ill j-gE CAMBRIA FREEMAN -eVclverliisinqr Itatpn. The larire and rf liable circulation rt the uniA Y nvr.Mis Mmmi.tit.i h famraole on- idrrati.m of rtTertler. wbt taTort will ta ln rled at Uie JoiiowiDK low rtt : 4 uMihMl Weefclv ' - v s- r, r ; G. C't m bla ' . ,Y I I. A. M.'I'IKr.. J'ff. w. 1 Inch. times Vn s ao ' 8. SO ' f CO .no 'o.ry) .no Tt.eO 10. n 3 moatr. rn vit lis .."."..".".." 1 Tear "IIII ' 6 nTn?h?...........""""""""""""' 1 yfcr '. " " ' 6 murtth..... i."!!!"" " 1 Tr nr ' -s,swt I Circulation - J.lltl. 5 11 - f' ;v.cRIPriOS Fl ATI'S. . yr-H r. cash in a 3 vanoo. ... ! f not with"! o Til l r nut p' l within to " if not p'l within vo i col'n mr.i)th ..ft.-'t I 1.75 I ,t ..'l ! r. . j hi " e miDt i ' -i . si " 1 rear I M e'monthi """ Si?-l C months II"" 1 " 1 J'hT AdTn'n'iTs 'T'r nd Fjptntorl NoUcn."" An-litor'p N ot irefi ' no S "0 i on re-idimr ou t l :lonI per j o tr will lie c o or. i;ny artr-'d to Stray ari'J Pimllar Votip. . . j ' Fultiep Item. fir lnT'lnn l'ie. TtT Una ..k -.at wliJ tho li r? he de an I llinn who d.n't c-n-iiii their .iv pvine in mlv iii. inut n t ' r'ed on tho savno fi"itivz is T ;ni f i't be iia t in ct ly urt-i--.-i-tiso.i - t irward . v tir psner before yon stnn it. fr vit. Norm hut ft'ii".!'J do otii. , : .ie a s.vaiawi life's t.e; -h rt. ; ur.'ocjuont lnertin tc. ir line. t P'"'"'tOT w prnr,rir-tj of am roi-nnrafi t9 or otfv. cwrf rnunirfififiTu dsrrnri tn r-ntt atten tion f. nv matror of ti-v:rd or ifit7id4,4i. mjrcf mttf tir paid for en edrrrtutTtmlt. ' .Ion rKTUTiTro r.f ill kini Tict!r urid irM'tl onjly cxfcutcl t lowest j rices. Iion't to -5nrB it. H. A. f1cP!:CE, "Editor and Publisher. "hb is a frkkman -whom thr troth makes free, and all are slates beside. SI.SO and postage per year, In advance. EBENSBURG, PA.. FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1SS2. VOLUME XVI. NUMBER 19. ; - I " V 1 1 i , I i -' I : i ' i : : . J r 1 J 111 . 1 1 I I V WlfT. PAT YOU TO 3 iTTY ;T PJew KIBE 1ST ST3TJTI G "P A. , ir vor Yr.ivr axt or the hTcnsst Goods at rni: ' J)i;ir.I ATPLES, j NEEDLES, - - (;::r:.-E. t " pe(-ites, ! on. : ; tm'DEit, pe--1 ).TiNr;s. 1 okan(;es, .mjDA, E XT 1 ACT stn-1 ; l'EN. - FXEN-CE3. 1 rENHOEDERS, ,,':avi:. ra eepi'Eh. EitUIIE.s. ri-n. ! TIN'. -T-rVf". " HOOKS, j I'lEES. '- '; E!N)S. i I'RfXES, J rror:i?. '. j rtixs, ' T E.ACOX, : FHEITs. ! EIfE. i rave; eh. J rope ti alters, vs. i crxr.n rs, , salt. .;, ! r;rxcrs. ; st-thxes, r )K. ! - I'OWIinH, 1 'Tsons. oil, I umpimxs ' sfra'i: rKrTTEs. ,; OIL. ' TTTS ' j SF.WT, MACII'K OIL, r ta'-ics. ; i r x i ) ic e rci 1 1 e fs, i sninTixf;s. ,l : AI'l'LES, ; noMivv. ' SHf)v laCERS, rnr.X. i hooks an. EVES, j SHOT. im.acIIES, j ifoK STLK TAVIST, !'iAi-s. 1 vnif;o. ' " THREAD, TOMATUES, , TXK. I SOAPS. vr:- ! JF.LLIES C.M l.in.IL Sr'ICES, "" -V)T. ' LAMI' flllMXEVS, STAROTT. oi.vte, ! " v.-k't:. 1 sTOf-rcixr:. i " RERXERS, ! STOVE POLISH, W AMOX, ; LAEDA XI'M. SFOARS. m . I s. ; LE AH l'F.XCILS, SrspFXHERS, )'!"! ! V. - I'lX'.S, I LEMON'S. ! SWEET OIL, r r.i :. ; ltxex i;asii. teas. v; l-AIU'H, i MACAROXI, J THREAT), T.1!:AXS, : MATCHES, TTTRS. iM : '. . MOL VES, 1 "V 5TTRORT, ! r!ERS. : MFSLIXs. WA!irT; SODA. TAUTER. ' MI'STARD, "VVOODEX 1UTKKTS. i; AMS. : XAILS YEAST POWHER, M ANY OTHER ARTICLES TOO XUMEUOrS TO 3IEXTI0X. ! UO OLD GOODS OF AMY KIND! i or.sir.-ALL r hie '.-all choice!-all cheap il i.i sfiiiri' of Pi'.Ii.ic ml mi I S Tlall iji;ai.i;i:s in all kixus or SPRING WAGONS, I i RRI AGESJOP AMD XT AY t ljl j .V fo!f-,fritrJ roriticx: TICJli:, 7; ETXJDEEli, IIOLLIW CSW Oirrif and 7 'IC'l'Jtt; rnri7n t t TrTnmT VP7 C PIT ' u i L it iiu, ua if iii.iiiUij ii i n i r. . . ,' s r, u And Wjji'in.- ilMOWX LMl'IIOVI-I) AM) it. a. i! tttTi'T tnachint rtj fimrt r.s tun a Siori f I'tof, all fi niH lirsi irttrravtctl to be exactly tin v jtn s'-nt' fl. Li. Cl V.ti. MAY I-, -f. Sl2,000 WORTH OF THE inn 3 5 W TV .5 ,'i I " J 3 K it ib u utiicii i)i:rn:s UUALITY, MAKE AND PRICE, HAS .11 ST l!i:r,N IMXIUVLD AT T1I11 foislen Eaalo Clotliinff House. :;01 KI.EVKXTIl AVENUK. ALTOOXA, ALSO, A LA VJiK AND EI.Kli.VXT STOCK (IS" WS, and GENTS' FURNLSII XG GOODS. 'a. r . '.rnhii, i.-ir. G. C llO ir.t.i;u.N i ttn, mum, mm, books, smiBHEST,! r twit,, ZiiULS, HATS, riT;.T?rirps VARIETY r STORE, lnr.Li (; o o ),. oxi:s t ho ir,? AVKI-! S20 . rvr i . 1 v'- A IN i M u: v. j v,.t. i : n i oK.Ct. . I. .. .. At- te .!- A as m r r r-.. A- MoOH Til. --!. T one.,. 1') e TI . rr' f in linre HoM.'.y ill on UKATT I , 'j or t'u.'.tlt t t 3., I'oi tlBB j.-Mo. I f Honest Prices HoLLoiriso list: Cheao. Store I'.ii-oii.t:: is IN-Mit'ft:u'.Iy!',H-itf(I. 1 t if ft I- Tv IL.IZ33 FAM and LUMBER WAGOHSJ XO TOP BUGGIES; s OO PAPERS: v. l .l ..i..rjO. ! TITFT" tit Tff rCsTn mnu ninnr.i TlilDIPH (.KAIX DRILLS. nn.l, from a Strain TiresIier to iltts HHtiitit'iir-torii ji iiinl & H. V. 1J VI: CELECnATED PI A' J 2 comi'ktitiox PA. a p a a b s 3 n m SAMUEL MARCH, Proprietor. i riRTrS, CAPS. GROCERIES, Paper, Gears, Tcacca, Fancy Gooas, Toys, k EBENSBU.aG, PA. i 'it i as. it in ea i. txg. T. MAFON lilCILVRDS, Siirpoii. Doiitist l-J.lxn-iliirr;, I ; . IT I,. t FN i a t. V( ' l.'K either ... ,-ntive or n;eehn . an I e . 1 "t'l'T ork verlnin r 1. 1 he evecnted at mod-Tate tory m truer. Year patron lo 11' V IH.if.-f ta-.'S an I : n t ne i re'eeetfii! l. "o oitis on Hili si-net, narlv epr H.alr Iio'i.-.. I--,'.- t U.e -tr.j T. AY TH( 'K . A TT"!? N F Y- T-TjA V. Fl.f t 1 -t . P l'1-,. 1.1 ...,'.!( rr 1 T 1. l.ior.l. ...... I. (!., r r.l t'en're f'reet. All ttanner ot leMl l.nr.i;e-1 i ' .ended to ratisfaeto. rrty gd ctrttB?tr) jni pjHt7. w t tr.7 PLAIN TRUTHS The Hood is the foundation of life, it circulates through every part of the 1 ody, and unless it is pure and rich, good health is impossible. If disease has entered the system the on'v sure and quick way to drive it out is to purify and enrich the blood. These simj 1 3 facts are well known, and the highest medical authorities agree that nothing but iron will restore the blood to its natural condition ; and also that all the iron preparations hitherto made blacken the teeth, cause head ache, and are otherwise injurious. I'.rown's Iron Bitters will thor oughly and quickly assimilate with the blood, purifying and strengthen ing it, and thus drive disease from any part of the system, and it will not blacken the teeth, cause head ache or constipation, and is posi tively not injurious. Saved his Child. 17 N. Eutaw St., Paltimore, Md. Keb. 12. i38o. OtT!tr TTr-on the TecmTTienda tion of a friend 1 tried bitowx's Iron 1;itthps as a tmic and re storative fur vy daughter, hom I w5 thjroe:i.Iy convinced was wntin:r away with Consumption. Having lust three daughters hy the tcrrihle i:sease, under the care of eminent physicians, I was loth iq telicve that anything cruIJ arrest the pr.iress r f the uisear, hut, to my err. a surprise, bpfire my daugh ter had taken one b .ttie of IIi own's 1i;iit I'-ittcts. she hetran to mend and now is qu-te restored to former hcahh. A fti;h d. uiiter br,;an to show signs of Consumption, and when the physicinn ws consulted he quicltiy said "Tonics were re quired ;" and when informed that trie elder sister was taking Bhown'3 Ikon Bitters, responded 'that is a good tonic, take it." AOK!l PHBLP3. Crown's Iron Bittfrs effectual ly cures I"K-spepsia, Indigestion and Weakness, and renders the greatest relief and benefit to persons suffering from such wasting diseases as Con surupuun, Kidney Cumpluits, etc. iOV'sWXcUN' e thnt 1 muiloa n!ir;ico!nBrur!ol . & 'lr":r.t.rnerr-d ft' i i nearly hi whole , N-d 1 tM-traTirn. Hurt h:nl erei.t i-tivs leian?. who the nttenti ti nrer'r ri te i t -9iin. siieii u 5 ui -i ; iu i r c. s ' " n.i'.-rl tr-hit! v:i '. tH up' 11 hi' in t'T 1 1 i itr.'1 ! t'Tie-na'. i v. 1 1 ; Tl e kin 'n hi : ,.t' his j rr--.n. p TI ctr-in-''. Is i t:ltit'S. vi!h n- i hind. !! h if :.X' Tt :d hy twelve -t relet ,i.- n :i ..r '. ' i . ki own to the jirofo- j rrosive a p., 1.1 f.O'i f4r ' T1 :f. 1 pro. 1' 1,, !- t 1-..TH KOLVliST 'i Tl' t'liA Soap is tom:,irli',y cvrid. ,;1 d. t d m e l;t r ;.;irts :. h ; r. - -r.t a iti'--t li -tri'.me i jv us felt ft net vneoih ? n in- tr er Ir m:v nl llu: ul-e t:e le!t le- v.- ! ' it (.IT' i Tve-ive. months. ! V. H . Ri;ws. !.(., Ham well. S. O. scnorri.-i snirn. l!, v. Tt. . in .! i'Viu' 1 ' i'H!w with tVc ' '1"TliV I' A h' Vv KiJ1. : that thro' litT'ne I'T'sei 1 pe ,.n" ol ! T'-ir'-t' toners .is e;ired ot a senT'ilotM ?'rr w-'-h wa-. ci,.w!y draitiina- (iway hi- !p hy ti c t't i n t ies Kus. ii.vk.st internally, nnd Ci'Tict it anil t't rit t". Sap oxt, rnaliy. The vol 'on that had !'d the li-etHo ws cotn;lcto !v driven out. i:czkjta. Sixt-n THi'MTki5f f :n ttiv .u' an-l h'iTh i ' t. 7rnia. itn-1 c t'i-p1 m 1 u-'c the r rrfTi; a ('i:TitTH. ari'l crrici wl.-h turrit! nut to ln ir- t ;,iiu nml annv;iree. K k 'i V K5T Interna ify nni k ioaf eNtrnali whh'h en1 irelv eei .'d nu- ei tint my -K ia is :i: r-i.h and natnr.il fl11 i-vt. Ikn. M. Fhai . er. ti South St., P.aUlmpro. CT'TrCl'IlA. 1 Tlte Cutteiiri ireatment. for the jure of Skin, Scalp nnd Mined licenses. eot,s'st in thn Internal ne of t'rTtrre.A lltsnivtiYT. tlto now Blood f'nri fi t. tid the external n-e of tv, Tret ra and t'rn (tha Soap, the (irr.it Miiti t'lin-f. Prie.-.of t'l'Tt- THA.ml! hoses. .Soe.; liirje hr xes. $1.09. Cl'TI- rt'itA Hksoi.vkst. l per b.mle. 'UTicfRA Sop, 2e. : t't.Tierti. sti "t mi S, v p. l.r-o. Dei ot, V. I.F.KS t I'HTTKK. Boston. Mg. Sanford's Radical Cure. Head Cold, Watery liisehurtte.;! from the TVoo and Keep. KiniMni( S'ois-s tn the Head. Nervona lleadaehe and ClmU and Fever instantly relieved. f'hok'nic. ptit-hl loaeiis ta d : -'h illed . memhrnne cleanse. 1. disinterred nnd hetiled. hreath sweet ened, smell, t is'e nd he-.ritikt restored, and con stitutional r.irntres cheeked. foTiirh, l!r':eht:'. Hrepfirirs Into the Throat. Isie- in ttie t'he-t. lyposi.i. Wasting of sstreng lh and Fleja. I.o.-s ol siee, !se., cunj. One hot tie J;id i m t Cure, one hot 'n farrhal Sol vent and one I ir. Sanford's Inhater, In one j.aek-P'-re. of all druKiil-d-i. t-.r $1. for ASiroRi's Kadical Ci-ek. WKIiKS VOTThIK, Boston. oOLU'S' LIGHTNING I - fe! -';r'. T ' Lj- Vsenkness of Tlle Kidney., I N;',r,"j;r m", Female Uenkn-ss. Malaria, i rU:e",h, every where0" j A llMIVKTO ITnnv v.'itiov , HJll.ll.ilUAllll) ,s .U11L F.steteni .Ioh lliiAnitr. doe! j ii.ivire heen ;ap.oiiiie.l Administrator tr bonit i no of the e-t.iie of John Br.idl-v. late of I.retto hi ro-iiro, f uti-' ri i enmity. dee.ied. the under ! Mirned herei.y notifies rJ", persons indehtod to snid t est it e that payment most he made without deUv, and those linvtnit chum? auiilnst the name are re j guested to pre-ent them in leil form tor nettle , ment. .It isH'll HOUCF., Administrator, f l-retto, Ai.ril Jl, li.-t. , VJ'OTICr.. The public are hereby no- O-N tifiej thnt I t.svp hoimht from Thomas Mill- : l.. i.i,..,... ......ii.... . , lilt, of li ill it z r . the Mh.ntni; te-i rih.d i.ernnt) ji-eperty, which I leivein his custody darimr my jdcasnr", to wit : '2 eews. 6 sheep, 3 i.its. 1 eookinif stove, 3 he.!--tea34 and bed tin. 1 earj.et. 7 ehaira and 1 ei:r,..,;.,rd. J A Ai KN McOKAIN'. fhest Sj.rint;, JIa la. ISSi-St. N OTICP! ! All persons are bereby 1 1 eniiitone,! fiirninct trespasmif on property ottne-i t.yeitiierot the nnder-ttf ned. Any person 1 fontid ere"! our prcnusc sfiir this at will he pruoeoutert to the full e! -n 01 Hie law. 7-tn.s. .N E p Wis:, ; 1 RANK KKVEHliAVX. CsiaVna Ttrpr, My 10, J?SJ.-St. I. 4T ml mm . - . "" WHAT THE BI HDOCK IS GOOD FOR. "Good for potMn?," tho farmer srtid. As lie marie a sweep at the brirrtock's liend; Tiut tlien Ik- thought it. was best, tio doubt, To rome soirtp day and root it out. So be lowered his srytne nv went his way, To see bis corn ami iratber bis y ; And the weed crew safe and strons: and tall, Close by th.e side of the garden wall. "(;oorl for a bntne." cried the little toad, As re bonped out of tbe dnsfv rfnd.l lh hTd jne been hivinrr a drendfnl fright, The bov wbo pare it wa yet in sicrht. TTere it was cool, ami dark, and green, The snfest kind of a letfv screen." The toad wrt barpv. "for," said be, "The burdock was plainly meant for me." "Oood for a prop," (be emder thontrht. And to an1 fro with eare be wroncrlit. Till he fiitend 't well to nn evergreen, Artd smin bit rabies fine between. 'Twa n beautiful bridge a triumph of i skill : The flies eame 'round, as hllers will 1 The spider lurked in bis corner dim. The more that eame, the better for him. ''Good for plav," rhl a child, perplexed To know what frolic was coming next. So she gathered tbe burrs that all despised. And her citv o'aymite was quite surprised To see what a beautiful basket or chair foiiM he made, with a little time and care. They ranged their treasures about with pride, And played all day hy the burdock's side. "Vothinor Is lost in this world of ours ; Honev comes from tbe idle flowers ; The weed which we pass in utter scorn, Mav save a l'fe bv another morn. Wonders await vis at everv turn. We must be silent, and c'adlv learn. No room for recklessness or abuse, Since even a burdock hps its use. SHAMROCK SKETCHES. "teho" KonnritY, tttf. mwrsa .TrTVJic. Very instructive reading to tbe thoughtful mind would be sketches of the Irishman at home in the last, century, of the oppressor and the oppressed, the advocate, the criminal and the Judsje. What pen could do justice to the impenetrable hearts of P.aron f Jeorge and Lord Xorhurv? the two who were asso ciated in the trial of Robert Emmet. Lord ; Norbnrv was then plain John Toler. Lie ! was the first Lord NYrbury, and was always ; a keen foxhunter. In a child's alphabet of j bis day this couplet is to be found : i "'T' !i Ti'wr: hfi-V ! firwnr l' thnerv: '. Hut tntond of a tiir ti. a ni;in thnt must die." j When he became Lord he was called "Sro ; Noihi'ry." TTow well he deserved the title, i I cite one example from n multitude in his , career. Tt would seem as if every misde- ; mcanor wa then magnified into a capital ; crime, and (he laws were executed with sav- , aire cruelty. The number of lives forfeited for forcing ami uttering liank nofes was ap- j palling. No rnerev was shown to man, wo- ; man or child convicted of that crime, even i though the note were of so low a value as j twenty shillings. ! During tbe Ticeroyalty of the Duke of : Lichmond, j a roon ma siwpn mcouk was tried at the Sessions fTouse, 'Green street, for having passed or uttered at the large crrocery of Messrs Smith, In Saekville 1 street, a forced note of the nominal amount of thirty shillings, purporting to be a note of one of the private nanus tnen existing in nW'"- Tt was proved that be bought at the store of the prosecutors, on the morning of a certa'n day. sr.me tea nnd sugar, and paid for them with the rote in question i IS I ill II soon after he left was discovered to be a f( rwry. lie returned in the evening, made another pnrchfise and offered another note in payment. "You were hern this morning," said the man who had served him. lie was arre-ted, and was sent to Newfnte after he ha.l leen examined before a Magis trate When brnuiihf to trial, Sfoore did not deny the charce of uttering forged notes, but i gave the following account of himself: He ! said thnt on the day before the commission i of the crime fw which he stood indictee; be ' arrived, near'y penniless, In Dublin from j F.denherry, wheie be was born, and had j passed the whole of his life. Tie bad a wife ! and seraral children. He was a hedge-car-j penter that is, he purchased timber trees, which he made into spokes and felloes for I eoach-piakers. Business failing him, he fell ! into creat distress, and left his native village I to seek employment of some kind in the enn" 1 : t - T r . . . - . . ... ii.ti. vni me evening oi n is arrival he met a cangof forgers who were on the lookout for innocent men they could use for instruments. "SV.ticing his simple and honest appearance, they accosted, er.t his storv, afforded him temporary relief, and the following morning sent him out on his first expedition, which was a .success. They asked him to try again. He declined, but was reassured by their tell ing him that their notes were genuine the only mystery bring that the notes had been found in the stret. Believing their story, Moore went boldly tn the very store where he bad passed the first note, which a con scious criminal would have avoided, and so stood before the court a guilty mm. Immediately on being taken into rristdy Moore admitted his guilt, and declared bis willingness to aid in bringing the actual forgers to Jnstice, (dating where they could be found. The whole gang were apprehend ed in the very et of preparing forged notes for circulation. They, however, were only sentenced to transportation for having forged notes In their possession, while THE roott VICTIM was wntenced to death, the sentence being pronounced by Xero Norbnry in his nsnal harsh and unfeeling manner. Moore had produced several witnesses of good standing who testified to bis honesty and good char acter. The jury accompanied their verdict iw At Hie of "guilty with a strong recommenib.i;.,n nrr-rcv. deeming it impossible that the ould be punished by more than a few imprisonment. ie time of Moore's Ininrisoament in pw?!vtt there was a,so there po. lit ir-al prisoner, hy name Walter Cox He Zcd With publish"..- a Seditious libel ! in the Innh Alaaazin. a. nnnir.hlpt. nf .,;.., - 1 ' he was the editor and proprietor. j at last acceeded to Costelloe's terms, and lie was afterward released, went to New ! gave him an order upon his wife for York and started a newspaper there. lie I ' A titocsand ixu.lahs, and Moore frequently met in. the prison I with the nnderstanding that if the lawyer's ennrt-yard. It happened that one of the j efforts should fail to save the cashier, Cos jurors by whom Moore had been convieted 1 telloe should return $0."0 to the widow ! called upon Cox, while be and Moora exercising tn the court-yard. The Juror recognized Moore, and Cox said, speaking of f, . 1 s .iu ire . I ioire j "Poor ttdlow : he has no idea of his dan ger !" " What danger?" inquired the jrror. "Of being hanged ?" "Impossible. We recommended him to mercy, and the Judge promised to lay our recommendation before the Lord-Lieuten- ant." j " Wliat Judge ?" asked Cox. "Nero Nor- 'bory! You recommend the poor fool tt) mercy to the mercy of that Judge ! He Las no more mercy In him than there i9 milk in a male tiger I" "It was not to the mercy of the Judge we recommend him, but " "Why did you not acquit him ? He was a mere dupe." "But be confessed that he was guilty," urced Ibe juror. "Guilty of what? Of uttering an Instru ment of exactly the value of that it purport ed to represent, for the bank of which it in tended to be an engagement is insolvent. That unfortunate mar. will be hanged. Re member my words." BF.NDKRF.n TF.RRIBT.T TEAPY in bi9 minrt by what Cox bad said, the juror drew up a strong memorial to the Lord-IJeu- tenant, signed by bimself and all of bis fel low jurors. Not content with this thev drew up certificates, memorial, petitions and pa pers, which they presented t" every one In authority whose voice could have any bear ing on the case. At length they arproached Lord Xorbury, Individually and implored mercy for Moore. At length tbe Thursday arrived, the execution being fixed for the en suing Saturday. Tn a state of horror at not yet being able to avert his doom, the original juror threw himself in Norbury's way in the street, and hung upon him begging for mercy for Moore X"Pa(I'r!C that he was Innocent of intended crime, that through his frank confession a gang of forgers had been given over to jus tice, and Imploring him to spare the country carpenter for tbe sake of his wife for his young children. Norbnry answered coldly. "Every attention has been paid to the doc uments addressed hy you to nis Excellency We have weighed them all well, but the j bankers have been playing the devil I They I have stated to the (government that if this man is allowed to escane they will never prosecute another. The law must take Its j course. So saying, he shook off the kind-hearted juror and hearted Into a store. Now at last perceiving bow fut'le it was to : appeal to Nejo Norbnry, and that the case j was desperate, the juror drew up a memorial, j and, seeking the wife of Moore, he gave it to her, with instructions how to proceed to the t residence of the Lord-Lieutenant j "Try," he said, "to p'ace it in his hands. I If that be found impossible see the Due'iecs of Richmond. Tell her your story, and pray , her to take charge of your petition. She is char'fahle and feeling, and will do all in her I power." "Arrived at the Vice Hegal Lodge. Mrs. Moore sent in ber petition. It was returned . to her with the regrets of His Excellency, ' beraus-e it was not in bis power to interfere. ; "But," continued the servant, "here is the Duchess. Speak to her." ! The poor woman rushed forward as a lady crossed the ball, and, falling on her knees, j held up the petition and begged for the life ' of her husband. j "flive me tbe paper," said the Duchess. j 'I will present it. If I succeed, you will see . me again." I A delay of some minutes occurred, of ter- rible suspense to to the anxious wife. Then . a woman, weeping, silently broueht back j the paper and placed it in the hands of the j half-dead supplicant for mercy. Moore was hanged the next day ! On the margin of the yellow, t;me stained page from which this "o'er time tale" is taken, there is ! written in pencil, after the last phrase, "It bad arter a bin Norbnry." j But while so many innocent men went to ' the pallowa I fkw nonrr? escaped scot-free of punishment, and the neck of one was very neatly saved by the ; shrewdness of a lawyer rained Co'telloe, i who had a large criminal practice in Dublin ; toward the end of the last century, j One morning, when he was in the height ; of bis reputation, a great sensation agitated i the city by the announcement that tbe Olea ; dow's hank had been plundered of n large sum in gold by the chief cashier. The sup ; posed culprit was soon in custody and safe j within the walls of Newgate. This man at once sent for Costelleo. 1 Closing the door carefully, after his arrival I the prisoner said : "You have probably heard, sir, that I have been the cashier of Gleadow's bank, and that a large deficit has been discovered in my ac counts ?" "That you had been a clerk of old Olea dow's, I was Ignorant," replied Costelloe ; "hut I have been informed that the cashier has appropriated some of the money-bags; in fact, that the batik has been robbed of a heap of gold by a rascal." "Pascal is a hard word, sir." "Not if you roblied the bank." "Do jou mean to insult me? I rob tbe bank ! I cheat my employer I Plunder mv benefactor and preserve the fruits of it ! No, no, sir I have rot a shi'ling in the world !"- "Then you will be hanged." "What can you mean?" "I will make it as clear to ynu as that those are f?tteis of iron. If you robbed tho bank you must at least have some of the money, and can afford to pay me well for saving your life. If yon are innocent, and consequently penniless, yon will be weighed as sure as was Cahir na gappul," Cahir na gappul, otherwise Charles-the-horse, was a horse-thief whose career had been untimely cut short bv the application of one of his own professional implements, a halter. "now weighed ?" asked the ca-bier. "In the city justice scales. The case is spoken of everywhere, and the proofs against yorj are irrefutable." ''Tint) there is no hope ? - , "None, if you be what yon say yourself guiltless for yon cannot afford to retain me who alone, of all the bar, could fcive you a chance." Overwhelmed and horrified, the hypocrite Costelloe left the prison, and without wait ing to present the draft, went immediately to the Crown's office, where! he found the chic? clerk at his desk. Engaging him in conversation, Costelloe asked him if there vp as any news. "News," paid Johnson. "Is it possible yon have not heard of the robbery at Glea- I dow's?" j "I not a word of it I" s.tid Costelloe. -"Ye,-Ifi true, the cashier ban abstracted ; tnifiA ;n i a a . . ; n r!uanv and substituted for them as mHiiy f lithiums." 1 "And got clear off ?" "Oh, no, he's safe in Newgate and sure to swing, for the evidence is most conclusive, part of the stolen property being found in a secret drawer in his home." "Did yon say the money abstracted was in gold?" inquired tbe lawyer. "Yes, but the pieces have been identified." "ITow ? One guinea is so like another." "True, but mark the finger of Providence. Along with the guineas were ten foreign gold coins, Dutch ducats, which were also in the safe. These have been sworn to by his deputy, and will hang hirn. See here !" The clerk opened his desk and took from it a small boy;, committed To bis custody for production at he trial of the accused, and poured its con'ents into the hands of the seemingly wonder-struck lawyer, who exam ined them attentively, pieee by piece, and finally returned them and took his leave. THAT KvTVTXfi TffF. T.AW-TKr.'S n.TV.K was observed to goon board a Liverpool j packet, which sailed half an hour afterward Some weeks later the prisoner was brought to trial. With much feeling be pleaded "not gui'tv," He declared that the rouleanx of farthihgs found in the safe had been there for years, and that he had received them from his predecessor at the value indicated by the ticket attached to each packet: he had never opened thtm. Costelloe only slighly examined the witnesses, who deposed to the preliminary facts, and the aecned bank clerk began to look very serious, and even to shed tears. At length the examina tion in chief of the deputy cashier took place. ne swore that be bad frequently seen the I identical ten Dutch pieces in tbe safe, and again identified them. Costelloe seamed to pay little attention to the examination of this witness, and gazed steadily into his hat. which sfood before him on the desk. Just as the deputy cashier was about to go down, ( the lawyer for the defense, rising, exclaimed : i "Ston a moment, young man. And so, sir, you neense your friend of robbery?" j "I am sorry that my duty eompds me, to 1 give criminatory evidence against him." j "And you swear that those identical gold pieces in your hand at this moment . Where are they ?" They were again handed to the witness. Cr;teT!no continued : "You swear that those pieces of gold in your band wer" in the prisoner's keeping?' "I do swear it." "Hand me those coins," he said. "Yon have sworn positively, and it will be well for you if truly. Here take your "r.T oor vonft." "Ie stretched out bis hand, and missing that of the witness, hy the mh't accident, let fall the mass of go!d Into bis own hat in front of h'rn. Then taking out a single piece, he went on : "You insist in swearing that this p.iece of money, the property of Mr. Gleadow, was in the prisoner's custody?" The witness took the ducat, looked at it, and said, pos:tive!y : "T wear it." "And this also and this and this?" continued Costelloe, to the number of ten. The witness swore to each. "And thisnnd this and this?" said Costelloe, producing from his hat twenty other pieces of a similar kind. The witness was dumfounded, tbe counsel for the crown looked blank, the Judge smiled, the case was abandoned, nr.d the thief saved. Th" way In which the shrewd lawyer bad managed was this. After his scrutiny of the ducats nt the Crown office, which era bled h'm to fix ie, hi? memory their dates and effigies, he had gone to his home. In the evening of the- same day his confidential clerk sailetl for Liverpool. Prom there he went by mail to london, from London by packet to Botterdam, where be bnnghf up twenty of the ducats of the dates indicated hy Costel'oe. These coins the lawyer bro't to court in his bat. His letting the cth"r ducats fall into it was not an accident, but a clever trick, and if not as wonderful as th hat trick of the modern magician, had the greater merit of s uing a man's life, who, rogue though he was, hardly des rved hang ing for his crime. Oscar Wii.uk Pau at.tzfti. A man who was on the same train with Wilde coming fnn Beno to Ogden relates an amusing ex perience. Wilde was lounging back in his seat dreaming of the asphodel, etc., when the train hoy woke him up by shouting : "Hoscar Wilde's poems for ten cents!" The poet started up to a sitting position, with : "Great Gurod I Is it possible that my poem? have reached such beastly figures as i that?" "Three for two bits." continued the boy. He offered t he poet some copies of the Sea side Library edition in paner covers. Wilde grabbed the book and rixed his big eye on t he boy. - "Do you know, my dear sir, that you are lending your countenance to a hellish in fringement on the right of an English au thor?" "Is that so ?" replied the hoy, slowly. "Do yon s'nose the feller that writ the book will know it?" "Of course he wid. now can your guilty acts escape his cogniz mce?" "His cognnzzence ain't anything to me. i It ain't loaded, is it ?" "I am the author nf these poems." "Ah. go awav," snickered the bor. "You i nrP vmnging j fnr a rnmmisli. 'Twon't j vrork, cully. Folks put jobs on me every J j.,.. TTore 'take a wasted peanut and fill up. If I thought such a looking chap as you wiit them lines d'ye suppose I'd peddle 'em? No, sir I" The crowd roared, and Wilde joined heart ily in the laugh. After the boy was assured that the man was nope otiier than the poet, be went to Wilde and offered half a dozen oranges to call it square. The Nfw artthtkttc. if it costs a col ored family eighty cents per week to keep four dogs and a goat, how much less will it cost if a policeman breaks the g'-at's neck and two of tne dogs get in the way of a street car? Six times seven girls are how rr.any girls, and what on earth pre they good for? i fr woman pays seventy-fi ire cents for a i shirt for her husband and f: for f pair of si'k hose for herself, what was the co-t of both .' A man who desires to move a cook stove weighing S'W pounds calls in a neighbor to lift ISO pounds of the infernal old thing, while he gets away with the remainder. 1 What ii the remainder ?-7)efrot Free Pre. A v eminent historian trtces h is-ba'.l hack j to tho t ime when B bceca weru down to th I well with a pitcher and caaght Isaac A 1100 A M'E 1 REAL LIFE. j j I.obert Myron was the son of an English j tenant-farmer, who in the year lsjs found I Ins family expenses increasing so much fast- j j er than his income that it was absolutely i i necessary to decrease the former, since the ! j latter cntiUl not he made larger. ' ! In the hope of beimraMe to assist his father ' j in some way Bobert came to this country i and failing to tfnd employment rear the me. trop-ilis. walked from town to town, until j when neur Bochester, New York, be was 1 j hired as a farm laborer by Judge James E. i : Berry. During six years young Myron ' j worked industriously, sending nearly all of j ! hi? earnings to bis parents, and then came ! j the sad news thnt bothfathei ar.d mother had ! I died on the same day. After recovering from I : this shock it was but natural the young man i should begin to think of establishing a home fr himself, and quite as nat u ra! that his love should go out tothe daughter of ins employer who plainly showed her preference fur the young man who had so devoted himself to bis parents. But Judge Berry, while he rec ognized in Myron an invaluable farm laborer, had not the same views regarding him as a son in-law that Miss Bessie bad, and the consequence was that the lovers, finding it impossible to change the father's opinion, resolved to elope and build up for themselves a home in the far West. In ITiR, with but a few hundred dollars and the judge's curse, the yonngeouple were married, and s, 'ed at Green l,ake, Midli ern. where, st the beginning of the yearly. hoy were in reasonatdv prosperous circum stances, w iih two children to make glad their hnmble log cabin. Thr-ir farm was situated . several miles from any settlement, nnd al- j tbouob the Indians were rising against the i whites in many portions of the Saf., neither t Mr. nor Mrs. Myron flt any uneasiness, be cause they believed they had succeeded in establishing the most friendly re'ations with such of the "forest chi'd'en" as they came in contact with. Therefore tl.ev weie by r.o means alarmed when one day five Indians stalked gravely into the cabin iost as the noonday meal was being served. It had ever been Mr. Myron's custom to invite such vis- '. itors to partake of food, and on this, as on other occasions, they readi'v accepted the in vitation : but. gn-at'y to the surprise and uneasiness of their host, instead of placing their rifles in one corner of the room, as us ual, they held th"rn between their knees, the tnn7zl3 Of the weapons showing just above the edge of the table. Mr. Myron was too well verged in Indian customs not to know that such nct'.m on the part of his cuosts meant ii;sch;of. With the view of stir. wing them that he understood this breach of hospitality, and in the slight hope of intimidating them, he arose from tho table, took from the rack on the wall his rifle and fowling piece, and carefnl'v examined them to show they were loaded Why tho savages did not attack h:m then is one of the inexplicable things in Indian warfare. In stead of miking any hostile demonstrations they stalked gravely out of the house, disan j pearing behind a clump of bushes. Eor the moment Myron be'ieved that he had wronged his guests, and that they had taken umbra go at bis movements whn thehj intentions were peaceful. Still holding his rifle in his lfind, Myron stepped to the c-pen door for the purpose of ascertaining whether h;s guests had reai'y departed. When th . farmer appeared on th? thresbo'd the report of a rifle was heard, and Myron fe'l with a dangerous b jt pot necessarily fatal wound in his side. Women w ho live on the border, where they are con-iantly menaced bv danger, learn early in life that thev must deny themselves woman's privilege of fainting. When Mr. Myron fell, his w ife sprang to his defer se rather than assistance. To close ai d bairi cade win 'ows and doors was but the work of a moment when eveiything was prepared for such occasions, ar.d then the heroic wo man turn'-d ' er att - tttion to ! r huhnnd and children. The father's wont 1 bled but little, and save t..i standi the hirwel tl.e d-vote-1 wi fe could not aid Mm. rtc-vt h" piling the liod dlng around him in stv h a wiy that, in a it i ting posuro, ;e could f ice t'e closed door. I The temporary safety of tbe children was se cured by fastening them in the cellar, where they wnu'd be beyond the reach nf any bul lets ttieir late visitors might send, and af'ej s.ie hail peifeet-d her plan of defense, she . began to asstpite the offensive, j By removing the mud that filled the orev , Ices of the logs at the end of the house, loop. . holes were formed, and through these the husband nnd wife began an assault upon j their foes. With his rifle Myron shot one of the Ind'ans, and at the same time his wife killed another with the fowling-piece. By , this time the foe, finding their Intended vic tims more tenacious of life than they sup. j posed, resorted to stratageM to accomplish i their n.Hssacre. In I lie field was a cut half , fiiie.l with hay; in the st ihh- yard stood a yoke of oxen quiet'y eati-c. To fasten the animals to the ca rt and not exnose t'lernselve8 ; to the deadly aim of those n foe house was ; a difficult task, but ou tint the Indians fi. j naliy accomplished. To g-t th load of hay i aeiiiist the building, that if might 1- set o-i j tire, was still more difficult, and in this case unsuccessful, forbef ie it could be dope lioth j husband and wife had shot an enemy, vvhi'e i the fifth and only remaining one sought safe i ty in ptecipit.i'e ffirjit. Each moment the conflict tasted the bus. i band grew weaker, and medical aid oouM j pot be procured w ithout a j.n.r"ey nf a tmn- dred nd eighty miies. To tnverse this dis i tance t here was no other mode of conveyance j than the ox-cart. In this rude vehicle Mrs. ' Myron phtced her husband and children, and not once during that tedious Journey, mad i painful by the suffering , if the nuin lor whom she had braved the dangers and discomforts j of a frontier life, was a halt made. I At St, Cloud surgica' jtid was procured, ' and there, after Myron's recovery he sought work of any kind that would bring in siifiic ieiit for the support of his family, since the depredations of the Indians had impoverished him. B w is only by tl.e greatest exertion : that Myron cou'd keep his family front tn.il : want : nnd hearing that laborers were in . greater demand at Cape Girardeau, tie, with his wife and children, embarked on the Mfamer Tidal Wave tor that place, after haviat remained nt M. Cloud n.-ar.y a year. ; The voyage w.is iu vei complet -d, however, for h"ii Tower Groe, Missmrt, w is reach ed, a fire hrefe- out oil tl.e id fated st- anter, and in a very shott time she was burned to the water's edge. T!ie loss c.f life was en , si h rab'e, an 1 n-nong the mis-ing ones were ! the two Myron chit. it en. per the s ci! J tin e L'.K-it M;. r.n n.ts I ..md" s!:.d p. Ill' lie. s, A ;t" lii- St T ! nig- 1 iiiteiiaitled by tLe loa his cliUdrtii. Ferhapg it whs fortunate for him that he was obliged to work very hard simply to keep the wolf from the door, for it prevented l.im from brooding ever his misfortunes, as even m stronger man might have done. During tbs two vents that elapsed aftT the burning of the Tidal Wave Bobert Myron labored industrioKs'y, but without success, so far as the accumulation of worhVy goods was concerned : he had been able to pay the rert of a rude cabin three mi'es from the vil lage of Tower Hill, and to furnish i scantily. But the expenses attendant upon the birth of two children, nnd his own severe il'ness, during which he was copfired to bis bed two months, had exhausted the small fund he had succeeded in saving to enable him to re move to Cape Girardean. Then came a time when be could no longer find employment near his wretched home, and he sought it some mi'es up the river, go ing and retiming ea -h day in a small boat. Even then it nppeared that misfortune wa3 pot wearied .wit h pursuing him, for ope nlcht when returning from bis work, a storm came '.ip, which overturned his frail skiff, and, nearly exhausted, be was thrown upon a narrow bar of sand that made out from the bank of the river nt the spot where the Tidal Wave was burred. On this frail and trearh srous foot-bold he managed toremaln during the night, in full sight of the town, but una ble to attract attention to his desperate con dition. The dawn of day revealed still more hor rors, for close beside him, having evidently been unearthed by t lie waves, was the skel eton of a human being. At first Mj run felt that fear which seems to be natural in man when be sees the deserted tenement of one of his kind : but the resting-place which the waves gave to th" living and the dead w as so small that he was obliged to remain a'most in actual contact with the yellow bones. As to sut by the tVeleton waiting for help from the shore, which seemed o tardy in comine, he saw about the ribs of the flosh'ess frame a leather bolt. Curiosity overcame his hor ror, and, unfaltering l""" beH, be found within it goM coin to the amount of five thousand dollars. That Bokert Myiort w as In a fever of ex citement hatdly reeds to be told. He bad struggled to ti e full strength of man many years, and was 1 nr By more than a pauper when he should have hod at )eat a spot of God's foot-too! he emiM ca'l bis own. The dead had brought him what the living had ' refused. To take the gn'd for his own pur- poses seemed a theft, and yet be who had fastened it about b;s body could no longer use it. The struggle between his conscience and his necess-ij- v ns a long one ; but when those who came t rescue him arrived at the sand-bar th y found him w ith a skeleton, on . whi h M-thb'C could be ecn, and no one could have f ancied that the half drowned man had found a treasure. That the bones , were t! 'o of one of the passenger on the Ti dal Wave no one doul, .-,!, and they were given a resting place among the nameless -, grave of those who had lost their lives in the disasfrr. No one save B chert Myron and bis wife knew of the money belt, or thnt on the inside of it, "ut deep in the thick leather, was the name "Henry Barks." B'l": Myron, having the mobey, did not d are to Us.. jt op -ply h'st s-.in- poop'e would qn.-stion how be c'.t H'" h'd agreed with , his w;f. that th-y d uubJ use th? gold for t! ir'mvn I rf, hut c'o i! wtth a view tt returning it if they shou'd ever find the der.d nnm's heirs. This tie hoped to ih, by making such investr". tits as eon". I be rer,.V'y realized up'm so that they Tridit show themselves to he go i l, even if se)f-e'c(ed, stewards. The ca' in thev lived in and tbe five acres of land surrounding it was for sale at a price below its real value. Mvron represented to tne owner that, despite appearances, he bud suecoeded'in saving a -pal! amount of money ' about half the price asVed ami offered to buy it if his note would he acceptable for the balance. The bargain was made, and Myron still continued to work bv the day for any one who would h're l.im, tilling his own farm wlem h" could find no other wortv. Then he it-vested in a very small way in stock, buy ing w ben he coul 1 gd d' c'.lo 1 bargains only. Year hy sr h added to his posses-ions and . Ms ndgl.bors c i'd him a "thrift j-" man. Ail h'S investments y.eie good ones, since pone were made suve with a view of con- . verting pverytl ing into rah at. a moment's police if necessary, and Bobert Myron be- ' anie a wealthy man. As is p.sual witj , wealth cane the respect of his neighbor- hi to show their appreciation of money, elected , h'.m to the office of county judge. ! During 'he year l-CO the inhabitants of Tower Dili witpe-sed the destruction of another steam -r by fire at a'most the exact place where th" Tidal Wave went down. j Among all those men who labored to save life none wss more active than "Robert My ron, and h's house was convert" 1 In'o a hos- ,' pital for tl e reception of those who ere in jured, but ave 1 from ib'?th. Mrs. Myron was as earnest in her efforts to conifott the distressed pe .pie ns was her : husband, and her labor was signally reward, ed bv finding among the unfortunate ones whom she was inirsoig her father, w hom she bad not heard from sauce the day she h ft Iter home to found another with the ope n.an she loved above all r thers. The daugbter'sheart was mad- still more glad when the old cen- ', t 'eman t '11 ber a l ber husband that be had I been searching for them several month in tl.e hi.r.e of inducing them to Tettirn to his lonely ho ne or a'.io-.v him to remain with them, i Then he told a strange story, and one whi' h lifted a load that had crown heavier w;tdeaeh succeeding year from his son-in-law's heart. Inl - ".l Mrs. Myron's aunt bad d'ed. le qiioathin to her niece the sum of five thous and dollars. Ju tge Berry, half relenting that be had pot looked with favor npon his dangb. ter's marriage, bad sent his clerk to carry to her this legacy. Th" messenger had written to his emp'oyer from f. Cloud in fhv?. cfat !ng that he had traced Mr. nni Mrs Mvron to that p'ace, but fro'u there thev list gone, ns he ha 1 reason to Iw'leve to Cfin ;irard ou, which pi ice he was abonffo start for in ft,e 's'eani 'r Til tl Wave. From that time Mr. ft -rrv had never heard from his cl"rk, and he believed tie t,a.I lost his life when the sTeaie"!- was brr'vd. As the old gentleman fin'shod his story, the husband and wife e-7.l a1 each other with an almost despairing hope in tbelreyes, and it was on'v wi'h th" gn-a" d-ftl mltr Judge Mvron coul 1 esk he qes-Mon, "What was the mn's name?" ''1... ! T ,rl-j Tho '...! was cf.-d f .eevermore the mo- ney which t' cv be red wn an itber s oe- I i-eel ri.r',;fii" made i"' a vie v to tb.-m: tne nv.'-ntt-i.ts v to T.ei-.g :' t -i l est ir(. t i)e r-o,, Inti' , V f . ;n'i -o . . o i ' ' a too': '; i-i ng t '"ct c.vn f v. en h? o. -l hv .., , tb.-v had l ' v .eve 1 tvtno from the tbralduia ot pjyert j . isr?r Hz-tcr.