1 0 iSY H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. VOLUME XII. DRY GOODS 'AMY GOODS, KHlincrv Goods, Ladies' Coats, CJUtfETS, SO,, N3.V ON EXHIBITION I THE LARGEST STOCK -A nil Cheapest In the CITY of ALTOONA! AT- i f ? ta 1 . SIMON it CO.'S C. SIMON & SO.'S x . r 5 n V - - c. c. l I Z : s. . IP ! ft r. 2 i:vL'i;viwv siioild go to C SIM k CO 'S CHEAP STORE, 1320 Eleventh Avenue, t,v.3 te H. R. PASSENGER DEPOT, vi;roo.Vx, iv. Men's and Boys' THE CHEAPEST AND BEST, ATCII.i&NUIO.YS! You can buy a Heavy Coat for $1 63 " jt 1307; .1 Man's Wool Hat for 35c. At Chas. Simon's; A Kin Wool Home Made Shirt far 73c. At 1307; Heavy Overcoat, very cJteajt, At Chas. Simon's; Men's Hats, of the latest styles. At 1307 ; U'-i'y Warm Cap for Men, very cheap, At Chas. Simon's; lle ivj Shirts and Drawers for 2uC. At IG07; La lir' Coat", the e.Vpttf in the city, At Chas. Simon's; Blankets ami Hap, all colors. At 1307 : r ji'i v.inf to kep n tearm and tnug at ., . ; n . ! - - ... . uj, vtiy wit;w At Chas. Simon's; Lvlie.i' 1 rimmed llats,froi90c. vp. At 1307. i iij .Van. if fin n eor,;tmplate matrimony, ' i,r if .ri'.l a tna'ttr of money to 1,11 : 4vy your treddinj jar merit At Chas. Simon's. Cmt's White lrr Shirts for 40c, At 1307; LiUf' aii n.:ui' FiArnitf.it and Fancy 'Jjstd; te hret t-rk and the e'.eapnt in the rity, At Chas. Simon's. 0 e-i'.t ,iv I Wt.rt-iitf) Pant you can hvy a ia',-t $oi'j, if are a good '';'". nr a bad one, At 1307. If'inu ,,-nnt r;oo,f, reliable Clothing f u.f o'fn r Goods eht at, call on CE1I SISON. 1307 EISFentt Atr. f f''"'ii J lrh aitd 14th Sts., '.! ry ki,i ! n .Vw';'s! AHoona, Pa. "i I i. 9 1 V! ;;'.,? r?;I7 Kl .ALE. I I - 11 . ti rf?. . I ' ' ' 1 ' ' i,-r..:i I,. -n i -a hi JV.i. I ':iniria -onnrv. y t : . r..;.rty ot Christina 11 "'.. ;.'.: :i htm and allow. ' ' ' A--r- .r v. l.'. h re rienred. un--. n I V i r-a M n'.i e ..t rn!tivat ion, "'' T ' " t-.-r in iio.rly every tie!,. - ' :t r .-iMi.r ,.f rt 5-,me f,,i.. 1 1 't H.-.k him u7'.n W..o. Mn-,1. -r t. : I he j.roj.eify will '-' " -;r 'r in P r!. ai purrli.mcts may , i 11 ' s: AMI l,nr !n arrl'icn "' ' " I.tren-e Hotel, new ""'" "' "f F.-rlin'Md S'r n I other. ' t i wt .r.r v I '! 1-5- t Ii4.'. !' ' ' i a v, i s- t r i ' tr- pink rui Minif. i leet in giMi ciinil'tion. lo nl i.thvr liu'ldin,! a. i;i and varluu It. v., , f - " . cr ma le ( ' ;ir r; ,s si; tie ' ') -i farm ..r a r either or both of accep:ed. Now I hotne in tu n a t a 1'K A IS a. IlL'CK. tn A IGXKf S NOTICK. Notice - 'v"" "'' Tl.-o.lore Maker. 'n'l k i. V'"""'1'' sl2n. V4sf, 1 ' it in i. . "erent ot i.i. cre-li.ors. All ' .'oV.!. '" fheo.lors H.ki-r are . . . i nipr sre i"i tnat pny:nnt mam b ma!e to MTi-f.il,""" iiTinf eiimi irr o;,114 t:'",x,l-?! PT.1" 'f.pe for pa. ; Pl RS : "YSTHKf and TTei at ttiort notic. SIMON L CO.'S SIMON 5t CO.'S SIMON L CO.'S SIMON 5t CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S SIMON it CO.'S CLOTHING-! ANOTHER GREAT BDUCTIOY IN-PRICE at thk KBKssnmo OWINil to the large mcraw In mv sale since the last redaction In price and ihe adoption or the cash jnem. I nn.l myself iM, to benefit my customer by a still further reduction In the prices of mil good comprised in my lar.e stock JUVF THIXK of it: A god No. 9 Cmk Stove, trimmed complete' - "r only 20.00. Good lloeated Cotft e hi 20 cm. per lb.; beat do t 22 ct. per Ih. No interior or dsin- ved coffee old at this store, llootl li-ut intr Stoves a low at. 14 00. Good T n from 30 to so eta. .,er it.. Tbe Unrest stock f FhM.rt)llCl.ttli In thecoun ty, from 1 to S vd. wide and trom as to TO cl. per ard. Best quahty F.nirltt-h Anvils at 15 cts. per lb. Needles at 6 ft, per PH-f-r. Good cast steel TaMe Ktilvesand Furka low its 8 ) ct!. per set. Tins ai 5 c!. s- paper. Best quality Blacksmith Vises at 15c. per lb. Good Srup Molasses at trotu 40 lo 70 eta. per ralion. Uoou Door Locks and Knob complete, as low its 85 cts. each. Good Cotton Thread at 4 cts. a innl. Best quality 12 inch Mill Saw Flhsai lucta.each. ( .oon nice at 8 cj. p,t t. . Rest quality Sole Leather at 2 tn 30 ct. per lb. Du jt.le nttt.d Axe al ll.liiiiimlipn.nl. , Lamest stock irairOil Cloths In the cuunlr, . . . ' Ih. ier yd. I 4 doz. hard wood ( lurnert head; Clothes Pins for I 10 es. I Clark's O. N. T. Machine Cotton at 5 eta. per I pl. I Oood long handle cmb". sttel Sborels for 60 cts. O tod zinc Wash rtoHrds for 25 cis. Largest slock ot Lookiv Olasscs in town, very low. Wit. bins' Sndtt mi 4 eta. n. ih. Best qualify lour-iined Manure Fork at 65 cts. eath. Good Coal Shovel. 7. o. 15 and V) eta. each. Pearl Starch tf cts. per in. have the larne-i stock ol Queenaware In town, at vi'tv low not s. Best Rakinir Sortir at a .t. tor Ih D'ston'a best quality t;Ktoot Cross Cut Saws, : I Dave tbe largest stock oi Spices In town, very low. ' Good Door Latches as low as 7 cts. mc-h. I Lance stuck of laMe and Hed Cuf itirs ul low. j est rules. ! Good Flour at al.35 net- .ai.lr. Larirest stock ol G iitMum t- and Lnuips in town, very low. A No. 1 F.irniture Varnish at 11.40 per nl. Good Corset Steels at 6 cts. a pair. Over HO lenirtlis and mm Tire and Carriage Itoiis ki pt in stock, vety ;w. rtot Tobacco In the market, at 5 cts. per Ih. iOU kr Nails now lu slm k, 60 tatt s. s lecttd and made of best ui'.ick iron No Infer ior or scrap Iron nails kept In stock. T nave :he !! Ciirnrsfn town for ibe money. Over 60 size of Vt iniiow titan, kept in stock, very low priet s. Large stock of Br Iron and Horse Shoes al I wavs on tiHtid. at irit. Good fliieiiuiii Comlisat 6 cts. each. Lrtrae siock of Taole O.I Clot b .oil band, very low. Dest Linseed Oil. direct from Factory, at 70 cts. a tr Ft I . Dupont's best F. F.F. Uitie Powder, 40cts. p.lb. Drop Shot at 10 cts. per lb. Best Green Coffee at 22 cts. per lb. Galvanized Coal liuckets ns low as SO eta. each. Gooti Green Coffee at "JO cts per In, Uest pure Wb:te Leail at 2 lo to ii.20 urr ker .f M lbs. Stove Pipe, made of the best iron, reduced to ctr. per lb. A lurge aj-aoriintnt of Tinware on hand, very cheap. 12 pnpers F-.wnce ot Coffee for 25 cts. Largest slock ol Trunk and Valisea in town, vety cheat. A large assortment of Wall Piipcr alwaya on hand al iowist prices. Paper Window Shades at 36 els. per roll. Toilet and Washit a- Soaps In endless variety. Cook Stoves Irom 15 00 up to Si5Ui. Large assortment or llair. Clot bea aud Tooth Brushes. Heating Stovea from ttOOup lo 35O0;very ehehit. Fxtra Nt. X. Salt, 1 65 per barrel. Revolver, tlveatt'l cv. n rhots. the largest stock frota (I 50 up to a.lo.110. Rest Carbon Oil at 16 cts. per a-l. Tha above are only a few of th thnnsandg of articles .n the hardware and linnsa furnlsbinv line wlilo-i I am furnishing at equal ly low prices. 1 don't advertise to tel. at 20 per cent, cheaper, or Indeed any cheaper, than other men do. a I think It better to let the puhlfe Judge that for them, selvei. but I do advertise to sell ifocxlsag low as they can be sold and psy one hundred cents on the dollar. Neither will l throw out a sjood sta ple article of goods over I he counter at fltst cost, or even leps. and t en charge two or three profits on Sutneth n else to make up lor the loss. Set It win tie my en eavor to sell hocis at tbe lowest livlnw pr tit. and 1 promise this heisuse 1 know th it I enn lurnish itikmIb nrices that will he hen. eneml to both scl brand buyer and no: at price . whir h would benefit one anil ruin the otbi-r -Ihoiilntf you ail for t he liberal patronage cnbauauoe and tnrreae or the tame, i remain Kespectlully your. iicrriinure tonierreii afion me. ati'i nop ns nr a OKtl. HCSTI.F.V. Lhensburg. Nov. 29. 1S78 DR. C. W. GLEASON'S nESTORATIVEREiMEDIESI DK. OLEASON'S UNO HF.STOK ATIY K is a PimiTiTK t 'ma mr Court s. Colds anil early stage of I onsumptlun. Take it in time. Sample buttles, 25 Cents. IJR Or,EA5il)X'S LIVER RESTORATIVE IsaSraRCratc lor Liver Complmnt. lliliousn ts. In.lia-.siioD, Ac, Ac. Test it. s,ample bottles, 25 Cents. T)R. OLEASON'S STOMACH BESTOKA-TIVECl-kbs liTsrtcrstA. IHt. OLEASON'S OOLDE1T ELIXIR. OR I'M VI HSAb T !:!. an tn.aluableand Invlg onvtlntr Tonic fur l he Cure or Debiliit and li so- KX lOW C'ONSIITCTIO- B. Dit.Of.EASON'S SAi.INE A PER I EN T acts on the Kidneys snd cleanses the system ot all morbid matter. Invaluab e medicine. im. or.Kiso.vs laxative wafers. highly Aromatic. Cures Habiti ai. 1,'osiTiri- tii, files, fce. Sample box 2S Cen((. 13T For Sale by all ltruffists, Jg Piiif-i pal Officii. 1'HILAblLrHIl. August 2. l:s -Bin.e o.w. TISSOLUTIOX The partnersliip ' lierefofore existing lietweett the iituier signed In the mercan'lle hnines hnving thldy : p-en dissolve t hv mat urvl content, all fterson in .lehred lo said firm s well as to the estste of P. It. Khielil.. dee'd. will find It. to their advantage j to ran and settle on or he'ore I he lt day ot Feh I rusry next, as all account t hen remaining unpaid j will certainly lie placed in the hands ot n officer I for collection. M cant Irne and on' II everything In I th "tore I disposed of all kind of goods will he f Sol I at c'uil eo.r In order lit olnw out business, j Nnw is tho time therefore toseeuresuek bargains aa n. otner denier can afford to give. J. K JtfUF.MV., K. T. SHIEHDS. Loretlo. Jan. 1, ll79.-t. EXE E XECUTOR'S NOTICE. 'fate of Iter Juriv HACKFTT. HecM. T.ef ter. tetamntry en I he estate of Her. .Tnn. Hnekett. late of Sommltvllle boreugh. Cambria einntr. deceased, having heen lsued tn the on dr!srne.l. all perron Indebted to ld ette are hrehy notified to make Immediate pTment. and t nte having rlalms agt'nst th tne will present them properly aof henttcnted 'er settlement. THI)US HAVIN. Bascotor, Sumraltrllle. Hee. 6, 187 -t. AD M I N I ST1! A TOR'S NOTICE. Kate of J. A. Moohk, tlerM letter of admlnlstraCon on t- e estatr of .T A. Moir. late of E'entnrg horotb deceased. hv. ing been Issned to t he unitrslsmed. a'l persons tn d7re.l tn ihe estate of said decedent are hereby notified lo make pavment wttbout delar. end those having claims a gainst the same will present them roperij suthenticated for svtiemsBt. F. a. siioetf AKF.B, AdaiiaHtfWor. Eteaeborf, Pec. 31?, l7.-4t. thcto dulv aurtnticatej for s Tt lernnt" r" i-,,.,ii TKrt;.K A " EllTK AM, Executor. I arri.ll I wp., Jan. -14. 18TH.-r,t. j A It mirni 1. lviv - 1 V., .,, i HB IS A FREEMAN EBENSURG,!IPA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 10. 1879. SNATCHED FROM XI A OA It A, "Ye. atriier, tm a mighty fine fall. I p n ess Niaeaia tPBl cr. atit.n fr l.ieness. You cuiioeity-luinteis can't find a dip of water better woitli eyeiiiff over in all your jaunts ai-y where. Well, yon see, it'a juat att.iceaii, aa it weie, roiling over that limestone, ledge. Foam, spray and thun der one dull, r tenia), awful roar, tpanued by altiftine laii.bown that 'a it. "I bate it, but I calculate the sight's new to you. You iliitik that Xaluie's got it fine up for you to attoll duwu to, aftr bienkfaM at Foisyth'a. 'It'a like an entet tainment. provided for tlioae wlio bouae'at our hotels; aomethitir tudiaw cuatomeia and trot up a p'lly re turn for the cpitul invested. Thai a it, isn't it ? It give you a pleasure to talk about and pay for, and brings nollara to tboee that let you lodginga. ConiH, it is up to your notions, in it not, at ranger ?' The dollar-giving tiea of thia Mihlinie cataract bad not, I must own, tccnrr-d to n.e. I liatked with some tiafuial wrnder at ibe speaker who tiaik thia view of per iMpa the most mat velons scene thai thia woild of ouia Imb to allow. Indeed, with ils deep, dread roar thn.bbing through my vety brain and bltaid, I beatd thesuggea lion with no it i It? disgust. Tbe spikv el'tuda ever streaming up from thai abyeaj iitcn received the plunging sea, Ihe over flow of the vast Ame.ican likes, faileri a! together in my mind in associate them selves with cash calculation. The twenty miles of river tolling the drainage of a cott tinenl to its ginnl Wap did not biiug with their mighty masa of doomed water idea of profit that better suited a New Yoik count ing-lii. use than the shuddering aut face f Table Ilock. !y manner, as I dare say, smacked of sut p ite nnd candor, but my American f i lend took it w ith that self pusMeened ch1 nesa which showed him to be quite carelesa f my estimate of In want of what our fine old sculptor Nulleaeas used to call "eiiitiFj mnsy. " '"Can ; you see something beyond dollars and cents in Huh wonder of wondeiB?" I said. 'I know familiarity bipeds, con tempt toward moat things, but I rather ex peeled lo find Niagara beyond this custom ary result. " "Well, to say the plain truth, Britisher, I don't go in for outlandish how lings about this roarer ; but when you talk of my fan cies about old ! blinder are anmethiug psr ticulatly different lo that. Shall I tell yo-i why? Aie yoti in a listening fit? Yes? Then for ouco I'll let out a stoiy I have in my memory, and no living man, native or foreign, has anything to pair off with it aa retpects this tumbler below ua." So with the diead music in my ears of thia mighty inasa of flashing down wateiR, I listened to a laid 'hat lias ever since formed part of my i ecollecl ions of Niagara. 'Why do I get savage at travelers' spoon v raptures about Vlns Rainiest woi k that the power of God Almighty baa tinn ed out ? This is why : They at e ho much lirummagem tinsel not got up well. You come here not just to feel as this would natutally niaki any creature feel, but froth and fusa about what you do feel and what you don't. That riles me. I like to sneer down such bosh. Thia thing was not made to be talked at. It wasn't made to be raved over. Ii'a too darned real, too horribly grand' for that. You're quiet one not one of the mouthing sort, I see ; my dander iau't riz by you. You're genu ine, you are. I saw that; hat's why I mean .o give you a real scare with tbia tale of mine. If your wool doesn't straighten before I've done you're a cooler caid than I gave you credit for being. "I'm toughish still, you see. Oldish rather, for sixty raid years I've lived here abouts, for here I was born. I know ibis place pretty well, I guess : every foot f every lock, of evety track for long mile., away up to Erie and down to Omarx Field and finest know my shoe leather t il through these parla. " hen 1 was thirty, or thereabouts, I buited up this river some four miles or so away. You've (tacked it down may be to liete. You'd hardly think we were com iiig npou this. The country up livet is tlrfttish. The liver slides akug quiet enough, too. No crags, no precipices, no daiksome forests ; all i ferule and good tn the eye of man just eace 4iid plenty. It is dirl'eient, though, as the sound of tbe thunder ahead gtos upon you, dull, aw ful, evei lasting, that has sounded on from creation, and will outlast you and me. stranger, and thousands of generations yet to come. "l here I lived was, as I said, but a few miles above this. Fuitherdown Ibe calm How of the river swirls into ripples, and whirls and grows scared like of what's be foie it. Then it exeicises ftself for the bell it is to pass through. It tastes purga toiy. It's all foam and dash, and splutter and growl, th tough the frothy rapids tha: roughen it for awhile. 'I hen it setlles for steady woik. It braces itself for endur ance, and then pluck ily smooths itself to face its fate. "How grand that ralm deep flood is that poms along without stay or hurry, that you can see, to its awful plunge ! But, stranger, smooth and peaceable as it looks, it's deep enough and strong enough to as. toiiish weak nerves, or iron ones, as I know well, and you'll know before I've done if my tongue does i s duty. - ".lust look acrtaut tha fall. Tou see it best .from the British side. Hun your eye mund the great Itotseshoe near you. That cuive is some t wo thousand ft et broad, and some hundred and fifty feet dee. Then there's Goat Island, snug it the midst of Ihe mighty plunge. Can you see a small flat speck of mck not so many yardiff its shores? No? I know it as you'll bear. Our American fall beyond knuckles under a little to thia nearer tn ns. But it'a a mighty resectable water-shed, too. Twelve hundred feet in breadth, a hundred and fifty feet high. . Yonr know-alls guess that eveiy passing minute some seven bun d ed thousand tons of good, fresh river roll over that rock into spray and foam in the dim gulf below. "As m boy I used to see beauty as well as wonder in all this. Wbere ii'a not bid while with foam see what a clear pea green the fbaid s as it shoots over. -You can measure the force of the tush of watsrs. for Uie curve of the shining sheet is fifty feet from the trail of rock it slopes down. 'How does it strike you ? Y"u see it, 1 dare say, as I saw It two score yeais.ago To yon it ibtertihl. but not all terror. , Ii'a lovely ton. . And tn me ? well, to me. it is horror only ; it baa been so since that day when I hung on it very blink for hours, sad tboegbt of it mosc might think is a bon-erer, of riding double witlr hee; so I : gotofTatthe turn, and, leading my bore ; .ononimp uestae tue road. let her ire on . 1 -j... .... i bi, back with her bundle. Then. urTbuck- litliT the i-efn tn tr a m I. ! . - WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, AND ALL nightmare dieam of some hideous thing, j paddled herself and her boy into the full inconceivable, uutterable, that held one in stream and cast the paddles from her, and its awful giasp. But mine was no vision . with a hevy heart, nerved hv hate and le nf the night to laugh at when awakened. I venge and mise-iy inn nduia'ble, stood m 1 lllMA I . . .( . .-A A.-,n1..l .1..... V. ....... . . r . l - . t " ipiMiru iiiviiim uiiikiiui aijr young head into the iron-gray you see it now. It has lived there ever since, night and day, season and seasin. There it will stay till the death rattle calls the memory of all this side of niv cofrin. i iintiten ana nsneaihen. I iat a how . , iniiiMi, t iieii (Jhviio pieiiy uicili l fill to see this wonder. I could get a ready sale for what I caught, whether it was fur or fin. 1 had canoed it from when 1 could recollect any thing, and was pretty spiy, I ell yon, with Ihe paddles, and pretty ven turesome, loo, I liecame, till I thought I was strong enough and skilled enough lo ,-,. ...I. . . i . . i j .., .irnn iirirniniu.B IIIHL OIUCTS WOUIU have shuddered from. "I thought I knew Niagara too wellto be in any danger from ii. I was so familiar with il, I thought of 't with none the care new comers found i:i it. I used lo laugh at their genuine fears at the veiy sight anil sound of it. I knew it by night when Ibe calm luiMNilight (toured down l ight thiough the silvered spray cloud I hat hung over it ; by day, when the glad s-.iu danced rain bows above in Hashing il.xsU. Then it. was too old a friend of mine lo be dieaded by me. One day changed all this, and I knew it for the hungry monster that it is piti less, craving lor its bu'tian prey. "It wail one Wednesday in Augiift. The hotels were lull. Fish was in request, aa much as I could bring. Price didn't mat ter. I'lnaaure-seekeiM bleed fteely. I a as paid well for what could Iks charged for aa (hey liked. I had f-xiud that tbe nearer 'he rapids I got Ihe finer see mel what. I caught, and the nunc freely the bait was taken. I bad so often gone where most were to-j timid lo venture that I had come lo believe I could skim any wlieie. "Even now I think, had my paddle been sound, I should have come off sale. Well, that morning I waa out al suniise, and prelly successful I was. I steadied my course, letting ihe canoe drift lit lie by lit lie toward the rapids that trothed and raved some miles below. I felt Bt any moment I could shoot it out of the 81 length of the corieut iuto the smoother waters by the shore. "I got fully employed with my lines, for as I ghded.down sdeam, my lake was rapid and Hint of Ihe finest, bo eaer was I that I failed to pay thai atteut ion to the oi ill of my canoe which was so needful. "It was with a start al last 1 felt I was far loo much in the full deep current of Ibe river, ai.a thai lis atreug h would need my ul most (lions to escape from its gtasu. For the tii st time I fell teal diead, for the boiling and hiss of the seething wateig could almost be iieaitl below me. I plied the paddles strongly, and for a while 1 had hopes of safely, iliougu I had never know n the need of the exertions I was unw using Indus myseir out of the mighty lorce ol the Hood that sped ouwaiUlo ilsleaiful fall. "Inch by inch I fought my way upstream and toward the shore wlieie I was to seil my morning's takings. Eveiy inch was won by a straiu thai made the peispiialiou stait Irotn eveiy poie. Il was tor life I .ought, for dear life. It was death that 1 pulled against and such a death! lor u wan an if a cui tain was suddenly anhdiawu to show me all the danger I had mo long been I uniting unconsciously. It Hashed into my thought how I had played in lite veiy jaws of destiucllou thai u..w seemed lo hunger for me. "As I toiled frantically against ihe rush ing wateis, (hey were living things whose c'utch sought lo drag me with I hem to share their awful doom. Iliad groat: so used to the roar of the cataract (as 1 now recollected, so near !) that my thoughts had ceased to be Cognizant of it ; now it almost stunned me. "I talk siagily, don't I? I tell you, stranger, if you want to wake up your fail 1 cy really well, just uy an hour's puil against Niagara, with the feeling I hat pel haps late is against you. You'll be l.r f loin cmi! and commonplace in thought or speech, if uu think or utter any Hung. "MiuuUs thai bail seemed hours bad passed, and still I was alinggling Irani i cally, streaming with my lienzi. d exer ions. I I ad won some way. 1 bad edged some distance front ihj central tush of Ihe liver, and safety would be found in the slower water that skilled the bank, could I but reach them. I bent si ill more madly to the effott. lu a moment 1 had losl my hold on exist ence and was lushing, helpless and hoi-le. to tbe dreadlul fale I hail been lighting gainst. One of my paod lea, overall a inert, had broken, and, al ihe ineicy of Ihe nighty thaid. I was speeding eveiy minute more swiftly to what I knew so well what I saw as plainly with my mind a rye as I had thousands of timet, seen tl wilh my liv ing sight. How I saw all we are looking down on I I XT... : ., . . 1 . ioi m aigoi, rut a sound, we are seeing and heating, but was in that mo ment heaid and seen by me mote vividly than now. I was literally bewildered witu the roar I now hear so calmly. "I shiieked aloud in my agony as I clasped my us. U ss hands over my sight, vainly, to shut out the smooMi slide of the inland sea, as I saw it flashing back the morning sun as it leapt into Ibe misty gulf into whose thunder it shot. "A lew moments bote me down to the rapids. A few minutes, and I was through them saf. ly. How I eseaed wietk among I hem puzzles me. I was too para lyzed wilb boiror lo use my own paddle, or in auy way steer my light craft through the foaming curiettlsoti ah ten it tossed. Its lightness must have saved it. Had it been a heavier built boit it would have been dashed u slued a score of times be fure we reached siniaiih water. As it was, it danced along, frolicking, as it seemed to me, with a ghastly defiance of the destiny to which it so surely Inn tied. Out of the hissing ! out of the frothing foam! We were on the calm. e were on l he calm, maientic mass of water the sea tide, you m ght surely call it, that was to hurl itself and me lo annus. "How oddly the mind acts in such mo ments of honor! Would you believe it ? a tradition of Niagara actually occuned to me as I tiashod along. It was an Indian lege tni. 1 rernembeied how an Indian squaw, long the favotite of a famous Chief, found a young maiden was to supplant her in her wigwam. I recollect 1 swear I saw it plainly as if imagination and reality were one she bore the best loved child she bad borne to its father from ber forest hots till all reached a canoe, Tbea tbe reason or bis being disguised as a girl 'bat dar. He bad been.t !! " "i-f "i' . town t.n ,,i 1 j ... w n" ' ' "d i Being out of money, bo ) ARB SLATES BESIDE." ; ciianiiiig uer ileal li song that rrcounted her wrong and her misery, and welcomed her coming escae fiotn it, til) tl ey shoi into eternity amid the hell of waters be low. Lven while this was for an Instant i flashing tl.mugli my bewildered biaiti I was entering the veiy heart of the thunder oi the fall. .Moments only separated me from my lelease Horn agony. But the In dian stoicism was foieigu In me; I could h:tve yelled aloud in the tenor that jar seswd me. "I dared not await seated the awful last moment that whs so near. I f .4 n. l r ... , . . ; laie - 1 lllt'llf-fl I at.wl tH. I ha ked straight ahead lo whete f he enrving wateis were to launch me to peace eternal. The ll.iod bad scaicely a tipple on i'a sin face. "Was it real? Within a few yards of Ihe awful Itiink the canoe had sin by a Hat speck of rock that off thJ Kllotest.r Goal Inland lay bliiless on Ihe veiy edge of the abyss. With a hardly conscious efToit in pans ing I had spuing to ils slij.pe.y surface. That moment bad saved me f.om instant annihilation The canoe w as gone. I was standing as yet, al:ve, while, almost wash ing my vmy feet, the sea of water hurried on ..u on either side of me, and disap peated. "I gard a ciy of blessing for deliver ance. Deli ve. a-icc ? Was it deliveiance For how long? I yet btrufhed, but who would, who could, save nie front the rush ing ll aai that tote past me, from the thiiii-d.-iing catatact, that fell almost within tench of my touch? O.i. heaven ! W hat bad I Saved life for? For a prolonging agony? For such misery as must end in stai vat ion, madness, suicide? Con hi my mind long bear lite st:aiii now upon it ? II, .w could it ? "Let your eye skill the loiiudiu edge of this Heal est fall. You can see th'e verv lock I was on. It hroks but yaids ftoni the larger space of Go.it Islauu', but those yards wete as bad as miles. 1'hey were an impast-able gulf between me atid the stretch of rock that seems so near. "What weie my chances of escape? Dated I hope theie wete any? I was1 a! mitst too wild xiih terror lo think at all. Yet. ihe train setiued leveled with life in such moments. "Should I lie starved? Should I slide .1 . .... I :.. I r . . ....... mo iiisuing line itoin cold and ex haustion? Would sheer, unbeatable ter ror Hiiig me to death fiom my utter inabil ity toenduie Ihe honor that possessed me? What could lie done for m ? Was res nn ...... 1 1 . 1 .. .1 ......i.J . . . n i".-ni..ic . viuni a ooai te iioaled i it any way down tj me? Eveii if it could be guided lo so small a poiut, could 1 dale to trust tin sell to it 7 "Would any tope be strong enough lo near me loice thai the mighty fl.HKl would require n io eiiriuie and ovei come ? "An inst int's lelaxation of the strain on the nijw that might hold it till it lowed it toshoie, and I. if not it, would be whete my own canoe had gone. "Would human strength, could human endeavor, snatch me f i oin the doom that had so neatly a li early ingulfed me? "All these thoughts weie in my brain in that instant, even while the veiy powet lo think seemed frozen in me. "How could 1 dare lo see? I shrieked to be senseless. "Ob, for madness, il mad ness would rid me of the terror in niv brain, in my very blood, that was, as it seemed, my I iles tbal so p.mess:d n.e. that existence had room for uotbing but unutterable hor ror ! ...... - I looked to. this veiy rock on which we stand. Here, on this erot, 1 saw a throng of excited SHCIatot8. I naa seen ; and who could see a human being in such peril and not faintly share the terror thai I fell ? "I could bear the calls or men to me to nave bean. I could natch cries lo me that I should be saved I could s.-e women wild with pity. Ah, what could liietr pity do for ine? Yet lhal, H-il.aps, was the sav ing of my life. Anything auyihi.ig to make me forget th- evei -rush ing wateis that unceasingly tlashid by n.y fevt and disappeared. ".Men weie cmwding the liver bank. They were consulting. I could see, excited ly, oebaliug what should be done. Ihore is a iiish of some from the crowd. Time passes ages to me, in my agony. At last a boat comes. Is. i ire on Hie khouldets of boatmen at a iuii. 1 hey lay tl at the water's edge. Delay ! delay ! Oh. God ! Oh, God! Ihete is a iiish of others with a coil of cabl-, not lope; iope they knew would be murder. I them boring ,R boat's sides passing the cable il.iough knotting u nailing if. avctlteiy. "Ibe Iswi is lowed along the still side water far np stteaui. The crowd follow it. What wi.l ibey do? G.al ! what will ihey o v itai sane taring ill veiituie Ins lite 13 save mine? Delay! ri-lay ! Thev have stopped. Talk ! chatter ! w:ll they' never aci ? Oh, dear God. help him bless linn ! A canoe pul. a out from shore, with the Ixiat in low. The canoe, at well as the boat, has a cable seemed lo it, by which those ou the bank regulate its drift down slieam. How slioiigly it struggles up and out into the full fi.aid ! Botn cables are seemed round lieca and paid oul by num bers. "Fighting upand across the tide, drifted down it as Ihe cables sl..ck their length 1 watch with what, hungering eyes! The canoe steals it cb I y inch to where it and I lie boat it holdsaie in a line with my feet. The set of some cut tent dufted me lo Ihe rock I stand on. Tbe boat is detached, stiaitiing on the cable, guided, too, by a rope from the neatly stationary canoe. Tbe cunent sets it towaid me. It is brought up by the strain of cable ashore. Still it drifts ueai er and nearer. Theie aie moment i, in life that swallow up all the i est of existence in our memo lies. They haunt us awake. We dieam them alwaya. If I should Iks a Methuselah wilh ceti to i tea of breath it seems lo me one thought would always absorb all oth ets, as Aaron's snake devoured Pbaroab's magicians' serpen U. "I renu mber nothing more but that. I awoke out of a di earn of bell m bed al For syth's. 1 was told I had ben in a death agony with a brant Tever. What mattered that? I was out of the torment of Ihe damned. I felt the bieascdnesa of peace, of safety, of Hts wrung from deith. They dared not tell me It it was real- thai al i am now tellrnj; you had been aw iui resiiitv-e-iDsr i una dared as tba boat J dftAird alMcast of is to nsk a lomg lutu U 1 ... . , ...... . " . . . : hours of bis absence, n is the worst pos sible ecottomy to deprive tbe family of a Mnre 90 anJ Procured And yet there are those wl IO Rnv thor ft. A. 8I.BO and that, on the very edge and utter blink 1 of petdition. the streng h of scores ashore bad overpoweted the rushing fi.ad -that ; amid the shouts and teara and sobs, not of women only, but of bearded, iron nerved : An I I. J 1... a a .1 ' wn i. neo fttftt-it!; trom the j turn? ai.ti .H.rne to enjoy brain fver TeIy ' a. 11.. I. .....I . J . .. i "Do you think I have told -von ft tie or a h. lieving truth the bare fact ? I know it lM..l-i.,.H,l. 1 . ff 1 - ... i mvs.ir Wei. a i ... v never forget it : it'a nart of ine aljc.e. " -....,. .- . ... num. l ... . . - e . ' 'OoI save any ,Mie fiYim ever trying, in fact or fancy, such an exerime:it as mine! "Now yon know a by I don't see any thimr of beauty in Niagara. 1,'leave that to be discovered by those who never came so near to being a real part of it aa I did." COLD SX ATS. SOME ACCOCXT OF SKVKKE WIJVTEKS IN EC ItOI'K INTERESTING DATA Or FIFTEEN CKSTURIE8. What pisses in England and Continent al Kuroie for "a aeveie winter' would be legarded in the Noil hern States and Cana da aa a compaiatively mild and ..pet. sea son. "Foi'y six degrees of frost," as Ihe London paiei a shivering ly put it wben le calling the hard winter of I860, lose much of their tmiMtitaiicn when translated into our equivalent of fourteen below zo," and since the invent ion of Mie thermome ter il is d-mbi ful if the nietcuiy has gone down in England below 20 degtees. Memo table severe wiiiieis theie have been in Eutiqie, not a few of winch have had Ihetr nnpoi lance as well aa their interest lu bis tMy. In 401 the Black S.?a is said to have beu fiozeu over Tor twenty days, and be tween October, 70:, and Fehiuaiy. 764, such a ttost pievatied at Constantinople that the seas aie sp .ken of as fiozeu for a hundred miles fiom shoie. It is reitam Hiat two centuries before, in 509, Zibergati, King of the Huns, cros sed .be Danube on the ice, and milling the tn sips of Justinian spiead over Thrace to the very walls of Constantinople, thia be ing the first inclusion of the Bulgaiiaus w ho ai e now to cbixise a pi ince ami regain (heir autonomy. In 1222 ice covered the Helleapoiiu In 1294 Ihe Catlegat was fro zen over; in 1321 the Baltic was passable to Havel, is for mi weeks; again lu 1402 it was frozen fiom Foiueiania to Deumaik, and Iweuty-lour wiuteis later us suilace would bear a rider liom Lubtck to the shoie of Piuasia. In HUD botsetneii rode f.oin Dcnmaik to Sweden, and in 1543 sledges riiawu by oxen '.raveled on Ihe sea ftoiu Kostock to Denmaik. In 16,iS Charles X. with bis army horse and ftait and Ins artillery trams and baioare. ciossed the Ltdle Belt fiom IloUtciii to iK iiiuaik, to lay seige lo Copenhagen. The Gentian chroui:les contain as many lecoida of seveie seasons. In 1433 il,e lare fowls of the air sought shelter in the towns of Germany; in 14(W and again iu 1544 wine meicjaiitt in Flanders cut their wines champagne fiappe with a ven geance ly champagne was si ill a thing Corked up and wired iu the boll Is of the Inline with hatchets and sold them iu lumps. In 15(5.1 the lazy Scheldt whs fiezon so haid that, it sustained the weight of loatled wagons ; again, iu 1594, it and Ihe Klnne weie fiozeu over. In the great odd or 1022 theZuyder Zee was ice bound, and in 1601 the winter brought the wolves into the si 1 eels of Vienna, wlieie they at tacked hoises, and even men. The cold seasons or modern England have been ni-wt catefully noted, with an abundance of tuteiesl ing details. On mid summer day, lGb, tl is said the frosts de stu.yed all the riuits r theearth ; iu 1076 7 after the peri. ad of forty one years that Ihe writer in the Hardener" Chronicle has been tig tiling oul there weie dteadfnl fnmts from .November to April, aud in 1407 all the small birds peiished. The Thames was frozen from London bridge to Graveseud from November 24. 1434, till Febtuaiy 10, 1433. and in 1515 after the long cycle of eighty years h ! been ful filled it was again crossed by vehicles lie tweeti L nub-! h and Westminster. In 1564 and 1607 Ihe liver waa the scene of boiitins and diversions, elaborately dea ciibcdoti later occasions bv writers whose passages are as lamiliarto English readers ol this day as the hi 01 tea of the great plague and great hie. Nmie Miakespeniean cotn meii'atots think that tiny have found in this unwonted sight of rite up n ice the s-.utce of Ibe lusouatioti f some of the Baid of Avon's images, and would use this as evidence lo settle the dale of Ibe com position of a play. I he winter of 1683-4 was terribly cold. "The finest trees and even the oaks split by the frost ; imml of the hollies weie kill ed ; ihe Tl allies was coveted with ice eleven niches thick, and neatlv all Ihe binls perished." "The frost," according to a citizen s diaty. began in the begin ning ol Deccnilter. The people kept trades on t'e Thani-saa in a fair till Febru ary 4, 1684. Alstut roily coaches daily pned on the Thames aa ou dry land. Bought this hcaik al a shop upon the ice , in the middle of the Thames." In the winter of 1709 there was a llnee noHnVha' j fiosl with heavy snow-, and iu 1716 a fair was held on the Thames and oxen wete I roasted whole npou the ice. "Coaches plied from Westminster to the Temple, and from other staiis to aud fro as iu the streets, so (hat it seemed to ma a 1$ to cbanalian triumph, or carnival 011 the wa ier, while tl was a seveie judgmeul ou the land." Again, in Ihe famous "hard winter" of 1740, there waa another frost fair on the Thame, which lasted for nine weeks, flar ing which period coaches plied regulaily 011 ihe frozen sui face ami the usual amuse ments, were enj yed. It was iu this win ter that the fain nia ice palace, with all itt furnilure of nature's crystal, was built On the ice at bt. Petersburg In 1766 there j aa a season 01 linense cold, lasting Irom Christmas day to the 22d of January, and leu years later Gilbert White, of Seiborne, recorded the only severe winter that he seems to have encountered in hia thirty eight years residence. January 7, "the snow was driving all the day," and on the 12th "a prodigious mas overwhelmed all tbe works of men, drifting over the tops of the gates and filling tbe hollow lanes, The company at Bath that wanted to at. lend the Queen's birthday were strangely inoomimKled." The cold was so peneirat ing that it occasioned ice iu warm cham ber. and in the day tbe wind was so keen that iieravna at ruKn.1 fcu.ttrit..,i.u.. ....l i scAreely endure tr face it. "Tamed by' Us season, skylarks MtUed in tbs sAreeto ' " u e v-'U". mtio lor Ttioiojy nun .win. very iiuauea 1 personal wauts, be frequently came into possessioo, by the sale of hoes, of more i ?i r-rr I'ktn . ,5 a 1 . . . postage per year. In advance. NUMBER 50. ot invm because t hey saw tbe ground wm bat." "The thrushes and blackbirds were mostly deatioyed, and the partridges were so thinned that few remained to bieed Ihe following year '' J four of Gilbert Whites o-wn paiishonera snlTeied from fuavt b fe and, be adds, "the frost killed all tbe tira and most of the ivy, and in many placet stripped Ihe hollies of all the leaves." V . . . . ,i... : - - ...... ...id niiiiuui tirmi ipt ion oi m severe W,"Tr , C ",,Hry P"riHh B""lnd, the i rural reaoer ran anrr tt. .n . . eaceuito .....t w.mer 1 litre noes not di iter materially from " "Jr!,Ke winter iu our Northern Stales. In 1789 a cold wave swept all over Europe aud fiom November to January peot.hs crossed the Thames at the coatom bouse on the Ice. Again, from Chri.i.. - ... . . e " 1794. tn P.li. ..... .. 14 .n. T- . penenced a season of intense cold, only intermitted for one day, January 23, Ie. emlver, KOfi. ,Uo remarkably e.l ; oti Chriairnaadav the thermometer in L.n..iot, marke. 16 degrees In-low s-r, the greal.i co'd re2is'er-.l np to that ttnta. On the 13. 1. of January. 110. th- q iicksil ver waa f-o,...,, sol t.l at Misww. The winter of 1812 dur ing which Xapoleon'a armv struggled horn from nussl j. learine 4.V) POO de,l men tn mark the track il bad taken, was a very cold tins. "This la pleasanter than Moae.iw," said the emperor, rubbing his Intnl. over a fira In the palace, ha had regalne after posting B.-rosB Europe; tbe soldiers he bad J.-f-hind were liferally fr..sen arifT ,-jr,.iH, and score. , ,,eT Uv nr sat around their bivouac fiees. In Tsl4 England en.tnred a winter t.t . xceptional severitv. A writer In a Tendon paper wrn.e a few .lava ago ihat - - . . j , -. t,,,,,, x.ugiaurj ex- u r waiae.t on the Thames from 'hamea from fa ami I t -k. ont ml -,r S- !"'. lie Al.'Jl Oy atiowd.i.I -r'r".' roan tn 1, 0.. inn hrnlge and ! portrieve or Tavtat.wk set ... ..a. 11 01 nmin at the 10 tarter Tinry-tmn miles awav, and as tb negts'er retMirds. waaatoped by .. rr iT.a-ee.ung iwei,tTone miles an. I Impria moil in a little bamtet for twenty-six rtnvs wlthnnf enmmnnieaf ion from the outer world. Soldiers marching from town to town were frozen to death on the road Tha Mie drifte.1 in the streets lo such a height that all tha nht e. . bv the middle of .tanuarv L-m..,tl Bridge wa"a hlneked. bnt that mid- no d ifT-renee, for the Thames was eompletely froien over a few dav later, when a frost fair was nnened 011 the river and a hulWk roasted whole. F.r many ravs there were no mails, though the post office pnt r.irih all its powers to compel overseers and parochial authorities to clear the highway, and sent agents down Into the country tn dig roa.ls. along which toiled mail roaches drawn by ten horses. X,i Coal con'd get to London, anil when the house holders' snpnly of fuel gave out theie was notbine for him but to shiver and wait, it wa difficult even to reach the hunher'a shnn. where there were neither fowl nor vegetables tnhehad. The children had to Ih sep warm and an.tised within .hairs, when all dav lonw tl.e lamp were lit, for the snowdrift shrouded the pane. The water, pipes were all frozen a:,. I people bad lo melt snow in pails within the lenders. The Sol way was fiozei, over for the first time with, in the memory of living men, ant the crews of coasters ami fih-ng boats starved at-.l perished of er?tl at sea, being nnthle from the accumulations of ice to make port. In the Scandinavian peninsulas the winter of was M most severe one :n various pans ol Norway on Hie 21 of January the mer cury froze Riid persona exposed to Mie ai mosphein losl their "breath." Five years and a day leter Hie thermometer in London registered 8 degrees; the rai'ronds rul livers were blocked, coal rose to an enor mous price and Ihe metropolis was threaten ed wilh darkness from the inability of the. gas companies to prtvure a fresh supply. The next winter, whet. Ihe allied forces were shivering in the Crimea, was to the full aever. On the 2-li of Jannarv. 155, Hie lakea were frozen over; on the 22uJ of February fires were made on the Si-rtieiiliae in Hyde Park, and in Hie lens in Lincoln ahlre waa established a traffic on the ice thirly-fi ve miies long. The spring was late, and there wa. cold weather till the 26th of"' Jnne. In IKtiO England experienced proba- bly her coldest weather. Fnun lh 2.1d to the 30:h of Der-erolier the cold waa intense. At Torquay the mercury went down tn twenty degrees below zero. In Hyde Park l was at IT degrees, and a letter lo the Ttmes recorded that a borse bad laen Been "with icicles at hi nose three inches in - length and aa thick a threefingera," a Sght ' by tin mean uncommon In L-iwer Itaoad. The Thatnee wa partially frozen in it. tt.laj reaches, and from Teddengtpu JyK-k f 4i most remote source was covered wits, Jce from six to ten or even twelve inches rn ' intcRnesa. Skating parties were arnmged -. for journeys from Oxford to London And tiack, and Hie year ia question wilt always . lie rememliered among skaters aa he one in -which round heeled irons finaily superseded all tubers. On tbe 9'h of .fa'toiary, 18(71, . there were himflrea and grand displaya of . fireworks on the ice, ii. S. lames' and lb other parka. Jaenary. lSti7, waa another cold mouth, snow and Ice practically sus pending traffic: at IohIom for everal days, thnngli eople offered cahmeti fare tf fif'eeu and t--entT shillings a mi!e. It was on rba 15ih that the ice ir. Hi-gent'a Park gave war beneath some fire hundred skaters, of whom foriy-one were drowned. Still another cold season waa the winter of 1R70-71. dnrlng which th ir people nf Part and the illy, eqniped Repnbllcau levies of Uaiubetla suf- " fered so severely. Duels and Dctuxn jy France, Dnr ing the first French Re vol nit. hi, in 1793, dueling was very common. Mn abeau and Camilla Desmoulins both went out and met their foes. The eliqtient B.-unave had two duels. Dantnn wr. challenged bv the Duke D'Artois, but declined. Two days I after another loyalist asked bim if he would rather be kicked than slot like a dog, lo which Damon renlted as he waa tbe challenged party, be woulu chotwe tl a guillotine, which retoit be made good by causing tbe Royalist to be beheaded in a few days. Under tire second empi-e then weie many duels. The tiespar mm bad their full share. One editor was chal lenged for having stated thai the sub lieu tenants .in the army devoured loo many refreshments at social parties ; J be w hole set challenged him. The editor selected one and "pinked" him : his second dew ' 11,8 ",l"r wounded Into seriously; w.m, as hid journalist lay tu 11 is red, thej wii.de army .r Republican editors called on him, and formed a committee of com batants to-figbt for-bim. This was as late as 1859' and two years srter, in I860, the Dnc d' A timrric challeng ed the cousin f Ltniis. Napi'leon. Ptinee Prince "Plon Plon." He consulted Ibe Emperor, and Eugenie was so incensed that she exclaimed. "The gentlemen, who wants fight never asks Questions or lakes advice." and Louis Napoleon added, wit more keen than cousinly, a few days .ifree Tf ewe - K..li. 1. r 1 ' -. - - - -- . . . ii.-. 1. 11H.1H1 1 n m oouin stomacU be will bave swallowed it. . , LOTTEnr Invwstors Alwaya look ot foe tbeuumbea wu. . - mc" WIs first to senr it with a r. d lmtTrol, an'1 ,heu cnre " burn. This fortitttd.-. fnrfi.llw.e .f1. . and et i in he b od : m." tia.1 rnii: lis-Kl drfc jot "c nur . bis : and le pi thoi ictior bapi prea lio sij jw hnt trav.i cxt ! i.Ul'fo " Jo Vniic t rt al sf :tnd 6 C'lni !e!l t'ic .I d t fam: Pl M'dcr ( . In the at tbe iiu bec , Tbe er.tb w Apple, nnn in ; Of deal life ssi:s! E nu ll; r. nr icial dii ill r.s:!, . w i tical r, CIC!'. r.d litl sc. as r ur li n t f :r tic 1 .-jdiit r band wi .t if she istivo, r a. mid : i d vli.i f 011 tl:n ' Tha! e- of j (i 3. In 11 ti 1 e in fi forcrd be vill.ic i lirr. A '- This vrr Id she b? c: ncrsiit, : I. A pn rt rii.I it . .str:i,-s f !b..di.--t 1 I.R first c: D:c man:! a time, to it oin.il: pi: ii, v.-.is b:. v .t criiic To tiny a er Cox, J leiir., :.-s :Scei tn incd ! w i'.b t lie ho is now d COUti'.y, ', time, ."i d 1 evil j.ii it it'.? the j ft ' tHi-itic; tl.c 0 make t!: I of t! 0 11 " U!iy. Tlif St: 1 !.,!:. ?, JC lrctni.-'i-s ilncats cf ; bt'cn ni?..lo gli closely w ;ble to con t: ns wl;icl. ".! .Monti txl 1 C'licly ti t-r.rc('!y, in d, pave cor; i in most td by ii:a n:. low many do person iiil 1'iit vet iiicd by c.inntii: f!i Mi. Tc. r influence, a llin; niKcrs. us a boot ;' I then oiicitc r, f;om I.t-i in !is !n-t ou I lie fls in t lie v;ir attdibie to 1 i pa; t ii s li.ivo fat tii!y,e.l;. i k-icnis ninciii I fct;li.u- cist' tbe sounds tl; I- Tt rtl's f.s.n and prostr.-.te t and tei rm-. Io ni.'iin'.r ; i f.ble to b . . 1 1 i by b. . Ik K'li'dd. 'J ; cy t:ti;cr f:i-t.i ! kt slie is a:: i.sn t;it! Ki) . 1 1 Incident 0. -.-.j; y's parisl! th .u Vich ootij !u fie it:? in Die . v. 1 to have t!.e 1 cb, cr:!ia rp rie?, and '.lis c tlorily nut il in pnttinj ou'.of overcd tb.it the ro wrts ?;i a i; Jcomj miy c nir.l jon, vliereupoti I rent ilio vet p. cy, the eye of 1 said to bave been in similar 1 mei , 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers