irrlKK, Editor and Publisher. I. - ' IJE IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, AND ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE. Term, $3 per year In adtaiice. OhUME 4. EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1870. NUMBER 31. He Cambria Freeman r . n llf'D! tCUC T j.vEKV THURSDAY MORNING, 4t Ebensburg, t-amoria to., ra. , ,i, Ubaiii rutes. patable within three lltOlltllS Jtom uuic yjj .inowiiw.y. ((-,rv.oue jear. J; six months, - - - - 1 00 "eci.pv, three months, - - - - 60 Xh.ttC who f in to pay meir suuscripuons til liter tllC e xpirtmmi i dia uivuimj nm charged at the rate of $2.50 per year, til" who fali to pay until after the ex ...m of twelve month will be charged at .rate 1$:1.00 per year. 'wive numbers constituto a quarter; . nvnntKc- sni! fi ft v immbpra jittTV live, '"v"""" J year. RATES Or AUVtKi mijin. euarc, 12 lines, one insertion. $1 00 25 2 00 2 50 2 60 1 50 1 yr. $G 00 12 00 15 00 25 00 28 00 35 00 CO 00 C 00 iter's Notices, eacn, . : 1 . iEinistrntori' toners, cam. more' Notices, cacti . tray polices, cm u C vws. $ 4 00 8 00 10 00 14 00 10 00 25 00 35 00 nn:ire. 12 lines. $ -2 50 5 00 7 00 9 &0 11 00 14 CO 25 00 glares, 24 lines. ivjares. so nnes, .jter column. Ini column, If column, ; C'lunni, fei mil or Business Cards, not tot-eilini: 8 lines, wit) paper. iHttwry Not ires, over six lines, ten cents tin Spei'ihl iintl business Notices eight cents line fi.r tirft insertion, ana lour cents lor iiih-a-duont insertion. Resolutions of Sureties, or communica- s 't a personal Lature must be paid for advef tis-cmit. Jol! I'RINTIXG. We Live made arrangements by which Mr. do or have done all kiduh i plain ! Iucy Job Pi hit in.s, such as Books, niliets. show Cards, ttill and l.ettej Js, Handbills. Circulars. &c, in the best s of the art ami at the most, moderate o,n, A!.s(), all kinds of Hiding. Blank ts. Ro:ik I'.iniiiiiL'. Ac .executed toorder "A us tho best and as cheap as the ajx.. BENSBURC FOUNDRY AU1 I. H I.L 12 LAST! tW FIRM, NEWBUILDINGS, &c. J AVINO ywri li;?il tlip well known F.B J. KNilil'U; FOl N DRY from .Mr. Edw. asul inbuilt, mid enlarged it almost en f. (wide refining ii with new machinery, i;!riiiei s a.e now jrepared to furni.sh K. PARLOR 1IEATIXO SIX) ITS, -t latfrt a;id most iipprnved patterns u.MUMi MAUIHM'S. MILL UEAIt- KOiE and WATER WH F.KLS of every nriion. IRON FENCING, PLOUGHS PLOUGH CASTINGS, ami in fact all h f article manufactured in ;i first class n". Jol Work of all kind attended to Ml? ati.l ilone cheaply. e fpeciul nitention of Farmers U invited !!? pntci.tcl rLOUOUS which we ; iiiesule nglu to niunufacnire and fell county, aiic" which are admitted to be 'pl over intiDilucetl to the public. "Wig ouifelves capable of performing - hi unr ; ,e in tno rnnst satiJ ininr. ''tt.Mid knowing that we can do work at ttrncis thao hare been chai ned iu this XUIiilVblTOtrifi.ra .,.,..(; ! . .1.. y;"V !om,d worthy oi liberal patronage. li'L'i1!0'-5 mJe to wholesale dealers. i 1 '4 ill u;iBil 1UI UiU f". orc..t;.P9 Riven ; exci,nll:e Fi' ntm m, ... - - COXV ER Y, Y1NROE & CO. '.burg, Scjjt.2, IfCB. fARMERS, Look to Your Interests, SI CUT OXK or SPROUT'S COSIDIXED ",IBUD0 HtFKCItT COMDIXtD pork and Knife Manufactured. lVERY F0ItK WARRANTED. 118,1 ",umber can be supplied for wuntr, orderH for tr is celebrated U"J ork and Knife should be eeut in Cui)j to StAgmt for Cambria County. IELgrVppT l? Ir,n Pu,lea- Also, Ftu.r,. n i LES for fabtenining PuIIcts tct 1. 1 . tne 111091 convenient faa w 'down Tei as thcy can be Put UP ms.,. "u"ut 1,10 us oi ladders. acc: 9. 18C9. 6m. IN teR.AND SHEET-IKON Warp SUAu5Klvr. ;n.JJ'.-T.Havinir rurchased th tne tools 1 . (1 'ne r."i ' lu,m". a leased otil!; "nt occupied by S. Singleton, "'0t Mr T r .,,.. -r. T ' a suh! 1 ' P0"11 the PUre of Zahm :'iiwns of P " Tould wpeclfully inform Ik:. - -oensburi ami n-iia 1 (! rtein n eR.nd roterial,but fully IvinE!06 a9.llke art'c' r sold by PWdton. l" 6 cou"ly. Special at 1 4f kinda rg and P"ttinB up S POUT V in iJ. "aniination of my work 3S1 tc f all n "thi t ' "'"n. ann i uave B?S T0 LAND OVVNERS.- iT4111 of the D'ure9 01 wa"a"s. and of the f drift ..Pyhie thesam . PJeioiSm lh? official recordB how biK Patent f'om th. Land Of- rof ku,'Zr iPtented lands, under Vt'itt th tb 20111 of May-1864 r of tU b'reto'8'lred by the 5tf ".March UrM0..Tr: & 1870. Summer. 1870. I am now prepared to offer SUPERIOR INDUCEMENTS TO CASH PUKCH ASKRS OF innur o nnr.i iUUli ML I'Ji I K li IU lT I I : k KITIIKR AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. My ptock consists in part of every variety of Tin, beet-Iron, COPPER AND BRASS WARES, F.NAM KI.I.KD AND IM.AIN SAUCE-PANS. BOILERS &c , COAL SHOVELS. MINK LAMPS, OIL CANS. IIOUSF.FURNISIIING HARD WARE OF EVERY KIND. Sprat's Anti-Dust HEATING am COOKING STOVES EXCELSIOR COOKISG S1VVES, NOBLE, TRIUMPH and PARLOR COOK ING STOVES, And any Cooking Stove desirod I will get when ordered at manufacturer's prices. Odd Stove Plates and Grates, &c, for re pairs, on hand for the Stoves I sell ; others will be ordered when wanted. Particular attention given to Spouting, Valleys and Conductors, all of which will be made out of best mate rials and put up by competent workmen. Lamp Burners, Wick and Chimneys WHOI.K9AI.B OR KETAII.. I would call particular attention to the Light House liurner, with Glass Cone, for giv"ng moie liidit. than any other in ue. Also, the Paragon Burner, for Ciude Oil. SUGAR KETTLESaND CAULDRONS of all sizes constantly on hand. Special attention given to Jobbing in Tin, Copper and Sheet-Iron. at lowest possible lates. Wiioiesai.e Merchants' Lists now ready, and will be sent on npp.icatioii by mail or in person Hoping to see all my old customers and many new ones thi Spiing, I return ray most sincere thanks fcir the very liberal pa tronage I have already received, and will endeavor to pleas : ail who may call, wheth er they buy or not. FRANCIS W. HAY. Johnstown, March 7. 1867. G 'REaT RKnrcTiox jx Pkices ! TO CASH MY EES! AT Till: I.III ASIU It HO li S E-F LI Pi i I S Hi A G STORE. The undersigned respectfully informs the citizens of Ebensburg and the public gener ally that he has made a great reduction in prices to CASH BUYERS. My stock will consist, in part, of Cooking, Parlor and Heat ing Stores, of the most popular kinds ; 2Y;t tcare of every description, of my own man ufacture ; HarJu-are of all kind, such as Locks, Sciews, Butt Hinges, Table Hinges, Shutter Hinges, Bolts, Iron and Nails, Win dow Glass, Putty, Table Knives and Forks, Carving Knives and Forks, Meat Cutters, Apple Parers, Pen and Pocket Knives in giat variety, Fcitsors. Shears, Razors and Strops Axes, Hatchets. Hammers, Boring Machines, Augers. Chissels, Planes, Com passes, Squares, Files, Rasps, Anvils, Vises, Wrenches, Rip, Panel and Cross-Cut Saws, Chains of all kinds. Shovels. Spaoes. Scythes and Snaths, Rakes, Turks, blcigh Dells, Shoe Lasts, Pegs. Wax Bristles. Clotb.es Wiingers, Grind Stones. Patent Molasses Gates and Measures. Lumber Sticks, Horse Nails, HoTFe Shoes, Cast Steel. Rides. Shot Guns, Revolvers, Pistols, Cartridges, Pow der, Caps, Lead, iSrc, Odd Stove Plates, Grates and Fire Bricks, Well and Cistern Pumps and Tubing; Harness and Saddlery Ware of all kind ; Wooden and Willow Ware in great variety ; Carbon Oil and Oil Lamps, Fish Oil, Lard Oil, Linseed Oil, Lubricating Oil, Rosin, Tar, Glassware, Paints, Varnish es. Turpentine. Alcohol. &c. FAMILY GROCERIES, such as Tea, Coffee. Sugars, Molasses, Syr ups, Spices, Dried Peaches, Dried Apples, Fish, Hominy, Crackers, Rice and Pearl Barley: Soaps, Candles ; TOBACCO and CIGARS; Paint. Whitewash, Scrub. Horse, Sl oe. Dusting, Varnish, Stove. Clothes and Tooth Brushes, all kinds and sizes; Bed Cords and Manilla Ropes, and many other articles at the lowest rates for CASH. (fyHauce Spouting made, pair d and put up at low rates for cash. A liberal discount made to country dealers buying Tinware wholesale. GEO. HUNTLEY Ebensburg. Feb. 28. 1867,-tf. G EORGE'W. YEAGER, Wholesale and Ilets.ll Dealer In HEATING AND COOK STOVES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, TH. COPPER Jffl SHIET-ISi WARE OF HIS OWN MANUFACTURE, And GENERAL JOBBER in SPOUTING aud all other work in his line. Virginia Street, near Caroline Street, ALTOOX.4, PA, The only dealer in the city having the right to tell the renowned " UARLEY SHEAF" COOK S rOVE, the moet perfect complete and satisfactory Stove ever introduced to the public Stock Immense. - Prices Low. satisfaction guaranteed. . IjlRANK D. STOKM, Practical Sur vcvob., EEBNgBUka. Pa. Office on Cea tr etreV)opposUe Colonade Row. (mj.5.) jje poet's grpartrntnt. PrLLIXO IIAR1 ACJAIXSTTIIE TIDE. In the wr rid I've gained my knowledge. And for it have had to pay; Tho' I never went to college, Yet I've beard the poet's say: Life is like a mighty river. Rolling on from day to day Hen are vessels launched upon it, Sometimes wrecked and cast away. Many a bright, gooddiearted fellow, Many a noble minded man. Finds himself in water shallow Then assist him if you cau. Some succeed at every turning. Fortune favors every scheme; Others, too, though more deserving. Have to pull against the stream. If the wind is in your favor. And you'vo weathered every squall. Remember those who luckless labor. Never get fair wiuds at all; Working hard, contented, willing, Struggling thro life's ocean wide Not a friend and not a shilling Pulling hard against the tide. Don't give way to foolish sorrow. Let this keep you iu good cheer: Brighter days may come to-morror If you try and persevere. Darkest nights will have a morning, Tho' the sky be overcast; Longest lanes must have a turning, And the tide will turn at last. Salts, Shears, lucbotcs, t. STEPHEN APPLETOK'S WIFE. When Stephen Applet or. had lived some thirty five years a bachelor, he be thought him that it would be well to get manied, and looked around him accord dingly for a wife. Had others looked for him, they would probably have cho sen a self-contained, decorous person past thirty, and would not have been particu lar as to looks, iiiasu.uch as Stephen was no beauty himself, and never had been. He, however, greatly to the surprise of every mortal who knew him, walked up the church aisle one Sunday morning, with a very pretty girl upon his aim, and, after the service, introduced her to his friends among the congregation as his wife. Sho looked a great deal more like his daughter, and a blushing, .smiling, loving hale creature, who must, so far, have had a happy life, to have brought out of it so many happy dimples. So she had, indeed. A half-dozen bright-eyed sisters, and a mother who was only an older sister in years, bad cried bitterly when Stephen Appleton had marched off from their country home with one of their number on his arm, and hud gone so far as to ask each other confiden tially : 44 What Tilly could have seen in that old fellow " And certainly it seemed almost a mystery that such solemn woo ing 6hould have proKpcrcd with such a merry girl wooing without many of those accessories, which women hold so dear, of praises and caresses. Probably, poor Tilly thought they were all to come after marriage. 4'IIe's not handsome, perhaps," Tilly would say ; "but he's very prepossessing, arid he has such a mind !" And then it seemed to her that he need ed some one to look after him, to sew on his buttons, and tiu his cravat, and prop erly prepnre his tea, which he had a cus tom of making wretchedly for himself in his dusty little study. So she left home and love, and plunged into the maelstrom of wedded life with a man who had so stiongly imbued himself with the idea that woman was his inferior, that he thought it a waste of intellect and time to love one overmuch, or to study her tastes and fancies for a moment, if they conflicted with his own. She, the inferior, bad on the contrary, said to herself, 44I must try to adapt ray self in every way to Stephen and had thought also that sho would never find happiness in anything which did Dot please him. She bad joyfully accepted all his invitations to weariful lectures, and refused to enjoy her favorite pastime, tho polka, when who discovered that he dis approved of it. And now, in her plain little home, she hopefully aud smilingly took up the dull routine of woman's house hold drudgery, and made all fresh, and sweet, and pleasant, fed her genius and hero daintily, and saw to his stockings and buttons. He hardly knew it. He never awoke out of bis hard and cruel self-absorption sufficiently to be aware of her constant thought for him He gave her so much money a week and found that it sufficed. She had a home and clothes ; that, it was his theory, was what women married for. He knew she was pretty, but it was his right to have as pretty a wife as he could get. And she adorned herself with ribbons, and twined flowers in her hair, and took thought about her cuffs and col lars in the vain hope of being told just once that these pretty things became her. Woman's vanity should never be en couraged, was one of his theories. Other men looked at her admiringly ; other men hinted what she would have given worlds to hear Stephen say. But she received nu eucb homage from him. She had no kind words of appreciation, no kisses, no endearments. In the morning a mandate was given concerning dinner. In the evening he ate it with ber ; and though he had no fault to fiod, never praised a dish. After the meal, he citbetuwent out or locked bim self in his study among books and papers Onco, at the very first, she had taken the crochet work to the door, and asked to be let in ; but ho had answered by denial. "Man's work," he said, sententiously, ''is too great to be broken in upon by womau's chat, or woman's lidgeting;" and she had retired quietly. She never tapped at those panels again ; nor did she ever hint at any wish for re creation at any desiie to enjoy a play or a concert, even at the natural longing for a moonlight walk. The inferior creature had some pride in her composition. No more would she woo her husband than she would have wooed him when his bachelor fancy first selected her to be his future housekeeper. A proud woman had rather miss attention altogether, even from the one to whom she is married, than ever seem to ask for it. Men will not believe it, but many a woman has died of such a life as Tilly led. The case was not so bad with Tilly as it seemed, however. Under all his ab straction, and coldness, and critical supe riority, lurked a tenderness that Stephen would have been ashamed to express. His neglect arose from absorption in his pursuits, rather than any repugnance to Ids wile's society. And he did not pro vide her with amusement, because he firmly believed that woman could be thor oughly satisfied with sewing and fancy work; and for this reason he gave her no praises, nor recognized her toil as a labor of love, but as an employment as delightful to her as his profession was to him. And the fact that he never praised her beauty was due to his theorizing also. Woman, the weak, vain animal, must be guided, lest she should go astray; and always lovers' talk had disgusted rather than pleased him, and he bad vowed never to yield to any weakness whatever. And so be called her Mrs. Appleton, aud she dared not call him Stephen ; and when sometimes his long arms would fain have encircled her and drawn her to his bosom, he refrained for shame of a fully, and she was too proud and too deeply pained even to touch bis shoulder w ith her palm un asked. One day he caught her reading certain love poems, and took the volume from her hand, pleasantly enough, for he was sel dom rude, with all his coldness, and furled the pages over. 4,A man wrote this," he said. "Praises of a woman's face ! Yearnings for her presence ! Why, a man should be all sufficient for himself. Love makes a man weak, contemptible love that these poets siit so much value on. I think you had best not read this thing, child, it is full of folly." Then he tossed the book upon the table the treasured volume over which her girl's eyes had gloated before ever she met this husband of hers, saying, "Would that some man would feel thus to me I talk or write so to and of me !" believing that there was a love life before her in the extatic future. He went up into his study and laboratory, where some 6trange metallic compound was filling the house with its fumes, and where for days he had been toiling for the purpose of com pleting an invention of which be had dreamt a long, long while something as dear to him as ever the philosopher's stone could have been to any old alche mist. Tilly took the book from the table, and walked towards (he bright tire with it. She rent the pages, full of her own girlish pencil marks, from top to bottom, and heaped them on the red coals. "Rest there, rhymed lies that deluded me !" she said fiercely. "There is no such thing as love. You mocked me with the falsehood. I believe it no longer. Hum, worthless jingle, that mean nothing. Would that I had never been fooled by you !"' And tongues of flame, yellow, red and blue, licked about the paper, and hissed and crackled ovar the shrivelling lantern cover. Tilly watched the work of de struction, and had seen the flames die out, and the red train of sparks which children call "people going to church" travel over the crisp tinder and drop off it, with the big 4parson" and "clerk" following after, when a cry she had never forgot, smote her ear a something indescribable rum bled and shook in the house, suddenly full of dust and hot metallic odor; and rushing by a sort of instinct to her hus band's study, she found him lying among the dtlris of his apparatus, a senseless, motionless, disfigured thing, that could neither speak to nor look at hor. An explosion had taken place, and the inven tor was the victim. At the eight of him lying there, dead, as she feared utterly uudone, at least, as she doubted not all Tilly's love returned. She took the disfigured face to her bosom, as she had never dared to take it before. She kissed that fioin which any one else would have shrunk with loathing, and knew that the poet had not lied, but that love was tho oue real thing in this mad dream of life and that once born, it died not. "Tell me what I can do for him," ehe Baid, after those who came to her aid had done their best. "Let me work for him, or I 6hall die 1 There is nothing I am not strong enough to accomplish, if ouly he is better for it." And there was work enough before her, as she found work such as she had never dreamt of before. Three months from that day, Stephen Appleton opened his eyes, and saw notb- lag; groping about wito ms imn nanas, j he felt a girl's littje, warm band crp into them, and 6aid, "Tilly, is it you? What has happened to me t" Then in another moment he remem bered. "There was an explosion I" he said. She sobbed, "Yes." There was a pause. He asked again, and Tilly told him. "Lying here three months !" ho said "I lying here three months, and and there was so little money for you ! What have you done T Who has helped you t Am I in a hospital, or ' "You are at home, darling," said she ; "and no one has helped me. I have helped myself. People have given me plenty of woik for my needle. And now that you know me, and can speak to me, I am so happy." She put her cheek to his as she spoke, and in the awful darkness of bis blindness be twined his arms about her. "Tell me again," he said. "1 lave you nursed me, helpless, and wandering, and worked also for my bread and yours, for three long months ? Y"ou, little Tilly 1 Why, half of that is one man's work ; and a girl has done tho whole. What strength was given you 1 Whence did it come t" She put her lips to his ear. "Once you told me that love made a man weak, my dear," she said. "It makes a woman strong. A woman can do anything for the sake of a man she loves ; and I have loved you very much, Stephen. Whether he ever loved her before or not, the man loved her then. A kind of adoration for her strength, and truth and constancy was born in bis mind, and never left it. It was not God's will that he should drag all his days out in blindness and helplessness. Sight and strength returned to him at last ; but ere that time Tilly had often been eyes for him, and right hand also, and he was cured of many things besides bodily ailments. His theo ry of love's weakening power his fancy that woman was a frail, fickle, foolish, un leasoning thing, to be sternly kept in hand like an unbroken coif, and his shame of yielding to any gentleness or softness, had quite left him. He saw in his fair young wife the helpmate heaven had given him, thanked it for the gift, and ie fused her nothing of that meed of tenderness and love which all good women long for, with out which married life is to them more miserable than any lonely lot with dreams of what might have been in it. A Goot Stouy. Once upon a lime there lived among the bills uf an adjoin ing county an old gentleman, whose entire personal and real estate consisted of a wife, a well ventilated log cabin, half an acre of not very productive laud, and a violent fondnc.s tor what is sometimes called "tangled" w hiskey. One spring morning the owner of this property was struck with the conviction that his land must bd plow- ed. But he had no horse, and found it impossible to borrow one. Nevertheless, the ground must be broken up, horse or no horse, and it was finally determined that the "old wouiau" should hitch up the old man, and bold the handle and drive, while he drew the plow. This was ac cordingly done, and the plow went brave ly on, until the plowshare ran under a root, and the team was brought to a dead halt. But the "critter" had become warmed up by this time, and as the old lady gave him a rap with the reins and cried out "git up there !" he threw his weight upon the harness with a heavy jerk, which snapped the traces off short, and he shot forward against a fence, his head striking agaiust the end of a rail with the force of a maul. "Thundcra tion, old woman!" he exclaimed, as he wiped the blood and dirt from his eyes, "why didn't you say w-h o a V Hints fok Warm Wkatheb An ex change says : "The warm weathbr comes on apace. The lovely evenings ate almost here when Samuel Augustus in his summer duds can walk out beneath the moon with gushirjg PI cebe Matilda, garbed iu her sim ple drees of white starched muslin, and whisper sentiment or agriculture, or any thing else be has a mind to, in her left ear, while' Pi. cebe Matilda bltshiogly fans her uelf v;ith her straw jockey, and wishes with her. inmost heart that Samuel Augustus would cork up for a while, aud ask her to have some ice cream. There are too many Samuel Augustuses who imagine they pos sess sufficient gift of sentimental gab to keep a girl's m;nd off ice cream during a summer evening' walk. It cau't be doue. Says the Schnectady Star : We never saw a girl yet who wouldn't rather eat ice cream than becd an ear to Oii! 6tar of my life, would that we might forever mate like two bumming birds on a twig of night blooming cereus ; niethiDks I would need no food but snake benies plucked by your fair hands, aud no drink but the evening dew caught iu your straw bonnet. There, bring us a pail. Sentiment will do to bring a girl to terms sitting by the stove in winter, but in summer it takes ice cream. Young men take notice and shape your course accord -ii-gly-" t . Is Wyoming a fellow was traveling over the dry waste of the Bitter Creek region recently when, as the train stopped, he asked one of the settlers at the station, "What kind of country have you around here !' "Oh !" was the response, "w have a fair country ; all we lack is good Bociety and water." The fellow was somewhat comforted by the assurance that "h -1 has the same advantage lack , of good eociety and water." AMOSG THE CAAMDtLS. A Sad Story of the Sn-VT-oIiOI In the So u Hi Atlantic Twenty lnna I'riHoner lterac iivntli. The following outline of the sad story of a citizen of New Jersey appears much like the romantic tales found in our sen sational weeklies ; but the narrative is nevertheless, true aa the distressed family of the adventurer, who still reside in Jersey City, cau testify : Twenty years ago a gentleman in mod erate circumstances, living in Jersey City determined to try his luck in China. Ac cordingly he invested most of his capital in goods suited for that market and em barked on a ship bound for Hong Kong via Liverpool. His family, consisting of bis wile and several children, weie left with sufficient means for their maintenance until his return, which was expected to be within four years. The ship on boaid which our Jerseyman was a passenger had a line run to Liverpool, where she com pleted her lading and then proceeded on a long voyage to China. Once only did the family of the Jerseyman hear of him after leaving Liverpool, and that was by a letter received by a ship which spoke the Jerseyman's craft after rounding the Cape of Good Hope. Months passed by and no further news of the ship. She never anived at Hong Kong, and nearly a year after her departure from Liverpool her cuptaiu returned to that port with the sad tale of her l'OUNDKltlSG IN MID OCEAN, i and bis own escape, wub most of his crew and passengers, from a fearful death. A dreadful stoim, which continued many days, drove the ship far out of her coutse to the southward, and finally, after losing all her spars, she went down, giving the crew barely time to lower the boats be fore the noble vessel made her final plunge. The boats containing the captain and most of the crew, after tossing upon the sea for several days, finally reached a group ol islands, where they remained six or seven mouths, kindly treated by the natives, until taken oil' by a transient trader and carried to Calcutta, where they secured a passage to this city. Hut the boat in which was tho Jerseyman and live seau,en was never heard of siucu the first after leaving the wreck. liijjll TWENTY YEARS OF SORROW, tugging and privation for the Jery fam ily passed. The noble-hearted widow and mother fought against the il It of pov erty, keeping her children under her own toof tree, educating them well to fight the battle of life ; and had the happiness of seeing them become brave men and good citizens, honorable amongst the most hon ored. During all these long years of sor row and toil she clung to the hope that the husband of her youth would tetuin to her ; his memory was kept fiesh in her heart, and almost her only solace was the recollection uf the happy hours passed I with him in their cottage home, and he j belief that she once more would be folded to his heart. Twenty years rolled slowly around, children became men and women, and strange young faces were seen around the hearth stone. The suffering wife's hair was turning white, and her trusting heart was well nigh btoken from its long waiting, when, six months ago, came A LETTER FROM THE WANDERER, reciting hi sad history. The second mor ning after the wreck nothing was to be seen of the other boats. With but a email stock of provisions the Jersey man and his five companions, hoping against hope, determined to shape their course south of east, trusting to make one of the many groups of small islands known to lie in that direction. After ten day's toil, during which two of the seamen died of privations, the party reached a small is land, when they were immediately seized by the natives and condemned to a life of slavery. Their captors were cannibals, and long sought to induce the white men to join them in their horrible orgies j but, rinding both threats and entreaties unavail ing, they finally desisted, and allowed their white slaves to use such food aa they themselves choose. One after another his white companions died, until the Jer soyman was left alone to his life of SERVITUDE AMONG THE SAVAGES, and so closely was he watched that al though many ships touched at the island he was unable to communicate with them At last a schooner from Australia drop ped anchor during a night in March last, in a cove near the hut occupied by the Jerseyman, and being the first to discover her, he seized a canoe and paddled to her before any of the natives worn astir. So long had he been among the savages that he had lost nearly every recollection of his origin, and bad forgotten his native lan guage. After gaining the deck of the schooner be was for soma time unable to articulate a word, and only after a copi ous flood ot tears had relieved him was the 6trong man able to utter the single word "home." Finally, after tuany ef forts, he made the captain understand his story, which so aue.cted the noblo-benrted sailor that he at onco weighed anchor aud sailod for Melbourne, where he arrived after a short passage. THE I.AST SCENE OK Al.i. Here the Jerseyman was kindly cared for by the authorities, but being too unwell to take passage by the first fteamer to Honolulu and San Francisco, he sent the letter containing the joyful tidings of h'v 6afety. Last week a letter in; a. liipum- envelope, from M.elttourna, was re- ceived by tbjs Jersey m au's family. t was from a city official, and contained the sad tidings of the wanderer's death. After twenty years of hardship and slavery, just as he was ready to embark for bis long coveted home, be was called to take a longer, more dreaded journey, and in that tur oil land, and among. Christians, his Fpirit took its flight. ADVICE TO C.IKUS. BT JOSH till.U.NGS. 1. The man who is jealous of every little attenuhun which you get from some other fellow, you will poind, after you aro married tew him, he luvs himself more than he dnz yu, and what you took for solisi-itude yu will discover hi.s changed into indifference. Jealousy isn't a harto disease, it iz a liver complaint. 2. A mustach iz not indispensable ; it iz iudy a little more hair, and iz a good deal like moss and other excressenced often duz the best tile that won't raza anything else. Don't forget that those things which you admire iu a fellow be fore marriage, you will probably hev to admire in a husband after, and a mustach will bo a very weak diet after a lime. 3. If husbands could be oA ou trial, as Irish cooks aie, tew thirds ov them would probably be returned, but there don't seem to be enny law for this Therefore, g'uls, yu will see that after you git a man yu have got to keep him, even if yu do lose on him. Const quently, if you have got enny cold victuals iu the house, try htm on them, once in a while, during the season, and if he swallcrs them well, and scz he will take some more, he is a man who, when blue Mondays cum, will wash well. 4. Don't marry a pbeller who is always a telling how his mother duz things. It is as hard lew suit these mill us it iz to weau a young ouq. o. If a young man kao beat you play ing on the pianer, and kan't hear a fish horn playing in the street without a back somerset on account of the musick that iz in him, I tay ship him ; he might an swer tew tend the babe, but if you put him to hoeing out the garden, you will find that you will have to du it yourself. A man whose heft lies in music (and not very Lcfiy iu that) ain't no better for a husband than a sedlitz powder, but if he luves to listen while yu sing some gentle ballad, you will find him mellow aud BO soft. But don't marry ennybody for gist one irtue any quicker thanyu would flap a man for just one fault. G. It is one of the most tuffest things for a female tew be an old maid success fully. A great menny has tried it and made a bad job of it. Everybody soems tew look on old maids just as they do on dried yarbs in the garret, handy for sick ness and therefore girls, it ain't a mistako that you should be willing to swop your self oph, with 6um true fellow for a true husband. The swop iz a good one, but dou'l swop for enny man who iz respecta ble just because his father iz. You bad better be on old maid for -1 thousand jears, and then jine the Shakers, than tew buy repentance at this price. No woman ever made this trade who didn't get either a phool, or a mean cuss for a husband. 7. In digging down into this subject I find the digging grows harder the further I get. It it is much easier to inform you who not to marry, than who tew, for iho reason there iz more ov them. I dou't think you will follow my advice if I give it ; and therefore I will keep if, for 1 look on advice as I do on castor il l a mean dose to give and a mean dose to lake. But I must Bay one thing, girls don't spile. If you can find a bright-eyed, healthy and well ballasted boy, who looks upon poverty ez sassy cz a child looks upon wealth, who had rather set down on the curbstone in front of the 5th avenue hotel and eat a ham sandwich than rt inside and run in debt for his dinner and toothpick ! that is armed with that kind of pluck that mistakes defect for victory, my advice is to take him body and sole snare him at once for he iz a stray trout, of a breed very scarce in our waters. Take him, I say, and bild onto him as hornets bild onto a tree. Ccrious Things to Know. Besides the fact that ice is lighter than water, there is another curious thing about it namely its purity. A lump of ice melted will always become purely disrillcd watte-. When the early navigators of the Arctic? seas got out of water they melted; frag ments of those vast mountain ui c-e called iceberg", and were astonished to find that, they yielded Only fresh water. They thought that they were frozen salt water, not knowing they wcie formed ou tUi land, and in some way latin, bed into the sea. But if they had been right the re6urt. would have been all the samo. The fact in, the water in freeaing turns out of it all that id not wuter salt, air, coloring mat ter, and all impurities. Frozen sea water makes fresh water ice. If you freeze h basin of indigo water, it will mako it as pure as that niaae ot pure ram water. When the cold is very sudden, tbc&e for eicn matters have no tiiue t;x escape,, either by rising or sinking, uJ are tbua entaugled wU tk iv but do not forrr any jurt of It. Why must the devil da a perfect gen tleroan T Because the imp o' &ark.aesa cauuot be i.mp-o Ute