33 fe2 V if x3 NT I j if. A- pSoFiKS, Editor ond Publisher. ItH H A FBSEXA9 WHO RUTH MAKES FBEB, AD Al AMI SPATES NSSISS. Terms, Sa per year, advance. EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1873. NUMBER 2. i 's jiis vc-ii:. 1873. 5J. t Leading Daily and Weekly Journal. Advocate of Democratic ' 2'riiu-iplen. . Fur ,tnr(. Bd Knera-y Sprl to Maintain It St 'SI "r-t of Je.rnalisia. .... Tup k nr Virt a hpn th t ton year "; ' ' b- k- ut as fcrn !"U .. ,.i.ont fear or favor ror mo It ha, therefore, been the per n.int advocate of all reforms, municipal. urrsl tr""';. jit-r.ii oll,, from oin fr,,n. oinciai patronage, iiic ttonsitmi Biippuri or 4 mel,rnit citizens - ..., rrjiiiil fpnr ohi disc.il. li'- .'nw rlio heat defence of ull ... 2 M-riiiU-'"1' (Ultll'.L- IlIICrCBlH. all the iwpatelior the 'A cvT Port f the worM; MB A , nly l. m.-rutic morninjr paper "J PhJi and ia tbre- 1 m ,.h i.i th English JanKuKc-. " ! VV'" r.P, f lt mfdiuuis1 for crttrfntr. Ml K u KKK LVAGK i newp for ho' . . .... iito whn are without ror- AnUilv- mail tuc ultiea. .V'i.- .r,..i..f what to traiiBPirina- Br""i, 'tr' Shi.d.tf home dutias wilh .loinesne lnstruc- , to: s- l,..e.l by thebciUithors; 1 oetioj. irf. wrrc.ii.ty: in which ail .iiH.;osr. cn-Irt-1 whi.i. have an inN'rext for the tillers of 2- v,- kiy Coutrihutioi.s fr the chiUlren : I ',m1 iirevili.-, ami a .awfully prepared i-Wiidiuin of Korrirfii "'1 Doineiiw Jlew; -iii!urt .mi. N-w York am! MiKwllaueousC-or-Z , !!.,. Finaucial and Comiuercuil Ma--I.' Foil Mark.-ts; Sfloot AiTrtiarmr-uts. a very liuiitcd space is appropriated, 'si! these aiivantaireo th Wekki.t Acb t-Aw'w.iiM-l to be t-h- boft Kaniily Jaurnal, iV.u I'liiladclpHa i RK'.IY iriTJI THE XEfV YEAH. lra.'K THE IA1LY AO" : Ono year, by i-L (M1; Six months. 1.5; Throe months ' Tui..y period U-sa ihnn throe months, f.-jr raio ot one !oIlar per month. Payment Jr...!r-1 invariably in advance: i raHsOFTHK WEKKI.T AGK: Ono copy, .'.rwir. JU)-, Ten -opiis. H2.50; Twenty cni fciCJ.Oi ; The followinj reduced ratufi will be f-jvil when nU ll-.c jipoi ordered are pmit to 1 . ...1.1 I I I 1.1 a!ra of tl'O.-ltib: Twenty copieo.r4-SU10 ; Trropiofi, 60.".: !! ciy will be f uriuueil 'is for (fettln op a club of t wen. y or more ui year. We l-uo no traveling f.irentnau. r...:.l to receipt for us. Specimen copies : Iree on application. Address Itobb A- Uid U and 111 South Seventh street, 1'hil'u. 3 AKNCUKCEIVILlHT 1813. it PITTSBURGH POST, UAII.Y ASM WBKHLTJ Always 3omooijvtic. LAiviest, Cheapest and Best Weekly in the IFest. i niaVui); llie ntual ftnnonnceinent at tlie . f tlio year The 1'ost proprietors have nn. promisea to make ; preierrinp to re- i.i ;i 'inst record ns an indication of wliat tV;.l ! in tbe fntnre; first-clasR political 4 i'.iier.try journal and one thattntist prove 'f' ine'visitor to the home and f.resdde. Jv.iiilished in 1KD4. it has never l eased to .a1e these measureH which it llieved i- rinltt. ar.d tho only will it faithfully i'.nue to ailvance, protect and defen.l. It t. in the future, as in the past, larlcFly 'l ko corruption ntid wroiijj doing vhere f: c!.te'lod atid adv.K-ate such doctrines 4'? k are U-st calculated to hring pca e to 4r i,.!ii country and happiness and pros :'.tv t.i our people. JTiir. Wukkly 1'ost i a larpo eiyht page . r and is a faithful compendium of the f each week. In addition to its Mo i..'ti v and other literary and scientific :i.r. u Yontaiiis the latest cable and oth t huh from all parts of the world, iiVssiona'., I.eyihlativ and (onstitution- ii.'!.!.on proceedings, lull Market Re ft 't a: hi .:iio and abroad, Political, Local 1 UeinTsl News, Hie, ito. I THE DAILY l'OST tk ntfir Democratic daily tmr.-v'.yaira, and the oldest Penr. t,.;,, :,lUriil in the State. In "Western established Kcli issue ''.n t"n S r.d i r.'-a.'. rv latest nefl from all quar- is iu every respect a nrst-claas "li;3 ALWAYS IX ADVANCE. The Daily Pott : y mii;i, n,.r annum - - - $8 00 !" bit it-.onth - 4 00 HtliT-re ! to subscribers in the two cities, J-'iViin.riiij; iKiroughs and towns, on all the ?-',. nayq u,.l.:,. , mil of TlttH- rS;i, l-or week, 15 cents. The Weekly Post : Ng'e r,.i,i,s ),v mail, per annum - 82 00 1 I'illilS . ,f fi V. . . o.l.lrui 1 .VI 'iil for specimen copies, and prospectus, '"ill an sent to any ojblresn frml of coat. ''l'lress the TiiihliHli' .Ias.'i. Baku & Co., l'ust P.tiilding, I'ittsburgh, tow rsikfin-d have received at their Storo llt GOODS, h as ."loth, cassimeres, Satinetts, Tweeds, n. iii.TiH Mtic and While JiMds, Prints. le ( hin Ties, Alpacas, Oil Cloths, Window a,i itml Fixtures, Hosiery, Shirt, Drawers, 'fS'ilovt, Kibbotis. Shawls, Flannels, Man W r;n y Goods, Notions, &c.,kc, together mu una iresh stock or WHS. HMIDWAIIE, OL'EENSWAHE, ioot. siioes. llitts. Can. DY-EV1ADE CLOTHING: TU'S' 'i;.s Paints. Medicines. Dve-Stuffs. 4c. EnS as a f''Ht variety of other articles ii in um niton all which will be the VERY LOWEST FIGURES. V rk r",r; "'""f'os, praiu and i t 1: taken inexel Viil r"1"" ,,,r I' tavors, w, and produce of all Manure for pious. id r....- ' i""' tavors, w hope to merit ?"'n e a cJ"iniiaiiee and itic rouse of the Up ruin v , 1 li-t-HILLuo SON. x irjijn l , :,v i ho founders of the Ilopu Ilhi ihi"11" . of its institutions. See I ni;' rl" ..i,,,s or "Itiiiurs. It. hi ijriinii '" ' ri-iint Influence, but h ,'..,.- .if tTfii-tirs. thelntel- Hycul ' , ..t, Tfrr tllO etpr nnu 17 piiipcivii ff'16' 'o-o ri!('ll'i and usorpa ami j'-urify tho Aincrican ?n.ii.Uf"rr' hour f.iuntry the "Model ffruri.-im"'1' ' ' .,j itsodinlinslrntion. In v."u'''"' .' JmI..!i ii rorsnrrt. i-an only be ndi '"' "'"..'h Vr ,k agr wlH ftill con-pna.-:!-..- f"; their ultiniate tri- 4 .,1K.m-.i'.,UpHt. OI . O the , ;ilrrrnt. k ijrf-iioi.H, Marin.- and t'"tnm.lr"aL.i" l.; ,-u..i I n. riuro. Art and Muw; At oui I I 111 I Agentn Vrnttil I TO 6D.I. THE LIGHT RUNNINQ DQfuESTIC" ABOUT 1 o , c o Sold last year: AIIOUT o o , o o This year; And now beiiiK Sold at the rate of A YEAR. Tho DBmewtlc" miperaed.f. others because It ourpnsses them in the every day service it ren dera. tmth in the inrk-Jiip and foiniln; and be cause it is equally useful for vert fink and VKRY HP.AVY WllltK. A MftrhlitA will Im filrnluhpd fffr trial) to rr iwiwiWe jmrtir with an Instructor (without "I rg-c upon application at our. .Vaireroom, 2 Sixth St., PlttNbnrfcti. r. "io DOMETIC" hem taken more rrcmlumt jjji.-r. un than onu uther Machine, and is spe cially i 'x'om mended for Family use and Manu facture! l is simple in construction, noise les ami t ' "tJ-v fun. A larjfe tfck of Thread, viiiba x-. V 'bvh on hnml. Address, onus. At ,.. l(K;i;Tur. s M- cxtM pan Y, Dec 27.-iin. " 34 Sixth Street, I'ittsburKh. IflOH AMD hR UIDS FOR 1. I herewith offer for salt t "O of the best and most valuable Iron I'ropeV " ih.c ,8tnt: ? Ten now. One! raet ubuu t 2 u. uea below ort louelfiou, coiitainiiiK IO.OCO ACRfcTS, t known as tne -Iron Mountain Fur. ' &tl,?' with abundance of rich tre. Wood ''V ' Btone. ami within i to mile of theV. It Jji and Cumberland tivera, ulo including" Duu 'M Small Ftrrm.i. The other Tract frontsatnile on the Tena. '8 river, uear Fort Henry, including 8,000 ACRES, part of which is rich river bottom, the balance covered with tbe best kind of timlier, such as White umi Itliiek Oak. Toplar, Hickory, Miiple, Ash, &c, iVc. ; underlaid witli I he best of Ore. Both tracts are iu Stewart couuty. ALSO, Two valuable Tracts of Timber Ind in Hou. ton county, one of l,st acres, within half a. mile of tbe Ionisville mid Memphis It. H and 1H' miles east or the t'ouiity Seat. On other t raet half a mile went of t he County Keal , with the Kailroad passintr throujrh one corner, con taining k"i0 acres. Ilolh of thepe tract have a lartre amount of Wiiite Oak and Yellow Poplar Timbtr, und well adapted for farming-. ALSO. several Farms In Dickson eonnty, on the Nash ville and North-Western It. K. Any of the above Properties are as represent ed, with good Titles to each. Any of the above lands can be boufrht at one-half tbeir value, and other (rood property will betaken as part pay. if desirod. For full description call on or address o. 1 5 1 i i tv a 11: 1 1 , Dealer in Heal. Estate, 116 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. FAITH, HOPE, CHARITY. Clii'iwtinii, ",lil Tfotr nhitteth Faith, H")v, and Charity; thexc three, but the ureateMt of time a Vharity." Nothinjr has appeared in relijrious art for a longtime so pure, and tender, and beautiful, as this new picture. The jfroupinir of the fig ures is (rrace itself; and the couutenunces of such heavenly sweetness, that it seems as if the urtist must hare seen them in a vision. This rare and elejrant to line and stipple steel eneravluir I hknt fukk to every subscriber to "AnTnt;n"8 Im.fstkatkd Homii Maqazink for ls7X" Price of Majra.ine, S.JO a year. Ham pie numbers. 15 cents. LOCAL CANVASSING AGENTS wanted ev erywhere. Lnrjre commissions and territory jruarantoed. Send for Agent's Confident ial Cir cular. You can hardly show the "Christian GitAfEB" to any person of taste or religions leclinir without irettitir a subscriber. Address T. S. A I1TH Ull & SON, Philadelphia. Pa. 17-1. 'X'l-iril List. I 1ST OF CAUSES set down for trial at an Ad j journed Court to be held in Eliensburjr, commencing- on Monday. February 10th, 1S73: Gates vs. Wolf & Wclshous. Flvnn Patterson et al.vs. Kriseetal. Kodelheim & Affelder.vs. Piatt. Millikeu vs l owen et al. Powers ys. Harter. Hanks vs. McAleer. Jones vs. Powell. M'Canee vs. M'MuIlin. Commonwealth vs. Debeeks. Emerson vs. Fronhelser. Fronhuiser vs. Emerson. Krise vs. Neason. Sprout & Fry vs. Wagner. Krise vs. Hips & Lloyd. Smith v. Wilson. Tierney & Null vs. Reich. Devlin vs. Doyle. Fpencer, McKay Si Co.. vs. Deyle. Tierney Jt Null vs. Maloney- .1. K. HITE, Prothonotftry. Prothonotary's Ollicc, Ebonsbursr, Jan. 2, 1873. Kxocntor's ISotiee. VOTICB is hereby jriven that Letters Testa i mentary on tho estate of Geo. Weakland, hue of Cartolltown, Cambria county, deceased, have been granted by the Register to the tiu .1 . 1 n. A II nMrwin. ttidehled to 6ld r-Sta t e are reiu9tefl to tnake immediate payment,and those hnvinjr claims against the same will pre sent them properly autnenticatea ior se.no- me"f- AUG. WALTERS, Executor. Carrolltown. Jan. 10, 173.-61. Kate Notice. nnu umUrclirnnl. Executor of the last Will L and testament or (i.M.ABiau,iei ymr n. Cambria Co., dec'd.:herehy notifies all.por ns Indebted to said estate that payment must son s i.. 1 a m.whmiY rlohiv. ami those havf mrclainis airainst thesanio are requested to present luein duly authentia-red lor settiemeni. ..u.y aun v SCAN LAN, Exeoutor EbensbUTTj lec 20, Ie72.-Ct. NOTICE. HAVING disposed of my Interest in tho ER ENSHUKG CIGAR MANUFACTORY to J. Alkx. MiM)HK,aiid having transierreu to imu an noiesann accounts uue iur, I'-. r... debttxl will please make payment to him. SIMON SULTZHACH. Ebensburtr, Jan. 10, 1873. 17-3t. I School Teacher Wanted. V COMPETENT TEACHER. Male or Female, to take charire of one of the Schools of Monster township for three months and eleven clays (unexpired term), at a salary of 30 per mouth, is wanted immediately. GEO, M,CU LLOL'OH, President. A. i. Cuiri'it, Socrctary. ljan.17.- 31. T Me On rue Ives a Othcn S 17a. BT FRANK CLIVE. Bill Baker owned a fighting dog A hrindle, coarse-haired brute "Whose chief delight was to en gaga In a canine dispute ; An ill-conditioned, viciotiw, cross, Stub-tailed, hair-lipped, crop-eared And red-eyed canine nnisance, By the neighboring canines feared. Bill's Aog came down the 6treet on a Diagonal dog-trot, A looking for aome other dog For whom to make it hot ; "When, on a scrubby looking brute. His vision chanced to fall, Staring from out a looking-glass That leaned against a wall. Bill's dog snrveyed that strange canlno Vilh sinister regard, And doubted if he'd ever seen A dog look quite so hard. The more he gazed, the less respect He felt within him stir For that demoralized, cross-grained And hang-dog looking cur. That stranger dog returned Bill's dog's Insulting stare, in kind, Which tended to still more disturb Bill's canine's piece of mind ; With every bristling hair along His back, he fiercely frowned, And curled his tail uutil it raised His hind feet from the ground. And showed his teeth and cocked his ears And otherwise behaved Impatiently, as dogs do Whose instincts are depraved ; But all his hostile signs were met By signs as hostile, qnitef And Bill's dog felt himself compelled To slink away, or fight. He flew into that looking-glass With all his might and main Filled with chagrin and broken glass, lie soon flew out again. Reflection showed Bill's dog that he Had got into a scrimmage Through indignation at the sight Of his own odious image. The knowledge of his aspect quite Destroyed his self-esteem ; For the hideous reality Surpassed his wildest dream. Life lost, at once, all charm for him, So, mournfully, he steered Into a neighboring sausage-shop, And never re-appeared. The moral of this doggerel I obvious, I trmt j (For there is a moral lesson in Bill Baker's dog's disgust :) If some men knew how they appear To others, they would hide Themselves within a sausage-shop That is, they'd suicide. JL l'LEASAXT STOiiY. It was a cottage. Don't tell mo that I jflou't know, llaveu't I been there to gath ct r.oses and feast on strawberries? No, ;r -o'an't a cottage oruec there was notli- iu"- Frenchified about it. It was purely Anienvnu. and harmonized sweetly with .!. dnli 'Ltful sceneiy. INo, it liailn t a at root, iior a jhjixico nouning ml .ui ui I kind. iJUb LUCll 1 . iiau i upi; tiuw j un- ul all over me wiuaows, uu nuuie sm- - ' - i j l. l .. 1 ,:. .j of wrens mar. maae tneir nests auu nn 1 1 . ;io tio roc Ta tlia rrrht: VHS sang- ; , r, " left an "hard whence winds scattered . i .Moom. In front was a greon lawn shade Wlth 801116 massive walnut trees,' and to tf-e rear opened a long grass Ian throng, & tho cows walked every morning to their ". j . .i ;i.i ut be milked. lUIHCU GVCI T II I - " . . al A. T L-.w xvaII anAiirt " trre be-lonced. It was . "? lu" "u" M. V.T VT -A ' -1 1 .1. 1 n . . ivaH in if 91 I had always admitted hi ex client taste in blending the useful with te wautatul, though I had never seen him 7 t liri.ini, Iiaaii f 1 1 bia wITa i ii.l ditrtn.T O- seuce. I had learned of him, thc't,'rn heard enouc-h to make me intensely iM . UUO AJ OCO 1IIIU . iui wt mm v-a -' iahmv. the neichborhood approved his wife b choice. "What is the matter with him Is he immoral?" I asked. "Not that I know of," was the rejoin der. "But to tell the truth, Dolly, he is insufferably ugly his face is all scarred and cicatrized, 1 should think by fire, and you know it always made me nervous to look at anything of that kind." "Poor man 1 Perhaps he got burned in rescuing some child or feeble woman from the flames," 1 .said. "Don't know ; never heard ; never made inquiries ; you know they only came to live in this neighborhood last summer, and I have never had the courage to ask what disfigured him, but I wish that you would." "1 am considerably acquainted with Hi's. Winslow," I replied ; "1 thought of call ing upon her this morning ; perhaps she will tell the story without being asked." "Do, that's a dear, good Dolly." And I did. The whole atmosphere seemed redolent with music and fragrance. I couldn't tell why all the bird3 had taken it into their heads to sing, warble and build their nests there, and I didn't know why it was that the roses, buttercups, violets and daisies should prefer that place to any other. But they seemed to prefer it, judging from the great profusion in which they grew. The whole aspect was delightfully rural and picturesque, and all over lingered an iniluence of quietude and repose. A narrow foot-path, crooked as footpaths usually are, wound along through the lawn, beneath the shadows of giant walnuts, and bv this I amu-oached, entered the little gate, and ascended the graveled walk, bor dered by beds oi nowers, to uie uoor. It wab open, and not pausing to rap, I went in. A serene and peaceful hush rested with in. The balmy wind nestled iu Uie wreaths of snowy drapery hanging at the window, where great white and red roses bowed their graceful beads, and tne warm, rich summer light came in and lay in bright bars of radiance upon the floor. A cradle was there, and it required no conjuring to tell that it had au inmate a self-dignified, thoughtful, imperturable lit tle baby, whose quiet calmness I could not understand. It was wide awake, and its irreat blue eyes were staring with infant . . . T 1 tl persistence as someimuy a wuiu uut what ; then they turned upon me and I returned the gaze. But it made no differ ence ; the baby had not a foul or evil tho't to hide ; it was not conscious oi a sin iu I word or deed ; hence there came no blush to that delicately roundea cneeK, no rail ing to that calm, quiet eye, limpid as a lake in summer, sercno as the heavens in .1 une. There was a rustle and a. flutter of mus lin, the sound of a light, springy step, the glimpse of a fairy form, and Mrs. Winslow stood before me. She was not very beautiful, but spark ling and vivacious, with a glow of health on her cheek, and with the light of health In her eye. The baby had roused now, to ne no more of its quiet and calmness- mow of its thoughtfulneos and serenity. IU little form fairly fluttered with plea- sure, it laughed and ciappea its uimpieu hands. "You've come to stay all day with roe, haven't you? And the baby had such good company while mamma was gone, hadn't it?" she said, in a light, ehirrtfpy way, that sent off the little fellow with re newed delight. Her invitation had only seconded my design to remove my bonnet and mantilla, and while she sat down on the rocker and took the baby, we prepared to enjoy the day and each other's society. I can't tell you what we talked about. No, it was not of balls, nor operas, nor lions, nor sights. No, not a neighbor's character was dissected. No, the infirm ities of the clergyman were not shown up. No, not a morsel of private scandal was cut and carved. But the time flew swiftly and pleasantly after dinner, and when the great round sun was sinking be hind the trees that bumed and glowed in the rich, warm light, she came to where I was sitting, and without a word, laid a portrait upon my lap. It was that of a noble looking man, with expressive and faultless features. "Is that your husband?" I asked. 'My husband asxhe was," she answer ed, heaving a littlo sigh. "You have seen him ?" I replied in the negative. "You will remain with me this even ing ?" I replied that I should be happy to form bis acquaintance, and again looked at his portrait. "He doesn't look like that now," she anewcred, wiping away e tear, "yet he says he shall ever have cause to bless the fire by which he lost his good looks, but which won him what he esteemed a thousand times more valuable." "What was it?" I asked, J with unac countable dullness of apprehension. Sho pointed archly, with aemile, to her wedding ring. "Do tell me the story I should be de lighted to hear it." Aga.in she smiled, saying : "i do not know that you willconsider it very interesting ; however, several reasons conspire to make me wish that you should know all, and since you have never heard it, jierhaps I may as well tell it to you." "Certainly, certainly." "You see, when Mr. Winslow first be gan his attentions to me, I wasn't at all pleased. He was handsome, I knew, but I had set my mind, very foolishly, upon having a rich husband, and xme that could keep me above the necessities of work. So I slighted and repulsed him on all oc casions, treating him not merely with in dill'ereuce, but with actual loathing and scorn. Such treatment, one might have supposed, would have quickly obliterated his passion ; on the contrary, however, it Only 6ccmed to increase it. "About this time I formed the acquain tance of a city gentlemen, whom rumor reported immensely rich, and whose in tense selfishness was veiled beneath a man ner of the utmost suavity. His attentions to me were marked, and not to be mista ken and though be had not spoken of iove, he looked and acted it, and I believed iu him. "It was in October, I think ; the atmos phere was dry and cool, with night winds when, as we were returning from a party, late at night, I was surprised and shocked at the appearance in the distance of a red light that seemed to climb the sky and quench the very stars. A wild and awful presentiment of approaching evil at the same instant crossed my mind. " 'If that should be our house V I almost hr."j-ved. jSt,nsense ; it is much farther off,' ex claim eo Jarton. "But I was not satisfied, and Ihurriod on eagerly, J ragging him wit- me- , "We came Ji-arer nearer. My fears it . Tt was indeed our beau tiful home. wramea id one broad ehect of smoke and flame, or with forked tongues lapping the pillars and shooting from the windows, while up at ono of the sky lights my mother was standing iu L,er mgbt dress. "With one wild shriek I eled the at tention of the crowd to her situation. Hundreds of people by this time h.d col lected, though chiefly, as it seemed, for the gratification of tbeir curiosity. Some were running with ropes and ladders, while many others were shouting ana giving or ders, which no one seemed inclined to obey. " 'My mother ! my mother ! I cried. 'Will no one go to the assistance of my mother ?' "Every moment the flames increased with astonishing rapidity, surging and roaring like a sea of storm. Still my moth er stood there surveying the scene villi the resignation of a martyr. " 'Barton! Barton!' I shrieked, 'forGod's sake help my mother I' "lie stood stilL I implored and urged him. At length he turned toward me with a frown, and said : " I cannot risk my own life to save area your mother.' ... "Great heavens 1 and I have loved this man. "The thought rushed heavy and seeth ing through my brain. "There was a shout, an exclamation, an utterance of brave, strong words. Some nervous arm had placed a ladder, and a man was rapidly mounting on through the dense smoke wreaths through singe ing flames, scorched by the intense heat. The crowd swayed and murmured like a wind-swept wave. "He appeared again I saw my mother in his arms I knew that she was saved. There was a crash of theroof, mingled with exclamations a gi-eatjmist swam be fore my eyes a noise not unlike that of the roaring flames, was in my ears, and I lost the consciousness of surrounding ob- JCC''Is it necessary to tell who it was that thus rescued my mother? What emo tions I experienced upon hearing how deeply I was indebted to the man I had despised? It is necessary for me to toll you, however, that, then and there he for ever lost the good looks which you admire in tbsk portrait. Tho clothe were burned from his body, and the flesh of his face and neck scarred and scorched till the skin seemed to have tbe consistency of leather." '"There, my dear, you have told enough let me finish it," said a manly voice at the door. I looked up, a man was there, on whose countenance there were deep traces of the fiery element, but lie didn't look ugly to me at all. Each scar teemed rather a badge of honor. His wife presented him, and as he gave me his hand, he said : "One whom my wife esteems so highly cannot be a stranger to me, and now, since she has told yon part for I have been a sad eavesdropper let me tell you the rest." I joyfully assented. "Then and there," he began, "I heard the flames roaring around me, and felt its fiery breath scorching my cheeks, and seem ing to lap up the very springs of life, but was conscious only of a great joy at my heart, for tbe mother of the prized one was in my arms. I knew when I touched the ground with my charge, by the acclama tions that rent the air, but could only think that I had made her happy, and iu the bliss of that assurance forgot for the time my suffering, the world, and everything. "I lay ill through several weeks through days and nights that would have been an guished indeed had I not known whose care it was that provided everything essen tial to my comfort had not such a sweet face bent over me, such a soft hand minis tered to my wants. Never in the proud est day of my health had I experienced such exquisite felicity, and never in my weakness. "Now, when she at beside me, when she brought me fruits and flowers, when she put her hand in mine and whispered something that would have repaid suffer ings a thousand times more bitter than mine " "Oh, William," she cried, blushing to the very roots of her hair, don't tell how Billy and foolish I was." "It was neither silliness nor folly," I exclaimed, "but the reward of the great est virtue and heroism. Let him go on ; I am deeply interested, and long to know all." "I have but little more to telL but as I grew strong "and able to walk about, I observed that all the mirrors bad been re moved. "Hitherto, in my deep happiness, I had thought little of the scars which I should have known would deface my features. "This incidtnt reminded me of it, and excited my curiosity. When I requested one to be brought she implored me to de sist for the time, but, thank. Uod, itjdidn t shock me in the least. "I took her in my arms, and whispered, that since her beautiful face had becom mine I saw no cause to regret the loss of one, and wouldn't, for the world, change back jgain " 'You have seen and loved me now,' I said, 'whereas, you didn't before you know all my disfigurement, and with it your manner has charged from scorn to loving kindness ; so I have nothing to mourn for.' "And every day of my life has since con vinced me more and more that I told the truth." Cukiocs Ikcidehtof thkBoston FrnE. The following fact, related by an eye witness, is one of the many curious circum stances connected with the great Bosttfn n ri . l 1 1 . .1 . xi i : t : nre : vniie tne connagraviou w i height, and a merchant was busy collect ing together a few valuables to carry away in his arms, a rough-looking fellow came up with a large wagorf and wished to know if he didn't watit to biro him for a load. The merchant jumped at the offer, and the wagon was by himself and clerks soon heaped with costly goods, and the driver told where to carry them, and to come back, if he could, before the flames reach ed the store. As he was disappearing in tho distance a police officer asked the mer chant if he knew the man, when it sud denly occurred to him that he had Hot even asked his name, and had committed his goods into the hands of an utter strangen Worse than that, the policeman knew him to be a notorious thief, but could not leave the point he was guarding to pursue him. , rw,. r, 3 I 1. tr o I ri o lire rrropTftSKeo.. ami 1 1 1 .' hour the merchant's store was in ashes. ITeit moraine he repaired to tne place Ii b-irl .llt-ofted the cartman to car ry the goods, and, as he feared, they had not been brougnt mere, awu ua) anci- surmised by the c.i..ev'K annenmnce. who apologized for not coming before b- hi3 inability to find the merchant, and handing him a key, i . i i i. .- i A r.e ru 1 WAS ?rfcreH ill torn niui ma iwi tj " Tj it the room of a hotel, where he would hud them. I ti, m,w.!nnt xnrsed surnrise. and I1UD 1U1.1VU1.-. ' mentioned tho suggestion of the police ot- " said the carter, "but do you rcmentber you were on the juryjwhen J for stflinr?" iras u P . , T. "Yes, I do, ana from the evidence 1 be- 12 .. . JniiViOllt." UOVCU UIIU ii'v,i... "Well, sir, that was me, ana I wismno- cent as innocent as a cnna ot wu was tried for. I understood it was you that was wise enough 4to see I was, al though I had no reputation to back me, and you saved me from an unrighteous ver dict and the State prison." "Indeed." "Yes I And Tve been trying get even with you for more than two years, and never got a chance till last night, when I borrowed a horse and cart and took your goods out of the fire. There's the key and there's nothing to pay." . So saying, the visitor slasnmea the door after him, leaving the astonished merchant with a door key in bis hand. But upon investigation he found his goods as was promised by the visitor, and now is of the opinion that there is some "honor among thieves." Got ITis License. A beligerent youth aged eighty-three applied to the county clerk of Evansville, Ind., for a marriage license. The clerk remonstrated, saying that a man of his age should turn his thoughts toward the other world, instead of matrimony. 'I'm of age, ain't I ?' ask ed the old chap. 'Well rather,' answered the clerk. Utl came tne oia man a coai and taking the attitude of a pugilist, he said : 'I kin jist knock fits out of any man who doesn't aDDrove of this here ma trimonial venture of mine. I want the li cense or there'll be somebody licked quick er than thuudcr ! He got it. JL COXJUKJSR AT 1IOME. THK MAOICIAK HERaASS SOME OK HIS QUEER TRICKS.- A writer in Iielgratia describes a visit to the magician Hermann-,- at his private resi dence near London, and the tricks there played for the entertainment of the guests. The dinner passed off handsomely ; the rintU were the best iu the season ? the wine was of the choicest ; comeTsation brisk, if not brilliant ; and good humor threw a radiance over the whole party. It was, in fact, a merry meeting ; and there was just the number seated around the table to concentrate the talk and prevent the party from breaking up into knots. Herr Hermann, who wa seated at the head of the table, bad Skeptic placed at his ritrht band. lhe collocation, which was supposed to be accidental at the tim was designed by the conjurer. He had seen and noticed the incredulity or UU guest, and was deterniiucd to make a con vert of him, or at all events to buow off his powers at hi expeu.se. The conversation turning upon prestidi gitatonrs and their various feats of leger demain, Herr Hermann who, having pasis ed many years in America, and being no stranger to England, spuse r.uguu w au , much fluency said : -I am well aware that all you savants have an idea how the best of our tricks are accomplished," "I should think so!" from Skeptic. "But I fancy I could even puzzle you !" "O, indeed 1" again from Skeptic. "Ah, sir, and evon you," turning to Skeptic. "By all means try it." "1 shall ; and after dinner I will show yon a few tricks, and will defy any of you to have the remotest notion how they are done." "Bravo !" from all the company excepting Skeptic, who laughed aad helped himself to wnie, and congratulated himself on being so much cleverer than the conjurer. The tricks played by Hermann are thus described : '..,. "Presently Herr Hermann rings the bell, and tells the man servant, who answers it, to fetch some cards. The man retired, and came back with two packs of cards, in secured cases, and placed them on the ta ble. 'Take one of these packs,' said our host, addressing himself to Skeptic ; 'oeu the cover, and see if all tbe cards are riht.' 'No preparation?' demanded Skeptic 'No, I assure you. What I ant about to show you now I COULD IX) WITH ANY CAR5. 'Of course,' ejaculated Skeptic, snoering ly, and began to tear the cover from the pack. Skeptic looked at the cards, and we all looked at the conjurer. When Skeptic pronounced the cards 'all right,' Herr Hermann took them in his hauds, j and. Hinging them down on the table with , their faces uppermost, said : 'There ttr eight of you. When I leave the room, and the door is shut on me, let each person draw a card from the pack, return it, and shuf fle tho cards.' He left tho room, bidding us recall him when we w ere ready. Each man took a card and put it back. Then we all had a shuffle at the pack, excepting Skeptic, who thought he knew all about tho trick, and the conjurer was brought back in due time. "He took tho cards in his band. There are eight of yori,' he said. 'Each one has drawn a card and replaced it ; and the eight cards, if you have well shuffled them; should be dispersed through the pack. No eye Could see into this room when the door was shut ; even knowing the earns were that possible would leave the seem ing impossibility of bringing the eight cards together ; you will acknowledge that. Behold w hat art can do !' He gave the cards a sort of flourish, ar.d placing the pack on his left palm, threw from the top the eight cards which we had drawn. He then turned to Skeptic, and with a good-humored smile inquired whether he had any idea how the trick was done. Our mil admirati' friend laughed, and said nothing; but shortly afterward he was heard to observe, 'Curious, ain't it?' This trick gave rise to a good deal of talk, and some disputation ; but there wore no two opinions about it ; it was allowed by all to bo the most Complete and inexplica ble feat of legerdemain ever witiessed. "Trick No; 2 was even more astonishing and incomprehensible. 'You know, Said Herr Hermann, addressing the whole par- v after Knmr disensioi liH.r.oo the sleight-of-hand performances, ! wort by wit, and not witchcraft., 'For wit read trick,' interposed Skeptic. 'But now,' continued the conjurer, not heed ing the interruption, 'supposing that I were to interpret your thoughts to know what was passing through your mind ' That indeed would be a trick above natu al magic.' I excluimed. Skeptic filled his glass aad winked to his neighbor, as if he would say, 'I know all about it.' 'We shall see,' said Herr Hermann. 'Now, each of you two gentlemen,' he went on, speakiug te his right-hand guests, think cf card ; I do mot ask you to touch one,' and taking up the pack, he threw the cards front upwards on the table. The choice wm quickly made. ME. HERMANN BBCOYERfcD TllE CARDS, shuffled them and spread them out as bo- fore. 'The card,' he said, 'one oi you thocght of i3 there; the card the other thought of is absent,' The gentlemen searched. One f the cards selected was net to be seen the other was found. 'So far so gcad," exclaimed Herr Hermann, 'but tho trick is only half done.' The con jurer tock the cards again, shufiied them as before, and exposed them on the table. 'Now,' he cried, the illusioa is reversed. The missing card reappears, and the card thought of that was present is not to be found. Search I And such was the case. The cards had come and gone at the bid ding of the wonderful magician, who seem ed to influence a mental rather than a phys ical exercise over them. Wonder was ex pressed in every countenance, and Skep tic, annoyed because ue wu ivuovl, urun off au additional bumper to qualify him for elucidation. "A moment's consideration of the trick must satisfy anvbodv of its extreme clever- n&a and lncomrireuensiimiu . wj possible solution that offers itself is the .nnnniitmn that the conjurer, by some process of his own, was enabled to louow the eyes of the gentlemen in thoir direc tion to the cards spread on the table, and . .1 n ,3 e XTrtn-WiTlfT to mark those uie jr mu.o um -the cards, of course an expert P01??1" would find no difncultv iu manipulating Znlas he pleased; the getting nd 1 of a card aud returning it to the aec, whatever rapidity, - noextraordi- ful Willi nuawioi . t - . - rt of Wenleniam. Ascertaining . . . . r-ni-ila 111 a m which Uncertainty trie - two persons have thrown a glattce fir hottest possible apace of time is, it must bo allowed, one of the taoet remarkable and puzzling achievements of tho conjurer' art, and may be Culled iu crowning font. I do not assert that it was by this proccs. Herr Hermann ascertained the cauls his two guests thought of, but if not thus 1 can conceive no other method by wkich he made them known to him, unless, Hided, it were veritable witchcraft.- "Some teu or fifteen minutes had pas.eI. and tbe conversation was about to laps into generalities, when our host roso from his seatV and, taking from the table the canls, went to the tKher end of the room. 1 want to ask your opinion of a trick which, no doubt, you have ofte seen your opin ion as to how I do it. Will you oblige me by taking a card?' 'May I be allowed to suggest the unopened pack of cards?' in quired friend Skeptic, looking around him with an air of wisdom. 1)h, certain:-,' answered Herr Hermann, 'open the un touched pack yourself, and then give it ti m- Skeptie removed tho envelope from the new pack and bcruVmized the card; carefully. The eyes of tke company wcire. now fixed on the pair, and no one s".Vc. 6KKTTIC HAVIXO SATISFIED HIMSELF " that the cards had undergone no previous preparation, handed them to tho conjurer. Take a card,' said the latter. It was done. 'Now take the pack in vour own band, put the card back and shuffle.' Skeptic did as he was told, and smiled a he shuffled tLe cards in a variety of way?. It would be difficult, would it not,' asked Herr Hermann, to tell you the card vou drew?' 'Rather!' ejaculated Skeptic. 'What If I were to do more, and make vou draw ygaiu tho same card?' 'I should like to lay 10 to a half-crown on that.' Keep j-our monoy, my friend; I don't want to rob you ; give me the cards.' He took the cards from Skeptic, and, sluf--lliug them, said : 'This time when you draw tho card, do not let anybody see it, nor say what it is until I ask you. I must do my tricks afterjmy own fashion. Drawl" "He drew. 'Now plaeo the card upon the table back upward, and coyer it with your hand, holding it tightly.' Skeptic did as he was desired. 'Now, sir, is not that card the one whioh you drew first ?' 'Certainly not, exclaimed Skeptic, loudly and triumphantly. 'Indeed 1' cried Her mann, 'there must be some mfstake.' Of course there i,' rejoined tho guest, 'bub it is your mistake,' and he laughed with much glee. 'Are you sure?' 'Positive. 'Name the cards.' 'I drew the queen of spades 5rst, and this under my hand is the nine of diamonds.' 'Let me look at it,' Skeptic took away his hand, turned1 the card and beheld the queen of spades. An explosion of laughter at Skeptic's ex pense was followed ;by a voliey of cheers for this wonderfully clever feat of sleight-of-hand, if indeed it was such, for I was utterly at a loss at the time and am now, when I think of of it to account for the manner in which it was accomplished. "Many other tricke were exhibited in the course of the evening, but those related were decidedly tho newest and best, al though some of the others would have made a common conjurer's fortune. (Sev eral times Herr Hernirtnn held out a pack of cards and named beforehand the card any one of us would draw, in spite of every effort on our part to foil him, and this without failing in any one instance. Of course, 'passing a card' is one of tbe com monest tricks iu card-juggelry; but to 'pass a card' and name it beforehand, aid 'pass it on a company so 'cunning of fence and so wary as ours, was a very duTereut mat ter. "Better than passing the card' with such magical; dexterity, which we know is achieved with rapidity and neatness of fingering, was th trick with tho pear, which, indeed, was as inconceivable a anything shown that evening. One of the party was asked by the conjurer to take a pear from the table and mark it, then to cut a slice from it, to eat the slice, and hand the pair to Herr Hermann. Thie was done and the pair given to the conjur er, who, taking it in his hand, threw it up toward the ceiling, caught it as it fell, '.and returned it sound and whole to the gentle man, who declared it was the same pear he had marked, and from which he had cut the slice.'' A Powerful Argument. A few tlajf ago, a tall, rough-looking mountaineer en tered the Union llailroad ticket otlice af Denver and through mistake, purchaser a ticket for New York via the Kansas Pa cific lino, when he wanted to go over the Union Pacific; Ho did not discover tlii fact until after the ticket had been pai. for, and on asking the agent to change it the latter refused to do so. "You wont change this ticket then, wont you?" "No, sir," replied the agent, "you have your ticket and I have the money for it UIIU II JOU WitllL t HClvC OVCF IDA OlUCl route you will have to buy it." Very quietly the strauger twisted hi ticket into a small roll ( very serenely he drew from tinder his coat-tail a six-shootor about the dimensions of a mountain how j itzcr ; coolly and deliberately he stuck the twisted ticket into the muzzle of that six shooter, and sticking the ugly looking thing through the little square window (Tt4 the ticket-office, and almost into the a-ent'i-face, and speaking in a tone that left m doubt of his determination, said : "Stranger, thar's that ticket take it yourself and change it, or I'll blow it clear, through you !" The ticket was changed immediately, and without any more words from the agent, and the mountaiueer walked away, saying, "I jest thought I could induce him to change his mind a lectio." Medical Items. An onion diet will cure scrofula. Fish diet is liable to produce hives. ' A draughtof cold water will relieve yawning- Sweet potatoes tend to create liver dis eases. Epizooty in ebickens exists only in imag ination. Parsnips is a valuable food m disease of the kidneys. Castor oil and turpentine is the best rem edy for worms. Dandruff may bo removed bv wnb; the head in butter-milk. L Nervous excitement Droducos Irvitot; and itching of tho skin. Beef eaters are more predisDOKert ti sumption than pork eaters. Equal parts of Mecca oil and Wce will cure chapped lips, hands, ami r, pimples from the face. , - T