Maud leaped to Lor feet-an expression of deep an- I G" fafulTamoitio:. by couHI you not leave me in peace? God kuows I Have-not deserved removed his wrappings reveal inga face haggard and bloodless-frame fearfully emacmted, and eyes"deeply sunken, burning, and restless, i nero was something superhuman in his aspect; wane in ©\cry Hneamont of \he ashen face-in the fiend,.h gleam. the wild eyes, could be perceived the workings o ic cruel, arrogant spirit. ' . , 1 You thought you had evaded me. he said, in a deep, sepulehural tone; ' but, like other mortals, you n you have erred. Illness alone has kept nae from you. i wrestled with disease that again have you in ffe ceased speaking, and tho mesmeric orbs were fixed full upon the shuddering girl. A numbness seized upon her nerves; hut suddenly, as if inspired-with strength from above, she shook off the incubus settling upon ininu and body; turned away; exclaimed: ' God help me • Lamoille, for a moment, seemed petrified with anger and astonishment; then with a loud.piercing cry,threw up his arms and sank insensible to the floor. At this juncture Mrs. Brown returned, who assisted the thankful Maud in placing her bitterest toe upon a bed, from which he never roso. For days he rayed in cessantly; and then, just before the lamp of life was burned out, became sane. 1 Maud/ he said feebl/, ' I have done you a great wrong. Heaven oniy knows what evil spirit drove me to make you the victim of my vile arts. 1 had practiced them on others —I will not horrify you with the rela tion. I conceived the idea, at once, of making you sub servient to my will. You were beautiful, educated, and talented, and I most ardently wished to determine if I could bring those lofty attributes down to the loathsomo level to which my previous machinations had depressed others I had become a monomaniac 011 this subject, and scrupled at nothing. Your womanly kindness to ward mc has won me to make this confession. As I failed in your destruction, you triumphed in your own purity and goodness. Send for an attorney. I wish to make a partial reparation for the sorrows I have caused you. I shall not speak to you again. Maud, forgive me!' ' Willingly,' sobbed Maad, deeply affected by the words of the dying man —who appeared to her just waking from a dream to a realization of the magnitude of his crime. After the death of Lamoille, Maud found herself, with the little Geraidine, heir of the joint wealth of her fath er, mother, and Gustavus Lamoille. Maud never married, but devoted herself to her beau tiful charge, who became celebrated as a graceful writer, and who, at the age ot twenty, wedded a sculptor whose naine is widely known. They reside together now in Maud's handsome villa by the waters of the Arno. THE DWARF'S WEDDING. It is well known that ico is capable of such great solid ity as to retain in eoid countries any desired shape for a long time; and houses have been constructed of it which have resisted the elements, not only through the winter, but far into the succeeding summer, and in some instan ces, oven during several years. In illustration of this fact, the Courier des Eta La U nis tells the following story : Peter the Great of Russia had in his service a buffoon named Isickolieft, a dwarf in size, and particularly ugly in appearance, but possessed of a mind full of intelli gence an i overflowing with wit and sarcasm, in the ex ercise of which even the sacred majesty of the Czar was not always respected, lie ono day approached his master and requested permission to marry. 'And who do you sujfpose wouid marry you ?' demand ed the Czar. 'Catharine Italivaski/ replied the dwarf. 'Catharine Italivaski! that majestic, beautiful crea ture, attached as title de chamber to one of the Empress' ladies in waiting! Impossible, my poor Nickolieff. She is young and beautiful, and vou are old and ugly.' 'She loves me!" said Nickoiieff. swelling with offended pride. 'Everybody does not look upon me with the un favorable eyes of your majesty.' 'You must be very rich, then, or she would not love you/ said the Czar. 'Allo wing that to be, I should not be the first one who has been loved tor his wealth'/ replied the buffoon, with a cynical smile. 'I know of one far more rich and more powerful than I am, who has thought himself loved for himself alone, instead of his piles of yellow gold, and was so plainly deceived that he alcno was unsuspicious of the true object.' The Emperor turned pale with anger, and bit his lip until the blood flowed, for tjic buffoon alluded to a love adventure of the monarch well known at court, but of which none had dared to speak above a whisper. •Very well/ said ho, controlling his rage by a violent effort, 'since you desire to marry Catharine Italivaski, you shall do so. I charge myself with the whole ex pense ot the nuptials, and 3*oll will receive from me tho palace which )'ou will occup3' w 'tb your charming bride. Meantime 3'ou are forbidden to leave 3'our chamber, un der penalty of being made acquainted with the knout. iD comparison with which the of 103* wife, which ha\o olten made your shoulders ache, are mere love ca resses. I itteen days after, the day of January, 1720, the buf foon was awakened at daybreak by the sounds of music at the door of the chamber which served him as a prison. A number oi the servants of tho Czar entered, clothed him in a magnificent suit of garments, then placed hifh on a sledge, to which were attached four of the most beautiful horses in the imperial stables, and surrounded > a college composed of the greatest lords and ladies ot the imperial court, conducted him to tho cathedral JNotre Dame do Kazan, where the nuptial ceremony was e e j ra e with a splendor and extravagance which not on y reassured but delighted the proud Nickolieff. wZ benediction pronounced, the happy couple were placed upon the sledges, and conducted to an iso lated place, a short distance from the city, on the banks of the *eva, where had been built a palace the like of which never existed, except in fairy tales. The palace which seemed to be constructed of crystal, and which reflected in thousands of luminous rays tho blazing tor ches of the cortege, was built of massive blocks of ice cut as if from stooe and fastened with water in place of cement.. The dwarf and his wife were introduced into an immense hall, the furniture of which, tables, chairs chandeliers, everything was made of ice, and were served i**. J e P rese nce ot the Emperor and his attendants' . a feast of regal sumptuousness. The choicest and most "oheate wines were served in abundance, and tho goblets ot Is ickoliefl and Catharine—also carved from blocks of ice were kept constantly filled, uotil, at a citri ™ m J; et ' sr ' the spouses, stupefied with wine, were S BIU ™ 'I P chamber and placed upon a bed wiU°ou" Cy Ca , rv ?4 and Silled, and there left, solid with the walls themselves. As the cortege with drew, the cruel Czar remarked— ' Behold a nuptial night such as was never witnessed before.' Eight months after the fatal night, says the historian Leveque—that is, at the close of the month of August —this palace and tomb of ice still existed, and in an almost perfect state. Certain portions of the exterior only had yielded to the influence of the warm winds and sun, and, melting, had formed about it a species of opaque stalactites. The monument itself gradually lost its transparency, and became a dirty, tarnished mass, through which it was no longer possible, thanks to God„ to distinguish the bodies of the frozen lovers, of which the very features had been so long visible. Another winter passed, consolidating the fearful tomb anew, so that two years later, under the combination of frost, hail, snow, dust, sun and rain, this fairy palace was completely transformed into a little hillock, black and hideous to behold \Y hen at last, Peter the Great gavo orders to demol ish the frightful witness to his barbarity, the pickaxe and bar were found insufficient for the purpose, and re course to blasting was necessary to relieve the shores ot the beautiful Neva from the villanous object which recalled so disgraceful a history. ■ ~~~ From "The Sparkling Stream." published by C. M. Tremaine. New York—songs aaa music adapted to tne use of Good Templars and generally. f! TELL ME YE ZEPHYRS SWEET-" Tell me ye zephyrs sweet, that round me softly come, I)o ye not know some spot where mortals drink no rum? Some pleasant happy vale, or mountains near the moon, Where man may dwell nor meet, one Lager J leer Saloon? The zephyrs murmured in their accents low : We've tried to find that spot, but 'twas 'no go.' Tell me, thou ocean blue, whose waters wifih the shore, Kno west thou some blessed spot where topers come no more? Where womankind may know in life some pure delight, Nor wake up from her dreams, and find her husband tight ? The angry billows loudly thundered, No ! While all the little waves cried out 'Jen so.' And thou oh radiant sun, that with such glories shine, Knowest thou some place where Brandy, Gin and Wine Are all unknown to man ; where he his thirst may slake At some sweet rustic well, or in some cooling lake ? The blushing sun withdrew his face in frown, You'll find it not, he cried, in Lewistown. Tell me ye giant minds that make or break our laws, Will there not come a time triumphant for our cause? A glorious time where man shall join with man, And rear their household altars on the temp'rance plan ? All, all responded in one uniting voice, That time will come— Americans, rejoice. HON. HENRY WILSON ON TEMPE . RANCE- At the New England Temperance Convention held in Boston lately, the lion. Henry Wilson spoke as follows : Before I was twenty years of age I took the total ab stinence pledge, and I have kept it more than a third of a century. I thought when a young man that when I should be fifty years of age I might use spirituous liquors with more safety to myself and without detriment to others. I have passed that age, and I clearly see now that I cannot use iatoxicating liquors as a beverage with out detriment to others. Yes, sir, I realize more than ever before, the necessity and duty of maintaining the character of a strictly temperate man. I see young men in the bloom of youth—l see men in the pride of mature manhood squandering talents, time, possessions, everything—blasted reputations and the hopes of kin dred and friends; and I would not have upon my soul the consciousiftss that I had by precept or example, lured any young man to drunkenness, for all the honors of the universe. The sorrows of drunkenness glare upon us from the cradle to the grave. From childhood I have seen—ay, and felt too —the measureless evils of intem perance. Kindred and friends near and dear to mo kindred and friends I tenderly love, and whoso memo ries I shall ever fondly cherish, have been its victims.— Anxieties for the near and loved burden our lives. In view of these great sorrows that rest upon us, we should be willing to make the personal sacrifice —if it bo a sac rifice—to put aside the cup of intoxication; I have never felt it to bo a sacrifice. In 1840, I wont to Washington to early petitions, signed by sixty thousand men of this Commonwealth, against the admission of Texas as a slaveholding State. John Quincy Adams, in whoso district I resided, made a dinner party for mo. Eminent men sat around that table—one of thro number has since been Speaker of the House of Representatives, two have been Cabinet offi cers, and two have been Foreign Ministers. I looked up to Mr. Adams with profound admiration and rever ence. During the entertainment Mr. Adams asked mo to drink a glass of wine with him; I was embarrassed — hesitated a moment; it was the sorest trial of my life; but I somehow succeeded in stammering out, 'Sir, I never take wine.' That answer settled the matter for me. I have never found it hard since to utter those words, nor to fill my glass with cold water. I have often since sat at the tables of Governors, Senators, Foreign Ministers, Cabinet Officers, Generals, Admirals and Pres idents, but I have ever found it easy to decline the prof fered wine cup. The real difficulty is not in others, it is in ourselves. Temptations arc ever around and about us. The only thing for the temperance man to do is to stand inflexiby firm in his plighted faith. He who is ready to live bv his temporance pledges will win the re spect even of men who indulge in the excessive use of intoxicating drinks. The holy cause of temperance must bo carried into our schools; Sabbath schools, churches, families, everywhere. All must feel, realizo that they have a personal duty to perform—that they must b'e examples of personal fideli ty. Let overy friend of this hallowed causo ever re member that its advancement demands individual re. s ponsibility. We intend, Mr. President, to have the Capital free from intoxioating liquors. A public'sentiment must be created and developed that will banish intoxicating j liquors. A public sentiment must be created and de veloped that will banish intoxicating liquors from all buildings and dofcer public officers in the army and navy in Congress, the Cabinet, and the Executive Mansion, from the conversion of the public building® into diam shops. Thi way to create and develop tjiat sentiment is for the people to lead temperance lives, and through pulpit, lecture room,*and convention. and by all means sanctioned by law, humanity and religion, let the public men of the country, those in office and those who hope to be in office, know that they will no longer tolerate drunkenness in official life. ~ • ———- . - , ■' rl , ■ = gilfc & From-Oliver Optic's Boys' and Girls' Msgatiae. CHARADE Five hundred begins it, Five hundred ends it, Fivo in the middle is seen ; The first of all figures, The first of ail letters Take up their stations botwoon. Join all together, and then you will bring Before you the name of an eminent king. WORD SQUARING. Now, boys and girls, you may use your skill at 1 word squaring,' which may be a new puzzle to most of you. Take tour words, and arrange the letters so that they will form a square, and be the same, whether read from left to right, or fVom top to bottom, thus: CATS* HAND A L O E AGUE T O R E NUTS SEES DESK Now with this explanation construct a A VERBAL SQUARE. The first we use on the water; the second is a fabled giant; the third is the plural of a Bible craft; and the fourth is a triai. BN. FABLE. A young man once picked up a sovereign lying in the road. Ever afterwards, as he walked along he kept his eyes steadfastly fixed on the ground, in hopes of finding another. And, in the course of a long life, be picked up, at different times, a good amount of gold and silver. But all these days, as he was looking for them, be saw not that Heaven was bright above him, and nature beau tiful around. Ho never once allowed his eyes to look up from the mud and filth in which he sought the treas ure. And when iie died, a rich old man, he only knew this fair earth of ours as a dirty road to pick up money as you walk along. A little boy, seeing a drunken man prostrate before the door of a groggery, opened the door, and putting in his head, said to the proprietor : 'See here, sir, your sign has fallen down.' Brimstone. —A Bible class were asked to name the precious stones named in the Bible. After several an swers, one little fellow was called out: 'Well, Thomas, what precious stones have you found V Brimstone,' an swered the boy. It is needless to say that a number of handkerchiefs were called into requisition to choke down the 'depraved human nature* that seemed desirous of manifesting itself in laughter. SMALL THINGS. Punch's advice how to kill time—shoot every day. Boiling springs, resembling the Geysers of Iceland, are among the singular phenomena of nature in Nevada. An Irishman says that a coffin is the house a man lives in when he is dead. So long as life remains to us, our duties are unfinished. There is no room for idleness here. Madder colors red. This is the reason why the mad der you get the redder you grow. A lie may allude to a small thing; but there is no such thing as a small lie. One hundred miles west of Fort Riley is the centre of the United States. When may a loaf of bread be said to be inhabited ? When it has a little Indian in it. Carelessness is little better than a half-way house be tween accident and design. Two skelotous have been found in a Savannah cellar, supposed to have been placed there daring the revolution. Artomus Ward says. 'Let us be happy, and live with in our means, even if we have to borrow money to do it with.' An Ohio paper says, 'Some say there are but two sexes, the male and the female; but you have only to get into Massachusetts to find a Middlesex.' An editor who was asked to respond to a toast to woman declined on the ground that woman is able to speak for herself, and any man who undertakes to do it for her, will got into trouble. Which is the heavier, a pound of gold or a pound of feathers? A pound of feathers; for they aro weighed by avoirdupois weight—7ooo grains in a pound; whilo the gold is weighed by Troy weight—s76o grains in a pound. BMMffii wimi~ Attention is directed, to the SEVERAL FARMS I AM AUTHORIZED TO SELL. Taking into consideration their convenience to mar ket, location in quiet sections where law and order and freedom of action and opinion prevail, and price, these lands are more desirablo and t CHEAPER AS HOMES than any offored in the former pro-Blavery regions. SEE LIST IN GAZETTE AND DEMOCRAT. GEORGE FRYSINGER, Agent Tor Sale of Real Estate. Lewistown, February 13, 1867 A. J. NORTH, WITH S. A. COYLE & CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS A>"D Produce & Commission Mer chants, 15 Market Street, Philadelphia. S. A. COYLE, sep*vem J. W. LAUGHLIN. S. S. CAMPBELL & CO. Manufacturing Confectioners, AND WHOLESALE DEALXBS IX FOREIGN FRUITS, NUTS,&C. No. 303, RACE STREET, ' PHILADELPHIA. ALSO. *AScrACTt*IAS or ALL XIXM or Molasses Candy and Coooanut Work. septl2"66-ly. OCBIVI'\ER A SEBEYOB. IJ G. H. Bwinart, respectfully.in forms the citizens of Mifflin county, that he is prepa re! it al! timer to daaurwiyiag on short notice. La-eds, Mortgages, Bonds, and other legal wnungz, drawn with neatness and dispatch. Address. G. IT. SW IGARTs nov7-6ra McVeytown, Mifflin county, Pa. J. IRVIN WALLIS'S New Parlor Heater.- WITH this Store two object* are perfectly attained, with the least possible expense. In appearance it is like the Parlor Gas Burner, yet BO constructed, that you can throw nearly all the heat up stairs when needed, or turn it down at wilH and In regard toeZoc •my. it hasweee sefeetifitwiy tested, rockrrond that the Russian G-if Burners produce more heat from a given quantity of coal than any other stove in use. Call and examine for yourseif at the Big Coffee Pot Sign. novtS-2m DOBBINS' ELECTRIC SOAP SAVES TIME ! SAVES MONEY! SAVES LABOR! SAVES CLOTHES! SAVES WOMEN! AND ALL GROCERS SELL IT. It is used by cutting into small sharing? and dis solving in hot water, then soak the clothes five to ten minutes, and a little hand rubbing wil! make them as clean as hours of hard machine rubbing would do, with ordinary soap, and the most delicate fabrics re ceive no injury. We can reter to thousands of fami lies who are using it, and who could not be persuaded to do without DOBBINS' ELECTRIC SOAP. Soid by all leading grocers throughout the State. Manufactured onir by DOBBINS & LOVE, WHOLESALE OFFICE: 107 Sonth Fifth Street, oct3l-tsm* Philadelphia. Dobbins' Electrio Soap is for sale by F. J. Hoffman and D. Grove. GOOD NEWS FOR ALL. 0 WOITLD respectfully inform the citizens of Lewis town and surrounding country that he nas opened an enure w mas for the to which he invites the attention of the public. Tbo Stock is large and consists of all kinds of n:rs^a3 9 such as Sugar, Tea, Coffee, Molasses, Syrup, 4c., 4c. Coarse $ Fine Salt. -Old Meat, Fish, Coal Oil, 40. Spices—Butchers' Pep- Ser. Cinnamon, Allspice, Cloves, Nutmegs, Ginger, lace, Ac., 4c. Dried & Canned Fruits, Cranberries, Bake Raisins, Figs, Citron, Apples, Cider, cider Vinegar, &c., Ac. NUTS, Peanuts, Walnuts, Chestnuts, Filberts, Almonds, 4c. CONFECTIONERIES, Candies of all kinds, French and Common, Sugar Toys of all kinds, fresh and fine, very cheap. Toys for the Holidays, Tin, Wooden and China. Fancy Boxes and Baskets for Holiday present-. Dolls ot all kinds, large and small, very cheap. Portmanteaus, large and small to suit ail who need them. A large assortment of Perfumery, % , Fancy Soaps, Hair Oils, &o. CHEWING & SMOKING TOBACCO, • and CSsl£icE>ac£>® always on hand. Plenty of OYSTERS, The best Baltimore Oysters can be had fresh at Grove's, very cheap. Give him a call and 9ave money, as he will sell cheap for cash. N.B.—All kinds of country produce taken in ex change for goods. decl#