Q)ht dfhafham Record. V TV a H. A. LONDON, Jr., KDITOIl AX1 PROPRIETOR. Mil Ay v- OF z AyAyA Ay ADVERTISING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One square, one insertion. One square, two iusertions, One square, one mouth, - 91.00 1.50 2.50 One r;--, one yo.ir, - ne fOiv .six niitiiiht -One copy, three inotiths. - 1.00 .so vol. 1. PITTSBOBO', CHATHAM CO., N. C. OCTOBER 24, 1878. NO. 6. made !rger advertisemeuts Uberal contracts will bo 0 ,irar Jdvqrtiscmtnte. LARGEST STORE LARGEST STOCK Cheapest Goods & Best Variety CAN HE FOUND AT LONDON'S CHEAP STORE. New Goods ReceiTBd eier? Week. Ton can always find what you wish at Lon don's. He keeps everything. Dry Goods, Clothing, Carpeting, Hardware, Tin Wan;, Drugs, Crockery, Confectionery Shots, Boot, Caps, Hats, Carriage Materials. 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All losses paid p o nptly. Eight thousand dollars paid in the last two years to families in Chatham. It will cost a man aged thirty years only five cents a day to insure for one thousand dollars. Apply for further information to H.A. LONDON, Jr., Gen. Agt. PITTSBORO', N. C. Dr. A. D. MOORE, PITTSBORO', N. CM Offers tit profcRuional services to tie citixeni of Chatnmu. With an expneoce of thirty year he iiutHi to five entire aatittfaction. JOHN MANNING, Attorney at Law, PITTSBOBO', N. 0., Practices in the Courts or Chatham, Harnett. Moore and Orange, and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. H. A. LONDON, Jr., Attorney at Law, PITTSBORO', N. C. t-agrSpecial Attention Paid to Collecting. DR. A. J. YEAGER, DENTIST, PERMANENTLY LOCATED AT PITTSBOBO', 27. C. All Work Warranted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. R. H. COWAN, DEALER IN Staple & Fancy Drj Goods, Cloth ing, Hats, Boots, Shoes, No tions, Hardware, CItOCKERY and GROCERIES. PITTSBORO', IT. C. NORTH CAROLINA STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO., RALEIGH, IV. CAR. O. S. POE, Dealer in Dry Cosds, Groceries & General Merchandise, All kinds of Flows and Castings, Buggy Xaterials, Furniture, ote. PITTMBOUO W. CAR. WAITING IN HOPE. Two lovers stray'd beneath a churchyard yew, Where autumn fields spread wide to left and rlBht; Their beam were brave, and light with hope; and through Their eyes deep auswer'd deep, In still delight. The golden eorn stood sheaf "d uhu the land; A golden dye shot ruddy o'er the trees; The setting sun sent forth his flaming baud Of painted cloud-curs floatliiK with the breeze. The murmur laden gale, with whispers kind. Wont sighing round the twain like sort regret; The evening's balm came watted in the wind. And klss'd the brows where love's first seal was set. lireen graves lay scattered round the lorlng pair. Where poppy-flt.wer, hU head all glowing, rears; Forgotten graves, once shadow" d by despair. Now blended with dim dreauisof long-dried tears. The church- a poeui in stroug granite stoue A Tillage church, all ivy-clad and grey. Sent out its chimes In many a boding tone. And warn'd the lovers of the closing day. Yet still they Rat, hand cleaving unto hand. And passion's tones were heavy in the air. When twilight deep'nlngo'er the autumn land, Wrapp'd its dim mantle round the clinging pair. Ambitious he. and sighing sere for fame; His earnest eyes wore flx'd upon that gold. Save when he sought and found an answering flame Of fervent love within his sweet one's soul. She long'd and waited for her lover's fame; In him she breathed, and hoped, and lived her life; To see Immortals woven with his name She would have died, nor sought to Ik? his wife. Oh, they were poor, these lovers of my tale; No gold of earth had fallen to their share: The lover with his nightly toll wax'd pale. And she with hoH9 deforr'd, and calking care. His home was in the city, vast and proud. Where toilers toll for Same, and gold, and bread; There, "mid the eager, struggling, strivlug crowd. lie work'd and watch'd in hope, though oft iu dread. So tar the goal where hangs the victor's crowu, So dusty lire's highway, so steep the road. Injustice holding patient merit down. While pride and poverty alternate goad: He was a sculptor, with a poet's mind; Beneath hlshaud the marble glow'd with truth. Beauty with truth anil subtlety combined Oh, might he but prove famous In his youth! While life is young, while blood runs red aud warm. While hope lteats high and ardor is awake, While strength of manhood battles with the storm Oh. might he now, if only for her sake! She dwelt among the corn lands and the flowers. Her father the ioor pastor of the place, ' Aud numerous little brethren taz'd her powers; Her mother long had slept in death's embrace. The red-llpp'd flower-cups fill'd apace with dew. Their wild blooms swaying iu the fresh'nlng gait, The shadows devpeu'd to a darker hue. And told that night was stealing up the vale. 'Another time when we stand here." he said, "May yonder portals uie for thee and me ; nil then. Heave u's grace descend upon thy head. My love my life my wife that art to be !" He left the village In the early morn, Wheu silver mist clung round the autumn wood. And rose as incense o'er the sheafted corn, Like thankful prayers for harvest rich aud good. The village thatch, the village dogs, the barn. The cattle grazing by th The solemn chunh tower, and the cheerful farm, He gaiu-d on all with wistful tender look. Aud clinging to his hand to chide his fears. And paint his hoj.es with Fancy's pencil gay, The pale, fair girl held back her rising tears. And spoke of joys on some new dawning day. Again we gaze upou that village tower; The autumn wealth is gather'd from the land. The folded heavens with coming teuicst lower. And wrapp'd in spotless snow the dwellings stand. The hell souuds o'er the fields ; the village street is soon astir, though biting is the air What liell V Alas ! no pealing cadence sweet. Chiming of wedded love, aud bridal pair. It is the touching, mourning, awful ouud, Wliirh speaks of spirits summou'd home to Ood, of dearest faces hidden under ground Alt : who can stoop and humbly kiss the rod ! And sec the sculptor carried to his rest. Before the field was won, or he could gain The bread to take the maiden to his breast, )r grabp the gay but thorny crown of fame. And broad the portals ojten'd for him now ; h, he hud striven to write his name on earth ; To bind immortals round hi aching brow. And cast a halo o'er his native hearth. In vain! In vain! now laid iu that dread sleep Which lasteth till the coming of the Lord, He leaves the loving eyes to fade aud weep. The heart to quiver "gainst the two-edg'd sword. Oh, will she die, and rest tier weary head. That pale, fair head, beside her lover fond ? No, she will live her life till youth bus fled. Waiting in hope for that which lies beyond. HUNTERS OF THE CHAMOIS. The day was beginning to break ; a large grayish band stretched across the eastern horizon, and as it advanced towards the zenith, the stars of the night, veiling their modest brightness, extin guished themselves one after another, boon the hardly visible sun shot up its lines of fire and gave to the rock which crowns the peak of Rawsberg the appear ance of a mass of crude gold. The valleys were enveloped in a heavy, mist, which was colored with opaline tints by the first rays of the sun. At intervals, the breeze that was springing up made this mist un dulate in immense waves, and at times separating them, permitted the black masses of the forests below to be seen. There were two hunters in the foot-path which winds up the flanks of Rawsberg both young, both clad in the livery of St. Hubert. But it was only necessary to glance at them, to see that both had not been born in the same rank, and were not called to play the same roll in life. Of medium height, the one who walked in advance was gifted with the vigor and agility which distinguishes the mountain eer ; his foot and his leg had the supple ness and the certainty of the foot of the chamois for bounding from rock to rock and making his way on the very verge of ma complexion, aimougn blond, like that of the greater part of the children of Germany, was bronzed by ex posure to the air and the sun's rays. The second personage was tall and slender- too tail and too slender to be vigorous : his hair and his youthful beard were light, and the paleness of his complexion showed that he had breathed the atmospheres of the talom oftener than the bracing air of the mountains, and also, the involuntary ap prehension against which he struggled when the path was narrow and dangerously near the edge of the precipice, proved that he was more accustomed to tread the carpets of the palace than the rolling stones of Rawsberg. From time to time the first of the t o hunters turned around in order to assure himself that the other was making his way without accident. When, by the frightened look and the pearly drops of sweat on the brow ot the latter, he saw that he was likely to be attacked with ver tigo, he would go to his assistance, and giving him his hand, enable him to get over the dangerous places. However, as these manifestations of solicitude neces sarily multiplied, a smile might be seen on the lips of the leader, indicating a disdain for the weakness of his comrade and a sense of his own superiority. The ascent was becoming more and more difficult, and more and more perilous. All trace of any passage by man had disap peared. The experience of the first of the hunters was necessary to find a way over the huge boulders which sometimes forced the two men to climo almost perpendicu larly over them and sometimes to leap from rock to rock over the great crevices which separated them. After a half hour of these gymnastics, the young man's forces were visibly exhausted, and he panted for breath. In a short, im perious tone of voice, indicating the habit of commanding, he ordered the hunter to halt ; and putting down his carbine and disembarrassin g h iuiself of the hunting-bag that he wore slung over his shoulder, he seated himself under a projecting rock. "Zounds ! Meinherr Wilhem," cried the mountaineer, with a shade of ill humor, "your legs are longer than they are strong it seems. If we make a halt every five hundred steps, the chamois will have left the pastures ; and you are not exactly fitted to go in search of them after they have retired to take their siesta. Make haste, then, my boy, to catch your breath, and let us proceed." He whom his companion called Meinherr Wilhcm. glanced with surprise at the for mer, and exhibited an ill-suppressed irri tation ; evidently he was not accustomed to be treated with such familiarity. "We will start when I give the order," replied he ; "and I will give you the order when I find my self sufficiently rested. You asked a frederic d'or to guide me in search of the chamois ; you have your money ; the rest concerns only myself." "Pardon," replied the .hunter, whose physiognomy had again taken its bantering expression, " but it is precisely because I have received your money that I wish to earn it, in enabling you, I will not say to kill, but to discharge your carbine at the finest chamois that ever bounded over the Rawsberg ; and if you do not carry his horns back to Berlin, I do not wish you to be able to accuse Stephen Raubvogel of your ill luck." "Bah!" said Wilhem, uncorking his drinking-bottle. "Perhaps they will be complaisant enough to meet us half way. " Do not count on that, Meinherr," ex claimed the hunter. ' If you were in search of the little silly hares on 3-011 r sand plains, 1 would not discourage you ; but the game of these mountains is not suffi ciently versed in the art of politeness to do that. The chamois will the less decide to dewend, as he does not suspect the honor that a personage of your importance wishes to do him. For, Meinherr Wilhem," con tinued he, in a chaffing manner, "you be long to the annv, do you not ? I would be willing to wager that you do, and, fur ther, that you serve in the cavalry." lou nave guessed right. "Oh ! I knew it at once, bv vour light and easy walk. And 3-011 are an Ensign, at least V" "Better than that, Raubvogel.'' "Pshaw ! Lieutenant, then?" " Better still." "Captain?" "Go on." "Major?" " You have not reached it j-et." ' But 3011 are still too voung to com mand a regiment," replied the hunter with an air ot doubt. "I had two of them under my command six years ago, when I had the glory of an nihilating the armies of the modern Attilia, under the walls of Leipsic. But let us leave this subject," added the young man, who was taking a draught from his bottle. Mv rank in the army concerns vou but little. Take a drink of this brandv. which I brought back from the campaign, and let us continue our way." Raubvogel took the flagon, and was about to raise it to his lips when a peculiar hissing whistle was heard in the distance. Dropping the bottle on the ground, and springing behind the rock which sheltered them, he exclaimed in a voice vibrating with agitation : " Fall flat on your face, Keinherr Wil hem ; flat on vour face ! Zounds ! You were born under a lucky star. There are the chamois coming to us. Stretch your self out behind that stone, and keep as quiet as the hare when it hears the hunter approaching." He had not finished speaking, when a herd of seven or eight chamois emerged from a gorge several hundred yards dis tant, and then stopped. Frightened either by the attack of some larger animals, or by the appearance of another huntsman, they had fled, leaping from rock t o rock and promised to pass within short range of our two companions. Couching behind his shelter, Raubvogel had already carried his carbine to his shoulder, and was carefully adjusting it, according to the custom of people of his profession : "Aim at the large male who leads the flock, Meinherr Wilhem," he is the general of the chamois. I will choose another in the rear. 7 The animals started on again with the rapidity of an arrow, but were almost im mediately stopped by a large ravine too wide to be leaped over. In an instant Wilhem aimed at the large leader, which had been pointed out to him by his com panion and fired. The chamois staggered for a second under the shot, then turning to the left, he bounded away down the side of the mountain followed bv the rest of the herd. Raubvogel, however, firing in nis turn, Drought down the last of the chamois, which seemed to be killed in stantaneously, and laid stretched out inert on the stones. "Quick! quick 1 Meinherr Wilhem, cried the hunter triumphantly. "As for mine, it is only necessary to nick him ud. but yours I have an idea that he will lead us a long chase. " By the three Kings ! I am sure wounded him badly," replied the young man, panting witn emotion. "Of course ! but let us hasten after him To think that if Heaven does not come to our aid, such a superb animal will serve for the supper of some peasant in the valley ! A nice piece of business that would be, Meinherr Wilhem ! " While speaking, the two hunters had di rected their steps towards the snot where the dead chamois lay. Raubvogel did not take the trouble to look at his victim, but taking on his hunting-bag and his vest he threw them over the animal, in order to keep away the eagles, who would other wise attack it while they were away : then preceding his companion they made their way over the rocks in the direction in which the chamois had fled. The hunter walked along, bending over and examin ing the ground carefully for the blood marks. " You aimed a little too high and too far in the rear, Meinherr," said he after an instant ; "you hit the animal just above the hind shoulder ; see, the mark of the blood is at the edge ot the print of the hoof. However," he added after taking several steps, "even if the bone is not broken, the wund is none the less grave. He bleeds profusely, and the blood is red and frothy ; here is another imprint of his toot, more bloody still, it his strength. is exhausted, we have some chance of find ing him, and you may yet be able to boast of 3-our good fortune, Meinherr Wilhem. To get sight of a chamois so easily, to hit him at the first shot, ana to carrv him back with 3'ou is an excellent day-'s work for any nunter. The perspective that Raubvogel present ed to him animated Wilhem very deci dedly. His pale cheeks became tinted with a deep red. His eyes sparkled, and at the same time his strength seemed in creased tenfold ; he clambered over the rough rocks and made his way through the difficult passes with an ardor that the hunter was forced to temper. But after they had traveled about a thousand yards, the latter began to show 6igns ot impatience and of spite, which attracted the attention of the young man. VY hat is the matter, blister Raubvo gel? " said he, " Have you lost trace of our chamois ? Do you think that he has strength enough left to escape us after all? ' " When 'the chamois takes the trouble to mark in blood3' letters the path he has taken, Raubvogel does not lose trace of him. The animal you wounded has not five minutes more to run ; he vacillates on his legs like a man who has taken too much beer, hook at the imprint on this sand, and see lu w he struggled to maintain his equilibrium But, in spite of all that, Meinherr Wilhem, I begin to believe that we never shall have the pleasure of re galing ourselves on his venison. "Aud why not, if 3'ou please?" " Because he has gone straight to the Vallev of Bodo ; because lie has risked a leap over the Rosstrapp, and because, like all those who have attemped it before him, he is at this moment in the gulf. He will be eaten b3r the fishes of the water, instead of by the eagles of the mountain ; for us he is none the less lost. "And wLat is the Rosstrapp? " deman ded Wilhem. "It will not be long before vou will have made its acquaintance, and then I will tell you, replied the hunter. In fact, after the3r had advanced about one hundred yards, and turned round a huge rock which had masked the horizon, they found themselves suddenly before an immense and seemingly bottomless gorge. It was over three miles long, and appeared like a gigantic cleft made by some great convulsion in the first ages of the world. The eye which essayed to sound the depth f the abyss perceived only the blackish and wet stones, from between which sprang out those parti sit? plants that vege tate only iu the orifices of deep, damp crevices of this kind. The bottom of this singular opening lost itself in the dark ness ; and the roaring of the torrent be low, which was invisible to the eye, added to the awfulness "of the scene. Although the young man was not in a contemplative mood, the view of this pas sage produced on him a decided impression, aud he remained absorbed in his reveries. Raubvogel, in the meantime, had knelt on a stupendous flat stone, which extended over the side of the gulf, and peered in tently into its depth. After a moment he arose. " Well, he has made the leap," said he with a sigh of regret ; "and now if you wish to cany back 3-our game, which it is the glory of a hunter to do, you will have to go after him 3'ourself to the bot tom of the ravine, for it is a work which does not tempt me." "Bah!" replied the young man, smi ling, " I will add two freddrics to the one I gave you this morning." 4 Neither for two nor for ten. I refused more from a young Englishman, who wished to carry to his own county the crown of gold, which many years ago, preceded our chamois in his fall.'' "What crown of gold?" demanded Wilhem, with curiosity. "The story which I promised 3rou, and which I am going to relate, will tell you," said Raubvogel, seating himself on the stone. "A long time before ths town of Wolf enbuttel wras built, a King who ruled over the country had his castle vhere our village isto-da3r situated. This King had a daughter named Elfride. As she was beautiful, and her father commanded the plain as well as the mountain, suitors for her hand were not wanting ; but as she was as proud as she was handsome.she refused '.hem all, young, noble and valiant as they vere. The King, who was beginning to grow old, under stood the necessity of leaving the Govern ment in virile hands, and became impa tient at her caprices. One day, deciding to end the delay, he accorded the hand of the Princess to the Burgrave Bodo, who had asked her in marriage, and swore by his sceptre that the union should be accom plished. Among the nobles who had as pired to the hand of Elfride, there was not one for whom she experienced a greater antipathy. The Burgrave was no longer young, he had never been handsome, and he had the reputation of being wicked and brutal. However, the King resisted the supplications and the tears ot his daughter, and in due time she became the wife of Bodo. The evening of the marriage cere mony, towards the end of the feast, when the freely-flowing wine began to thicken the speech and obscure the vision of those present, Elfride, who during the formalities of the occasion, had remained quiet and thoughtful, fled from the hill, descended to the stables, leaped on the back of her favorite horse, which was in readiness for her, and urged him at the top of his speed toward the mountain. But the Burgrave, soberer than the rest of the guests, and somewhat suspicious, did not fail to notice the disappearance of her who was to be long to him from that night, and at once began to search after her. A groom in formed him of what had just taken place. He called a number of his friends to his assistance, and mounting their horses, they darted away after the fugitive with the rapidity of lightning. Elfride, who had arrived at the part ot the mountain where we are now, heard behind her the gallop of the black whirlwind of cava liers, and saw the sparks which the iron on the horses' hoofs caused to fly from the rocks. Tired ot invoking since the morn ing, God and the saints, desperate and almost crazed, she addressed herself to the Prince of Darkness : "Satan, Satan, come to my "aid," she cried ; "rather than belong to the Burgrave. I give myself to to thee ! " She had not finished speaking when a frightful commotion shook the mountain to its foundation ; the Rawsberg seemed to separate in two parts, and the great cleft which vou see before, xnn opened between the Princess and her pur suers. The latter stopped short : the Bur grave alone, intoxicated with love and with rage, burying his sours into tli airi of his courser, tried to leap over the abyss. The spirit of the animal was so great that he gave a tremendous bound, touching this stone with his fore feet. m.ikinr t.h marks you will see here : but he fell bar k the horse and rider were swallowed up in the gulf, which since that time has been called the Rosstrapp." "And the Fnncess?" demanded "Wil hem, who had listened with interest to t Via legend of the chamois hunter. "She was never seen afterward, either here or elsewhere, and it is suDnosed that. the devil, who does not have such a wind- tall every day, did not delav in claiming the victim who gave herself to him. But a few days after, a herdsman, who was drawn by curiosity to the edge of the crevice, perceived some distance down, the crown that the Princess wnm it u-:i hanging on a projecting stone. The King who had been notified of the fact, at once repaired, with his court, to the nlace : one of his servants descended in the gulf by means of a rope, but the instant he reached out his hand to sieze the crown, it detached itseu and rolled down to the torrent below. Since then it has been sought a nmhor of times for there have not been lacking iiiusc who nave wisuea 10 possess it but 111 vain. "I can well beiieve that," replied the young man, "for the crown must repre- "Yes, and more than that Meinherr Wilhem ; all the old people of the coun try here will tell you that it is written on high, that he who possesses that crown shall reign over Germany entire." A silence of several seconds followed these words : they had produced on Wil hem a perceptible impression, which he endeavored to hide, but which the move ment of his lips and the expression of his eyes plainly revealed. He approached the precipice, and bending over its edge, gazed for some time in its sombre depths ; then turning to the hunter he said, in a vibrating voice, "Raubvogel, I must have that crown." The hunter became grave and thoughtful and then answered : No! no! All of those who have attempted to rescue it have met with mis fortune ; as well ask me to sieze that cloud which floats above our heads." "This morning," replied Wilhem. "you did not think it possible to see the chamois before attaining their pasture grounds, and 3-et 3rou lodged a bullet in one of them not tar trom here. Try," continued he. in a strangely persuasive voice, "try without fear this perilous descent, for not only will you run no risk, but you will certainly succeed." "Ah ! it seems that the elements figure among the squadrons 3'ou command, Meinherr Wilhem," said the hunter, re turning to his bantering tendencies. llis companion did not appear to hear him. but continued : "I must have that crown, Raubvogel ! Put it in my hands and you shall be rich ! Place it on m3r head and you will have served the Divine will." This last movement astonished the hunter without moving his resolution : he replied to it with a smile which expressed oetter than words his incredulity. After a moment's pause, he answered : "In my quality of good Christian. I would ask nothing better than to be agree able to God, the master of us all ; but in asmuch as He Himself has not declared to me His desire that I should break my neck, I shall continue to hesitate. Yet," said he slowly, "perhaps we may come to an agreement. I love Eva, the daughter of Deitrich, the rich farmer : he has prom- lseu 10 give ner to me when 1 shall be able to put down five hundred frederics on his table. Enable me to present myself at the house of old Deitrich, and I will see. One could well risk his neck for such a prize as Eva." "Uh ! said the young man. whose eyebrows gathered when he heard the price the hunter placed on his services. " hve hundred is almost too much : sav two hundred and fifty frederics ; that is a greater sum than an3' mountaineer has ever ptssessed." " Pshaw ! exclaimed Raubvogel, with a ourst 01 laughter; "here is Meinherr. the General, who wishes like a Jew. to cheapen the life of one of his fellows." ' You shall have your five hundred fre derics," answered Wilhem, whose face became colored with deep red. The hunter started, but he replied in a tone of mistrust, which he took no pains 10 conceal : The word promises, but it is the purse which " " The word gives, also, when it fall from royul lips, Raubvogel, and he who promises you 3'our five hundred frederics belongs to a ro3ral family-. " You ! " " My name is Frederic Ludwig de Ho benzollern. and I am the second son of your King, Wilhem III." The royal prestige is so great in old Ger many, that, in spite ot the skepticism which he had till then affected, the moun taineer was profoundly and visibly moved by the revelation ot the rank of his com panion. He raised himself quickly, and having respectfully uncovered, remained standing, with his head bowed, before the Prince. " You have the right to claim the crown ot nitride, your Highness, said he ; " it is to you and 3'ours that it belongs. Under 3rour incognito, 1 did not suspect 3'our real position. Pardon me for having spoken of recompense. I was ignorant of whom I was addressing It onl3r remains now tor 3-ou to speak to be obeyec." The future Wilhem I., who was already imbued with certain ideas of predestina tion, was touched by the devotion and abnegation of his guide ; he hesitated 1 moment and seemed to waver in his deter mination ; but the ambition to possess the precious treasure outweighed the sentiment of humanity which reproached him for exposing the life of a fellow man for the satisfaction of a caprice. " Make the descent " said he. at length, "and I will give vou five hundred frede rics ; but if 3Tou bring me up the crown of Elfride, you shall receive one thonsand frederics. This promise, which gave the lie to the reputation of parsimony which had alread3r been attributed to Prince Wilhem, electri fied the chamois hunter. " There is a cabin below here a short stretch," he exclaimed. " I will run and bring some people and some ropes. In a quarter ot an hour 1 will be bacK, your Highness, and soon you shall hold in your hands the crown twice blessed, to which I shall owe the joy of possessing Eva, the blonde. And may God protect the future sovereign ot Germany." This enthusiastic homasre on the nart of Raubvogel caused a gleam of satisfaction to pass over the face of the 3-oung Prince. vv nen me hunter had disappeared behind the rocks, he walked uo and down bv thp side of the Rosstrapp, glancing sometimes at the yawning gulf beneath his feet, some times at the clear blue sky of the horizon. What was passing in the mind of this 3'oung man for whom fortune reserved such a strange destiny whom fate was going to place on a throne to which he hail no right to pretend, and who, later, with no other merit than eood sense uni ted to a firmness almost bordering on ob stinac3', was to be the Emperor of a uni ted Germany, and the leader of her victo rious armies? He was too narrowlv religious to be without superstition ; and perhaps the idea of see'ng in his hands the crown, to the possessor of which, the j popular belief gave the government of an immense countiy, divided at that moment among twenty ditlerent sceptres, occupied a prominent place in the vague and con- wseu aspirations 01 rnnce w Hhera. Raubvogel soon returned, accompanied by four herdsmen of the neichliorhood. who brought a great quantity of rope. yjac ena 01 it was tied around a firm rock, ! the other was let down the precipice. The hunter assured himself that it touched the bottom ; then kneeling, he made a short prayer, and carrying only his iron staff to protect himself against the sharp stones to which he was exposed by the svtaywigoi tne rope, ne resolutely de scended into the abyss. Lying down and bendintr over the edcrp. Of the Rl)SStraDD. the assistants whim w. down, and soon lost sight of him in the heavy mist whic rose trom the bottom of the gulf ; the movement of the rope above indicated that the descent continued, and that the courageous mountaineer had not reached his objective point. At lensth the rope became motionless, and the quar ter of an hour which followed was full of anguish for the watchers. Raubvogel had arrived at the rushing waters below, and nad stin to explore the bed of the torrent, of the depth of which he was ignorant. All the faces were deathly pale, all the mouths remained mute. Prince Wilhem could no longer control his agitation, and moved about in a levensh anxiety, which was plainly 'to be seen in his changed and almost haggard appearance. I5ut now a shout of triumph was heard nbove the roaring of the torrent, and five loud hurrahs at once responded. The rope began to sway anew. 1 he hve men, their eyes fixed on the sombre curtain of mist which concealed the lower part of the abyss, for a time could distinguish nothing ; but at the end of a few minutes, they saw an indistinct torm which became more and more de fined ; it was he whom but a short time before they had believed lost. Raubvogel, who was remounting with an astonishing vigor. More pale han ever, the forehead f the Prince was bathed in a heavy sweat. The hunter continued to advance. He was not more than fifty feet from the surface, when the j-oungest of the herds men cried : "He has the crown ! he has the crown of the Princess Elfride ! See my friends, 11 is on nis arm, wnere it throws out as much fire as the mid-day sun !" Poor Raubvogel heard him. He had indeed the crown. But in the intoxication of his triumph, forgetting to be prudent, he let go his hold with one hand of the rope, in order to wave his tro phy, and at thesame time cried, " Hurrah!" This enthusiasm was fatal to him. The spectators saw the other hand of the unfortunate man slip the length of the rope, then his form disappear. They heard a long, loud cry of despair and of death, then the dull heavy thud of the falling body, which broke itself on the rocks below. Raubvogel, the brave chamois hunter, was lost in the torrent of the gulf. Prince Wilhem was deeply moved by the unhappy result of the adventure, and departed from the place in great sorrow. He had only caught a glance of the crown of Princess Elfride ; but it did not prevent him trom, being hailed fitty-one 3-ears later, in the palace of Louis XIV., at Versailes, Emperor of Germany. Tramlatei from the Paris Figaro for the 2ieu York Tims. IMPRISONED IN HIS OWN TOMB. THE LATE WILLIAM XIBLO'S ACCIDKX TAL XIGIIT IN GREEN WOOD CEME TERY. About fifteen years ago, the late William Xiblo, of Xiblo's Garden, built a handsome tomb in Greenwood ceme tery. He expended a great deal of money upon it, and it naturally became one of the attractions of that pensive resort. Among the eccentricities of the veteran managers was that of visit ing this tomb on sultry Sunday- after noons, and sitting there, novel in hand, until the shadowing of the grand path before the door showed hinithat even ing was near. One day Mi. Xiblo passed through the lodge-gate as usual, saluted the attendant in his customary courtly style, and wandered away. That night Mr. Xiblo did not return to his home 111 this city. Nothing was thought; of it as he had such a number of friends whom he might visit and remain until late, but when the morn ing showed the room unoccupied and the bed undisturbed, the alarm siezed the household. Search was made ; the clubs, the places of public resort, the theatres all were visited. He had not been there the night previous. Then one remembered the visits of the Green wood tomb. When those who were searching for Willuim Xiblo reached the gate of the cemetery they were met by the man in harge. He remembered that Mr. Xiblo had been there so many days be fore that it become a custom. What was the matter ? Mr. Xiblo lost ' "Come to think of it, I didn't see him go out of here when I locked up. He must be in the tomb.' The tomb has an ornamental door let into the solid rock surroundings. It is massive, thick, uninviting and seems just the aperture for a perpetual home for the dead. Beyond it is an airy apart ment, in which the sunlight filters. Mr. William Xiblo entered his favorite resting place that summer afternoon so long go, he sat in his accustomed seat, opened his book and fell to reading. The wind rose, the vault was rilled with air until a propulsive force was generated, and then, suddenly, there came a short, sharp click, with semi-darkness after it. Mr. Xiblo was shut in. Tho vault door had sprung to. He was found sittine composed in the tomb, aad by no means so much agitated as was any one of those who were look. ing for him. He explained the accident, his shrieks for assistance and then h relapse into a calm and nhilnsnnhiVai consideration of the circumstauces. He knew that no one could hear him call, but he felt that the active brains of his friends would seek him out, and that sooner or later he would be liberated. iVew 1 ork Mercury. Obstinacy is the heroism of little minds. Seven million people are said to have died from the famine in China. Twenty-four million dollars will ie coined at the Philadelphia mint this year. -Portions of Germany and Belgium were recently shakea up by a lively earthquake. The public debt of Great Britain, is er the last official statement, is 8U,lo7,9(U. Never marry but for love, but see that thon lovest only what is lovely. Tir-Ti- t- " rr uitam Jt'eixn. Respect is the result of a lifetime. whereas a single silly act often wins one a reputation. A Birmingham youth recently skated 200 miles in 24 hours in a rink for a wager of 75. Two little children, in London, were lately burned to death as the re sult of playing with matches. Nothing is beneath you if it is in the direction of your life: nothing is great or desirable if it is off and away trom that. Emerson. At Erie, Pa., tramps are sentenced to thirty days' hard labor in the chain ing, and the law is said to work with excellent satisfaction. The first successful attempt to as cend Mount Blanc on the Italian side was recently made by four members of the Italian Alpine Club. A new peal of 12 large bells is be inir placed in position in St. Paul's Cathedral, Loudon. The largest tenor bell weighs 02 hundred w-eight. Experiments with war balloons are going on at Woolwich, England, and are to be continued for several months. The telephone is used to communicate trom captive balloons to a committee below. It is a most important lesson, and too little thought of, that we learn how to enjoy ordinary life, and to be able to relish our being, without the transport of some passion, or the gratification of some appetite. Steele. Thourgueneff says: " In a century there won't be a king in Europe, ex cept, perhaps, in England, and there iie will be nothing but a pageant a political mummy shown to the popu lace at so much a head. The thirty-second report of the British Commissioners in Lunacy shows that the number of "registered lunatics, idiots, and persons of unsound mind in England and Wales" has increased from 3(5,702 to 0S,538 in the last 19 years. A woman of Steele County, Minn., had her husband and son killed by light ning five years ago. She married again, and her second lord was killed by light ning a few days ago. Indeed, both hus bands were very much struck with her. German sugar-beet manufacturers offer $40 per ton for dried sugar-beets, delivered at their sea ports. At this price, their culture, preparation and freighting would leave a handsome profit t American farmers and ship owners. In the International Prison Con gress, which opened at Stockholm on the 20lh of August, Dr. Wines, of this city, as Vice President, delivered an address giving an extensive resume of the progress of prison and criminal re form during the last seven years in all countries. In Bulgaria a new baby is first salted thoroughly, as if it were a cod fish, and then it is wrapped up. After that an omelette is made of three eggs; black pepper is sifted over this, and the child's head is poulticed with the pre paration. The purpose of this is to harden the skull against sunstroke. The buffalo plains and the middle portion of the continent, together with the Pacific States, are rapidly taking the place of Texas as the great feeding grounds, and are leading in the produc tion of beef. Tiie estimated returns for this year give Colorado o50,00'j head; Wyoming 225,000; Utah 3."0,000; Wash ington, 2,000 ; Montana 300,000 ; Ore gon 17",000, and California 650,000. Mine. Quentin-Proffit, a matri monial agent in Paris, lately sued Prince and Princess Galitzn for 0,000 francs, for trying to make a match for their son and failing. Her bill was: Carriages, 432 francs; cost of toilets, 1,000 francs; money expended, corre spondence, &c, 150 francs; honorarium, 4,418 francs; total 0,000 francs. The court thought it was too much, and allowed her only 500 francs. Capital punishment has been abol ished in Switzerland, and the punish ment for murder ordinarily amounts to live or six 3'ears' imprisonment. As a consequence the most atrocious crimes have become quite frequent. One of the latest cases is that of a vagrant Italian, who brutally murdered an un protected woman in her husband's ab sence, in order to get her money, which amounted to about $10. A sailing-car is frequently used on the Kansas Pacific road to transport the track-inspectors in their tours of observation. On such a road, extend ing over long stretches of level, treeless country-, there is little difficulty in catching a forwarding breeze a con siderable part of the time by skillful use of a sail, and often making the, speed of a fast express train.