i (gi S$I0' ' b tfcPlKZ, Editor and Publisher HE IS A FHKEMAS WriOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, AS A,1L A-RE 6 LAVES BESIDE," Terms, S2 per year, in advance. oLUMK VIII. EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1S74. NUMBER 27. n w hoppiu' mad to think li.i'-vt K and r-tealin' -;ks tli:it live so high i Ms; I lueuii , lo no sort o work i- nioiioy, ,t .'Hie so snort o couut ;V;;i i-u'i tunny. mi', can't they dress and swell, ,; i.- ami splendor, !!:at don't sartin make '."., :?wr over tender ? : ran feel so high above '.ir thieves and sinners, ,.. .- .-..-t stealin's wouldn't make sr-i Wfi. fir,; rs "a It!,, lih. lei !.. Tor s c; .if ii t'. k El 11', !oU tyi P' in i hk mi, j, r oft sm ; an: ii"1 'Si it). Jul I ips 4.:. -ft' l .; 0' :"i!:c ir plainest dinners. .,,. '. now begin ter think i.'s o' si'iks and laces, U,-; and -rand carriages, '..!!.: ving in high places; if-v aii's don't count for much T,, ..',..? people's feelin's i-iw ''" work tor all tho cash , v ,.,,! Me up in ste-aliu's. r,.iv tliat Washington is jist ';,',V diieves together, -v bavt- plucked our eagle bird rv, ry qi::Ii and feather; B ; think to make It good us the grotiter, .-, ;!icv Lad ortcr all be shot l;, i;, in tho realms o" Natur. 4 y a ( la it Jn:xi:ii ctoiz. STCRY CF FEARGUS OCHTERLCNY. l'.V W A. TAYLOR. i rfO 'l'-tu-tions of early boyhood days ;,:,:i-a!!t ones by any means, and I 5 j try to forget them; but now and '.,vcfu:o back to mo like an echo. ,;y a:e associated with tho dismal ,:tir.a;lie sijuallor and the naked pov :,ie Five Points in their palmiest i I. . v I managed to pick up a living ; va,::y ..Hiring tiio nrst ton years O'e is a uiysieiy to me, and how bo ; uiuiken ai'i'lc-women and fish v ;u:,-il au is, rough carmen, boozy iii:in'y cars, evil companions, and !.-s j.-ilicemen, 1 maiKiged to live at ;.:ite as nuich of a inyV.cry. r remember my i;!"l!ier a patient l::.ery like an ai gel who with my : a:.J myself occupied acellar in a r.w of tenement houses, living for Tjc.irs ;uu:d the fumes of bad whisky T.:-t"biceo upon tho ragged edge of 7 it:- n. i'.w very clearly remember that one try uie i' and Tim Looncy were on i.ia dr.uken brawl at the head of r. : . TI' ' t! . V is J av.i ; aV to t i.Y .! Ei viia! ;.,ot 'ltd.' .j: led don n into our miserable . a:.rl I'.at I.ooney sti uck my father, (''' 2 tot be bottom of the steps was t!i or.e groat shriek of fear u;-i4.ii. my mother fell lifeless across ":':c; father's corpse as it lay in the ;k.-? v. as a dreary funeral, and two t-' wtre hauled away in a cart, and ,; in 'lis great unexplored ' '.!. r.:L:r, ipol-s. iKMbb.irs, none of whom 1 'A-an ownership in me, ':"! 17,0:1 pretty much as a stray i- d'.'i never come to any good, acc'iidingly. -1: I wa:,ilereJ listlessly down tho '":te?s. iased the dingy Miojsthat like luxurious bazaars, until ' Kast liivcr docks, and scat- ; u;...n a coil of cables, looked out -f--:.Kli waters of the river, dotted :l::tc-sailed ships that came and '" the distant seas, dancing their !-nsnie and nodding and bowing 1 aitners. I wondered how 'T "i'd was and what I was made -';-r. i!ii:.kii:g of my louelinoss and ;i:!-t into tears. n:o y-.ii crying for?" inquired A :-.'t wlm'.'.y unpleasant voice. I am starving and have 110 i:'--po:.('ed. 'K'el'.ent reasons, I should say, ' Do vou think vou could earn -1 r jr:y ' i:- i Bl 8 :'?" ; Jo-' ts to k-" y , ttaii :(tu: , -its!:. - -fra-, itr- ".. ' Hi l":-.v, your honor," I replied. ,!i m;ght have been anywhero 10 Slx,y, short and wiry, with a ,ci and half-severo face, seemed -u !!:y reply, and asked me my 6 :s Vlteilony, at your sorvice, "rah h st rnn it namp." lip renlipd s : . I' -t-f.R''d j r - 7 & t"l's r'"'' you wash your hands sL. d your rags, you will fit a;'J"- and wo will see." i'l'ii t j No. Beckman street, )ivv"l; a;,J the way be told me ." " "" I ever knew; that his name '"'lah. and that ho had no "."V:!'S in all tli M-..-i.f in'Jti1 -.t o., !P and Confetioner' and ( .; b' i Mid boy. Tho fact that , " ' "-'' i', mother, nor relatives v. 'J :tet recommendation. i-CHcud that to bo uttorly 'Let l ll 1"'fl i,,,uled. as lie t-.ld - Jud ful'.j- mac up lji3 n,mJ a"y 0,,-e about his promises i,, r tin living. 1 ',irc' ",cal 1 ever ate was at j r Jtai; "1 h5 and the house. '.v Hto.inded at iny gas- lut by degrees 1 came ike a f ivilizd being, and I was rather a spruce -lit: -'I U.d I do say it myself. ';;,'i''ar ai.d peaked As timo wore on I grow in stature and the good graces of my master. My stipend was increased from ono to two, three, four and then to six shillings a week, and i had daily lessons from n competent tutor, in oui private room over the shop. When I was sixteen my mother had taught me to remember my birth-day Mr. Darragh called me into his private office, gavo mo a twenty dollar gold piece, and told mo that from that day henceforth I was no longer to bo his errand boy. He said this in a half cold, half laughing way, but with such a look of meaning, that my heart -was in my throat in a moment, my eyes ran over with tears, and I sobbed out "O ! Mr. Darragh, what have I done that I must leave you ?" "Who said that you had done anything? Can't a free man dismiss hid errand boy without being catecliised ?" "Certainly he can," I replied, "but I always tried to please you, aud I don't want to qait your service." "Who said you was to quit my service ? I discharge you as my errand boy at six shillings a wesk and employ you as my chief clerk at sixteen shillings, board, clothes and washing thrown iu, so long as you are worthy my confidence, with a chance of promotion. Now go and dress yourself and take a holiday, and waste no words in thanks and nonsense." With that he kindly took my hand and dismissed me. I strolled about town tho whole day ; walked up Broadway till I breathed tho country air, where Stewart's great marble store now stands, and chased tho butterflies iu tho fields, where the prim , and muddy gutters of that i lawns of Union Square are now guarded by tho metropolitan olice. I regarded myself as the happiest boy in New York and on the threshold of fortune. Then I wandered down town into the hum aud bustle of business, and aimlessly bro't ap at Castle Garden. A number of emi grants were landing, and among them a fair-haired, blue-eyed, handsome little mai- beautin;!. and aliased woman, J den of twelve or thereabouts, plainly and poorly clad, who was weeping as if her heart would break. I pitied her, and kindly inquired of her tho cause of her grief. ".Both of my parents died at sea," she replied, "and I am alone and in a strange world, with no one to care for or take cai-e of nw," "But I will take care f you," I replied, impulsively. A look of hope came into hor face and eyes as she asked, beseech iusjlyc "Will you take mo to your mother and let me live with her?" "I have no mother or living kindred that I know of." Hor eyes full and th bright sunshine of hope faded from her face, arxl fcho fell to weeping again. I took her by the hand ami told her my exact situation, assuring her that my mas ter would welcome her to oar happy litUw homo. Hor rough fellow passengers seemed, willing and anxious enough to get rid of her, and it was not difficult to pcrsnado Jici to go with me. I felt assured that she would meet with a warm reception from Mr. Darragb, and upon the strength of this assurance I paint ed some very highly wrought pictures as we made our way up Broadway. But my own dreams and thoso I bad in spired in her own sorrow-sore bosom were doomed to a rude awakening. Mr. Dar ragh frowned, and stamped, and declared that his house was not an almshouse, and that I had presumed entirely too much in bringing her to him for protection. I bogged las pardon for w hat I had done, and pointed out how very like our situa tions had been, and that I was only follow ing his own kind example. But still he was not satisfied to fulfil the promises I had made to tho little stranger. Finally be consented to let bcr remain aud tiuthes and a shilling a 1 until a placo could be found for her. I cl.rt 4-..K1 tfnrv a verv brief one. Her name was Amelia Vanderson. She was a nativo of Manchester, England, but of Flemish ancestry. Bridget McNary soon fdl in lovo with littlo Amelia, and by tho end of the week, Mr. Darragh, to my great delight, dropped the subject of seek ing a place for her. She was shy and timid, but so frank and confiding that she soon became the favor ite of the neighborhood, aud when she in sisted on tending shop to earn her living, Mr. Darragh, though pretending to remon strate, was secretly pleased, and let her have her own way. Her pretty face and winning ways brought many new custom ers and retained old ones, who were not Ho kept 1 alwas inclined to excuse tho rough man ners that Mr. Darragh now ana iuu in dulged in when a little irritated. But with all his faults Amelia and I n-rccd ho was tho purest and best man in the world, lie was a father and more too. Our business increased, aud our stre mom was enlarged, and show windows were placed in tho frout, gaudy with flow ers and fiuits and sweetmeats. Mr. Dar ragh was not selfish, and private tutors were employed to perfect Amelia's educa tion, which all could sec had been careful ly looked after. Her parents had been woa'.thy, f-ho said, but met with reverses, and started as steer age pafcsengers to America, to escape pov erty aud starvation. Wheat they died and were buried at sea, there was nothing left her but some clothes, a fuw dollars aud the lovo correspondence of her parents. This she carefully preserved, as something too sacred even for her own eyes. It is not necessary for ma to detail tho fact that I fell deeply, nay, desperately in love with Amelia. You all understand that. We had never spoken of love, but we both perfectly understood the nature of our feelings. When she was eighteen and I was twonty-two I began to think of speaking to her on the subject of matri mony. Mr. Darragh no louger treated her as a child, but with the deference and courtfy consideration due the perfect and glorious woman that she was. He seemed to grow younger as the days passed, and dressed with the taste becoming a gentleman who had an abundant faith in the good inten tions of mankind. But his attention aud deference to Amelia never gave me an uneasy thought. Our business had grown from a retail establishment into a very respectable whole sale house, and wo began to import our own stock of fruits. I had been promoted to bo confidential clotk, with a partnership connection in the near future. My salary was $1,000, which iu thoso days was con sidered princely. One day I told Mr. Dauagh that I had thought of marrying Amelia. He looked up suddenly and a spasm of pain convulsed his face. "Have you agreed between yourselves ?" he asked with forced calmness. "Not yet," I said. "Wo lmvo never spoken of it, but with your permission and blessing, I will." "Not for tho present," he said quickly. "I want you to go to the Bahamas to make arrangements for a stock. Wait till you come back, and tin you may marry." His veh emeuce rather surprised me, but I attached little importance to his words then. I was glad to mako the trip, and at onco began my preparations for the voy ago. In a week I was ready to go with full instructions and a letter of credit to our correspondent and agent at Nassau. Amelia accompanied mo to tho dock, and as I bade hor farewell before embarking, I said : "I havo something to tell yon when I come back." "I will wait till you come and whisper it in my ear," she said with a smilo. We perfectly understood each other, and I scaled tho bond with a kiss. Tho schooner on which I took passage glided over the bright waters and down into the summer seas of tho tropics, aud tho whole voyage was to me a happy dream. Amelia smiled to me in every star that looked down from heaven, and whispered to me in every brce.ethat play ed about the ppars and rigging. Time passed so rapidly, that ere I thought of it, we let go our anchor in port, and I has tened to our correspondent and delivoi-cU my lettoi-a Our agent, alow-browed, linister looking man, with business air and shrewdness, after glancing over Mr. Dariagh's letters and scrutinizing mo closely, asked me to call tho next morning. I socurcu lodgings for my expected stay of three or four weeks, and then gave my self up to pleasaut dreams of Amelia and the future, and strolled till far into the dusk of the evening among the tropical luxuriance and beauty of the place. Everything seemed like a highly colored dream to me, and proved to bo one too beautiful to last. The next morning I cailed upon Mr. Simmonds, our correspondent, according to my appointment. After some common place remarks, ho said : "Young man, I am very sorry, but it will bo necessary for me to give you into custody. You are too plausible a sharper to be permitted to escape." I could scarcely control my sudden in dignation at his uucxpected and insulting words, but restrained myself sufficiently to calmly ask him to explain himself. "Well," said he, "tho explanation is easy. Your letter of credit is simply a clever forgery, and " "You lie !" I exclaimed, starting to my feet ; but a strong hand seized me from behind before I could move a step, and I found myself in tho grasp of an pfiicer. I raved wildly, protested my innocence, and my ability to establish tho genuineness of my letter of credit. "WelL prove it, then !" sneered Sim momds, as tho officer led mo away to prison. I was told, after being confined, that be fore I could bo released it would be necess ary for me to procure proofs of my inno cence from New York. I immediately wrote a long letter lo Mr. Darragh, and another to Amelia, detailing the whole story of my wrongs and awaited patiently for the proofs of my innocence, which 1 felt sure would speedily arrive. But thrco month passed, and no answer came. I wrote again and again, with no better success. A vague and dreadful apprehen sion seized upou me a terrible far that i I could not understand, and when my im ' priaonmt-nt had lengthened to ten months, I and still no word from New York, I gavo ! way to despair, and felt that I would seon die. Ono day a mulatto named Jack, who years before had been a porter in our Beck man street store, came into the prison, and beckoning me into an angle, whero wo were unseen, told me in a whisper that ho had heard I was in prison, aud that for more than six months he had been trying to ob tain a moment's interview with me. llo said that he was a servaut of Simmonds, and slipping a letter into my hands, whis pered : "Keep that close, and read it when you can. Maybe it will interest you. My mas ter lost it, and I picked it up." He was gone in a moment, and as soon as the opportunity offered I opeued the let ter and read it. Judge of my horror when I saw the following in the well-known handwriting of William Darragh, my bene factor : "New York, April 24, 1R3G. "Mr. Simmonks My Di-.ar Sir: Mr. Fcar;,'"s Oehterlony will deliver you a let ter of credit signed by me. Arrest liim for forgery, anil keep him closely confined, so that he can communicate with no one until I request, hi release. Enclosed find ray check on the Hank, New York, for your trouble. Your obedient servant, William Darragh. "No. Beekmftu stroet." Then I cursed my benefactor as tho vilest reptile on the faco of the earth. On the blank page Jack had writton out a plan of escape, which, by feciuj oue of the keepers, could be easily aceomplished. The truth Hashed upou me iu a moment. My old master had fallen in love with Amelia, and I had b6en sent to Nassau and to prison that he might accomplish his end in marrying her. No doubt she thought me dead. Perhaps even now she was his wife. Tho thought nearly drovo mo mad. In less than a week Jack and the bribed keeper had me out of jail and smuggled on board a schooner bound for New York. How slow it sailed on its journey. Tho days lengthened into years and tho weeks into centuries as tho lazy breeze wafted us onward. I paced the deck and scarcely slept. At last tho voyage was ended, and I leaped upon tho pier and hastened to No. Beeknian, to denounce Darragh and rescue Amelia. Pushing my way into the front shop, I inquired for the inmates. The girl in attendance glanced up in a frightened sort of a way, and exclaimed : "Oh ! Mr. Oehterlony, surely you are dead. They havo gone to church to bo married." I did not tarry to explain, but flew to the church, and bursting open the door, hur ried up the aisle. There stood Amelia, the ghost of her former self, and there stood William Darragh, her expectant husband. The clergyman had just begun to repeat the marriage services. "Stop !" I cried. Amelia turned and saw me, gazed at me for a momeut, and then pronouncing my name, fll in the arms of tho minister in a dead swoon. William Darragh did not utter a word, but Hed from tho church, his face blanched with tciTor. By the time I reached tho altar, Amelia had recovered consciousness, and threw herself into my arms with tears andsobsof joy. It took me but a fow moments to make a satisfactory explanation to the cler gyman, and in fifteen minutes Amelia and I quitted the church husband and wife. We loitered along Broadway and in the park in tho bright April sunshine, while wo detailed our strange experiences during the past year. As I had suspected, "William Darragh had told Amelia that I was doad, and show ed her a letter from Siinmouds detailing the circumstanses of my death and burial. Heart-broken, it was but rii easy matter to induce her to marry her benefactor. My timely arrival had saved all three of us from a life of misery. But could not go back to the houso of our mutual benefactor even for a mo ment. I sought comfortable lodgings iu Varrick street, where Amelia and I began the voyago of life together, and very bright was the beginning of our new life journey. Our honeymoon was not over, however, until William Darragh found out our hid ing place. He came to us in the gloaming of the evening. How ho was changed. His hair, which a mouth before was but slightly frosted, was now white as the snow. Ho was bent and his face boro the marks of a more than humau grief aud remorse. Ho told us tho whole story without the slightest reserve. How his jealousy bad beeu aroused when I spoke of marrying Amelia, an how he had arranged to keep mo imprisoned at Nassau until he aad Ame lia were married. We both felt instinctively that his lovo had crazed him, and when he begged us to forget and forgive, and ge home with him as his dear children, wc kissed him reverently, and went without a word. Once more wo were back at our dear old Bookman street home, but business no long er prospered with William Darragh. The crash of '37 came and swept away all he had, and with it my own little fortune, w ith which I had tried to save his. We were turned out of house and home well nigh peuniless, and I secured humble lodgings in Little Jonos street, where by dint of hard labor I managed to furnish tny wife and our mutual benefactor with the ! bare necessities of life. It was hard to see ! Amelia deprived of the comforts and luxur '. ies she onco enjoyed so much, and see the kind eld aian eating coarse aud scanty food. One morning I picked up a city paper and read "Charles Vanderson, who sailed from Liv erpool to New York about th year Is.",.), in the bark Ellen, will learn something to his advantage by addressing the undersigned. If he is dead his legal representatives are equally interested. Wm.Ciiah. Lykue, So licitor, Manchester, England." I showed this to Amelia, aud sho was in a flutter of excitement. It could refer to none other thau her father. We wrote to Mr. Lynda, and ho informed us that if Amelia could prove the death of hor father and her heirship, she would at once be placed in receiptof 0110 hundred aud fifty thousant pounds bequeathed to her father by an uncle. Then the old lovo correspondence was brought to light, aud among it was found more than the required proof. So that in less than six months we were possessors of a fortune of three-fourths of a million dol lars. I bought a county scat far out of tho noise and bustle of tha city, and we settled down the happiest trio on Manhattan Is land. Tea years later William Darragh, our true and loving father, after dandling four laughing, happy grandchildren upon his knee, and telling them how ho found his children, bade us all good-bye, and we !aid him in his grave with many tears of genuine regret. Wo no longer live out of town in our once quiet country retreat. The great rest less, hungry city has swallowed us up, and wo live in the very centre of the town, where we receive our friends. My dear old friend Jack, who opened the prison doors at Nassau for me, nowj opens the door for our visitors. "TnE Scalp-Snatcher." A TIVy to Make the Red Man JJajipy. A man named Grubb came into my office the other day, and after introducing himsef, he said he would like to call my attention to a little invention of his. Grubb said that ho had long been impressed with the fact that, as baldness is becoming so general, the time must come when au Apache Indian, for in stance, would be unable to scalp three out of any five whito men whom he happened to kill, unless something wero done in be half of tho red mau. Naturally, being of a philantrophic turn, Grubb examined the subject to see if ho could deviso any kind of a machine which would placo bald men and mon with hair upon a footing of equal ity, and enable the Indian to obtain his rights. After years of patic'nt investiga tion and thought, Grubb succeeded, and ho had dropped in to obtain my infiuenco so that the Interior Department could be induced to accept the patent and recom mend it to the Indians. He called his in vention "Tho Patent Adjustable Atmos pheric Scalp-Snntcher," and he offered ex clusive territory for agent!". Tho device, consists of a disc of thia lcat?;er about six inches in diameter. In the center is a hole through which runs a siring. When the Indian owner kills a man with a bald head lie merely wets the leather, stamps it care fully down upon the surface of the scalp, slides his knife around over th earn, gives the string a jerk, and off comes the scalp as nicely as if he had been adorned with hair a yard long. "TI10 machine, iu fact," I said to (Jrubb. "is simply a 'sucker,' such as is used by the boys." "Precisely," he replied, "I merely claim a patent for the mode of application. I want to make tho red man happy. I wish to bring joy to the wigwam of the Kicka poo, and to mako tho heart of tho Arapa hoe glad." "Did it ever seem to yon, Mr. Grubb, that the baldheaded wbite man iu such a situation needs succor just as badly as tho Ind ian does?" Then Grubb Sttid that if I was going to joko about it ho would go home. But he stayed, and before he left I accepted a general agency for the valua ble invention. Persons wishing to exam ine it cau apply to mo, and if any one de sires to test its efficacy he cau do so by bringing a ba'dheaded corps with him. Ex periments free of chargo when persons fur nish their own cadavers Max Adder Thb only Tom Collins joke worth print ing was perpetrated at a New England col lege. Mr. Collins was announced to speak in the chapel. The president, angry that the arrangements should have been made witliout consulting him, placed an injunc tion on tho lecture, locked tho door and stood guard over it for a somewhat lengthy season, to tho infinite amusement of tho boys. Not far from the city of Bangor there was recently a baptism, and among the con verts was a black girl of great size. All went off smoothly until the colored woman was immersed. Just as the minister was putting her under tho water the choir on shore saug, most innocently : The morning bcht is breaking, The darkness disappears. "Dear George," said an Indianapolis young woman, "I am willing to marry you if we have to live on bread and water." "Well," said the enthusiastic George, "you furnish the bread and I'll skirmish round and find the water." A Western- journal describes a widow as being unmanned by the los of hey hus- Hard Times in the Siuilh Family. It hivs been a hard year in the mountain of East Tennessee, not t!'t work has been particularly scarce, for w. rk is worse than starvation with many of tiictn in that Je-nighte-1 region ; bat whUky regulate tho market, and tlmt has !,t.0n high rutd brought many a proud family l.iv. Now the Smiths were one of the proud families of that region. They lived on a ten-acre patch at the fojt of the mountain ; They had an old, poor hor-.- that wouldn't make a shadow in the sunshine, and a knock-kneed cow, with a horn broken off, while the rest of the family coii-i-ted of Caleb Smith, his wife, and nine red-headed, freckle-faced girls and boys, after the pat tern of the mother, beside seven Jogs an J five eats. The Smiths would fK-mloh in n. Ikt'.e corn each season to carry to the still and the mill. and make up the re-t of the living by fi-h- ing, hunu'nir, mil lounging round the tavern, while the small-.r children would phiy mumbiey peg," and it k:j,t Mrs. Smith busy cooking, smoking her J-ip-' spanking the chihh-en, and lay i-.g it d,iwn to Smith. Wa-hing was a laborious task that it was only done oisee a month, at the creek, an J then it was only J.. n,-? in sections, so that one washday the boy would go without their pants, and on the next without their shirts, and the girls like wise. The Smith mansion was n t a pre tentious aifair, nor were they particular stuck up over it, although it was not to lie sneezed at. It consisted of an elaborate log structure of one :ooin. and a l.,ft lloored with ronfring Kiards, with n Judder, up which the young suiiths would go to root at night, when they didn't s.h-ep in the corn er) h to keep old Bill Ilohmson from making off with their corn. The Monotony of this up-stairs jjfe was occasionally reuered, when they had company down stairs, by one of the hoards tilting up and dropping one of tho girls partially through the f! .,r. liiis was the status of the Smiths when the hard times began. Th.-ir corn had not turned out well, an J. the di-tih'ery increased the toll, so it did riot leave much to go to miil, and the stone that they balanced the coin with in the other end of the sack was too hnavy, and pulled the Smiih boy, corn fin 1 all, off into the creek ; and. you see, such, things as this play.;J smash with tho Smith family. They had to eat ju-t like lolks who worked for their living, and, to make matters Worse, Smith didn't kill anv wild-eat that season to bounty on its scalp, nnd it didn't lake long to bring them down to their last hoe-cake, and Smith couldn't sing that soul-inspiiin funj any more: "Oh, Sally, g.t your hoe-cake don-." Smith had au offer to chop cord-wood, but never liked chopping no . Now Smith started out one evening aJhiut sundown witn his rite, and there was deter- j initiation in his eves any one could tell he I meant business. Was he going to pop the 1 oM dlsu.'ier over, an 1 run the whi-ky mill : himself? or was he g.)in' to lay fbr some 1 traveler with a saddle-bag full of lunch? 1 Smith, however, relieved all anxiety on this j point by returning alter dark with an old, j poor hog across his shoulder that bore deacon Snogglu's car-mark ; nd, as Smith was out of salt, the nest morning found the hams, shoulders and sides hanging up in his smoke house with a coh-lire round them. There was joy in the Smith family, but, of course, with so many mouths to l.-ed one bwg wouldn't last long; luidwhen Smith returned j next time with hi ri:!e, aivj Couldn't find a single porker at large, matters began to look j desperate; there was only .;ie little slice of j fat bacon left, and that had to go as far as j possible, so Smith studied all night, nn-1 had i the problem solved by breakfast time next j morning. He just got Mr.-. Smith and the ; nine children all in a row. and he took that i slice of bacon and tied it on t a string, and j he went through from the old wom-u down to the youngest chil l, and let them swnllow 1 that piece of fat baeon, and then he'd pull j it lr.u-k wit!) the string for the next one s ; breakfast; and, poor, sclf-sacrilicing man, wlien they had all breakfasted off it, he then took the string off. and it went down his own throat never to return. That day be killel a wild-cat and got the bounty, and the fish began to bite, arid the Smiths again revelled in plenty. Hereditary I iiiliu'iiccs. rarer. ts aware of their own tendeticy to infirmities of body or mind should be un ceasing in their vigilance over their children, so ns to prevent predi-position from becom ing a habit. For example, a cliil I of parents prone to epilepsy, apoplexy or insanity, and who displays precocity of mind and great vivacity of feeling, should b? kept from all irritants, either in the shape of food, or drinks-, or applications to the outer senses-, from strong appeals to the feelings, and be encouraged to lodi!y exercise lather than to book-tastes, to hasten the development of the intellec tual faculties bf yo id their strength. The very early netiity of an or gan, the consequence of its premature de velopment, so far from being a reison for tasking it to greater exercise, should, on the contrary, be the sign fur diminishing the supply of stimuli or agents capable of still further cxiiting it. But howeu-r good and perfect the home tii-cipliue, it cannot be successful without the hearty co-operation of the sensible school in-truct r, who not only ought to under-tan I Unman nature, and know the parent by t' cir children, but be as able to teach the full use of th.- limb3, and how to wear a graceful can luge, as to lad the pupiif ti.ro.igU all the steps of a Chul.Vs flock. ChnbVs clock got out of crier tho ot! t day and began to strike wrong. That v the exu-e of the fearfid excitement at ! m ho.!se 0:1 Wednesday night. They ww a I in bed -oan 1 a-Ieep at midnight, wp"n t ! c'.o.-k s;;d :c;:'y struck ftv?. The new I,ir--l irir!, happening to wake just as it b. g .1, hea:d it and bounced out f.f bed, nnd -.' ti e imprest. .n that !!i.,ri!ir.g had cotao ; and -0 it is as dark nt 5 A. M. iu winter as it i- t midnight, sV;.- did not perc-ive hcrmb:.:' b.:t went down into the kitchen and I ...,. : to L-.-t breakfast. While was batllr:" a'vr.t i:i a p iiy H'-. -.y m-r.r.er. Ch-iVi !..'.; ;.. ::-! to w:-ke. a ?v I lie hear 1 the n -lsr. He opene! l.i. r x--::i door captiously, -and crept s-;ft!y to the l.r.i.l of the stairs to li-ten. He enri 1 d;i!i!c;!y hear s, ,:jlo one moving about t'.j j ktctt:n nn. dlning-r-m :u, and apparently J packing no the chin:'. ! Accordingly he w.-rt K-.ek to his ro-' i "id woke Mrs. ('!,!,',, - l c,vo ).r :a t spring the rattle o-it of the front v. i i i j.v tho Moment she heard hi- gun 1:0 oil'. T.'vn Chubb si-ied Jus . , ling-pi, -,-e, ar.d g ,ir,g down to the uii.inir-roo'.u door, where J.o could h.-nr the burglars at work, lie cock e I the gun, aimed it, pu.-hed the Jour pe:l with the muzzle, and lire 1. Instantly Mrs. Chubb -prn:?:r the n-'t'e, mid, lK'.'l.re Chubb cvuld pick up the 1 nvr:: ted hired irirl, the iro-.ii Joor war- bur.-t oi- '-i by two po!ivmo:i, w ho c.i:n.- into the Jin-ing-rooM. Seeing Chubb with a iran.ru, 1 a 1 i!ce. Hug worn. m on thr floor, tl.y im.i ;in -1 that murder bad been c .mmhted, an -1 000 of them trotted Chubb . ft' to the station house, while the other ixmaiucl to iuve.-Li-gate things. Just then the clock struck six. An ex planation en-u.-d n-oiii the giri. who ..n.'y had tt f.-w bird-liot in her leg, ind t':e policeman left to b; ing Chubb homo. II an i' d at about three in the morning, j.i-1 :is the clock was strikinc eight. When th. situation was urf .Med to J.i:.., his ff action was to j uu thebutt of his g :n through the clock, w hereupon it immediately -tr;:ck two hundred and forty-three, ai:l then Chubb pitehcl it oertlie fence. He has a few clock now, and things arc wyrkinj better. Illval Journalists. They l.;uc in a certain town in Northern Peim-yixania two rival newspajwrs, whi.-fi are publi.-hed upon the same d.iy of tho week. The editors make de.-perate attempts to get ahead of each other in procuring items, nnd the en--.-1.ien.-,.s are often auiua i.'ig. l-a.-t we.-k they were serious. 'llic cd;: r of th. ?,1.ruth- ihj.iu demised a scheme which he calculated would lay tho .'I :!-A r out cold. lie employed a man to make on attempt to aNsa-inate him jusf aa l is jHijr was-going to press. c bought this man a six-barrXc-.l revolver, nnd In structed liim to rash int . the ofHee of the M-mh-Oiyin 11 1 a certain hour, and lv-gin to bang away at the editor, taking g od care not to hit him. The editor intende 1 to pern: it tho villain to escape, and then he proposed to sit down ari l run out a sensational local, with half a column of head-lines, rdM-e.it a 'Dastardly Attempt nt A-sa nation, ' ' A Biow at a Free Press,' etc., etc. The Mini with the revolver Fernicl renily cnthu.-i.e-tie about it. When the appointed J.oiir iirrivi d tl- t-Iitoi f,,ok n po-ition ne;:r the door. Iii dashed the villain of tho piece, with murder written ail over his countenance, and began to bom!ird that eminent jouruali-t at once with re. ki.--s ferocity. The first shot took elicut in the editorial calf; the second grazed lis elbew ; the third tore a channel across his sea'p. 'Hit- editor howled .'or the assa.-.-in to stop, but the a a-.-in thought it was n j.ilI t ,,r the play ; so he emptied three more barrels t him, scratching him a little every time. Then the editor fainted from loss of blu' d, the a-sassin was arre-tel in real earnest; the elit .r of the M.at-Ai rus'ie.l around, wrote a stunning account of the tng-?-!-, and got his paper on the stnvt, - lli-er Ilkj wild, befoye the M '-ulli-Ojon mrai revived. But lie i- -!; now. He say- the it ss: is-in Must have mi-umW-tood his instructions somehow, or else he was bribed by the pro prietors of the M-at-Ar to play falst.. he does not care to organize any more schemes fur getting in nhead with sensa tional item-. He thinks now that a news paper ought to be conducted upon a calmer basis. A church in Prussia wits used as a maga zine for provi-iuns for soldiers, but great care was taken of the high altar on account of the beauty of its construction. A rumor spread abroad that the a.'t:ir was mysteri ously illuminated every night, and throngs of people gathered about the church. The commandant ordered the key and with a lantern he explored the church, b ;t noth ing was found to clear up the mystery, bat as soon as the church was empty the n'tar nnd the whole church was illuminated. Ti-j commandant i-sued a proclamation offering a reward to any one who could unrmcl the my-tery. For two days no one claimed the reward, but on the third a common soldier belonging to the fortress requested a private audience with the commandant, an J expViio cJ to him that he wa- occasionally cmp'- y, J to put frames to mirrors and burning gla.s-cs, and one evening when at work at n large Concave gla-v, it happened 1 1 he ... 1 lc! ..s to throw a light into tuc church, when ing public C-urio-ity e.v he 1 he t '"o -a thicvv the light from the aitic to tie altar. 'I ho commandant cxo'ai' el t- '!' : -t ' I t. i