h p rrrrr ' " " ; ------- ; o 1 t, j0lS,TO5; Editor. HR IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, ASD AL1L1 ARE SLAVES BESIDE, II. A. JITIKC, I'uWlOKr. at OLUME EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1867. NUMBER 42. 1 WHOLESALE STOI BUS ,1!! 1HSHDERGER& CO., ?ItlX STREET, 'j'TVSlTE SCOTT HOUSE, JOHNSTOWN, PA., f"r s'e largest and best assortment of pure TV IN CAMCl'.IA COUSTY. OILS, VARNISHES, tholiol, Turpentine, .rc Wines xd Liquors, best brands, a Lbs. White Lad. nT'ir.n PTin" PTTTiTiv T iiit-iliira, 7 -v" njfltiit'j lept in a first-class il'. nil f icfiich u i'.l be OLD AT CITY PRICES, iWLEJrS CELEBRATED BITTERS, lv Ue uL-zeu or Lv tlic gallon. OF en: stock or rics and Tcilet Articles iv k il jj'j ': by all judges to be the t .v (j ua s rriY ASD FINEST JS QUALITY AMY I Ottt TOWN". AGl.NTb I'Olt if'S SSiUS Ell BITTERS AM) ii .W "3 MAGIC OINTMENT ! l:.o:;l!:.:s puomptly FILLED AT LOWEST PRICES. I ;:: t.wn, Aug. 15, 1F.C7.-Iy. 1 rrvnvi WET1TI0XII 1STABLISHED 1858. THE OLDEST DRUG STORE IN CAMBRIA COUNTY. c. FRAZER K'-'.-ps constantly on hand the LARGEST, CHEAPEST AND BEST l HiTMEXT OFGOODS PEFTAIX 1SG TO THE DRUG BUSINESS In The County, which he offers IT WHOLES ILE OR RETAIL T; THE TRADE AND PUBLIC :i LOWEST RATES ! H.EIS & It E U T H , V-R JohhilotTn, Pa t BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS AXO IlUOXi. mxDtr.s. MANUFACTURERS OF BLANK ROOKS, POKTE-MONAIS. PAPER BOXES AND LOOKING GLASSES. Looking Glass and Picture Frames always on hand, and made to Order. A large and mo3t complete asiortment of Diawing Room and Miscellaneous Pictures, consisting of Chromos, Paintings in Oil, Steel PIat En gravings, Plain and Colored Lithographs, Oil Prints, Photographs and Wood Cuts. This collection embraces a selection of large sized match pictures of Landscape and Do mestic Scenes and Portraits, and 5,000 dif ferent varieties of Card Photographs of prom inent men, comic and sentimental scenes and copies of subjects by celebrated artists. We have alio a varied assortment" of BIBLES, PRAYER. HYMN and SCHOOL BOOKS, HISTORIES, BIOGRAPHIES, NOVELS, iSrc. Religious Prints and Emblems in great variety, and the largest and most complete stock "of STATIONERY ever brought to this county. 600 new and beautiful styles of WALL TAPER, including an assortment of Potter's celebrated English make, for which we are sole agents'. in this locality. These Wali Papers are handsomer in design, supe rior in finish, and 2i inches wider than any other make. . . The'citizcns of Ebensburg and vicinity are respectfully notified that we make BOOK BINDING and the manufacture of BLAIsK BOOKS a speciality. All work promptly executed at moderate ratts. CStcre on corner of Clinton and Locust streets, imrjic-diaMy opposite Foster II -rase. Johnstown, Oct 2. 18C7.-tf. WANT SUPPLIED AT LAST I THE ONLY CLOTHING STORE IX EBESSClRfi. FALL Sl WINTER STOCK There i. no need now of going to any plce distant from home to purchase Ready-Made Clothing, as the ubcribcri have not only ia store on Main street, thiee doors east of Cravv f rd's Hotel, a full line of Overcoats, Fp.ock & Dkess Coats. BUSIXESS AXD O THER C OA T3, Ca.-simire and Dicskin Pantalcon, Panta loons for every day wear, Vests yf all vlcs and textures, and Gen "tlemen' FURNISHING GOODS, to uit all purchasers, as well aa Trunks, Valises, Carpet-Sacks. Ladies' and Gent's Traveling Bags, &c, but we are prepared to sell goods at as Reasonable Prices as like articles can be purchased from any dealer in this section of the State. Our STOCK 15 UP AND PRICES DOWN to the times, as any person can eatisfy him self vho visits our establishment. (Tv-Remnnber that this is the only regular, first-class Clothing Store in Ebensburg, and in variety, extent and cheapness of stock it will be found unrivalled. Everybody is in vited to give us a call. oct.17, 07. J. A. 1IAGUIRE & CO. jjc poet's gtprfmtnt. imoKi: vows. Piomises are lightly spoken ; Vows on which we blindly build (Uttered only to be broken) G forever unfulfilled. Oft betrayed but still believiog Duped again and yet again All our hoping, all our grieving Warns us, but it warns in vain. From the cradle to the coral From the sunny days of youth We are taught the simple moral. Still we doubt the moral's truth. When a boy they found roe rather Loth to do as I was bid. "I shall buy a birch," u&ys father. Broken tow ! lie never did. Grown extravagant, when youthful, In iny tailor's debt I ran ; Up appeared about as truthful In his talk as any man. Let me tell you how he sold me : "Look ye. Mr. What'sYour-Name, I shall summons 3'ou," h told me But the summons never came. Through the meadows, daisy-lad n. Once it was my lot to stray, Talking to a lovely maiden" In a very spoony way ; And I stole a kiss another Then another then a lot. "Fie!" hhe said, Til tell my other. Idle words : she told her not,. (tales, Sfeelfbcsntcbofcst. A itflGHT IN A BAYOU. 5 5 riitnUllu Street, j'WotTF, :ia::kft house.) JnNSTOWN, PENN'A. A0!E3' FANCY FURS! AT John Fakfjk.v's old established Fur Manufactory ! NO. 718 Arch St., above Tin, Pt , Pill LAD A. "?V H"" Have now in Stcre, i;: of my own Impoi t- " l'S ation anci Manufac- ' 7 turc, one of the lar " A"A est and ni'xst beau- .'.'li.ji.s f FANCY FURS. for Ladies :'.!'cti'K w.iar.tiow in the City. Also, jortment of Gent's Fur Gloves and en T. ' 'u d to diiose of my goods at ;i:ionable i tecs, and I would therc ;' -dl I'rom iny friends of Cauobi'u . icinily, m.er I hi- nrei Number and Street. JO I IS FAR FAR A. ARCH St.. above 7th, south side, ..:bAir.Lr:iiA. " partner, iinr connection wifft .';." in Vh ihi' Fa. c. 3 . 4 m . J K " TAMES' HOTEL, on the European Flan,) 1 w.L.nY Stueet, orrosiTE THE -1 1 n Di i'ut, 1'iTTSuunciii, Pa. A'. LAN AH AN. Proprietor. is newly built and splendidly aM. and couveLient to nil the Rail- ....uitig into the city. The Restaurant v,;, tja Hotel open at all hours ! "-t ujy and night. oct.17.-ly. i' i OT J VAXT the best Cooking it t i -r' -r Sljtre made in the world, go to 'ULbi .-j and get Spcarss1 Anti-Duster. r :1 JJOLLIDAYSliURG'! JACOB mTpIRCHER, FASHIONABLE CLOTHIER & TAILOR, lias just opened a full assortment of well su-le-d n-.d most desirable SPRIXO & SUMMER GOODS. Gents and Bovs furnished with CLOTH ING, HATS, SHOES, &c, of the latest st!osa!i'i best material, ai im iinJ CASH PRICES. A VABILTY OF PIECE GOODS, which will be sold by the yard or made to order in the most approved manner. Having given full satisfaction to his cus tomers Lr more than twenty five yeaks. he guarantees the same to all who may favor him with their patronage in the luture. frj -Store on the west side of Montgomery street, below lilair. next eloor to masonic Hall, Hallidaysburg, Pa. Lmy23.1y.J TCJOTICE. Notice is hereby give ' that an assessment of roc a per ckn' has locn laid upon the premium notes of the Prof at ion Mutual Fire Insurance Cvwjny if Cambria County, to pay losses recently sustained, and that said assessment is due and payable on or b fore the 10th day of December nest, to John E. Roberts, Recei ver, at Ebensburg. The failure of parties insured to pay at the time required will viti ate their policies, though the Company tLay enforce ejection of the amounts atsessed by suit upon their premium notes. A. C. MULLIN. Secretary. Ebensburg. Nov. 7. 18G7.-3t 1 UDITOK'S NOTICE. The undcr . signed Auditor, appointed by the Or phans Court of Cambria courty to distrib ute the money in the hands or David bbai- fer, guardian of the minor cm wren oi Ja cob Shaffer, deceased, to aud amongst the persona legally entitled thereto, liereuy no tifies said persons that he will attend to the duties of that appointment, at his office in Ebensburg, ou Friday, the T2d day of Ao vember. 18G7.at 1 o'clock P. M.. when and where all parties interested may be heard. F, A. SHOEMAKER, Auditor. Oct. 31, 18G7.-3t. The Mississippi, like the Kile, is divi ded at its mouth into a number of outlets, thus forming a delta of islands, which, though devoid of anything like scenic beauty, are not devoid of interest. The great liver, washing. as it docs the banks of a country many thousand miles in extent, entries down in solution great masses of soil, which the impetus of its currci.t, through the reaction of the sea, aided by subterranean salt springs and ac cumulating drift log9, causes to settle. in banks at the mouth, which in the lapse of lime and the ordinary nature, obtain an elevation above its Burface,.and becomes sprinkled with tokens of vegetable life. Those island nearest the sea possess the fewest traces of vegetation ; some of them being adorned by only two "or three tuft3 of red grass, white'thpsj on--tb o -Ugf treuie confines of the coast are wholly without vegetable production ; the forma tion of the latter being too recent to allow time for the germination of chance seeds. The numerous creeks which intersect these islands are called bayous, and wind amongst interminable spaces of marshy ground overgrown with tall and cane-like reeds. These are the favorite haunts of all alligators, snakes and other acqueous and amphibeous reptiles, whose solitude is rarely disturbed by man. An explor ing party entering these precincts, will find the navigation, from the shallowness of the water, both troublesome and dilh cu!t. On the afternoon of a hot day in sum mer, a boat with a crew of lour men and coxswain, belonging to an outward-bound ship lying at anchor in the stream, was seen to make its way into one ot the bay ous. The coxswain was the chief officer of the vessel, aud the men at oars were nicked men from his watch. Embarked r as they were, for ua other purpose than the gratification of curiosity, the reserve usually maintained between master and men was laid aside, and jokes and coni' mcnts freely passed, a proceeding which Mr. Adams, the officer rather encouraged than suppressed. Indeed the latter oc casionally put in a remark likely to in crease hilarity anil dispel restraint. Un der such auspices, their labor was light. The oars bent to their strokes, and the , v IJUWUIT KNIVES, Table Knivts ul i orkr . Spoons, A'e., can be bougl fu. ch at G EO. il UNTLEY'S. lO do; DOZ. WoOltKN I? UTTER 1 $OWI.fi fcCeiveil Hint fur k:i! Inw for rnxh 4 DMINISTRATOKS' NOTICE. u- Letters of Administration on the estate f Michael Maxwell, late of Washington tp der.M. having been granted to the undersign- L1 liv the Register of Cambria county, all r J . . . . : i .. persons having claims agamsi. tiu wi arc hereby notified to present them properly .r,;,-Afl for settlement, and those in- ; dobted to the same are requested to, make 1 uavment without delay. P ELIZA RETH M AX WELL, william Maxwell, j Waliiton Tp., Oct. 24, 18e7.-Ct, boat cleft the water like a fish 'Give way, my lads," said Mr. Ad ams ; "pull with a will. Make a noise, 6ome of you. Jack, strike up with some thing." Jack who Jung well and had a good voice, commenced a roaring song. 'Ease the starboard oar," interrupted Mr. Adams. "Pull in for that creek, d'yo see. There steady she goes." "Aye, aye, sir," said Jack. They had not moio' than reached the middle of the creek before the boat touched the bottom, and though she moved slowly to the strokes of the oars, yet the labor of propelling hr became greater every mo ment; and the men at last paused to breathe. 'I thought it was only a bank, and we should have not over, but the mud seemed v here," said Mr. Adams. "Hack her off." She was accordingly backed off. and they pulled for a narrow bayou nearer the entrance ot me creeK, wnicn proved deep and navigable. Mr. Adams directed them to make lor a small cove in one of the island?, at which he proposed to land. The landing was effected with some difficulty, upon the trunk of a tree, one end of which rested on the shore while the other floated in the water. The boat was run aground, and the party had to walk some distance on the log, which the washins of the water had rendered shp- nerv and insecure. However they land ed in safety ; and Mr. Adams directing two of the men to make fast the boat and set on with the cies of shrub which stood considerably higher than his head, and formed in parts an almost impenetrablaTthicket through, which they forced their way with difficul ty. Birds of bright and beautiful -plumage flew from tree to tree, seemingly without alarm at tho individuals who were intruding on their retreat. Chame leons of transient and varying hues ran along the bushes, changing color to that uf the spot on which they .alighted, so as to be scarcely discernible' from the spot on which they rested. Tracks of rac coons marked the soil in different direc tions, and the party would occasionally stop to listen to the cry of one of these creatures at a little distance. The parch ed and thirsty soil covered here and there with a rank and wiry grass, was cleft in to long and deep fissures, which were sug gestive of subtle and deadly snakes lurk in the hollow.0. . While the two men were engaged in pursuit if a small animal among the bush es, Mr. Adams pushed through the thick- ' ets and lost sight of thepi. He soon j gained the opposite side of the island and came to water again. -Iere, trunks of great trees stretched along the bank so as to form a kind of jetty. Mr. Adams stepped from one to anotbcjLof theso im mense pieces of timber t whuKrmd no doubt been swept from the skirts of some mighty forest, drifted down the river and deposited here. He rounded a point of land and found a numbct of these dogs lyiDg together, making a rude bridge to an adjoining island. He tried them with his foot, and finding them firm, by tread ing resolutely and carefully he managed to cross to tha opposite bank. This is land he found less inviting in appearance than the one he left. There was a little clump of brushwood in the centre, but otherwise the place ws bare of vegeta tion. The soil was solV and muddy at the landing, so much so that Mr. Adams sunk almost ankle deep at every step. There was a salt spring in one placu which had the shape of a cone of glisten ing mud, from the top of which a narrow stream of brine trickled down, and settled in a pool at the foot. There were two small mounds of earth, each with a board at one end on which an inscription was rudely carved. Mr. Adams did not need to be informed that these were graves, for the effluvia arising from them indicated the interments to lmra been recent. In roaming over the mounds, from which it would seem that this had been a burial ground for the numerous ships leaving a sickly port, a.id that the dead had been thus disposed of in nreference to beinn launched into the j - t fea. The association was not pleasant, and he turned away to return by another path. The 6 nl in this direction was so treacherous and soft that he sunk ankle deep at every step. When half way across, he found himself plunging up to the knees in clayey and adhesive soil, to extricate himself from which it required the most violent strucrsles. It was with an apprehension new to him that he fount himself at every nause in his exertions settling deeper and deeper in the mud To aggravate his distress, he was assailed by innumerable sand-flies, which fastened 1 on his hands and iace, anj stung him to madness. Hy repeated and almost fran tic efforts he succeeded in gaining a small natch of hard soil, where he had crossed. There was a small lake of mud similar to that through which he had passeJ, sur rounding tho spot on which he stood. He looked toward tha shore of the opposite island in the hope of seeing some of the - r . i 1 men ; but as none ot tnera came, ue w as nerving his mind to another plunge throuh this terrible slough, when he observed an unusually large tree come drifting down . . 1 1 T-T' the bayou toward me oriage. cor moment he trembled for the safety of the fabric by which he hoped to recross, and was struck with dismay to see it com- Dletelv swept off with the concussion, leaving a passage a hundred feet wide of deep water, and with a rapid current, which he would have to ford, fur he was no swimmer. He breathed hard, and again ventured beneath his seat. Eut now the evening breeze sprang up, and blew away tha myriads of minute sandflies that had hitherto tormented him. Then the mist of the river came rolling in and hid every surrounding object in an impenetrable cloud. No L jndon fog was ever denser or colder than this. It was the exhalation of a moist and pulpy alluvium pregnant with the vapor of decaying vegetation and endless swamps.- It was not long before his teeth chattered with cold. He fortu nately had matches in his pocket, and with them he attempted to light a fire. In his search for dry chips, he struck against what appeared to be a stone ; on taking it up it proved to be a human skull. He threw It away in disgust. Some cold substance adhering to his hand he struck a light to examine it, and discovered that an enormous centipede had crawled out of the skull and was u3aklng iti way up his sleeve. Every nerve in hi3 frame seemed to start at the sight, and he hastily swept it on. It required more fortitude than he possessed now, to stir without alarm. Every substance around him he knew was dive with venomous reptiles. Vipers were concealed in the dead timber on which he might sit. Centipedes and scor pions nestled under the bark, insects that feed on decomposed and putrifying matter, were generated in the inalaiii he inhaled, and swarmed about him in cloud3 ; and, when he had succeeded in kindling a fire, the musquitoes, settled on their defenseless victim, punctured him with a thousand stingy, and buzzing into ji3 ears with a wailing aud ceaseless hum, seemed to crown the pandemonium into which he had fallen. No wonder that he became a prey to unnatural terrors. He fancied he saw the fierce eyes of crowds of alligators twink ling at him through the blaze ; that he heard the snapping of their fearful jaws on every side of him, that every unburnt em ber in the lire was a deadly serpent thaw ing into life, and about to s, ring upon him with fatal bite. Then he fancied that scorpions had crept into his linen, and was afraid to move lest a centipede would sting his bosom. W orse than all, he began to think he was resting on one of the graves, and that the worms from beneath were anticipating his decay ; and oh ! horror of horrors, that the air rung with dismal cries, which seemed to be approaching from a distance, until he became over powered with his fears, and trembled aud moaned h4flettely likt mifef ,?ut - Duhe. was now really ill. The chills and uguc creot over him, and happily rendered him insensible to ever thing but physical suf fering, uutil he was roused by the crack ling of twigs near him as of something stealthily approaching. This was the cli max, lie jumped up w ith a cry of terror more like a yell than a human voice, and rushing toward the water's edge, fell un conscious to the ground. If he had retained his faculties he might have known that a light was at no great d'siance, that the water re fie ted the flame of beacons blazing on every isdand ; that a boat full of men was approaching ; that these men were shouting for him with all their might, and that help was at hand, though he knew it not. Some days after, when his ship had got wed out to sea, and he had recovered from the deihium of a high fever, they ventur ed to tell him about his escape. The boat's crew had at first searched for him in every direction but the right one, and foolishly ,one back to the ship for orders. They were immediately dispatched again with lantcrne, and instructions to remain all night if necessary. They goon dis covered his fire, and after infinite pains, contrived to reach the spot in time to res cue him from a watery grave. Though some years have now passed over his head, and he has attained the command of a large ship, yet it always gives him pain to be questioned as to the cause of his premature gray hairs ; nor can he ever recall without tremor, the sufferings of that night in the bayou. SHADDOCK'S GRAVE. A Curious I'rog St0. img. The place where liraddock was buried is in Fayette, count; , Pennsylvania, and between tifiy'-three and fifty-four miles from Cumberland, Maryland, a few rods north of the National road. There had long existed a tradition in this region that liaddock was killed by one of his own men, and more recent developments leave : little or no doubt of the fact. A commu- , nieation some time since appeared in a ! Washington paper, w rit ten by a gentle- 1 man whose authority is good on such J points, and says: "When iny father was removing with his family to the West, one i of the Fausctts kept a public hou.-c near where Uniontown now stands, the county teat of Fayette, la. In this man's house wo lodged about the 10th of October, 1781, twentyssix years and a few months after Uruddock's defeat, and there it was made anything but a secret that una of the family dealt the death blow to the British General. "'Thirteen years after I met Thomas Fauseit in Fayette count-, then, as he j told me, in his 70th year. To him I put the plain question, and received the plain j reply : ' did shoot hua f He then went , on to insist that, by doing so, he contii huted to save what was left of the army, j 1 I C . ..... ......ll, I i...u. l..ir-il i ..... . . . t ii .i . f ,W lul tact eitner Uouuteu or oiameu, inai rau sett shot Uraddock." Hon. Andrew Stewart, of Uniontown, The Elk Kun (Del.) Gazette has the bubjoined : f Mr. Yr.gerliving near Mitchell's Sta I tion, in Culpepper ctunty, rv'ats some ! very curious facts about a remaikabiw 'It has lived," he svs, "man. j years with us, and is a great favorite, aud the greatest curiosity i us wTirj c r markab'y tame. Il had frequented door steps before our hall door some j.ws before my acquaintance cumxeiux 1 vil!. it. My father had adurred it oi acct uui of its sizo aud color, and he risked it every evening, when ii would come fort!: j at his summons, and by constu.it k.u.iT.& it would cotne to he candle ard look -v j as if expecting to be taken ;ud biouht ; : tho table and fed on insee; of all iwr ! On presenting living insectf, :t xe ir 1 ejes iute.itly and remains "ot"jnk tor a : while as if urenarinir lor a t"it , u. as if preparing l is an instantaneous throwing f iis u-u, to a j:reat distance, upon which : i--'t sticks fast to the tip by a j;lu:e.ous m tirr. I can'i pay how lu.ig my i. T been acquainted with it ; lion, inj et io. recollection he spoke of it aa "Old To-u," "the old frog." I have known -U loi groat number e f years I can answer : fifty -seven 3 cars. It makes it, ap. auce with warm weather .:d 'ru ua till fall, appearing uoimn - evening to our great amusou. nlt li ;-. been trained to do many tlir.e, .ujL,b J. leaping, turning sumersault holdi"V Pa., says his father knew and otteu con- j ternately by its feet and hands to suiiu versed with Tom Fausctt, w ho did not j ror,e swinging an 1 w hilling a'tei ihe mar. j hesitate to avow, ia the presence 01 us j lier cf ;. Pf ...;-r0pe performer, n.ra.:c i friends, that he shut General liraddock. j erect un its hind legs: and at tho 'o: d of I command, going tutuugh the iu.. uul ex 1 ercioe. It seems perfectly good uVtirv.i ! Fausett was a man of gigantio frame, of j uncivilized, half-savage propensities, who I spent most of his life au.ong ihe moun- j u;1j ncve, ohows temper, but is ut caaml y i tains as a hermit, living ou game w hich airaid of a cat. on w hose approach it w it ! he killed. He would occasionally come often lep fuur feet from off the floor, with : into town and get drunk; sometimes he the ut must precision, plump into the mouh i would repel inquiries into the affairs of; Qc a iu,gC water pitcher, and thus secure Uraddock's death, by putting his lingers j a g.afc ,ct,eat, Y'ct he is in no wis i to his lips, and uttering a sort of buzzing , alar,ned or disturbed by the' presence of sound : at other times he would burst into do"s. of which we have many ,about tho tears, and appear greatly agitated bv cou Admri A "Timbkr Hat." Somewhere about the year 1790, (so runs the story,) a trav clinT millwright, in those days the king of on the yielding soil, which here was soft- mechanics, footsore, and with the broad er if possible than before. Ho had near- cst Northern Done accent, stopped at lv teached the middle, when lie ai- Soho, a locality indicative ot h eld sports, . 4 1 I . . f t . Ct tempted to place his loot on a secmmgiy uut tuen the engine iactory ot liouuon 05 Aiding passions. Iu spite of BradJoL-k's cilly order that the troops should not protect theiuselres behind the trees. Jo.-eoh Fauseit had . j taken such position, when liraddock rode up in a passion, and struck him down i with his sword. Tom Fausett, who was . but a fchoi t distance from his brother, saw ; the whole transaction, and immediately . ifrr-W Tip liifc ..ifl iiird.-fcbct 'ii-lJ-Uek f through the lungs, partly in revenge tor j I the outrage ut ou his brother, and partly, : aa he a'.was alleged, to get im General , out of the w ay, and thus save the remain- j der uf the gallant baud who had been sac- j rificed to his obstinacy and wai.t of ex- i perience in frontier warfare. . j After liraddock fell, the retreating sol- j diers carried their wounded General for j four days until they reached ".-even miles ' beyond Dunbar's camp, where he cx- pired." He was buried in the centre ot the road which his advancing army had cut ; and to prevent the discovery of tha "rave, and to save the body from savage dishonor, soldiers, horses and wajious, . . o . c . 1 . .. n. ... wer-j passeu over it. Jim; 01 me souiib mui-kcnl tha trees near the fput th t I those who visited there many years after could point out the spot witlucevtaiiiiy. Some twentj-nine years fciuce" while a , party of laborers were repairing this road J and clinging away the slope of the hill, i they disinterred some bones, with sundry , mi'itary trappings, which were at oi.Ci knoAii by the old settlers to be those of liraddock. One and another to;k son.e of the most prominent bones, and the oth ers were rcinterred under a tree on the hill. Mr. Stewart afterwards collected tho scattered bones from the individuals who had taken them, and sciit them to l'oale's Museum in Philadelphia, A plain shingle marked "Uraddock's Grave." nailed to the tree where a part of the bones arc interred, is the only monu ment to point out to the traveller ihe rests ing place ot the proud and brave but un fortunate hero of the French war. premises They seem to regard him as one of the household aud u "privileged character." The . Hon. Judge Pay lor, who will attest the above statement mp. by Mr. Yager, in speaking of the age of this frog remarked : Tt is certainly ono hundred years old, an i though he o-h have been here before the Indians left the ouunXi-y, la iui.ij' - uvvir Out ill i"" lclaiicy. hard substance like a piece of hard tim ber imbedded in the mud. T his sur prise this substance rose instead of sink - .. ... if in under him. and the neaa 01 a n ' great Watt, and asked for work. His aspect was a little better than one of "beggary and poor looks," and Mr. lioulton bad bid him God-speed to some alligator with open mouth, emerged from other workshop, when, as he was turning below. What he had mistaken tor a drop aWay sorrow fully, air. lxulton suddenly of water on the surface was the eye ot J caUed him back and inquired : "What kind of hat havo you on your head, mv friend " "It's just timber, sir." "Timber, mv man ? Let's look at it. the creature while basking in the sun. With an involuntary exclamation, he sprang aside, and by means of a series of convulsive plunges he'managed to flounder through to tho solid ground while the rep- Where did you get it?" tile, fortunately for him, waddled off to onntlipr tart of the island at a speed that made him shudder. When he reached the bank he halloed to the men till he was hoarse, bat received no answer. The sun RPttin. and in a few moments it would be quite dark. He waited at this ganr anitber gait to please me. point as long as it was possible to see any- j jong journey afore me, and I th thing, and then seated himself on a stray lo", where he had not rested a second be fore something like a twig glided from be neath his feet, and displayed to him a large serpent, which in his dismal con dition, he imagined to bo twice its ac- toal size. He rose up nastuy, ana lor a lone time would not sit down at all, as ho . ... ... ij remain to bail llCf OUt, .1 ....., ;,wimoi tbft island. He found the rlcc wooded with a large sne- ' knew not what reptile might be cjnccalcd J Goxn ur the spout Radicalism. "I just made it, sir, my ain seL" "How did you make ltT "I just turned it in the lathie." "Hut it's oval, man, and the lathe turns things round " "A weal ! I iust guar'd the lathie id a thocht I'd have a hat to keep out the water ; and I had na muckle siller to spare, and I just made ane." By his iuborn mechanism he had in vented the oval lathe and made his hat, and the hat made his fortune. He be came a distinguished machinist. The Wkon-g Mas. The Fall Kiver reurs relates the following amuning inci dent which occuned a few days since in a neighboring city. "A worthy couple well to do in the world a few years ago, had a son who often strayed fioni the path of rectitude, and went on the most disgrace ful sprees. Marrying, he reformed, and for some vears has been as steady as could be desired. A short lime since an intoxicated man tumbled into a drug store, and was immediately recognized by the keeper as Mr. S. who had been so lon reformed. W ord was immediately sent to hi parents, and coming they took j tlim nOmC. HO was tuvcicu mm u" and mud, but they went towork bravely and pulled otf his clothes, washed his feet, put on clean linen, and tumbled him into the best bed. Ihe mother, with uuiier- in- heart, took her way to her son's house to infoun his wife of his disgraceful con dition. What was her amazement when, after telling, with tears and sobs, the sad occurance, to be invited into the bedroom, where her son was sleeping soundly, hav ing retired earlier than usual. Careful investigation showed tho fellow sleeping comfortably in her best bed at home to be one of the "dirtiest and worst drunkards in the city. His features were something like her son's, but that did n.t save his being dragged out of beJ and escorteu to the watch-hoMT." . :t-' r "Don't Siav Ixng." It is rarely, in deed, that we have read anything more truthfully pathetic than the subjoined waif, which we find floating among our ex changes. Would that every husband iu our land might read and profit by it : "Don't stay long, husband 1" said U young bride tenderly in my pivseuce one evening, as her husband was preparing to go out. The words iheuiseiv were in significant "but the look of melting fund ness with which they were accompanied, spoke volumes. It told the whole vast depth of woman's love of her grief when the light of his smile, tho source of all her ! joy, beamed not brightly upon her. j "Don't stay long, husband I" cuo I 1 fancied I saw the loviug, gentle wife, sit ting alor.e, anxiously counting the mo j 1 aents of her husband's absence, very few , 1 laments running to the door to see if he ! was not in sight, and finding that he was ' not, 1 thought 1 could hear her exclaim . ing ia disappointed tonss, "nut ytt.-' I "Dou't fctay long, husband !" and I again thought I could see the young wif rocking ncrvoasly iu her gret arru chaw and weeping as though her heart would break, us hu thoughtless "lord and mas ter" prolonged his stay to a wcarisoma length of tiuic. Oh, you that have wives to say "don't stay long," when you go ftTth, t hi uk of them kindly when you are min gling in the busy hive of life, and tryjaat a little to make their homes and I warts happy, for they are gems too seldom re- placed. You cannot find amid ilvt pleas ures of the world, the peace and joy that a quiet home, blessed with such a wo- man s pretence will anoru. 'Don't stay long, husband !" and the young wife's look seemed to say for here in your own sweet home is a loviog heart whose music is hu-hed when you are ab sent here is a soft breast to lay your head upon, and here pure lips, uusoiUd by sin, that will pay you kisses for coming back so soon. i i 1 i OnjEer3 to Serenading, A younj V gentleman in Darby was anxious to sere- I nude his charmer. He blows the cornet and the bass drum in a most artistic and highly inflated manner. As a drummist he is without a peer. A bass-drum is not exactly the thing to serenade a lady with. Neither is a coro . t. He desired ,'. company on his serenading expedition., j and engaged the services of a colored .. guitarist. lhey vre going it, these two, i at a high old rate, mixing the music of 2t the guitar and c-renet in a sort of musi-'?., cal punch, healthful and inspiring. But ':. the gal, the dulcenia, the divinity in " waterfall and a gored dress, didn't like it. She raised tho window ; she drew from its hidden recesses a utensil; her beaut1 V. ful lips unclosed ; she spoke in strain musical as the first low whispered not'' of love : "Now, see here, if you. darkK.J; don't go away from there, I'll rae ,!,;, ? unpleasant fur you." Ap.d. U hr.vn ?t. 11-7 !f. Uforfr the foil - UV. 6 EO. 1 1 UXTL EY'S. 1 Pa OP P. r...TZ r i ; i r