BREEf&SBOftO i 1 " I C : JT4i.isitEi nr ism.) Lament. P " ' -, i write, but I writ? to bo purpose; 1 I write j,,urnal will notice my work. I WJSi i quires of letter and foolscap. I" IV St X Utter my only desert. To 8B Vj brd oo a fellow. I ' t " nrint to behold my own writing i 4W'&V -veV riiwl could think or indite. I bwn. e nof in u or , mall pica. But ,,h1i thought ever gladdened my sig ht ?""ThsVViac lise of ambition? i . :i j , TVe eat in composin? a stansa, ! ouitt ."'ton. in finding a rhyme; ' f ,AgJKc' Slt eaf.v to print in no time, ,n iu"c, ,u stress oi naru ininmng uw uwuw 10 u. I ..., , .Will never be published T hi ' :" s. r-.U written describing the shepherd's 'n if", that wwmphic and true; . I"' ?'? T to w 'that are blue. tZnZii composed. ln Plneuc nu comic. fficient to make me quite famous. fitted by a mortal. I , . ,v H fine freniy. are ever imwuiu ; -? ey that true ream doth in mVabide. 'Eii the use of it all, when the printer. ( M TVthemroU. never fails toecide . 01 .Tto squelch my productions ? U - ! i, i ; " t- ' . . id! Moonshiner" and asked it to publish. I -,Vj$$ght. to besure.the-BulldoierSrould b f."; ni'itSer would set up in type, my productions. ivh -h in-teal were returned with a typical hint E-v "Iihat dampened jny spirits. ; I l Is- ..!. i . ' i r ectl. rre thi.. to be bound in morocco, ? 1 And ili-l n the tobies of parlors so fine. ' " Where. ilt-eJsexi and ; engraved. I would show lvntage. J AndWuimonplaee books would, surpass and V outibin. J - . ; , -, - t ' - j i lJut I shine in a bushel ! ' ! f 'lelivc S will quit and r raiding strong onions, '.i'-Or-ilu'seiuething more likely to pay and succeed. 4 Fur i 'vi' fwaited and waited for fame by the prin- n . . l iitil I've losl s . JFrom 111 get leilof i . . . . i ,i i i j.:n T l i ve lusi uoi i lull 11 UV II CWI rom such undertakers- lit eei skeii of my motto or ml desperandum. I lie one tnai l vet-mug iu so iuug wun sucu ' igrit. - For it Kives me no comfort or cheer that is hope- : fiili- i ! " I'll another adopt that's more likely and fit i ; To give consolation. ji farewell to my prospects of fame and of glory ; Iet tnem siumoer anu ren in uie u spins 01 we Though my genius lies smothered and prostrate. It ?h41l not be subiect to printers to rasp. unpnnteu, ' i And keep in a ndget. t. I will hope with my might all my life. o falsely allured amid woes and all eviL clear that my fate will be nothing but lie.-' i I printers and hope, that will end with the (levilr lint not With a printer's. Rockixoham. Mi , iTalmae on Amusements. Pr. Talmiige preached last Sun day frqm the text, Jndges. xvi, 25 14-MAiritl ft came to pass, Athen their hearrs Hvero merry, that they said, Gall for Samsou, that he may make j us Bpqft." j He spoke thus : . 4 Ko5r all opera houses, theatres, i-bowliiifj alleys Jskating rinks and fal( styles of amusement, good and bad, 1 put on trial to day and judge Qf; them by certain cardinal princi ples,!'! (First, you may judge of any airitisement by jits healthful result orbyj jts baleful reaction. There are people,' who seem made up of Sard factsi They are a combiua i.tiou ' of, multiplication tables and rstatistics. j If you, show them an eiqUisito picture they will begin tq discuss the pigments involved in the! coloring; if you show them" a beautiful rose they will submit it to . a'i botanical analvsis. which is only the post-mortem examination of a flower. They have no rebound in their nature They 'never do anything inord than smile. There are no great tides of feeling surg ing ,up from the depths of .their ioul iin billow after billow of re verberating laughter. They seem as if Kature!had built them by con- :?alr w' . L . .1 ? l 4. xracc aim inaue a uungting joo out ;of it. ;But, blessed be God, there 1 '-.' -Atten SU 1 . e to be quoted ana reaa Dy. we lair ; Sr.- - A tiTamdertineU to never be printed. i st rJfv weotness to waste on the wild desert air if I dii' -1 I And 1'or it' rivithi ! . t ;are people in the world wno have jbright faces and whose life is a jsong, an anthem, a paian of victory. 'tbeiri troubles are like the M a- Vines that crawl up the side of a great tower, ion the top of which the sunlight sits and the soft airs of summer hold perpetual carnival, they are the people you like to have come to your house. They are the people I like to have come to pay. house, j If you but touch the heiri of their garments you are hea)ed. '.hi - : : - ii-i SUBJEGTj TO TEMPTATION. KowJit is these exhilarant and sympathetic! and warm hearted i people that ,are most tempted to pernicious f amusements, in pro portion jas a ship is swift, it wants : a strong helmsman ; in proportion as a horse is gay, it wants a stout driver ; and these people of exube vVant nature will do well to look at. the reaction of all their amuse fmeiits.i If an amusement sends you home at night nervous so you cannot sleep and you rise in the 1 morning, not because you are slept 1 out, but because your duty drags I you from your slumbers, you have ' been where'you ought not to have f beeuf , There are amusements that l,send a man: next.' day to his work " bloodshot, jyawning, stupid, nan ' seated and they are wrong kinds , of amusements.' There are enter - tainments that give a man disgust i with the drudgery of life with tools because they are, not swords, with working aprons because they are not robes, with cattle because , they are not infuriated bulls of the arena; If j any amusement sends i -you hbme longing for a life of ro rdance and thrilling adventure, love that takes poison and shoots itself,' moonlight adventures and , Hairbreadth escapes, you may: de pendiupori it that you are the sacri ficed J victim of unsanctined pleas ure. Our, recreations are intended i to build 03 up; and ifthej pull us j down, as to our-moral or as to our i physical strength, you may come to the conclusion that they are ob noxious. ,iy j 1 1 Hull turther, those amusements I sire wrug which lead you into ex penouure- oeyonu your f means. JSloney speut m recreation is not thrown awaj. It is all folly for us to come from a place of amusement feeling that we have wasted our ? money and time." You may by it lhave made an investment worth I more than the transaction that ! yielded you a hundred or a thou- Isand dollars. But how many pro jperties havd been riddled by costly r amusements T The table has been I robbetl tb par the club. The cham Ipagne has cheated the children's 1 wardrobe. The carousing party i has burned up the boy's primer. 1 The tablecloth of the corner saloon ; is in debt to the wife's faded dress Excursions that in a day make a tour around a whole month's wages, ladies whose lifetime business it is to "go shopping," have their coun terparts in uneducated children, bankruptcies that shock the money market and appall the church and that send drunkenness staggering across the richly figured carpet of the mansion and dashing into the mirror and drowning out the carol of music" with the whooping of bloated sous come home to break their old mother's heart. When men go into amusements that they cannot afford they first borrow what they cannot earn, and then they steal what they cannot bdrrow. First they go into em barrassment, and then into lying, and then into theft, and when a man gets on as far as that he does not stop short of the penitentiary. VICTIMS' OP EVIL AMUSEMENT. There is not a prison iu the land where there are not yjctiins of un sanctified amusements. How often I have bad parents come to me and ask me to go over to New York and beg their boy off from crimes that he had committed against his employer the taking of funds out of the employer's till or the disar rangement of the accounts ! Why, he had salary enough to pay all lawful expenditure, but not enough salary to meet his sinful amuse ments. And again and again I bavfr gone j and implored for) the young man sometimes, alas ! the petition unavailing. Merchant of Kew York, is there a disarrange ment in your accounts f Is there a leakage in jour moneyrawerf Did not the cash account come out right last night T I will tell you there is a young man in your store wandering oft into bad amuse ments. The salary you give him may meet lawful expenditures!, but not the sinful indulgence in. which he has entered, and he takes by theft that which you do not give him in lawful salary. You may judge of amusements by their ef fect upon .physical health. J The great need of money, good people, is physical recuperation. There are Christian men who write; hard things against their immortal souls when there is nothing the matter with them- but an incompetent liver. There are Christian people who think it good sign to be poor ly, and because Richard Baxter and Robert Ilall ware invalids they think that by the same sick ness they may come to the same grandeur ot character. I want to tell the Christiau people of my con gregation that God will hold you responsible for your invalidism if it is your fault, and when through right exercise and prudence you might be athletic and well, i The effect of the body upon the soul tou acknowledge. Put a man of mild disposition upon the auimal diet ot which the Indians partake and in a little while his blood will change its chemical ! proportions. t will become like unto the blood of the lion or the tiger or the bear, while his disposition will change and become fierce, cruel and und enting. The body has a powerful effect upon the soul. There are good people whose ideas of heaven are shut out with clouds of tobacco smoke. There are people who dare to shatter the physical vase in which God put the jewel of eterni ty. There are men with great hearts and .intellects in i bodies worn out by their own neglects magnificent machinery capable of propelling a Great Eastern across the Atlantic, yet fastened in a rickety North River , propeller. Physical development which mere- , -., i i i i : n.: y snows liseii in iuuuiuus iiiuug or in perilous rope walking or in pugiustio encounter excites only our contempt; but we confess to great admiration; for the man who has a great soul in an athletic body, every nerve, mnscie anu oone oi which is consecrated to right uses. Oh, it seems to mo outrageous that men, through neglect, should allow their physical health to go down beyond repair, spending the rest of their life, not iu some great enter prise tor uoa anu; lue wonu, our. in studying ! what is the best thing r- m a 1 to taice ior uy8pepsiaj a. snip which ought, with all sails set and every man at his post, to be carry ing a rich ! cargo for eternity, em ploying all its men in stopping up eakages ! When you may, through some of the popular and healthful recreations ( of our time, work off your spleen and your querulous ness and one-half of your physical and mental ailments, do not turn your back from such a grand medi cament. 1 - King's Mountain Tin Mine. Baltimore Manufacturers' Record. j The King's Mountain, N. C, tin; mine, about which there wa so much excitement a few mouths' ago, seems to have taken a new start. A party of Cornwall, En4 gland, gentlemen have offered $100,000 for the mine, and the proposition is now under consider! atiou. That the ? six inch vein is almost perfectly pure cassiterite is certain. The price offered by the English capitalists for the Clay- well mm is considered very small, and the proposal (will probably be reiecieu. xue ore is saia oy ex perts to be fifteen and five tenths per cent richer than the cassiterite ore found in West Virginia, and eighteen aud seven one-hundredths per cent richer . than the ore re cently found in the Black Hills. The Site of Paradise. The Rev. Canon Rawlinsou, an admitted authority on all questions relating to Biblical antiquities, has contributed an article to the Inter preter on "Biblical Topography, in which be discusses the various theories advanced regarding "the site of Paradise." Canon Rawlin son believes, with the German Kaliscb, that a distinct locality was before the mind of the writer of the book of Genesis, and he gives it as his Judgment that the locality was in Assyria. Cleveland at Gettjsbnr;. . Washington Letter May 4th. President Cleveland's visit to the Gettysburg battlefield took him away from the White House for the first time since be entered up on the duties of his office. The trip was made at the request of veterans of the Army of the Poto mac, ex Gov. Curtin and others. A special excursion train was run for the accommodation of the vete rans and their friends, and to this was attached the hotel car St. Nicholas for the Presidential party aud the President. The President, accompanied by Mr. Dinsmore, the White House doorkeeper, was at the Baltimore and Potomac depot at 7$ a. m., fifteen minutes before the train started. Mr. Clevelaud wore his usual .black suit with a spring overcoat of dark material and a silk hat. He appeared to be heavier in flesh, but did not look so rugged as when he lived in Albany and walked more. He has become known as yet to few persons in Washington; and he was not re cognized by more than half a dozen of the small group of persons about the station.! The colored porter who had stood at the steps to the special car stopped Mr. Cleveland with the remark that "This car is reserved." Sergeant Dinsmore ex plained, and the porter was profuse in his apologies for bis failure to recognize the President. Mr. Cleve- and was pleasantly greeted by Vice-President Hendricks with bis perennial smile, . and by hand shakes from the handsome, gray- laired Secretary of War, Judge Endicott, and the distinguished ookiug Postmaster General, Col. Vilas, and the equally distinguish ed Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Whitney, j J' The seven cars carried in all about four hundred persons. The rain made the ran to Gettysburg in three and a naif hours, very ew stops were made, and, as the coming of the President had been made known in advance to only a Small number of persons there were no marked demonstrations at any of the stations along the route. The President had stipulated be ore coming that he was not to be asked to speak, and he was not even formally introduced to the as semblage. Gov. Pattison, of Penn sylvania welcomed the visitors, and speeches were made by Gen. J. C. Black,of Illinois, Martin Maginnis, of Montana, and Gen. Kosecrans. Before the exerciser were con eluded the' President returned to his carriage, and was driven over to the cemetery grounds, which were a part of the battlefield, and command a view of the whole scene of the great fight. It was a familiar spot to the President's companion, Gen. Hunt, who commanded the artillery of the Araiy of the Poto ac, which was planted on the very hill and mowed down Pickett's men as they inarched across the long yalley and up the grassy, slopes in the vain effort to gain the hill aud break the-Onion centre. From the brow of the cemetery hill Mr. Cleveland was shown the long line of ridges in front, across the valley where the rebel lines were stretched in a semi-circle five miles long. To the right he could see the wooded slopes of Culps Hill in the distance, and on the left Round Top and Little Round Top, the scene of Sickles7 desperate fight. To the rear Meade's headquarters, and over beyond the town below was the stone bouse which was Gen. - Lee's headquarters. After getting this outline of the field the President was driven to the vari ous points of interest in three days fighting. lie saw where the lxmis- lana tigers ciimoea the mil ana fought the Union soldiers hand to hand, the memorial stone shoeing where Gen. Hancock fell badly wounded, and the spot where Gen. Sickles lost his leg. He visited Round Top for another view of the field, descended into Devil's Den, and then visited the Theological Seminary 1 for still anotherview, and saw the place where Gen. Rey nolds was killed. ; Mr. Cleveland was a very close listener throughout the journey. He asked few questions aud made i -w . .... no comments, lie only augntea twice from his carriage tor short excursions put of the beaten path way. The tonr of the field was completed before sundown and the party was ready for the return to Washington by 6 p. m. Dinner was- served in the car on the way to Washington. At a little station a short distance from Gettysburg a boy created some excitement by firing a pistol into the air near the side of the car. Passengers with lively imaginations thought for a moment that the President had been shot at,' but their fears were allayed by those who saw the act. Some of the veterans were dis appointed that the President did not say a few words at their meet mg at the cemetery. They did not expect a speech, but they thought they were entitled to a brief ac knowledgement of j their, services from the. Chief Magistrate at least. At 9.30 p. m., the seal-brown horses landed Mr. Cleveland at the White House door.! Snake Like lllsslBf. The viperous, malice laden ton gue of a wieked, depraved and evil minded person is an affliction to any community, and its execrable bissine is but the foul breath; oi the devil through the villainy coat ed mouth of his chosen agent. Mis erable and1 wretched and sin cor ered indeed must be the heart of that one, who is so ready to hiss out, like a stinging serpent, air the unkind and lying accusations which their own depravity and meanness hath engendered and nursed. Such a being is : a black, ugly, loathe some wart npon the beauteous face of refined ; society. Wilson Arfraactf.. Name your man. - GREENSBORO, NJ C, TUESDAY, MAT 12, ' The Confederate Censtltntlon. How the Confederate Constitu tions were preserved and what be came of them is thus related by Mrs. G. F. DeFountaine, of New York, in the New Orleans Time- Democrat : Until! within the last eighteen months I was the honored custodian of both j the "Provisional and Per manent Constitutions of the South ern Confederacy," a guardianship wuicu x cuusruereu next aniu io 1. T T T .1 I A. !! i that of the "Ark of the ConveuanL" During all of my journeying, after the fall of Richmond, they were among my most sacred j treasures, having! been buried under the ground on two occasions to prevent their capture. Immediately after the war, when the feeling between the two -sections was still hostile, these touching souvenirs of the "Lost Cause" were seldom exhibit ed, and then only to a few of "the loyal."! j ! No thought otherwise than that ot retaining them as relics or do nating them to some historical so ciety was entertained until within the past two years, when fate de cided differently, and they were of fered for sale. Feeling that the South j was the proper place for such mementoes, I wrote a person al letter to the Governor of every Southern State, (I think without exception) offering them to the States. In not more than one or two instances did I receive even a recognition of the letter containing the information of their existence, and in no instance an offer for their purchase. Then it was proposed that a syndicate be formed of the States mentioned in the "Constitu tions,'' in order that each State should become part owner in this, their Magna Charta, but this, too, failed to elicit auything but a neg ative reply. ! The historical societies were next tried first with a stated price and then with the request that a price be made by them. Out of all the societies written to on the" -subject only one, the Maryland Historical Society, called a meeting and laid the matter before the board, which board decided that they were "not in a condition to make an offer for the documents." This was sup posed to be the richest society in the country. The principal colleges, universi ties and libraries were! next tried with similar results. It was then suggested that they be offered to Congress, but not wishing to ask a Southern man to introduce a bill for the sale of documents, each clause of which he had sworn to defend with his life, and fearing partisan feeling on the other hand, would recall old issues, and rekin dle smouldering fires, I decided not to make an effort in that direction. Feeling by this time that patriot sm, as far as large organizations were concerned, was really a thiug Of the past, I decided to offer them to private individuals recognized as wealthy persons, who did not hesitate laying out immense sums in bnc-a brie and curious, x rom one of these, a gentleman residing in Atlanta, who, by the way, bad ust paid $3,000 for a set of china, l received a letter stating that if "both" the constitutions were in "perfect order," he would pay the manificient sum of $1,000. The first letter manifesting any interest iu the matter I was from a woman of course "Last at the cross and first at the! sepulchre," the women of the South. God bless them 1 They know . what it is to "suffer and grow strong." This lady; was Airs. W. J. DeRenne, of Savanvah, Ga., who, emulated by the public spirit of her noble hus band, became the purchaser of the "Permanent Constitution," which subsequently,! believe, she donated to the Georgia State Library, i ; Mr. W. W. Corcoran, the million aire banker of Washington, wno pays out annually immense sums for pictures, &c, was the next ap proached by friends in reference to the Provisional Constitution. It was thought that he, who had been such a patriot during our war struggle, would be willing to pay a large amount for thisj the first act in the great drama of that war, but the price offered by him was refus ed.! Finally, however, negotiations were again opened and he became purchaser at the same ! figures. Hundreds of letters were written I.. . ;,. '-VP . on the subject, for l ueterminea that it should never be said that they were disposed of without giv ing the South a chance to possess them. 'Ml I ! ' : r j : ; She Is Net Likely to Forgive Illm. I Richmond Religious Herald.) We werit out in the country the other evening .to I preach. We stopped at the house ot a brother for supper, and were most gracious ly; entertained, the ladies of the house making themselves specially entertainiug j and devoting them selves ardently to the promotiou of our comfort. Leaving the house in advance of the family, we hurried to the church, ; and began the ser vices. The members of the family came afterward and took their seats with the rest of the congregation, without our observing their! en trance. After the - sermon we an dertook to play the agreeable, and began to sbake .hands 'with the saints, and chat around to the best of our poor ability.' j Presently we found a strinkingly good-looking sister in front of uy and, holding out our hand, expressed a wish to form her acquaintance. I A vicious titter rattled through the crowd, and the sister looked a little scorn ful. We asked what it all meant, and to our undoing found that the ladv in Question was the one who gave us our supper,1 We spont ;. good part of the night trying to ex plain how it happened, but we can not say that our transgression win ever be forgiven. "We meet to part no more," said the bald-neaaea man to. his hair brash. THE FBA DIAVOLA OF PARIS. The Crimes of an Extraordinary Paris ian Mnrderer- -Cay, Fascinating and llaadMBsc . ,, . ; ! j A correspondent of the New York World wnting from Pans, says : ! There is nothing that rejoices the Parisian public like a sensational murder. In the excitement it creates everything else is forgot ten. If the murderer writes lettret (Pesprit and pretty Verses, like La cenaire, the joy is turned into a general delirium.' Lacenaire, the author and murderer of a dozen or fifteen years ago, had more rogue at the time than even Victor Hugo. it has been always so in France. Mme. de Sevigne wrote more let ters concerning the prisoner Brin villiers than about the great Tu- renne, and the murderer of Tiquet was more talked of in the Court of Louis XIV. than the victory of Denain. The names of Menesclon and Troppmau are known to more Parisians to day than are those of any two members of the French Academy. 1 , The present Fra Diavola is a youth named Charles Marehandon, who, until his arrest for a murder in the Rue dt Seze, lived the life of a fashionable country gentle man, supporting himself and his pretty mistress on the proceeds of series of daring robberies that puzzled the ingenuity of Parisian police and detectives. Marehandon is a young man of 21 years, of ele gant figure and faultless dress. He is remarkably handsome, and his beardless face and soft mild eyes give him a look of childlike nuocence. He belongs to a highly respectable family living at Batig uolles. He has been arrested on several occasions, but always suc ceeded in effecting his escape by his'cool audacity and cleverness. About seven months ago he hired a pretty country house from a re tired military captain in the little town of Compeigne, where he lived A Life of Elegance and Luxury with Jeanne Blain, a pretty girl "rom the provinces. He adopted a . a OiO'O il new method ot maintaining tuis pleasant and luxurious existence. His custom was to go to Paris from time to time on business, as his riends were iuformed, and to pre j sent himself at an intelligence office iu search of employment. Owing to his handsome face and attrac tive appearance he had no difficul ty in gaining admission to the man sions ot some of the most wealthy citizens of Paris, especially when it was the mistress of the house hold herself who visited the office. He usually remained' a few days till he "located" all the valuables and iewelry in the house, and he would then suddenly disappear and the valuables with him. Complaint after complaint had been lodged against him under the various names he assumed, but the police found ' themselves always baffled. A few months ago he stole 15.000 fraucs from a resident in the Rue de Marignan, and to throw the police off his track he went immediately and engaged himself with M. Worth, the Tamous coutu rier, ub valet de chambre, under his real name of Charles Marchan don. A detective ere long appear ed and took tljp valet into custody. Marehandon mad not the slight est resistance, and seemed not in the least disturbed. lie chatted with the detective as they walked, and at an opportune moment trip ped him up. threw heavily on the ground, and was out of sight before the detective had recovered from his surprise. Marehandon boldly returned to M. Worth's, and ex plained to the servants, with an air of injured innoueuce : "Did any one ever hear of such a misfortune f was arrested by mistake for some other person, but I had no difficul ty in establishing my innonence." The detectives, not dreaming that the prisoner would i return to M. Worth's, did not think of going there, aud Marchandon's escape was easy. On the occasion of each steal, Marehandon was accustom ed to go to an old clothes woman's shop, and procure a disguise with which to escape from the city. Marchandon's Country Residence at Compeigne was a model of ele gance aud good taste. Thousands of francs were ! expended in fittiug it np to the liking of his gay young companion. He kept a talon which was frequented oy the most renneu residents of the town and vicinity. It was enriched with rare curiosi ties of decorate art, some of which were adorned with his initials and count's coronet. The furniture was richly carved oak and the cur tains of rose colored silk. In one chamber was a Heuri II. bed. cov ered with a red satin spread, the pillows embroidered with the ini tials "J. B." and the count's coro net aud the curtains in black silk. In a wardrobe was a complete uni form of a gendarme. The eoidis ante Mme. Marchadon had among her belongings an ebony casket, also surmounted by the coronet, in which were found! many packages of letters received by her before her connection with Marehandon began. Each batch was carefully arranged aud endorsed "Corres pondance du Chateau du ," or "Correspondence ) de Ie Marquis ," and sq on. ! These had evi dently been kept for blackmailing purposes. She also kept a diary, entitled "Le Petit Livre de Mes Souvenirs." ' Several albums filled with portrait of I the cavalry offi cers of the Compeigne garrison and of other neighbors were on the ta bles of the $alont and on the mantel-piece was a portrait of Marshal MacMabon with "Vive le Roi" written urderneatb it The Le gitimists of the hour all gathered there. ; :. ' ! ji - j. ' ; To his neighbors Marehandon represented himself as an illegiti mate son of Worth, of Paris, who bad settled on him a generous monthly allowance. He was re garded as a model husband,: and 1885. Jeanne passed as a model wife. The latter is a young woman of 24, of extraordinary, beaut and' most engaging manners. She is tall and graceful, with brown, .wavy hair, a sweet, sympathetic look, and a face: of what is called the Andalusian type. She 1 is the daughther of a coffee house keeper ot Vesonl, where she lived till her eighteenth year. An eminent judge saw her, 1 proposed .marriage and she accepted, but he died suddenly i 1 TT ueiore me union iook piace. nis death was a little suspicious and Jeanne was subjected to an inter rogation on affair by the Police Prefect, but nothing came of it. At this time she made the acquain tance of j Marehandon. From that hour she ceased to frequent the places she i was previously accus tomed to, visit She preferred the pleasures and repose of a quiet country life. She belonged to that class called popotte, who love a tranquil life and to be mistress of their own home. She adored Mar ehandon,1 whom she described in a letter to a former lover as "a darl ing young j fellow with a budding moustache.? L It was. to' please the taste of This Beaatlful Girl that Marehandon hired the fashion able mansion at Compeigne and robbed aud murdered to maintain it. M. and Mme. Marehandon were most rigorous iu the practice of piety in the presence of their ad miring neighbors. Madame went to mass "regularly every Sunday at seven o'clock and seemed to pray with edifviner fervor. Merpbundou. if not so punctual in his aedauce at church, was a severe champion of morality. A house of doubtful repute had been opened within a little distance of his residence and his sense of propriety was so shock ed that he formally petitioned the municipality to remove it in words of vehement indignation. He like wise wrote numerous articles to the local press in the cause of mortal ity, and endeavored to persuade the editors of their duty to oppose all scandal and decry every ap pearance of immorality. On seeing the published account of the mur der in the Rue de Seze, and with the blood of his victim hardly yet washed off bis hands, he remarked to a gentleman who happened to be at his house : "A terrible crime has been committed in the Rue de Seze and the police are unable to discover the murderer. If he be caught I hope he will be guilotiued, for murderers are increasing at such a rate of late that no honest man can go to bed in peace." The Cnme for which Marehandon is now in custody was a murder of the most brutal kind. He gained admission, by his peculiar method,' to the house of Mme. Car not, a widow lady, living in the Rue de Seze. He rose during the ni?ht, secured what valuables and money could be found, and, entering the bedroom where Madame was sleep ing, began to ransack the drawers. The old lady awoke at the noise, aud Marehandon, flinging himself on her, dealt her two ; strokes with a clasp knife, severing the carotid artery. He then bid ( in a closet, where he remained till morning, when he made his escape. ! He then hurried home to his chateau in Compeigne, and settled down' quiet ly to the enjoyment of the proceeds of his last coup. i Uls Arrest Ingeniously Accomplished. M. Gaillarde. ignorant of Marchan t don's resideuce, but remembering that a certain frxptere or old clothes woman of the locality furnished criminals with disguise suits,1 pre sented himself before her as a friend of Marchandou, and said :j "Mar ehandon was to meet me here yes. terday and I want to know if I can wait here and see him tb dav." "AlTl" replied the old lady; thrown off her guard, "he has gone to his home in Compeigue." That was enough. M When Marchandou saw the Chief of Police enter, he j turned slightly pale, but did not make the least resistance. Jeanne was also arrested. and Marehandon, although denying his own! guilt, was parti-J cularly anxious to impress on the Chief that the girl was innocent of any offense. After reaching Paris,! be was brought into the room where the murder had been com mitted. He was cool and indiffer ent, and insisted that another bad struck the fatal blow. He after wards confessed that he himself was the murderer. An immense throng had blocked the streets around and would have torn him to pieces but for the gendarmes.! As he was driven away, surrounded by the police, the maddened crowd followed for blocks shouting, "Kill him ! kill him !" Among the persons whom he had robbed and who was summoned to identify him in the room of the murdered woman was the Priucess P. the police preserve her! in cognito to whom he had applied JOT service a Huurb iiiue ueiurc. prepossessing in appearance was he that he was engaged. The Princess, however, asked for refer euces, and Marchandou answered that he had served with the Coupt Bredeville aud gave his address. Oa passing out he remarked to the other servants : "This is a good find. I'll be here $ to-morrow at seven o'clock." The Princess wrote to the Count de Bredeville and re ceived in answer an equivocal let ter. Her suspicions aroused, she went to the address add questioned the conccirge, who replied that no Count Bredeville lived there, but that a young man; came on the Monday previous and asked her to keen for him a letter addressed to that name. The next morning the Princess read in the paper of the murder of the Rue de Seze. I. The truth flashed on her, and she bur ried to the police station and told her story. The Chief of Police took a photograph from the drawer, and the Princess exclaimed : "There he is P When confronted bv the ! Princess, he admitted lha he had forged the letters from the alleged Count Rredevilie. - l "Why did you not return next morning f " he was asked. I "Because I talked with the ser rants going oat, and I understood that there was not much hope for a good steal," he answered. . . "You learned from the concierge at Mme. Carnot's that you would have a better chance t" v ' . I "Exactly ; that's why I went there. - i j The Princess almost fainted at her narrow escape. I ) - ' ! : ? : L Death of the Widow VanderbllU Mrs. Frank A. Vanderbilt, the widow, of Commodore Cornelius vanderbilt, died of pneumonia, Monday morning May 4th, at her residence, io Washington place, New York. - She was taken serious ly ill last Tuesday, with what was then thought to be pleurisy. It developed into pneumonia, and on Sunday she was given up and bade farewell to her family and friends. She was conscious to the last. j She came of a Virginia family; and was distantly related to the Vanderbilts through -the Hand family Her father, was a lawyer and cotton planter, and. was a cousin of William H. Crawford of Georgia, at one time a candidate for the Presidency. Mr. Crawford moved to Alabama and had bis plantation near .Mobile, and there Mrs. Vanderbilt was born in 1846. She was married early to a Mr. Elliott and went with him to New Orleans. She obtained a divorce, with t permission to resume her maiden name. She returned to her family in Mobile, and ' there her father died during the.war. On a Visit her-mother to New York in 1SCS, she met the Commodore, who was then mourning . the death of his first wife. Miss Crawford was tall and slender, with fair complex ion and black hair. The old Com modore, forty-five years older than herself, became infatuated with hen On May 20, 1868, an ante nuptial contract was drawn up, in which he agreed to beqeathe to her in his will $500,000 in first mort gage bonds of the New York and Harlem Railroad, at par. f Sue would not consent to imme diate marriage. She was at Sara toga that summer with her mother, and the Commodore was there also. He pressed her with all the ardor of a young suitor, and finally in duced her to agree to a marriage in Canada, ' to avoid neighborhood gossip. They went to London, Canada, and were there married on Aug. 21 by a Wesleyan minister. Augustus Schell went along, and was the Commodore's best man. This was fifty-five years after the date of the Commodore's first ; mar riage. : The couple returned at once to Saratoga, where . their appear ance as bride and groom in Con gress Hall created a sensatiou.f uominodore vanderDUt died on Jan. 4, 1877. He bequeathed to his wife $500,000 in five per cent. Government bonds and . 2,000 shares of New York Central stock, and gave her the use of his bouse and furniture,' 10 Washington place, for life. She had remained there ever since, . with her mother and her brother, Robert L. Craw ford, and his family, i ; '.1 ; State Board of Education. This board was in session last week. The object of the meeting was principally in regard to school books, particularly the selection of the new text books on physiology arid hygiene. A number of agents of publishing compauies appeared in the interest of their respective hduses. . The matter of the drain age of the State swamp lands was also considered. There were two proposals in regard to the body of 300,000 acres in Carteret county. One was by a company which pro posed to lease the lands for grazing purposes; the other was oy a com pany which proposed to drain the lands, as the phrase goes, "one half for the other." The board adopted "Steele's Hy gieuio Physiology," published by A.! S. Barnes & Co., of New York, as the text book for the public schools Webster's school diction aries were put on the list Former ly only Worcester was used, The following of Webster's were adopt d : primary, common school, high 8ehool,; academic and counting house, i Arrangements were made for exchange and retail prices. The j proposition as to swamp lands received much attention. Mr. B. L. Perry proposed to drain the laud for one half. The) board agreed to give him 10,000 acres to drain, he to pay all expenses, apd the lands to be surveyed by the State engineer. v There was a proposition by Mr. Fly nn to , lease for a few years a part of the Hyde county lands (known as-the Bibb and ,Carrow tract)' in case the State bids them in at the sale to take place on the 11th inst. There are 300,000 acres of these lands. Mr. Flynn's scheme ras to lease 15,000 or 20,000 acres, for the purpose of testing their utility for stock raising. If valua ble, be proposes to purchase. The board postponed actiou on the mat ter until the next , meeting, which will be after the sale alluded to. There was a request by citizens of Carteret county for, the construc tion of a road through the open grounds of Carteret belonging to the board. This proposition was also held over until the next meet- i!,g ; ' . " ! Trifling with the World. Old Mr. Bantly I see by the pa per that a revised v edition of the Old Testament is to be published soon. ' -: - :J . Old Mrs. Bently Does it .say who writ it! I : Otd Mr. Bently No. 1 V i Old Mrs Bently -Well, it's per- fectly scandalous. I s'pose it was that man Ingersoll. ; vww trmr x tftr. iaidua -w- Flirtation. f OVjW1iatbn.''Titiao! : Saltation . p A pleating 221 ' That past expensne - n e aero i ' ' There 11 be once moreT Just aa of jrere, Damnation at too beaches- And sad to tell. 11a knows fall well - Who his experience searches. - r v There's often been, Plain to bo seen, . Damnation in the churches- ' - Lyrics of Culture. , Far in the depths ef the mighty woods. Where the snapping tartles ran, -. ! And the brindle cow la the branchaOjhrood From the dawn to the set of son; . t Where the earibon and the panther fight. And the hungry eoyotes bark., i And the bine fox hew Is the lire-long night . -a Near the den ot the Bojum snark : Where the framptious mugwump makes his lair ' And the amorous gnrascntis . His lore song sings to the grixxly bear. You'll find the pink arbutus. i : The Latest Bone;. ; f- -.: Oh. mamma, dear mamma, come home with me now ! l wonder wnat papa will ttunk I .! Hell meet yon to-nicht with a frown an his hmm For staring so Wng at the rink. j Ho lamp has been lighted to-night in the haU. ' . And there 1 1 was sore, dearest ma. yon would fall. ' f -. Some sight your poor neck will break. Come home, eome home, r v Oh, mamma, dear mamma, eome borne. . - . .. . '' j : r . The Month of Lore. U New o'er the hill tops trippeth merry May. ' H And modest flowers spring 'neata her (Useing feet , !', : Ere long to crown her brows with garlands gay. ..Jl 1. : i iV i . xinu uwj uuua wii uer coming greet. -,;, The bullfrog in the marsh doth gayly Ang ; Once more nootural carols to his mate. ' And Corydon and Phyllis, oourting, swing i j : At dewy ere anon toe garden gate. Stand Hear the lien. ; j When lorely woman throws a rock, ' 1 f A contamacions hen to scare, -Itgires th' artistic eye a shock ; ft ' To mark her attitude and air. - K Bat be not to your danger blind. If you should be beside her then ; At once a place of safety find, That ia to say, stand near tn e hen. Facta and Fancies. Song of the German pastry cook Wait till the clouds roll pie. MNever eat between meals," cautions a writer.. We never do. We board. ! A bride's cake is often as heavy as the groom's heart when the bills begin to come in. J "Every cloud has a silver lin ing.'7 ; That's wbere the clouds get away with the vest pockets. , The man who thinks the boy who lives next door to him is a good boy has not been found. 4j The widow;of a Hindoo is ! about the only individual' whose career really ends r smoke." a man content to live in an oleomargarine boarding-house does uot know on which side his bread is buttered. ! . : ! A West Lynn teacher asked a ittle boy the color of the Atlantic ocean, and he said he guessed it was water color.1- i t "I am a belle ringer now." remarked a Bedford avenue young man as he put an engagement ring oil the finger of Lis dnlciana. : , i "He who has pie has friends." says a Russian proverb, which, be ing freely translated signifies that the doctor and. the undertaker stand in with the pie-man every time.... : " .'L-'- An item is going the rounds to: . the effect that "some of the Doeti v Willis's best linefr were written in a boarding house." We haveofteu; heard that hunger was a spur to iterary work. "--r-1 '") It is noticeable that the old joke, the combination' of bulldog trousers, young man, father and trout gate is being fixed up for its summer tour in the funny columns Of contemporaries. 'The gorilla does " not build a house in the native jungle," says a returned missionary, ifrobablj he can rent one cheaper. The old maxim is "A-fool builds houses,' a wise man rents them." i i How innocently unfortunate is the the frankness of childhood. Young Orotund Delsarte.the dram atic reader, was taking tea, on in vitation, with the family, and in the evening favored- the cueists. with a few of his most startling re citations. He was approached by. the midget of the family, a fairy in looks, but with au early develop ment of speech. "Now, I know why you talk i so ' loud when you speak pieces," she said to i him. "And why, my dear!" with a little patronizing stroke of the golden hair. 'Caese you're a Bellowcu ist ma said so." That child will be put to bed early after this Stonewall Jackson's Daughter. . Baltimore American. ."Richmond society is deeply in terested in the announcement juet now of the engagement of Miss Julia Jackson the only daughter of Oen. Stonewall Jackson, to Mr. William E. Christian. The marrt age will take place June 2, at the Second Presbyterian church j ant the ceremony be performed by the pastor, the Rev. K Dr. Moses D. Hoge, who was a dear friend of the Confederate soldier, and conducted- his funeral services from the same , church in which Miss Jackson is to i be wedded. The lady is as I well known In Baltimore as in Rich- k mond. She is universally popular.1 Mr. Christian is about 23 years of I age, and one of the modt popular; and successful business men of Richmond. After service of several! years fii a large banking house of j this city, he Degau onsiness iasi i fall ou his own account, as the geu-I eral Southern representative off: McDermid & Co., of Chicago a firm of which Mr. C. W. Smith,! general manager of the Chesapeake: & Ohio Railway system, is a promH fient member. While actively e'n gaged in business, Mr. Christian is distinguished for his broad culture and great polish of manner, having received the advantages of a bourse at the University of Virginia, and afterwards at one of the German universities." j ! j - -- U r . f:- The-nooverrHill mind, Ran- dolph county, made $6,198 during the month of March, from 574 tons: of ore.. -. . . . "; , ; ! i - h. v.. i- ril" 8-1 V. !l I f