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Blanks, Cara, Pamphlets, it., of ever, variety and style, printed at tile shortest notice, and every thing in the Printing line will ho execu ted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards AP. IV. JOHNSTON, Surveyor and • Civil Engineer, Iluntingdon, Orrice: No. 113 Third Street. nug21,1572. DR. IT. W. BUCHANAN DENTIST No, 223 Hill Street, HUNTINGDON, PA. July 3, CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, D•No. 111, t 1 street. Office formerly occupied by 'Messrs. Woods k Williamson. Lapl2,'7l. DR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the community. Office, No. 523 Washington street, one door cool of the Catholic parsonage. Dan.4,'7l. EJ. GREENE, Dentist. • moved to Leister's new buildii ' ttinedon. rt L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. 'LA • Drc.wn's new building, No. 520, Bill St., Huntingdon, Pa. [npl2,'7l. HC. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law • Office, No. —, Hill !Erect, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap.19,71. jr FRANKLIN SCHOCK, Attorney r, • at-L,tw, Huntingdon. Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal business. 'Mee 229 Hill street. corner of oourt House Square. SYLVAN[ 3S BLAIR, Attorney-at- J• Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, hroe doors west of Smith. [jan.4-7 JCHALMERS JACKSON, Attor• • uey at Law. Office with Wm. Dellis,Esq. Nu. 403, Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. All legal business promptly attended to. [jean PL. DUIIBOItROW, Attorney-at ri • Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in tht several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particulat attention given to tlie settlement of estates of dece dents. • Office in he Jou ftNAL Building. jfeb.l,7l. W. 3IATTERN, Attorney-at-Law J • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa.. Soldiers claims against the Government for bad: pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed to with great care and promptness. Office ou Hill street. rjan.4,ll. T.A.S. GELSSINGER, Attorney •at- Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office one dot. Kist of It. M. Sneer's office. [Feb.s-13 J. Ilem. Muss.. K. ALLEN LOVEL, L OVELL & MUSSER, Afturswp-at-Law, HU;TINGDOM; PA Special attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds; to the settlement of ESTATES, Lo.; and all other kgal business prosecuted with Sdelity mid dispatch. inov 6,72 RA. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, o Office, 321 Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [inay3l,ll. JOl,l SCOTT. P. T. !BOWS. J. S. BAILEY' QCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, At torneys-at-Law, Iluntingdon, Pa. Pensions, and all claims of soldiers and soldiers' heirs against the Government will be promptly prosecuted. Oboe on fill street. [jan.4,'7l. Awl, lAA m A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to collection., and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 22:4, Hill greet. [apl9,'7l. Hotels JACKSON HOUSE. FOUR DOORS EAST OF THE UNION DEPOT, HUNTINGDON, PA A. B. ZEIGLER, P.op. N.12;73-oan. McIRRISON HOUSE, OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA R. R. DEPOT HUNTINGDON, PA .r. 11. CLOVEIt, Prop. April 5, 1871-Iy. Miscellaneous, TTROBLEY, Merchant Tailor, in • Leister's Building (second floor,) Hunting don, Pa., respectfully solicits s share of public patronage from town and country. f0ct16,72. "p A. BECK, Fashionable Barber .A..lw• and Hairdresser, Hill street, opposite the Franklin House. All kinds of Tonics and Pomades kept on handand for sale. i.P19,11-41m HOFFMAN & SKEESE, Manufacturers cf all kinds of CIIAIRS, and dealers in PARLOR and KITCHEN FURNI TURE, corner of Fifth and Washington streets Huntingdon, Pa. All articles will be sold cheap. Particular and prompt attention given to repair ing. A share of public patronage is respectfully solicited. Dan.15,73y WM. WILLIAMS, MANUFACTURER OF MARBLE MANTLES, MONUMENTS. HEADSTONES, &C., HUNTINGDON, PA STER PARIS CORNICES, MOULDINGS. &C ALSO SLATE MANTLES FURNISHED TO ORDER. Jan. 4, '7l. GO TO THE .JOURNAL OFFICE P.T oil kinds of printine. F. ALL KINDS OF PRINTING, GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE h e untingdon Journal. r ephe 011SfO' couttr. J A NASII, [Original.] A Defence. Oh I they tell me, Mr. Printer, There's a rumor now afloat, That the JOURN a.L'Et yearling poet Certain verses never wrote ; So a consciencious public On my "Poems" darkly frown, And a hundred brainless voices Loudly bellow, "kick him down, Yes, they say the pearly glimmer That illumes the classic mind, Never did the dark recesses Of joy stupid nature find; Consequently, "An ImrosToi," They have branded me full soon, Ard presented me a ticket To oblivion's land of gloom. Now, let calumny's foul leader Come from out his loathsome cave. And in, truth's benignant waters His inhuman spirit late; In the columns of the JOURNAL We will fight the battle through, And perhaps his education Can my untaught pen subdue. Oh 1 the light of education Is most potent I admit, And I would its golden flashes O'er my darkened mind did flit; And I know the real scholar, Who possesses common sense, Would not dare to stain his manhood By denouncing my defence. 17370 F27' CR 38.0 51 6i I 00 AO G 5 8! 160 WGO 10U But the person I'm describicg Is the self-important fool; He who thinks all useful knowledge Is obtained at Normal School; Oh I my paper-collar'd stripling, With your lasting gaiters shod, Don't compare your education With the priceless gift of God. When I wrote those humble poems No pretentious did I make, On the wings of parenziel fancy My depariure far to take ; I but wrote the modest effort Of a mind unskilled in art ; 'Teas dictated by the impulse Of a warm and guileless heart. Vhe ttirg-(7"rlier. Doctor Vathek -Oil - AMY MOORE'S ROMANCE. Office rc -Ig, Hill areal [jan.4,'7l. 1 Y CAPT. CHARLES UOWAIt D. CHAPTER I. THE ACCIDENT. It was a sunny day in the midst of the '.fiowery month, 'and merry picnic people of Swansdown were enjoying themselves in a cool grove, in sight of Oak Hill, Amy Moore's picturesque home. Amy had driven the spirited little bays to the picnic ground:, quite early in the ti.renoon, to show her golden-haired little brother the sights, andipend several hours among her own friends from the town. She was the accepted belle of the coun try five miles around Swansdown 'and ev erybody courted the smiles she had; to be stow—smiles such as had never fallen to the lot of beauteous woman. The day passed pleasantly to Amy. She encountered handsome and dashing Doctor Vathek, who, she knew, would some day ask for the prettiest hand in all the dis trict—hers. I cannot Ray that the artless girl loved .the doctor, who was fully five years her senior. He was the only suitor she 'IA ever bad. tutelliient, refined, the master of his honorable profession, and, to all outward manifestations, a true gentleman, there was much about the doctor to captivate the fairer sex. Amy thought she could love bitri, but, to tell the truth, reader, she had never tried. If it were in accordance with the pa rents' wisiles that she should become Mrs. Vathek, she would willingly relinquish him her hand, and try to love him for his make. The golden god of day was yet far from the western horizon, when a professional call took Otho Vathek from . Amy's side, and a few minutes later, to oblige her boy ish brother, the pretty heiress of Oak Hill entered the phreton, and set out for home. Not far from the grove rushed a turbu lent stream, whose steep banks were cov ered with May grasses and flowers to the very edge. The precipices were lined with little groups of picnicers; whom Amy could dis• anguish with the superb glass which she hod accepted at the hands of Doctor Vathek. "Amy, du stop the horses, and let me get that pretty flower for mamma," beg. ged Harry, depositing his already large bunch of flowers in his sister's lap. "Harry, you have gathered flowers enough alread ," said Amy. "You were quite anxious to go home 'a few moments since, and now you will never get there, if you stop to pluck every gaudy flower yon.,. see." "But just this once," pleaded the boy, bestowing a look upon his sister which she could not resist. "Amy; I'm the only little brother you have, and I'll love you more than ever, it' you leave me pluck the flower." A tear glittered beyond Amy's smile, and she gently drew rein. Barry sprang from the phroton, and ran, with a childish shout, to the group of kndelions. He quickly broke several from their stems, and was returning when a pistol shot smote the mild spring air. Down the cliff some person was amusing himself with target shooting. The unexpected report startled the bays, and, suddenly wheeling, for Amy's hands rested lightly upon the lines, they dashed towards the cliff. The phaeton barely missed little Harry! With pallid face, but still self possessed, Amy tried to recover the lines,• but they were jerked over the dasher bofore she could touch them, and she settled back into the vehicle, waiting, with a terrible calmness, fur the dreadful fate seemingly in store fur her. Rapidly the steeds, blind with fright, neared the cliffs, a hundred feet below which roared the muddy stream over its rocky bed. Groups of merry people stilled their laughter at her peril, and many bulled their faces in their hands, that they might not witness her impending doom. To attempt to arrest the speed of the in furiated animals seemed death as horrible as a leap from the cliff, but there was one who possessed the nerve requisite for the attempt. He was a young man, who had quitted the busy city for a few days' real pleasure and quietude in the country, and was com partitively a stranger to the neighborhood. When he saw Amy's peril, be ran to wards the phaeton; and intercepted the horses scarce thirty yards from the preci pice. lie fearlessly threw himself before them. He grasped the bits, and tugged at them with all his strength. He was knocked beneath the iron hoofs, and murderously trampled, but the horses were brought to bay long enough to permit Amy to spring from the phaeton, and seize the lines. Then they were speedily subdued. Her daring preserver, rendered uncon scious by his manifold injuries, was borne to Oak Hill, and a messenger despatched for a surgeon. Amy paced the eastern veranda of the mansion, than she might not hear the heart rending groans the sufferer sent heavenward, and watching, oh, how anx iously ! for Doctor Vath A's face. At last he came up the lawn, and exe cuted a ceremonious bow when he stepped upon the veranda. He would have said something foreign to his visit, had not Amy pointed to the door beyond which her deliverer lay between life and death. "He needs your immediate attention, doctor," she said, with emphasis, and, as he passed her, she added, with clasped hands, "He saved my life, at the risk of his own, and for the love of Heaven, Otho, cave his !" He said nothing, but passed on, leaving Amy upon the porch waiting his report. When Otho Vathek bent over the wounded.man, he was struck with the handsome face, which, through some un seen Providence, had escaped unmarred. He felt that Amy Moore would love that face to the entire exclusion of his, and he resolved that such things should not be. The stranger's wounds were dangerous, but amputation was not necessary. "She will love him!" murmured the doctor, whilst making his examination. "If I were a woman, I would worship—l would die fol. such a fice And he saved her life, too. He shall not wed her. I will maim hint for life, and then, if she wants to wed a man with both legs in the grave, she may do it. Amputation is not necessary, but curse him, it shall be per formed. . Thus he informed the young man "Doctor Vatbek." he said, "amputation is not essential to the preservation of my life. lam a surgeon myself, and can easily sec that I need no such operation. I will not submit to it—there ! I place myself under your medicine, but not your knives " %flied, Otho Irathek walked from the room, promising to return soon with the proper medicines. A dark cloud sat enthroned upon his face, aucl'he walked p:st Amy without speaking. A terrible determination ruled his heart. Oscar Goldsmith—his new arrival— should die ! CHAPTER 11. TIIE _DRAUGHT OP POISON. The reaction of nature brought to Os car Goldsmith - the weakness of a babe. Amy Moore watched untiringly at his couch through the long hours of the nights, and often felt that she loved that pale and emaciated face. He had gained a place in her heart which man had never filled before—which none other than he would ever fill. One night, as Amy occupied her post of duty, Doctor Vathek called with a bottle of wine, which he said would greatly strengthen his patient. Amy had discovered the doctor's jeal ousy, and watched him, as the Indian watches a traitor, for many days. She knew that some da - rk plot was deep buried in his heart, and bided her time to defeat it. When the revengeful phinician placed the wine upon the table, she felt that the fearful hour had' come. "Amy," he said, handing her a goblet filled to the brim with the ruby fluid, to allay all suspicion, "while Mr. Goldsmith sleeps, let us drink to his speedy restora tion to health." She took the goblet with a smile, and drank, with a zest that made him frown, the health he proposed. "Now," said he,' "do you, Amy, brit'' , a cloth, and we will moisten the lips of the young man with wine. It will be for his good." Without replying, the girl rose, and glided fzom the chamber. She went no farther than across the thresbhold, and applied her eyes to the key hole. Doctor Vathek stepped to the table, and drew a tiny phial from an inner pocket. Ho bent over the goblet, which he had refilled with wine prior to Amy's depart ure, and permitted three drops of the con tents of the phial to mingle with the ruddy liquor. • A moment later Amy rejoined him. 'Nothing better that; my kerchief is at my immediate disposal at this hour," she said, extending her handkerchief, which he acoepted. He quickly saturated a portion of the fabric with the poison, and moved toward the sleeper. . "Otho," said Amy, seizing the goblet, "I am going to take a sip of Oscar's wine . He'll never know it; look ?" An icy chill flitted to Doctor Vathek's heart, and burrowed therein. He turned, as though pieiced by an Asoestian arrow, and with a cry of', "Don't, for God's sake, Amy rushed towards the girl. He reached for the goblet, but the rim bad touched Amy's lips, and she dashed it to the floor. "How strangely it tasted, Otho," she said, staggering towards her arm chair. qt stings my heart ! Can this be death— death ?" Thoroughly frightened, Otho Vathek dropped the handkerchief, and sprang to the girl's side. "Rouse father," she said in whispers; "but tell him not of my condition." The prisoner rushed from the room. The door had scarcely closed upon his form, when Amy sprang from the chair, and hid the handkerchief in her bosom. "Saved !" she murmured; glancing at Oscar Goldsn.ith, who slumbered uncon scious of the tragic scene enacted at. his aide. " 'Tis well, Otbo Vathek, that I suspected you. To-morrow, sir, you shall obtain a permanent leave of absence. But hark ! they come." She threw herself upon the chair again, and admirably counterfeited a deathly ill ness-. She'li•eely took the restoratives the hated hands administere•l, and 'slowly re covered Baffled the second time, Doctor Vathek took his leave, planning another attempt upon his rival's life. fle believed that Amy suspected nothing; bat yet he cauld not quite satisfactorily account for the ab sence of the poisoned handkerchief when he re-entered the sick chamber. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1874 When he called the following morning, he found a physician from a neighboring town in attendance upon his patient, and Amy gently informed him that his further services could be dispensed with. He beer me furious, and demanded of the young girl the cause of his abrupt dis missal. "Miss Moore ;" he said, hoarse with smothered passion, "I have been the family physician for years. Why, therefore, I demand, am I dismissed, and a stranger called in my stead? I consider the action an insult, not oLly to myself, but to the profession. _ _ "Doctor Vatheli, by myself was your dismissal brought about," returned Amy. calmly. "And does not this kerchief tell you why ?" and she drew the poisoned handkerchief from her bosom, and held it before his vision. He shrank from the sight. aghast. '•I saw you poison the wine," she con tinued. "I never tasted the liquor; and, Doctor Otho Vathek, villain and poisoner, you are wanted in the prisoner's dock. Ungrateful man ! you have attempted the life of one who saved mine—aye, the life of my betrothed; for yesterday I promised to become his bride, as soon as health and strength return to him again. Had he never crossed my path. or had your dia bolical plot succeeded, I would have become yours; but Heaven has interposed. Otho Vathek--" Amy suddenly paused, for Doctor Vathek was gone. He threw a scowl at her from his gig, and rode away at a terrible speed. That night Swansdown was minus a physician. Oscar Goldsmith recovered under the new doctor's hands, and when the leaves of autumn were falling from the hoary trees, he wedded the brave little creature whose fate lie had saved, mid who, in re turn, had preserved his. Doctor Vathek never returned to Swans down, but should lie happen there, he will 6nd his office occupied by Doctor Os car Goldsmith, and often Oak Hill's phar• ton is driven up to his door, and two little children, sweet images of Amy, our he roine, spring from the vehicle to greet "papa." giendiug .or the pillion. [From the "All-Day City Item:'? The Siamese Twins The Autopsy Completed at Last—Dr. Pancoast and Profes:or Allen Explain Things—Full Report on the Important Sul?fict. We are at last. able to :ay the result of the autopsy of the Siamese Twins before our readers. The following official report of the spe dial meeting of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, held on Wednesday even ing, appears in the Philadelphia Medical Times of to day. A special meeting of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia was held at the ball Wednesday evening, February 18, for the purpose of hearing the report of the Commission on the Siamese Twins, Dr. W. S. W. Ilusehenberger, United States Navy, in the chair. The bodies of the Siamese Twins being upsn the table, the meeting proceeded to hear the report of Drs. Pancoastand Allen. On behalf of the commission, DS. PANCOAST STATED the t, the dPssection not having been en tirely completed their report would be a verbal one, to be followed at some later date by a memoir upon the subject. Dr. William H. Pancoast said : Mr. Chairman, and Fellows of the Col lege. Having been requested, as n mem ber of the Commission, to open the discus- Men this evening, I will sly briefly, in reference to this monster, of a symmetrical duplex development, joined as many of the Fellows now know, at the ensitbrm appen dix, and also here at the omphalos or. nay el, that at the investigation which we made on the first occasion at Mount Airy I made the opening incision of the body on the line for the ligation of the primitive iliac, on the right side; Dr. Allen made the incision on the left. The object was to reach the great vsels,— THE AORTA AND TWO PRIMITIVE ILIAS, and to force the injecting material which we use fur embalming (chloride of zinc) up the aorta and down the iliacs until it ran from the incisions made in the fingers and toes. It flowed freely through the blood-vessels of Eng, owing to the ossified condition of his arteries; the injection in Chang woe, however, not so successful, owing to decomposition in the tissues and blood-vessels. It was necessary to repeat the injecting process several times in order top reserve the body. The arteries of Chong, were found to be very much de composed—quite rotten, in fact. In Dunglison's Medical Dictionary we find the scientific name given for the Siam ese Twins, in the classification of teratology to be "Xiphopages," and by referring to the admirable article on "Diploteratology," of Dr. G. J. Fisher (published in the Transactions of the Medical Society of the State of New York for the year 1866,) it will be found that the twins belong to the class of Anacatadidyma. In his classifica tion of double monsters he makes three orders: Order first—Teratacatadidyma ; derived from teras, tcratos, a "monster," rata. "down," and didunms, "a twin."— Definition—Duplicity, with more or less separation of the cerebro-spinal axis. FROM ABOVE DOWNWARD. Order second—Terata-anaditlyma, deriv ed from ana, "up" or "above" and didu- Inns, a "twin." Definition—duplicity, with more or less separation, of the cerebro-spinal axis, from below upward, or from the cau dal toward the cephalic extremity of the neutral axis. Order third—Terata-an ae atadidyma, derived from ana, "above," rata, "down." and didumos, a "twin."— Definition—duplicity. with more or less separation, of both the oephalio and the caudal extremity of the cerebro spinal axis, existing contemporaneously. In this order the monster now befilre us might be called an Omphelopagns Xi pbodidym us. Thu; we hive thiseientifie notnencia tore of this monster. Of course, the con sideration of greatest interest to the pro fession, and one of the main reasons why the c-mmission made such exertions to obtain this post mortem, was that the American profession. might not be charged with having neglected an effort to obtain an autopsy, which would solve the myste ry of their union. The feature of greatest interest is connected with this band—about four inches long, and eight inches in cir cumference. In addition to this, there are other points of importance in teratolo gy, in regard to the fulfillment of THE LAW OF HOMOLOGOUS UNION, in relation to the juncture of the recti• muscles, and the Ease m of the obliquns and transversails at their point of meeting in the centre of the band. In regard to the position of the hearts, we think their apices preeent toward each; but we have not opened the thorax. The livers we have found to approximate to each other and to push through the respective peri toneal openings into the band. We ex tended our incisions to the margin of the band in front . By placing my hand in THE PERITONEAL CAVITY of Eng, and my colleague placing his hand in the peritoneal cavity of Chang, we push ed befbre us processes of peritoneutn, which ran on to the median line of the band; and we could feel our fingers in the lower portion of the hand, behind the me dian line, with a distinct layer of perito neum between .demonstrating at once the prolongation of the peritoneum into the band, and the complete separa tion of one peritoneal cavity flow the oth er at this median line. Above that we felt some TRACES OF VASCULAR CONNECTION apparently running from one liver to the other. But this we will examine into when we have a better opportunity of care fully dissecting and examining what vas cular structures may exist. We also no ticed that in turning off the flaps consist ing of the anterior walls of the abdomen, the hypogastric arteries, as illustrated by the diagram on the black-board, ran up wards in each body into the band. We lost them in this way, as we think, to wards the common umbilicus in the inte rior inferior surface of the middle of the band. It is probable that the two hypogastric arteries on each side passed this umbilicus Whether or not there were two umbilical veins, we have not yet been able to decide, nor to answer the question whether the umbilical cord was double or single and composed - of the four hypogastric arteries and two umbilical veins, or whether the placenta was single, double, or twin. We also recognized that the ensiform ap pendix, as shown in the diagram of each side, was prolonged and united in the mid dle line. On our later examination we find that there is complete continuity of structure of the cartilages, but NO TRUE JOINT AT THE MIDDLE LINT, although it is possible there may be some small synovial sacs further up. The motion is mainly due, as I here demon strate to you by moving these bodies one upon the other, to the elasticity of the con nected ensiform appendices and the inter vening fiber-cartilages. In regard to the vascular connection of the band, we have not yet been able to make so thorough and careful examination as we wished; but still, in throwing color ed plaster into the portal circulation of Chang, it has been found to flow through the vessel of the upper part of the band into the portal vessel of Enz. So that the surgical anatomy of the band consists in the skin and fascia which cover it, the ,two separate peritoneal pouches which meet in the middle, THE LARGE PERITONEA!, POUCH, the vascular connection, to whatever ex• tent they may exist between the two por tal circulations, and the remains of the hypogastric arteries in the lower portion of the band. Thus the main difficulty in any operation for section of the band would seem to be in regard to the perito neal processes and the portal circulation. The anastomesis which may exist between the iuternal mammary arteries and the in terenstals in the integument in the upper portion of the band, of c4urse would pre sent no difficulty. ' . I will not venture upon any further remark's as to the surgery of the case, while there are so many distinguished gen tlemen pre=ent more competent than my self to give an opinion. At the same time. operations on the peritoneum may not be considered so hazardous in this day, when ovariotomy, gastrotomy, and even Clesarian section are so often performed. The peritoneum pouches themselves would ,NOT PRESENT SO GREAT A DIFFICULTY as might be anticipated, under pressure and acupuncture, by which the sensitive ness of the structure might be so altered as to permit of a section. I was informed at Mount Airy that in Paris a surgeon had made the experiment of applying pressure upon the band, and it was report ed the twins had fainted in consequence I could not ascertain, however, whether this was from fright, design, or actual pain. As Dr. Hollingsworth is present, itmay be proper for me to mention a fact which that gentleman can corroborate, that Eng was the stronger physically and Chang was the stronger mentally. The same dif ference was observed in their characters. Chang was more irritable than Eng, es pecially since an attack of paralysis with which he had been afflicted—this beingin the side next to Eng. The latter bad not only to bear with the irritability of his associate, but also to support one-half his weight. Among other peculiarities, Chang would sometimes break useful articles, or throw them in the fire. IN CONCLUSION, let me say that when I turned up the skin and superficial fascia of the H incision on the posterior part of the band, I was struck with the development and the strength of the abdominal nponeuroses. The fibers arched, interlaced, and developed into a strong fibrous hand about a quarter of an inch wide, running around the median line, although there was no actual joint in the cartilage. Prof. Harrison Allen then trade a few remarks, agreeing in the the main with Dr. Pancoast. [The bodies were then inspected by the audience, and afterward turned so as to expose the p-sterior part of the band. Further remarks apply to this posterior aspect.) Dr. Panconst—While the bodies arebe ing turned, I will take the opportunity of replying to one or two questions which have been asked me. First in regard to the common sensibility of these individ uals. According to the statements we reoeiv ed at Mount Airy, there was a line of com mon sensibility corresponding to the me dium line of the band. Dr. liollinsworth says that if a pin was stuck into the band at the medium line, both of the twins would feel it distinctly; but that, even at a slight distance to either side, the point of the pin produced an effect only on the twin of that side. Another question has been asked me as to whether either of them was ever put separately under the influence of an aims thetic. I answer it by saying that so far as we know it never was attempted, but that when, upon the final occasion. Chang was anmsthctized by death, Eng was for a time unaffected. • The story as told at Mount Airy WRS that Eng waked up and asked his son, "How is your uncle Chang?" The boy said, "Uncle Chang is cold. Uncle Chang is dead." Then GREAT EXCITEMENT TOOK PLACE. Eng commenced crying out immediately, saying to his wife, whom they called in, "My last hour is come," and finally sank away. He was in perfect health when they went to bed. They had been sitting up in a large double chair made for thir accommoda tion. Eng was smoking his pipe until he became sleepy, and finally said to Chang. "We must retire." Chang said that he could not lie down comfortably. I under stand that when they went from Chang's house to Eng's house, where they died, it was against the directiqn of Dr. Hollings worth ; but, with their usual stubbornness, they persisted in riding the distance in an open buggy. _ _ _ To return to the narartice of the night of their death, after Chang had refused to lie down, they walked about the house for some tithe, and even went out to the porch and washed their hands and drank some water. It was about one o'clock when they went to bed. Thou CHANG DIED, sometime between that and morning; his death not producing any immediate im pression on Eng. It was only when the latter woke up and inquired about the condition of his brother, that he was at all affected. As to the question, "What caused Eng's death ?" I am not able to tell. The post mortem which has been made does not show the condition of the lungs. Prob ably the valves of his heart were in a dis organized condition, and probably also the shock upon that weekend organ caused death. Dr. Allen—ln my opinion, Chang died of a cerebral clot. From inquiry at his home, I was led to believe that the lung symptoms were not due to pneumonia; in deed, were not severe enough to have been so caused. The suddenness of the death, the general atheroma of the arteries, and the fact that there had been previously an at tack of cerebral paralysis, all indicated that the death was of eerebral origin. Eng probably died of fright, as the dis• tended bladder seemed to point to a pro found emotional disturbance of the ner vous system, the mind remaining clear un til stupor canoe . on—a stupor which was probably syncopal. One thing to be set tled in the making of our examination was to get the bodies iu the best possible position, so that we could judge of the true nature of the band. Prof. Harrison Allen concluded his re marks as follows : "As far as the origin of the twin mon sters is concerned, I am certainly of those who are not of the opinion that two indi viduals could get into such an intimate connection by growing together. Certain ly the c.nnection is an original one. I believe that the general opinion is now that one Graafian vessicle may have two ova, or one ovum have two nuclei; and these finally may, like the two vitelli of an egg, be closed together, surrounded by the same material, forming a single com• plete ovum ; and thus it may be that the two are included in the same ovum. I think that this will explain also why the sex i always the same—why they are al ways both male of both female. They are male in twenty or twenty-five per cent. of the cases." What will be done with the bodies of the Siamese Twins is not yet known. Cer tainly casts of them ought to be added to the principal Museums of the country. __.,,,......,.,_ A Waiting Wife. A widow of seventy years died in Ports mouth, Mass., the other day, the truth of whose life Was stranger than many a fic tion. At the age of eighteen she married the choice of her heart, a young se.i cap tain, and after a brief and happy honey moon he left her for a foreign voyage.— But hie ship was never heard from, and doubtless foundered at sea with all on board. The young husband, as he was dressed for sea, on the morning he left home, playfully threw a pair of stockings backward over his head, to test some sail or's charm or other, and they chancing to laud on the top of a canopy bedstead, he remarked, "Sarah, let them stay there till I come bdck." And many and many a long year they have laid there, but, alas! he never returned. But neither love, nor 'hope, nor expectations ever died out in her faithful heart during all the many years of her lonely pilgrimage. To the last, whenever a door opened, or a step was heard approaching. she turned to see if it might not be he whom she mourned and sought. But be never came again to her ; let us hope and trust that she has gone to him. By her desire she was buried in her wedding dress, with white gloves,and wed ding ring. Fancy and Reality. In the morning of life we paint with the brush of fancy our beautiful idea of the future lying out before us—a picture of cloudless skies and brilliant sunshine, of flower-strewn paths and tropic blooms—a picture where joy and love, and friendship and fame stand holding out their bea•tiful offering, as the central flgureof the whole. But how different the pictures painted each day of life by the brush of pitiless reality. Not one picture, but many, for the scenes are ever shifting. The skies arc clouded, and the sunshine faded. The flowers are withered, and bide the thorns no longer. Sorrow steps in where joy bad stood; hatred takes the place of love; friendship, that we had painted with a beautiful face, takes on the hideous look of treachery. At the eventide of life we gaze at the pictures in the gallery of mem ory, and comparing the ones that fancy painted with those stamped upon our hearts by the stein realities of life we wonder where fancy got its beautiful false coloring. A DRY goods merchant of Hartford was asked how he spent his evenings. His reply was, "At night I store my mind. and during the day I mind my store." He was alive at last accounts. A FASHIONABLE young lady dropped one of her false eyebrows in a church pew and badly frightened a young man who sat next her who thought it was his mous tache. AN attorney observed to his brother in court that he thought. whiskers were un professional. "You are right," replied his friend; a lawyer cannot be too barefaced." . IT is singuler that there should be no way of putting a stop to the '.girl of the period. Tit-Bits Taken on the Fly Ex-President Baez, of San Domingo, has gone to Washington. History does not show a parallel to the efforts now making in the West to suppress dram drinking. A fire in Bryon, Texas, a few days ago, resulted in the destruction of property val ued at 8130,000; insurance $60,000. Two German laborers in Slatter's stone quarry, Piqua, Ohio, were instantly killed en Tuesday, by a bank caving in upon thew. The .Pension Office is the only one, so far, in which the saute number of Flecks is allowad as before the new estimates were wade. If Congress was a little more practical and much less experimental in imbusiness, the result would be more satisfactory to the people. Oysters weighing three pounds and measuring ten inches in length are among the curiosities found at Point Pinallis, near Tampa, Florida. In Kansas hotels, it' you call for a plate of Indian cakes, the waiter puts his hand to the side of his mouth, and sings out : "Modocs for one." A general hetacomb of mayors is taking place in France. They are changed for merely political considerations, and for electoral pnrp 3SCS. There is a degree of fine fitness in the name "Warmouth," given to a pet alliga tar, just received at Stamford, Connecticut, from New Orleans. Rhode Island, in spite of its small size, does a good divorce business. Seventeen applications were recently made in one court in a single day. If the anti-rum crusaders invade . New York the ladies are seriously advised to make their first visits to the clubs: That would create a sensation. Rubinstein. the fiwous pianist, has just adopted a poor Boston girl, paid her ex penses to Europe, and undertaken to se cure her niu•ical education. Members of the Catholic Union of New York are preparing for a pilgrimage to Rome and elsewhere. It is proposed to leave not later than the middle of May. In Germany great complaints are being made as to the constant emigration, which dains the country of its valuable hands, and leaves behind socialists and agitators. Now we know all about it! The Siamese Twins were Xiphopages of the class of Terata-anacatadidyma, and may be called, for short, Omphelophagus Xiphodidymus. The preseut staffof the British Museum embraces about four hundred persons. This patronage, heretofore under the charge of trustees, is to be transferred to the govern ment. A Georgia girl aided a noble charity at Macon by allowing 300 men to kiss her at twenty fire cents a head. When she got home and washed off the enamel she felt better. The Banking House of Harshman & Harshman, at Dayton, Ohio, suspendedon Tuesday. Their average nionth!y deposits were about one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Hot alum water is a recent suggestion as au insecticide. It will destroy red and black ants, cockroaches, spiders, chintz bugs, and all crawling pests which invest our houses. The managers of the Grand Trunk Rail way of Canada have increased the pay of their brakemen twenty-five per cent. the increase to take effect from the first of the present month. An Indiana man, with a turn for statis tics, calculates that his faithful deg, ten years of age, has cost him 5234.25 for hash and $25 for license. The dog - is now for sale. Price, ten cents. Red Wing, Minnesota, says it wants an agricultural implement manufactory, cabi net and furniture manufactory, marble works, glass works, soap factory, cheese factory, and carriage works. The expenditures of the government for some time past have been so heavy that the Secretary of the Treasury has antici pated the quarterly funds of the Patent Office, and from other sourc es . A number of racing caps and much jew elry stored in the Pantechnicon, London, which was burned last Friday, has been recovered from the ruins. One insurance company is said to be crippled. Wm. E. Sturtevant has been arrested for the murder, at Halifax, MOSF., of his uncle and Miss Buckley, and committed to jail. His overciat, which he said was lost, was found in the dwelling of the mur dered family. An English writer thinks the Ameri can early potatoes will come to an end ere long, for as each new variety is claimed to ripen about ten days earlier than any other, the time between planting and dig ging will soon be used up. A distinguished New York actor pro tests against actressess putting so much paint on their faces and arms, because whenever in the progress of the play he has to go through a love scene, or rescue a forlorn damsel, his dress is nearly ru inej. - - - - A farmer sent to an Orphan Asylum for a boy that was smart, active, brave, tract able, prompt, industrious, elean,pious, in telligent, goottlooking, reserved and mod est. The Superintendent wrote back that unfortunately they had only human boys in that institution. The barque Rate Williams, of Boston, which recently arrived at that pirt, was attacked by a large whale during her voy age across the Atlantic. The whale struck the vessel on her quarter, damaging her mizzen channels, and proba9y raising a good sized lump on its own back. The Archbishop of Canterbury has eon ferred tha degree of Dxtor of Divinity on the Rev. John Shaw Burdon, who is short ly to be consecrated to be a bishop fur North China; and on the Rev. Edward Sargent, on the griund of tie eminent ser vice in the mission field in India, and of his contributions to the literature of that country. Seabrook, N. H , has 396 names on its pall list, and 79 different names. The tpwn is chiefly composed of a very few families. The Batons come first, number ing 54; Dows, 31 ; Choses and Browns, each 22; Waltons, 18 ; Smiths 15; Lockes, 14 ; Felches 13 ; Boyds, 11; Southers, Knowleses and Bowes, 11 each ; and Beck mans, 10. These 14 families have 272 out of 396 votes. NO. 9. Zia •udgtt. yot I Like, Und Ton't Like BY CHARLES F. ADAMS I ton't dick mooch of dose fine shaps Vot lofe aboudt der sehtreet, Und nefer pays der landlady For rot dey haf to eat; Who gifes der tailor notings, Und make.; der laundress vait, Und haf deir trinks off lager bier All "put upon der sehlate." I tout dink mooch off vintwin, Who tink it deir "schpeer"' To keep out vine abbearances, t'nd live in -Grundy's" fear; Who dress detuselves mit vine array, To flirt upon der schtreet, Und leaf deir modern at der tub, To earn der bread dey eat. I ton't like men dat feel so pig Yen dey haf plenty gelt, Who nefer knew an hour of vent, Nor hunger efer felt ; Who dinks more off deir horse und dog As off a man dat's poor, Und lets der schtarving und der sick Go hungry vrom der door. I ton't disk mooch off dem dat holdt So tight nbon a tollar, Dat if 'twas only schust alife, 'Twould make it shcream und holler. Vy ton't dey keep it on der more, Not hide avay und lock it ? Dey gannot dake it yen dey die : Der shroud ton't haf a pocket. I like to see a hand dat's brown, Und not avraid off cork ; Dat gives to dose cot air in need, Und nefer tries to schirk; A man dat meets you mit a schmile, Und dakes you py der hand, Schust like dey do vere I vas born. In mine own vaterland. Vere bier saloons ton't keep a sehlate. Vere tailors g.t deir Und vashervimmin get der schtamps For cork dey dike avay ; Vere frauleins schtick righdt to der vork So schteady as a Block ; Und not go sehtrutting droo der schtreets Schust like a durkey-cock ; Vero blenty and brosperity Schmile übon efery hand : Dat ish de Deutscher's paradise, Dat ist das Vaterland. —Oliver Optic's Magazine. A little darkey was recently found set ting on the steps of a fashionable house in New York, crying pitifully. "What's de matter wid you," asked a colored woman. "Matter null—double trouble all ober de house—fadder am drunk—mudder bob gone home wid cloze—sis broke de lookin' glass wid de broom-stick—de baby got her eyes full of kyan-pepper, and little Ned Anthony put de mustard on de hair for goose-grease. I put salt in my tea for white sugar, and it makes me sea sick.— De dog licked Ned's face, and got his month full of mustard, and lies under de bed a howlin. De kitten got her head in de milk-pot, and I cut her head off to sabe de pitcher, and then I hab to break de pitcher to get the head out, and de way I'll get licked when madder comes home for setting de bed afire, will be a sin." "HEAD Us "—A clerk in a rural town had a pet c.ilf which he was training up in in the ways of the ox. The calf walked around very peaceably under one end of the yoke while Mr. Clerk held up the oth er end, but in an unfortunate moment the man conceived the idea of putting his owu neck in the yoke, to let the calf see how it would seem to work with a partner. This frightened mister calf, and elevating his tail and his voice he struck a "dead run" for the village, and Mr. Clerk went along to keep up, and crying out at the top of his voice: "Here we come, dung our fool souls; head us, somebody !" Peter Van Dyke, an old chap who died in New Hampshire the other day. worth $140,000 in cash, requested in his will that no one "should sniffle and shed eras- - odile tears at his funeral, but cover him over, and then hurry home to fight over his money." . A long suffering county superintendent, driven to desperation, fired at an importu nate book agent yesterday, but no serious injury was done, the ball strikingthe book agent fairly' on the cheek, chipped off a piece of metal and passed on. A school inspector in Alsace, a short time ago, asked a well-known urchin if he knew the Saviour's name. The boy answered correctly. "How did he die r' "They killed him." "Who ?" "The Prussians." "There is one good thing about babies," says a late traveler; "they never change." We have girls of the period, men of the world, but the baby is the same self-posess ed, fearless, laughing, voracious little heathen in all ages and in all countries. Commercial Morality.—"l say, John, Stokes has received twelve months for stealing a horse." 'Served him right," said John; "Why did he not like an hon est man buy it and forget to pay for it." St. Louis had him this time. Name, Hotchin ; occupation, physician ; age, one hundred and forty ; cause of death, small pox. Oldest Freemason ; no spectacles ; constant voter from his youth upward. Bricks can't understand why so many gentlemen on the street ours are interested in the architectural beauties of the build ings along the street when the cars are full and a number of ladies are standing. A gentleman asked, "What is woman ?" when a happy married man replied, "She is an essay on grace, in one volumeLele gently bound. Although it may be dear, every man should have a copy of it." A little girl went into a drug store the other day, and said to the proprietor, in a. half whisper, "If a little girl hain't got no money, how much chewing gum do you give her fur nothing ?" Benevolent Louisville people scatter nuts in the park for the squirrel s, . end diabolical *mall boys follow around and fill their pockets before the squirrels know anything about it. A lawyer, on leaving his office, told his clerk to say, if any one called, that he was engaged in a case. As he had simply gone to his dinner. it must have been a "cases heili It occurred to a Danbury scholar, while writing a composition, to make the re markable statement that "an ox does not taste as good as an oyster, but it can run faster."