jgjTciwBRIA FREEEIAN -A.clvertiirfr . Th lures sod reliable t ire .1. t ltii runAic tmi .fnj It v sideration of adyerc'fers writ- i v - serted at the following k, rate- 1 tllCB. 8 times ... I " Smooths 1 e months 1 " 1 year 6 months t " 1 jfr months " t 1 veer '"" It pablKtafd Weekly 3EySBUIiG, Cambria Co., Fa., BY H. A. Mcl'IKE. ranteed Circulation - 1,110. 1 CBSCRIPTIO KITES. 1 . I'l ' . t ' . 4-1 00 . T o . a: one Tf r. e.-b In .11.) eol'n t monies If r.it p d within if mos. e months 1 year 6 months if n' t p d wit nin o .. If not pd within year.. 2Jo 1 " 1 year ; Administrator's and Executor's Notir" Auditor's Not 're . "" -f . nersnOS rP"t'll" uuifiujr v,....., -TTi P0"'1.... r.nii he charged to ,M sMl'.10nl ptri j" .'"4e;,rat will the above terms be de- ao j(r. . u"i .iron Mr r lfcu Business Items, first Insertion lOe.per Una lc nbrequrat Insertion to. par Una. W9 ftnotutian, or proceeding of inv rr-xm- ro or society, mnd communication, dentmed to eait atten tion tm any matter o f liwiMed or individual xnt,re$t. mutt ot paid Jar mt advertisement,. Jo Patn of all kind neat! and ext-ltv-oasly executed at lowast prices. Oon'i you target IT j those who don t oonsuit melr "1 -1 ' 1 .4 a r. .... mutt n if H. A. McPIKE, Editor and Publisher. . - i r- m HB IS A rBESKlN WHOM THB TRUTH MAXES FBBS, AND ALL ABB SLAVES BBSIDB.' 81. 50 and postage per year. In advance. ' hnUrP on ne-nui mm footing as those j ,. Let . ,i Urn" forward J .Vv for your pt before yon stop it. If ', Via must. None hut lcliiadooth Don't be a Scalawag lif e's too short. VOLUME XVI. EBENSBURG, PA.. FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1882. NUMBER 25. ffil fUMT I r IT 1 MY o H. S fTTi r 5 3! ! I El ei 5 "I .eI el Hi i CHEAP! EEAPEE! CHEAPEST! ? bEO. HUNTLEY f;is NOW ON JIAMl THE aGEST, BEST I MOST VARIED STOCK fF (SKtvoH, Timvnrc, T. rV s? r.in f'nn1 fn any nn tnhlfih. ;:, fISIB AND H2ATINS STOVES, ' v irl' style? sti.l patterns: !uil,, Hardware ,5,.'v .1 -ori i t ii .n anl of hpst'qnUtT : RENTERS' TOOLS! .r ,J Jin-J t ifmf fn th mnrket. AMo, a IK WD POCKET CUTLKRY. ,r.. Wood -in I WIMnw Wsrf. Witll p. fc Ilnrs. ShoM. Rsr Irnn, Rll I u re M. nrrlntrr Itnlta. tlv , Mill lirlnilonM. Mfee1 Shnv. -! fonl'U. It O VAAm; W.VWES,PBSEH4V RAKES, , lfr I'nrks, Bnps snil PnllTt, . ( nltl ntor. anl a full line of Harw ns Fnil. AI?o. a B.ortment of "i, Floor and Stair Oil Cloth, Cfirrinire Oil Cloth. CTT. T."TT1 WIN'PTW SHPT"Nf FIXTT'RKS: T.T vkhpool ASHTIIN r i,..t !n the worM for Tnlrv and Table , ',. tm Rof'K SAT,T. the rhenpeof n,l .! 'r.t Live Sf.wk : r,ATT PLASTKR ; it-. Ci-rv rt'Mf". of the boat minl'tv- r - f'ATKXT SAFETY l.AMIS. which . t: ' .1" I : rHTi.rPF"' WAW VS A1Tn - i:i r -t st.iclt nf M1T.K CFOTKS of i . nnd of superior vrnre ever nf. . 'r, Vhensbnnr : full line of PAT VT ' t!ie t.."'t ileoirf.ie nnlItT- tlTV. iII.S. PAINTS. TT'KPEVTTXE. v :. together with a lance and com- frifs. Tnnvrt o ad sfars, i .a rV -am i" rf other nseful and needful v In i:i' . nth,w T haven't ifnt f-r can't . , .. ,. D..t w,,rh .mvinir. and what I -f. Tc.' -iv ,i itiv he -i'l!c,l on a nmr- ITT. w' 'V thev will lnvnrlnl.lv be D VI ISOI'IOM PKICKS! vinz hi ! rnrlr TnntTT TKARft etpkrt :.e f.-ie '' 1 In my line. I am enabled r tv cu'itotner- with the very best In tha " me n liberal share of "your patron '.. sr. 1 he I'.nvfnco.l that the bet is alwa vs and that it never pavs to )uy an In ' mr-Iy l"."iui the price Is low. rs It 'irat-U U.'t that such goods are always --1 lr. the end. T H i-t. April 11. ls;). (iEO. HUNTLEY, iHMD FOR THIRTV-FIiI YEARS' AY BROTHERS Manufacturers, OLESALEAND RETAIL OF AND- set Iron Wares AND DEALERS I.N ill, PARLOR aai COOKING STOVES, IEET METALS, -AND SBING GOODS GENERALLY Jol i ng in mppERtsnEET-mos fiOMPTLY ATTENDED TO. 280 and 282 fastiDJiton St. JOHNSTOWN. PA. NEVIN &l YEACER, "ArrAr-rrmtRs of :"-f?ER am SHEET-IRON WARE, " AND tlJAtSHS I!T & HEATING STOVES, ;rs, fi-ksackn. fTptith ATenne, . Altoona, Pa. " Dofl' "est of Opera House. AND SPOUTING U Pi "TLT ATTlSDtD TO. ' T0Tf 8 COSSTASTLI OS HAD. '' -r). UT9.-U. "SAVED! BSO x- t r v . ' ' '''hasln-r . ..' h 'e-s. Al- ' '-rW "-''es re .... "i-.-inhks manner ii, ,,,, T. McORATH. 'r "( A I TOOA. T4. Frnrteenth street, near . ,T' ) t eaiu ran be made. . ' . n " fn 1. w.. and from t to 4 'f'r.tlon paM to !ls-T- " WU to S-irKteal tr eter1ptlon 4-X, ijO.-tf.) OhJyBack! That's a common expres sion and has a world of meaning. How much suf fering is summed up in it. The singular thing about it is, that pain in the back is occasioned by so many things. May be caused by kidney disease, liver com plaint, consumption, cold, nervous debility, &c. Whatever the cause, don't neglect it. Something is wrong and needs prompt attention. No medicine has yet been discovered that will so quickly and surely cure such diseases as Brown's Iron Bitters, and it does this by commencing at the foundation, and mak ing the blood pure and rich. Loganiport. Tad. Dec. s, 88o. For a long time I hare Wn m sufferer from stomach and kidney disease. M y appetite was very poor and the very small amount I aia eat disagreed with me. I was annoyed very much from non-retention of urine. I tried many remedies with, no success, until I used Brown's Iron Bitters. Since I used that my stomach does not bother me any. My appetite is simply immense. My kidney trouble is no more, and my general health is such, that I feet Lice a new man. After the use of Brown's 1 ron Bitters for one month, I have gamed, twenty pounds ia weight. O. B. Sacsjct. Leading physicians and clergymen use and recom mend Brown's Iron Bit ters. It has cured others suffering as you axe, and it will cure you. Notice to Taxpayers. IN a.-cordance with an Act of the (reneral As. semblv of this 'ommonwealth, approved the Sth day of April. 117J. relating to the collection of taxe" In f'amhria county, notice ts hereby irlTen to taxpayers residing in the aistrlcts oelow natne.l that the "ounty Treasurer. In compliance with the I 2d Section ot said Act. will attend itt the nlaces of I holdlnif the Township and Borouich election on the following named days, for the purpose of re ceiving the County, Poor and State Taxes Assessed for ttie Tear 1412: t'royleTwp. and East Conemaunh Bor. Monday, July 24th. Saminerhill Tup. and Franklin Bor. Tuesday July iMb. Wllmore and AVoodrale Borouirhs Wednesday, July 'i6th. Pottaire Twp. ami "on.m3uth Boro., 2d Ward Thnrnlny. .Inly vTth. Washington Twp. and 'oneraaniih Bor., 1st Ward Friday. July 2th. " Smnmerhlll fwn. and Johnstown Bor., 1st Ward Monday. July 31st. (Jallitzin Bof. and Johnstown, 2.1 Ward Tuesday, AtlttMSt 1st. Tunnelhiil Bor. and Johnstown. 3d Ward Wed nesday. AutfusfAl. tlallltiin Twi.. and .lohnttown. 4th Ward Thurs day. August 3d. Iiretto Bor. and Johnstown, Sth Ward Friday, Anifust 4th. Iiean Twp. anl Johnstown, eth W ard Monday, August 7th. Clearfield Twp. and Johnstown, 7th Ward Tues day. Atiifuct Ht h. Chest Sprinirs Bor. and Coopersdale Wednesday, A uff ust yth. Allesrheny Twp. and Cambria Boro, 1st Ward Thursday, Aitiruttt loth. Munster Twi.'and "atnbrla Boro', 2d Ward Frl dav, Aiiuust llfh. KeadeTwp. and Mlllville Boro', 1st Ward Mon dav, Auirust 14th. White Twp. and 1 illvllle Boro", 2.1 Ward Tues day. AuKust lth. Chest Twp. and Prospect Wednesday. Ans:. 18th. Elder and Taylor T ps.Thurs.lay, Anst. 17th. Susquehanna and Coneinaugh Twps. Friday, An trust lih. Carroll and Stnnycreek Twps. Monrtav. Auk. 'Snt. Carrolltown Bor. ami Lower Yowcr Twp. --rues-day. Aurnt Ban-and I'pper i"oder Twps. Wednesday. Aug nst letd. Blackllck and AdamTwps. Thursday, Aim. 24th. Jackson and Richland Twps. Friday. An. 2ith, Cambr'a Twp. Monday. Auirust 2Stli. F:bcnfbiirir. f;st Ward Tuesday, August 20th. Ebenabur., West Wanl Wednesday, Aug. 3Uth. And, In accordance with the 2d Soction of said Act. upon all taxes paid to the Treasurer on or be fore the 1st day of September there will l a de duction of fivk pn ckxt., whlle.Ajt'e per cent, will be sd.led to all unpaid taxes and placed In the hands of a constable for collection. J. A. KENNEDY, Co. Treasurer. Treasurer's Office. June 23. l82.-t. AUDITOirS NOTICE The under signed Auditor, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Cambria county to pass upon the excep tions riled to the first and final account of Mm tij Sasdbbs, Executor of E iiaketth Stuby, de ceased, and to rejiort distribution of the funds in the hands of the accountant, as shown by his sec ond and partial account, will sit for the purposes of his oppolntment. at the Court House in Ebens bnrg, on Mondni. st.th Jut,. J., at 1 o'clock, r. is., when and where parties interested may attend If they think proper. JOSEPH MCDONALD, Auditor. Ebensburg. June 30, lH82.-at. AUDITOR'S NOTICE Orphans' Cot RT In the matter of the account of J. H. EisHttH. Eq., Trustra to sell the real estate of Joseph IjA hi m icr. late or Johnstown, deceased. June 12, 12. on motion of J. Ztmtneiman. Esq., W. Horace Hose was appointed Auditor to ascer tain Hers and reiort distribution. Pursuant to said appointment, I will sit at my office on Frank, lin street, Johnstown, at 10 a. ju. on Monday. July iv.. wnen anu wnere mi persons Interested may appear, or be forever debarred from coming in on said fund. W. HORACE ROSE. Johnstown, June 3(1, issi.-3t. Auditor. ADMINISTRATION" NOTICE. F.tate of Wsf. Mdljfontv, dee'd. Letters of administration on the estate of Wil liam Me aunhey. late of Mnnster township. Cam bria county, havlnit been lsue1 to the undersign ed, all persons Indebted to said estate are hereby notified that payment must be mnda on or before the 1st day of June. 1SS3. and those having cUlins airalnst the same will present thern properly au thenticated for settlement. J AMES J. SPKOAL. . , . . MAKY A.SPKOAL. Administrators. 174 Spring Alley. Pittsbnrgh, June 9. 18S2.-lt. THE BURM5G OF HANXASTOWX. The followiriK account of the feumlnfc of Ilanrjastown. then the seat of justice of Westmoreland cour.ty, by a band of Indians, under the command of a famous Seneca chief, Guyasutha, Is taken from a detailed account of the affair published fn the Greensbure Argvt in 1836. The burning of Hannastown and the massacre that followed took place July 13, 1782 one hundred years aeo last Thursday. The centenary was ob served with appropriate ceremonies at the scene of the traeic occurrence, and this ac count of that terrible day will be read with interest : About three miles from Greens burg, on the road to New Alexandria, there stands two modern built log tenements, to one of which is a sign post and a sign ap pended, giving due notice that at the "Seven Yellow Stars" the wayfarer may partake of the good things of this world. Between the tavern and the Indian gallows hill on the west once stood Hannastown, the first place west of the Allegheny mountains where jus tice was dispensed according to the legal forms by the white man. The county of Westmoreland was established by the pro vincial legislature on the 2fth of February, 73, and the courts directed to be held at Hannastown. It consisted of about thirty habitations, some of them cabins, but most of them aspiring to the name of houses, hav ing two stories of hewed logs. There were a wooden court house and a jail of the like construction. A fort, stockaded with log9. completed the civil and military arrangement of the town. The first prothonotary and clerk of the courts was Arthur St. Clair. Esq., afterwards general In the revolutiona ry army. Kobert Ilanna, Esq., was the first presiding Justice in the courts ; and the first Court of Common Pleas was held In 1773 Thomas Smith, Esq.. afterwards one of the judges on the Supreme bench, brought from the east the most abstruse learning of the profession, to puzzle the backwoods lawyers; and it was here that FJugh Henry Breckin ridge, afterwards also a judge of the Su preme bench, made bis debut in the profes sion which he afterwards illustrated and adorned by his genius and his learning. The road first opened to Fort Pitt by Gen. Forbes and his army passed through the town. The periodical return of the court brought together a hardy, adventurous, frank and open-hearted set of men from the Red stone, the Georges creek, the Yougliiogheny, the Monongahela, and the Catfish settle ments, as well as from the region, now in its circumscribed limits, still called ''Old West moreland." It may as well be supposed that on such occasions there was many an uproarious merry-making. Such men when they occasionally met at courts, met joyous ly. But the plough has since gone over the place of merry-making ; and no log or mound of earth remains to tell where justice had her scales. On the 13th of July, 1782, a party of the townsfolk went to O'Connor's fields, about a mile and a half north of the village, to cut the harvest of Michael Huffnagle. The summer of '82 was a sorrowful one to the frontier inhabitants. The blood of many a family had sprinkled their own fields. The frontier northwest of the town was almost deserted ; the inhabitants had fled for safety and repose toward the Se wickly settlement. At this very time there were a number of familiesat Miller's station, about two miles sooth of the town. There was, therefore, little Impediment to the In dians, either by way of resistance, or even in giving warning of their approach. When the reapers bad cut one field, one of the number who had crossed to the side next the wood9, returned In great alarm, and re ported that be had seen a number of Indians approaching. The whole party ran for the town, each intent on his own safety. Tbe scene which then presented itself may be more readily conceived than described. Fathers seeking for their wives and children, and children calling upon their parents and friends, and all hutrying In a state of con sternation to the fort. Some criminals were confined in jail, the doors of which were thrown open. After some time it was pro posed that some person should reconnoiter. and relieve them from uncertainty. Four young men, David Shaw, James Brisbon, and two others with their rifles, started on foot through the highlands, between that and Crabtree creek, pursuing a direct course towards O'Connor's field : whilst Capt. J , who happened to be in the town, Euraued a more circuitous route on horse ack. The captain was the first to arrive at the fields, and his eye was not long In doubt, for the whole force of the savages was there mustered, ne turned his horse to fly, but was observed and pursued. When he had proceeded a short distance, he met the four on foot told them to fly for their lives that the savages were coming In great force that he would take a circuitous route and alarm the settlements. He went to Love's, where Frederick Beaver now lives, about a mile and a quarter east of the town, and as sisted tbe family to fly, taking Mrs. Love on the horse behind him. The four made all speed for the town, but the foiemoet Indians obtained sight of them, and gave them hot pursuit. By the time they had reached tbe Crabtree creek, they could hear the distinct footfalls of their pursuers, and see the sun beams rlistea through the foliage of the trees upon their naked skins. When, how ever, they got into the mouth of the ravine that led up from the creek to the town, ,hey felt almost secure. The Indians, who knew nothing of the previous alarm given to the town, and supposing they would take it bv surprise, did not fire, lest that might give notice of their approach ; this saved the lives of David Shaw and his companions. When they got to the top of the hill, the strong instinct of nature compelled Shaw to go first into the town and see whether his kindred had gone Into the fort before he en tered it himself. As he reached his father's threshold and saw all within desola', he turned and saw the savages, with their tufts of hair flying in the wind, aud their bran- AUDITOR'S NOTlCE.--Uavine Wn appointed Auditor to report distribution of the funds in tne hands of W . A. B. I.ittls:. Ad ministrator ot Hunt J. Mvkhs. late ot Iiretfo Nironifh. deceased. 1 hereby give notice that 1 will sit at my oftic fn F.l.nhnnr nn Tue.dnu .Tu.lv J", at 2 o'cio-k in the aiternovn, for the purpose ! dished tomahawks, for they had emerged i., e i c... iiik to inv uuuesoi id y apoiuineni, at which time and plc!a persons having claims on eaid fund must present them, or h debarred from somlnir in on tli same. A. V. BARKEK. Ebensburg, June So, 1882,-St. Auditor. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. There will b a letting at St. Augustine on Saturday. July ft. H', at 1 o'clock, p. ., of the contract for building a new school house in Clear field township. Catutirfa county, about a mile and balf below St. Augustine, on the Phlliptburg road. Sealed proposals will be received till the hour of the day namtal ahove. For Information as to plans, etc. apply to either of the undareianed at St. Auaostlna. H. B. NOKU J una 30. lgS2.-St. J- C. Mc MULLEN. STATIONARY ENGINE for Sale, with Boiler and other appnrtensnoes. in nd r-nnir. Can be seen at tha So o man Shaft Colliery, tteuscreek fetation. k. k. i N. B, WESTBBM)K. ' Sonman, Jaae 9, im-tf. F. R. K. Ageak Into the open space around the town, and commenced the war-whoop, ne resolved to make one of them give the death halloo, and raising his rifle to his eye. his bullet whizzed true, for the stout savage at whom he aimed bouudd Into the air and fell upon his race. Then with the speed of an arrow be fled for for the fort which he entered in safety. The Indians were exasperated when they found the town dt set ted, and after pillaging the bouses, they set them on fire. Although a considerable part of the town was within rl fi range of the fort, the whites did but little execution, being more intent on their own Mfety than soijsitous about destroying tbe enemy. One Mvage, wfco put tm a military coat of one of the Inhabitants, paraded him self so ostentatiously that he was shot down. Except this ne, and the one laid low by Shaw, there was no evidence of any other execution, but some human bones found among the ashes of one of the houses, where they, It was supposed burnt those that were killed. There were not more than 14 or 15 rifles in the fort ; and a company having marched from the town some time before, in Lochry's ill fated campaign, many of the most efficient men were absent ; not more than 20 or 25 remaining. A maiden. Jennet Shaw, was killed In the fort ; a child having run opposite the gate, In which there were some apertures through which a bultet. from ihe Indians occasionally whistled, she follow ed It, and as she stooped to pick it up, a bul let entered her bosom she thus fell a victim to her k!ndness of heart. The savages with their wild yells and hideous gesticulations, ejcnlted as the flames spread, and looked like demoniacs rejoicing over the lost hopes of mortals. Soon after the arrival of the marauders, a large party of them was observed to break off, by what seemed concerted signals, and march towards Miller's station. At that place there had been a wedding the day bo- fore. Love Is a delicate plant, but will take root In the midst of tbe perils of gentle bosoms. A young couple, fugitives from the fron tier, fell In love and were married. Among those who visited the bridal festivity, were Mrs. n , and her two beautiful daugh ters from be town. John Brown lee. who then owned what is now the fine farm of Frederick J. Cope, and his family were also there. This Individual was well known In frontier forage and seonting parties, nis courage, activltv and generosity, and manly form, won for him among his associates, as they win evervwbere confidence and attach ment. Many Indians were acquainted with his character, some of them probahly had seen his person. There were in addition to his mansion a number of cabins, mdely son structed, In which those families who bad been driven from their homes resided. The station was generally called Miller's town. The bridal party there enjoying themselves In the principal mansion, were without the shadow of approaching danger. Some men were mowing in the meadow people In the cabins were variously occupied when sud denly the war-whoop, like a clap of thunder from a cloudless sky, broke upon their as tonished ears. The people In the cabins and those in the meadow, mostly made their escape. One Incident always excites emo tion in my bosom when I beard it related. Many who fled took an east course ov-r the long steep hills whih ascend toward Peter George's farm. One man was carrying his child, and assisting his mother In the flight. When they got toward the top of the hill, the mother exclaimed they would be murder ed, that the savages were gainingspace upon them. The son and father put down and abandoned his child that he might effectual ly assist bis mother. Let those disposed to condemn keep silence until the same strug pleof nature taites place in their own bosoms. Perhaps he thought the savages would be more apt to spare the innocence of infancy j than the weakness of age. But most likely ; it was the instinct of feeling, and even a ! brave man had hardly time to think under such circumstances. At all events, Provi dence seemed to smile on the act, for at the dawn of the next morning, when the father returned to the cahin, he founo his little in nocent curled up on his bed, sound asleep, tbe only human thing left amidst the desola tion. Let fathers appreciate his feelinga : whether the Indians had found the child and took compassion on It, and carried It back, or whether the little creature bad been unobserved, ana when it became tired of its solitude, had wandered home through brnsh and over briars, will never be known. The latter supposition would seem most probable from being found in its own cabin and on Its own bed. At the principal mansion, the party were so agitated by the cries of women and children, mingled with the yell of the savage that all were for a moment irresolute and that moment sealed their fate. One young man of powerful frame grasped a child near him, which happened to be Brownlee's, and effected his eFcape. ne was pursued by three or four savages. But his strength enabled him to gain slightly upon the followers, when lie came to a rye field, and taking advantage of a thick copse, which by a sudken turn intervened betwoen him and them, he got on the fence and leap ed far Into the rye, where he lay down with the child. He heard the quick tread of the savages as they passed, and their slower steps as they returned, muttering their gut tural disappointment. That man Ilvtid to an honored old age, but is now no more. Brownlee made his way to the door, having seized a rifle ; he saw, however, that It was a desperate game, but made a rush at some Indians who were entering the gate. The shrill, clear voice of his wife exclaiming, "Jack, will you leave me?" and he aat down beside her at the door, yielding him self a willing victim. The party were made prisoners, Including the bridegroom and bride, and several of the family of Miller. At this point of time, Capt J was seen coming up the lane In full gallop. The In dians were certain of their prey, and the prisoners were dismayed at bis rashness. Fortunately be noticed the peril in which he was placed in time to save himself. Eagerly bent upon giving warning to the people, his mind was so Ingrossed with that idea, that he did not see the enemy until he was with in full gun shot Wnen he die see them and turned to fly, several bullets whistled by blm, one of which cut his bridle rein, but he escaped. When those of the marauders who bad pursued the fugitives relumed, and when they had safely secured their prisoners and loaded them with plunder, they com menced their retreat, neavy were the hearts of the women and maidens as they were led Into captivity. Who can tell the bitterness of their sorrows? They looked, a they thought, for the last time upon the dear fields of the country, and of civilized life. They thought of their fath ers, their husbands, their brothers, and as their eyes streamed with tears, the cruelty aud uncertainty which hung over their fate as prisoners of savages overwhelmed them in despair. They had proceeded about half a mile, and four or five Indians near the group of prisoners, in which was Brownlee. were observed to exchange rapid sentences among each other and look earnestly at him. Some of the prisoners had named him ; and whether it was from that circumstance, or because some of tne Indians had recognized his person, it was evident be was a doomed man. He atooped slightly to adjust bis efaild oa hi back, uv addlttoc to tbe logstge which they had put on him ; and, as he did so, one of the Indians who had looked so earnestly at him stepped to him hastily and buried a tomahawk In his head. When he fell, the child was quickly dispatched by tbe same individual. One of tbe women captives screamed at this butchery, and the same bloody instru ment and ferocious hand immediately ended her agony of spirit God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb, and be enabled Mrs. Brownlee to bear that scene In speechless agony of woe. Tbelr bodies were found the next day by the settlers and Interred where they fell. The spot is marked to this day In Mechling's field. As tbe shades of evening began to fall, the marauders met again on the plains of Hannastown. They retired Into the low grounds of the Crabtree creek, and there regaled themselves on what they had stolen. It was their intention to attack the fort next morning before the dawn of day. At nightfall thirty yeomen, good and true, had assembled at George's farm, not far from Miller's determined to give, that night, what succor they could to the people In the fort They set off for the town, each with his trusty rifle, some on horseback and some on foot. As soon as they came c ear the fort the great est'eaution andcirepmspectinn was observed. Experienced woodmen soon ascertained that the enemy was in the Crabtree bottom, and that they might enter the fort.. Accordingly, they all marched to the gate, and were most joyfully welcomed by those within. After some consultation, it was the general opinion that the Indians intended to make an attack the next morning; and, as there were bjt about 45 rifles In the fort, and about 55 or 60 men, tbe contest was considered extremely doubtful, considering the great superiority of numbers on the part of the savages. It be came, therefore, a matter of the first Impor tance to impress the enemy with a belief th at large reinforcements were arriving. For that reason the horses were mounted by active men and brought at full trot over the bridge of plank that was across the ditch which sur rounded the stockading. This was frequent ly repeated. Two old lirnms were found In the fort, which were new braced, and music on tbe fife and drum was kept occasionally going during the nteht While marching and counter-marching, tbe bridge was freqnently crossed on foot by the whole garrison. These measures had the desired effect. The mili tary music from the fort, the tramping of the horses, and the marching over the bridge, were borne on the silence of night over the low lands of the Crabtree. and the sounds Carried terror into the bosoms of the coward lv savages. They feared the retribution which they deserved, and fled shortly after midnight in their stealthy anfl wolf-like habit Three hundred Indians and about sixty white savages In the shape of refugees, (as they were then called,) crossed tbe Crabtree that day with the intention of destroying Han" nastown and Miller's station. The next day a number of the whites pur sued the trail as far as the Kiskiminetas without being able to overtake them. The little community, which had now no homes but what the fort snpplied, looked out on the ruins of the town with the deeDest soriow. It had been to them the scene of heart.'eit joys embracing the Intensity and tenderness of all which renders the domestic hearth and family altar sacred. By degrees they all sought themselves places where they might, like Noah's dove, find rest for the soles of their feet The lots of the town, either by sale or abandonment, became merged in the adjoining farm ; and the labors of the husbandmen soon effaced what time might have spared. Many a tail harvest have I seen growing upon the ground ; but never did I look upon its waving luxuriance with out thinking of the severe trials, the patient fortitude, the high courage, which character ized the early settlers. The prisoners were surrendered by the Indians to the British in Canada. The beau ty and misfortune of tbe Misses II at tracted attention; and an English officer perhaps moved by beauty in distress to love her for the dangers she had passed wooed and won the fair and gentle Marian, after tbe peace of83, the rest of the captives were delivered up, and returned to their own country STAN DIN W TREAT. No American custom causes more general surprise and amusement among traveling foreigners than that which is known in our saloons as "treating" consisting in the en tertainment of two or more with refreshment for which one volunteers to pay. It Is pure Americanism ; all over the republic it Is as common as in Europe It is unknown. There is probably no minute of a day in the year when two or three hundred citizens of any large city are not guzzling something stronger than water at somebody else's ex pense. The casual meeting of two men who have never exchanged a word together is a signal for both to instantly exclaim : "Come, let's have something !" and for both to dive down into the nearest subterranean cavity below the sidewalk. The one who spoke first usu ally insists upon "paying the shot" the word "shot" being a metaphorical reference to the deadly character of the contents usu ally taken into the stomach. If two friends meet, the regular thing to ray first is, "Let's drink to old times," and the resident must Invariably treat the stranger. If there is anything more absurd than the habit, we are unable to pnt our finger apon it Men do not always treat each other to car tickets because they happen to meet on the same seat We never saw a man take out his pocketbook on encountering a rjew acquaintance and say: "Ah, George, de lighted to see you ! Do take a few stamps ! it's mv treat I" Do men have -a mania for paying each other's bills? And is drinking together more "social' than eating together, or sleeping togetlier? A traveler may go all over the continent of Europe, of Asia, and of Africa, without see ing any man except a Yankee offer to 'treat, and the Frenchmen are quite social enough, but when they turn into a cafe to sip their wine or brandied coffee together, each man pays for his own. When two Germans long separated meet, thej will be very likely to emhranee and then turn Into an adjacent beer cellar, sit down and drink and eat pret zels and chat, but when they part again each man settles his own score independently So in Italy. Tne Italians are probably mer ry and generous, but each man pays for his own wine, maccaroni and cigars. They would as soon think of transferring each other their washerwoman's bills. The preposterous fashion of "treating" Is responsible for the terrible drunkeunesis In America. There would be little need of temperance societies and little work for tbe Good Templars it this pernicious and iDsld ooua habit was abolished. It is, taken all In all, the inost ridiculous, the most unreasona ble and tbe most pestilent custom that ever laid its tyrannical hand on civilization. Ptta&ws. (r.) IMor Trftvne. SUDDEN WHITE HAIR. With so many professors of the art of re juvenation proclaiming their readiness to turn old faces into new ones, smooth out wrinkles, obliterate crow's-feet, and restore the hair to its original abundance and color, tbe putting of young heads on old shoulders should be easy enough ; but the proverbial impossibility of putting old beads upon young shoulders still seems to hold, although the feat has sometimes been accomplished by Nature herself. Sorrow, not Time, frosted the bright tresses of Mary Stuart and Marie Antoinette ; and theirs were not the only queenly heads that have been prf maturely whitened by care and anxiety. While nan over was waging an unequal contest with Prussia, a lady in attendance upon the con sort of the brave blind king, wrote thus of her royal mistress : "in the last two months her hair has grown quite gray, I may say white. Four months since one could scarce ly discern a gray hair; now I can hardly see a dark one." A similar change has often taken place In the course of a single night One of the wit nesses in the Ticbborne case deposed that the night after hearing of his father's death, he dreamed he saw him killed before bis eyes, and found on awaking that bis hair had turned quite white. An old man with snow white hair said to Dr. Moreau : "My hair was as white as you see it now long before I had grown old. Grief and despair at the losg of a tenderly loved wife whitened. my locks In a single night when I was not thirty years of age. Judce, then, of the force of my suf ferings." nis white hairs brought no such 1 nnaA . T , 1. . W n . I I 1 . V. A ' iniiiiiriio mini iiirui. 113 imp ytr-1 iu in aiic instance of the gay gallant who had the har dihood to hold a love-tryst In the palace grounds of the king of Spain. Betrayed by the barking of an unsympathetic hound, the telling of tbe old, old story was Interrupted by the mysterious appearance of the king's j guard The scared damsel was allowed j to depart unchallenged ; but her lover was held captive, to answer his offence. lve making under the shadow of the rova! palace was a capital crime; and so over- ' whelmed with horror at the idea of losing bis bead for following tbe promptings of his j heart, was the rash woer, that before the sun j rose his hair had turned quite gray. This being told King Ferdinand, he pardoned the offender, thinkiDg he was sufficiently pun ished. When the Emperor Leopold was about to make his grand entry Into Vienna, the old heaven on his knees for his escape ; and then the awe-stricken people saw that the black haired deity had become transformed Into a white haired mortal, whose youthful features formed a strange contrast to their venerable looking crown. Staff surgeon Parry, while serving In India during tbe Mutiny, saw a strange sight Among the prisoners taken in a skirmish at Chamda was a Sepoy of the Bengal army. Ue was brought before the authorities, and put to the question. Fully alive to bis posi tion, th? Bencaiee stood almost stupefied with fear, trembling greatly, with horror and despair plainly depicted on his countenance. While the examination was proceeding, the bvstanders were startled by the sergeant In charge of the prisoner exclaiming : "ne is turning gray I" All eyes were turned on the unfortunate man. watching with wondering intereht the chanee coming urton bis splendid glossv jet nlack locks. In balf an hour they were of uniform grayish hue. Some years ago, a young 7ady who was anxiony awaiting the coming of her h-i- 1 devil in tbe saddle, nnd no one cnn',1 Dand-elect received a letter conveying the sad tidings of his shipwreck and death. She Instantly fell to the ground insensible, and so remained for five hours. On the follow ing morning her sister saw that her hair, which had previously been of a rich brown color, had Income as white as a cambric handkerchief, her eyehrows and eyelashes retaining their natnral color. After a while the whitened hair fell off, and was micePred by a new growth of grav. This ease coming under tbe observation of Dr. Krnsmns Wil snn. shattered hk unbelief in the poslbiiity of the sudden conversion of the hair from a dark color to rninw-white No man knows more, about the hair than Dr. Wilson ; but he is at a loss to explain the phenomenon anite to bis own satisfaction. "If." sars he "it ! be established that the bair is snseeptihle of permeation bv fluirts derived from the blood a transmission of fluids frotn the blood vessels of the skin Into the substance of the nair reniiv ooenrs. the ounnMrv and nature 1 an uneventful life, bad mnrrio.1 being mrwlifiVr! bvthe neen'inrifv of rontitn- non or state or health of the Individual it k dren. One day Mrs. Geoi p-e rtr. of this follows that'aneh fluids, being altered In their ! city, who was a relative r,f Mr. Bon. died cbeml"al qualities, may p'wsp,, the power of i and wss taken to Frederick to be bur.d. impressing new conditions on the structure j Among the mourners was the fstlier. and In Into which they enter. Thus, if thv contain tbe company at tbe church was tbe son. an excess of salts of time, they may deposit Neither was awrenf the ntbi-r's riir-i or salts nf lime in the tissne of the hair, and so ! identity. An old patriarch of tbe nr iiil..c- prodnee a change In Its appearance from dark to gray." Then be tells us : The phe nomena mav be tbe result of electrical action- INTRODUCED TO Ills SOX. A FATHER MEETS HIS FIFTT-TRATt-Ol Ti CHILD FOR THE FIRST TIME AT FOEB A.I.. A strange thing happened a: Frederick Station, In Montgomery countv, Ta.. a few days ago. Aaron Bout a well to-do trucker of the neighborhood, a hale old man of fifty was introduced to his father. Aaron Bout, a rich old merchant of seventy, who nn neas street, in this city. Neither kn.w tVat the other was alive. Although tber hc.ve been residing within two hours' rble i ea- h other fur a quarter of a eentnrv. tl ss first time they bad ever seen ea-;h other, er.t' thereby banRS a tale. Fifty yars t!;o father was a well known ho.rae jiicV. v !n Montgomery county, and live-! ncir Freder ick. He was a crack rider across nnntitn-, and the most noptiHr Jockey to b found In tbe radius of fifty miles. At a'l countv fairs young Bout was authority on '! mntN-rs pertaining to horse flesh, and no-e Airo, dispute his opinion, ne was a perfect dare- rnannce the ribbons of a four-in-hand as c'fiecf u'V as he. At twenty be went off v'?'i a circus, and in a few months hi fir;t son " born. He did not return to FrederioVrtot'l tbediv. fifty years after, when father and son frvf met face to face. The mcther ha.1 died md he father supposed tVnt t'"P son ta-1 aKo died. But while the one was roairrpc ', ,. earth, leading an adventurer's life, th boy grew to manhood and to middle ace. After many years of wanderinc. and 'w-h.-n he bad been lost to familv and fr'crd in Montgomery. Bout, the elder, married nrd settled in this city, and became a tiomestie man of business, accumulated property, and became the head of a numerous family. Ilis last child is now but two jeajs oM, and was born when the father bad reached t e ripe old age of sixty-eieht There are t"-e--tv-four other ehildteu, not including t' e ".in-posed-to-be-dead first born, all of (hm s'-ve. In the meantime, Aaron Ron, ir.. hd lived bo'ir-M a little farm, and also reared a family of chil- hood met Boot. sr. ne bad known V;::n when both were boys, and was eniri.zd to find him alive. Falling back 'n the f':ncal sexton of St. Joseph's Cathedral was much j It may be the result of a chemical alteration ! procession be took th son asjd troubled in his mind. Upon such occasions j it had been his custom to take his stand on j tbe pinnacle of the tower and wave a flat as j the Imperial pageant passed hy; b;it be felt ; that age: had so weakened his nerve that he dared not again attempt tbe perilous per- i formance. After thinking the matter over, be came to tbe conclusion that he must find a substitute ; and knowing his pretty daugh ter had plenty of stalwart suitors, the old fellow publicly announced that the man who could take his place snccessfully should be his son-in law. To his intense disgust, the offer was at once accepted by Gabriel Feter- J sheim, bis special aversion, and the special j favorite ot the girl, who saw not with her I father's eyes. On the appointed dav Vienna opened its gates to the new made Emperor j but it was evening, or near upon evening, j when the vo'mg flag bearer welcomed the j procession from St. Joseph's Tower, nis j task performed Gabriel would have descend ed from the airy hefgM. but found his way barred. Two wretches bad done the treach erous sexton's bidding, and closed the trap door of the upper stairway, leavinir the brave youth to choose between precipitating him self on the pavement helow. or elinrlng the cold night through to the slender spire, with but ten Inches nf foothold, ne chose possi ble life to certain death ; but when rescue came with the morning his eyes were sunken and dim, his cheeks ye'low and wrinkled, bis curly locks as white as snow. Gabriel Peter sheim had won his bride at a fearful cost Believing a fortune might be easily won In the oil country, a young Boston Ian went there to enrich hixseif. One stormy night a glare In the sky told him that an oil-tank was on fire a few miles off; and knowing that after a time the oil would boil up and flow over the side of the tank, he made for a bill to witness the spectacle. "She's coming!" a man shouted. There was a rumhling sound, and then the burning oil shot tip from the tank, boiled over Its sides, and floated down the creek, e'estroying everything In its way, and setting fire to a second tank. Cu riosity getting the Itetter of discretion, be ran to the ground in the rear of the tanks to get a bptter view, and in trying to avoid a pool of burning oil, fell into a mndhole, and stuck fast therein. Struggling until be could strug gle! no lonzer, he lay back exhausted, watch ing the billows of smoke surging upwards and floating away into space. Suddenly his ears were atartled by the sound of cannon firing ; a column of flam and smoke shot up from one of the tanks, and he waa stricken almost senseless with the knowledge thai the "pipe-line men" were cannonading the first tank to draw off the oil. and so prevent another overflow. He tried to shout but the words would not come. A little stream of 1 burning oil ran slowly but surely towards him. He watched it creeping on until it was almost upon him ; then in a moment all was dark. When he came back to consciousness he foand himself in his own room, surround ed by "the boys," who had seen him jut In time to save him. It was a weary while be fore be was himself again, and then he was Inclined to doubt If lie was hlmseir, for bis once dark hair was perfectly white. Instances have not been wanting of the hair being deprived of Its color in a few min utes. The home-coming of the king of Na ples after the Congress of Lavhach was cel ebrated with much public rejoicing. To do the occasion hor.or, the manager of the San Carlo Theatre produced a grand mythologi cal pageant, in which an afterwards well known opera singer made his debut In the character of Jupiter. The stage-thunder rolled, the stage lightning flashed, as the Olympian monarch descended on his cloud supported throne. Suddenly, screams of horror ran through the house ; the queen fainted, and all was uproar and consterna tion, until the voice of the kir.g was heard above the din. crying : Tf any one shoots) or screams again, I'll have that person shot! " Something had gone wrong with the machin ery before the clouds had descend ed ten feet, and Jupiter bad fallen through. Fortunate ly a strong Iron wire or rope caught hia cloak, and uncoiling with his weight, let him down by degrees. But a workman falling with him, was Impaled upon a strong Iron spike supporting tbeaceaj-ry. In ten minutes or so they reached the ground, the workman AmA1, tat -laiw in4, but tbaak wrought in tbe very Mood itself, or it mav be a conversion for which the tissue of the bair is chiefly responsibly " Somanv "mnv-hes" from such an authority proye flint the mvs terv of tbe endden whitening of the bair is ! yet unsolved. It is likely to remain nnsoK-ed. I since the docror more modest than some of i 1 Come," said be, "I will introduce you t" your father." "Mv father." cried out the astonished man. "Imr ossible! I hnve nofather. He is (!.' V "No, no," replied his friend, "he U here. Come with me." In a few moments the father of seventy bis brethren owns that "the mysteries of and the son of fifty years, each somewhat vital chemistry are unknown to man." The whitening of the hair wrought by mental disturbance is sometimes only of a partial nature. Vexation of spirit gave Henry of Navarre a parti-colored moustache. An old writer tells of an Irish captain going to deliver himself tip to Lord Broghill. tbe then commander of the English forces, who, bine- met on his way by a party of Encllsh soldiers, wns made prisoner, and was so ap prehensive of heing put to death before Lord bewildered, were in a long and v-arn em brace. For hours the two sat close ton-other nnder the friendly shade of a neighbor's vine-clad porch, all nncfinr'nii' of tbe cu rious paze of tbe country folks who had at tended the funeral. The son, who has been In PMladelnhia but once in bis life, was pressed to pat, a visit to his father's house on neas street, aliove Twelfth, and when the crop' have been lnr vested on the Frederick hills thera wi'l be I RUSSIAN NIHILISM. Broehill could interfere in bis behalf, that ! another meeting in this city. rt.ihx. Rer.-irrl the anxiety of his mind turned some of bis locks quite white. wbj:e the others remained of their ori.jinal reddish hue. Perhaps the' curious change was lees annoying to its vie- ! titn than that which befell nn American girl, ! whose first Intimation of her lover's falsity ! was the reading mn account of bis marriage in a newspaper. After a nisrht's brooding over the traitor's perfidy, her looking glass showed her that one side of her head was Still adorned with tresses of gulden brown ; bnt the other, alas ! was decked with locVs more befitting a grandma than a maiden still In her teens : thonch even this was pot so bad as was the rase of a French girl, who. frightened by the floor of her rtiom giving way bereath her, shed her hair so quickly that in three days' time she was to use the expressive comparison of a chronicler of the event "as bald as a bell-handle." C7am 6ers' Journal. The PrtET7.ET This delicious fruit grows best in the shade, the shade of a befr garden being preferred. It is ripe at birth, and Is ready to eat as soon as picked. In north Germany, where the benighted people do not know any better, the pretzel is caltfed a "kringle." This is enough to spoil the pret zel, only that is impossible. The pretzel is always planted on tree lunch counters. There is more nutrition In a barrel of sawdust than there Is in a rlothes- baskefful of pretzels. But then tbe pretzel ! re lne 'h'1 Is much the dryer of the two. The genuine pretzel has a heart like a marble yard, and tbe bide is varnished to keep it dry. It is varnished with hot. tve. and sprinkled with apr.Iseed to give It tone. Before ft assumes the expression so famil iar to the lovers of this perennial fruit, the pretzel Is about the size of a irarter snake. After it is tied up in that intricate knot which makes the eater wonder where to take the first bite no man can gwewt at its length 1 h' fact that the Nihi'i.st ranks ere tr.V In a notice of Victor Tissot's ' T.uss'nns and Germans," the London Sertatnr says : "The author confirms what has always b-en our own opinion namely, that the Ni!;i!i-.ts In Russia are numerically unimportant Wherein, then, does their strengMi lie? How are they able to paiVvze a va-d mili'ary em pire, and make the absolute mse'erof eigVty millions of subject a prisoner in bis own palace? The author answers t!;t- qne-ti.-r in a sentence. 'Their strength,' be savs. 1 'lies not in their number, for they are but a i handful, but in their fanaticism, :n tbrl. mystic exaltation, in their sombre energy, lr ; their steadfast resolution to perih ': the j lat man, whether ny torture or the gV'ov-s, ; with t'ie heroic f.rmne-s displayed by the eirly Christians struccling atrsim-t tbe e-rj-i pcrors, and against the pride of sfrenc?'. n j the rotting paean society.' F.,iit---i! ns h-s'i-. nations are rare, and attempts tit them i en ! erally unsuccessful, because the a-sp.;-io j take too many precautions lo insure thr own escape. The Bns-iait X l;'!i t. I -vi- ful as they are, are formidable hrcn"-' tl.ey gladly sacrifice their lives ip t:ie r t vseen'ii'i of their designs. Their se?f sfici if ojr.r, zal is, after all, only a perverted form of he splendid heroism which conquered Nipo'eu by the eopflacration of Moscow, p.ol i .1(- The mai'ot'ty cf tl ftp,' ! says M. Tissot, 'consist of stude. ts y "-o ' have failed in their oxatrtiiinl ions, or v ... itn j poverty has driven from the un'vf si, ;e.. i embittered schoolmasters, nniierpai-l p il."; officials who are dying of I.iniio-r, l: ne , ' ants and subalterns who bare he -n d p- pointed in their amlflMons. F ssimMs Ideas have Invaded all these bra Irs, an- from pessimism to Niliilisp, th re i- but or step.' M. Tissot calls a'ten'i n to the .jot- Enouch is known, however, to warrant sci. entific authorities In saying that if a man should swallow a pretzel whole, and it should snddenly stratgbren ont. In him, it would kill him in a minute. It Is not possible, howev er, for a mn to eat a pretzel whole. You can eat all the rest of it, but while there is more hole than pretzel to heeln with, yet the more you eat the pretzel the more hole there recrui.ed bv Jews. 'Tl ere a""e te:i ti-'ies many Jews as there are Bossiars. Tole or Germans.' And. what is f-till nut "e.i. tri able, the Jewish women are more j-rni"."it than the men in the Nihilist move-,c -nt.-Thev appear to be Impressed w!ib ;iie iii and resolution of Judith, r-rey.r -rl ' r' everything in avenging theii,ee!- c oppressors. Even young unn.arr; 1 T ses, 'of remarkable beauty,' d'-r.''- u is left. The pretzel is eaten. Why. rtohody seems ordinary restraints of their faith r--' to understand. When first Introduced in ! found In the forefrentof th:s crusade p.t- this country, the backmen ued them for ir existing order of tilings. For mn . ' snaffle rings, hut. by and by the people got to ' borne in mind that the Nihilist' . not ai eating them : and It lias been a popular cus tom ever since. Tne soberer a man is, the fewer pierzels be eats, and conversely. The market value of the pretzel Is 150 for a dollar. They got started at this, and have never varied from it very much. As an ar ticle of food it isn't worth quite bo much as that ; probahly not by 150. After a man has lost all his teeth, it Is a hollow mockery, a withering sarcasm, and an Ineffaceable stair, upon the rame of hos pitality to offer him a pretzel. Burlintrton Thet Wouldn't Grow.-A lot of farm ers who had been listening to a railroad land agent's praise of Arkansas valley soil, at la-t asked him, sarcastically, if there waj any thing that wouldn't'grow there. "Yes." said the agent promptly, "pumpkins won't" "Why not?" "The soil is so rich and the vines grow so fast that they wear ont the pujopkbas dragging tham ovar the groand." at reform, but at universal anar'i.y. T' have persuaded themselves that soci.-ty, rial, religious and political, is st irr. e -. i bly rotten, that reform is imp Kpihlf. T' whole system roust be dissolved into its p roents that Is the mission of th ?rihi." and it Is useless, from this point of - ew. think of reforms till that mission ba r completely fulfilled. In the prog-arcm the Nihilists, therefore, there is no p'ace God, or marriage, or the Institution of -petty. These lie at the root of the y e order of things ; it Is therefore neces - r . sweep tbem all away." A". T. Frmv r - Sow Yorn Wti.t Oats. No, ynvt r. It doesn't hnrt you a particle to T wild oats. Go ahead and sow a rnanv you wish. Bnt it's the gathering In o' crop that will make von bowl. Ar have to gather It too. If von don't it r yon, and one is a great deal wenv t' other. Go on and sow your wild o- - - yon keep away from this oflJce dnrli.. . -Test tlrat.