:t ( I " ' ' . .... : w A - MflT' Ml I ----- -r r ? - - - x'. ' :-r; O p t. JOIIXSTOX, Editor. HE IS A FREESIAS WHOM Tills TRUTH MAKES FREE, ASD Abb AHB SLATES BESIDE. II. A. MTIXLE, FotstlSlW. f f 1 III ft 5 II i VOLUME 1. THE Cambria jfrccmau WILL BS rCBMSIIEU EVEKY THURSDAY MOKKiNGhi" in Ebeuibarg, Cnlrl. Co., P., I following rates, payable within three month fiom date of subscribing : (be copy, cue year, - $2 00 cie copy, tix months, - - - - 1 00 (J:;e copy, iVircc months, - - 60 Thoe who fail to pay their subscriptions sutil after the expiration of six months will be ch-irjeJ at the rate of $2.50 per year, -j tii -e ho fail to pay until after the ex vr:itii n of twelve months will be charged at il'grAtdiliS.OO per year. , JVe've numbers constitute a quarter; ;wcutv five, six months; and fifty numbers, esc ycir. RATES OF ADVERTISING. ic cq-. ire, 12 lines, one insertion, $1 00 r A si;lseii'jent insertion, 2ft .iuJitvr'a Notices, each, Air.iiiiistrator ' Notices, each, E:'jtors' Nutices, each, "t:rav Notices, each, 2 00 2 50 2 50 1 50 1 yr. $6 00 12 00 15 00 25 00 28 00 So 00 00 00 3 7105. 6 mot. i 4 00 8 00 10 00 14 00 1C 00 25 00 35 00 I ijiwre, 12 lies, $ 2 GO 5 00 7 00 9 50 11 CO 14 (0 2o 00 2 sijuires, 24 lines, tq'iartr, t!0 hues, ,i.:.rtfr column, T.,iru column, iiail co.unv.i, e O.'.unin, fessi ijnI or Business Cards, not ucte.liug 8 lines, with paper, 6 00 0'v.luary Notices, over six lines, tin cents Steciiii and busiurso 'Kot.ices eiglit cents er hue ilt nrsst insertion, ami lour cuu for uch tubsequent Insertion. Ees'.'Iutions ol bocietiea, nr communica-t-'.3 of a .ersonal cature mut be paid for aaJvei tucment. JuB PRIXTIKG. Vi'e have rnade arrangements by which tMDiio or have done all kinds of plain :.j fancy Job Ptinting, such ns Bwts, ;.aip!iets. Show Cards, Bill and Lettc-i I.aJs, H.iHdbills, Circulars, Arc, in the best 'e of the art and at the mo&t moderate .t'.;ts. Aluo, all kind of Kuling. C'ank jki, RtXtk Binliur, &c, executed to order s g n.l the best and as cheap a3 the .ieapest. WXOTIIEtt NEW WRINKLE ! BOOTS AND SHOES OR ALL AGES AND BOTH SEXES. t-i Ma larae t$ck of the lct ILusttru made HOES, BUSKINS, GAITERS, Jt-c., tot- L&J-ics' and Children's Wear, jH9 lubscribtr Lps jmt added to kia ndaort" ratct a full and complete inroice of Boots and Shoes for Men and Youths, I'.cu he wul not only warrant to be sup& x to any pjoda of like character now being in this market, but vastly bettr iu "cry respect than the slop-shop work with the ccuntrv ia flooded. Remember v. I offer no article for 6ale which I do t guarantee to be regular cuatom made, of e Lett material and superior finish, and i-i'e I do uot pretend to compete in pricea -i, ti.o : i . t wn. it I can furnish BOOTS, SHOES, &c, it will give tnort service for less money a any other dealer in this community, and pledge myself to repair, free of charge, any '''.t; tint may give way after a reasonable an.1 reasonable usage. Everybody is pecifu.ly invited to call and examine my -'k acJ leam my prices. The siibscriber is also prepared to mann jre to order any and all work in hi3 line, - e very best material and workmanship, at prices as reasonable as like work can :Uiiil anywhere. French Calf, Com ;3 Calf, Morocco and all ether kinds of !.cr constantly on hand. Store on Main, street, next door to iwfurd'd Hotel. JOTl D. THOMAS. Ebcnsburg. Sept. 28, 1867. IJOLLIDAYSBUfiG ! JACOB IVl- PIRCHER, FASniONABLE L0THIER & TAIL0H, 13 just opened a full assortment of well se lected and most desirable mm & summer coods. Gents and Boys furnished with CLOTH--G, HATS. SHOES. &c of the latest ?Im and best materia!, at the LOWEST ruiCES. f VARIETY OF PIECE GOODS. 'th will be sold by the yard or made to jr in the most approved manner, uaving given full satisfaction to his cus--fs fur more than twenty-five teaks, ?Jarantees tlie same to all who may favor 'jth their patronage in the future. 3-Strre on the west side of Montgomery lelow Blair, next door to Masonic ;;vujliaysburg, Pa. my23.1y.J r JOSEPH ZOLNER lA-s just opened, aDd offers for sale lower ineycan De Dougnt --re. a Bn1.ni;l io r-'dav an.l ir.ntn.r.,. r., or uescrintiori ArmimFONs .1 KTv kt . and a variety of all articles i'n his line. . Jnng of Clocks, Watches, and all kinds 'welry, done on short notice and moat ;ahe terms. All work warranted. -0-1 ir 9 fell0p' Uiu 6trec opposite Public uus-e, rjensburg. sep.5.'67. 10HTABLE Steam SAW MILL "KIVATE SALE. Tha snbscri "trat rrivatflfial. toirta.l Saw Mill located in Susquehan' . , , k!"Pi Cambria COOlitv. formflrlw nwn- f 11 i! bnl hy Cole & Barberich. The ;iitnV ruining order. Parties de- w imy Ciln caU OQ F . j Barbe ftC- 2ry. Carrolltown.! Sf CO. SHERIFF S SALES. By virtue of sundry writs of Vend. Expon. and Fi. Fa., issued out of the Court of G..nimon IMeas of Cambria county and to me directed, there will be exposed to 1'ublic Sale, at the Court House in EbeDsbtsrg, on Saturday. Hit With day of Octobet, inst., at 1 o'clock P. m. the foilowing Keal Estate, to wit : All the right, title and interest of Edward M'Glade, of, in and to a pieca or parcel of land situata in Summerhill township, Cambria county, adjoining land3 of Christian Smay, William M'Conncll, and others, containing four hun dred acres, more or:ess, unimproved. ' Also, a piece or parcel of land situate in Summerhill township', Cambria countv, ad joining lands of Wm.fi. Hughes, heirs of John Crum, and others, containing three hundred acres, more or less, about one hun dred and twenty acres of which are cleared, having thereon erected a two story Log House and a one-and a half story Log House and Frame Burn, now in the occupancy of the said Edward ll'Glade. Also, a piece of parcel of land situate in Washington township, Cambria county, ad joining lands of Wm. llussell, Joseph Mc GuUgh, and others, containing two hundred acres, more or lets, about twenty acres of which are cleared, having thereon erected a two story Plank House. Frame Stable and water Saw Mill, uow in the occupancy of Peter McGough. . Taken in execution and to be cold at the suit of Henry Logan. ALSO, All the right, title and interest of Edward McGlade, of, in and to a piece or parcel of land situate in Summerhill township, Cam bria county, adjoining lands of William 11. Hughes, William Carr, and others, contain ing fuur hundred and forty-one aens, rnoro or lets, unimproved. Taken in execution and to be Sold at tin; suit of lienry Foeier. JAMES MYERS. Sheriff. Shff 's Office, Ebenaburg, Oct. 10, 18o7.St RrilAXS' COURT SALE By virtue of an order of the Orphans' Court of the County of Cambria, there will be exposed to sale, at the Hotel of Francis P. Grussberger, in the Borough of Carrol ! town, on Saturday, the ldlh day of Nwrcmbcr next, at 2 o'clock r. M. , the following real estate, of which Peter Wible, late of Carroll township, died seized, to wit: A CEUTA1N PLANTATION Oil 'iRACT OF LAND situate in Carroll township, Cambria county, adj"iniug lands cf Levi Luther, John W. Luther, Solomon Dumm, James Dick, and others, ccntaiuing one hundred acres, or thereabouts, about eighty acres of which are cleared, having thereon erected a two story Frame House and a large Frame Bjrn. Terms qf Sale Oue-third to be paid on confirmation of fcale; one other third in one year thereafter, with interest, to be secured by the judgment bond and mortgage of the fUrchaser, and tho otLor thir.l to tfroaiu a. ien oa the premises, legal interest thereon to be paid annually to Elizabeth Wible, widow of the said Peter Wible, dte'd, from the date of confirmation of sale, by the pur chasers, his heirs or assigns, during her life time, and the principal, at her decease, to the l.eirs and legal representatives of tte said Peter Wibel, or to the parties w ho may then be legally entitled to the same. ELIZABETH WIBLE, 1 Aimrs JACOB STOLTZ, AUm rs Oct. 10, 1867.-3t. "(PUBLIC SALE OF REAL ES- TATE. By virtue of an order of the Court of Common -Pleas of the County of Cambria, (pursuant to proceedings in parti tion.) to me directed, I will expose to sale, by public vendue or outcry, at the Hotel of Francis P. Grossberger, in the Borough of Carrolltown, on Saturdayi the ldth day of November next, at 2 o'clock P. M. , the follow ing reai estate, of which Chri6tian Wible, late of Carroll township, died seized, viz : A CERTAIN TRACT OR FIECE OR PAR CEL OF LAND situate in Carroll township, Cambria county, being part of a larger tract in the name of John Dorsey, adjoining lands of Solomon Dumm, George Trindle, George Misel, and others, containing KiKETT-ElGnT acees, strict measure, or thereabouts, about one acre of which is cleared, having thereon erected a one and-a-half Etory Plank House; being the same piece of land conveyed unto Peter Wible, dee'd, by Henry Buck and wife, by their deed dated the 23d day of June, 1854, and by the said Peter Wible conveved, by articles of agreement, to Chris tian Wible, dated the 14th June, 18G2, re corded in the county of Cambria, in Record Book, vol. 1, page 21. Terms Cash. JAMES MYERS, Sheriff. Oct. 10. 1867.-3t. A UDITOR'S NOTICE. The undcr signed Auditor, appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria county, at September Term, 1807, to distribute the fund in the hands of Robert A. M'Coy and George C. K. Za'nm, Assignees of John Mc Coy, as shown by their supplemental and final account, amongst the creditors, Ac,, entitled thereto, hereby notifies all persons interested that he will attend to the duties of said appointment, at his-office in Ebens- burg, on Friday. tJie 1st day of November, 1867, at 2 o'clock P. M., when end where they must present their claims or Ixj debarred from coming in for a share of said fund. ,.. GEO. W. O ATM AN, Auditor. . Ebenslurg, Oct. 10, 18J7-St. A UDITOK'S NOTICE. The under .Sl. signed Auditor, appointed by the Or phans' Court of Cambria county to report distribution of the assets in the hands of William Kittell, Esq., Trustee to sell Prem ises No. 2 of the real estate of Daniel Dl mond, deceased, to and amongst the persons legally entitled thereto, hereby notifies all persons interested that he will attend to the duties of said appointment, at his office In Ebensburg, on Friday, the 8th day of Novet her, 1867, at 2 o'clock p. jr., whea and where they must present their claims, or be debar red from coming in for a share of said fund. ' GEO. W. OATM AN, Auditor. ' Ebensburg, Oct. 10, 1867.-8t. - . SAW MILL FOR SALE. The ub scriber offers for sale his STEAM SAW MILL, known as ."Cambria Mill,". two and a half miles north of Gallitzin. Cambria co. The Mill is in perfect working order, and will be sold on reasonable terms, Apply on the premises to JEROME DAWSON. EBENSBURG, PA., Sjjc ocfs Jlrparlnunt TIIE RADDT'S LAMEST, BY CONST u'iiYAX ; Air Fat Maloy. The autumn winds now cheerless sweep, a weird requiem screams. Around our homes, where. oft in bleep, we've had our sweetest dreams. No more bright hopes of pluuder stalk before ur longing eyes, : A doleful sound of vanquished, wbip'd, oar list'uing ears surprise. ; - We see our hopes our party's name now trembling on the brink Of a base career of frauds and crimes, rre shudder when we think That those whom once our very nod would cause to leave our way. Can shout with triumph in our ears, the Rads have had their day. It's only one short year ago, that laurels crown'd our brow, The hero ( ?) then, of Snickersv ille, was rosster of the scow. But now destruction's at the helm, we're drifting on the shoals. An awful gale has struck our prow, which makes us "hunt t ur hols.". The sceptre we have wielded with unrelent ing sway. Is emitrng us like miscreants, from Maine to Iowa The colored gang has bravely fought against the turbid wavej But 5tl33 our craft's untimely wreck'd. the nigger crew to save. We are drifting, swiftly drifting, to a fate that's riht and meet, A just retaliation for our actions indiscreet. E'en now we feel the wretcheduess of our unhappy fate j To weep and pray is all in vain ; repentence comes too late. Fart well, the fattest offices; here ends our shoddy dream ; All party hopes were blasted through the equalization scheme. If punishment commensurate with our frauds they bhtmld demand, Then half our leaders, sure, would 6wing from off the hangman's stand. We are not passing from the field with a gradual decay Nut whirring like a wreath of flowers be neath the sun's bright ray An overdose of Sambo is the cause of all our ills, Tie party has been purged to death with Thaddy Steven's pills. Come weep with me, 'you Radicals, who dirty work have done ; Let 's pau?c in our careers before the day of grace is gone. A lo.a.t,o in igtniy ourning now to warn us from the way That wrecked onr craft which erst could strike its millions in dismay. Sales, Sftritjtfs, wtbofesc. A TALE OF SAVAGE LIFE. BY JOHN QCII.U This is a thrilling narrative of a noble North American Indian. It is also the 6imple story of a woman's lore And it is a touching illustration of the power of paternal affection. As well as a tale of bitter and terrible revenge. It is also first-class in every respect, and warranted to keep one year in any cli mate, and it is a number of other things, which I won't mention, because I don't want to tell the anecdote before I get to it. For I ooco knew a man who under took to write a preface to his book, and when be got through he couldn't tell whether to make a book of the preface, or a preface of the book, and he lost his reason, and became a straw haired luna tic trying to decide. Oat ia the prairie dwelt an Indian chief named Fiery Nose, and Fiery Nose had a daughter, over whose head sixteen Indian summers might hare passed. Now it will be necessary, you perceive, that this copper complected young maiden should have a lover, in order to give this story tbe proper degree of interest So she had one, and his name was Buffalo Bull, and he was an aged brave, some years her senior, and be wore knock knees and goggles, and was related to a red haired tribe of Indians who ate the bread of idleness, excepting when they were compelled to work for a living. Buffalo Bull was a fine old brave, and he always hit directly from the shoulder, and con sidered it no disgrace to drink nine fingers of fire-water at one time, and wear crape on his bat when his first wife died. He also bad a cow-lick in his hair. Tbe old aborigine Fiery nose,, hadn't tbe slightest idea in the world that such a venerable old savage sb B. B. , sprung in tbe knees and spavined as be was, ever tkooght to marry bis daughter. But, strange to say, that was the very identical thing upon which Bufialo had set his heart , , So he called one evening at the family mansion of Fiery Nose, with tbe intention of murdering him . in a peaceable and friendly manner, and then eloping with his daughter, tbe Fair Prairie Flower. ; On that very night Fiery Nose sat in bis library with his war paint on, trying to balance his scalp account, which was one scalp- short, and the Prairie Flower also wore paint, and sat reading Tupper'a inspiring poems under the chandelier in the front parlor. ' ' When Buffalo Bull came in, ho weot back into the library, and entered into conversation with the old man, for Ie ha J THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1867. rare conversational powers, and spoke his native tongue with a facility that was at once admirable and remarkable. "Will you take a pipe?", asked the hospitable Fiery Nose; "do, take one," handing him a coil of gas-pipe. "I have some tobacco that has a stamp on it, and it consequently must!' be good. It ws grown in Paducha."--'. "Why don't you use 'the 'Atud Turtle' brand V' observed BdfTalo Bull. "Every paper you buy has -tnilIjon dollar bill in itj and you can get it for ? five' cents. It is an excellent investment for your sur plus earnings. Let me advise you to get some." .' "Ah, I w il'," said Fiery Nose. "Pray halre,'' said he to his child, "go around and buy me two papers of Mud Turtle to bacco. You'd better, ride. Get a quar ter's worlh of tickets, and you may buy 'yellow jack' with the change." " The fair Prairie Flower kissed her aed parent until Jus colors began to run, nnd then she went out on her errand with a small hat over her eyes. "Nice girl, ain't she !" said Fiery Nose; "I've had a great deal of trouble bringing her up, but I am amply repaid, and I attribute all to the met that I raised her with yeast powders. I got the best, and they did the business." "She is a fine girl, and no mistake, and she seems good, too. By the way, how are you getting along over at your Sunday School?" "Tolerably, thank you," said Fiery Nose; "tolerably. I make them an ad dress, and play a few tunes on the melo deon every Sabbath afternoon ; but I can't attend to it properly, .you know." "No? Why not T "Well, yon see, I am constantly inter rupted. Here last Sunday, while I was riht in the midst of a touching hymn, a pale face came down the road, and I was obliged to go out and murder him. He ran, but I told him that he'd got to die, and if he didn't want to go out on the fly, he'd belter succumb at once.' "Did he ?" . "Y'cp, he came up and apologized for running on the ground that he wanted to see a man. But I was mad, for you know I am lymphatic, with a tendency to apoplexy, and I don't like to run." "Bight enough, too." "So I gripped onto this fellow like a double-headed terrierand then I scalped him and let him go. He asked me what I thought he ought to do, and I told him I would advise him as a frieud to use hair restoratives warranted not a dye, and to shake the bottle, and rub it well in." "It did credit to your head and heart," ot served Buffalo Bull. "He said so, and concluded by giving me his hand, and asking me if I wouldn't bury the hatchet." "Did you signify your willingness to do so ?" "I did, and the ceremony came off at (he cemetery. The friends and relatives of the family were invited, and the Epis copal service was read at the grave. No cards, however." "What, no seven up in the carriages going to the funeral ? Why, I thought that was the regular thing." "Oh, yes; we had that, of course. But I mean no cards of invitation." "By the way, old boy," ejaculated Buffalo Bull, "speaking of your daughter, she's a regular straight-out gamboge-Ekin-ned, aboriginal angel, with no discount on her. She's a nobby bit of calico ; and, while I think of it, I understand young Grixzly Bear, the festive brave of the Algonquins, has viewed her with a critic's eye and passed her imperfections by, and concluded to go for her. How sayest thou ?" "He has, has he ? Well, permit me to remark that he has probably shinned op the incorrect tree. Him ? why I'd just as leave marry her to somo wooden headed cigar store Indian, I would, vpon my sacred word of honor as a gentlemen." "She's too good for him, peradventure," observed Buffalo Bull sententiously. "Venture your whole pile on that, me boy. She wears low-down bonnets, and has her linen embroidered, she does ; be sides she chews gum, and has a four-ounce ring through her nose. No girl like that's agoing to fling herself away, is she ? Well, I should think not. Not while her pa can dabble his hands in gore, at any rate, I reckon." "But, my friend," observed Bull, with a trembling voice, "how much these eb nlitions of youthful affection remind me of mo childhood days. Look at ma while I weep ; listen to these bona Jtde tears as they patter in tho spittoon. Oh where, where are the friendsiof me youth ? O where are the loved ones gone ?" "I give it up," said Fiery Nose, after a few moments calm and patient thought. 'Don't you recollect how we used to go out on the trail and capture little child ren and gouge their eyes out, and chop 'em into bits, and then come home and learn onr eatechlims and knife onr next door neighbor, and then pray to the Great Manitou before we went to bed. Ah, those were happy, happy days, and we were hilarious little Ingins, weren't we. But now all these things are mingled with the irrevocable past, you can just bet thy are "Why you're drunk, aint you ?" asked Fiery Nose, '.'you're talking first-class dri vel. Where do you get you're fire water ? i u nave. to get oenator. lates to come and lecture you on temperance." To this Buffalo Bull deigned no reply, but pretending to see something on the top knot of Fiery Nose, he asked him to stoop down a minute while he picked it off. lie then clandestinely jerked out his scalping knife and lifted his hair, after which he jabbed the knife Into his vitals, and threw him on the grate to die. Just then Prairie Flower returned with the tobacco, and perceiving at a glance that her parent was reduced to a cinder, she observed to Buffalo Bull that it seemed to be pretty well up with the old man. "lim-m, yes, said he ; "but a thought 6ti ikes me will vou be mine I" "Well, I don't know ; let me see, what was your income tax last year ?' "I paid tax on two horse blankets, a Barlow knife, and thirty-seven scalps. Besides I love you to distraction. Come to this loving heart ;. rest on my bosom, rest. Say will you ?" "I am ever thine own," said Prairie Flower, as she nestled against his hunt ing shirt. And on her lover's arm she leant. And round her waiste she felt it fold ; He said "I do not care a cent," She said "I'll bet he finds he's sold." Thus were these two aboriginal savages made happy in the fullness of each other's love. She grew old nnd ugly in time, and he, in the depth of his unspeakable affec tion, used to sit day after day smoking on tbe front door steps, while she hoed corn and wheeled home potatoes in a push cart. Until at last she was called home to the happy hunting ground, and he immediate ly put fresh crape on his hat and began browsing around fur another girl. But docs not this teach us all a lesson, that, that teach us, I say, a lesson that we that we, I say, may let that pass, however, doubtless it does teach a lesson, but it's of no consequence. The Sock Lake ih Texas. About sixty miles from Houston, in Texas, in a low, wet prairie country, but itself on quite high and dry ground, and surrounded by a fine little forest, is a small lake, whose diameter may be counted bv rods, the waters of which are so sour that it i3 al most impossible to drink them. A num ber of wells have been dug in the imme diate vicinity, and the waters of these contain iron, alum, magnesia and sul phuric acid. Notwithstanding the diffi culty of reaching tha place and the poor accommodations, large numbers of invalids go there from Southern States to drink the water of the wells and bathe in the lake ; and they experience immediate and re markable benefit. The effect of the baths is sedative, and persons who have not slept comfortably for weeks, after taking a bath in the lake in the evening enjoy a refresh ing night's rest. The water becomes more pleasant to the taste after a few glasses, and may babottled or put in wooden casks without losing its strength. The soil is so strongly Impregnated with the sane qualities as the water that if the mud be dissolved in pura water and a little soda or saleratus put into it, it will foam and efferveseoj and will be as sour as lemon ade. Before the war a number of gentle men were considering plans for building a large hotel at the place ; but since then the project has been postponed. A num ber of gentlemen bought the property of a man who died about twenty-five years ago ; but according to laws of Texas a man cannot sell his homestead without the consent of his wife, nnd a lady of Chicago, claiming to be the former own er's wife, has brought a suit to recover it under that lawi The matter is still in litigation. The OLbEst Voor6N House -The oldest wooden bouse in the United States is in Dorchester soon to be a part of Bos ton. It was built in 1633, and is called the "Minot House," from the name of the first owner. The house was occupied by Gen. Washington and his body guard for a season, during the revolution. The house is two stories high, and the outside has by no means a bad look. Its frame is of oak, either Irish or white, and the beams are sound as ever, and likewise tho whole frame, with the exception of the ! sills, ts in a good state of preservation The rooms are oddly shaped, and awk wardly arranged. Tbe beams are in sight, and are finished off and beaded and the ceiling is very low. Indeed, it is quite worth while to visit this ancient house. There is a little romance connected with it. During the early years of Dorchester, the Indians were very troublesome. -The Neponset tribe made" their headquarters in the village now of that name, and the chiefs name was Chicatawbut, hence the name of the street on which the house stands. Mr. Minot being absent one day, an Indian came and tried to get admittance, bnt the heroine wife refused to admit him, know ing that it could be for no good intent, and taking down her husband's loaded gun she fired it at him, wounding him severely, and then, in a moment, threw a pailful of boil ing water into his bosom, lie fled to the woods and, as tradition says, was found dead the next morning near by, having died of his wuunds. The woman was honored for her bravery by the inhabitants of the place by the presentation of a gold wristlet, with her name upon it, and the words, "Who slew the Naraganset In dian.' The house is now occupied by a family who pay eighty dollars annual rent. "' The highest peak of the Rocky Moun tains is 12,500 deet. ICE FIELD IN THE DESERT. The very hot weather reminds me of ran incident which occurred in 1839, dur ing a hot spell upon th very far frontiers. It was while a command of two compa nies of tbe old Second Unite ! States dra goons, under charge of Captain R. H, Anderson, of the same regiment, was on the march from what was then known as Camp Floyd, Utah Territory, to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. We had struck our tents at a very early hoar in the morn ing, and as the first faint glimmer of day light was observed in tbe east, the com mand was 'straightened out" upon the road, and prepared for a long day's march under a burning July sun, for "Pacific Springs" had to be made that night to camp at, or horrible to think of, there would be no water. We started out live ly and buoyant ; both men and horses thoroughly enjoyed the beautiful cool morning air, bracing and invigorating as it was. The merry laugh and joke passed from front to rear, and each man enj yed himself, apparently as well as soldiers could. The morning passed, the sun came out strong and brilliazt, and soon the effects of his mighty heat became ap parent. The jokes were passed less fre quently, the laughs becaina fewer and shorter, and finally silence reigned among the bipeds, and nothing was heard but the tramp, tramp of the quadrupeds, and jing ling of the equipments, and as old Sol rose higher, his piercing rays grew strong er and stronger, until the very horses grew languid and drooping. We baited to water and rest at noon, still under the burning sun, not a bush the size of a man's bat wa3 to be seen which would afford us any shade. After aa hour's broiling, the word was given to mount, the "forward" was sounded, and we resumed our melting way for that evcrl tsting "Pacific" Spring ; and pacific it ought to be, for our tempers as well as our bodies were sorely tried, and lam afraid there were more left-handed prayers said that day than even Parson Brownlow would approve of. About five o'clock p, m. we reached the Spr nj, ef:er twelve hours steady set in the saddl, ten of which hours we were under the perpen dicular rays of as hot a sun as it was ever my lot to experience, and I have been in not a few of the hot places of this earth, which I earnestly hope will be suf ficient to keep me out of any of the hot places of the other world, all thing else being equal. . 1 he tram arrived, the tents were pitch ed, and tho order passed along to change the feeding ground of our animals, which had been picketed out immediately when we unsaddled, in the rear of our line of tents. About three hundred j'ards in front of our camp there was a very beau- titul strip ot tresh-Iooking grass, and for this point each man made with his horse. The first man on the spot struck his picket pin into the ground, and it imme diately rebounded as if it struck against a rock. Several more tried it, and the same thing happened ; when one of the men stooped down, and inserting the point ot bis picket pin, turned up a portion of the sod, and lo ! there Was a bed of ice from four to ten inches thick. The news flew like lightning through the command, and in the excitement created by the cry ot "ice! ice I" everything else in that camp was forgotten. Every pick, spade and Bhovel, and in fact anything that a man could dig with, was put into imme diate requisition, even to the pocket knives; and in less time than I write this the strip of green grass was covered by anxious, hard-working men, as earnestly bent upon what they were at as if their lives depended upon ice. lou miy rest assured that that ice was a perfect God send to that party of men, after our lon and weary and dusty march over a coun try covered with sand and sage bush, un der the rays of as hot a sun as I ever felt in the tropics ; and that ice was prized as so much gold. Every empty gunny bag and every blanket was put into use to car ry ice, and I do not believe that before or since sueh a load of ice ever crossed the Rocky Ridge as there did next day in our tra-.n. We all thought it ftranse, of course, that we should find ice there, six inches under the surface, in the month o July; but the philosophy of the circum stance was not thought of in tbe excite ment and joy of obtaining it. The Democratic Emblem "le Rooster.' A correspondent cf the Ohio Statesman inquires why the Rooster is used by the Democracy as an emblem of victory. That paper replies : "Because the game rooster is the gam est bird when encroached upon by his fellows, that ever existed, and the democ racy i3 the gamest party that ever voted at an election or resented oppression. Both the party and its emblem, when they go into the fight, make it a matter of life and death, lioth may be whipped, but not conquered, for giving upj when once in the fight, is a word unknown to the practice of the Rooster Utions c found in the Democratic vocabulary,' The following historical incident duced the adoption of the emblem i the m- During the war of 1812 the British fleet on Labe Champlain waa attacked by tha American neet under wommouore AlcDon ough, which being much inferior to that of the English.suffered terribly in the first part of tbe battle. At th mnmn v..;.t NUMBER 38- ( was raging fierce st the heaviest fre of tho enemy directed against the firsiil cf McDonough his men driven from their guns by the fierce cannonade, and dismay sat upon every countenance, and tho i ii rm of iron hail, which seemed to threaten de struction not only to the ehip but tocvevy living soul therein, was at its lsig!:t, a cannon ball struck a chicken eort i.nd -knocked it to pieces, killing 11 it con tained but a moment before, savo oDly a game Rooster, whose battered comb bona the marks cf many a oeath fight. Fly ing upon the buiwurke of WcDonoi?j:u'3 flagship, the nobb bird, undaunted by ;he noise and confusion aud caruj;e ground him, with clarion voice rantj out hi t:oIih of defiance and victory. S::i! rs are ever supctsliiic.is, and wiitn, in the pause of the thunder of tfto er-m cannon they heard the shrill "cock-:;-Jo-.'- dle-doo," of iho undaunted bird. gathered now courage, and repairing ? ;;,.: to their guns, returned anew the liro of the enemy, cheered by th? loud crow of the brave emblem of the Democracy, ur? t il the battle ended and M'Donouh; .rs Lake Champlain, like the Democracy i i Ohio and Pennsylvania, was lciorior.8 over the enemies of the country. Every naval historian makes mention of tha .fact, and history says that th-. bravery shown on that occasion by tho rooster was the cause of the victory, by the renewed courage it gave the sailors in McDonough's fi?et. From that day to thi?, in poliiicl con tests, the Rooster has been the Demo cratic emblem of victory, and when it is seen, in the act of sending forth its "cock-a-doodle-doo," at the head of a Demo cratic newspaper, it is right to say tha country is safe, for the victory is with tha Democracy. Hit IIim Agaik. Somebody a crus ty bachelor, of course -icquires why. when Eve was manufactured of n spare rib, a servant wasn't made at the tains time to wait on her. Somebody el?? a woman, we imagine replies in the follow ing strain : "Because Adam never came whining to Eve with a ragged stocking lo be darn ed, collar string to ba sewed on, or a glovo to meed Tight away, quick new r Be cause be never read the newsnaner until the sun got down behind tbe palm trees. and he stretching out, yawned out t 'Ain't supper most ready, my dear ?' Not be. He madfr the fire and hung tbe kettle over it himself, we'll venture ; and pulled the radishes, peeled the potatoes, nnd did everything eUe he ought to do. He milk ed the cows, fed the chickens, and looked af:er ihe pigs himself, and he never brought nome nait a dozen tnends to dinner when Eve hadit't any fresh pomegranates. He never stayed out till 11 idock to a politi cal meeting, hurrahing for an out nnd .t candidate, and then scolding because Dour Eve was sitting up and crying inaide the gates. He never played billiards, rolled ten-pins and drove fast horses, nor choked Eve with cigar smoke. He never loafed around corner groceries while Eve was rocking Cain's cradle at home. In short, he didn't think she was especially created tor the purpose ot waiting on him, and wasn't under the impression that it dis graced a man to lighten a wife's cares h little. That's the reason that Eve did no! need a hired girl, nnd with it was the rea son that her fair descendants did." "I Thought They had Stoftf.d Yocr Grog." The following story is told bv "Mark Twain" of a gallant naval officer: Twenty or thirty years ago, when mis sionary enterprise was iu its infancy among the Islands of the South Stas. Ohpt. Somers anchored his sloop-cf-war off one the Marquesas, I ihink it wag. The next morning he saw an American ling fliaiin from the beach, Union down. This exci ted him fearfully, of course, and he sent off a boat at once to inquire into the mat ter. I 'resent ly the Krat returned and brought a grave looking missionary. Tha Captain's anxiety Was very highj and ha said ! "What's the troublo out there' say quick!" . . J "Well, I'm grieved to sir," said the missionary "that the natives bave been interrupting our sacerdotal exercises." "No ! Blast their yaller hides, Til what what was it you said they had oeen aoing i - "It pains me sir to say that Ihey have been interrupting our sacerdotal exercises." "Interrupting yoiir-your h 11 ! M.n them starboard guns ! S?ar.d by, now to give 'em the whole battery " ' The astonished clergyman hastened to protest against such excessively rigorous measures, and finally succeeded in making the old tar understand that the oativ? bad only been breaking up a prayer meet ing. "Oh, devil take It, man, is that all ? I thought you meant that they'd stopped your grog." aVygiVMND SHOES, 40 MARKET STREET. fbanoo. 18S7. PHILADELPHIA. in coal mines.- - taneously, nor byfricti!r RV S tim, and its explosion givesrut6;5!' deleterious gasea or smoko. It is twiceaa bulky as gunpowder, but it is one half more powerful, and is composed of -- ausi .- - . . )ne parts, charcoal three to fre f. ri t t 1 PAPE-C,rn r "t i t