Whole No. 2573. BLYifIYER & STANBARGER, PBODOCe & COMMISSION IfiESiaHAWSS, Near Canal Basin, Lewistown, Pa., Will purchase every description of Produce at current prices. ALWAYS ON HAND, PL.ASTER, SALT, FISII, STONE COAL of aborted sizes, lAME BUR NEKS' £• SLACKSMIfIIS' COAL. GEO. ISEYMY VAX, dcc 2 C. C. STANBARGER. j, mm,' u D ? ~sat -C_L j Li > f-> a Ol 1 ILL on Lost Market street, Lewistown, adjoining t. (j. l'ranciscus' Hardware St.ire. P. S. Dr. Locke will bo at bis Alice the first .Monday of each month to spend the week. niy3l JJR. A. J. ATKXJSTSCr*, UA \ IXG permanently located in Lewis town, offers his professional servi es to the citizens of town and country. OiSco firimrly occupied In Dr. Marks, Residence one dour east oi George Ulvinvcr. Lewistown, July 12, 186U-tf Dr. Samuel L. Alexander. llas permanently located at Milroy, YG and is pie pared to practice all theb-unch iw es of his i'ruicesiuii, Otlicc at tSwiuc* hart s Hotel. uiyU-ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER & TIA\TFI€TIRLR lllllls.Mlllll.sM. See., Sic., A. l?_£iO Orders promptly attended to. jelO Tpy ■^* r W mJJ V • I*o team ms JuJ Sium Jw iv Attorney at Law, Market Lewistown, will at h ; ; id hu?iresi in Mitlliti. Centre and Hunting 's uon counties. t&jXu JDI J'-jQ xiiiii j/£ii J j fceigrivt's Cld Stand, JNcnrr the Cuual Jiridye, Lcicistown, Pa. Strong Beer, Lager Beer, Litidenbergcr ami Switzcr Cheese—all of the best quality constantly on hand, for sale wholesale or re tail. least to be had daily during summer, myffl-y r JUST RECEIVED V A 3EJ.ECT M'lfl'K OF Boot*, Shoes, Graitsrs, &c, fur men, women, boys, and children, which are offered for sale remarkably low. J. CLAHK, my 10 Opposite the I nion House. EoALISTERVILLE ACADEM Y Juniata Count), Pa. GEO F. OIcF.IJfL.i.YJ), Piinch/at S," Proprietor. J.iCOR MILLER, Prof, rf Mathematics, \c. Miss .L\l\'J£ S. CRIS T, Tatchtr >f Jilusic, S,-c. The next session of this Institution com mences on the :16th of July, to continue 22 weeks. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department "ill lie formed which will alfwnl Teachers the best opportunity of preparing for fall examina tions. A NEW APPARATUS has been purchased, Lecturers engaged, &c. TERMS —Hoarding, Uoom und Tuition, per se-iicn,sssio S6O. Tuition alone at usual rates. Circulars sent free on application. lAßiim SLOAT'S EL IT TIC LOCK STITCH SEWSNC MACHINES. nWriter after considerable search A f>r a Sewing Machine for his own use, bus one C- e ' lite aove now in operation, which aie ti ted for their simplicity and strength, "by Stitch. Hem, liind. Fell and Gather with out basting, making the stitch alike on both sides of the work. They sew equally well the lightest and heaviest fabric with any spool thread or silk. We feel warranted in recom mending them as the very best now in the market fur every useful purpose in a family, Bra Dressmaker, Tailor, or shirt Maker.— As an evidence of its simplicity Mrs. M , without instruction or explanation from any one, commenced work on it, and in less than one week made 10 dresses, 4 pair of pants, and 3 shirts, and has not experienced the least difficulty in its operation. We simply ask all to look at this machine before purchasi" and remember these facts. We warr*y Kt ev °' p- machine, and keep every r>:, e iu re - l>nir , Cl u P i nse '! t r onc jeA - : • Jft-ieeFlFf Y LLAK!S. Ad OTPffS JAS. M. MAItl IX, Lewistr-wn P. 0., nty_,-r t ____ Agtou-ibj:Jdiffliu County. PROt'KERI WARE-—Fine assortment of fttone Crockery Ware and Baskets at _ A.FELIX'S. r | f e,st S re iß and buff Window Curtain 4pJ toff U? 4 ' 30, 40, 44 iuches wide, just re vived and fur sale low by ,yl2 F. G. PRANCI9CTO. &st)S) i*>giariiNitnp ww wmmm s>*. iIORM&BEMiIOiiS TIIIE 1)V1 JMIDLOf.. • & Prated fror* the CinciGazette of September, K26. | What shall I be? Where shall I f0 ? I, 7,' V ■' thousand worlds to know. | Shall I exist-i or shnil t not? i easing t* \> ■ —l drea'l tlie thought— , , lOS 'bath, in ti- .do -m.y the whole, 1 •)nu with the body kill the s.,ul i ohoos" thee lor mv c'tido, i I. bear thy voice, and none btiside; ' 'f- ll " u - decide the doubtful strife, j l w;xt o'idlo.ss sleet, and • omit-lib-. , : . onio who thy sole dominion own, j \> Nature's brightest eldest -on. | bay thou hast taught the soul will live, "'V i to God*nn -i give Others d. Ny that this will bo. j And both tor proof app.-ai to tliee. | i ieei. 1 know that I do sin, And i-.n- i.-noo mires iiero within : i , 'here's a God—(i fear 'tis trie: — j 11 toes lie ids creatures' conduct \ lew ? i And it the soul immortal prove, Can sinner ever taste 11 is love ? A ill they have nothing, tiien, to fear, Bei auso he governs there and here It he is good, will he destroy. And banish every hum: n joy .' Are parents hurried to the tomb, Merely to give successors room? I f he regards our action hero. Why not ivveiig, the itijurod's tear, And crush the (rue I and unjust, i t'otr pride and limlk-e 111 ti;o dust? i These thoughts an anxious doubt create l hai tins is not our final state. The Bible doctrine may be right It so. 1 Miik to eurfless night. 1 hate that God whom they icvi His iiol iii' s U severe; I half Flis law. winch says I must | Be like Him. or be accursed. 1 < 'nee 1 could laugh at what some tell, j And s. i.rn the thought of heaven and hell, i But reason shines as clear as dav. Although ntj outward man d< . av'; • \ etc it may shine mid never stop, And misery till my future cup. t'raw near, my lriend, if friend iudee-l, j You will assist me now in need: j V. ith you 1 sj.ent the jovial rtay. ; And east tlic thought of 'lealii atvav t I gave the rein to sin and lust, j V. hi -h hastened my return to dust. I O. can you screen my soul from harm J Against the power oi any arm? An wretel.es. stop—deceive no more, I've in aro all you can say before. I I seorned the christian and bit God, : And trampled on the Saviour's blood; | With bun I now no part can claim, j l or still I hate the very name; Yet he must be more safe than 1, Better pre pat ed to live or die I The Great Revival iu Sweden- I A lute number of the London Quarterly j | Review contains an historical sketch of! | the remarkable revival in Sweden, brief | : notices oi which hud been given from time \ 'to time, and liom which we compile the ! | following: fc'caice any means have been employed | i besides the ciiculatiou ol' tracts and the i reading of the Scriptures. Owing to the ! i peculiar regulation of the Lutheran Church, | , tlie Swedish people were only acquainted | with a small portion of the Ribie, and thus iit had the freshness of anew book. Small i meetings lur prayer and reading, almost eu tirely by laymen, were everywhere largely ' at ended. The lowest estimate places the ! ! number of converts, or as they are termed j in Sweden ' readers,' at 250,000 out of a j population of 8,500,000. The morality of j these people is remarkable. Drinking has i j so decreased, that two thirds of the distil- I lories have been closed since 1830. Iu the parishes bordering on Russia, where nearly every man is guilty of smug- j ; gang, hundreds of persons refunded the | duties uf which they had defrauded the government. Many sold their property to obtain the money, and others who could not raise the sunt at once discharged the debt Ly instalments. Ihe perplexed offi cers of customs laid the matter betbre the king, who decided that the proceeds should be distributed among the poor. The aver age number if lawsuits has decreased from 5,800 to three, four, and six. In villages once remarkable lor their profanity, not an oath is heard, and tire Bible and sermons have replaced low literature to such an ex tent that the Look sellers only keep relig ious works. The awakening has pervaded all classes, and is extending among the no biiity and the wealthy. Instances of ' sudden conversions' are not frequent, and the 1 divine impulse' had been so irresistibly felt in tiie midst of sec ular arrangements or in the streets, as to lead the people to fall on their knees and cry for mercy. In other instances, persons have been compelled to retire from parties overcome with emotion and penitential tears, which contrasted straneg'iy with their splen did dresses and jewels. No such revival has ever before been known in Sweden. It may be said that there is scarcely a j church or congregation there which has j nut A; power —scarcely a community ] ... i -, f OU n.i i.~r. contributed to ! swell the number of t hose who are hoping j in Christ. An awakening so wonderful, as this may well cause Christians here to to rcioice, to take courage, and to continue with increased faith in their iubors lor the perishing. Our Own Faults- Let us not be over curious about the fail ures of others, but take accouut of ur OWQ let us bear in mind. the e v " C nencies of other men, vvh'ne we cKOn U p our own i' dU its, for Uhen we be well pleasing to God.— J.OT he who looks at the faults of others, and at his own excellencies, is injured in two ways: by the latter he is carried up to arrogance, through his lisfnessuess. For when he preceives that such an one hath sinned, very easily he will sin when he perceives he li'ath aught excelled, very easily he bceouieth arrogant-. He who consigns to oblivion his excellencies, and looks at his failings only, whilst he is a curious engineer of the excellencies, not the sins of others, is profitable in many ways. And howl' I will tell you. When he sees that such an one hath don.® excellently he is raised to emulate the samt* y wh eu he THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1860. sees that he himself hath simied, heisreu dorod humble and modest, it we act thus it we thus regulate ourselves—we shall be able to obfain the good things which we are promised, through the grace and loving kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ. THE *HEART. 1.1 the complex mechanism of the human mind, God has made the affections the liv ing, governing principles, the motive pow ei. wcn the understanding is a subor dinate power, and is carried by the allee j tiong- whithersoever they will. This great living, moving, governing power is in the Scriptures denominated the heart, • With the Lea it man believes;' with the heart he obeys, and to the heart the Iloly Spirit di rects his appeals. . .No tiue religious knowledge can ever reach the understanding except through j the heart. Love and obedience, a willing subjection of the heart to Christ, is the first step in Christian life; and then and not before, true light will break into the J understanding—warm, living, life-giving ! f'pkt, light that will cause the subject of i i.o glow in grace and tu obey the truth, j Then, and only then, will the Saviour's woids be realized iu him, 4 11 a man will i do my works, be shall know of the doctrine 1 whether it be id (rod. i his is a precious ! promise, and, like the words of liim who uttered it. As a declaration, it shows us : (be true source and medium of light; as a i promise, it relieves the mind from that anx iety with which it is so apt to he filled, arising from a thousand questions of doubt- j j ful disputation. And bow sweetly it ac- i j cords with the promise uttered by the Psalm | ist! 4 To the upright light shall arise in 1 darkness.' | Mary s heart was right when she sat at 1 the feet of Jesus, and she loved and en ; joyed the light which he shed around him. i 1 The understandings of the Pharisees were ; not at fault, while their hearts hated and 1 fled from the same light. With minds j full of religious knowledge, they 'satin darkness.' Are there no ,-uch people now? j \i e often hear addresses from the pul- i pit, learned, logical, and sound, but so cold j and hxAess that the heart is perfectly un- j affected. Such preaching is an attempt to | invert the order of the Christian warfare. | With the heart man contends with his Maker, lite heart is the great rebel, not i the head. The heart is supreme: the un- j derstanding is subordinate and is dragged ; withersoever the heart dictates. Lc-Mhat i rebel, and all that is in rebellion ; let that j bo captured, and all is brought into captiv- I ity; let that be darkness, and all is dark ; j let that be enlightened, and all is light. The heart is (he king oj Israel. \Y hen Ahab went out with his army to i fight with the King of Syria, the latter is sued a singular order:— 1 Fightneither with small nor great, save only with the Icing of Israel.' 'lhe order was a wise one, as the sequel proved. An arrow pierced and slew the King; all his followers and sup porters fled. Let this, therefore, become a standing order in the Christian camp: ! lor while the king of Israel lives and fights. I we can make no impression upon the host ; of his followers and supporters. A Grave Without a Monument. The sea is the largest of cemeteries, and all it 3 sluinberers sleep without a monu ment. All other grave yards, in all lands, show some symbols of distinction between the great and small, tlie rich and the poor: but in that ocean cemetery the king ami the clown, the prince and the peasant, are alike undistinguished. The same wave rolls over all—the same requiem, by the minstrelsy of the ocean, is sung to their honor. Over their remains the same storm beats and the same sun shines; and there unmarked, the weak and the powerful, the plumed and the unhonored, will sleep on, until awaked by the same trump, the sea will give up its dead. m€EmiKom Remains of American and British Sol diers. Some remains of American and British soldiers, near the Old Fort, at Toronto, j Canaan, were discovered. Thq i i>aily Globe of that city, of the 18th, has j the following: — On the afternoon of Friday, while the j workmen employed at the excavation lor ; the bridge, at the Old Fort, wery digging near the surface, or.-;, sitc Dillon's tavern, they * - o o _ .rfOVCI" ai human beings. It once suspected that the bn^ ies weru those of the Ameri °_l7is and British who fell in the conllict which took place in front of the Fort, in the year 1818. A. Barlow, of the One Hundreth, Mr. Dillon, and others went to work along with the laborers, and in a short space of time they succeeded in' exhuming fifteen bodies. From the posi tion in which they were found, it appeared evident that they had been buried in a tiench netr the place where they 1011. Several buttons, a bayonet, pieces of offi cers' epauletts, and portions of clothing were found in the trench. One of the buttons appears to have be longed to me of the men of the ' Gallant Eighth British Grenadiers/ Another has the letters 4 P. R' engraved on it, and shows that it wa£ at- one time attached to the coat ol .>no oi the i ennsyivarwa Rangers. A th r 1 has simply the lett.rs 'C. B.' on graved on it. A couple of copper ee ts an-, a -Mexican coin were found near the bodies. The discovery of these remains will bring to the remembrance of those who fought and bled in the war of 1812, 1813, and 1814, the stmggle which took' i place iu front of the Old Fort, in the summer of 1813, and which was'brought to a .-peedy termination by the explosion oi the magazine. At the time referred to, (leu. Shraie was in command ol' the Fort; his forces only amounting t<> about seven bundled l>iitish soldiers and Canadian mi litia, with one hundred Indians. Furlv ( one morning the Americans succeeded, af ter a sharp conflict, in landing a force of seventeen hundred men, from armed ships, in the woods, near where the new garrison now stands. A detachment of the Eighth Regiment were sent out to prevent the landing, if possible, and in the struggle which ensued in the woods and thickets, they lost more , than half their number of men. One ac count states that when they left the Fort ' they were one hundred and twenty strong, 1 tut on the following morning, only twentv- j five answered to their names. * General j Shrale, at the head of his small force, 1 made a stout resistance, but finding the en- j emy weic two to his one lie was at length, ! after a gallant struggle, compelled to re- i treat, ihe assailants advanced upon them, but when opposite the Fort tire powder , magazine exploded, and two hundred Amer- . icans, with their commander, Gen. Pike, ! were killed on tiic spot, and also a number of british soldiers. It is stated that lartre j numbers of the slain were buried near the spot where the bodies were found on Fri- | day. ihe remains were carefully collected, placed in a box, and buried by a fatigue party belonging to the Royal Canadian Ri fles. The Lake- --Atlantic Fleet. The Detroit Tribune in a late issue pre sents a full list of the vessels from the Dreat J .axes, which are now engaged in the European and coasting trade. The list comprises fifty-seven vessels of an aver age capacity of three hundred and seven teen tons. We know of nothing which more plainly marks the enterprise of our countrymen than the rapid increase of the tonnage on the Lakes, and the total disre gard of distance and danger evinced by such men as the captain of the little schooner lately announced as having ar rived at Constantinople from Chicago. The aggregate capacity of these vessels is 18,080 tons. The Tribune says that in quiries for vessels to load for Liverpool, Cadiz, Charleston, &c., are now quite com mon, and it adds, 4 if this had been predic ted six years ago, there is not an old laker but would have smiled incredulously.' One of the steam-tugs belonging to the fleet 'is carrying cattle from Brazos to Cu ba. She is a nice little steamship, and has had her engine changed to low pressure, and an ingenious self-condensing invention connected with it, for producing fresh wa ter from salt.' Horrible Murder. A and Daughter Killed. —George Aldrich, a eouvict, who had just served out a term of five years in the Virginia Penitentiary, for killing a man in Logan, left Itiehmoud, a few days since, and on arriving in Logan county, found that his family had moved across the river to War field, Lawrence county, Va. The Kana wha Republican says: He followed them, lie murdered his sister in the most shocking manner, liter ally cutting her to pieces, and then throw ing the body into Sandy river. The body ol Ins son, a lad of about thirteen years old, was found in a by-placc nearly eaten up by the hogs—but was readily identified by a remarkable scar, on one foot, which had been preserved by the shoe and stock- i ing. The son was by a wife who had ob tained a divorce. Alter the perpetration of these horrid deeds, the fiend, with his gun in hand, fled to the woods, saying that he intended to kill his father and mother , and two other persons—and then the peo, I pie might take him, burn him at the stake- j or do what they pleased with him. The 1 excited people are now after liim. fer.U the late Amcrt- it g oiontific Conation, l'^ osor j oll „ LeCcite road t -per on the phenomena presented by the ' Silver Spring' in Marion county, Florida. Although the optical phenome na of this spring had been greatly exag gerated, yet he found, on paying a visit last December, that it was sufficiently won derful. While it was reported to be two hundred feet deep, a careful measurement showed it to be only thirty feet. On a clear and calm day the view from the side of a boat is beautiful beyond description. Every feature of tlie bottom is as clear as if there was no water above it, but only the clear air. The bottom is thickly cov ered with luxurious vegetable growth, de veloped by the large amount of sunlight which penetrates there. Objects beneath the surface of the water, viewed oblique ly, appear surrounded by prismatic hues. The beholder seems to be looking down from some high point upon a truly fairy scene. Romantic Story. The New Orleans Bulletin, of the 19th inst., says that Mr. Floury, one of the sur ♦ Ivors of the steamer A ratio, which ves sel was sunk by a collision at sea, several years ago, was expected m that city on i tuirsday last. Mr. Floury was well known as having kept the grocery store at the corner of Orleans and Robertson streets, Ne.v Orleans, whore his wife now resides. She married Mr. Fleury's chief clerk. Mr. L el cr, and has had three children bv him. Her two children by Mr. F.—a daughter cd li and a son ot 15—are now living with her. Saturday .-die received the tiist intimation of the startling news of her husband's return, after an absence of nve and a halt years, in a letter from him, dated at New York. A ladv lriend, to whom she showed the letter, reports the substance of it to be that Flemy, and live other survivors of the Arctic, were picked up from fragments of the wreck by a whaler, which kept on her long voya ,r e. This ship was sunk, and fifteen of those on board saved themselves upon an island, from which they were taken by anothei whaler, which was just commencing her (■raise, and which only returned to New Y urk a week or two ago. Fatal Case of Hydrophobia. The Boston Traveler, of the 18th inst., says that Mr. Thomas Daseomb, residing in Zeigler street, Koxbury, died >BunJay noon oi hydrophobia. He kept a number of dogs, and about a week ago two of them, a. female and one of her puppies, were play ing rather roughly together, and he at tempted to separate them. The mother of the puppy bit his wrist lightly, but he took i no nutice of it until Friday night last. ; when he woke up with a burning thir.-t, and endeavored to drink some water, when he was seized with a violent spasm. He spoke to liis wife in relation to the dog biting him, and said he was sure lie had been poisoned in some way, and thought he had the hydrophobia. He continued to grow worse, and barked like a dog, turned summersaults in his bed wuh a strength which two men were unable to restrain, and after much suffering *Jicd. The dog ! that bit him died a lew day§ after oivirie: the bite. ; It is stated that Mr. Dascombe did not | have the wound cauterized until a day had : elapsed. The symptoms before death were very severe, and left no doubt upon the mind of every one that it was a ease of hydrophobia. Suicide of a Sensitive Youth. —At Blairsvillc (A. .J.) a young man named llmine killed hiuiscif because the princi pal of a boarding-school found a love-letter addressed by him to one of the female pu pils and read it aloud. The letter says : ' The young man, it seems, bad taken a fan cy to, and bad been corresponding occas ionally with a young lady in or near Blairs town. The principal of the school Mr. •Johnson, having found .this out, forbade the correspondence, and even wrote him -elf to the young lady forbidding her to send the young man any more letters.— She, however, continued to write, and it happened, a day or two before the fatal oc currence, that the young man chanced to drop one of her letters, which letter was was found and carried to Johnson. Instead ot returning the letter to the young man, with such kind admonitions as his own judgement ought, have suggested, this fool or knave, or both, had the" letter publicly read before the school, which so wrought ! upon the young man's mind that lie at once determined to put an end to his own exis tence. The shame, he thought it, of such public exposure, was more th in he was able to bear.' A Funeral Train Struck by Lightning. —A most exciting occurrence transpired near Baltimore o:i Wednesday afternoon, during a heavy fall of rain. A funeral train started with the body of an infant, for the purpose of interment at a private burial ground in the country. The car riages had gone but a short distance, when vivid flashes of lightning played near them with fearful effect. The last hack, in which several ladies were seated, was str" ,' K considerably shattered, occu _ p'iuLS were alsoyy ea tly affected. The dri ver, stphucre to state, desired to proceed, 'out the undertaker, who was in charge, in sisted upon the ladies being removed to other carriages, which was done, ocveral drivers of the train were more or less af fected by the electric fluid, and all present were terrified. Taking Liberties with Her. —A young lady was struck by lighting while skim ing milk in a cellar in Cortland county, New Ybrk, a few weeks ago. The fluid struck her on one side, tearing her apron into shreds, passing through her dress uud underclothes —melting one of her hoops — to her hip, thence down her leg, tearing : her stockiug on one side down in places from one-half to an inch apart until it reached the heel, when it entirely destroyed that portion of her hose, and rent her shoe in |to numberless pieces. Strange to say she : escaped with comparatively little injury. fig?"A gentlemen coming into the room of the late Dr. Barton, told him that Mr. | Vowel was dead. ' What,' said he, ' Vow -lel New Series—Vol. XIY, No. 41. A Vvestmorelandcr Sentenced to bo Shot. Ulyn tlis since a statement was pub lished to the effect that a man who vivo Ills name as William Williams murdered a captain Otis, of ,San Francisco, by stubbing him with a bowie knife, in the cars, while crossing the Isthmus on tlie Panama Rail road. He was seized on the spot, and al ter a trial before the local authorities, was pro no unca 1 guilty of murder, and senten ced to the chain gang for twelve ' cars. Not being satisfied with his sentence, lie applied to the Supreme Court ofHHro r tu for a now hearing, on the ground that lie being a foreigner, had a right to trial be fore a national or federal eourt. The court admitted his right, and referred hF case f the federal judges of Panama, who not only found him guilty, but sentenced him to be -hut. The real name of Williams is Gar ret \ anhorn. He went to California in l s 4fi, in Company F . Third Artillery,an i deserted when gold was discovered." lie resided for so me time :• nwards in Tou lumo county, in the Olguoso camp, and iullowed gambling for a livelihood, lie was Lorn in this county, where he is well i now n.— G remain eg Argus. .1 Little Girl Carried Through o Cul terl and Into (he Jinshh'iU. — During very heavy raiu a girl, aged about 11 years, daughter of Jacob Fuhnor, through some means got into a stream of water that swej t through Locust Alley, and its force being so great that she was unable to help herself, tire child was carried off with the current about titty feet anu then plunged into a culvert, through which she passed at a distance of one hundred and eighty loot, and Irom that out into the iiushkill, bringing up finally on a rock in that stream. Hie culvert is three to four feet in sir.o, and those who saw the child carried into the water thought that she would meet her death by being dashed against its sides cu be drowned, but their surprise may be im agined when we state that only a lew bruis es on one of her legs and about her bead could be discovered when she was taken, very much frightened from the rock in the RushkiiJ. The escape of tlie little girl is one of the most remarkable that we have heard of for some time.— Eastuii Ey peers, Aug. 11. A Domestic Romance. J ho papers relate the following .-tory < )ne morning last week, a scene occurred on the train from .New if oik south, which fur a time created quite an excitement among the passengers. Among those on the train, was a lady about thirty years of age. She was good looking and-attracted much attention from her air of melancholy. At Princeton, a sun-burnt but very hand some gentleman entered the car in which the lady in question was seated. No soon er had the parties glanced at each other than the lady swooned. On recovering herself, it appeared that the gentleman was her husband, whom she had not seen for ten years. lie had started for California when the gold fever first broke out. Tlu parties at that time resided in Princeton, New Jersey. The husband was taken sick and did not. recover for some time. Prior to Ins convalescence the lady had gone .South, in the capacity of a governess, and wrote that fact to her husband, who, unfor tunately, did not receive her letter. No answer to his letter reaching him, ho thought his wife was careless of his wel iure. A feeling of home came over him, and he returned to the States a few weeks ago. Meantime the lady had fallen heir to a large S uthern estate, left her by a mem ber of the family in which she bad been teaching. These explanations being made, the once more united couple started 0:1 a Southern trip together. There was cer tainly two happy persons on that train. fUu!Af!) J Alii* Id' J. HOFFMAN, Lewistown, Pa., lias - O on F;,n