Iff! THE CAMBRIA FREEMAN A Ebensbarg, Pa., by H- A. McPike. Circulation 1.12S IT? II ATI".. - ,inc rur. rh in advance II. W ecoPi- ',. f net p'd wlihin 3 miw. 1.75 if not p'd within 8 ram. )!.iO .. if not p'd withiu year. . r. r.,ind rcsldinir outside tb? oniintv X . ' i-u-ional per fir will he I luirjred to ,lC, vn' wil! th" a tin vp term bp de r P V an'-l tii' don't rnnrii 1 1 I heir '.'m'i bf mvitiir iti advance raut not i ;n , , (.,! en the a:n footinir timt 0 ten- ..el ! r' 4 V I , t tti! frt hc J'ftinctty undorstood fi in- forward. ,iur iniK'f before yon stop It. If N ine nut Fc.iinivnir no oth h i a -thz ii te s loo short. ,.i in 1 1 -t . H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. H IS A FREBM AN WHOM THR TRTJTH MAKES FREE, AUD ALL ARE SLAVES BESIDE. SI. SO and postage per year, In advance. VOLUME XTII. EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1879. NUMBER 4(3. Advertising Itnten. The Iirtomd rapidly Hicresin circulation o- Tt Vf.ttii foirroniil. It to tbe faoraUe eonlderatlon of dertter. ATert Isertients will bp inerfe at tbe following rate:' loch. 8 time. 1 8 month 1 6 month, 1 " 1 year t 6 months " 1 year S " S month,.... 3 " 1 year H col's 6 month,.... H " 6 month, H " 1 year 1 " month, I " 1 year Administrator', and Rircutnr'i Notice.. Auditor a Notices I. no Stray nd similar Notice l.io DuHines, Item,, flint Insertion 10c. per Una; each snoaequetil ioeertion So. per hoc. w7iMii ft'on, or i;rii-ref ino tit any mrrrm ft.m or iKirt.-fv. an4 f"tnniumfn(ifmi fri7iiecf tv call attention t" any matt ernf limited "r n.diridwa ( nfrrrf. must l-r j-aid for a alxertmn-mtt. Job Pristiko of M kio4 neatly and expedi tiously eieculed at lowest price. Iion't yoo forrat It. . 1 M .( .. so . a oo .. aoo ..100 .. oo .. II OS .. itct .. jootj .. af. co .. u oo rt oo WE ARE STILL ON DECK.lPIANO AND PROPOSE TO REMAIN THERE! A Perfect Tornado in Low Prices. and ORGANS nt i run .15 TUB LARGEST AND CHEAPEST HOUSE IX PEl'A To tli'" nuiiiprourf i-o1m-? of" 1" rctt'iiimi V. S. BARKER & BROTHER Hill. :i"'i tent ion tin to i iTinttr of" in(erfl to in'r"T- the induceiiiunts Iiclv: itivitei lit- .,. i rl 'nrt ami nio.t i"inplete JfO-tmfnt or HOOTS ever seen In this or tiny ather roun . . . :i u .jiifi lit in.) in the cniirji-.l n the tinir. :md at prii'i" whiidi e.? roinjiftltion. ! r '. r tun, or iji'-e to fsivn a full prii'r list. Iiut append an example or two ol our low ' . , i-';.'ir:ii!''i.t : Fit 2 W m Mil a ninn's hunt, made trom whole stork, with kakhi k "i'-.n'.t" ' l i' li t' rrnts cdrqxT than I'n-it of U:e same )iiiiiity ran l-c hoiiirlit from any v . i ".mi Ai-n. a miin's i'nlf h'jot ( warrant? I ). with tap olir. nttu-r eewrd or pftruc I, for ' '.. .-. i I (.. sin.! at tli Minn Ii.t ritc. and If customers tail to find our pri'-es tar be ,l.-:il t ir.'ti' '. HID Mill n:i PI k : l.,K- ii Haines Brothers. S' WEBER, t NEWTON & CO. MISCELLANEOUS DEPARTMENT. C3 O - "W 1 1 1 v will not. le ii-t il tolniv .V eomiilcte st-i.'k of Imv, and yoiitli" Pool, l,. sj,ips nruni ioots at pri-r. a Tittle cheaper th.m othor d:iliT? demand. liiive h.i-.ti! Lamiiij ! offer, in we keep a lull -t;-k of inediiitn prin-d irar j r t finer aoo.?. an I will take your order Inr any kind of a fine uit. wh-eh e if-, m miv ti. ui v.u .;i n n:iv the fame k ind of uouls in Alt-xma or .lolinstow n. i: ii in it l.-ir'saln,. In V Kli ' UTS we earrv- tit.; oil v e. .m pi etc ."'nek in town. : ete with 'j ir pri.'rj. while in I'ASSIMKKlN and ( i.orifS we have the inot ' ; v .? ! a rt:n;.t n rr exlii'dted in Kh"titmrjr. and ran have suit, made t) order on f '. Z n'r to -ei' otir i-ant jtwhh Hetore luivinyr. . w; x :n: a Mil line of I'MIKKWEAK. from the eheape,t to the be,t. and a, an exam- -ui thee ifiiu li. nnd the only one we hare room tor. we iiote (rood, heavy under .' .!. ad tu:i mi it- t i"J rent,. W ho ean heat lliene tiurr.4 W i dies' J3e pc'ii'ti ncn i . VK W TO CAM. S1ECIAI. ATTENTION Tt I'l'li srii-:ieit stock r xvTII:H', c)Arrs, it varletv and at al! prices from $-.'0 up to the highest. We eertainly bve w....i f line, ar'l to tn.-e l.tdies who need e ml? lor the con.inz Winter, hut do not wifh . we w..u'. I eo.nc ami examine our ct.K-k now a ri 1 m-leet what you want and I, w : ; be d.ir.i with pe,-iire. s lv so doinp yon will liave a larae aorlin"nt to v not l-e tlie e-.-.- loi;. a we xpeet tn rcluro the Moek very much before the '2bth r-.w when joii vi-it oi:r store d .n't luret to look at tho roat,, which we will be i i.i,i'I)it v.iii i. Nh to hiiy or not. VMM t.RF.N we lriv i nu e line, an I are eirin sreat bara'n In them at well tuiiiNiil ar - ori'-tle' ;ind texture.. M Sll A WI.s we shall keep a Kill nrt- nt hi. of ill ,trte and price,. We a! h te a neat and eoiantete stock or La in S Hi isl UK V. f MiKliVKAK.(;i.ll KS. .sc.. a well j tie tft line of WAT r i i liet' cloak and ekildrcn'a wear ever brought to Khennniirji;. Ilmxlnar reeentlv reeDtert the (irnfral Atrener for Otatral Petaowylv am I addition to our old territory), with hfadqaarter, aod UIK.'I! STORE ROOM IT !40i ELEVENTH AVE.. ALTOOXA. IN CHARGE OF MR. CEORCE W. COOD, And balntr dealroo of extending our already Immense Bale of to moa cel ebrated and moat desirable I P I . V iVOB and OEG-ANS I ETfr Introdnccd to a maslc-IOTlntr pnbllc, we respectfully In, Ite all who aro ! dealrona of purchasing m H'irst-Cla.ss Instrnixient OF EITIIFR KID TO (ilTE VH A CALL. WE SELL NO PIANO OR OllGAN THAT WE CANNOT FULLY WAIIKAXT. AND BETXG THE OUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST. Our House u a eptbtis7ied in JS.ll in riltsbttrgh , trhere tffl will con tinue at Xo. 7i Fifth Avenue. Instruments Sold on Small Monthly Payments. H.VFI SFACTJOX GUARAXTEFD. II.' PALACE. STERLING. iMason&Hamlin. GOOD, THE FATE OF THEFAKT VOCSH MAS. WRITTEN IN THE STATK'8 PRISON. It's curious, isn't it. Hilly, The chances that twelve months may bring; Last vear I was at Saratocra, As liappy and rich as a king. I was raking in pools on the races. And feeing the waiters with "tens," And sipping ntint-jnleps by twilight, And to-day I am here in the pen. "What led nie to do it?" What always Leads men to destruction and crime? The prodigal son, whom you've read of, Has altered somewhat in his time ; He spends his substance as freely As the biblical fellow of old, But when it is gone he fancies The husks wiil turn into gold. Champagne, a box at the opera, High steps, while fortune is flush, The passionate kisses of women, Whose cheeks have forgotten to blush ; The old, old story, Hilly, Of pleasure that end in tears : The froth and foams for an hour The dregs that are tasted for years. Last night, as I sat here and pondered On the end of my evil ways, There arose like a phantom tiefore me, Hie scene of my boyhood days, I thought f"f my old home, Billy ; Of the school-house on tin-, hill ; Ot the brook that Mowed thro' the meadow I can e'en hear its music still, Again I thought of my mother Of the mother wrio taught me to pray Whose hive was a precious treasure That I heedlessly cast away. I saw again, in my vision, The fresh-lipped, careless boy. To whom the future was boundless, And the world but a mighfy toy. I thought of all this as I sat here ; Of my ruined and wasted life ; And the pangs of remorse were bitter They pierced my heart like a knife. It takes some courage, Billy, To laugh in the face of fate, When th yearning ambitions of manhood Are blasted at twenty-eight. 2 w: ial at? ii'i-i 111 erti. n to ttur f ARI'ETS. We have completed arranementi with Nc v V -rk whereby we are enabled with the n id ot a wonderful lu- l el Vi';" f.. :t i ur .-t-- . as ! vere. the entire foek o( a N.w Y Tk W rule . ,.f tM -i.v,,hito"-." tu't wit! take jrert p. h - !! tr i - e you an ..portunity to rc'.-u .ir.y carpe int pattern''. hoiee ,.t of m.ANKKrs. whi.-h we are utl.-r: n-; , ,.,,r t.j,"k a !i a !:.! 'Hi- lit e ol Cl.i iCKS. and ar-" n. : ' .' ':.' " " .:ii!i."-n or how elaborate, at price- fui ,-'i. t'o" i- ini mal-.e and ti iish. If'l.i .THS v.e ;re nrlel inir un-.".) a i lied k th"." Urs.-t and bc-t tu '.own. .-otr.pr:-. t!'Mie. W e have !' ia -lii-win you i::;iv li'iri from ; e pr.re. r-iriinp: 'rum n. prepared li:rn'?h fuiiy -Ci p. r eent. cheaper i .merit-", mr ) rl.'es bein; i w: ttl.s 1:1 1 patt'-rii" tor re-27. 1404 Eleventh Avenue, Altoona, Pa. M ELL OR & H ENRICKS, 70 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, ?a. THE 1; ii 1 MM 11 nimrv goods in endless im.ofusion. ews m BE fll caue 01 uie ai 5 9 I force was tlesr I I or l'crson k'2 3 ' ; village, whose I pon learning ,-t hi 1 H Tl I .1 I the 1 1 ; i; 1 . N S I.T. I I- I Vil .AT. 1 - e"T A H I .1 - . r 1 1 re inire ion nv v. ki ep. .Villi-,- it to nr." tua'.i .lo'i'-li- wh it any ,le m.tr.y ..( the v'.d were s we r.o'e l 'antoii Flannel", v e.iiiid bi 1 m 01 tl t ' for now. fundi whi. h lilijht bo nien- - of 1'ir--? 1. u 1 . i i ia". TM, i, n ii-e Ku-ine-.-. H know ome ariMin I our ; ri"e with tnwirn. in t-wn, nn I we not only intend nd he.t stoek of IIKOI l.HI a well a. 1 1. u k. H.ASS of all Miz. NAII.S. (HI.S A.C., .Ve.. to be p-. I- r ; ";'!. c a fill i! ;i:er"'" ndi-'e in Eienbiirir ' 1 li'it rt tb" .ii"t e-.-h prie - -f :idv.t:i"e pri". It' t; I- lat'ei ' ! 1 v au-i at i.Tii---. .nil"1! Piivei linn ft :!.! I Si o'-. a- !! nj m ill I a n -1 01. r :n 1 I rii iir.f.-er f "'!! otl.er or. out .1: ve :.'k i-i : nur.er ih::n nr.v other firm FALL and W INTER GOODS While ' Jii mv rr hicl i "R TERMS If (-ii ! ARE STRICTLY CASH, or Country Proilnce at Cash Prices. 'n. I j ii ! 1. . ehe-t nut.. roo.i j rid and other pri intorrniii' o' dnee. fall at nnr stnra and of our prtee.. w :iet her you ;ii7 forward to the coming T'rfjeidential flrclinn in hopes of hdnq th Iw ky r.iar. (he mtlfcri'icr Imx cnnciwird to rfyimin in the mcrcaixiue bu.-ine.s fld girr it hi und've'lrd attention LJ fn.,j,lii,i'i ." friend and the public 'eneralh with ALL KlXli'uF (iUOUS F i.e. ,-.!,,! m. Ortobcr . I'HTW-.tr. !ri fo di" f:' -. .. h. J k.i 0r & Sectional Vlev ii r . iiti.,:., .vrto. ATPRICE8SOLOW THAT AO.YK VAX OR DAJtlZ COMl'KTE WITH Hill. IUiers will h'icuvs fJi-7 "full tnd cho'tnt siO'k f fri'ii'i'''! to bt found in a general store, comprising a complete line of DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, H0TI011S, H&TS, CAPS, Boots, Shoes, Groceries: Hardware, Tinware, Qrasiare, Glassware, ffooaeniare, Cigars, Tolacco, Camieil Goods, k, &c. NINETY-FIVE PER CEFJT. STERLING BOOT. Tpper and . .. ,- j 1 r 1 11 T.1.W Tf?t lnrl u rile" 1. ri V nul- .'k',. of Ituloier tne tahre or Knun of whieh u cto- I .' r.-ht nele. whereby .epar--:; . - rarJ, i Bide iinpo.hle. Ordinary KubberBoot. .nTarLb.y wnnkla, le.dj.Bg h::r.? the f. t nd ckle. u 1 werinn ou. cbT:rd by th Double 1 pper nn ia. lie ucnoini irn of .'liiJ KitlhT, half inert thl. k. ad not txV.'i with ft$. hk eetr.mon Rubber liont. In the rut below, theblai k part mark ad " Sokd l;abbr r.lhn?." in or !inry P.iih'oer Hoot i n.aile of (rroiind-up rir,, c.r cloth, ami reirher durable rirrwater-proof: hut th " ine'y-FiT9 95 Per Cent. Sterling RUEBER BOOT. ?r:Z3 the Polid Ribber in p.-aoe of the f-j ..t.s u-e i ia ordinary 1.-1' r :i ut :nrr' a. of bulk or weight. .. of cuuuoa Kabber itoou Pnr Tent. Sterling B..ot." when the tao o'.n rd lonsi ol n . worn throu"h.m f third aole all olid Ru bber rrejent itj-If. and RlTe 100 per rent, ad.'.itiontkl Tlil tolas will cut- Warraxitefl Tlireo Montlu, :n . f"' v 1 nrmr for fferr !, month dart :hrt-f. r4 J t.i lfx.! 4 will in I -rmun-iit rcorl of that ciat. (S r itiiar.i tr Boot bir tb wr- '.- "ti r 0:1 tn 1- fi4V.i! ; ' ..': . Jt'fl-..'7!'.t?fe. fai l f f''' jo ;.. TV A No. FLOl'i:. CORN MKAL FISH, SALT tn.ANS, l-UT'l'V, l?KlTSHKS, HKOOMS. by tlie bushel and barrel, T),U?. XAH.S, itc. I have likewise added to mv t-tock ;,'!..-v 1..".. .sy-'!.t:;..v.'iv.' '' ,3lfclfSffv: k-i-.r:y. fjV :..A- IJIRIVS 1ATI5T CORN fSI T1Z1 , tvh:cfi iriil br told at the r'mcrkablr low price of nf rcrh. Also for Hale, the BEST AND QUICKEST El TT ER-PRODl'CING CHURN EVER INVENTED. yr" A Urs'e Increase ot lnifne has reerfitted the enlargement ol my it ore. room and tho ereo tion of an additional warerooni. and fill my establishment la literally ernwded with choice iriod and eaticr seeker alter baryalns. - r 1 1 1 heinif determined to accommodate all who comn. and especially mv friend from the ennntr. to whom the hizheat j rices in trade wiil be paid lor all kind ot produce, l hare thrown open my larVc and eotnmodiou t le Tor th free ne of all who may wiah to pot up their tock. Thankful tor past favors ana nopetu mar futnr ones I remain as erar. llih street, KlM-nalitars. Oct 3. IS7. X. J. FRBlDHOFIi at tnaa T--e Poor Mans Boot. 5ft -'-?:-. - K; i c -,ir;: ..-,Jt V SI '1 9 2f If lit STER CLOTHING nriiK: liAitGKST stock of MEN'S and BOYS' CLOTHING Kter iliajila .! In AMtoonR tn niw rMdy Tor inrtpi'etlon In leaner nnl niieqnalletl variety at un4nrpH'ile ele- A TRl'K STORT. In 1S."), wlirn the English and French were at war with the governor of Can- t ton, a mimbor of their ixials ascended a creek to a town called Faater, where the sailors amused themselves by robbing and ill-treating the inoffensive villagers. Ten days lalcr, a cutter from the En glish fleet, in passing the town, was set upon by the inhabitants, whose friends had suffered at the first party, and the result was a massacre from which only i three; of the foreigners escaped. ?m. ! In the excitement consequent to the : ti.ncs, no inquiry was made as to the caue oi me aitacK. jvi once a strong snatched, with a demand son or tlie head man ot the ! hose name was Snag-Seen. ; pon learning that ti is surrender would save his people from further reprisals, : : Sung-Seen gave himself up, and was ' conveyed to Macao Fort, in the Canton ( river. "When the news reached the old man's I j sons, four youths, who wore studying at j ; a Chinese College in Fatshan, they inir- i ried home, iletenr.ined to rescue their j ' fa! her from the h:mds of the English, j . The undertaking was foolhardy, and its success seemed simply imjiossible. i Sung-Sccn was contined in the upjier i story of a pagoda. Tlie building stood in the centre of the fort. The fort it- j self was garrisoned by two hundred En- : glish seamen and marines. Its walls ! were patrolled day and night. Notwith- i standing this, the lioys found means to j : send a message to their father ami in- j formed him of their plans. i j Upon the evening fixed for tho at- j tempted rescue, I was on my way from '. j Canton. Near the village my boat was j ' attacked by river pirates, and my men ; i were obliged to seek refuge in this fort, ! where I was warmly welcomed by the , J lieutenant in charge, an old friend nam- j i ed I'rown. After I was comfortably ; i settled in his quarters, lie said j j "I have just received a warrant to ex- j ecute Sung-Seen. As I don't know a ! ! word of Chinese, I am puzzeled how to i inform him of his fate. lie is to be shot , ! to-morrow. Would you mind telling ; him what my orders are ?" ! I replied that I knew the prisoner, 1 and had been active in petitioning the. ; commander-in-chief to spans his life, i ; Under tho circunis:ances it would have i been exceedingly painful for me to com- j ply with bis request. However, upon learnin.r that I was the only foreigner j i in the place that could siK-ak Chinese j ami thinking I might be of some service ! to the doomed man, I consented. ! The old fellow received your mess- ace very coollv,'" observed the lieuten- I ! ant, as we seated ourselves in the apart- ! ment below. "You must not leave. here j ! to-night. The nver is swarming with I pirates. 1 will gie jou a bed ar.d you ! can leave early in the morning.1 I i I thankfully accepted his offer, and j ' atter ordering my men to haul up their j boat, I returned to the pagoda. It was i i impossible for me to throw off a feeling ; 1 of depression at the thought of Sung- ' Seens fnte, ami for that reason I said s j but little, and proved. I am afraid, very I 1 poor company for my host. : j We heard the loud voice of a sentry, : , followed bv the reiiort of a rifle, llur- j rving out to learn the cause of the alarm ! The attack had been so sudden and the incendiary's daring so astonishing that the men had not realized the cruel ty of their act. Uut now, as they gath ered round the prostrate form, every man expressed pity for him and wished they had not yielded to the frenzy of the moment. Bidding them form into two compa nies and search the lower part of tlie is land, and extinguish tho fire, the lieu tenant said to me "The poor fellow is speaking. "Will you ascertain what he says, while I look after my people ?" Advancing to the sufferer, 1 raised him in my arms, when I discovered he was Sung-Wang, the youngest son of the .unfortunate man confined in the fort. Then it flashed across my mind that lie had sacrificed his life to save Lis father's. Aided by a kind-hearted seaman, 1 carried him into the fort, and having placed him on a lounge in oui quarters, informed him who I was. Upon this he opened his eyes and faintly said "Tell me, has my father escaped ? I cannot die until I know." As he spoke, my host entered the pag oda, and hurriedly remarked that the men had lieen unsuccessful in their search. Then he mounted to the floor above, but returned in a moment with an angry exclamation on his lips and de claring that the prisoner had got away. His handcuffs and irons were there, but the man had vanished. A rope was hanging out of the windows, by which he must have descended, between two of the sentries. "See w hat you can get out of the boy," said the lieutenant ; "he surely knows something of the affair ;" and then he rushed away, leaving me with the dying lad, to whom I immediately translated what had been said. It appeared to give Sung-Wang mo mentary strength, for he half rose and exclaimed "Now I am happv am happy ! lo not weep for ire but rejoice in my lion- ! orablo death. Fortunate is the child ' who dies for his parent. Tell my father 1 that my last thoughts were of him." j As he uttered these words he sank back into my arms and died as peaceful ly as a child sleeps. 1 "Noble boy !" said the lieutenant, 1 when he learned the full extent of Sung- j u ang s heroism. " hat a love of his : it must have lieen to give him courage j enough to face that hail of bullets!! ! These Chinese are a wonderful ieople. j ' Well, we'll bury him with naval lion- ! i ors." 1 An hour liefore sunrise I quitted Ma cao Fort, carrying with me all that was. mortal of tho faithful Chinese lad. .Two ' months after, when tho blockade was raised, I visited Faatee, when I learned ' from his brothers the particulars of their father's rescue. They had drawn lots to decide which of them should act as decoy while the others scaled the walls of the fort. The dangerous duty fell to the youngest brother and he had indignantly refused to yield it to either of the other brothers. I entered a sedan-chair and was con veyed to Sung-Seen's house. In the re- ETTI SATISFACTION. Half an hourbefore the morning train over the Canada Southern road was to leave for Toledo yesterday, a pompous fat man, with several parcels in his arms, entered the depot with a great rush, and made a bee line for a Grand Trunk train. When halted at the gate and asked what train he wanted to take, lie replied : ' "I'm going to Toledo, and if 3-ou make me miss the train I'll ue you'for damages." "Hut this isn't the train for Tolo.t ? ""vr me? j-uriai-e oi tne river, at trie "W it isn't it ,1.5.1. n . 11 1 foot of thc from that Patch it. - - ? .v. ' ?lf '- ' V' K1 ! iped. ali-Jititic in the foam at the edee of SAM PATCH'S LAST LEAP. The recent fiftieth anniversary of th first great leap made by the i:oted Sam Patch, has resulted in the bringing to light of the following description, by an eye-witness, of the great acrolt'B last and fatal jump : The writer first saw him in I'ochester in the autumn of lS-Tf. Sam had spent the preceding month in the vicinity of the Kll of Niagara, and had made two urrestul t-ti-mptij to "lp the cataract." as the feat was styled. A staee waserected soinceitfhtv feet atove the surfai-e of the river, at th for Toledo loudly demanded the fat man. "Itecanse the train for Toledo stands over on the track there." "Then why didn't you tell me so in the first place? I've a good mind to report you 10 your sujieriors. the American fall. Sam maintained a larce Mack hear as a pet, and he always took his animal on the s'ape and thn-w hiiti off liefore vonturingto jump himself. The lwar always alighted and swam out safely. Not so, how ever, with hN master. Sooii after showing that "some things could tie done as well a a others" at Niagara, l'atrh and his bear came - . - I -. .iiaiiia, 1 1111 11 rtllll III, II. HI I .1 III V 011 II nnd the Superintendent tip 1 to Ivochester. lie was hospitably received by stairs," humbly replied the gate-keeper Aim l II lodge complaint against you; yes, I will ! Travelers have rights and those rights must be maintained." The fat man rushed half war up stairs and the whistle of a yard engine made him halt and turn and rush down again. Reaching the gates of the Can ada Southern triin, he called out : "It is your business to give warning at least three minutes before the train leaves I" "And I'm going to do it," replied the gate-keejier. "It is over twenty min utes yet before train lime. Please show your ticket." Show my ticket ! Do you suppose a man in my position means to steal a ride on the hind trucks V" "The rule is forall passngers to show their tickets." "I don't believe it, and I want vour name. I'll go up to the superintendent and see if tiavelers have any rights in this depot. Vour name, sir." "My name is Humps, sir, and I'm a poor widower, with seven children to support." "I don't care a cent if you've got sev enteen children to supjiort. I'll bump lmmps till he'll never dare sass another traveler !" The fat man rushed up stairs again, and was heard galloping through the halls and passages and calling for the superintendent. The janitors passed him along until he came down the out side stairs on the public streets. "liave a back, sir" drivers in chorus. "Xo, sir; n. sir;' ply. "Have a wagon?" pressmen in his ears. ".Never ! never ! " yelled about forty he screamed in re howled twenty ex- I want to sret into ; 1 the leiot. If I miss that train I'll sue ' I he v. lmle city:" ' He was t-hown the public entrance, : and he made a rush for a Flint & l'erc j Marquette train just making up. j "That isn't the train for Toledo." 1 called several voices, and be hurried j over to where Humps was standing. and ; : sail! : "I'll fix you for this, sir! Let me in i this gaie !" I ' Ticket, please." I "Yes. I'll show yu my ticket, and as ; soon as I reach Toledo I'll make an a.Ti- and send it back to cention room I found the venerable fath er. He was surrounded by a number J davit of this affair of his friends, who were proud that the , the superintendent. village should lie the birth place of such He passed through and entered a eoa h. a sou as Sung-Wang. I -A. woman was saying sho feared her Had I not understood the t hinese char- 1 irtinK naa not come down on the bag acter, I should have the conduct of the told the last words of the heroic I bone it hasn't. It will serve von just right that portion of society called "r.ortsmen. w ho maintained adelegatii.it then, as now, in every larce town. The disinterested gentry lodged Sam at a fa-0 unliable restau rant, and kept him generously supplied with the ardent. A day was set "for th.- leap at the Ocnesee Falls, the principal of which then was a copious cascade ninety-five feet in height, within the coriorate limits of Ro chester the "fall" of which now furnishes water power to many mills, factories etc., to tbe exhaustion almost if tlie usual stream. 1'atett eamc on the ground at 10 a. m.. in fine spirits, leading bruin by a chain. He was received tumultuotislv by a crowd esti mated at 4,00.1 tH-ople, llmni; the river bank 011 both sides just In-low the falls. The performance" was designedly deferred until the afternoon the interim lieing occupied hv Sam's patrons in passing h:its and collecting larey quantities of small coin ''(or the i-oor fellow." (It was believed poor Patch neith er knew nor eared much aUmt these contri butions). About 1 r. M. the "cynosure of all eyes" stepped Ix.ldly to the edge of a rock jutting over the abyss In-low, dragging his unwilling hitsute companion. Ily a sudden ieikthe man sent his Vvlorcd friend" wbirl ing in the air, descending to the misty depths, which he pierced in a moment, a "moment longer hid from view, and thence etiieiged j and gained the bank with a half drow ned aspect. Itruin having Wen recaught bv a fiitnl!v ; hand, his ma-ter prepared to follow in his j footsteps. Arrayed simply in pantaloons, I shirt and slippers, with a" kerchief of gay (colors jauntily tied on his head. Pau-h j iHiwed to his admiring audience on either i side, and then, gracefully leaping out from j the rock, spreading his arms as be assumed position, holding his feet together and lean ing slightly backward, he rapidly gravitated to the waters below. As he always gradua ted his place sii as tn strike 111 e edge of the fail id the end ot his descent, ho v;is fully ill sight to al! from whom Ihe river banks "did rot hide him. ii'i'il enteting tlie river lielow. Thus he was seen to strike the water feet forcnior-t, having suddenly thrown his nnns down close t" his body. I (e roup wared somw rods down the stieam; and in su'h "tine feather" that a little boat which was wait ing to receive him was spurned from him ; wilh a contemptuous push, and tho triumph ant diver swam ashore, i This feat was so successful that its pro jectors. Sam's keepers, determined on a sec ond performance even more woiideiful. They erected a scaffold on the same jutting I rock", twenty-live feet high, soth.it the entire height propo-od to bo lonH"d was forty yards. ' The time was s-t lor the next tent. pre. isolj j one week from the first, and 011 thi-occasion ' even a greater crowd than Inrfoiv assembled. 1 Similar delat s and collect ing operat ions were observed: but. early in the alternoon, poor 1 Nam climlied a ladder to his dizzy eyrie, and assumed as t re-'t a position as l,U maudlin .condition warranted. Tie wiiter viewed him from the roof of a neighboring factor-, ; and memory is yet fresh as to the disagreea ' hie sensations expericncod while seeing atu re 11 r I .uu-i me 111 new cnai- , me uag- t,,,,,,,,. on ,ljs diriy ,.jM However, the ve been astonished at fMSe wagon, and he darned his parcels 1 wa4 ,,t much time for suspense. The i Chinaman when be ! ""to a seat and said : : was loosed from his moorings, whining words of the heroic "I hone it hasn't. It will serve you pitiful strait and ruthlessly plunge. ! pi indication of 1 was bov. 1 1 is face gave no the terrible grief he felt. Uowing gravely, he thanked me for bringing to him the body of the child ; and also for the visit I had made him when he was a prisoner. After this he received the congratulations of the as sembly and then retired, leaving the vis itors to take their departure. As sixm as the crowd had left, Sung Seen re-entered the apartment, and in a tremulous voice requested me to fol- low him. i With his sons accompanying us at a I respectful distance, he led the way ! across the fields of rice, just then devel I oping their first green leaves, and con- ; ducted us to a grove ot trees upon a I knoll, in the side of which was built a j horse-shoe sha)ied tomb. ! Up tothat time he had restrained all emotion ; but as he pointed to the grave i tears rolled down his cheeks. "My boy j sleeps there," he said ; and covering his I face with both bands, he sank, sobbing, ! upon the marble slab. I According to tho custom of the coun j try, I decorated the tomb with boughs i of the beautiful ieacli-l)lossom, which in i China signifies remembrance, and thus j paid my last tribute of respect to Snng ; Wang, who died a martyr to filial devo tion. The Chinese as a nation have most assuredly secured the fulfillment of the promise of the fifth commandment "Honor thy father and thy mother that thy days' may be lonj in the hind " H13 ELEVENTH AVENUE, ALTOONA, PA. Gri'aiirl OjjeiTiiiii: f GODFREY WOLF'S p rc FASH JO !N AS Tf QT'AI.ITY. SEA KOCTIESTEll MAKE OF CLOTHING Romance in Real 1,1 kk. Some fif teen years ago Olga Eskold obtained such fame for her vocal powers that an u-Dwereiid.irtiiNl i hn t -a. le id v of Ch in se i enthusiastic patron removed her from - . I.. ,-, l:l l tlie rsweiiisii viuagc m which sue to miss it. A iersoii who hasn t got spunk enough to stand right up to these railroad iolks and let "em know what's what, ought to lose her trunk. They tried to bluff me around just now, and when they found thev couldn't do it, they couldn't lio too bumble and obliging. Co out and blast them, madam blast their eves till thev can't rest !" Ihtroit Free I'rets. Th f. La w y kk Who I )i dx't Ta k k It. Up in New Hampshire is an old ec- ; centric individual, a self constituted i curer of all ills : a sort of universal pan i acea, "body and soul, head, heart and j conscience doctor," who with all bis ec centricities has a fund of actual wit that is hard to lieat. Not long ago the "doctor" was called upon the wilneas stand. The opposing counsel, who is said sometimes to "wet bis whistle" with "liquor j.izen," knowing the doc tor's peculiarities, ventured in cross-examining to show him up a bit. The 10- j suit will be appreciated : J "What is your business?" promptly ' inquired the counsel. "My business is to do what little good , I can t mv fellow man," mcd stlv re I plied tbe doctor. j "Hut that doesn't answer mv qnes- tion," gruft'.y replied tbe counsel. j "How do yon sjiend your time ?" j "Why, Squire, it takes about all mv i time to do what I said," remarked the I doctor. j "Hut I want somethingmore definite," stoutly demanded the counsel. "How do pitiful strain and ruthlessly plungeiil iTito l lie deep. AS In lore, lie escaped scot tree, guided by a provident ial instinct. HesMos, the bear "was sober. Not so w ith his unfor tunate master, who. nftcrawkwardly making olieisancc toward the spectators. This time, however, his form licnt to the tight and it struck the. water below with a noise tlmt might have ln-en heard br.If a mile. This was on a cold, murky, dismal day in Novem ber. The body of poor Sam was not actin seen by human rye until the next March, when it wan found by a li-hing party at the mouth of the river, seven miles below, sadly bloated by decomposition and nibbled by fishes. On that gloomy autumn day, the author of the adage deiiioiist rated that among the "things to lie done as welt as others" was not that of safely jumping the Oci esco Falls with a skin full of whisky : POPFI.AR PIONKF.U EMPORIUM! AS TO QT'AI.ITY. NIOATNF.M. DURABILITY A."I FIT, THE dn't :'L tiil(;!('l rrniXGia : HATS AND CAPS! HATS AND CAPS! ! jiMimisli'o: Goods, &e.,, GOjMf WOLFS OlllllD 181811 BUUB,! rcr uenis, iouihs iioys anu tniicircn. I really the t'c-t in t'.e tn:ir'et. w'.ile stock and prices we defy Competition. NO HOUSK IN HI AIR COUNTY CAN COMPARE WITH OUR'S, il liefore inre'tin in a new suit to sail and infpect the g'.-od t had landed 011 the lower part of the is j land and were setting fire to everything that would burn. ! "They will fire tho boathouses next," ! hurriedly remarked the lieutenant, re j ferring to some sheds that stood about fifty yards from the fort. "Fall in, all I but the sentries, and open the gate." j Never for a moment imagining that i the attack had anything to do with the ' rescue of Sung-Seen, but believing it to I be made by pirates. I shouldered a rifle . and inirifd niv friend. i Meanwhile the extreme end of the ! back to Sweden I island anneared to lxVnveloted in flames, t come ol Olga. Twelfth S'rect. Xejrt Door to the rosfoJ)ce, Altoona, Fa. Oflnbrr 3. 1HT!. if- CjS-- WOLF, PropriPtor. PB1CE m m MM IH ill CKBl;a-Eo- w. -zB-ca-ESK,, " i , 1 bo aion,. !'erti.,., ' w niiidvari' enf irel.T itcn nn il (jnarantceJ finest, liet '10- rilr. lull unci fiatninr. j s. p,. conx & co inm l.'rvtntlt Afrnue, & CO., ."4 A I. TOO XA , FA I'M 1 iu lie, 'd the ra '1-. i men '4 - II, PA. tii-nl educi I'm of for i"-:it ? bi,. ire. 4 . St'iicntF r.in e:i- M1 I'll. -d t. :nr-i; reas my wife, fary ;. t ed and be:ir 1 without ire hTolr netitied that I n.ll i"t T-1'." anv I'M!?. a-". unt.. or ilebt eon- ;r:cti"I 1.." iter unie" eon.i -'led t.r due er.nra of i:.. ' i i .i i;;k. .ti s." si'Ku.M hr. Wj: hirgtur. Trrp., rnv. .'.. -tt Hon.--wi. StT.mr. h.t rU : j:t rr. all prrB-r II i"t r-iv nv J'MI? I 3HiS FOU SALE.- h ii clini'-e I v ..f viinn H-Ilk'iore t.T. .-.!, r!il-h lie Fl Tiiinv. . it. i . The subscriber i; . of t;.e '.' snd II! 11 at im.der.ite I'l! .l P.'A'.l'. CASH DEALER IN' ALI, KIND OF HEATING and COOKING STOVES -AND MANUFACTURER OF- TIJT- SHEET-IROjST WARE, llovoiitli Ave., Altoona, I rv- all M-rilEAPMT fI. "F. WM THE ITT. Koo n(r. KpASiMiiK mil Repairing of kind promptly Mid .-lfctort l.r n(ten1e4 tn. 10-K.'79. tf. $10 to $1000 S i-ii''-. lnrefte 1 in v. st.S'.iek make fortune-i e erv tnont h. l4.Mk Feot. f .... i . ; ; i ... . V. , . . A K A XTTTH rtt . ftnnkerf 7 V ii 5?? ..". V. W.WTKI). Young Men up. I I.sdie. to leam Telesrraphr. rtnrd si'ttatt.in xnari rted. Addre's with rtaitin tiUKKl.lN n.Ll.'lli'U'll CO . Oherlln. (Mo. s we marcheil down to the lioat-sheds a figure busily employed in the lire. understand this," said the ; lieutenant, leveling bis night-glass in the i direction of the daring intruder. "I ' only make out one of the rascals yet. l!y the way he signals; he must have a ' number of accomplices. See whether I sonic of you cannot pick him off. ! Tha words had scarcely passed his lips j when the sailors and marines began to fire, at the incendiary ; wh'Ie to our '; amazement heslowly advanced. shouting: I "faini'Mi lo : J inqni In : ' j I As though bearing a charmed life, the j j solitary figure at which they were firing i continued to approach our men, utter ing all the time his derisive cry. On he came, and by the lurid light of the burning reeds that covered the swamp part of t he- island, we presently saw that he was a mere boy of fourteen or fifteen years. Still, in "their excitement, tlie riflemen blazed away. "Faniui In repeating the incen diary, folding his arms and bravely de fying us. until he fell forward, wound- ' ed in a tlo?er. t-lace.-'. always lived lo give bet training in the j Hoyai Conservatory ot music, at Stock holm. In bidding good-bye to lu-r old home Olga told her village lover, Chris tian Sielhorn, that be bad better think no more alviut her, as they would soon be very wide apart. Young Sielhorn gtew desjicrate and that night left for America without a word. lie settled in liuffalo and worked for over thirteen years as a ship cariienter. Nearly two years ago lie made up ins mina ic go i and find out what tie- At New York be was i robbed of almost all his earnings and re- ; you go alout your business V that deeiids on circumstances ac cording to the nature of the case," ex plained the doctor. "For instance if I bad I were going to begin on vou. tbe. first thing I should do would lie to advise you to sign a tenijieranee pledge." The court roared, and the counsel, as if convinced the doctor was pursuing a legitimate and respectable vocation, proceeded with the singular cross-examination. mained in liellcMic Hospital, ill with brain fever, for several months, t'pon reaching Stockholm he learned that Olga's voice bad broken down, that she had married long ago and had also gone to America. Sielhorn's old love still burned and he came back to this coun try. After a long search be found that Olga had been living in Uuffalo, his own city, for several years. She was a widow and had. a family of eight child ren. Last week Olga and Christian were mirried, and started in a wagon with all the children overland to Kan sas. The State Fair Thick. Soon af ter breakfast, yesterday morning, a ne gro who was crossing the Campus Mar tins was halted by a run-down white man with a bad kink in his left eye, and asked if he intended to visit the Slate Fair during the week. "Yes, sah Ire guine up dar at least fo" times,"' was the reply. "Well, now, I want ten cents to pet a drink, and if you give u c flint sum I'll tell you how you can make your way through rnv of the gates without the least trouble.' "Wouldn't 1 be kotched V" "Not a bit ov it. I'll warrant you go through without a word, and I only want ten cents fir telling you bow. I wouldn't give it away to anyliody but a sharp, keen man like vou." " ell, I'll take dat in," said the ne- i i gro, as he handed over a dime. "Now j American Greatest llitmt;r. A New York journal remarks People who cross to and from Ihooklyn by ferry are apt to look up at the srreat" Fast river bridge ami wonder what assurance they have that when the heavy Hoor is built anil loaded with travel, it will lie safeiy held tip by the suspending cables. These cables have just been tested by a machine which is the most elaborate and perfect of its kind in the world. It is the one planted on th.-i;oT-: eminent grounds at the Waiertown, Mass., arsenal, designed by ir. A. H. Kim ry, and ' and is, indeed, a marvel of fkilled coilstruc ' tion, for it shows how many ounces are; needed to break a pice of thread, and bow 'many ton to fracture a steel Nam. The 1 apparatus is microscopic in accuracy, inso much that it registers, in a breaking 'weight of a million pounds, within one pound of the ; mass needed. This w as the mm bine selected j to test the susjiondiiig cables. nuiI Mesr. ; William 11. l'ayne and Isaac New ton, engi j necrs connected with the Urooklyn bridge, ! recently spent four days in the tests ut the arsenal", w hich is under charge of C ol. T. T. , S. Laidley, of the ordnance eoips. Instead of usinir small sections of the stisjndiug ca bles, they took lengths that would make the , results .h-cisive. Not to go into techiiieali I ties, the tests were entirely satisfactory, and showed that the precautions taken ifi put ' ting together the parts were ample for their purpose. The sui ndingcables were found j by the engineers to jmssess a strencth much greater than is required to resist the strain that will be put iiin ttieru in actual use. A 1 thought succc ted by this test is that it is a j matter of regret that a machine so itsef nl J should be left on one side of the central lim- .of iron and s'eel construction. It cost I ho : govermuent nearly a hundred thousand d..l ' lars, and it would be- well to have it used freely by the people. ! den. how kin I pass the gates ' An Arab who was quarrying stone at i a ph'ce aliout four miles and a half from i ("aza. in Palestine, recently, unearthed a ! marble figure supposed to lie a colossal ! godof the Philistines. The height istif- j teen feet. Tin hair bangs in ringlets j down tiion the shoulders, and the beard j is long, indicating a man of great age. ! There is no inscription on the figure or the pedestal, which is a huge carved in one piece with the figure The white man put his movth close to the ot!i r"s ear and replied : "Pav "cut fifty cents !" A lh-KT I.ss.-Tho llarli.n.l eor 1 spondent of the Spriiiiifj.-ld 7.'. ."'"'' tells the fol lo win story of Imw a Hart ford manufacturer lo-t and found -f 1, tKHt in I'nited Mates bunds : The gentleman in question is a heaw i ap italist. who occasionally has tobonow lat ce sums for a short time and uses 1 "nited st.iti-r bonds s.s collateral on such occasion. In 1 the present instance he had ja-t paid up a 1 loan and called in his bonds which li. plac . ed in a tin box. On his way to his ottice he j stopped at the ooot .Maker's" r-ml tried on a : pair of new hoot. Nothing was thought of ! the bonds for a fortnight, when another mem bcr of the firm needed to use t hem at the bank and searched sate in vain The hero ot the tale was- in New Yolk, to which Jioiiit a dispatch was scut to the effect tluit tlie bonds couldn't l-o found, lie ret lull ed to Hii'tford post-haste and wetit oyer the route taken the day lie had l ist sii-n them. Asheentsred the shoemaker's shoj Ka ,...,. ..r 1..illw.r Lnll. . A 1. Mr It wo-il l have bee n a pretty evrn iighl, , j am ,.n , V(, i,i(ln'-t vo" ,.ave an old till lo here a week or so since '.' There it is, stowed away on thvt upper shelf It I lav here on the lloor a day or two after your ' ca'll. when 1 shelved it until some claimant but an otbeer came it in the blossom. - along and p-iuelehed Ihtroit Free Pre. ! A i.itti.b boy refusing to take a pill. ; bis mother placed it in a piece of pre- blocV: ! served jH-ar, and rave it to mm. In a The ' few minutes she said : "Tommv, have j apjeared." The manufacturer eacerly p ; ened the Ikix and found his H.Vo of londs and intact. j uninjured and intact. statue was found buried in l ip of a hill near the : -en. and on the : you eaten the pear i but the seed." Yes. mot !ior, all 1 1. who adveitise 1 el lew get rich W i .1' do pi It. t z '.'1 ir