, receiving thirty-nin- e
out of sixty clerical, and fifty-fiv- e outof fifty-eig- ht lay votes on the secondballot. llis election was then madeunanimous. The Episcopal Council ofthe Fond du Lac Diocese have chosen asBishop the Rev. John Henry HobartBrown, of Cohoes, N. Y.
Jake Hicks (colored) was tried atAugusta, Ga., on the 9th, for being connected with the late alleged attempted in-
surrection. After the testimony was sub-mitted the Judge charged the jury thatthere was not sufficient evidence to con-vict. A verdict of not guilty was returnedand all the prisoners discharged, and thecourt adjourned. This ended the prosecution, except against the two leaders,who, it was thought, had left the citj-- .
A confidence man has been arrested inMuscatine, Iowa. He had inserted an advertisement in the Chicago Tribune for aCongressman's clerk, offering f2,000 andexpenses, and instructing applicants toaddress him at that place. His plan wasto reply to each one seeking the positionthat, as agent for the Congressman, hehad inquired into the applicants qualifications, etc., and would forward the appointment on receipt of five dollars to defray expenses of advertising, telegraph-ing, etc. He had received a large number of letters in answer to the advertisement.
Is a letter to Gov. Ames, of Mississippipublished on the lGth, Atty.-Ge- n. Pierre-pon- t
quotes from a dispatch he had re-
ceived from President Grant, in which thelatter says : " The whole public are tiredout with these annual outbreaks in theSouth, and a great many are ready now tocondemn any interference on the part ofthe Government I heartily wish thatpeace and good order may be restoredwithout issuing the proclamation ; but ifthey are not, the proclamation must beissued ; but if it is, I shall instruct thecommander of the forces to have nochildish play. If there is a necessity formilitary interference, there i3 justice in suchinterference as will deter the evil-doers.- "
The President then suggests that Gov.Ames be urged to exhaust his own re-
sources to restore order before receivingGovernment aid, which can be given himwhen necessary by the troops now in hisState.
A gentleman named Hill, living inLower Gold Hill, has a little black-and-ta- n
dog that accidentally fell into" a holeabout twenty feet deep, near his house, afew days ago. He shortly began barking,and his master, being attracted to the spot,thought he would by an experiment seehow much the dog knew. He procured arope, tied a knot on the end, and loweredit to the dog, who shortly seized it withhis teeth and hung on until drawn out ofthe hole. Gold Hill (A't.) AV?r.
Somebody is writing for the BuffaloCommercial Advertiser a series of articleson the " early music of Buffalo." As theearly music of that place was principallyfurnished by the frogs it is well if theseprimitive artists are at last receiving therecognition so long withheld from themthrough the machinations of the brassband. Louisville Courier-Journa- l.
ASKA" COXQIT3RS.'
EPITOME OF THE WEEK.CONDENSED TELEGRAPHIC NEWS.
A DisrATCH from London on the 11thsa3--
s the Privy Council had been askedfor an executive order to prevent the hold-ing of fairs or markets throughout War-wickshire on account of the prevalence ofthe foot and mouth disease. During thepreceding week 3,000 cases had been re-
corded in Norfolk. Sheep and pigs wereaffected as well as cattle.
The entire Spanish Ministry resignedtheir positions on the 11th and on the 12thGen. Jovellar formed a new Cabinet.
A. II. Thompson's division of Maj.Powell's exploring party arrived at Gun-nison, Utah, on the 11th, en route forhome, having concluded their explorationsof the season.
A distiller at St. Joseph, Mo., underprosecution for violation of the InternalRevenue laws, pleaded guilty on the 11th.
The widow of the late President Lin-coln reached Springfield, 111., on the 11thin charge of her son Robert. It is said sheis not regarded as being any better, men-tally, than when she first went to Batavia.
A Belgrade dispatch of the 13th saysthat on account of the recent concentration of Turkish troops on the frontier theServian Government had ordered theformation of six frontier brigades aggre-gating 24,000 men. A Constantinople tel-
egram of the same date says that seriousfighting had occurred during the week, inwhich the Turks had been defeated, andthat, in consequence, the siege of Trcbignehad been renewed.
A water-spou- t destro3'ed fifty housesat St. Chinian, France, on the 12th. Ninedead bodies had been recovered on themorning of the 13th, and sixty personswere still missing.
The election in Maine on the 13th re-
sulted in favor of Gen. Conner (Rep.) forGovernor by about 5,000 majority. Legis-lature Republican.
In his trial on the 13th Westervelttestified in his own behalf and sworethat he never saw Charlie Ross,and in answer to a question whetherhe had any knowledge of his wherealnrntshe replied emphatically that he had not,but wished he had.
Judge Gilbert, of the New York Su-
preme Court, rendered a decision in acivil-righ- ts case, wherein Wm. F. John-son (colored), of Brooklyn, sought to com-pel the Principal of a public school toadmit his son, instead of sending him tothe school provided for colored children.The court holds that the commonschools are a public charity; that thebenefits conferred by them are a freegift from ths State, aud, like every otherdonor, the State may prescribe in whatmanner the gift may be enjoyed. In conclusion, Judge Gilbert says that the stat-ute, by guaranteeing equal privileges,does not confer the right to enjoy them incommon with any class of persons, or inany particular school, and that nothinghas been shown from which it can be in-
ferred that the relator has been deprivedof the equality of privilege to which he isentitled. The motion for a mandamuswas denied.
The recent severe storm on Lake Mich-igan did much damage to shipping andcaused great loss of life. Among the moreserious casualties was the sinking of twopropellers the Equinox and the Mendota
and the loss of nearly all on board thetwo vessels. The former was loaded withsalt, and had in tow the schooner EmmaA. Mayes, and when within about tenmiles off Point Sauble, and during thesevere gale, she suddenly sank. Therewere twenty persons on the vessel at thetime of the accident, including the crewand Capt. Scott's daughter and niece, allbut one of whom are supposed to have per-ished. The survivor Charles Burns,wheelsman was picked up by a schoonerafter being on the wheel-hous- e in the lakefor thirty-si- x hours. The Mendota, loadedwith coal and having in tow two coal-barge- s,
foundered with one of the barges,and of the twenty persons on boardtwelve were lost.
According to a Vienna dispatch of the14th Montenegro has definitely informedthe insurgent leader that she cannot makewar against the Porte.
The first fast mail train over the Penn-sylvania route from Ncw'York city for theWest reached Chicago on time on themorning of the 14th, making the distancein twenty-si- x hours. This being a pre-liminary trip, made in advance of thetime fixed upon for the beginning of thefast train via the New York Central, nomails were carried. Several Pennsylva-nia Central officials and Eastern newspa-per men accompanied the train on thetrial trip.
A delegation representing the Repub-lican voters of Mississippi called upon theAttorney-Gener- al in Washington on the15th, to explain the condition of affairs inthat State. They asserted that, owing tothe White League organizations, whichwere very general throughout Mississippi,Republican voters were not able at alltimes to exercise their political rights.They claimed that there was alwaysdanger of serious difficulties unlesstheir State Government, which wasutterly unable to give them protec-tion, should have assistance from the gen-eral Government Upon the advice of theAttorney-Gener- al the delegation would re-
turn to Mississippi and confer furtherwith the Governor and ascertain what theycould do in their own support
In a statement read before the RedCloud Investigating Commission in Wash-ington, on the 15th, Indian CommissionerSmith emphatically denies the chargesmade against him by Prof. Marsh."
The Rev. II. W. Beccher having con.sented to a proposition made by the District-
-Attorney of Brooklyn to enter a nolleprosequi ia the libel suit of the formeragainst Frank D. Moulton, Mr. M. em-
phatically demands a trial under the in-
dictment pending against him.The ninth reunion of the society of
the Grand Army of the Cumberland washeld at Utica, N. Y., on the loth. Sen-ator Conkling made the welcoming speech.Gen. Sherman and Col. George J. Water-man delivered lengthy and eloquent ora-tions. President Grant, Gens. Hooker andSlocum and ex-Go- Seymour were pres-ent and made brief speeches. Gen. P. II.Sheridan was chosen President of thesociety for the ensuing year; Gen. H. M.Cist, Corresponding Secretary; Col. John
W. Steele, Recording Secretary, and Gen.J. S. Fullerton, Treasurer. The nextmeeting is to be held at Philadelphia JulyG and 7, 1S7G.
A dispatch from Madrid on the lGthannounces the capture of the Carlist townof Oyarzun, together with the Governorand his subordinate officers.
Belgrade papers of the lGth say thatTurkey had again violated Servian terri-tory. Her armament was continuing.
The latest returns received on the lGthindicated that Gen. Plaisted, the Republi-can candidate for Congress from theFourth Maine District to succeed the lateSamuel F. Ilersey, would have about 1,000majority.
THE MARKETS.
September 18, 1375.NEW YORK.
Live Stock. Beef Cattle $10.5013.25. HogLive, $S.X8.25. Sheep J4.50ati.25.Bkeadtcffs. Flour Good to choice, $ G.00J5
6.40; white wheat extra, $ti.4(&r. 50. Wheat No.2 Chicago, $1.211.2S; No. 2 Northwestern,$1.2S!&1.29; No. 2 Milwaukee spring, $l.a01.31. Rye Western and State. StXglfiJ. Ear- -ley $1.221.25. Corn Mixed Western, Ttj'13c. Oats Mixed Western, 457c.
Pkovisioss. Pork Mesc, $21 .001(21.25.Lard Prime Steam, 13;i13?c. Cheese 4(310c.
Woor.. Domestic fleece, 4:53 65c.CHICAGO.
Live Stock. Beeves Choice, $"i.75(3;ti.2j;good, $5.00(5.60; medium, $1.255.C0; butch-ers' stock, $3.O04.OO; stock cattle, $1.00ai-0-Uogs Live, $7.603.50. Sheep Good to choice$1.25 J. SO.
Provisions. Butter Choice, 2630c. EfrgsFreeh, 14,4ai5c. Pork Mets, $21.8021.90.Lard $13.0013.20.
BREADSTcrrs. Flour White Winter Extra,$5.757.75; spring extra, $j.25.25. WheatSpring, No. 2, $1.131.13K. Corn No. 2, 61
oHic. Oats No. 2, 37K38c. Kye No. 2,7CS76V4c. Barley No. 2, $1.111.12.
Lumber First Clear, $ 14.0045.00; SecondClear, $43.00(45.00; Common Boards, $10.0011.00; Fencing, $10.00tl.00; "A'' Shingles,$2.t02.90; Lath, $1.7'.2.00.
EAST LIBERTY.Live Stock. Beeves Best, $tj.757.00; me-
dium, $5.756.25. Hoys Yorkers, $7.!(08.15;Philadelphia, $9.50y.75. Sheop Best, $5.255.50; medium, $4.25(24.50.
FACTS AD FIGURES.
TnE State census, just completed, givesCharleston, S. C, 54,000 inhabitants.
Ij the 225 churches in Brooklyn, N. Y.$170,850 is paid annually for music.
Portland, Ore., has a white populationof 11,500, with about 2,000 Chinamen.
It is estimated that during the last sixmonths over 97,103 persons in this countryhave been killed by violence.
ViCTOit Hugo, it is said, has made$700,000 by his pen. Of this amount hisplays alone netted $150,000.
TnE Board of Health of Washington areabout to declare the decayed wood pavements in that city a nuisance as a sourceof disease, and will order their removal.
Even if the Indian is a fellow-man- , heis an expensive luxury to his more favoredwhite brethren and tax-payer- s. Last yea'-i- t
cost $8,032,752.73 to have him aiunlThe exports of butter from France in
1S74 amounted to 83,000,000 pounds,worth $18,000,000. This is calculated torepresent the product of 400,000 cows,each yielding about 200 pounds of butteryearly.
During the last quarter of a century thenumber of volumes in the British Museumhas increased from 435,000 to 1,100,000; inthe Rihliothcquc Nationale, Paris, from824,000 to 2,000,000, and in the public li-
braries in the United States, from 980,000to nearly 20,000,000.
The medal that was voted by Congress,June 20, 1874, to John Horn, Jr., ofDetroit, has, one side, a has rclif profileof Mr. Horn, and upon the other an in-
scription setting forth that Mr. Horn hassaved 121 men,Wonien and children fromdrowning in the Detroit River.
The English Earl of Dunroven hasbought a large piece of laud in EstesPark, Col., and desires to preserve thegame there for sporting purposes. Theneighboring settlers do not approve ofthit, and his Lordship will probablyhave to keep a large force of gamekeepers.
A Philadelphia man has invented avelocipede to be propelled in water. Themachine consists of three zinc floats of theshape of a cigar, placed at equal distancesfrom the center, at which point the opera-tor sits upon a chair three feet above thewater. In front of, and partly under thechair, rests a paddle-whee- l, turned by thefeet with cranks.
TnE report of the Deputy Master of theEnglish Mint for the year 1874 has recent-ly been presented to both houses of Par-liament. It appears that during the yearthe total coins struck numbered 27,407,-142- ,
of the value of .2,371,739. The goldcoinage, including both sovereigns andhalf-sovereign-s, amounted in value to
or considerably less than in pre-ceding years, but to this must be addednearly two millions sterling of gold coinage imported from Australia.
The following from a Georgia exchangeshows that the growth of that State istruly wonderful. The figures given areauthentic, and are as follows: "In 18G5the taxable property of Georgia was$12G,G35.87; now it is $273,085,000 morethan doubling since the war. There arethirty-fiv- e railways in the State, with anaggregate length of 2,000 miles. TheState debt is $8,105,000, and this is 'par-tially offset by property owned by theState worth $0,000,000, leaving the netindebtedness $2,105,000. It has $3,G02,-00- 0
invested in cotton and woolen mills,$735,190 in iron founderies, and --$G,000,-000
in tonnage." The tramp" is attracting considerble
attention in New York at present. A re-
porter of the Tribune has been visiting thehaunts of the homeless, and in a recentissue gives an interesting account of thenumber and habits of those unfortunates.Sleeping in Union Square, in doorwaysand under wagons, he found, at threeo'clock Sundav morning, 258 men of allages and conditions, from the most de-based beggar to the well-dresse- d debauchee,sleeping off" the effects of a night's ca-rousal. The average number of lodgersin the square is about 175. The policehave given up the task of compelling themto "move on," finding it easier to keepthe evil-dispose-
d ones uader surveilancein troops than separately. At CentralPark, which the police try to keep clear oftramps at night, forty were found sleep-ing, while in the ruins of the hotel pro-jected by William M. Tweed, at Filly-nint- h
street and Fifth avenue, fifty-fou- r
were found snoozing the weary hoursaway. The other public squares andparks throughout the city are more or lessfrequented by these vagabonds, the major-ity of whom subsist by petty thieving andsometimes burglaries. After a nightspent in the sky-roofe- d lodging-hous- e thetramp bethinks himself that he must havehis morning dram. Looking over the wayhe sees a pile of beer kegs which havebeen emptied ut the saloon, and with anoyster-ca- n or piece of tin formed into arude vessel he catches the dregs from thecasks and drinks. Passing up the streetshe comes to the market and watches hisopportunity to catch a bone or piece ofold meat or, going to the railroad depotsor vegetable and fruit stands, he looksabo'jt to find a discarded cabbage or othervegetable, or perchance a few apples orpeaches which have not been soli the pre-vious day. t
ERAPLATTSMOUTTI, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER
PARAGRAPHS.
PURSEYERAXCE
LAKE MICHIGAN DISASTERS.
The Milking of tliel'ropellero Equinoxand Mendota SurTlvort Storleo.
The Chicago morning papers of the14th contain detailed accounts of the lossof the propellers Equinox and Mendota,as given by rescued parties. The onlyknown survivor of the crew of the formeryosel reached Chicago on the 13th, hav-ing been nicked up by the schoonerHavana. llis namtf 1 given bv one ofthe papers as Charles Burns, and his storyis condensed as follows:
Bums, who was a wheelsman, remainedin the wlieelhonse until five minutes oftlie time the Equinox went down. Whenthe line by which the M 3 was towedwas cut ihc propeller had in-art- eighth et of water in her hold. Her gangwayhad been stove in br the heavy seas andthe salt between decks was washing over-board. She had only two boats. Onehad been launched, containing Capt.Dwight Scott, the mate, two lire-men- , sixdeck hands and another man, unknown.There re twenty on board in all, in-cluding two ladies. The propeller wentdown liy the stern, and just before thesinking Burns and Capt. Woodruff hadbeen working to get the second loatlaunched. The tackling caught, however,and neither having a knife with which to cutthe gU3s it became too late, and Burnsand Capt. Woodruff" took to fenders, ofwhich the former secured two. The up-per works of the propeller floated oil", andBurns seeing the deck of the pilot-hous- e
within a short distance of him, struck outfor it and succeeded in getting upon it,thus losing sight of Woodruff'. ThoEquinox went down about ten miles offPoint Sauble, at about two o'c lock Fridaymorning, or a little after, and Burns feelsquite certain that all, except those in theboat, perished, as also Capt. Woodruff", asthe latter could not possibly live in thatsea on the fenders. The young ladies, thedaughter and niece of Capt. Scott, wereso overcome by fright that the3' were easyvictims. Besides these ladies there wereleft on board five persons. . A blanket audsheet, from the berth below the pilot-house, were secured by Burns, and helashed himself to the uprights in whichthe wheel was rigged, and so floated, liewent through a terrible ordeal, and becameso chilled and exhausted that had it notbeen for his precaution in lashing himselfhe must have been washed off' and per-ished. An hour or two after the sinkingof the propeller the second cook camedrifting in the vicinity c f Burns, who saj'she unlashed himself, swam to the man andgot him almard the pilot-hous- e deck, butlie soon afterward died and washed off.Later, the boat containing those mentionedabove came along. Capt. Scott askedBurns to enter it, but he preferred not, andthe boat and raft soon afterward separated,the boat going Burns docs not knowwhere. The gale was at its height, andBurns does not think Capt. Scott's partyweathered it. At least, if the boat hadoutridden the storm or been picked up,she ought to be heard from by this time.Burns took to the fenders at about two a.m. Friday and was taken off' his raft aboutsixty miles off' the Manitous,the middle ofthe lake at nine p. m. Saturday, the raitgoing to pieces soon after.
Eight of the survivors of the Mendotaalso reached Chicago on the 13th. Oneof their number, a seaman, tells the fol-
lowing stor3':There were f wenty persons on board the
propeller, including two ladies, the Cap-tain's wife and the Steward's wife. Theyhal a prosperous voyage until theyreached Glen Harbor, on Lake Michigan,about four o'clock Thursday afternoon,when the wind began to blow a gale fromtho northwest. A few hours later thewind changed to the north, and a fearfulsea was making. They passed Point Bet-se- 3
at a quarter past twelve Friday morn-ing, and the propeller, though laboring,went along all right. At about two o'clockone of the barges, the Morning Star, brokeadrift. By this time the arches of the pro-peller broke away and she began to makewater. TI1C3' then let go the other barge.This was about eight miles east of PointSauble. When it was observed that shewas siuking one of the boats was lowered.Tiie Captain was the first to enter theboat and the mate the second.Ev-rylxd- that could crowded into it.The crew were told not to get in it bythe Captain, but to launch the secondboat, though he knew there was not timeenough to "do it. Ten persons crowded inthe boat, and when the Captain saw hiswife was not in it he tried to have herpaved, and in the effort to do so he fell outof the loat, and was jammed between thearch and boom. The Captain got backinto the boat again, and more tried to getin, but they were driven back by the mate.The Captain's father fell out, and waskilled by being jammed between the bul-warks and the hawser-box- . In the effortto save the Captain's wife, who was seenclinging to the hawser-box- , the owner'sson, Biily Crossthwaite, anil the secondengineer were thrown out of the boat. Noeffort w as made to save them, and Mr.Crossthwaite climbed up on the pilot-hous-
on top of which he was last seen. Thisleft but eight persons in the boat. Theypulled for a quarter of an hour towardthe sinking boat, tiying to save the Cap-fciin- 's
wife. At about three o'clock thevessel went down stern first Nothingcould be heard from those left on board ofthe wreck, except that the Steward's wifecried: "Oh. my God!" The wind wasterrible, and the waves were filling thesmall boat in which they were, but by bail-ing they managed t keep it afloat Theywere on the boat twenty-nin- e hours, andwere once passed by a vessel which he isconfident was the schooner Emma A.Mayes, and, though they made signs ofdistress no notice was taken of them, andthe schooner passed on. When they nearcdland they saw a small schooner comingtoward th-?n- which proved to be the Ad-di-e,
of Manitowoc. They were taken onboard and kindly treated by the Captainand crew and taken into Manitowoc.
Fall Dresses.
TnE first importations of fall dressesshow very little change from the fashionsoftheBummer. Basques, over-skirt- s andsacques prevail, as they have done allsummer ; it is said an effort to restore thepolonaise will be made later in the sea-son.
The cuirass basque fitting the figuresmoothly will be retained. It will havebroad forms behind, whether with orwithout side bodies. Short backs willalso remain in favor. Freshness will begiven the cuirass by new ways of trim-ming. The front may be plainly but-toned, or else only fastened across thechest over a vest, and there are also somenew basques that button diagonally. Thedouble Byron collar is one of the novel-ties that will appear on fall costumes.This consists of a large Ityron collarmade ot the silk that forms part of thecostume, upon which is a separate smallercollar ot the same shape, made of thewoolen goods of which the suit mainlyconsists. Silk sleeves with woql basqueswill be worn again, giving the populareffect of sleeveless jackets. Basques ofplaid and striped costumes will be cutbias; to make these effective there shouldbe very few seams to-- interrupt or breakthe lines, hence the broad French backsare preferred for these, anel the lines aremade to meet in the seams. Long bowsmade of doubled silk are set about onbasques and sacques. sometimes in mostuseless places, as at the end of the frontor back seams, while others are on thechest at the throat, just back of the neck,and on the wrists. Silk pipings finish theedges of basques. Sleeves are simplytrimmed, and of close coat-shap- e. A band
LJl1)o
TERMS: $2.00 a Year.
NUMBER 2G.
of narrowly-folde- d silk pleats around thewrists, with a pleated frill falling on thehand, makes a stylish cuff for silk or torwool sleeves. Pleating and braid are thetrimmings most used.
There are new ways of draping ovor-skJrt- s
l3r pleating them to the lower skirt,and putting heavy box-pleatin- g down thefront. The present effect of long tablierswith short backs is also retained. Thelong round overskirt that was among thefirst introduced, and has oxiste-- despiteall novelties, is now slightly changed, andis called the long square overskirt. Thischaije is in the back, where- - it is leftopen from top to bottom, has souarecorners below, and is trimmed with apleated frill up each side of the openingto the belt; the deep front is close andclinging like that now worn, .and its backis arranged so that its trimmings w ill meetand stay together instead of falling w ide-I3- -
open. This is prettily illustrated on afall suit of black and white shepherd'scheck of very heavy twill. The longsquare overskirt has 11 pleated frill ofblack velvet, and is worn over a lowerskirt of black velvet. The basque has ablack velvet vest and velvet sleeves.Double Byron collar, one of velvet, theother of wool. The long overskirt.-- ofhandsome black silk costumes are stylish-ly finished bj' having their entirecut into squares neatly piped, and the lot-to- m
of each square trimmed with fringeor wifii lace. For trimming wool suitsthere are heavy wool fringes more elaboratethan aii3r fringes before shown. There arefringes, deeply netted, fern fringes, Ityfringes, w ith small tufts of wool tie-e- l on astring, bell fringes, and newly-arrange- d
tassel fringes.Buyers just returneel from Taris confirm
Mine. Raymond's assertion that stripes arepreferred there to plaids; but they learstripes w ill not prevail here, because theyhave not gone out of use for several sea-sons past, and purchasers are asking forsomething more novel. However, someof the most stylish imported suits are ofstriped Algerienne, soft, flexible woolfine, 3'et of coarse, w iry appearance. InParis it is worn in brown, blue anel graygrounds, with stripes of gilt and tinsel,anel is trimmed with gold or silver gal-loon. To be stylish the stripes must bebroken and irregular, just as plaids noware, instead of the even, bold stripes onceconsielereel stylish. Among striped Alge-rienne suite for early fall Wear arc thoseof black grounds striped with w hite linesin clusters of three or four lines separatedby wide black spaces. These are madeup with black gros grain, and trimmedwith black agate buttons. The sielc plcat-ing- s
of these stripeel suits are alwa3 s cutbias. One model that has been dupli-cated for several houses is of black andw hite striped Algerienne, with a deep biasside-pleate-
d flounce around the bottom.The tablier has a broad box-pleatin- g ofblack gros grain down the middle, orna-mented by two rows of agate buttons, anelholding the Algerienne apron, w hich is
to the front breadths of the lowerskirt; pointed hack breadths edged withnetted fringe form drapery behind. Thestriped basque is cut bias and pi peel withsilk; two silk scarfs begin at the waistbehind, and are tieel in a long bow on theeelge of the basque. Double Ityron collarand silk sleeves complete the suit. TheLous XV. jacket of stripeel stuffs, showinga plain basque like a vest underneath, isalso frequently seen with such suits; thesleeves arc also plain to match the vest.Leael-eolore- stripes on black grounds areconsidered stylish combinations.
Plaiel woolen suits will be made in thefashions just described for stripes. Newplaid thinners are straight and gathered,and are edged top and bottom with knife-plcatin-
of solid color. Plaiel trimmingson suits of solid color ar largely imported.Dark navy blue woolen suits are trimmedwith white and blue plaid.
Costumes of hcavj Knickerliocker clothwith irregular knotted threads will beamong the handsomest woolen suits. Thela-s- t models are in solid colors, althoughstriped anel plaiel Knickerbocker woeilcnsare very largely imported. Dark seal-brow- n
Knickerbocker, with the raisedthreads of lighter brown or of white,makes very tasteful suits when trimmedwith brown silk, velvet or braid. Somesuch suits have diagonal rows of wideTitan braiel across the tablier, vest andsleeves. There are also hanelsome suits efheavy breiwn ele bege, warm enough formidwinter, trimmed with brown silk anda brown braiel in which are threads of giltand silver.
Another very heavy fabric, similar toKnickerbocker stuff's, is called Snows ofSpitzbergen. It has a elark cloud-gra- y
ground of thick wool irregularly dottedwith white fleecy spots like snow-flake- s.
This will be used for over-dress- onty, asit is too heavy for the whole costume.
Porcupine cloths are also new this sea-son. These have dark, smooth grounds,thickly set with phaggy hairs that aremore soft, and pliable than those of the
Tctl 1 porcupine." This w ill be usedfor outshle wraps, sacques and jackets.Finely twilled serges and cashmeres in in-
visible plaids, also in dark Highlandplaids and other dark mixtures of colors,are commendeel by merchants of experi-ence. Quaint combinations of colors areshown ia stripeel 6erges; thus plum-colo- r
is striped with blue, gray with cardinalred and navy blue with green.
Damask-figure- d gooels of fine wool arecombined with gros grains in street cos-tumes. These are shown at houses whosefastidious customers refjuire the latestnovelties. The figures are in matelasesdesigns, anel resemble the moyen-ag- e bro-
cade silks already described. A browneuit of woolen damask lias the basque ofdamask, with silk sleeves. The back isquite short, has two small pwketstrimmed with bows, and the waist is de-fined by. buttons of shaded tortoise-shell- .
The over-skir- t is edged w ith wool fringe,has long bows down the fnint and is madeshort and lxiufTant behind. The silk skirthas a shirred puff, with alternate rufflesof silk and wool. Foreign correspondentsdescribe costumes of damask wool asso-ciated with velvet of the same shade andtrimmed with silk braiel in which arethreads or checks of gold and silver.
Black cashmere suits promise to remainthe jiopular attire for autumn and winter.They are no longer trimmed w ith showyjet and lace, but with substantial braids,fringe anel made trimmings of gros grain.A very neat model has a long cuirassbasque and long square overskirt. Thebasque has silk sleeves, Byron collar, aknife-pleatin- g of silk on the edge, a clus-ter of silk pleats down the back seam, andlong Ixrws down the front. The over-skir- t
has tw o row s of knife-pleatin- g on the edgeand up the back ; a row of bows is clownthe front, and a "reticule" pocket of silkis on the left side. The lower skirt is ofsilk, trirnmeil with three narrow side-pleating- s.
Correspondents who haveasked for hints about early fall suits areadvised to use this model. It is verystylish for traveling costumes when madeup in seal brown or flate-colore- d cashmere
--and silk. Those who are making blackalpaca suits can also take thi for a guide.The pleatings should be of alpaca, andbuttons may be useel instead of bows. Thebuttons used on new suits are saucer-shape- d,
an inch in diameter, and haveeyes in the middle. There arc also veryneat plain buttons of twilled silk putsmoothly over a wooden mold. Harper'sBazar.
A very small lioy is more modest thana larger one. While the latter directlyasks the peddler for a peach, 1 he formerwill stand bj-a-ni bashfully explain severalhundred times: "I like them, I dopeaches is what I likes, peaches is." Andif the peddler is confident he cannot kickthe child's head off without being seen, hegives him a peach. Danbury News.
THE HERALD.
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square.3 squares.Jtf column.X column.
ADVKRTISLtO HATES.
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T All Advertising Mils doe quarterly.ffT" Transient advertisements must bo paid fctf
in advance.
Ertra coplos of tho IIeraid for sl by U.J.Streight, at the Postotflre. and O. F. Johnson, cor-ner of Main and Fifth struct.
THE MXEJrS BETROTHAL
JOHN .lAMI'.S I'lATT.The miner kissed his midden bride. " L'pon
St. Lucia's la-- ,
Their Messing em our live, f tin;ru-Ml- v palms slrill Iiiv;
Then we will build our lucky nct In summertrees together.
Where Pence ami Love. li- - sinin-- Mtds,shall keep their sunny wciiiii r."
Yesterday came the Sabbath-day- ; oh, bright- -
Iv :!
The esirth wss wii-ullic- dilnly with tholiulo-uir- ;
Anil in the il'lgc e Impel, for t! f second timeproclaimi-il- .
The holy b:ii!S were spoken, i;d tin-- happymorrow named.
'Miood-inorumi;,- at her window now lmgreets her, going by,
Down to tie midnight iniin; all day hersmile's her bright reply:
" fiood-moriMiig,-" in his heart it sings, istiel
merrily and fatFrom her sweet sluht he oin'licil far away
into the past!Ghul-he-arte- d plays lu-- r needle, and her woik
is made of song;Fancies at loving work for hove lighten flow
Time along.Slowly the morning dies and slow the even-
ing hours depart.And in her cheek the roses limh their fra-
grance tills he--r heart.
Fifty long years of happy Junes anddreary, dark December!
Fifty long ye-nr-s of smiles ami tears bl ight
li resides, dying embers!Fifty long years on what strange shores
have crawled their broken waves!How far away their echoes dead drop down
in memory's raves!
Old crowns from dust gleam, buried, and oldscepters lie forgot;
Old prisons, earthquake-shake- n low, haveopened doors for Thought;
Gray, giant sluniberers have waked withblindness in their ryes;
The West has rounded toward the East moremanly destinies.
Some miners toil w ithin a mine one morningbright and fair,
In olden excavations deep below that morn-ing air;
When lo! a dreamer lying there, asleep inyouth benign!
And with his dream about him, Jrcsh, theybring him from the mine.
No one remembers seeing hirn. None knowhim. Who is he?
Lying a dreamer all alone, a man of mys-tery?
Full of the love-drea- long ago, he seems adreamer now:
Yesterday's kiss is in his heart, this morn-ing's on his brow!
They arc all gone, they are all gone, thoeloFC-fumili- faces;
Old footsteps falter far away, old echoes losotheir places;
No father, no mother, no brother, stealsamong that crowd to see
And find his Iwbtfaee ia their hearts, a burledmemory.
Hut who is she that comes, her hands longweary with their part?
From the old coffin of he--r love he wakens Inher heart!
Love only sleeping there like him leaps up aslive nnd young
As when the dews of the fur days to Mayingroses clung.
Her eyes unhlinded by the years of patient-waitin- g
pain,She claims him for her own, long-los- t; she
clasps him back again;To a true heart she clasps him back; her
wrinkled features traceLife's paths of sorrow lifty years Death ha
not seen his face!
" fiood-morning,-" long Ago he said ; he comes
to say "tiood-even.- "
Love that has lived so long on earth hasinolte-- wings for heaven.
A few more days, the appointed time, Deathwill the blessing say:
She knows her used betrothal, and she waitsthe wedding-day- .
The story Is related of a young miner, some-wher- e
in the north of Europe, whoso body wnsfound lifty vears after his death by the falling Inof a mine, preserved lifo-li- by some chemicalproperty iu the enrt h, and wan recognized onlyby the faithful woman, grown old and withered,to whom he had been betrothed. A'l'ti ton'Jovriml.
SENSE AND NONSENSE.
A member of the St. Louis Board ofEducation proposes to establish a schoolespecfally for adults. A pood idea.
A i.akoe whale stranded on the beachat Boekaway, L. I., has been one of thesights there, but lately Iims become one ofthe smells.
Thocsands of people who have gonodown to the New Jersey resorts this sea-son all pale anel lifeless are now comingback home all rosy with mosquito-bile- s
and active with the ague.(Jail Hamilton' thinks she has found a
clear case of genius in a little Cambridgelx3', w ho, the other d;i3', closed his li.it ofexports of Massachusetts with "manylearned men from Harvard College."
In one part of Missouri there are somepeople aw fully mystified by the occurrenceof a shower of' hay, and some hundreds ofmiles distant the people are grumblingterribly that the whirlwind should comejust as their hay w as cut.
The researches of the British Boyal So-
ciety, extending over 200 years, fail toshow a single case of sudden change ofcolor in human hair, nnd, although thepopular belief is strong in the affirmative,men of science doubt that it ever occurredoutside the pages of novels or poems.
An elderly lady who, with he-- r daugh-ter had just returned from rather a rapidjourney' through France, part of Germanynd Italy, was asked the other day if they
had visited Home, and she replied in thenegative. " La, ma, 3'es we did," said herdaughter; "that was the place where weljought the bad stocking. "
A girl near Utica, N. Y., a fewdays ago mistook the meaning of a votingman who was looking up pickers for bisfather's hop-yar- d, and when asked if shewas engaged, sweetly said : "Not yet, butalwaj-- s thought it would be pleasant."The young man rode home quickly anddreamed all night of brcach-of-promis-
trials.The most perplexing thing in a youth's
life is when his girl gets mad and returnsthe numerous trinkets that he has boughtfor her. He hardly wants to sell them;be can't palm them off' on his pet choicefor new goods with any degree of satisfac-tion or safety; they're probably things thathe can't wear himself; and he's kit withthem on his hands, and so he can onlystare at them and count up how much theycost.
GoiNCi up Abliolt street, yesterday, aman saw a loy about ele ven years of ageseated on the sidewalk, bareheaded, inthe full blaze of the scorching sun. " Bub,
ought not to sit there!'' said the man."Why" " Because you'll get all tannedup." "Makes no difference to me whetherI sit in the sun or the shade," sadlyanswered the hoy. "Mother tans me upthree or four times a day, anyhow. He-tro- it
Free l'rcfis.A coctle of "gentlemen" entered a
fire brick store in Akron, N. Y., the otherdav, while the proprietor was absent, andinformed the clerk that they wished topurchase some fire-bric- While one ofthem was being shown around the placelooking at the bricks, the other, who hadrequested leave to write a letter w hile hiscompanion was absent, busied himselfwithin the office making two cheeks, onefortl00 and the either for 0'00, signingthe proprietor's name to both, and affixingthe regular office stamp, as was the cus-
tom. That the checks in every respectwere perfect imitations of the genuine maybe known from the fact that both werecashed without question at the Nationalbank. The whereabouts of the forgershave not been discovered.