The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, October 31, 1879, Image 1

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CAMBRIA FREEMAN
9I,,(I HYKKT FRIDAY BORXIJiG
so.rz, Pa., by H. A. McPike.
1. .1
l,r,J (irriihition
1,1 2 S
MATCH IT?
. r.,r. r:i'i in advance ll.r.0
' .'. ' i f r; t p" 1 w i' h n 3 mos. 1.7
jf n . p'd within 6 mos. -!.!
,f ii.it p . I vritlnu year.. 2.23
. r htnr outside the comity
',','nl i" ' will cbartr oj to
1 . . ; t; a' ve trmf be Ie
. i -, .. i'.- ' e m-tilt their
, .' .,v -? i" n-iv-uiee must not
.',.,; . r 'o. m" f Vooinir in those
.' . , . t i-.'jt :y t! n !t rstiil
,. :.,'.r I fore y a stop it. if
," t-'.t' -.!. whim 'I otli
a- sb, rt
:! riectlon Proclamation, j
, iiimcinifttAi.Tii.
: '..- jcr.eral A-vm-
. . , h .1 r.-c n--y; v . nia. j
.. i :-'.'' tt is . upo nrd iijirin j
I " .. i ; -1 t.
., ' C- --'i-s :. r- t.t I c i
, . .. .i j r ! t'.,-C..u,.tv '
. . . t I vitv!vt. :
:' S-ff-.r t 'ic i
-r.. ' I ' ti-ll will lie
. -r.. '-'l the
,:i ' l!M , a. n. is;o, j
!-.-' . f.-l!.w:nir 'he
" -h it: St:, te I
:" : I " ; :. i.f t!i
' . ' Hlab Sheriff ..f :
. ' . -. f I' -..r IL.iiso T i - j
i! '! J dry '..turn i-
::. i' : Si:ri ...,r nf the '
: .. .... -:-:. -.. -1 ; . . II .
1 .1 : . : n -: a rr J t.. :i-
:!: :i- li.ihitvs. t.j wit :
.... I .1 t:i.- t..w:i-
: ; H;j.. .! Ii.-u.-.-, ;
- -i . ! 'J.p t'.T7!l- i
! 1 : 1 - I - ? " J i .l'l I :. 11- j
..,,.-. , .r th town-
: lim;-. ?. il. in
e ': , - - I ..f t i.p r- wii
' i .-T A !': :i in
.. i liif ;. w.i-
-in h '!-( in t!l
:. : I ..t ihi- -r-
.. v : h ir,t U r.l.
a : ' : 1 . , 1. mi
. : irl
!!.; ! .if tin- t..n-
. ; ! ' :.' . il "i:n!l-" ;n ':t r-
. --i r ti,. h. r-
' .' t t -''!:v -1 holism t n
tr.... I -'t the t.wn
: :. :-- X-.. y. ni ,M
! !! -f t!i. Imt-
. !,..-. " :it t:.f 1: .!!'.. of
:::; 1 ( the t .v, :i-
li ii.- N... -2.
A j-: tin..-, in ;:ni
r.; .-i1 1 .if T i f..TTn-
' I hvti;.- :it
! .-f the ..r-':!-:
h'ir-t
r -vi !... ,ti - w:r. :
:.:; A .. rt .ti:aii. ill
-y.-- ! -f th:- !...r-
. tv .. t , -.'!;.. 1 1...U-. i n
r ; ... ! f.:' f..- !ii :i--.
i. t.i!i-e in th'. v:l-
: I iv : -i . ; .
T t. .i ! t if t.i-vr.-
. -hi, iu. i s .-.-in ii .u-c.
:. t c--it; !.-! "t tlie h-.r-
'.. ! IK t at t I:.- .- !:..!
:t -.t::; ...-e 1 - f'o h.-r-...
- ;. .. '. - : K i-t w ir.'..
: . r ! : f-r w.tr I. i :i
- '.v..r.i.
. .,.u, -o.l ..f t hi- tun,-
.. - ,. ...) i.. .n-.' in the
- ' ' .'.'i'.'f h'.r-
:, ' - h.. ! :' in
eh
it
. , :. . l
. .v
T. , W 11
t " r !.
.! : , l
'. I : . a
, -. i - ' -he
--. i-: - 1
, i ret:., i n
Auif-ist
the . I. '-:---
: i'l -aid
.! .-: f':t..'.vn
. ; :. - i r. i ri a: d
.f ! . I' the '-T-)
T -t WIT,!.
1 w:,, i. at the
.-e.l .,:' -:.e 1 r-
h- t'.'Tn-
1 -:.
',-.' V ' - .!
-vv. i :i -.. id tovvn-
: .l.-.-iph
- ! -.; ti.- tovt-ii-
Mm rli.'l
, .e 1 i. The l.or
. .........l j; .-i-e 1:1
- i , f the town -
I, .n.su...f h-
- 1 . :1 - P w:i.
- . !. n: n- .r
: 1 of ihe hor-
1- -'. !: in
..i i . r
i. 1 i ' t: .1 111 i'er
! . f -.:, b. r-
- 1: - - 1 le.f-i ir.
e I . ' ti e t-.wn-
- ' o ! l.o'l"? l"t
,,.l; .,
-. ; (i-t..n.
. -'','- hell c '-I
.-I ..' the town
I r-t .iivi-.'.u.
:' . 'il s.' ; ! t . vvn-
Ilia
.-rv...T'e -.-ears of
: i ...i oil-, shall
- n ..'' t e T ' ri if c 1
! ::: !!;'- S-.c- ore
'! a i ;. 1 -"I e : . -'
:. :.- si.. 1 1 ! hive '
.':.ci!.vl laolil h s )
i -t ..n
t w .Hon i ii
i..
. : '-r '; w ird. i.n
:-'.te' e, .i.i.ty
. ' :' r. tie f h
' - s .-', hi . hv
. I :: -i '. : u
- ,o , : , -.1 t 1 c
'. r who pi i
. . e : :,.-:. a..-
i i
In-'-, 1.
e. h.- ; r.v i-
- ' --
I : : ...( ,.rs ol
. .. pr. -:.'. . ,t ,'(
t ; .I-.-,-
-i r r.irl.' f
h'-'i.o'..
' ' ' : ::..-.r it.-u.-l 1 la.-'
- ' : - .:. .... , r .
:.- r , ..I .!," r"
' - ' -t-e. I tl . to
.-, . ..... "rr. p'
- .1., or
"... - . ii.- . r.--.'. .1 r i . . . r
' - .' v ,.; at :- iv
' ' : j: t'-ie s , ..v. o- irho - liall
- . h i oi,-,.! .on to any
i I a-,v .-'.-!,, v t shall
. r (,.r r.r,..-h-
- ' . : a ! 1 in - ' er-
.-i . r '. . I ', e .1 1 i
' ' r -:'iit to vn'fl at
; rr.-lit I I V. lc
', - , I . '.,. -- t he f 'ee-
i - -,i p. swear r i ftiitn
" - i-l,.i is Ri.true belore
- -1.
' '; ' ' '" ' ''Ilili.ljH
' ' ' l - v. : ' :! v :'
c ' l !..-!.. re .er dis-pi-tl-'"
- ii t t - : . r pro-.' in
i r. ' a..-.- , .,.! let.-. I f
s
1
' " 1 '-- ..CI:, in ii'i.h-
1 i -''. 1 i y be vit?4':it:d
r"stii-
K. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher.
YOLUME XIII.
: t!ie riirht .f .'iiSniac absolutely for a terra nf fonr
he .le'me.l t.) h:iv
.r. . i... j ..r i in: inr.. se oi voting no persnn shall
irnine.1 a reshlenee dy reason of
... , y reason oi nit nbsence.
while employe.! in tli.TerrfeP. either eivll or mill!
....... ..i mi,. .-l:lic. .r oi Hie 1 nite.l States
I r:r inuii -e:is. nor win e a sin. lent ol
or on
tion ol learnii,- n,,r while kept in a ( oor house or
otnnr iwyltim at puhlic expense, imr while confined
in pul.he prison.
my institu
fi r. if. I Mstriit rlei-tinn f.onrd 'hall consist of
.);.I''c and two In-i.e.-tors. win, vi,.,n i, , i,..i
:i nilila ily hv t h
cit..eiw Kii.h a! ..... .. ..... 1 1 i.
t he ri-rh t to vote I
an.! ra.-h ins-pert.
r.V:,e.ii,;'n.'' ::"Vn;'-::--
in -I l U-eilon noara ot anv n..r . is.ri.. ul...ll K o-
, "I I' " ' ' i V. I lie i
Ifte.l. an.i vaeaneies m ele-tion hoards filled ns
shell he provi..i hv hiw. Kleetion offleers shall
I'fivi!. it. ,1 irom arrest upon .iv. of eleetion
an.l while I'tiicuci in m.ikinn up an.! transmittini?
returns. ,,.,-..pt up ,i, warrant ol a curt ol re.-..rd or
iu l-e th.-re.it. ,.r ;ln eleetion li-aud. lor teh.nv or
.or var.ton hr.-.ieh ol the peaey. lneities thev'mav
e. inn exemption Iroin jury dutv.lurinu: thcir"terui"s
f. t er ICe.
Si:i-. If.. X.i t.er-..n shall he q ialilie.1 to s'erve as
an eleetion oftl.-er who shall Uol.l orphall within
two month? have held an oiflee. or appointment or
employment in or mi, 1. r the irovernmcnt ol the
I mted States or this State, or ol a.iv eitv or
-iinty. or any municipal hoard, com mission or
trust in liny city, save or.iv justices of the peace
find aldermen, notaries puM'.,- and p.-r-ons In ti.e
no:itia service of the state, nor shall anv election
oih.-er be ellnihle to any civil offlee t.) be filled at
an election nf which he shall serve, save onlv to
si'.-h siiiioniinaie inunieipal or local olh.-ers, helow
Ho- siraile ot city or count v ottieers, a" shall he des
iuiin i e.l I. . la -.v.
nd also to the l,,u..winsr Acts ot As.-euibl
in h.rce in thi- State, viz :
now
At r of ,t .Nr.liY :j"J. 187(3.
Si r. 5. At all elections hcrcaiter held un h-r the
' ' ' J nl this "..in.iionealth. the polls shall he
oj .i:e,l at eeven o"elo.-k, a. m., and close at seven
o c!-i. k. I. !.
ski-. 7. Whenever there shall he a vaennev in or.
n l o'ird on the niiiniiin of an election, saul
y siiall he tilled in coiilorml ty ith eis:ting
laws.
Ihef.ud Act of Assembly, entitle.) " An Act re- 1
hit, to the Klci-th-iis ol this 'oriiiuonealth '' I
p:.-.-e. .Inly -id. l-O.'.. provides as loilov. to it : !
I hat the Inspe-iors and .lu.lircs shall meet at the I
r. -ic tive , s appointed .,r holding the elej-
t'o:i in the district to which thev respectively he- I
h -r.ir, l-etore seven o'clock in the' morn hi? of 'i'ues- i
.hi..-. November .'. and each said inspector shall
appoint one clerk, who shall )c a qualified voter of
.-u:-h district. !
In case the person ho shall have received the
e.-.-nd highest number i f votes lor in-icetor shall i
ot .;tteud on the
tis.ui ho shall li.iv
ay ol an election, then the per- j
received the next highest nuro- :
cii T pi.
n.iiia -E a.sinspe-ior m ins place. And in case
nc per-. m wiio fiiaii i.-ive received the highest
n.u.il.-?r of vote? t'T inspector shall notntter..?. th 1
per-on riei-i.-d ju.iesiiall appoint an inspector in
hi - )i:ice. Ami in case the person elected polifo i
.-i:..ii not attend, th'n tli.j i n:-pector who haii have j
reeciverl the herhc-t ntimber ol votes shall appoint
a ladie in his phe and it any vacancy shait cm- j
tiiiue n ti-.e bo:ii-d for tne spa.-e of one hoar alter '
the time nved hy hi ,v for t !j e oj.en 1 n i . I theelec
t;. i,. the .jm.l.ti".! voters ..i the lo'-vi,-hip. v.ard. or .
.1 : -i r-.-t f...r wiiic'i such o:!icers bale 1-eeii ei-eted, .
sha 11 cieot s tne of their number to fi i i the vaeancv. j
-UK M
IB Of VOTiX'l.
Th,
t!ie t.
ol yot
fei.tion ot a!' i.o.-.iincd v--e--s is -l:i--cted to
.winir Act ot A - --til Sly rei-.ila i n:r the movie
:r in tins t 'ommonvve.ilth :
I II A No K IN T 11 K MOOK OF VOTIXtt.
rcLrii'ariii tlie mode . it votimrat all the
An A"t
!'":
wealtl
St:,-. !.
i i the several e.ointies of this t'ommun.
, approved Mar-h .V r!i. 1
if r-i"r..1 b-j STiatr rnI House of
;..!,): i-.-- .;-i of frunxvrn-
i. C'ld It 1 'V ,' ';.-..; t'fu-.'trri
nil A.
.7 I'
'O'-it:- ;' Tiiat the qualified vo-
s,.-,-. r:. ' -..'. -i r i o s . .r ( -,. mi 'ion we ilth.
ri'-r.i!. t vvn-hi:.. I. iriciirh, or special elec-
tl
t;i,n-. ar-' lorci-v iicr.-.: : i er a u iiori7e.l a nd r.-,,i! i red
to o:e l.v t:..!v"t- p:-.i:'ed or vTnttcu. (,.r partly
priiit.-d '-ii.1 t irt'y wr:i.-ri. severally el...-ine.l a
t i:!ovv : ( ne ticl.-et - :: a 1 1 em I .race t'-e t!:mi.. ot
a ! 1 .1 'ldes ( t ',i:i.-i. t i I ." v. i. -d for. a nd he la belled
,.nt-iie --.In li- i..r;. " : r.ck.-i shall embrace the
1. mes ol ail State n'Ti.-er v-, ted for ? Oil te labelled
i
"S-a i ,-" : one t o-k'-t shall ee Oraee t he na mes of all i
'.J in.-v-oifn-.-r- vot.-d for. and be labelled "('mm- 1
tv" : . tie ticket shall em! race tte names oj all i
T"Wi:.-h,.i otfici r- vote. for. h nd rielah.-! led "Town- ;
.-hip": i. ii' ii'-lvet st.a il einhriice thenameiof all j
p;,,",..wh f.,.i.rj voted tor and t be labelled "l!or-o'l-ih"
an. e .eh ci.i- J shall be -lepositeil in a sop- !
ar. t.- t i.ilot box. !
'iivr.s iin l'T my hand, af my office in Lbena- '
1-irir. this sixth day oi t K-tohcr. in the year of our '
I., .p 1 one : hon sand e: rht hundred and --eventy-nine.
:.'.d the in. let nd.-ii.-e o! the I'nltc.l Suites of
America the one hundred and third. I
.JOHN UYAX. Si.oiitT. '
Sh-Titi's ( iTice, r.t.en.-hi.rs. ( lot. 6. 17'.. !
OilKl'M'F S SAI.P.
KJ writ of Mir", r-,nJ. f-.Ve.
( ': ;,! a n ' 'ourt :i rid 'oiirt
.. :i:t ri i con i: r v and to me d
e-To, to pn'.'li -ale. at th'
-By virtu-''
1.. issued out
f t 'iimmon r
f ct.-d. there
Cimr' llo-isc
et: t.iii . on ..-.'-. ilnj.
jsembft- J", fs.-.i. at -.
1'. M . , tlie l.il.ovv iii re.ii e.--'.atc. w-.L :
All the riirht. title ar.d interest ol Isaac Iv
Wi.U-ita Lute. ol. in and t.) a pic e or k
1 t :l,l .- i tn i le 1 ill Sil-.,:: -''.Hill 1 t- v t.-h l p. a liitiri.l
coi.ntv. l'.-iiii' i. adputiin-j; lands ot John (.ar.lner,
Ail nil l.r.l iv. r.t.-r t i liinan. and William i:.r
Mc.n. e-uit un inn loo r- s-. more or lc-s. .-hout .!
in-r... ot whi.-h ar.- c!i.ir-".l. h, '.v iii's th' ,-..-. .n erected
a or-.'-und -i-halt st. .rv pi ink bo-iSL-and Irimesta-!.;-.
,k..v in the ij.-c'U'a n 'v ol Win. Late, 'taken
in event!, u and to' be sold at the suit nf .1. T.
li., -kii'.'.i-- and mi Mil Ann. his wife, in ri.'lit of
i , S i ra a A nn.
i Kii.Ms ... S vt.t:. Oiie-thir.l of the piirlm-e
Tiiom v to be :i d when the property is knocked
.l .-.in" and the renia ini t.a two third-- before thecon-
l:r-n 1'ion ot tiie ,1 1. .luTIN KY.lN. Sheriff.
t-iierit.'s Ori'.ce. K'-.-m bur":. et. -J-i. 1S7'..
Al.7,
"DITOi;-- N' TICF. In the ( ourt
ommoTi I'leas ol I'ambria cuiii'y.-l;'. th
mi. i f r "f t he a.-eounr oi l iifimas r.-r. e.ii'tui
Jo-cph i 1 1 :";. r. eon firmed June . 1 79 :
And now. June 9. liT'.'. (continued Sept. 179.)
en m, lion of I. A. Shoemaker. Ks.p, f. L. lick
intd Auditor to report dist riimi ion.
Hy the Court.
I w;
it f.r the ;.urp:.ss ne the aoove appoint
ment at the olh-- "I I . A . tioetn:l KT, l-.s... in me
b..roiiL'h ol libensburvr. on furmlai;. Sotvnber Uth.
! at -i o'clock. 1-. M . . at. which time and place
par':cs interled may alien. 1, or be debarred Irom
rulirnl in o-i said fund.
Oct. 17. OO'.-sit. CHAL. HH k, Auditor.
Vl'DITOIPS N( iTIl'o. In the mat
ter of the tirst and partial account ot John K.
s:,o l.s and i:iiz.'l.eth M (iuire. Administrators ot
Sli. haei 31. Ullire. ib-eea.-ed.
Ai d ..vv 1 let 7 is:'.., on motion of Johnston .t
.,!:, I.-.ts.. K. A. Shoeinak-r. V.q.. tip pointed
Ac! r to report distribution ol the iuoncs in the
hito'se' t '.e; sn'.i: ntants.
.-MUice is hereby tiven that I will attend, to the
pj.-.-s ,,f- the iibo.c appointment, at my ..fii.-e in
l ...en-l nri.' on ,lnJ.iu. the Uth -oemh.r. I.:.".
at 2
i-. m when and wnerc an painen iuiv..v..-v.s.
IT
-::t.J l A. S 111 KM A K I.K. Audit, r.
riilTHII'SMUH I.. In '. in
( 'ourt !
JL. of Common lle.is of Cambria county:
In the matter ot the nrsi ami unai . .. "
JonnLiovd. A.-s irnee o: Theodore and Kll-n L like-
An! r.n 7th toher. ;s7'., coniirmed abso-p.ieH-'ar
l i:. Y Kerr. K .p. .q-i oii.ted An l.tor to
d.-triimte. Kro-.n the ive.-oid. Hy the C ourt.
vi.,e js l.erc'iv a:vcn that I will sit at my ofHce
in' i -'.on-huut. (''.uiibria county. I'a.. on i.es-M;.
-n'.rr Jo" ' at 2 oVIo.'k. I-. M.. to per'orm
fv .".it-es of a:l appointn-ert. v hen and where
all i.'.-ties interested can attend il thev s.-c proper.
Oct. -j; l;s.-"t. L. r. KLKK. Au l.tor.
IGXI.l
rehys-ivct
XOTl'' P. Notice
iltllV. C !
o!'r..vie I
i that liavi-l M. l'r:n-.'l
ade an "as-
!. ' ii nil . :iml .1
fi: u I. in '-I, t o ! : t-e
....... ii-s w-f,-. have m
, st ite and et'.eets ol trio '. .J oa
,, :hci iin.l. r.-iirr.i d 'it ' he benefit
v.d M. IT U.! to tliii
ot cr-tit..rs. All p-rs-
.pa i'l-f.-'T.-.I TO tue ::.! i 'a-
vbl .M. Innl
w il therefore make payment, in
.i,.r ,t,i.',iiv,tiiiiit 'i-!!'b;7" '
Ml
llSt 111 m W! Il prese-.K I "... J
- bent .eate.l tT i
i.r t '...rnfiit .
HKNKV W A1.Tr.KS.
i i r
j .:.-'"t.
A -si'i:ee
liavid M. i rinirie.
XT (ffil
V
IS iii-rt'liV e;vn; in;;', in.-iiiv
, . I . . . . 1..-. I. ,-Lri
,nl Sn-v! acconrf I-. . .- n ' .-m : rvei . -
... t.'.vi.l Hio-koark th- h.jnetit of
red-
v. -s ..en h.-d in the ofhee ol
I'r.ithono
t , rv'o! Cur,! n.i eour.-y.
I be o--es-':eed to
the Court ot c or.mion i :
f raid eon ity. f.,rcon-
hi- . Hi' n. on ti-,.- fir t
. ml iv of I'eei-inii'T r.exi.
C. K
n !''i.V.M.hI.. Troth, notary.
Tr th.'t: itary'
: Otfi. c, Kben?'"irif. Oct. 1 , ls7..-3t.
otk'i:
and i n.-1 :
,.- T-! ',l
h . . 1 i'l t i ;
s hi it bv u'iven that the Crst I
ce. unt . i'.b.t.n W.irn--r. A - . n. e
r p.- ll.e bec.-til .-! cr -di'e -'. fias I
o-ice the l'r. tiienot iry o- Cam- j
will b i-rcs-tite 1 tu the Court of ,
I ' Ml, tllOU I '!'-;; S
tin., lirst Mm 'hi
il raid county, lor ciiiiiiiiunviviu.
.- of fh- 'trib. l- rext.
r. t- o-n iNh .1. I'ro-.noiTio-. - .
IV
thorot iry's oilice, Kbcn-burtr. Oct. 14. 179.-St.
s
iTHAY STKKPv. Can.e to the prem-
ti,.. mo. -nb.-r. in Aiiejr.eny uiwiimi'v.
oi; the '-'"th ! Sej t-l.it er. a red steer.
lie sii"
n In- hack, and sapji. -e.l i"
voir ol
.1. T he o-.vn. r I- re.p.ies;e.i
ior .. :i'.l. pio-. s pro)., riy. nay cnarif.-. nn.i
nv sway : otherwise he w 'ill J '!':;;' :'.'ll 0
t::k
. I .. .u ... fuel S
W . ... I IV.
Kui-k's Mill,
Alie.'viieny iwp., o, c,
1.1 Stops, : set f rt'ilden
Tolisfiie Keeds. ft ( -taves. a
,i,e sm.li J. W a I nut ase.
,irn f. t I X vears. ! I
and II ''. o-ilv T'".
.,. . r :,,id llo-.k. on
N- -i .ip-r sct.t fr e
TV. hi.l; to.), .
N'" 7 Octavo 1'ianos. i.n., l
UH 7S. I.at "f lilust.-ate.l I
Address U.VN'L k . llliAT-
j.
;.lverthers:,1sir;,G.P.Rowell&Co.'s
l r Ivo.rt .lo tl'Pl.CV. PfStirO".
- " N V ' ',.. i.' on th- exa -t eo t of any fro.seJ
l u" of 1.VKK I'1SINJ tn American Newspapers.
of a :
of the I
leas of i
vv i ; 1 be 1
in Kh
'ci ek. j
'to and '
reel of
SELLERS'
coich
STRIP !
;4U YEARS BEFORE THE PUBLIC.
PronotiiKed by all tube the mos-t pleas- i
ant anti KFFirAnovs remerly now in use
; for tlie t UTtE oi-- coi chs, coi.ds, crtour,
j hnarsiencss;, tickling sensation of the throat,
j whoojiing cough, otc. Over a million bot-
I TLKS SOLD WITHIN THE LAST FEW TEARS.
' It gives reiicf wherever used, and has the
I power to impart Win-fit that cannot he had
: from Hit-cough inixtun-s now in use. Sold
i hy all Druggists at 2." cents per bottle.
SELLERS' LIVER PILLS are also high
ly recommended for outing liver complaint,
constipation, sick-headaches, fever and ague,
and all diseases of the stomach and liver.
.Sold by all Druggists at 2.1 cents per box.
It. ;. Scflers Co., Vittsbiirff, Ta.
October '24, lS79.-ly.
Jv.li; vvi,-
i Diseases, like thieves, attack the weak. Fortify
I your organization wit Ii the Hitters, and it will re
sist and ha til - a like the virus ol epidemics and the
cha i-ires ot temporal 'ire. which .1 .sor-ler the consti
tutio.is o! the leeble. There is vitality in it. It is
a I'lire veiietai'lti si iinulint. a rare ait.-rative and
atiti-h;!ious medicine, and lias not
h ir-i-iui eie. '
m-nt iiiiii.iiL' all its iiuiredicnts.
I'm- sale i v ail I iriiiiirists and respectable Deal
era generally. lo-17.-ly.
COLLIHS, JOHHSTOH & Co
Ebensburg, Penn'a.
MONEY RECEIVED ON DEPOSIT
1 A Y A 11 l.F. it X l K!l A I.
INTEREST ALLOWED 0 TIME DEPOSITS.
MONEY LOANED. COLLECTIONS MADE.
AND A GENERAL
BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED. '
Spccialat tent Ion paid to business of cor
responcients. A.W. Hi t K,
N'ov.lil. is75.-tf. Cashier.
ixonroiitTEn is itt.
STRICTLY ON MUTUAL PLAN.
PROTECTION MUTUAL
HRHCECOfilP'HY
OF EBENSBURC, PA.
Frssina Sstssccw inferos - $123,C53.
Only Five Assessments in 2 Years.
NO STFAM MILLS TAKEN.
GOOD FARM PROPERTIES
ESPECIALL 1' DESIRED.
GEO. M. READE, PresMent.
T. 1J J)fC, Scrrffart.
F.bensbura:, .Irn. 31, 1S7'. -ly.
Removed to Bank Building
Next Poor to FreHhotT's Mew More.
CARL RIVINIUS,
TJpontiPO 1 WQtPhrilQVCP STIfl
fir,
1 IQUUuUi M UlijUmUfiUl UUU UU
EBEMS3URC, PA.,
HAS! alw.iv. on hand n la re e. varied and ele
t.,nt i.s'.rtment ot WAT! Ill lis. I'Lot'KS.
"''V", ,',:: ... i.iTTcr r.ncrs than
!:'... J'l- in tl. cniintv lPrllII tlH'lltie :
ntlirii. denier i r. the COlinfv.
---
ftTivthinK in h.s imewni ooweii iu pot uiuivi
before purcha.'ina-elsewhere.
-Prompt attention paid to repairlnirt locks,
Watches, .leivelry, Utr., and satislaction taaran
tee.1 In both work and price.
McNEVIN &b YEAGER,
H.vMPACti i.Klili OF
Tin Cepr anl SteeMron WARE,
. AND PEALKRS IV
COOKIW & H HATING STOVES,
RtStr.S, IT KNAf lS, Ac,
1 10S Eleventh ATenne, . Aitoona, Pa.
One Koor West of tper House.
KOOI INti AND SPOl'TING
I-PoMI-TLY ATTi:"!IEn TO.
RETAIKS FOR STOVES rOSTANTLT OS II AMI.
Altouna, Oct. 10, l-Cu.-tf.
I'lTTSliliKdll. PA.
Exclusively devotd to the practieni education of
yountr and middle nared men for active business
life. S h,..l always in session. Student.' can en
ter at anv time. Send tor circular.
;-l!.-S.n.l .T. f. SMITH, A. M., Principal.
a Mnt h and eipes !rurnieedto Ant
Ji i ( Outfit Iree. Shaw k. Co., ArrTA, Mirsi.
01? f" a
STETTlv
j p tELEBBATEO H
STOMACH
'HS IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH
EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1879.
TERILS OF BALLOOMXt.
BONALPPON AND GTIIMAVOOD'S FATAL VOY
AGE THE THRILLING HIDE OF LA MOUN
TAIN AND WISE OVER LAKE ONTARIO.
The loss of Prof. "Wise and his com
panion, George T. Burr, of 8t. Ixuis,
recalls the last pprial voyage of Prof.
Donaldson, a noted American balloonist.
Donaldson was originally a tight-rope
performer, and took up ballooning about
the year 1S70. P.etween that time and
Is7." he made. 130 successful ascensions.
ami had many hair-breadth escapes. His
1 -'Jl't li anil List ascension was made at
Chicago, on July loth, ls7.". The bal
loon was the P. T. Darn urn. Sdie car
ried S:$,m,"0 cubic feet of gas and SOU
pounds of sand. Mr. Grimwood, of the
Journal, and Mr. Maitland of the Pout,
were to go with Mr. Donaldson.
Mr. E. E. Wood, a brother reporter,
approached Mr. Grimwood a few mo
ments W-fore he entered the basket. "I
only care to go thisonce, just for the ex
perience," said Mr. Grimwood.
"The wind's unfavorable, but ier
haps an upjier current will make that all
right,1" Mr. AVood remarked.
Grim wood laughed. "It won't work,'
he said, with a shake of the head.1' They
ar trying to frighten the reporters by
saying that Donaldson exjwets to be
carried into Michigan, with the chances
of being gone two or three dajs. It
won't work."
"Well," replied Mr. Wood, "what's
the difference ? If you .should tly over
to Michigan the trip would be all the
more interesting, and you'd have a
chance to spread in the Journal.'''
"That's so," said Grimwood. "Come
to think of it I'd like to land in Michi
gan. Hut if I'm going so tar from home
I ought to have more money."
lie iHjrrowed, a ?10 bill from a Mr.
Adams, another rejorter, saying, "1
guess that'll do."
Mr Wood then gave Grimwood a field
glass to aid his observations while in
mid-air. A life-preserver was thrown
into the car. Grimwood said: "If I
should see that we're settling into the
lake. I'll pull off my boots, and slap on i
the life-preserver. I'm a good swimmer,
and can stand a good deal. 1
Tlie two reporters stepied into the
basket. Donaldson followed. ThebJ
loon was overburdened, and he said that
only one reporter could accompany him.
He called for a volunteer to remain le
hind. Neither reiMirter moved. Mait-
! land pulled a copper from his jiocket
and (lipped it in the air, and Grimwood
shouted "head." Maitland won. and
t t il l ii WOoi l was Tfl i iciiiiu V c ra w 1 1 n g 1 roi u i
the car when Mr. Donaldson's agent in- i mile. A terrible storm was surging ue
: terfered. "Gentlemen," said he, "the neath them, the trees waving and the
: lots must be jast in the usual wav. un- i waves dashing against theshore of Erie
I der niv direction." He wrote "First 1 i" an awfully teirestiioiis manner,
choice" and "Second choice' on slips of i Now, like a gurgle, came the subdued
paix-r, and shiM.k them in a police ollicer's
hat. The hat was held aloft, and the ,
otlicer drew the decisive slip. It was I
( 'rimwooil's death-warrant, lle.stej-.ped !
I back into the basket witli Donaldson
and Maitland desjiondeiitly withIrew.
The balloon rose gracefully to an al-
i titude of about 5.mhj feet and lloated
steadily to tlie northeast, out over Eake
Michigan, and in a direct ion that won id,
! if followed, take them near Grand
; Haven, Midi., 120 miles distant. Tliou
! sands of ujitunied eyes watched t he Bar
I num. as it moved steadily before the
! breeze at a rate of about fifteen miles an j
I hour. At tit, one hour and a half from
the time of starting, many eyes were j et
fastened ujion tlie balloon.
At 7. p. m. the Little Guide, a small
craft standing out some thirty miles
fn.m the Illinois sl.ore, sighted the bal
loon, it was ti
n occasionally Iiiiiiilc
its basket in the lake, only a mile and a
half away. The schooner headed for it ,
but before 't could overtake it there
seemed to be a sudden lightening of the
car, and the balloon shot upward to a
great height, and soon disaieared.
j This was the hist ever seen of the bal
! loon. That night a terrilie storm swept
i d.iwn ujx-n the lake. How the two men
j met their fate was never known ; but on
j the Pith of August the body of Grim
i wood was found on the east shore of
Eake Michigan, near Stony cieek. The
body was fully identified. It was com
jiletely clothed, excejit that the hat and
j boots were missing, and around the lxvly
j was a broken life-preserver. His watch,
I pajiers, letters, fruit-knife, a certificate
of metnlershii in the Chicago Public
Library, and the held glass that was so
kindly furnished by Mr. Wood were also
found njon his body.
Nothing has been heard of Donaldson,
nor have anv remains of the balloon
! been discovered. The finding of Grim-
wood's body, however, established the
fact that they lost their lives in the lake.
There was nothing to indicateas to how
death was met; whether the ball on
was struck by lightning anil collajised
in mid-air ; whet her the balloon struck
the water and was burst, leaving the
men to battle with the waves, only at ; gone but an overcoat and two blankets,
last to be drowned. Prom Donaldson's j which were saved to be used as a final
knowledge of gas, and his mode of man- j resort. A propeller. Young America,
aging his balloon, we might infer that lore down to their relief, but they scud
he found that he must trail upon the , ded some hundreds of feet before her
""lu' l,y v outwv.! iu v... uuv
few w-eeks before on Lake Ontario, and
that they prepared for the worst by
throwinuout all ballast, then their boots,
and to meet the last they put on their
life-jueservers. The basket, coming
down into the water, tilled, ami was
virtually at anchor. The hurricane and
furious w ind would soon tear the bal-
loon to Pieces, and tlie two men. left at
the mercy of the aiiirrv waves, must
i....n li.iv'eiii.iuiml.1 iv n iim I cru in. ,m
aifiin iia.r iiv.cuiii vj , I lu i .ion it si".r.
satery grave.
The great :erial voyage from the Mis
' sissiotii to the Atlatilie coast lierran on
j July 1, 1 "'.). It wa.s the longest trij
! ever made in a balloon. The advvnt
' urers were .John La Mountain, a noted
! n-ronant, O. A. f 'ager, John Wise and
Wm. Hyde, of the St. Louis iiJtti'ica.i.
Mr. Hyde described the trip in. a long
letter to his journal. lie said that they
left St. Louis at 0j p. m. The cargo
consisted of '.WJ roun.lsof sand, in l:ig-s;
allarge quantity of :old chickens, tongues.
jMitted meats, sandwiclies, etc.; nu
i merous dark-colored, loug-netkeil ves
sels, containing champagne, clierry,
j sparkling Catawba, claret, Madeira,
brandy and imrter ; a pit-;it:UU sujiplyot
overcoats, shawls, blankets and fur
gloves ; a couple or three carjtet-bags ;
a pail of iced lemonade and a bucket of
water ; a compass, barometer, thermo
meter and chart ; bundles of the prin
cipal St. Louis newspajers ; an express
package, directed to New York city ;
cards of candidates for clerkships in
several of the courts; tumblers, cups,
knives and other articles.
The balloon, the Atlantic, with its
fonr passengers, sailed off in a north
easterly direction, and in less than two
hours, at a height of aliouL one mile,
struck the current that the aeronauts
had declared was always Mowing in the
upjier regions from west to east. Tin;
discovery greatly elated Prof. Wise.
There broke from his lijisaliltle cough,
MAKES TREE, AND ALL ARK SLAVES BESIDE.
and saying, "Boys, let's sing," he stuck
up the stirring national anthem, "Hail
Columbia," in which all joined, through
the frigidity of the atmosphere put quite
a damper on patriotism and melody.
A little after midnight their were mo
mentary flashes of lightning on all sides
of tlie horizon. The milky way appear
ed like luminous phosphorescent clouds,
and heaven's jeweled tiara of stars
glistened Wlow and above. Night's
queenly brow shimmered with the mel
low light of the new-born crescent moon.
The mighty scroll of the cerulean-pillared
firmament glittered all ovt-r with
gorgeous heraldry.
Day broke at 3 o'clock, and dogs be
gan to bark. At 4.15 they sailed over
Fort Wayne, Ind., and could hear the
shouts of its inhabitants. At 5.15 they
described in the east what at lirst ai
peared to be a rellection of the sun on
the sky. One of the party asserted that
they were not many miles from a lake.
The noble air vessel was rushing along
at a brisk rate, dragging its shadow on
the ground encircled in fantastic colors.
There was no doubt that what had at
first seemed a brilliancy of the eastern
heavens was nothing less than an im
mense body of water. The aeronauts
concluded that it could only le Lake
Erie, and they were riitht, for, tracing
theshore and observing tlie little islands,
its contour corresponded almost precise
ly with the m;ip.
A sublimer scene now broke on hu
man view. Eake Erie has a surface of
7,soo square miles, and, although they
could not W-hold the whole of it, the
view lost none of its magnificence.
Groups of white clouds, like great puffs
from a steam pipe, floated languidly on
every side, unfolding their gauze-like
robes, and passing off in eddying cur
rents. There was a collection of houses
huddled together at the mouth of the
Mauruee. It was Toledo. There, in
that great bend, dotted with specks of
land, Peiry gained his victory in 113.
At 7:25 they swept over Sandusky,
and floated out on the bottom of the
lake. At i':3U they overtook a buffalo
steamer and were hailed with a shrill
5i0
feet 1
n,l i 1,1 .. eiiiH-nrlinn n-ill. tl ,o 1
high, and held a d in erb.it ion with the (
passengers. At . :of Wic i.ere otr .
Long- Point, Canada, the scene of the
great tight between Merrissey and lleen-
L 1 A I.-. 1 A - 1 i . . 4 V, . I
an
ro uiey iiau iiaveiseu e.u ,y toe
ent ire length of
of 250 i.iiles, accomplishing it in three ;
ii .nil-!. ,,, , , -, , - . , 1
At lo:.;o inev na.i iikcs j-.ru- aim vn
tario bith in
sight. The balloon hid
again auaiui-u
n altitude of nearly a
sounds ot the plashing ana neaitiong
cataract of Niagara.
At 11 o'clock,
i - . . 1
u"""h or...........
the lake .shore, still bound eastuardiy, '
the balloon brought them in sight of
lhifialo and Niagara falls, as also the
Welhind canal. They had rvached a
height of over a mile, the barometer
marking 23. U inches. At 12:3') they
were nearly between the fails and Buf
falo, inclining rather t- the left of the
latter. '1 he ianious talis were quite in-
significant. There was to the voyagers .
a descent 01 seenr.ii'-ly about two teet, ;
ami the water aj-jH-ared to be j-rfectly
motionless. The sju'iiy gave the whole j
an apiearan."e as ot ice, and there was :
nothing grand or sublime about it.
Passing the western terminus of the !
Erie canal, '.he balloon was borne di- j
rectly toward Lake Ontario, The bal- I
last was now nearly exhausted, and to 1
have determined on crossing the second !
lake would have been sheer recklessness
and hardihood. Here it was debated ;
whether it were better to land Messrs. ';
Gagerand Hyde ami in their stead take
in sufficient quantity of new ballast and ,
again stet r tor tlie Atlantic ocean. The
air ship was lowered, but was inmie- ;
dia'ely caught in the hurricane which'
was then raging, and earned very near
the tops of trees, which were bending
and swaying to and fro by the force of
the wind. Mr. La Mountain at oner
threw over the buckets and their con
tents, and the life this gave them kept
thein from being crushed in the woods.
Like a bullet they shot out into the
lake. The boat was got in readiness,
and the trooping winds sent them out
of sight of land. They were in a dreary
wis rf T i U M 1 ci i n ' rr m i i f uyli'T At
length they neared the dashing billows,
Ti?s.M.ri,,v.i,i,iorv w-.os ,'.,it. iivvuv
and thev rose like a feather. Por a
time the'sliip was buoved out of the way
,.f ,i..,.r,,- i..o vsbA i. iA.it iv .larted
,ie.vv-r,r n fbouo-b li.t on destruc-
tion. Carjiet-sacksr overcoats, provi-
lake. La Mountain finally cut awav the
t;! Hwi i-- T'liu i -tit ;
after the lir.intr. Everything nad now
,.o, ...... ....,.v, ... ......
i- inallv, attersliirinislung within inir-
ty feet of the dark waves for a distance
of not less than fifty miles, and perhaj'S
more, they were out of danger of drown
ing, but a new jeril was In-fore them.
The hurricane blew them into a dense
forest which skirt ed the lake, and threat-
i ened to tear them limb from limb. Mr.
' Gairer jla,i thrown out tue anchor, a
heavy iron one, with three hooks, eacn
an Inrh nml 9 llinrlcr in f 1 1 1 C W 1 1 SO
nu .in. i. i.ik. it ....... v. . ... ...
j rajtid was their Might that this stood out
iwi-1 elf lirr-iirlit l'l- .r" i Ito ! r
As the
lit (till ai i iii.;iiu i"in uj v
grajmel swung against, tne trees oi mou- ,
erate ize. the velocity of the balloon i
and its terrible strength would tear
them down and Ming them to the ground, j
One by one the books broke olf, and
they were again at the mercy of an all
sweeping wind. Messrs. La .Mountain
and Hyde held on to the valve rope, en
deavoring to discharge the gas, bnt
were quickly conijH'lled to release their
grasj, and cling to the concentrating
hoop to avoid being thrown out.
The balloon actually went through a
mile of forest, and. tearing down trees
and breaking branches, juirsip-d its course
dashing the party in the wiilow car to
and fro, against trunks and limbs, until
the stout netting had broken, little by
little, and the balloon itself bad no
longer any jirotection, when, striking a
tall tree, the silk was punctured in a
dozen places, and rent into ribbons,
leaving the car suspended by the netting
twenty feet above the ground. The
course in tlie woods left a path similar
to that of a tornado. Trees half the
size of a man's arm were snapied in
twain as though they were pine-stems,
and huge limbs, were scattered like
leaves.
The landing was made within lot)
yards of a settlement, ami the crash was
so great that the peojile ran to the spot
to see what had happened. Singular as
SI.50 and
it would appear, there wa.s only one of
the four injured, Mr, Pa Mountain re
ceiving some slight contusions about
one of his hips. The remainder escap
ed without a scratch. When thev got
down, partly by rojH-s and partly i.y
means of a broken tree, several persons
were standing around with otien months
and eyes staring out in wonder. They
then learned that they had landed on a
farm of Truman O. Whitnev. near Sac
kett's Harbor, in the town of Henderson
Jefferson county, X. V. Bv Mr. Ea
Mountain's watch the time "was 2 o'
clock and twenty minutes.
They had been nineteen hours and
forty minutes traveling a distance
which cannot be computed at less than
1.200 miles.
PCHS AND THE BlCKS. Charles Kaiser,
who has the only hive of bees in town
SaVS that ivheu lip trt rrni Lij ,,1,. I.Jo
... . . . ' s ,'t Ji.J VlllVill llll
old cat's curiosity was much exciteil in
regard to the doings of the littl insects,
the like of which she had never before
seen. At first she watched their com
ings and goings at a distance. She then
flattened herself upon the ground and
crept along towards the hive with tail
horizontal and quivering. It was clear
ly evident that she thought the bees
some new kind of game." Finally she
took a position at the entrance to the
hive, ami when a bee came in or started
out made a dab at it with her paws.
This went on for atime without attract-
ing the attention of the inhabitants of
the hive. Presently, however, old Tal-
by struck and crushed a We on the edge
! of tlie opening to the hive. The smell
of the crushed We alarmed and enraged
the whole colony. liees by the score
poured forth and darted into the fur of
the astonished cat. Tabby rolled her
self in the grass, spitting, spluttering,
biting, clawing and squalling as cat
never squalled Wfore. She appeared a
ineie u; u or nir ana oees. .-sue was at
length hauled away from the hive with
a garden rake, at a cost of several stings
to her rescuer. Even after she had been
, .... ... .!
to in-r rescuer, iven aner she had Wen
taken to a distant part of the grounds
,1,1 , i t t i i,... c , ! ,
the Wi s stuck to 1 abl v s fur and aWut
" "- . .- .ii
' " " ' ' ' ' " "i.um unci ,m
nil(.arUiiy ..vowl-, .,, llollI1(.,. ;i fllU
. . : Tw three davs
after the adventure Tabby was caught
l.,- l.c .iv.-o.e ,!,.. I,,,,!- i,J,. i. ii,o ......l-
:lll t ,,.,. .I,,,.,, l)Vtl,eiMo. Live
- " J ' " -
"T"i CMoiii.r t ! ;1 1.. ct r i L f 1 m trvoiiiul t Ii 1 1
avt. ;l ind ;U .. silll,u, ,,,.,,
readied the lop oi tue lence, i m
reacheil ihe lop oi tue fence, liul si:.
feet in height. There sue clung for a
moment, with a tail as big as a roiling
pin, when, wiili another bound and
squall, she was out of sight, and did not
again put in an appearance for more
than a week. Yirrjinvi t'it'i (AC1.) Ea-
I A WN DKIiKI'L
! Tkout. In the Jirt.
or 1'itooK
little news-
lvn.f.p t hat. inmroves each shniitiLT hotii'
jn tin' citv of Sacramento Cal. to'gatln-r
tne very honey ol the news, there one
day in the last month apjieared a story
nljout some brook trout. The lite got
the story from Mr. Bedding, who is
jiai'.l bv the State to take care of all good
fish. Mr. Bedding says that at th- !ood
of Mount S!i:ist:i near t he Siierameti! o
ri ht u;l(Ul ., slliall on,-j in wi,ici, u,
)iat(.h lrout The w.lt,.r ra!, i,,t the
ii,,-,Ti, slM,.,t for as he calls it.
flume""), and this sjnoit wa.s built for a
long distance to a spring on the moun
tain side. The spout crosses a deejiglen
when about two hundred feet from the
pond, ami in the bottom of the glen runs
a free stream of water that empties into
the river. Now one sunny day Mr.
I Bedding saw several trout swim nut of
; the pond and into the sjiout, which is
: not covered. There was water enough
I in the sjiout for the fish to swim in by
i hard work. Mr. Betiding watched the
little fellows until they reached the
part of the sjKuit that was over the tb'i p
, gh n. When they reached that point
theyleajH-d over tin.- side of the spool
and drojued into the water, below,
, swimming thence into the river. He
: watched "fourteen lish do the trick i.i
one day. Every one of them made tlie
: jump in safety. It is strange that the
fish should have known just where to
1 jump at. for had they atten:jted to leap
j from the sjiout at any other joint they
would have been killed by falling on
i the rocks.
An Aunt-kdiluvian Flopement.
j A telegram was received in Colorado
,a few days since direct nivf the j.ro.er
J authorities to arrest a young man w ho,
: it was alleged, had run away with bis
; aunt. "I have an order for your arrest.
! remarked an oflicer. addressinc the sup
', ros'(1 criminal.
have boon run ni
Por what V "You
have been running away with your aunt"
; M.v aunt . W hy she s my wile .
But
wasn't she vour aunt before she locame
your wife ? 1 on .see, we don t toleiate
those kinds of troiii'js on in Colorado.
"I suiose yon never were in Utah ?"
remarked the young man. after he had
completed bis survey of the detective.
"No." --Well, as vo'u don't understand
the relations of an aunt and nephew in
T ernvne, T nun
ought to ex-
-"-o- ""'".- - --'t i - - ;
plain them to you, and then
jx-rhaps
you may see your uiuy plainer. .
father married my mother." "I sup
pose so. "Then be married her sis
ter."' continue,! tlie stranger, without
heeding the interruption. "Tlii-n he
married the sister of his brother-in-law;
then the d.uightf r of his uncle, w ho
wa.s cousin to the first two wives; then
he married her daughter ; and a son ef
this wile married iny sister, who w is al-
! so wi'low or one or ine oiner wies
sons. 1 Ftipj.ose you are ionow -ing me r
interjected the narrator. "Marry your
aunt or your grandmother either, or
both of them." "And you won't ar
rest ine ?" "No ; you might le your
own father."
A fonr.EsPoN DENT of the Troy Ti.ru.
gives the following exjilanation of the
origin of "hurrah : "Hip, hip. hurrah
was originally a war-cry adopted by tli
assailants of a German city, in which
many Jews had taken refuge. The place,
was taken, and they were all put to the
sword, amid shouts of "II it rosy ma est
jH-rdita !" and from the firsi letters ol"
those words an exclamation was con
trived." A cow that wore a liell having been
run over and killed on a railroad, the
owner brought suit against the railroad
company for damages. It was proved
that tlie engineer rang his lell and
tried to frighten the cow off the track,
but the farmer's lawyer also proved that
the. cow rang her liell and tried to frigh
ten the engine off the track, and so the
jury decided in his favor.
Am itch for an office does not always
lead to a niche in the temple of fame.
This is a humorous remark.
rouy
t busy
postage per year, In advance.
NUMBER 10.
AT .MILK IMVLK.
Incident of the C'nmpnf if ii Airalnvt the
I'lrs-llow Kravelv the nlnretl
Troops I oils lit i heir Wat.
A corresjondei:t at Kawlins, Wyoming
Territory, gives the following incidents
of tlie Milk river affair, as related by
some of the men who participated in the
campaign :
i ne so-ene oi me name was peculiar! v fit-
ted for the Indian mode of warlaro. U'hen
Tliornburgli's command entered t'-e ravine '
or canyon they found themselves between
two tilutTs l,:io yards apart. 'I hose on the '
nortti were ;."0 feet liieli, those on the south i
10n feet. The t o id to ihe agency ran through I
tlie ravine in a southeasterly direction, fol- i
lowing the bend of the Miik" river, at a dis-
tance of r.0o yards. On the top of the two
ranges of blull's the Indians had etitienclied
themselves in a series nf i.itc o tlmt tv-Loo
the troops halted at the first volley they Mood
j between two tires atarangeof only ards
j from either bluff. Rapidly assembling hi-.
I force. Major Thornlmrg ilr.-w up eight of
the wagons and ranged them as a sort of
oreasiWotK ft long tne northern ana eastern
sine oi an oval, at the same time cut tine tra
verse trenches on the western and southern
points of the oval, along the line of which
the men posted themselves. Inside the oval
eight mine wagons were drawn up for the
purpose of corralling the animals, and there
was also a pit provided tor sheltering the
wounded. Outside the oval and on a bit
of ri.-siiig ground to the southeast Were the
pits thrown up by Captain Dodge's men, and
behind them ran a path to the nearest ben.i
of the Milk river, w hich was used lor obtain
ing water. It wasat a point north of Dodge's
iilfc fin. rill N- l-inlj from In l.-if Ii
that Tlioniburg feii. A more complete trap
could not be contrived, for the troops were
not only ouuinm;ereil out exposed to a gall
ing fire from bluffs over the edge of which it
was impos'.ble to reach the f.e, as the range
of sight would, of course, carry bullets clear
over the Indian pits.
Captain Dodge's feat appears inore admi
rable tlie more it is dwelt upon by everybody
except the modest Captain. A soldier with
Payne thus speaks ol the arrival of Dodge
and his colored company :
t'W'n ....ft;.,.. I.r...!,- ,1 .1 t rA,l nl..v..i
j that time. It was the third morning alter
; we wet.-corralled, and of course we didn't
j know whe'her any of our messengers sent
' ollt ll"m camp had struck help or not. Sud-
TVV VIC Ollt 1UI VO ' I 1 Llit .H"UV
","IM ;"II1I s-im-h. m-ipoi
! u'uly m""1,' V1 ,!"' "ak '
' noise. Even by that time some
j p,,., to foar tfmt Ul(. iI1(liilIls V(
we beard a
of us had
! Wgun to tear that the Indians would charge
us, and we all then sutiposoii it might be lu-
; (U;UIS lf it ,,.,! been fouh.-v..i.vof John
(iorlon. the scout who was riding in advance.
i we might have poured in a volley r-.t them:
i but von bet your hie there wasn t no volley
except cheers when Gordon rode in with live
j or six darkies alongside t liiia. Pretty soon
; he told us what was up, and what to expect,
: ami when Captain Dod-re came up at a can
. ter, leading the rest oi his men, we din't take
' much account, cxeejit t. wonder a iktlc at
the color of their faces. It w ts the greatest
marvel to me and all of us at th.s minute
that the 1'tes didn't pour in a heavy Sire
i when they liearl us cheer. We forgot ail
about the d it'trer ol exposinn oiirsep.es an l
leaped up out of tin- pit to shake I, amis ail
around. '" Why, " eon ii 1 1 a", i tins oi.ii.-i-, wilh
: curious naivete, "we look those darkle- ii:
right along with us in the juts. We let 'em
sleep w ilh us, and they took tln-ii kuivesainl
cut oiT jdij's fit bacon fr"iu the same sides as
: we did."
"That's so," exclaimed another trojer,
. "and one darkey has not a knife with a dent
in it that was made by a t'tc build when he
was reaching up to carve a si'.." of? of the
' hoc; foi tilt. -at ion in front ol my trer.'-h."
Another cavalryman said: "Veil ought
to have seen th.-m" lajars and watched how
they behave.!. You know It wasn't any lun
goi,t for water even in the niht lime, let
alone dayli'-fi.t. Hut one afternoon one i.ioi.e
got terribly thir.-sty; the tiring had stopj'ed
lor (uite si spell, and says he, -Well, boss,
I'se powerful dry, and somebody's got to git
waier fo' me. or I'se -jot to git water to'
somebody,' so w hat does that moke do hut
take two pails in broad daylight and go dow n
an.l bring 'cm both back lull ! wal.-r, and
the 1 ti j mis ii-vei lifted a hair "u him."
The colored sergeant of !b..ige'.- company
tells the following slory in this wis,, in terms
of natural pride :
'We did not know what we were to find
when we went in tlh-re, whether a cahijiluil
of live men r dead fo.-m. We went i:i though,
and they were mighty g.ad to see us. We
were rather surprised when we found how
things la that the I'tes did not tire on us as
we went in and slan t us all to pieces. Hut
(with an :iHii;--ii:g grin ) it was early in the
morning and 1 expect they were deceived by
the coiof of our complexions. At any rate
we got in and there we stuck. Afterwards
we had to go out and make trenches for our
selves under a heavy lire. While we were
digging, and when we g"t abop.l an i :i-!t be
low the ground, the reds saw tin- outlines .f
tlie new trench in the catly d.i-.vn, and made
it so hot that we were ghei to imp o::t ;h I:';ip1
some wagons and wait ti l we got another
show. '1 he water," continued the sergeant,
"was the hardest thing to get of ail. -some
call it 2i0 yards to that water : some wore,
some less but I paced it oil' one night my
: seif, and it was 4'.J yards, or 1 aia a white
man."
For the fir.-t three days, according to ail
the ollicers and soldiers, who were th.-re, the
situation was chiefly horrible from the con
stant wouimN and .b-a'Ji strugg'es of the poor
; animals, which they could in no way protect
from the Indian lire. "I".'. ; y f, -,v minutes,"
', savs one "you heard the living gurgle of a
horse or a mule, and although we fastened
them as .securely as j.ossibie at night their
angs were such that they would often break
away after being hit, threatening the men's
lives in the trenches. hi'i' a womiued horse
leajied in Ids agony right into the pit we had
dug for the 'wounded, where Lieutenant
Paddock and. seven men wee lying at the
time. It was a miracle alm.e-t that he did
not traini them to death. As it was we ail
opened a terrific fire on the bluffs, so as to
make tho I'tes stop firing, and under cover
of this fusilailc a lot f.f our boys jumped up
and hauled the horse cut of the tieiu li. We
had to watch out continually to give danger
ously wounded horses ami mule-, their quie
tus." f they got cavorting after receiving an
Indian bullet, and we could see that they
w.-rc maimed or fatally injured, the soldiers
would take rim and finish them. It was
awfully hard once in a while. A friend of
mine got three flesh wounds in try ingtos.ive
his horse's life. Finally, the horse was shot
through one of his forelegs. Instead of
; writhing around like the others he came hob
! h'.ittg up to the edge of the pit vvlier;- Joe and
I were and locked down at Joe as if to say,
: 'Beip me for (iod's sake : Joe turned to !
I we an 1 sai l, says he, 'You'll have to finish
him. Hank : I ca'n't c.o it ; by (i-vf, 1 can't .'
, I wat -bed te.y chance as the horc tunic. 1
and put a bail in right behind his left car ,
an l dropped Vim. That night wo hauled him ;
i outside with the rest."
i Ther" wi re several pet dgs in the c.n-.p,
! among them a beautiful grcCivoid be '.!. g
' ing to Lictepant Cherry. ""1 use 1 to I, t
i him out of n v j it vcf..ior.a'ly," says th -.
lieuto'ir.nt, "to run down to the water. One
; right h" came back with one of l,is p.iwsshot
, ofb It turned out that h" bad been fired on
i by one ef our own set, thiols, r.ho mist ..k
him lor a crawling Indian. There w as n.,th
I ing to do but kid the poor old fellow to save
him misery."
i )ne i lorni nga so'. Per (if Payne's command,
I wounded in the arm, and soil! that he had
i no ai'j-e'i'.e P:rtwo d.tys, turned to a rcgro
'soldier flose !v him. saving. "Here, pard,
! step shooting i:t tueia b'ti.ts. at d f.r the
i Lord's sake make me a little cosfep." 'i he
i colored hi re thus ad. Ires el, whoso name the
I parrot or ''ou'd not re-a!l, answered no' a
' word, hut set to work. There was no colTee
; in the pit, but there was some in the next
I one which was tossed over. But how C
i make a fire withou w-.d, that was the ques
tion. The colored man ca'cu'.ated the
' rliances. made a break for the piit'er'R wagon.
snatched a loose side of n provision box and
came back with a bullet hole in the board,
which was meant for hU own body. Then
he made a fire in the corner of the pit and
prepared the coffee for bis patient.
The New Oi lcans Citizens' saving bank
went' .tto voluntary liquidation, there being
no loss fo depositor.-.
Vl-oi-tixiiitr lln(N.
. The lartrp and rnpidir inornir.(r (iron bitlot)
of. The Fbkksiam (-"m rn.-rdii it to thi- lyvom! ,o
consideration f.f advertisers. Advert:, menu
will be tin-crtcd at the following rate:'
1 men, a timis a i n
3 mnni ho . .
1 " ninntha...
1 " 1 year
5 " d months...
; " I ycur
3 " fi months...
3 " 1 yrnr
V col'n f. months...
i " 6 months...
S..V)
fi on
e "0
If. o
g.im
12.f
1"..0
2i 'JO
5.iO
H " 1 j car.
1 " fi months 4" "0
I " 1 year 75.00
Administrator's and Executor Notices...
Auditor'!" Notice t
St ry and sim: 'r N'ot tc.t 1.!)
Ihisines. iniiK. rirM insertion 1"V. per line;
each tinfciu( iit lncrt''n iie.KT line.
r"Kf"'"'iin or frt rn1ir:0 of onu frjxra
r,,! or 'i-i.f;. m, r. rr nuiin ni..Ti !:.'.. -f to
rnllnttftii ion t.. ,.., tnrilrr ,.r ij, ,f , r ,-r ,i'ltn,juo I
intrrr-t. niu.'l t jmt.f fi-r at mr rr'i.v7tf ti tt .
Job Trintino of a", kind r..-t!r ard i xpt cll
tioiislv executed at lowest rno'-s. 1'in't you
foriret it.
MR. IVAIils AMI MART'S I. A MB.
Few pv-ms 'iave been more g lier.illy
admiivil or paraphrased in the various
tongues of earth than that commencing
w ith the liin s :
Mary had a little lamb.
Its tiee-'e was white as -.now,
Ann every when that M try went
This lamb was sure to e.
Well. th- story is now current at tlie
national capital that the dtstinrMiKheil
Secretary oi state, when recently i:i a
jofular crowd of his friend;, was ii.-s.-red
to cond'tise into prose these immortal
verses. Urgently soli. .-e,l. Mr. P.v.irts
yielded and wrote as folh.ws. s.-,s the
I Chicago 77oi.s.
i "Man.-, a female inrW.l fob.
r f th racf
unkio.wn.
of man, whose family name i
! whet her of native or foreign birth. i ,.fty
i or low ly lineage, and who-e app. .nam e,
, tiianneis and m nt.t! cultivation : iiiv...vt-.l
! in the mot profound iiiV-Vrv. whi.-li preli-
ab
v never will 1-e 1 .i'Iv u-iei tii.ti-d. nph-ss
through the most jeoLmod ics.-ar i..
s ol a
-i. :i,
! historian admiral
v frame i in hi- pr f,
! who hall devote the ablest effoits (.f bis life
to the investigation of the sul.iccf, .iliip.riu
enced by either pas-don or prejudice, and
having only in view the sacred truth, i-: the
same time being u'.'..-: Iv rega r.l ;.-s, of -Jij.
plaudits (,r censures of th-- w. i d, we are in
formed by ope who, it has been -i.-tci. at
one time while living in t h , . t j.a'l ol the
United States known as Ma-s i, has, ,
whose fishermen have f f."ueiii l v be.-n in
vc .edin dilhi lilt ies with t lie : .it"; : n it - of
Her Majesty t,l:i.-en Yii-foria, f :n ei, of
Great Hritain and F.mj.ress ,,( the In i es,
whose domiiins extend over a large share of
the habitable ulohe, thereby ewmnffcrinsihe
peace w hich sh,,a;d so hupj.ov exist In. ; w een
nations of the same blood and ianguage. had
an infant heej., of wl.i. h there at- many
millions of various stocks nnd cjiiaaties m.v
in our Country, cniisiim v ad-littg wo.:ih
Hiid prosjierity to our ivj.uhlie and ena' infr
us to be entirely hide eiidei:t ol all other
nations for our su; jdy of wo.. I, now :.nir!t'
for the use of lactones a 'ready i,n-i' em
jdoyed, an l for those w hich ere "long w'nl be
constructed in all j-arts of our i;i!.d, wotkii g
both by water and Mealu jiower. and in
whatever direction the said Mary travelled
this animal wh.ee th-eoe w-s :"iew-whife,
even as the lofty in "Hit iin regi .!-; in t ie
silent solitudes of eternal winter, as the eth
ereal vajeirs which : i I i . .it ov.-r an au: 'initial
sky, 'darkly, deejily, beaut ii ul'y blue,' or as
the lacteal iiiii.l. covered with iii;Pv.i. del
icate froth, found in the bucket- .f the iaiiv
.'airy-maid, whether n.eanderi'ig tiimugu
the meadows in mi-bummer, gat n-ring the
luscious strawberry, slroding in ii"' woo-l-find
j.atlis i:i -.ear- h --i wii.l !: .v.-t s, i-;- ing
the church witii her '.nicies, con-ins and
aunts to listen to tlie in.-j.ired vo-nls wlii.-h
came from the iip-ol the mini -tor f the
san.t uai v. or wli.-u retiring to iier biis-fvil
couch to seek re-', and enjoy sweel rej-ose
after the cares .; the day, in la,-:, eve! y w here
that Mary wi-nt thi- y.ciihliii sheep" influ
enced, doubtless, by that ail.-i iioii which U
so oit coiisj-ieuou-ly manifested by the lower
animals in tln-ir association wilh human be
ings, was ever observed 1 i aocoinj any her."
It is staled that when the pause in t"l.e sen
tence came lite S.-, n.-tarv, who h i l r. ad it
without an
t'ijoomatie c
had dejiait'
iu-l-.r.i:i
a.
lesun.-ii l.j,
ami n.i: ; !.: ;:
f..-e of that
.id
Mii'eiiiiii.-i
l irom t!i,
h.'ppy con'.j'.ihy.
Novi i. Usk of Mkhkine.
sician w ho had charge i f a frc
sary in Inland rel.i'.cs li::s c i
-A phy
iu .d a!l-
ecdo'.e :
hie morning I remarked that there wu
an '.musuany huge nuitiiiei id j er-..ns hi the
w .:'.; i:ig-r
!1
ol the .-' ti-.trv, m.ivv of
them hue. bioomitpj girl-, who 1.-
! a- t'.tl
.vs pes-
like persons reipiii ing the pl-v-ici.ui
sible.
"What do you want, Maggie V I
the lirst ot these who j re-i-nt.-d lier-
1st
1 Of
'Moluer sent me," she sai l. dr.
pi:
court esv, "f , ,t ;i t on i ue ol .'.o-es i 1
she handed l:ie a stnal. bottie, v. iii.-ii I lih..-,!.
To my s u j'tisi-, th. y a'i wantc I t s:1':p?.
''A lilt if ii, iio. tor, if y.u piei-e. " Weil,
fistor-oil is an innocent tue ;i. in -, :i i ! n-.-t
likely, 1 thought, to be ti-.-d as :i!i aitp'ie of
diet. S" I Ii..ed i-ii'-'u oi the hot: ..- wi: : the
oil, wondering much wh.it s. it oi . i -i-.iic
this was that M-em-d to ij.ive all.n i:e J -o
many families. "Next Suipliy, i.-i coraiiig
into the viliage t-lnirch, the inv-tory wiis
soiled. Tlie re wi'.s :i:i utiniistukablc Cl.'T in
the air, and the usiiudy seek hair i 1 many vi
the i.os iindgiils boiv"wit:ie.-s to u.-v "the
oil lied be-n I'tit to. The next disiiensary
day there was .juite a crowd in the waiting
room, evident. wauling oil. 1 w.;s jit'ej'ar
ed lor this, ami announced that no j.t-rsop.s
s'nould receive cisti r-oi: who did n : rt-quire
it for lli.-ir ow ti u-e. a:i l tl:.:t as thi- ". as a
medicine lor i',i:. in.U and let ex;. n:-. i two,
the hjiplioai'.t mils; swa.iow it i.i mv jce--cu'-e.
t .ie-!;ail el my vi-iic-i's !! t t : ." wat-ing-iooia
thai (lay w iihoul c-.wj.ig into t!;e
iispeii-nry to see ine: and a- tie y j.a-.-ed
the winduw, I cou'ai jieiceive that i f s: -it-' of
their disappolatuient they t njoye ! : ikc
I r is i fter. desirable t.
d.ij' of tie- v, . i k a ct it
Know oi: v. hilt
AVe l:lld a IO": !: 1 sugge.-te.'l
11 spoil. .-l;t of the I.. Hid"!! '':'.
w j oh'.isii for li e ( tuio'.i., r.:
b
a .-or-vlivh
r th m
f..r ll.e j r.!' 1 ic,,l :
The following oi l co.-.plet, committed tt
ni.-moi y, al: oril - an easy i u:e 1 or a-c.-: loitiing
without reference to an aim. mac c.i wi..tt
day of the momh a day will f i:'. :
-At I'ii-.-t i is ?c.,r-- i:r..v. -l. ;: v: -n.
It. ...i br'.-lian hi.'iiil.iiuil Imvi.i I ;.. !.''
Kxt'lanntioii. The couplet eo:. tains twelve
words, one for ea h moc'.li in o !cr. b.-g.n-niiiR
with Januaiy. The initial l.-ft r of
crcii word en re-o!ids with the iett-r i'i tin
ca'endar for the tir-t "f the laonth h ire-.-f.t-
edi ythe word. 1 he k.-y !,, ti (
rule is the knowledge I'd-'the Nm
ol t he ear, win. ! t l is year is K.
Kxainpb. j. )i) v,n day ot tin
March Pi !.!! this yea: ?
Answer. 1 , the f.r-t letter of
-- o! the
lay letter
week did
Dv.c
stand- f.r Modi 1. Pet 1 i . th
day before K t hat is. I), th" 1st (.
was a Saturday, The c .ileum. ion i
or
f M ir.-h.
m-tan-
tane , is tl al M..
h 1:
w a -
i !
a i Sat ur-
dav In Ihe in. :nU.
J.x.inii'ic g. i : what dav "f the week did
Do -!. i'i -r a la',. .' F. i- Ir--. i i -.-r i. i.h.t F
is the day a f tor . K i.e.. M vd.'.y : then fere
i December v.'iii In- -ii ;i V. .:!. i-:v.
A I IK ni'lViXKT) C w;
of the Pr i i it tioe City
f.ci'id an unknown va :.,,!
and down tip., lower colli
inquiring wl.t .h. r .-i;..- .
an iio.ly, .--lie i i i lii d :
M
li.
; 1 '
i
1
1 u;
"I rather think I am.
ot the City llali."
"J'.ut i.o woman can
1im."
"Why net '.
"Win, how could a w
among such a cr-.'.vd n
I want to be j '.nitor
:re
i a y
iifi'.in g. t
m. ti .' It
w '
Very mbari .is-r g to -..y
"They'd sn -.-r at :ue,
lh" le::-t.'
MU.hl li.ev
"Of course they won! !."
"And then what w.e.-.hl I d i
lca-h:
"Yon could i ih't bin .
"1 couhlii't. ch : After I hid took
two bv the n. cktie, !:.e thi-, and i
on-
ili.i:
them tiiroiigh the -.v.:1". like this
1 ;ue.-s t hv y
W shut Up. WOoaln t I ll-'V .
l'i- klng no lh-hat, which ha 1 tci
' off by the sii .-k, ; nd hangitig It t" t
: eml of his coliar. lie re, lied :
I "(i.i t r tin- ofl.. c, inad.itii ; you si
; all ttiV inllu.-pee."
Mie' gut the o'lii-e.
"WKl.I., my son." sa'd a gm 1 n-.it irej
father to an "cigh'-v ar-o d s. n Co other
nclit, -'what have oii .c'!:c1.-d.'y that p -iv
W set down as a c '- ' i di-d "" "o ive a J-.H.r
bov five cents." r. j.'.ied the hopi !ul. '-Ah .
Rb.'l that w as a charity, and chat :'y bflAvras
ri 'ht He w;is a : o: phau hoy, w is 1 . ? ''!
didn't s'.-P to r-k," rej-lied the b y. I
irave him 1'e im-v.ey f. r Inking aooyv. .:
e...i 1 pi'' t'o-o'Cr t ?sl.et '."
2.'-0
.i'l
i.S
.-re
bo