i1Y Ay A A v a. MoPIKE, Cditdr and Publisher. "HE IS A FREEMAN 'WHOM THE TRUTH MAXES FREE, AND ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE.' Terms, S2 per year, in advance. if Pi N 'o " VOLUME XII. y EJr AD VER TISEMEXTS. The Co-Operative Newspapers. .ft hi" fc" 'fcte1 that one half of fill tfloticy r.r,!.j hr New York advertisers for ailvertsin oat' i j that city noes 10 i.n-ipera-.ive Iewsracr8. I' t his statement is trne there is no occasion for 1 nrprise that prominent papers which are mil 1 bur-Kin war prices for advertising feel called np i n to ho.e a rival with which they find theni l.eivps nnahle to maintain a competition. I Fail particulars ahout the Co-operative News i,iiers. together with catalogues and ad vertisinir .,t.- mailed free on application to KKAL8 H. KOSTEK. tien l Aents American .MftePAPiH t.iios, 10 Spruce St., N. Y. II EEC RE UUYINO OR RENTING A CABINET OR PARLOR ORGAN 1 jure to .'end for on r I.ATKST Cat Al.ori! anil C: urn. a its with new stylks, REnrrr.n pricks ttn.l much informTtion. if frrr. MASON J HAMLIN OKOAN CO., Uoston, New York or I'hicaso. , n HiX Fl V It 1N. with tintni. 10c. A pent s' 4Uutfit loc. L. JON F.S & CO., Nassau, N. Y. H retail price ?so only 5.V PIANOS retail price fold only 185. Oreat bargains. Beatfy, Washington. .. J. or Fnrj fsrils, Knowflak llamask Assorted LJ m tii styles, with name, locts. Nassau Cat d V')., 'a.'sau, N. Y. Ci A KAY to Aarents canvassing: fnrthe Flre J4 i.te Visitor. Terms and Outfit Free Ad VI .lre.s P. O. VIUKERY, Augusta, Maine. .mTinm hayy Tobacco ATirl-l mhtt pr,z at Crntmnlal Exposition Tor ' ' r'.'-ri y q mHtin am! rrrrtfrnce n,,d Voting tfmr an." f rirreK ,i;g and fimnring. Th best tubarro iTtr nvl: As oar bl-.ie strip trarfr-miirk i rlwlr Karat 1 01 inferior pnawia. m lliat J irkmn't Hrl is m e--y j,l:nf. S.,11 I t all dealer.. s,..i ,ati.K V e, :o C. .V. Jackson A Co., Mfr., sbuiic. VI ;. F. W AItlM.K, rhlla., ra.,(,neial Areata. INSTITUTE'Bw,No.oa W.4th CC. tnrlnnatl. ,tabiibrt tar the can at Cmnerr, Tviaora, Ikra, Sercfiila. o.l dkla llr. r.ocrrcurrdwlioout IhenKoruieknirForeauitlc. F or lnrirmation,pocloaetwo atarapii fbrbonkcontata. in llrrif irwimfM, tmimonlali from patlrata I- M. fcrmUcnj, M. !., Box 598, Clnclnn.U. O. RFST FrT KTf forall SewinarMa. I,r'M InWLII chine. 5)c. iwr ilor.. KKDLES free.M.I FLOCK, Hackettsfn, N. J. OUTI'MKH !- I IK lift T Vrevented 3nt( nr- l by the use of PVLMONA. Pre-'ri.n-il liy our leiftinn phvsioians. Ak Tour 'ra.'iti.t !..r it. nnd refuse ail other medicine's ot lre l m its stea J. Messrs. EDITORS: As we were connected with Dr. QUINCYA. SCOTT'S Dental Establishment! AT THB TIMK HIS CENTENNIAL SPECIMENS Wer mqnufj.-tur-il. westate positively that those elegant i' ntal Specimens which received the CENTENNIAL MEDAL and DIPLOMA WKItF. f A Dtt (IT DR. QUINCY A. SCOTT An-I th-it iiive lii' aaistsnts. And we desire also to state we h:ive licon In many dental offices, and si-n -i'-Dtistrv in all it iihases. but have i hit .).-n ,rk tarned oat anywhere to eiiul lhaims.leat t x I im Avenue, Pirrsni ikjii, ia. 'e J B-tt think It necessary, but we also wish to endorse Oiii.icvy Scott Ala rentlemnn. npriatht and honorable in all social anil business relations. I'R .TtiHN st'OTT. Dr. W. H. PF.RKY, lt. JOS. OKA II AM. JOHN K. A1IL, A LI. of riTTSItBCIH, PA, NOTICE TO CONSUMERS Th! trot celebrity or the TIN T AO TOBA ' i In- ciiuyed many imitations thereof to he put "n the market. e therefore caution all Chew t n i n s r iiirchnsing sucli imitations. All 'teller tuvifitr or selling other pluir tobacco '"'jrin a hsrd firmtaltc iatel render themselves l'Me in the penalty of the law. and all persons V"!atin:t our trade mark are punishable hv tine n l 'ti!.ri,.nmcr,t. !S KB ACT i F CONG K KS, Ar,- U. 1-79. I lie miine I.f) II ! I,T, A It I TIN TAf T "AfCt can be distinguished bv a TIN TAfI on '"Mi liimn with the word LOItli.LA III) stamped tnre.n "Ter T.n tons tofmcco sirld In 1S77. and near IJ S.ntm per.ms employeit In fnct.trles. Tes pai.i -vernment in 1S77. nbont 3.S00,PO9, M .luring past tt venrs. over CO.000,000. rh?e KW is Svdd W all jobbers at manufactur er mif,. J J !' T-h T' Tn SmrtK,ni? Tobacco Is "second -Mril 12. 1 3tU. lliATIIKR AND RUBBER BELTING KlBBtK Hose; Rl BBF.tt ri.LMBfil, AHST08, Italian and Hemp Packino ; Lace Lkatheh. Excink Oii, And Mill Supplies Ceneraily. W 4KI IIOI 8K anil OI I K I , "Vo. los Writer Street, J'ittsbiirffh. THORP .Sc CO. -'I.intb ?l H7S.-ly. Ill IS THE riM K.TO SEI'PR K T KRR I W lOUY for IHt. MiLE'S GIIKAT WOUK, if Til K SKW 1 1. 1. 1 NTH ATM) i- va w y grN4e,t selling book Tor the PennevlvHtiia ''''id. Liber! terms to Agents. Send SI i.o at "'l'a f,,r tJomplele outfit, or 10 cents ror our (14 Sntnplo, and name territory wanted. Ad r' S l. f jM!CITI. Hiiblisher, lm. . II ARRISBtTKn. V A . " IJl, ''t fail tn miy'what jcpt.r t" ac thi 4i. 1) N I EL' MclA UG II LI N. A ttorney- i-Laip Johnstown. Pa OfSce In the old aaV!''? biling', (uptaira.acopet of Clin- . " vinwnai. iirtKt, win aiiena vo mi mmm- 14 iffy Jj-J f6jini!xra&jZ TOBACCO ! a Written for the Frekxax. MY BIRI, AT THE l'lJIP, t lrw Iore,y ""1 fair was the tnnrnlnir, w--.we",n ,hro"r, 'he rlusterinlf trees I,i'rn,,!iZ,,, ,he1r b"UKhw9ilorniruT, Shilted soft by the wandering breeze! II. 1 'mid the radinncr, a maiden One tiptoe the old pump stand by ith (rlittcrinjr pail liKhtly Imlen Keach up to the pump hafidle high in. Twas early, so earl- at dawninir. The tdr-ds were awild In th Ir irlee ; The mendowg rty low in th Ir swarding-. But naught was so lovely to ine IV. As the fresh race that bent o'er the water, v ith irrave eyes so tender and sweet With lips half enci cled with laughter. The beautilul vision to meet. V. The brown arms, so strong-, raised their burden And o'er Iheitreon path took her way, That Dauirhter of Nature disturbing No note of the minstrelsy gayt f. That waited on each bush about her. To carol her on her way home; Lonely the scene was without her, My girl whom I worship alone. VII, Slowly I rode to my labor At.d oreamed of the picture so fair. Wonileriiifr it my trentle young- neighbor Could 'ceptor my honest, best care. Tin. How could I enjoy of a mornlna- To catch 1 he pure itlint of htr tone." Coming buck from my pump in my garden, And call the dear sioger mine own. A MURDERED PEDDLER. BY JIDT.E CLARK. An old time Pennsylvania Governor tts once interviewed as lo t lie methods lie pro posed proposing in his forthcoming mes sage. "Viist and voremos'," he said, ,:I dink of ricomnientin' a bill to iani.sh Yankee .et tiers viom de Sbate. You sec detn fel lers dovs noting but o apotit lioonipuckin' de bfple mit deir pcn cliimeracks, sucli as. bassvoot nutmegs; vereas any pot y, as ki ows anydinrr, knows dot de cmywine ntitmeck is nude out of sassy fiack." Had fuch a law beeo passed and stiictly enfoiced, it would have saved .led Sinkey a woild of trouble. It was my riist murder. Don't.be start led, reader I only mean it was my fiist case of that kind ; ihe aforesaid .leil being the accused parly, and his alleged victim a Yankee peddler. Jed wan Ihi poor to employ counsel ; so the court eonjiwitetl my services in his be lialf. In other words I was assigned the horrible duty of conducting his defen.se ffftiti. We young la wyersj;ot most of that sort of business, and we willingly accepted it ; it served to bring us out, you see. The case was a tough one. lu brief it was this : On a certain evening a Y'ankee peddler, who had been making a profitable tour of the i;eighboi hood, found himself at Jed's dor, and applied for night's lodging. Jed gave him a hc-aity welcome. He would have done so at any other time ; but on Ibis occasion, his greet itig was the morn cordial because he was alone, his wife hav ing gone to attend a sick neighbor, and Jed was a man fond of company. He and his guest, and a neighbor who dropped in, spent a jolly evening, and when the last meiiti.med had gone, Jed at least that was his stoiy and the peddler bade each other good night and good-bye, the hitter intending to make an eaily start next morning. The sun "was some hours high when Jed, who was never an eaily riser, and whose late hours the night hefoie had probably deejwMicd his morning a him bet a, was aroused, after some effort by a crow d of ex cited neighbors gathere.l about his bed. 'The peddler! the peddler f were the words ta everybody' mouth. "A plague oil the peddler!" growled Jt-d, rubbing his eyes; deleft afore day lightleastwise lie said lie would, and I suppose he kept his word, tho' I wain't fool enough t lay awake to see." Uut his horse is m your stable," "In Course he is. l)idn"t him and mo swaji yesterday evenin' ? (iuess the Yan kee didn't, get much the best of it, nuther. Old Hockey's fifteen, ef he's a day, ami if liis eyes keeps on, he II have to take lo sjecs soon ; besides lie's had the lamjjers these ten year. Hut it was a fair and square trade. Jem JJui Kilt ueie siooa oy and seed it." Hut. Jem Burkitt, the neighbor who had n tiled on the previous evening, failed to c nlirm this statement. 'I didn't see no swap," said Jem ; "and wo.' more, Old Kockey's out there iu the lot now. ' "You don't say so," cried Jed, starting op; "I wonder if that tarnal Yankee's coining tack to me." "The Yankee won't never come back," ut ered half a dozeu voices in solemn Con cert. "It's to be hoped he won't," said Jed, "but if he comes back on 6uch a fool's ar rant a tilde's a trade the world over." "He won't never come back not in this Troild," gravely repeated a gray haired, earnest man "he's dead ! murdered ! his head allsjjit to pieces, and it's only light lo sny there's a strong suspicion that you done it !" The light of that morning had, in trulh, revealed a horrible deed of crime. The peddler's lifeless body, covered with sick en'.ng wounds, had been discovered in a ravine not far from Jed's cabin. A bhxdy hatchet ljing near, evidently the ins'.ru mcnt employed in the murder, was identi fied as Jed's property, while in his stable was Touud the horse the peddler had lid den. Jed was more profuse than col erent in his explanations. He protested that after retiring for the night, he had neither seen nor spoken to tLe pcddlei ; that the latter, in accordance with his previously express ed pm pose, must have left befoie day ugnt, and the story of the swap Jed stuck to with dogged pertinacity, in the face of Jem Buikitt's rlat contradict ion. Black as Jed's case looked at first, it was not long until it looked blacker. A search of the premises was instituted and under a pile of straw in the stable was found the dead peddler's pack. The murdered man was known to have had a considerable sum of money, none of which was found, either on the body or in Jed's possession a cir cumstance whiclT weighed but little in the latter's favor, for money is a thing easily concealed. Evervbodv believed Jed guiUy every body but bis poor wife, who reached borne just ia time to see her husband led off to 201 -it ji BTTiti?!-" jp p?jppS ti -za-fc; sags . IggH Slp EirV8-ey View, John Wanamaher's Grand Depot, Thirteenth Street, SI? jRLZSST US-, 1878. Silks Dress Goods Mourning Goods Cloaking Flannels Linens Muslins White Goods Laces Ribbons Trimmings Embroideries Fringes Zephyrs and Worsteds Xecktccar Gloves Toilet Articles Stationery Flowers Feathers j.iil. She clung to him to the last, sobbing out, "Indeed, indeed, he never did ir." The day of trial was at hand. I was sit ting in my office at a la:e hour, giving the finishing touches to a speech I was prepar ing, more, I confess, for my own sake than the piisoner's when the d.Hir opened, and the prisoner's wife, with haty and un steady steps, advanced and stod before me. Her face looked hauiaid. but a crleam ' of eager joy shone from her eye?. ! "I have walked twenty miles to see yiti to night," he said, "I have at last the I proofs of my husband's innocence." j She spoke iu an assured tone, and when I I had heaid her strp.nge story through, my coovicwon 01 us tiutu amounted to cer tainty. "Have you any evidence of the facts you have related other than your own word?" I asked. 'Xo," she replied, tremulous and anx ions, "is that not sufficient ?" "A wife cinnot be a witness for her hus band." I answered relnetaiitlv. ------ -.j - The strength that had borne her up gave ' way, and reeling back, she fell swooniug to the lloor. I raised her gently and placed her in a chair, and when she had sufficiently recov ered to understand my words, I did my best to soothe and salni her stiiving to make her comprehend that, though he- lips were scaled as a witness, now that she bad placed the clew of truth in my hand, I might, with heaven's help, be able to find for her husband a way out of the peiils with which lying circumstances had sur rounded him. Above all things I caution ed her to keep her secret, and by no means, unless I sent for her, to be present at the trial. On the morning the case came on Jed looked despondent, but. on the whole bote up with courage. A jury was soon obtain ed. and the case opened. The prosecution proved substantially the facts alvove narra ted by a number of witnesses, all of whom I suffered to go without cross examination till it came Jem Buikitt's turn. Jem, as the strongest witness, was re- , served to the last. In addition to what the others had told, he knew the fact of the peddler's presence at I he prisoners house on the fatal nigl t, where he had left, them together at a late hour, and besides that he was able to expose the falsehood of Jed'a stovy of the horse-swap. The witness gave his evidence with con fidence and clearness. It evidently had the effect of dispelling any lingering doubts of I he jury in whose faces a stern look of conviction was plainly visible. For the first time, I rose to cross-examine. The witness confronted me with an air of c-miposnre. "Pleas open and examine that," I be gan, handing him a small parcel. He eyed me suspiciously, and with ner vous fingers began to undo the wrapping. He gave a sudden start when he had re moved it, and a silver-cased hunter's watch fell from his hands to the floor. "Did you ever see that be fore?" I asked; taking it up and reaching it toward him, but he shrank from touching it. "I I never did," lie stammered, bis face turning ghastly white. "ier. me reiresn your memory, ' I r-ft ceerterl. " I bat is the dead ma'i watch, and here is the pockeLjui.tH containing the money for wlucfrymi murdered him. Yon w followed ou you i last visit to the bid EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 24, 187S. THE second year of the General Dry Goods Business at the Grand Depot is just opening. It is proper to Bay that -what -was deemed an experiment, the first year, experience proves to be a success, and we now propose to greatly improve on the first plans. The principles of X A uniform low price for ovorytliins throughout the House. 2 One Price and no partiality. 3 Politeness and Patience to rich and poor. 4 Cash Returned if buyers return coda (even though Dress Patterns) in reasonable time and uninjured. A very large stock of all kinds or newest Dry Goods always on hand, arranged on one floor with plenty of light to see them. A thousand people can easily be waited on atone time. 'Where so many goods are selling every day the people are sure of getting only fresh goods. Earnestly desiring to serve the people well, and inviting them to visit the Grand Depot whether they wish to buy. or "only to see the fashions." at? If 001 coming to the city to see the magnificent Sayj ril J new s'ock for Spring, send for samples, describ ing class of goods wanted. We do a large business through the mail. Very respectfully, JOHN WAN AM AK ER, Grand Depot. Thirteenth and Market Sts. PHILADELPHIA. ing-place in which you have kept them, where you were'seeo to take them from their concealment, and after assuring your self of their safety, to replace them. When you had gone, the person who watched you, and who is now within call, took pos session of these evidences of your guilt, and they are here to confront you." 'I he base wretch shrank upon his knees in abject tei ror. "Have mercy !' he exclaimed, turning i . .. n 1 n .. : r .... appeanngiy troni one nuiniri m hire io another. "Have mercy, and I will confess all;" and he did so, relating in broken sentences, the story of his waylaying and murdering the eddler in the daikness of the eaily morning, and the steos he had afterwards taken to cast suspicion on the prisoner. The words, "not guilty" had"jiist fall en from the lips of the foreman, when a cry of j-y rang through the court room, and Jed's wife, who, iu spile of my Injunc tion, could keep away no longer, fell weep ing Jon her husband's bosom. Convinced from the first t.f his innocence, she had felt almost an equal conviction of Jem Bui kill's guilt, and by stealthily hanging on the hit ter's step, with the vigilaiieo of a woman devoted to a purpose, she was at hist ena bled to unveil the teriible secret, and save her husband's life. Advice to Y'ouno Ladies. Trust not to the uncertain riches, but prepare your self foi every emergency in life. Learn to woik and not be dependent upon servants to make your biead. Sweep your own floors and knit your own stockings, and dam them when they need it. Above all things, do not esteem too lightly those honorable young men who sustain them selves and their parents by the woik ot their own hands, while you receive into your company thoso lazy, idle loafeis who never lift a finger to help themselves, nor their patents, nor anybody else. So they just keep soul and liody together, and get sufficient to live in fashion, is the height of their ambition. Y'oung ladies, slum the c impany of such characters as these. Bid them good night and. order them out of sight. i oung ladies, remember this, and in stead of sounding the praise of your lovers, and examining the cut of their coats, look into their hearts and habits, and see il they have trades, and can depend upon them sel"CS. See if they have minds that will lead them to look aliove a butterfly's ex istence. Talk not; of the beautiful white skin, and Ihe soft, delicate hand, and the fine appearance of the young man. Iet not these foolish considerations trouble your minds. Young ladies, when you marry, b sure and get a man who is not too lazy to work. The elevation of man is to be sought, or rather consists, first in force of thought exerted for the acquisition of trulh. All that a man d.ies outwardly is but the ex pression and completion of his inward thought. To work eff.-ctnall y"'""rr ust think clearly; to act nijbly.'ve mnt think nobly. Intellectual Torce is a. principal tl emenJof the soul's life, and should 1 ac cepted by every man as the lincipal end of his being. , Sr.T.t df.sal is a graqd virtue : we al- ways delight tojsee it ia other persons, . . Ladies Jb Misses Suits Sacques C Cloaks ' Undertvear Hosiery XTjyholstery Goods Blankets ami Quills Trunks and Valises Rubber Goods Horse Covers Mens C- Roys Clothing Hats ( SJioes WHO B UIL T IT? ItEMAT.MS OF A STRONG STOSF, WALL WHOSE INTENTION AND HISTORY ARE A MYSTERY. There is in Fayette county. West Virgi nia, the remains of an ancient stone wall, iu regaid to which nothing definite seems to be known, and which is acttiiosity well worth investigation by those inteisted in . ... ... : : . . ti.; n i i . iinici lu.iij tint iifiiii i. una nun wanoiiiii tn tlie so mini; of an alm;st inaccessible ridgo, foi ining the wateished between Armstrong and Loup creeks, ahout a mile from their confluence with the Great Kan awha River, and w hich at this point i ises to an elevation of 1,375 feci bve the river, forming a short ridge or' backbone, -comparatively level in tho direo ion of its course. In ascending the steep slope fac ing the river ;he wall is encountered aliout seventy five feet vertically'from the top of the mountain, and from this point it can be traced entirely around, following as near as piacticable the contour of the ridge. The en.ire length of this wall, to the best of my knowledge, is about six m iies, though it is estimated by smue at twelve and fourteen miies. There is a single cinss wall dividing this enclosure into two unequal compartments, within the larger of which is a pool of clear water, ten or twelve feet in diameter,, and which the old settlers of this regiou believe lo have been a well. Mr. Bmler, who came to this section w I, en it was partly occupied by the Indians, allii ins this pool to have been ten feet deep er than it is at the present, and that, as far as he knows the Indians knew nothing in regard to the wall save its existence. The wall seems to have been about eight feet wide and as many in height. Wbete it has fallen the stone covers a space of twenty or ihir'.y feet wide, and in places it is raised five or six feet above the surface: the remains aie so distinct that it may be traced several bund ed raids on euher side from the summit of the ridge. All loose stones have been cariied from within the enclosure to the wall, and for some dis tance on the outside there is no htose rock. Large masses of black flint may be seen some distance nbove the ledge, and since there is only one black flint ledge iu this formation it is evident that these masses have been carried np the hill to the wall. There are two important questions to be answered Who built the wall? For what purpose was it built? I will leave the answer to someone bet ter infoi ined ou I hese subjects, but will al ways be ready to answer any ques.ious which ni.iv throw light on the subject. William N. Pace, Hawk's xest, Fayette county, W. Va., 31ay 2, 1S73. File Yorit Paper, ThellwnTg clip ped from an exchajige Txpresses au idea well worjJhjitf-wTteli ion : fsfwell worth while to ware your home paper and bave it lonu.l. A few years will make it the most instruct! ve and entertaining volume that yon can possess. All the laws of association make it more or less a history of yourself and friends. Names, dates, facts, are preserved for yon in the most accessible manner, river it von may cry at your mis takes and langh at youi follies and rejoice In a review of those wteps that have led you to prosperity, it gives the history of your town which is butan epitome of ouiversal history." SA VED. THE HEMABKABI.F, Fl'I.FILI.MEXT OF TWO DKF.AMS. One winter evening about fifty years ago, a post chaise, with a single gentleman in side it, drove up to a little Inn on the Pcntland Frith, in the noith of Scotland, where passengers who weie going to cross to the Orkneys usually spent the night. Mr, Mac T. was the owner of a large estate, and an old house which had be longed to his family for hundreds of years, in the Mainland, or chief of the Orkney Islands, and was now about to visit his probcrty. It was a blustering, stormy night, but that only made more pleasant the Vgar and the glass of whisky and the cracking wood -fire by wh'ch Mac T. sat chatiing with the landlord, who was an old friend both of his father and himself, and who was proud of entertaining the "young laird," as he called him, with his wildest tales of advent ure on the sea. They did not, however, sit late, for the Orkney packet sailed very early in the morning, and Mac T. soon found himself in his cozy, well-appointed little bed-room. The wind was chanting a grand Bar serker melody, and the sea was roaring a deep bass accompaniment. Mac T. loved those sounds, for they bad often been the lullably of his childhood, and soon .fell asleep. Forsome hours he slept wi bout an image or a thought reaching his mind ; but. at length, when tne morning was glimmering gray in the east, A STKASGE DREAM came to trouble him. He dreamt that he was in the ancient banqueting hall of li is r.i-r i t,;.i.. . .1. head of ivA.vlr.ntr table. Tl. lui.ni.nt in.r ' ball was now in reality almost a miu, but in his dream Mac T. saw it bung with tapestry, and blaz'.ng with a hundred lights. The table was well rilled on both sides, and he thought he glanced curiously down its length to see who the guests weie. Ashe looked he shuddered iu his dream. Those who sat at the table w ith him were all his dead ancestor for many generations , back. He knew their faces and dresses well from their portraits in the picture gallery. Next to him sat his own father, j who had died about a year before. And ! at the bottom of the table sat a fait-haited ! man in the dress of skins, who was a Noise : chieftain, the founder of the family. It I seemed to him that he sat for some minutes ' as if spell-bound, while the sjiectres mur- mured together iu low, hallow tones. At : length they all rose, and slowly, one by j one, in turns, left the ball, lint befme they went, each one paused at the door, ; and turning, raised his hand in a warning attitude, fixed his eyes on Mac T. ami said in a deep voice, the woid "Beware." the smr WRECK. "The packet stalls in twenty minutes, sir," cried a loud voice at the door, rousing Mac T. suddenly from sleep. Confused at j fiist, ye, soon remembering wheVe he was, ; he sprang out of bed and began hurriedly j to dress himself. Being a bad sailor, his) first glance was naturally enough at the ' sea, c'ose to which the inn stood. The ; wind had lisen in the nicht. The waves ' thundered on the shore, and the lit; le Oik- ! ney-packet was tossing np and down like a I limjiet shell. As he gasced, his stiange riieam rose up with sudden distinctness be- I fore Mac T.'smlnd. He was infected wiih J a good deal of thorough Scotch suierstition. ! Besides he did not much like the look of j the sea, and so he resolved not to go till tomorrow. That day the Oikney packet' was lost wuh cveiy man ou board, and Mac T. and his little w.fe, who was left at home with the babies, had to thank that warning dream for Irs life. The other iu cident we have to tell is quite as singular. ANOTHER rCH'OlS CASE. Many years sgo the ltev. Mr. N. held a small living in the wildest part of West Somerset. The parish chinch st'd on a bleak hill side, and Mr. N. who was a batchelor, lodged in the farm house close to it. Among his flock theie was no one in whom the clergyman took more interest than in Mary, the pretty daughter of the farmer, bis landloid. When Mary was about twenty, Mr. N. was much troubled by finding sha had formed an attachment with Jack l'owuseiid, the cleverest woik man and the most worthless fellow on the farm. One autumn nighl the clergyman dreamt that Marv stood at his l.edsule and cried out :u an imploting voice. "Come out on ' to the hillside." The impression left on his mind on waking was so dial ioct that, j if he had not known bis door was locked, ' so that no one could enter the t smij-.lie j would have thought. Mary must have in ! reality bc?n thre. . Kcejiiig, howe'veV, woe that it was only 'U cfrt'atu he ejynposed him self once more to sleepv Bul'scaicely had he closed" his eyesw lifen Mary was again Mere, "calling ro him to come ou the hill side: Seven several times he tl ied tosleep, and seven times the phantom came back, always with tho ame ciy. At length, mastered by an almost ii resistible impulse, be lose, diessed himself, and went out. ou the bill. He walked some distance, but could see nothing except tlu heather-bells waving in the m.wiiliglit, could hear noth ing but a distant she?p bell tinkling softly, aud the stream warbling below Ihe valley. He was just going back, when suddenly a shrill ciy leached him. seeming to come from a neighboi mg combe. Hiinyiiig iu that direction, he saw at the bottom of the combe two tlgnics, those of a man and woman, apparently slinguling wuh each oilier. As he dicw near, the man ran away and tho woman fell to the ground. When he came ii lie found it was Mary. She had only fainted, and lie rooii brought her to heisclf. Then by degrees she con fessed to him that her lover bad peisuaded her to meet him that night in the combe, bnnf'.nif wuh tier a small sum ol tuoacj; which she had saved from eajJttttrTiKl by laying by little giflAfiTTeiids and re lalious. Minima hni accoiding to custom ComrDHi TTmoiig her class iu that day, she hu kept in an old stocking instead of in the bank. Towusend had promised to eloje with her. aud many' her. and as she loved him, and her father would not allow the match, she had consented logo. But when he met her. Tow nsend, instead of go ing away wilh her, had Mied to rob her of her money. She had lesistud, aud strug gled with him, nnd j-ist then the clergy man had come up aud thp villain had run ( away Aftr that night Mr. iS. was a Ins liever in the provideutial nature of dreams. Argotg. - A bit job a ne wspaper. NUMBER IS. D L D S O UMl AM A x r. AN F.LErilANTtNF. CF.NTF.NA111AS ACTITO AS A baby tender. The following cut Ions anecdote is from a book about elephants, wiittenbya French gentleman named Jacolliot, and we will let the author tell his own story : . , In the autumn of 1ST0 I was livinjj iu the Interior of Bengal, and I went to spti d Christmas with my friend, Major Daly. '1 he Major's bungalow was on the bat-Ls of the 'Janges near Ownpoie. He had lived there a good many years, beinrj chief of the Quartermaster's department at that station, and had a great many Dative, t ie- phauts, bullock cailsand sold it-it under his command. On the morning after my arrival, after a cup of eaily tea (often taken before day light in India), I sat smoking with my friend in the veranda of his bungalow, looking out Umiii the windings oflne sacred liver. An I diiectly I asked the major about his children (a boy and a girl), whom 1 had not yet seen, and begged to know when I should see them. "Soupramany has taken them out fish ing," said their father. "Why, isn't S uipratnany your great war elephant?" I cried '. 'Exactly so. You cannot have forgot ten Smpramany?" "Of course not. I was here, you know, when he had that fight w ith the elephant who went mad while loading a tiausjxut with bags of i ice dow n yonder. I saw the; mad elephant when he suddenly began to Ming the lice into the river. His 'mahout' tiied to Mop him, and he killed the "ma- l,m,t T I . u cn;l,.. . . away to . " - r.e,,,n. trumpeting, charged into this incl.isiue. Old iMiupramany was here, and so weir Jim and IJelsy. "hcn he saw the mad animal, he thiew himself between him and tho children. The hole ones and their nurses had jost time to get into the house when the tight commenced." "Yes," satd the Major. "OlrT Soup was n It ii r A rot) rt i-ei .-.1st 1 1 . 1. -1 i lowar),,,d to fljUt he rlinoc but be was too old lo hunt then." Aud yet," said I, becoming animated by the recollections of ihat day, "what a galiant fight it was! Do you remember how we all stood on this poich and watch ed it, not dating to fire a shot lest we should hit Old Souprara my ? Do you re member, too, his look when he drew off. after fighting an hour and a half, leaving his adversary dying in '.he dust, and n nlk ed straight to ihe corral,' shaking his great eais which had been badly torn, with his head binised. and a great pieco brokeu from one of his tusks?" "Yes, indeed," said the major. "Well, since then, he is moie devoted to my dear little ones than ever. He takes them out whole days, and I am peifectly content to have them undei his charge. I don't l,ke tiusting Christain childien to the care, of natives; but with Old Soup I kuow they can come to no harm." Besides the childien. oa the batiks of the Ganges, stood Old Soup with a bamboo rod in his trunk, with line, hook, bait and coik, Lke cliiMien s. I ha 1 not wnicotd him long befoie he had a bite ; for, as tl i religion .f the Hindoos foibids them to take life, the liver swaims with fishes. The old fellow did not stir; his little eyes watched his line eagerly; he was uo novice in "the gentle ciali." He was waiting I ill it was time to draw in his prize. At the end of his line, as he drew it up, was dangling one of those golden fish so abundant in the Ganges. When Sonpiamany perceived what a fine fish he had caught, lie littered one of those long, low gurgling notes of satisfac tion by which an elephant expresses iov and he waited patiently, exacting Jim to take his prize oil the book and put on some mote bait for him. Bat Jim. the little rascal, sometimes liked to plague Old Soup. He nodded at us as much a to say, "Iook out, and you'll see fun. now !' Then betook olf the fish, which he threw into a watet jir placed there for the rnir jMse, and went back to Ins place w ithout putting any bait on Old Soup's hok. The intelligent animal did not attempt to throw his hue ii to ihe water. He tiied to move Jim by low, pleading ct iea. Ii was cm ions touoie what tender tunes he seem ed to try to give his voice. Seeing that Jim pa d no attention to bis calls, but sat and laughed as he handled his own. line, Old Snip went up to him, and with his trunk tiied to turn his head iu the direction of the iait b .s. At last, when be found that all be could do would not induce the wilful fi ieml to help him, he turned round as if struck by a sadden thought, and siintcbNig up in his trunk the box that contained the bait, came and laid it down at the Majoi's fett ; then pick ing up his rod, he held it nut to his master. j VY hat do yon w ant me to do w ith tb is, Old Soup?" said Ihe nnjur, j The crt at me lifted one great foot nfer i Ihe othei, and again Ix-gau to utter bis i pla'ntive ciy. Out of mischief, I uxk I Jimmy's pa it. ami, picking up the bait j box pretended, pretended to run with it. I The elephant ws not going to be teased j by me. He dipped his tiuk iDto the tianges, and in an luMaoi squirted a stream of water over me wi'h ail the force and precisionvof a fpe engine, to the immense amusement of ihe chil-lrrn. The M.ij ir at once made Soup a sign to stop, and, to make my iK-ace with the fine old fellow, 1 baited his hook myself. Qniveiing wiih j -y. as a baby does when it gets hold at last of a .l.-iy thing someone has taken from it, Old Snipiatuany hardly ....! ... .1. .. 1 1 ... . r. i.r iiisi.in inc u, a .(Oil note Ol vv or nailing ins line lor mm, Delore lieirt back to his place, and wasagn watching ins t-oik as ii tiemtjiarTTti,e tipples of the walvr j4rtil" for 4- Clothes moths arc always worsetn tfie Fummer than in any other period of the year ; but theie ts oire plan by which Ihey may be bafih.l, It is simple, but useful fiom its v.-iy simplicity, and may' be ex-1 pressed in two wmds biown paper. I'beie is no sucli protection against the clothes moth as brown pajK-r. Annually thousands of valuable seal skin jackets ani other furs aie handed ovei to the dealers foi p esei vation during the summer, and not hiug is done except wrapping Jtiem up iu brown pajrer and letting tberi be until the dawning of u'nmn. There are of conrs instances where furs and oiher -miliar ai!iclt must of necessity be left exposed duilng ttie sum;nr time.-' L-t every piece of wol or fur be violently shaken every rooming, and not clothes moth will harbor within it.