n x. -WMfiK SBHtrffflESGIl tWSSs Y.. a A ni j A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. HE 18 A FREEMAK WHOM THE TRUTH MAkICS FKKE, AND ALL ARB SLAVES BESIDE.' tfcrms, 2 per year. In advafice )LUME IX. EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE IS, 1875. NUMBEtl 22. Mr y i i m a r 1 . r - a. i v fA w mi r v -. f t n -- , i - .. t -i- fc!"r,CT""' ' PLANING MILL N. F. BURNHAM'S WATER WHEEL ; ielerfpt,4 vears Biro, ftnd put l.i'mirk in the I I'atnnt Office, H. ('. and hii" proved to be the ht. Nineteen sixes made. Irl r(. lower than any other first ,..tJJ whff!. Pamphlet free. N. f. HI'HNHAjI, York, Pa. GILES' LINIMENT IDE OF AMMONIA L .rlel- rereAriir. Kiieamamm. imii, v : . . a i.iii.iIm. sun- 'I hroiit.. Kri slucl.. E, rri. f ii -- ---- r -t -..ni sss',,l cvcrv nature In man orani- ri rcieSOs:,le cures this remedy has ef- r .... .1 . w... .vr..l fur I In iiiii ,.'M ,.i "In rrnup, laryniiti nn.l .,,! I have nr liilr l.iithnrht nf ,,' w th innrkfl an.l .leri-le.l hpneftt." kkt's. tw ruN. M. i., iar w. 47th St., Y..rk. ... L.i,l,r I P Tin ' " ' '- r-iM-nnnurir. f P ' , I. l l.M Ml I. A .- TV.' -V' I 1HBTH. rTHK WOHI.IV-Hrthrvila ffatir It tlHt rt'tatiirii IIMnl-:tii'in iniiii 11117 i.riiin vil -vr: if-vin h iltli ami ."iri-rnth to thuxe ..l.i)il the rearli "1 all mcilical science, ;r:i-ii lilir path of atllii'tlnn to utii- of haii- i , t!,,. ,i.jinn wiimn its riniicj. 11 lurrj !iv Hritth' iitwaf.' ami inannrn : eraiu il: i -n it" el thv k; !m y ; rt'Storoi the url rinn ! . ! ri-r: !i mi-l p.'iwiT In n wopl. It la K-u rv-.rir 1 l!("t l' 11. ;i 1111 n:i-ii'riiirini"il (lie r.n. i-rin. ml imra-u lull rare of any known i-i- en ilic it'. Ail'lri'sf. fur cin-tilars. . . . i 11 .......... 1. ..It.. irt.. 1 M'-ti. l. 11 rt. i' 1. 1 , 1 , iu irrua, , in. for ssyviii:. ''I'H E nililerairned otter at private sale tlie prrt 1 perty recently neenpleil hy the "Kbenstiurg Mining; ami ManufacturinirlJo.;" situate In Ebcn burjc, Comlirla county. Pa., eoiisOctinij; of ONE ACRE OF CROUND, fronting on the Etenlurtf ami Oresson Railroad, havlnn thureun erectel a LARGE PLANING MILL, 4.11 feet, ttirei gtorleM lilirli, with HIIer Shel at taeheit, 12x93 feet. The roachinerv eonsistt of one 40-llilllSE IMWEil ENGINE AM) BOILER. 1 ! itel Pln-r, 24 tnehe wide, for nr-fai-lntr and trroovintr; 1 vr i.lt,r. ao In. wtd; 3 Irrulr itip Sum. with lift tables; a irrntar roos-rtit Sn -.. with slide ta ble: f Swtriir 'renlnr frmn-t m Haw: 1 IKiolile lloaiied Mlmpinr Hnrhlae, with iron trame; 1 l entrie I.athe t I Hand Lathe, with com plete set ot Tools. I fo!isliin Dram, 12 feet lonjr, 1 floaldinc Mat-nine, with slide heads. Theanore machinery, with neeessarr shartlnir. beltinir and pulleys, is in erood worklriir order, with nn abun dant supply of running water on the promises. Said tuiildinir was erected specially for and has been used In the manufaetare of flooring, sidinir, all kinds or handles, brush bloekft, hnllu.ters. etc. I hrery. ash. poplar, linn. siiit;ar. beeeh. maple and white pine lumlter to be hatt at moderate price. There Is also ererted ou the preinist'S a Tiro Story Frame Dwelling House COHTAISI Jif SIX ROOMS A IV D A CELLAR. iFor terms apply to JOHX A. RL.AIR, Kbensburp;, JOHN I. K WIS. W. H. HON ACKER, Johnstown. Ebensburg;, May 14, l75. ani. Trustee's 8ale. dvertiser's Gazette. itirnnl of Information for Ad- iiwi, Etlition. V.tHH) copies. Itisfini trn lJif. Terms, p'2 per nm, in ail en iter. W'. -ini ii jj:t', '.il.eient dates) toonead- lur I ' ci i. Ctii.'i-. o. 41 Park Kow, New 111(1. P. KOWKLI.kCO., K-JitiT and Publishers. i.tn -r f-iy ut h'.tne. Tirm tree. Address l ii'o.iN ft Co., Pur Lin lid, Mc. remise. in Cam brut township, on VJ K!C .i.T-.'-'r- to Male and Ve ! .'i in th-.ri'wn Io'-rli'y. Cos'f r!::' t.. trv It. Partieulars Free. I- f. V I :.l i:Y V !.'(.)., Au.'usta, Me. TliK WALTER A. WOOD t.l iXu.iillRT iHiiLllliiiJ. yong Local r&-:!orsement. ."f'li.- ' :t r fully explnftis ifsi-lf , and '.i. . in-ut : I . lsi!'. I.O. r.. April 13. 1S75. ( II . i. I'-f U nl, rtr. I k S: ThH l to cert fv . ' 'a 1. S. ',' . Pavs. y,.ur r:-i jr t!i.- y nr I -'72. t'..- of - ' "-V i.:.'S. r,-liifh I h tvi: fit't-r-':.r.o m .i.,t: -;:h entire .ne. :L .1 ;t:i.:lti triliy 4iM ri Ti'j of . ..T.,.-., V ! ri ut 1; fur '.!i' r';i ; l.'if. ii ; nm perf-'-t, .til-, ':mi t I iin.i r.-:.h !t is hat : v :h -,iui;- :r li''r-- iii.-1.! ad - '.i:i ktj- easily operate it in -.. . ' npiin I. .! :( T. Iliii;i!'. ' ' jC ' -s sutu h of l.I.ensbiirar. . J wiiii wish to sen th i . r i XmiiiiH- the mi l its of ' ! i'.-ioi-r. Pratt's, Safitiif, ' '' ' il I!;)':", "tmiri's Fanlmiir i I np n il Plow. Hinl other ' i i. H hltiery. orf invited to ' a.': l .iile Statil? of I.. A S. W. II. WIS. . r.t for Cambria Couaity. i;, ;.. -::in. 'IHE nnderslrned Trustee will expose to Pnbilc M raie. on wie pret Cambria county. Pa., proximo, at 2 o-o I !. t., the following real and jiersonal property, to wit: 425 ACRES OF TIMBER LAND, situate on the Turnpike, 2' miles west of Ebens burg. with a Stationary Steam SAW MILL, 3 one.nn.l-a-halt storv HOT'S ES a large FRAME ST A liKK. and atmut l.i OO.OOO feet of pecleil Hem lock Loos, all on said tract. Also, situate on the Hlackltek. known s the ''Morgan Tract." iitv.tit three miles from E!ensbnrir. well tlmli.-red with Cukrry. Poplar and Hkmi.otk. nud properly lo-nteil for logglnir down the llliick-lic-k oi" 1'i.r niannfaeturing jmrposcs. Also, the Ui.tlivified One-Half of 106 Acres Land situate In Itarr town-nip, Cambria countyi Tkrmb nr Sai.h. One-half of the purchase mon ey to be paid on the delivery of the l)eed, and the halanee in one year t hercs" Iter, with intereft, to be secured bv bonds and tnortijairc. JOHN A. HLA1R. May 2S, 1S75. Trustee nf Owtx t'l jsinoiia. Cast Steel Plow Points. T'VMIM F. R. one and all. are hereby Informed 1 that money, time and labor can lie saved by us:n- Cast Steel Plow shares, of which only one has in many eases proved Fiilltcl,:rit for a whole season's, plowing, and in pome soils, by beiin twice sharpened, one share has :is;t., t wo seasons. They scour briurht and ma ke t he plow scour and run easier, and are o stronir and touih that they will not break. When worn dull, they can be sharpened and tempered by any irood blacksmith without disturbing the fitting part. All regular sizes kept on hand and fit any Pitts burgh Plow. Any special siie or kind made to order. RETAIL PRICES of POINTS. cutti-r. . .1.15 .. 1.45 Willi tultrr. fl.SO I SO 1 Si Jteiw tvfor. 80 l.im 1.25 'Urtl VEr,T. ElnVAIIIl WE5T. LL, WEST &L CO., V N i !' ( TI' l FUS ill.' InVtl,: oiirl TJvm nil nn " I - VI. K UK t I.FII!) IX r-ll!idMMIIr.ITO, in ur Sacks, Crocers Bags, v nntu t , civaks, de. lil M' OM tVKM i:. vrrHrirtti ui Woou Smr.ETs, i'i rrni'iKjn, pa. sm. E Vi t Coim; TO lLf?" erill Chemical Paint J !' ' '" 'i'"" and colors, ready to ''.:-;. ... i:i ! u-e. A n v one can be' h Is I. . 'r :1 binine.. hv using it. It is " ' :; '''' fry a sample can. Sold at l llVv 1) t I lltrtX- n 1)1UY1. & tU., Wood StPOOt, pi i rsiu -nun, pa. i6m. ?le PLANING MILL "SI M o XV , m ' Ti rtrim op 21. 5feEo3i, SMlers, 3ER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, No. 3. riifht and left No. 4 lett and 5 Hit lit ... . Nb. 7 left and 8 Hht .. No. B. 3 2:1. 14 an-l West V Hillside 1.75 1.50 Erery share has my trade mark and the words "Cast steel" cast thereon. Order one ol these at once and try it now, and you will bny no more cast points hereafter. The process of making this Steel Is patented, and this quality Is made at no other Steel Works but my own. Cast St.eel Axle Boxes And Wagon Skeins also made under patent, havlnir from tonr to six times the strength and onlv half the weiirht of those made or cast iron. " J. C lil Ii W YJA.. Dtiquesne Way and (larrlsun Allev Pittsburgh." Pa. Pittsburgh Plough Works, Jane 4, lo5.-3m. ni nnn I Thn m.nn is the un III II II II I and ir it is hn)ure the whole sy III II Mil I tem wj" diseased. You ra ULUUI a not purify a stream while tl " n l !MKTs-Mr LMsmt. uk 'i'-sawlng done to order. ' ."a'Nvv sn Ajiijerhos Sra., ..".'.iin.rcirY.PA. (2'm.) Ur,., ,.. iVljl. .' . -! I 'N'r U AtlONS r'i ... ! N vAtlOXS. v.: i ,,,,- FARM WAUONS. r- i. ,r''- H kinds of Carts ami .rr-, 'n ", 'turedand Tor sale cheap at 8 WAGON WORKS, N ' " n i ' f "en v river, 2siiuares r''f - Alitgheny t.lty, Pa. ' . COLEMAN fc SON. rRVST F0R7aENTS -.'.. "J etin the 7 Wonders, or ' - ,. "very r-tmil" Send ::-.' , Twetity other articles for u ' "MvUlIN V CO. No. Ia. " ' :n!thtlcdd st re.) Pitts- l-21.-m J PATF 1 ;i ti,! !' Kr I-roenrlrg y 'sb.,,,;,. Sollct.ir l-i n.il.Aeiil street.) Pitt .IFF. isys- ran. tho spring Is corrnpt : neither can you impart rood health to the human body while the blood is eon vevinir the seeds ol disease toall parts of It. There lore PL'RIFY the HUMID, and nature will heal the disease. No remedy has ever been discovered which has etfected so great a number of i-rma ueitt cures as LINDSEY'S IMPROVED BLOOD SEARCHER ! i It is rapidly acquiring a national reputation for , the cure of i Scrofulous Affections, Cancerous Formations, ICrysipetas. ISoils, l'imples, I'lcers, Sore ICyes, Sea hi Ilea ft. Tetter, Salt Jlheum ..Mercurial and all Sh in Diseases. The remedy Is a Vegetable Compound, and can not harm the moot tender Infant. Ladies who suf fer trom the debilitating diseases known as Fe m a lk Complaints will find speedy relief by using; this remedy. Beware ofeonnte felts. The genu ine has our name H. E. SEIEEKS & CO., Pitts burgh. on the bottom of each liottle. For silo by all Druitiiists and Country Dealers, and by A. X. Harkkk H. Sou, Agents. Ebens burg, Pa. -4.-3m.J Manhood; How Lost, How Restored. Just published, a new edition of Itr. iiUrrneirs I miv on the ,Sia rmlirnl rare, without medielnel of Spekw atorhkah. or Seminal ami Mental and Physical Incapacity, Impediments to Marriaife, etc.; also, Cosst Mi-TioN, Kpii.kpst and Fits, Induced by selt-imlulgencc or sexual extravagance, fcc. i"Price. in a eilod envelope, only six rents The celi-lirau ! author. In this admirable Essay, clearly demons! rales, from a thirty years' sue eessfiil practice, that the alarming ennsequences of self-abuse mav be radically cured without the dangerons use of internal medicine or the appli cviion f the knife: point insr out a mode of cure at once simple, certain and efleetu jl. by means of which every sufTerer. no matter what his condition may be, may euro himself cheaply, privately and tillif "'. -This lecture should he In the hands of every youth and erery man In the land. Sent under seal in a plain envelope, to any ad dress. ) -i-aiil, on receipt of six cents, or two poi stamps. Address the Publishers. i HAS. J. O. KMNE & CO., 4-19-ly. 127 Bowery, New York, P. O. Box Mrt ronr Pat. or address i FirTK TTSRriinn. (5-21.-m. M I M Ti 1,1 " ' Ian an'i Sr:m;f:ox, LiORBTTO. PA. at .,yr, ;lolel .j n;;.2E.AI AUorne,,. m. N la-lit o-U.-6iu.J - e'limiw. iaujr-;..; ADM I XISTK ATOIt'S NOTI CE. Estate of Wm, Patteksov, d:M. letters of administration on the estate of said decedent, late of Croyle township, Cambria coun ty, bavinar been Issued to the undersigned, all per sons indebted to said estate are notified that i.ay inent must be made forthwith, and those having claims against the tame will present them duly probated for Settlement. May 21.-6t. K. L. JOHNSTON, Adm'r. TpRANCIS MULVEHILL, Ver- TINA RY SfROEON AND FARRIRR. All diseases of Horses and Mules treated prompt ly. Intelligently, and upon very moderate terms. Residence on Hlarh street, near the western ex Iremity of EbonsTmrg. fr-14.-tf j THF. MAXI.IEST JtA.1. Tli manlieMt man of all thss rare, Whose heart ia open as his face, Puts forth his hand to help another. 'Tis not the blood of kith and kin, 'Tis not the color of the skin; 'Tis the heart that beats within Which makes the man a man and brother. His words are warm upon his lips, His heart Wars to his finger tips, He is a friend and loyal neighbor: 8reet children kias him ou the way. And the women trust him, for they may. He owes no debts he cannot pay; He earns his bread with honest labor. He lifts the fallen from the ground, And puts his feet iipnn the round Of dreaming Jacob's starry ladder. Which lifts him higher, day by day. Toward the bright and heavenly way, And farther from the tenipterV sway; Which stitigeth like tLe angry adder. He strikes oppression to the dust. He shares the blows aimed at the just) He shrinks not from the post, of danger; Hut in the thickest of the fight. He battles bravely for the right. For that is mightier than might, Though cradled in an hntnble tn.inger.- Hail to the manliest man! be comes Not with the sound of horns and drum; Though grand as any duke, and grander; He dawns upon the world, and light Dispels the weary gloom of night, And ills, like bats and owls, take flight; He's greater than the great Alexander. AlA'S OLD HIS A u, The recent rerelatiansj concerning tieed forgeries at a criminal trial at Chicago reminded me of an incident that occurred ft few years ago, in the vicinity of St. I,ouis, which seems tome to be worth re lating. Clara and Mary Mcrwin, sisters and or phaus, were in the sitting-room of their pleasant home on the edge of a village near the Missouri. Their mother had been dead several years ; their father had lately died, leavirg them au estate; as they sup posed, of tho value of some forty thousand dollars, but they had learned quite recently that the projiei ty was encumbered to such extent that they were likely to be deprived of it all. This discovery, a may bi sup posed, filled them with sadness and anxiely, and they were seated in silence, unable to read, to converse, to work, to do auythinr but brood over their great misfortune. While they w?re thus occupied with som bre thoughts, a buggy drove up in front of Ihc house, and a man alighted, and the ouKSy drove away. The man must have been a little on the shady side of fifty, to judge from bis gray hairs although his faCe was fresh and un writ.klcd. He was dressed with remark able neatness, and his manners indicated brisk. .ess as well as precision". Iti one hand lie carried a small valise, and in the other an umbrella, and he steped quickly to tlie dKfr and rang the bell. In a few minutes he was ushered into the presence of the young ladies. "I'm obliged to introduce thyself," he said, smiling and bowing in a courtly man ner "Abner Pierce. Here is my card professional card. You will perceive that I am a lawyer in St. Louis, and presumably a respectable man. Don't be afraid; I am not here to hurt you, but to help yon. I have the honor to call myself the friend of your family that is to say, although it is many years since I have seen any member of said family. I always had the highest possible regard for your now sainted moth er, and nothing would please me better than to be of some service to her children." "We are happy to meet you," murmdit'd Clara. "Thank you. I happened to hear no matter how that you are in trouble, and have Come up here in the belief that I can assist yoi. I hope you will feel that jou can trust hie. I am actually an honest man, although n lawyer, and I mean well, although I may express myself clumsily." "I am free toadmit" said Clara, "that we need assistance and advice, and that we have not known to Whom to look for it." "Very well. It is a good thing, no doubt, thac l have come. Xow sit down and tell me all about it." Clara Merwin, who was the elder of the orphans, and leader in everything, told how she and her sister had taktn out It ti ters of administtation upon their father's estate, when a man of whom they had never before heard put in an appearance; and presented a moitgage, with bond in cluded, executed by the late Mr. Merwin, upon all his real estate, for the sum of for ty thousand dollars. Not content with prohibiting them from attempting to sell anything, he had tied up their money in bank, leaving them absolutely penniless. They had used their credit, but tradesmen were becoming impatient, and some had refused to supply them any further, with out pay. "That is a bad case," said Mr. Pierce. "You need money that is the first thing to be attended to. You must let me act as your banker nntil I get you out of this 6ct ape, and that won't be very long, I hope. How much do you owe ?" "More than one hundred dollars,' an swered Clara. The old gentleman counted out two hundred dollars from a well-filled pcket book, and handed it to ber. "For your mother's sake," he said, when Rhe refused to receive it, and he forced it upon her in such a way that she could not help taking it. He then accepted the young ladies' invitation to make their house his home duiing bis stay, and went into dinner with them. 'J there any place where I can emokef he asked, when they bad returned to the sitting-room. "Yon can smoke here," said the impul- sive Mary. "Pa always smoked here, and j we are used to it.' " , So he took a meerschaum and some to- ( bacco from his valise, and wfis soon puff ing away with an air of great contentment. "I can think better when I smoke," he said. "Did you have any legal advice in ! the matter of that mortgage, Miss Mer win ?" "Yes, sir,' replied Clara. "Our lawyer said that it was a plain case against us, although it was strange that we had nevar heard of the mortgage before." Mf. Campbell was fidgeting uneasily in I his chair, and made no reply. "Here is the glass," continued the old gentleman, taking it from bis pocket, "and you can see for yourself how well it mag nifies. Now, as I look at thit 'forty' why, bless the, the same sigtis are visible 'that I saw in my Tennessee mortgage i I think you will be obliged tod rep this, Mf. Camp bell. My Tennessee man's name was . Alexander Bell, and he has added a Camp ; to it since he came to Missouri' CampbelL bis face red as flame; raached out his baud for the document. "I believe twill keep this, Mr. Campbell, . for fear of iccidenta. What, do you think TRUTH WILL OUT. THE lHAXT03t TOE JAHKY, HIS MA ASD TT1E SCX DAY-SCHOOL. TEACHER; Very strange. What is the name of I you could take it by force ? Here is some- the man wbo holds it?" "Alexander Campbell.'' "Hum. A good name but a bad man, I am afraid i Wbeu and where can I see him ?" "He will be here this afternoon" an swered Clara. "He proposes if we will make him a deed of the real estate, to give up the bond and mortgage leaving dtir money in bank and the rest of the personal bro perty."' "Very liberal. Introduce me to him, when he comes as an old friend of the fam ily, and not as a la-vyer." Mr. Alexander Campbell called in the course of the afternoon, and was made ac quainted with Abner Pierce, at whom he looked suspiciously ; but bis eyes fell when he met the old gentleman's intent gaze. Mr. Pierce glanced but slightly at the deed that wasotTered for the consideration of the ladies, being occupied iu studying the countenance of the man in whose favor it was drawn. "I can't decide upon it just now," he said, at last. "As a friend of these young ladies standing ts I mty 6y, in loco pa rentis t must make a few enquiries con cerning the value of this property; Sup pose you come nfter supper, Mr Campbell; and suppose you bring that mortgage with you. I have no doubt it Is all correct; but would like to see it." Mr. Campbell assented to this and with drew. Abner PieiCe filled his pipe with nervous haste but also with tobacco, and Mary brought him a light. "I know that you have some gtiod news for us," she said, "I can see it in your face." "Not bad, my child. I hope and trust that it is very good. A good name, but a bad man, I said, and that is true. I think I see my way out of this difliculty; and the money that I lent you is safe. But you mnsn't interfere with me, young ladies; or be surprised at anything I may say or do, or object to it. Yon must trust ine, and let me work in my own way." After supper, when Abner Pierce had enjoyed another comfortable shioke, and conversed with the gills concerning their mother as he had known her in hei youth a subject upon which ho grew quite elo quent Alexander Campbell came in, bringing the deed and moi tgage, both of which he handed to Mr. Pierce for exami nation. "I have made inquiries concerning the property." said the old gentleman, "and am satisfied that it is not worth more than the amount f the mortgage, and wou'd probably bring much less if sold at fore closure. Your offer is a liberal one ; but I must first look at the mojtgage. This ap pears to be correct," he continued, when he had examined tlie instrument, "it is properly acknowledged, and the signature is undoubtedly that of Philip Merwin; I suppose the young ladies will have to goto the county seat to execute the deed." The girls' coiinteilarltes fell at this sud den surrender on the part of their cham pion. "This reminds me;" said the did lawyer, picking up the mortgage again, 'of an oc-cun-ence that fell undei my observation in Tennessee. Not that the two cases are ftlike, as the Tennessee case was undoubt edly a fraudulent affair, but there was a similarity in the circumstances. Don't look so downhearted, young ladies. What will be must be, and it is useless to cry , about what-can't be helped. As I was j .tbout to say, a man died in Tennessee, ; leaving a widow and one daughter. The j widdvV was about to administer upon liis j estate; when a man who was unknown . came forward, and presented a mortgage 1 similar to this; and for exactly the same ' amount. It was examined by lawyers who were familiar with the signature of the deceased, and pronounced correct. Al though there was something strange about the affair, they could find no Haw iri the instrument. It was particularly puzzling to one of them, who thought that he had transacted all the law business of the de ceased. He got bold of the moitgage and brought it to me when I was in Nashville. I happened to have in my possession a very wiwerful magnify ing-glass that had btci presented tome the most powerful sn.glw lens I have ever seen. With this I examined the mortgage, and soon discov- thing thai shoots five times. Going, are you ? Very well, I don't think you will b molested, if you will leave this part of the country and never retui n to it. It is barely possible that the estate of Philip Merwin may really owe you four thousand dollars. If so, I advise you not to try to collact the debt, as snch an attempt would land you in the Penitentiary. Good-night, Mr. Campbell, and farewell." "Wliat sit? What docs this mean?" asked Clara; as Mr. Pierce, rubbing his hands and smiling, bustled about to fill his pipe. "Are you so dull; hly child? Why, the fellow is a swindler, and has been found out. I guessed as much when I first heard of the affair, and was sure of it when you told me his name. Yotf will ftoOit be ablo to pay me my $200, and then we will straighten up matters. Thank you, Mary, you are very kind to give me a light." "Don't yod ttieah to punish him ?" asked Mary. "It would hardly p.ty; We could pvit him in the penitentiary, but you might lose four thousand dollars by the jobi By trying for forty thousand he has lost four that may have been justly his due. He will be far fiotn here by morning, I have no doubt, and good riddance to him. Ah! this is comfortable. I knov that I feci better, and I hope that yon do." The girls were sure that a great weight had been lifted from their minds and hearts. Alexander Campbell, alias Bell; decamped, and Abner Pici-ce stayed a week with the orphans, dining which time he arranged all their affairs, satisfactorily, and won their lastiryj gratitude and love. "How riitii vtd ever thank you for all you hate done for us?" said Clara; whcu.he was about to leave. "It was for your mother's sake, my child. And for ber sake,- if I onri eer help ydu, all i have is at your serviof." Abner Pierce has made visits to the or phans frequently since the event above narrated, and they have always had a Cor dial welcome for "ma'e old beau." I am not a stf peretitinrts rhnn -far fn fit it but, despite all my effort to Uie contra ly, I could not help thinking, directly I hud taken a survey of my chamber, that I should never quit it without going thrors-h a strange adventure. There Was bome. i tbltig in its immeuse size, heaviness and I fclooin that seemed to annihilate at one j blow all my resolute skepticism as regards ! supernatural visitations. It appealed to I TT)e Litjtll v imrMtilil trt krn Itif. iit v ,. i 4 ..;. i ! . IHM iwim ii a was cauea young jacouj tie a ue ana disbelieve in ghosts. The fact is, I called old Jacob, wouldn't lib?"' : incautiously partaken at supjier Oi that "Yes, my dear , what makes yoti ask i! VJitlbi d I lnnll , , suppose it bd disagreed with roc and pot nch question as that ? , ct range fanele into my head. "Nothing, only I beard something flbotit I Be that as it may; I only know tfcat aftf him last night." parting with my friend for the night I grad Mrfc Watts srlddenlv br:itrfitt irirest.d ' workd w'?elf jn, ate of . Tiugeinesa mat at last I wstan t Stlre whether Jakcy crept tip and sat down by his mother's side as she was looking Out of the window yesterday tndrhing. After a few minutes of silence, be broke out wit u- "Ma, ain't pa's name Jacob?" "Yea, Jakey." "What was It; my son ?" I hadn't become a phost myself, "Oh; nothing much i sotilelhinar the new The old, cumbrous harisintfs of thA h.l Sunday-school teacher said." ! Pp,edto nj diseased mind to be swelled v. n,,i.,u i - : out as with a whole army of goblins in- Yououghtn ttohave anything jotir deed; I almost thtfught I saw them move of mother don t know; Jakey," Coaxingly their own accord-and the Carted figures plead Mrs. Walts; , upon the mantel-pieces seemed to faaveen- "WeU, if you mnst go poking into everr- I ntY 8ome devih compact on pur- u- n " pose to platrue me; Everything- In short, thing, I'll tell you. The new teacher bays id a snsmcio,,, i,-iir. ; tlT ? . to me, what'a your name, my little man ?' and when I said Jacob, he asked me if I was increased when: tiiKin turning t.o ttw. door to fasten it I found neither bolt nor lot k a ins new iis:ovbry raised a hot of nei erer beard of old Jacob, and I thought that t 1 "ew ",sovry ,Rert a host of ne . . !' fears in my biain, and a thousand recoller. was pa', name, so I told him I gues I tions of midnight robbers shot thrown it uu, out, a nice to uear wuat he had to i Tupts!iig," ruminated I "supposing say about him. He said old Jacob used to t,,e ,!dlord himself Should be a practised be a little boy once just like me, and had if ! UTd6'!uU,d kVe Ukfn t,,u tnM . . . , ., . ' J the door for the purpose of enter no- horrt bean-shooters and stilts, and used to play in the dead of nigl.CTbstracting all my hookey aud get licked; and used to tend property, and perhaps murdering me. I tattle' thought the dog had a very cut-throat air "Yes, I believe he said bis father used ' "TlZ 1,hA H. to keep r. cow," interrupted Mrs. Watts, j that moment, for my host was a flat, stupid "And he hogged his brother Out of some- looking fellow, who I don't believe had thing or other, and he got stUtk with a i "T? tuwuKh to know or understand what re.om.0,..,.d Md ( w.t,.!1r;r,:,rt.'t".oii became still more interested), and was go- ; really annoy us (and it certainly was not iug to marry her; but her old man fooled : pleasant to gu to bed iu a strange place him arid made him marrr his Other dangh- : ?hont ei"e ab,e fa?ten dwr we i.li .,..,M1,. , . s : rfe sure to aggravate it by myriads of chi- ter ; but pa said he guessed he was no- ; nie,as of oilt own brain. Sti Ton the pres body's fool, and married them both." ent occasion, in the midst of a thousatid "The wretch!' ejaculated Mrs. Watts, ' d Keeable reveries, some of the most wild ei.ittriir t,- c.t- -f it. w-ti.t i: absuidity; I jumped very gloomily into bed. l' ." , udi n.-m . ji. Tfntl.-t DllIi'JI. i , . ; . .- ... , - . - " " 1 iiavirto- Mist, niir nff MnU t. t - ' - ' J it. , i.ri unai Passixo ix ttie Crowd. A well-known drummer fora dry goods bouse who chanced this summer to bo in a Pennsylvania town where the circus showed that night, made a bet that he could pass every ore of a party of thirty who had come over from a neighboring town into the show without paying a cent. The wager being accepted; the pitrty was marshaled, and proceeded to the tent, where the doorkeeper was busily engaged taking tickets fiom all wbo passed through the aperture ill the canvas. Corns ing up with his crowd, the drummer rushed up to the ticket-taker with his hand full of cards, and said : "Just count these gen tlemen as they pass in, fending with the One with the straw hati" "Certainly, sir ;" and the Cerberus went to work : "Five, ten, fourteen, eighteen;" etc., as they passed by him and mingled with the crowd, till the straw hat was teached, when he shouted "thirty-one," and tttrlicd round for the tickets. Hut the polite individual who had bade him enu merate had vanished, while the party who was crowned with the straw hat; the ohly one who was stopped before he had mingled with and melted into the indistinguishable mass of the crowd inside, proved to be an innoceut countrymen who had legitimately procured his admission pasteboard. The ticket-taker couldn't leave his post; for the ingress of regular spectators was pressing, so be made the best Of it, and said nothing. He had learned a lesson, however, that made him take trckets first, aud count af terward, for the future. Couldn't be Bluffed. A cottple of horsemen, coming into the city the other day from the interior, overtook an old man and his wife seated In the bottom of a mule-cart. Feeling in high spirits, one of the men called out I "Hello, uncle, how much will you take for your wife, cash down ?" , "Oh; I dunno;" he slowly replied; "Well, name yjnr prifcei VHow rnuch'll ye give?" he asked. "Ten dollars." "Take her !" The horseman didn't know what to say and was gathering up the reins, when tho old wotuau jumped to the ground and ex- ered that 'forty' had been raised from J ciajmeri t Tour.' 1 here was no mistake about it I j could easily see the marks of chemical i erasure, and the difference in pen and ink. ', between the 'raised and the rest of the i instrument. How the rascal got Into the i Agister s office, 1 don't know ; but thd ,idillJf wff at fu Rpeedj -vi,i iiiciq unit .c-ii mrereu in inv same manner. He ran away, and it was not Con side ted worth while to follow him. Strange circumstances, wasn't it, Mr. Campbell?". "Pass Over the ducats, mister ! I like the old man, and he likes me, but we are a family which can't be bluffed by no man ou horseback 1 The "bluffers" got out of the scrape by A ScnfexECTADT girl at a spelling school sat down on "pantaloons." This hannena - "He said old Jacob had a dozen or two children, aud " "Did I marry him for this?" exclaimed Mrs. Watts, Sobbing arid throning herself on the sofa, making all the springs, brim like a set of tuning-forks. Jakey said ho didn't know what she married him for, but she wouldn't catch him telling her anything very soon again if she was going to kick up such a row a lx nil it; and went out of the room highly in dignaut. When Mr. Watts UStne home ho met Mrs. Watts -iti the hall, with a very red face, who pointed ber finger at him arid jerked oiit tho word "Villain !'' and asked him if he could look his innocent wife and infant son in tho face. Mr. Watts showed that he could, by staring very hard alter nately at Jakey and Mrs; Wits; "I know where yoil go, sir, when you stay away from home," continued Mrs. Watts; "I've beard the story of your per fidy. Can't you tell me how Hachcl and that other woman arc-to-day?" she asked, with forced calmness. Mr. Watts con fessed his inability to enlighten ber on the health of the ladies about whom she was SO" solicitous. Mrs. Watts said tbat she al ways knew that something like this would occur, and ended with another hysterical Interrogation after the children's health, but not receiving any satisfactory answer, she threw herself on the sofa again and sobbed and asked herself a few timM why she had ever left her mother's house, it lid then she Called Jakey to her and told him that they would have to live alone in a little house and be very poor, and maybe not bave Cnough to eat, w bici. made that hopeful utter a series of most doleful howls and b&sten down to the kitchen to examine the larder. Later in the day Mrs. Lewis happened iu, and Mrs. Watts confided to her the story of her husband's villainy. Mrs. Lew's was very pVopcily shocked, and tried to impress upon Mrs. Watts the necessity of being philosophical, and left with the observation that she bad ncret yet seen a man with a mole on bis nose who did not, sooner or later, prove to be a rascal. Towards evening Jakey was sitting ou the steps, hating recovered from his grief of the morning, when the Sunday school teacher chanced to pass by; and Jakey hailed him with : "Say, master; I told my mother what you told 'ne about old Jacob last night, and there has been the old scratch to pay ever since. Ma called pa a villain and a bloody thief, and tried to break her back t'u the sofa, and said that there wouln't be anything to eat, and thete ain't been such a time sinee pa offered to k is Au n i Jane good- bye. May be y Od b d bettor drop in and see the old lady, mister ; she ain't so bad as she wasi" The teacher, after sohib pressing; ac companied Jakey into the house, and waa presented to Mrs. Watts in the parlor. Mrs. Watts began to thank him for dis closing her husband's perfidy, but he dis claimed having done anything of the kind, darkness was far preferable to its flicker- ir:?;, ghostly light, which transformed ob jects, aud soon fell asleep, perfectly tired out with my day's riding. How long I lay asleep I don't know, but I suddenly awoke from a disagreeable dieam of cut-throat Rtutstsind long, wind- ing pasagc'3 lii a haunted iuu, an indescri bable feeling such as I never before ex periencedbeing upou me. It seemed as if every nerve iu my body had a hundred spirits tickling it. And this was accompa nied by so gieat a beat that, inwardly cursing my host's saner kraut, and won dering how his gricsts could endure such poisort; 1 ttas forced to sit up iu bed to cool myself. The whole of tile room waa pro foundly dark excepting at one place, wber the moonlight., peering through a crevice in this shutters, threw a straight line of about an iiloli or so thick upon the floor" clear, sharp and intensely brilliaitt agamst the darkless: I leave the reader to con ceive my Hiti rnr when, uon looking at (hi Raid line of light, I saw there a naked hu man toe! Nothing more. For the first instant I thought the vision must be some effectof the moonlight; then that I wasou ly half awake, and could not see distinctly rJo I rubbed my eyes two or three times and looked again. Still, there was the ao cursed thing plain, distinct, immovable marbleslike in Its fixedness aud rigidity, but everything else horribly human f I am lidt ait easily frightened man. No one who has traveled so much, and seen sa much, and been exposed to so many dan gers as I; Can be. But there waa some thing so mystei Idtis and uniisua in the ap-f pearance of this single toe that for a short time I could not think what to be at ; so I did nothing but stare at it in a Btate of ut ter bewilderment; At length; however, as the toe did not; vanish under ray steady gaze, I thought I might as well change my tactics j and te nicmbering that all midnight iuvaders, bo they thlevbs, ghosts or devils, dislike not H ing so much as a good noise, 1 1.1 touted oiit id a loud voice:'4 Who's there V Tho' toe instantly disappeared in the darkness. Almost simultaneously with my word I leaped out of bed, aud rushed toward tho plac where I had beheld the otiauge a peararice. The next instant I ran against something, and felt an iron grip Pound my body ! After this, I have no distinct re collection of what occurred, excejting that a fearful stiugle ensued between me and my unseen opponent ; that every now and then wo were violently hurled U I he floor, from which we alwajs rose again in an in stant, locked iu deadly enibiacv ; that wo tugged aud strained, and pulled and pushed I in convulsive and ft an tic energy ot" A fight for life he (for by this time. I had discovered that the intruder was a human being) actuated by some passion of whteu; 1 was ignorant ; that we whirled round and round and round, cheek to cheek, aud aj .a to arm, in fierce contest, until the rootti ap peared to whizz round with lis ; and that at least a dozen people (my fellow-traveler among them); routed, 1 snppoie, by our repeated falls, came potif thg into tho room with lights, and showed me struggling with a man who had nothing ou but a shut, whdse long, tangled hair aud wild, unset tled eyes told me he was insane. And then, for the first time, I became aware that I had received Iti the conflict evc.al gashes from a knife which my opponent still held in his baui. To conclude my Strii f Iri a few words, it tinned' dut that iny midnight visitor was a madnan who was being conveyed to, a lunatio asylum at the Hague, aud that ho and his keeer had been obligt d to stop at Delft ou the way. The our fellow bad Contrived; during the night, to escape front his keeper (wbo had carelessly forgotten tei lock the door of his chamber), and with that Irrrsistible desire to shed blood psrn: here often, but it never gets luto the papers. and at length, after considerable talking, it was discovered that Jakey had misapplied liar to many insane people, bad possessed the story of the patriarch Jacob; Mrs: himself of a pocket-knife belonging to the Watts started right Oilt to hunt op Jacob, ,naM Hi?.h.1d l,,m c'iire. entered my , . ; . . . A , , j .. riMM iwhicli was nuist likely the only ono and when she fotind him astonished him ll the house unfastened), and was prob again by being as loving as she had been ably meditating the fatal stroke when t distant. Jakey Is contented iri Hie .fact Mw hla too the mo4ilight; the rest of that there is no immediate prospect of a 7 hidden In the shade . . , ,. . ..V. Jv ! After this tenible freak of his he was1 lack of supplies in the family, aud Mrs. tched witb much greater strictness ; but Watts would be perfectly happy if she I ought td dbserve, as mime excuse for the could only shut Mrs. Lewis's mouth. keeper's nfcgliseiiee. thai this was the erst Bi'ltinorc Amsrictni ct of w attempted