Sh.igOcatlittr" . Nutaitutt, PUBLISIIED EVERY WEDNESDAY By 11. G. smiTw.erHoo. A. J.. STEIBrhiAN H. G. SMITH: TEF MB - Two Dollars per annum, payable all cases In advance. TIM LANCASTER DAILY /NTELLIGENCER Is publicited ovary evening, Sunday oxcoptod, at $5 per Annum in advance. OFFICE-80=min color= or CENTIM SWAIM. Following a Phantom. From Melton's Onao a %Veen I'm not a romantic man, and, If I had any learning in that direction, a few Monday morning visits and reprimands from the board of directors would soon have cured me of the failing ; but some how another I have found out that rail way men are made of the same stuff as other men; rind have hearts under their uniform coats. It was no business of mine, if, while I Was at the London terminus of Great I)lvidend and Longshare Railway, I examined - the tickets and unlocked the carriages on the departure platform—lt was no business of mine if a tall fair girl, in deep mourning came twice a week regularly, and showed me her ticket for Westgate, return, second class. But somehow it seemed to be my busi ness, when I had unlocked an empty carriage and handed her in as well as I could, that I should lock that door again without banging it, and then take care that no one else went in but lady-like females. Of course I could not.help it, but from thevery first day-cold winterly day—when, thinly dressed, she came shivering along the platform, I seemed 'to have some strahge interest in her ; and, as the weeks slipped by, I found myself looking out for her regularly. It was easy to see, from the music-roll she carried and the return ticket, that she went down the line to give lessons. called myself a fool, and thought of my salary as a guard, and my position hi life as compared with the graceful, ladylike girl who used to come float ing along towards me every Monday and Wednesday morning, looking so pale and sad and careworn that 1 first began by pitying her, and then—well, never mind now. One cold December day I was shifted for a week to the arrival platform, and so missed seeing her leave; but I care fully watched every train that came in till I saw her get out. Without seeing me, she hurried away. Well, there was nothing to sigh for there, you'll say; but I did sigh all the same, and was turning away, when I saw the search ing porter with a, musle-rol I in his hand, which some one had lost In a carriage. "Here! I know who that belongs to," I said, snatching it from him ; and then, seeing that he was going to make a bother, I slipped a sixpence into his hand, and ran out of the station. .litst in time; I could see her at the bottom of the street, and catching hold of one . of the boys hanging about for a job, I pointed the tall figure out, and told him to follow her to where she lived, and come back and tell me. And not send the music roll? No; I mean to take that. 1 did not know why, but there seemed something pleas ant in the idea of being servant to her, and waiting on her ; and I kept telling myself so as I walked back to attend to my duty. Next morning I was in a quiet, shah by, lodgin.f-letting place leading out of (lower Street North, with the music roll in my hand, looking out for No. 21. IL was easy enough to lied, but some thing seemed to make me walk past two or three times before I could summon courage to go up and ring. But at last I did, thinking how foolish it was, when I only had to deliver Ihe lost parcel, and come away. So I rang gently, and wailed; rang again, and waited ; and then a red laced woman came to the door. " You have n young Indy who teaches munic—" "Second floor front," she said, snap pishly. " Why don't you knock twice? h ell's for the ground floor. There, go up I" I took my cap, wiped my shoes, and, feeling ashamed of my uniform for the first time in my life, went slowly up to the second floor, and then stopped ; for I could hear a piano, and tile sweet est voice 1 ever hearth was singing to it 41 o low tone. I stopped,llstening and drinking In the sweet sounds with my heart beating heavily, for it was a long way up; and I should have stopped longer, had 1 not heard some one com ing up the stairs. Then I knocked, and a voice cried, " Come in !" I turned the handle two or three times, for it was old and worn, and then, en tering, stood blushing like a great girl, and trembling before a tall pale lady and some one lying upon a sofa In front of a miserable lire. Such a bare, chilly room, and so pule and cold both the inmates looked, as I stood observing all I could in the first glance, "Oh, mamma, the music!" cried the pale girl, rising from her seat by the piano, and running towards me, and then, as I clumsily held It out, I saw that I was recognized, us she thanked 1110 for bringing It, and also for what she called my kindness at the station. "Ask him to take n glass of wine, Louise," said the lady on the sofa, when I saw the color flush in her daughter's cheek, usshe said, hastily : "I think, inamma, wo have none in the house." I clumsily protested that I would rather not take any wine, and was back ing towards the door, when a sudden pain shot through me for I detected a mutton on the part of elle pale girl, and caught sight of a shilling in her hand. I suppose I showed what I felt, for she paused, antbcolored deeply, and, as I stood outside, she once more thanked me, passed the shilling hastily into her left hand, and held out the right to me. I have some recollection of having taken it, and pressed it to my quivering lips, and then I was blundering along the streets in a sort of wild dream, see ing nothing, hearing nothing, but ap parently lost. The days went on till Christmas Eve. I had watched for her next coming to the station, aud, as usual, seen to the carriage in which she went. I knew that I had nothing, to hope for, being only a railway servant, and she a lady; but, for all that, it scented my duty to watch over her, though since the day when I returned the folio her bows haul been a little more distant, and she had hurried into the carriage. But it was Chrstmas Eve, and all through that week I had not seen her. "Holidays," I sold to myself, and then tried to be as busy as possible, to keep myself from thinking that it would be perhaps a month or six weeks before I saw her again. But there was no fear of my not being busy, fur most people know what kind of a Christmas railway servants keep—all hurry, drive, bustle, worry and rush. Dull, heavy weather it was, yellow fog and driving snow. The trains came in covered with white, which slowly thawed and dripped oil; so that the terminus was wet, and cold, and miserably dirty. People didint seem to mind It though ; for the station was thronged with corners and goers-friends coming to inoet those from the country ? and as many coining to see others oil, "By yer leave," It was all day long, as the barrels full of parcels and baggage were run here and there along the plat form. The place seemed alive with llsh baskets, oyster barrels, and poultry ; while somehow or other, from the poor est and shabbiest third class people up •to thegrandees of the first class, every ono looked happy and comfortable. So there was I at it, helping to gel train after train late, of course; for do what you would there was no finding room enough for the people, and so it got to be past four, with the gas all alight and the fog and snow thicker than ever. A train was just starting, when there was a bit of con fusion at the door. Some one shouts "Hold hard I" and then from where I was—some distance up the platform—l saw a gentleman hurry up to a first-class carriage, almost dragging a lady with him—a lady In black. Before any one could stop him, he had opened the door, pushed her in, and then followedjust as the trait( began gliding off. This happened to be a carriage just put on,'and the compartment the gen tleman entered was locked but he had one of the pocket railway keys, for be fore the carriage .railway where I stood, with my heart somehow beating very strangely, I saw his hand out of the window, locking the dooragain. In the momentary glance I caught, as the lamps flashed into the carriage, I could - see that there was no light inside, while two little gloved hands pressed down the window the man tried to draw up ; and there, pale and horror etrlckou, eyes starting, add lips open, as if she ;was crying "Help!" I saw the face, of the young governess. • • ' The, time did not appear long enough to 'seellnuoh, but lia*till , that, and my mind'iteeined to keep up with my eyes and canalsW And I knew that : • • , . . ~., .. ~........, .. • ft n:',3 I rri 4 i : , . .....„ ._ .. . _:.:... 1. , ..,:.;:,. - „.1 - •_.; _'.•'_••• 1 , ;', • -,.." ..- .- ',. ••• '.:.,,,..-, ' -,.‘ - 1 .1 .. ..* 7 .: . • , - , ... . '.,,,' . .. . .. . ~,--•-:, ::: : • ••„:, i .:,-, - • ‘,..,. ..,-.! , , ~....: •.. : : ..:.,. ..,.. - • _ . ._ • _.. ~,, . r‘• ,„:1., ,f . ..; : t = 7 .... . 40 .- .111 % . * ' ' : .. '., ' t:11,, lir IP ,'I 'f :, ,IS.:; - \ fj-d: ':(., , • .., • • : ; tl, , I' '.,.. i ,', .'; ..i!... 1 ~. ~,, . ,;,..., -.: ~ . i , .• • , _ .. ... . : rp . , .....,i:".. LI!) j - !:1 - ",";:• ,r - ,.... •' . - : Ft ; , ..... .. , r • '..; ,'".. •' :• :, , ...•, w.. ~,, :, . - •:7 .:.i.f.:,,...- . .., .. _ , . - ' - -- •• ' - - . . . .. , - , .. " ..: .•"' i. VOLUME 69 there was some infernalphice of villainy on the way. ' • " What to do?" seemed rubbing through my mind, as in the agony I felt I turned all of a tremble. Telegraph to the station in front to stop the train, which was the express, with fifty miles to run befdre pulling up ?—send a spe cial engine and tender after them? How could I do either. on my own responsi bility, and only•on suspicion? Should Igo and report it? I should have half an hour wasted In questioning, and then perhaps he told that it was time enough to act when there was proved ground to work upon. And what had I to ad vance? Nothing but that appalling look for aid from her I loved. "Her I loved !" Yes, I knew it now; and I knew, too, that to be of service, I must act—act at the risk of life or limb. I thought all this, running after the train, fast gliding along past the plat form. I had lost too much time already as I darted along, for a few more seconds it would have been impossible to overtake the fast receding carriages. There was a shouting behind me, as I ran ; one porter stood right in my way looking afrer the red lights, and in passing, I knocked him over. The platform past, and bounding along the incline at the end I was out in the snowy night, when I tripped over one of the point handles, and fell heavily, uttering a cry of des pair; but I was up again directly, and running along the rough line amidst crossing metals and rods that threaten ed to throw me at every Instant. It seemed the act of a madman to run now for the red lights were some dis tance ahead, and gradually growing dim and blurry amid the fog; but through the thick snow I ran panting on, with my breath coming shorter and heavier,. and a hot burning sensation at at my chest, while it seemed that I could taste blood, though: my mouth was dry and hot. All at once my heart leaped and every nerve tingled. From the fast vanishing train came a long shrill whistle, which I knew well enough meant red signals in front, while to my unutterable joy, the end lamps of the guard's van show ed plainer and plainer as I panted on. Another stumble and fall over the point rods—and I was up again, heed less, that my hands and forehead were bleeding, and that I had lost my cap. There were the lamps plainer and plain er, for the train had almost stopped but now, a hundred yards ahead, could 1 ever overtake itbefore itstarted again? The suspense was terrible, I felt my head swim as I panted on. Fifty yards passed and the red lamps still receding, but bigger and less dim. On still gasping andchoking, and draw ing my breath with difficulty. Not twenty yar s off—and, if I could have run another few seconds would have seen me holding on by a carriage handle; but I could only go at a heavy trot. " Bang ! bung!" went a couple of fog signals, and hope rose again as the en gine slackened pace once more, and, almost at a walk, I panted on—nearer, nearer, nearer—the red lights growing brighter and plainer; and at last, just as the engine gave a final shriek. and dashed on all clear, I laid my hand on the red bull's eye, and the next moment was clinging to the foot hoard of the guards van. The fog had been my friend. In an- other feW seconds I must have dropped; while, in an ordinary way, the train would have been miles down the line by this time. " Bang ! bang !" went the fog signals again, and I sat helplessly there, with my legs all drawn up, and again we slackened for a fetweconds, initial clear once more and we Were dashing on, and fast getting into full swing as I rose up, and opening the door, stood with the guard of the train. "Pooh! nonsense!'! he said. "You're mad, I shan't stop the train." ' " Then I shall,' I shouted, making towards the wheel connected with the gong upon the engine. "Not if I know it, you won't," he said, stopping me. I was too weak and donelup to scuffle with him. " Will you come.with me to the next carriage, then ?" I said. He only shook his head. " Win you lend the your key ?" Isald ; for I had dropped my own when I fell. He shook his head again, and then it struck me that perhaps ho might stop me, seeing how rough and wild and ex cited I looked. I backed slowly to wards the door, facing him all the time. Ho told me afterwards, if I had not felt afraid, ho would have pinned me while I turned my back. But I didn't turn my back, and the next moment I was outside on the long step clinging to the door handle, and with the guard leaning out and watch ing me. "‘ Come back !" he shouted, as we dashed along at full speed, now rush ing through the darkness ahead, and giving a wild shriek as we passed a sta tion, the lights looking like one streak. There were the carriages shaking and the wind tearing at me as if to beat me off; but I was recovering myself fast,, and....ip a few moments I was at the end of the guard's van, leaning towards the carriage I wanted to reach. So far my task had been easy, though, of course, very dangerous, with the train dashing along at fifty miles an hour ; but now there was a gap to pass between the van" and the carriage, for the buffers keep the carriages at some distance apart. For a few moments I stopped in dread, but, as I got my breath more and more, courage and the recol lection of her wild appealing face came to me, and, clinging to the buffers, I contrived to get one foot on the step of the carriage, and, still holding on by the iron, tried to get the other there. Just then the train gave a jerk, and I thought it was all over; but the next moment I was on the step, and had hold of the door-handle. "At last," I muttered, as I drew my self up on the next and tried the door, which was, as I expected fast. Then I looked back. There was theguard with, half his body out, and his hand screen ing his eyes, trying to follow my mo tions ; but with the darkness all round, the snow cutting by like knives and points, and the dense fog clouds we kept entering, I felt sure he could not see me, though I could make him out from the light in his compartment. Then I listened, and my heart seemed to stand still; for I fancied I could hear the sound of a struggle going on inside, though I was not sure, from the rat tling made by the train. I was not waisting time, for I had tried to look In la the window ; and, after opening my knife with my teeth„ was trying to open the door. • But the interior of the carriage was dark as pitch, and my knife was useless, while now I was sure there was a struggle going on Inside. Direct ly after, ono of the little side pains of glass was broken, and I heard a faint cry. I dashed lu the door window in au In- stant, cutting my hands with the thick glass, and thou, beating out the loose pieces made a place for entrance, and had half body In before I felt myself seizing by some one who tried to force me buck. Two hands held me by the throat, while I grasped the door with one hand, half lu and half out of the carriage. My blood was up. I hail hold of my unseen enemy by the collar, and I dug my knuckles into Lie neck as I held on for life like a dog. I had the advantage of him there, for while I had on a stiff collar and button. ed up uniform coat, he had only a thin dress shirt collar and one of those blank wisps of ties. It was a struggle for life and death with me, but I got further in. At last, I suppose, feeling half choked, he started back and drew me with hilt', HO that I fell heavily on the floor. Here, though, I lost my hold, and he had me again at a disadvantage. For what seemed a good five minutes, it was an up and down struggle, while more than once I felt myself dashed against,somebody who was'orouching in a corner of the carriage. Sometimes I got-the better and some times the worst off. After the struggle had been going on some time, It seem ed that the far door was open, and that there was no one else in the carriage but us too, hanging to one another like a pair of wild beasts, Then came such a horrible reaction that my strength seemed to leave me, for I felt that in 'her fear and dread the poor girl had leaped out. 33ut she had not, for she was outside, clinging for life to the handles, as in one brief glance I saw by the end light of the train flashing upon her. In a last fierce struggle my foot tripped, and I and the man I was struggling with fell headlong out of the door. There was a flash of light, the sound of rushing wind, and then I seemed to be dashed with fearful violence upon the ground. The next thing Free°llect is the sound of voices, and.the hissing of an engine close by me, while two of three people were moving about with lanterns. I found some one supporting my head, and then I gave a shudder, for there were horrible red patches andmarks on the white ground: As the men spoke in whispers, I could see they were col lecting together something horrible, that steamed in the cold air. A mist came over me, and I fainted dead away. When .1' could think again, I found that I had been in a London hospital, and was lying there in a ward, looking at a pair of soft white hands that did'nt seem to belong to me, while my head felt cool through my hair being cut off. But I got stronger every day, and soon I had visitors to see me • and qne face that came, and used to 'lean over my poor bare pallet, was, alit were, the face of an angel—so sweet, so loving, and so tender in its compassionate look; and once, while the old lady stood back, two tiny soft hands smoothed my pillow, and a tear fell on my cheek, as a voice whispered. "God bless you, my brave preserver." I shut my eyes then, and trembled, for there was a bitter feeling of sorrow came over me ; and in spite of those tender words, I seemed to be standing on the brink of a great gulf, far away from her. As I grew stronger, I learned from her mother how they had been deceiv ed. It was through answering an ad vertisement for a governess that the poor girl had met with insult. She had been deluded in accompanying thegen tleman, underpretence of taking her to his home, a few miles down the line. He had paid the penalty of the crime he had meditated with his life. An up train tore him to pieces—an up train which must have passed within a few inches of my head. The train from which we fell had been stopped by the guard a few miles further down, when the poor girl was found clinging outside the carriage. An engine and tender were sent back in search of us, to find us as I have already told. I only saw her once again, when she gave me this—this little purse, just as you see. She spoke to me kindly and tenderly, and they were words of praise, I think ; but I saw her only through a mist, and the thought that it was for the last time seemed to fill my mind so that I could only speak huskily. I kiss ed one of her hands as she said " Good bye;" and then I was-standing alone— alone in the world, without aim or hope. You will please to remember that she was a lady, and that I am—only a rail way servant. Waited for at the Downley Station As I stood at my door, looking for a passing cab, I could not help wishing that I had taken my wife's advice, and gone to Downley by an earlier train. The weather had grown much worse instead of better, and not only did the wind blow as boisterously as it had done all day, but Its gusts now drove before them a heavy rain which would have wetted one through in a very few min utes. As a rule, disengaged cabs crawl ing slowly past my house were a nui sance, and now I had waited full a quar ter of an hour without seeing one, and I knew that the margin beyond the number of minutes absolutely neces sary for getting to the station was grow ing dangerously narrow. There was a howl; there was a deluge! I could never walk to the station in this. Ah ! there .was one. In answer to the man's hail, I dashed through my little gar den, and in a few seconds was inside a four-wheeler. "Great Southern, sir? yessir," said the man, as he stood at the door, the rain pouring from his oilskin in streams. "An uncommon nasty night, sir." So it was, and so I should fancy the foor fellow found it, for when he opened the door for me to alight at the station, a complete ring of water formed where he stood. We were in pretty good time after all, and I got my ticket and was seated comfortably in the carriage for some minutes before the moment of starting. There were very few passen gers in any of the carriages, and in the one by which I traveled, and which was marked for the Downley branch, there were but two or three, and I was the only occupant of my comparment. Tho last bell had rung, the whistle had sounded, the premonitory scream from the engine had been given, and then, of course, had followed the first tug, when I heard a voice shout— It " This way, sir, this way." A guard tore along the platform, fol lowed by a belated passenger; my door was unlocked, the stranger Jumped panting in, the door was slammed to, a shilling changed hands rapidly, and we swept from the station. " By Jove," exclaimed the new corner, wiping his forehead as he spoke, " by Jove, that was a close thing." " Very," I assented, " and the last train, too." " The last train, certainly," said my companion. " I believe there is no way whatever of getting to Downley if you miss this train." "There is none," I replied, "which very inconvenient." "Oh, excessively so," returned he 'Have you any objection?" Of course, as he said this he exhibit ed his cigar case, and finding I bad no objection be pressed a cigar upon me, which I may remark was one of the very best I ever smoked, and then, without further speech, he reclined with his eyes closed, as though in deep thought. He was a tall, good looking man with fine beard and moustache, very black and full. But I could not help think ing that his head was a little too much like a head from a hair-dresser's win dow ; and his attire was too much like a picture from a fashion book. Some how everything about him was too new and glossy to please me• entirely, and hisjewelry was also too profuse, but it could not be denied that his cigar was a capital one. I sank into a reverie as his own; in deed, I rather suspect I had begun to doze, when I was roused by the stopping of the train. My companion roused himself too. I was on the side nearer to the platform and looked out. "A rough night still, isn't it?" he said. "It is, indeed," I replied. "Just put your head out and try how the wind is blowing." "No, thank you," he returned with a smile, "I will take your word for it." I laughed In reply, and was about to close the window, when the guard looked in. The official passed on, but returned in a few seconds, and stared somewhat curiously, I fancied, into the carriage. The scream and the tug came again, and on we went. " That fellow had agood stare at you," said my companion. " Well I fancied he looked chiefly at you," I said ; " but the fact was, I have no doubt, ho smelt a somewhat power ful odor of tobacco, and he wishes us to see that he did." "I shouldn't wonder," said the stranger, showing himself back with the languid air of one who takes no interest in a conversation. "Do we stop again before we arrive at the Dowuley branch?" "No," rreplied. "Verygood then," he continued; "let us make ourselves comfortable." And, by way of doing this unlocked a black valise he had with him, and drew out a couple of bottles of champagne, which proved as good in quality , as his cigars. He next produced contrivances for glasses which shut up into a mere ring. With these appliances, we very merrily journeyed over the twelve miles 'which remained of the main line, when "Downley Junction" was now shouted, and, as soon as we came to a stand, our carriage was detached from the train. "All tickets ready, if you please," said the conductor, appearing at the door. As we handed our pieces of paste board to the man, the same guard who had twice before looked in, peered over his shoulder, to the annoyance of my companion, who muttered something strongly condemnatory of his impu dence. In another. moment the main line train was thundering over the viaduct, and dashing with its roaring and its sparks, into the utter darkness of the night, while our modest little engine came fussing out of some siding, and ' was hooked on to its smaller charge. ,'Now we're off to Downley," ex claimed my new friend. But he was wrong. A delay of some minutes yet took place, which really seemed quite unnecessary ; for there was not a soul, on the platform—along which the gusts of rain and wind swept LANCASTER PA. WEDNESDAY MOENENG MAY 13 1868 fiercely—save and eicept • the station" master, who well wrapt up, twice walk ed slowly past our carriage, and looked sideways at us, with a very keen ex pression, or so I fancied. My fellow traveler did not see this, as he was fix edly staring into vacancy from the other side of the carriage. At last we puffed on to the branch. we had gotinto pretty good speed as we passed the second platform, which, on theDownley branch exists for the convenience of up passen gers, when, to my amazement, the door was pulled open, and a young man Jumped in. "Come my lad," I remonstrated," this is a very dangerous game, and surely we have been long enough at the station for you to get in leisurly." "Yes," he said, with a grin. On looking at him, I thought he was one of the most dissipated, impudent looking young fellows I had ever seen. "Yes ; you've been at the station long enough,' , he added. Then he stopped, without any per ceptible reason, to grin again, and to wink at me. I tried to freeze him by a scornful look, but it had not the least effect upon him. "Now," he continued, " do either of you gents know me?" " I do not," was my reply. My companion turned his face from the window for an Instant, and bestow ing a lofty glance of contempt upon the speaker, resumed his gaze. The new comer was in no way abashed at the cool manner in which his advances were re ceived, but resumed— " I want to have a little talk with one of you, but I don't know which. Have either of you ever heard of Tawell, the Quaker, who was waited for when he got out of the train s all through the elec tric telegraph, which was a new thing in his time?" I stared at the speaker, while my fel low traveler bestowed a momentary glance upon him as before. " Oh, come," continued the young fellow, assuming a still more knowing expression, " this won't do. The branch is only seven miles long, and one of you is wasting time awfully. Which of you is likely to be waited forat Downley ?" I could only continue my blank stare at the boy (he was little better); my fel low traveler Just moved, but I took no notice of him. " Come, I say," urged the youth, "don't be a fool, one of you. I'm the telegraph clerk at the junction, and I have wired - to Downley to have a.couple of blues ready for this carriage—two hundred and four B; that's the number you see. Oh, that's enough," he went on, turning to my new friend " I can see which is the party. "You're in for it, mister." "But—but why should—how could anybody know ?" began the gentleman, and his voice was now husky and wa vering. " That doesn't matter, that I see," re torted.the youth ; " the onlyquestion is, are you afraid of policemen just no or are you not?" " Well, there are circumstances at present—" "That will do," interrupted the clerk ; " I don't want to know particulars. It was the guard of the down train, Bill Bixon (he's been a policeman himself) put the station Master at the junction on the scent. They were very close over it. Didrvt say to me, ' Here, Sam, you share in whatever reward we get,' and orcourse, they expect to get some thing." • " But what is the use of you telling me this now?" demanded the gentle man. "Just this," - returned Mr. Samuel, " Can you find a pound or two for ad vance that will get you safe out?" " Yes ; here are five sovereigns. Will that do?" said my friend. "Good!" ejaculated the clerk, drop• ping the money into his pocket; " how listen. About a mile thisslde of Down• ley, the road is under repair and the or ders are not to run over it at more than five miles an hour—in fact, just before they get there, the train very nearly stops. I'll tell you the right place to jump out, and I've got a key if this other party can manage it, he had bet ter make himself scarce, too, I think. There will be a row when they open the doors at Dowuley." "But what will you do ?" asked my fellow-traveler. " Why, you don't suppose I should be such a fool as to stay in after you had got out," retorted the clerk, with a laugh. "Nobody knows I'm in the train, and it's worth my walking four miles to my lodgings if I can earn five pounds by doing it." " Now, sir" said the stranger, turn ing to me, " It is not fair for me to in volve you in this trouble." "Don't mention it," I said. It was a stupid thing to say, but perhaps the champagne had something to do with it. "But I must mention it," returned my fellow-passenger. " The fact is that it is dangerous for you to remain here. If the carriage arrives with no one but you in it, the officers will certainly mis take you for me. Two days, at least, will be required to establish your iden tity, during which you will be kept closely confined." This was an alarming prospect, in deed. Two days confinement, not to speak of the annoyance and disgrace, would have been ruin to me. I had business on the following day of vital importance, which could not possibly be postponed and my companion's an ticipations seemed only too probable. " I hope," I said hesitatingly, " I hope you have not been engaged in any trans action of a questionable nature. ' "Oh as to that," returned my com• panion, "I will tell you frankly the whole truth About this painful case.— You are a gentleman, and a man of honor, and will not betray me. I am an officer in the army ; I cannot now enter into particulars, but my lieutenant colonel was a scoundrel, a villain of the deepest dye. I challenged him—l horse whipped him ; the coward bore his die glace. But his time came. He brought most unfounded charges against me, which were certain officers in England I could easily rebut. In their absence I may be ruined. I sent on two ex presses to Canada and Bengal yesterday, but until they return I must conceal I myself. But I weary you." "Far from it," I exclaimed. "Pray go on." "I have 'little more to say, he re sumed. "You know why I fly, I will tell you who I am. My name is Lionel Gerald de Mortimer—have you an army list about you ?" I mechanically clapped my hands upon my waistcoat pockets, as if to be quite certain on the matter, regretfully said, "No I have not." "It's of little consequence," resumed the officer. "I should merely have shown you that the Honorable Lionel Gerald de Mortimpr's name is no ple beian corps. My father the baron's name is of course familiar to you." I murmured that it was, and Samuel, the telegraph clerk, also murmured that it was familiar to him. "May I confide in you ?" said the fugitive. "You can," I exclaimed. "You can," echoed Samuel, the telegraph alerk,and then we all shook hands. The officer stooped to his valise again, and the clerk hurriedly whispered— "l say we're all right." He winked and struck the side of his nose with his finger, and I mechanical ly imitated his gesture. The train was slackening speed now but the captain— for such I had decided was his rank— produced another bottle, this time of brandy, and we all three quaffed to his escape—Samuel, the telegraph clerk,. drinking, It seemed to me, rather more than his share 'Adieu I my preserver' exclaimed the officer as the clerk rose and carefully unlocked the door. Fling out your bag," said the youth; this was accordingly done. "Now Jump the way the train Is going." We did so, and although a good deal shaken, no harm was done, and we saw the angly lights at the rear of the car riages disappear with quickening speed round a curve. "Well, Pm off," exclaimed the clerk, " good luck to you captain," and he vanished in the darkntas. " Now, where on earth are we to go ?" said my friend. "I only thought of coming to Downley, because it was, I supposed a quiet, retired place; but I don't know the neighborhood." "I do," I said, "follow me." He fol. lowed me accordingly, and I told him that I would take him to the little inn at which I usually lodged, and where I could obtain a bed for him. This latter offer he declined. He said he would just wash, and have some bread and cheese, and then walk across the coun try to a town he named some few miles off. lof course allowed him to decide on his own movements without • corn.- ment,.andin a few minutes we arrived at my lan, which was, luckily, a good way out of Downley in our direction.— , Tired - and splashed es he, was, for the night was still wet and tempestuous, the officer decided upon having "his crust,". as he called it, which turned out to be a very hearty meal of cold roast beef, be fore refreshing himself with a wash. I then took him up• stairs to my room, and as we crossed the landing he said , pointing to a staircase. " Where does that flight lead to ?" "Oh, only to the back yard of the house," I replied, and we entered. I had obtained two candles, and he went, taking his valise, with him into .the dresaing-robm, while I spread some papers which I had brought down with me. I heard him washing, and in a minute or two, hearing a footstep con ing froth the drawing room I looked up I recoiled with an exclamation of alarm, for there stood a man in a moleskin jacket and trousers, cloth cap, shaven face, and close cut hair. " Who are you? .T. exclaimed, grasp ing my chair as a possible weapon of defense. " Oh, it's all right, I:should say if you don't know me," Bald the man, and I recognized the voice of Captain de Mor timer. " What !" cried, more astounded then before. "In the name of all that Is wonderful, what does this mean ?" " You are not a bad fellow, but you are very green returned the voice; a greater spooney I never saw, nor a bet ter hearted one. Why old fellow you stare as if you never read of a sham moustache or beard. Good bye, old chap, you have had a mistake to-night, that's all, and our sharp young friend of the telegraph department has made a much greater. I won't ask you to shake hands with me again, because you are a gentleman and a man of honor,though soft, and I am a rogue; but take this." As he spoke he offered me a ring. " I don t want " I began. "Nonsense," said he; "take it. It is one of the few things which are really and honestly my own ; believe me for once when I tell you I have had that ring over twenty years. That's right. I wish you good luck. Good-bye." He was gone ; valise, moleskin clothes, felt-cap, and all. I heard him run stealthily down the back-stairs, and I never saw him again. I had disturbed sleep that night, dreaming of officers, both ohe army and of the police, arid woke very little refreshed in the morn ing. Luckily, the weather was very flue, and my business demanded that I should be in Downley early. As I entered the market-place, I saw several small groups staring at placards, evidently newly-fixed; indeed a man was posting one up as I got there. I r aurally stopped to see what it was about, and saw that it was headed, in bold type, "Robbery. Five Hundred Pounds Reward." It went on to de scribe the appearance of Mr. John Mace ly in such language as left very little doubt as to who was my companion on the preceding evening. Blot on Binning In the "Galaxy Miscellany" Prof. Blot tells us plainly that we do not know good wine when we taste it, which, in truth, is but seldom. For "bogus wines are sold to Americans al most entirely." This is because our taste has been so perverted that some of us absolutely prefer the bogus flavor to the natural, just as many Western peo ple prefer chicory coffee to Mocha. And the American habit of gulping instead of sipping causes us to swallow liquor before tasting it. As a rule, no drink can be properly enjoyed which is not swallowed slowly. The Professor gives the following formula to tell real from bogus wine : I will try to enable my readers to tell real from bogus wine, by tasting : Take a little of it in your mouth, move it about for two or three seconds, and spit it out or even swallow it. If it is real wine, it may taste rather sour, or acerb, on the tongue and palate, but the flavor is agreeable and lasting,. and no pungent taste can be detected. If swallowed, the same signs are experienced in the throat; and if a glass has been drank, instead of burning the stomach, it will be felt warming it, but only after a while. (It is understood that no wine should be taken on:an empty stomach.) If it really is bogus wine, instead of tasting sour or acerb, it actually tastes rather sweet and biting; as for the flavor, it is hardly tasted while the wine is in the mouth, and it is all gone as soon as the wine is spit out or swallowed. When swallowed and immediately after the throat and stomach have the sensa tion of burning; and it is that very burning sensation, created by the chem icals used for its manufacture, that is mistaken by many for the real body or strengthaf genuine wine. It does not warm thFstomach like the real liquor, but excites it, and the nervous system also. "None despise puns," says Swift, " but those who cannot make them." They are pardonable perhaps in print, but, so far as society is concerned, would they were held in universal:contempt! If puns were despised, even then they would, we are sure, be discharged upon us in the midst of every interesting and serious conversation. Puns in conversation are abominable. We consider punster very much as we should mischievous boys who would in sist upon exploding Chinese crackers and firing pop-guns in the dining or drawing room. Punsters are vexatious to the last degree, and, if they will in dulge their vice, should. be given a 'quarter or half an hour for it, and then be commanded to restrain themselves upon pain of expulsion from the com pany they have annoyed. The poli ter the society, the more odious are punsters. If they would' be content to burn their verbal powder without de manding recognition of the impure at mosphere they have created, they might be pardoned. But it is the unalterable determination of a punster that he won't be put down by inattention. Seem not to notice his effort, and in revenge he makes six other puns, each worse than its predecessor. So we are obliged in self-defence to notice each labored utter ance, which wholly breaks the magnetic current of conversation, and destroys sympathy as nausea does sentiment. If we don't notice him, the punster thinks us stapid, and the fact that We know rth is Is not sufficient compensatiod. Then the example, like all vice, is contagiousi, and what was a pleasant, genial com pany degenerates into a mob of verbal skirmishers and stragglers, who should be tried and executed for deserting the army of good breeding. Brazilian Coffee. Brazil has also had her peaceful tri umphs. In the great exposition held at Paris, in 1807, Brazil attracted much attention by the display of her material resources. She succeeded in obtaining a number of prizes. To the uninitiated it may seem strange that from all the countries—Arabia, Java, Ceylon, Yen ezuela, the West Indies and Central America—contesting for the production of the best coffee, Brazil bore away the palm. But it has long been known to dealers that coffee does not de pend upon where it grows, but upon the length of time it remains upon the tree upon the manner of its curing. The southern and the south- western states became acquainted with coffee imported from Rio de Janeiro, fifty year ago, at a time when Brazilians did not know how to cure coffee •, but the taste of the south and West has alone kept up the demand for the green, poorly cured coffee known in commerce as "Rio." The Brazilians themselves never use " Rio," and although three fourths of all the coffee imported into the United States come from Brazil yet much of it is sold as Mocha and Java, or under any other name than "Rio." The English, Americans and Germans make the poorest drink from coffee In the world, while the Latin nations, who never boll their coffee, make the best beverage. The proposed railroad from Reading to Treverton, via Bernvllle, Rehrersuurg and Tremont is to be built. So also is the road from Douglasville, through Amityville and Friedensburg to Lyons 'WID, the East Penn sylvania railroad, The Sherman House, one of the finest ho tels in the West, Is to be the Radical head quarters for those attending the Grant Con vention in Chicago. If negroes present themselves for accommodation, the propri etors of this elegant hotel will be in a quan dary, as by the rules of their house 'colored persons arq.not eligible for guestships. In Louisiana, two of the Presidential electors and a number of delegates to Chicago are itegroes. iftistibtutono. Mexican Life and Manners. "The Court of Mexico" is the title of a new work which has recently been published in Vienna, the authoress be ing the Countess Paula Kollonitz, "lady in waiting to the Empress Carlotta." The'Countesi Kollonitz wasin the suite of the doomed family when Maximilian and his consort embarked at Miramar on board the Novarra, Aprll 14, 1864, to take possession of the new empire. In this book we are told that the Empress carelessly read and wrotein preparation for her future life—working out the ar rangements of the court and household, and in other employments; and the Emperor also was uninterruptedly busy, assembling his suite every day for sev eral hours of consultation and work. Since the days of their first establish ment in the new world, the Spanish. Americans have steadily declined. They have forgotten much of what they once knew and learned but little of what America had to teach them. The women especially are " very weak, and there la nothing in their way of life to strengthen and invigorate them." They marry early—usually at fourteen or fifteentind a family of eighteen chil dren is not an uncommon occurrence. Women who are often little more than infants themselves are not likely to be careful mothers, though Countess Kol lonitz describes them as being foolishly affectionate. Her instincts of careful nursing were grievously outraged by the want of proper attention to the chil dren's health. They are dressed up and petted like dolls, but they are car ried out in smart clothes to morning promenade when the sun has scarcely risen, and taken to the evening drive after the air has become cold, to "sit half naked at the carriage windows" in order to gratify the irrational vanity of their parents. At eight or ten years old they are seen struggling against sleep, at the opera, till past midnight. When they are not servingras play things, they are left to the care ofyoung Indian girls. Thus brought up they die in great numbers. The life of a Mexican lady is very much what might be expected from the bringing up of a Mexican child. They rise early, go to mass, and thence to the Alameda, where they "march slowly up and down, and sit and chatter upon the stone benches." The rest of the morning is spent in bathing, walking in the terraces of their houses to dry their long hair, dressing and playing with their children. The afternoon is devoted to visiting their friends, and about six they go in full evening dress to drive in the Pasco. The theatre Is the usual resource at night, or else they have little informal parties called " ter tullias," where they play cards or dance with a few intimate friends. They never take up a book or any kind of work, and with the exception of three facts, that their ancestors came from Spain, that their clothes come from Paris, and that the Pope rules at Rome—they are abso lutely ignorant of Europe. Countess Kol lonitz was especially hurt at their be. having that French was the native tongue of the Germans. On the other hand, they are extremely affectionate, and family relationship are maintained with great care. By a curious inversion of European habits a Mexican girl rare ly leaves her father's house when she marries. The common plan is for the son-in-law to be adopted into his wife's family, and this goes on till the house is full of relations of all degrees of re moteness. Partly, perhaps, by reason of the barrier thus interposed between them and the outer world, the Mexican wives do not deserve, according to Countess Kollonitz, the bad reputation sometimes attributed to them. One relationship between the sexes is peculiar to Mexico. A man may pay a girl certain attentions, may ride with her, walk With her, sit by her side at the theatrd, and escort her wherever an escort is needed, without being consid ered to beengaged to her. He is simply her novio (betrothed.) If a young lady chooses she may even have several novioB at a time, nor has any one of these the right to complain if his privileges are suddenly transferred, In whole or in part, to one of his rivals. The French officers showed great promptitude in adapting themselves to this novel rela tionship, and even formed a French verb from the Spanish substantive—"novlot ter," form "novio," in order to express the relationship It implies. "Le Capi taine un tel novio to Mademoiselle Lupita ou Caliche," is a very ordinary way of speech. Either because the French presumed on the intimacies thus accorded, or because the superceded Mexicans got the ear of Mademoiselle Lupita ou Concha's family, these intru sions seem to have been more agreeable to the young ladies than to their friends. "This," says the Countess, "led to many disagreeable family scenes." In many families there are no regular meal times. You eat when you are hungry, or when you can get food. When food does not appear at fixed in tervals,'there are always some additional places "as some relation or friend is sure to drop in." The cookery is un inviting, partly, perhaps, from the quantity of lard which is used in every dish. The cooks " live out of the house, and provide the meals of several families." The servants are chiefly Indian girls, men servants being very rarely met with. In the houses show is more important than comfort. The principal reception rooms are fitted with handsome furniture, gilding of all kinds being in great repute; but the rooms ordinarily occupied by the family, and especially the bed-rooms, "are often wanting in neatness and cleanli ness, and overcrowding is common to an extent which might have been thought insupportable in a hot climate. The mother and five daughters will all sleep !done small apartment." The Mexicans are inveterate thieves and gamblers. Perhaps both these vices may be the results of their incorrigible indolence. Play and robbery are both easier ways of making money than bard work. Between twelve and one o'clock, a luncheon is eaten, which chiefly con sists of national dishes. "Tortillas" and "frijoles," take a prominent place at the tables of rich and poor. The first are pastry, made of ground maize in the shape of a thin dish as large as a plate, white and tasteless. Among the lower order, this takes the place of bread ; they use it, tuo, slightly rolled up, in stead of spoons. Frijoles are little black beans, which thrive particularly well In the neighborhood of Vera Cruz i when they have been cooked for .a long time they take the color of chocolate, and make a very good and tasty food. A ragout of turkey, (guajolote,) prepared with chills (red peppers) and tomatoes,is a favorite dish. Mixed with maize flour, wrapped up In maize leaves, and steamed, it makes the best national dish, the gamalcB. On the whole, the cookery of Mexico is not very enticing to European palates and stomachs. Lard is used In groat quan• titles In all the dishes, even in their sweet ones. A good soup is almost an unknown thing. Coffee, which grows here of the best kind, Is so badly prepared, that it Is almost !impossible to drink It. Chocolate, highly spiced with cinnamon, Is, on the contrary, very good and much drank. A 'lnge Grave. They are digging out a 750 foot high ancient Tumulus in Yorkshire Eng land. The exhumations have been those of men, women and children, all superficially burled, and some few in slight graves, but mostly burled barely out of reach of the plow. With the men have been found bronzeandiron swords and knives, and with the women buckles, brooches, dm, and various beads. The strange feature has been that the' bodies have many of them been interred in the doubled up way hitherto thought to pertain only to the ancient Britons; but some were at full length, and when so, were east and west. Mutilated bodies have been found, some being without skull or arms, while in other. cases, the skull only and no other part of the body was found. Infect, the results of the opening so far are very enigmatical, presenting the first sam ples of contracted Anglo Saxon burials. A young woman, giving the named' Ma rla McKay, aged 24 years, and living in South Boston, attempted to shoot a young man on the steps of the Old South Ohttroh, Boston, on Sunday evening. She fired:a pistol at him as he was passing her, the, ball taking alight effect, and - causing him to make a hasty retreat. She has been an rested, but her intended victim, whom she accuses of seducing her, has not yet been found. Theßattle, the Battle-neld and the Can didate. The great issue Of the pending conflict Is, shall the Government created by the Con stitution be perpetuated, or shall it be sup-. Planted by a centralized °manhunt Saber dinate to this and connected therewith are the questions of reconstruction, of negro impremacy an th ese national finance. Radical leaders see in the means to the attain- - mant of their great end. States are coerced into the support of this project; rwgrovotee aro, valueless but for this object, and pa tronage and place, banks, treasury and financial agencies are made to lend their powerful influence to the preservation of Radical role, to the centralization of the Government and the overthrow:of the Con stitution. The battle to be waged involves the vitality of our institutions. The battle field in this great struggle, is Pennsylvania. In Presidendaloontesta'for seventy years, the Keystonehaa invariably voted with the majority. Her vote in Octo ber has alway s been the certain precursor of her verd ict in November. Success in October is invariably followed by success in November; defeat iu October is the ;herald of defeat In November. Her voice in Octo ber Is potential with other Commonwealths, for New York and New Jersey usually fol low her lead, and always showsympathetio action. Our victory in October, 1867, swell ed the majority in New York in November. To lose the October - electiod is to lose Penn sylvania. The loea of Pennsylvania is the loss of the battle. The loss of this battle is the destruction. of the Government. Here is our Thermopyla3 ; the " ides " of October determine our destiny. To win this con test every energy should be bent ; to insure success every extraneous aid should be yielded us; to compel this victory our broth- ren everywhere should aid us. The action of the New York Convention in its selection of a candidate, will be po tent in its bearings for good or evil upon our cause, in October, and that great party "tribunal of the last resort" should heed the voices of our counselors, and attentively ponder the views of the leading men of our delegation. Pennsylvania is uncommitted to a candidate. She will sacrifice to success everything but principle. We believe that her delegation will esteem success hero in October vital to success throughout the Union in November ; that they will insist upon the choice of that candidate who will most essentially aid us In carrying our State, and that they will resist with all hon orable means, the nomination of any one whose antecedents or present position will tend to make that result in any degree problematical. We believe that they will regard the prestige of a great name, or the most faultless party record, as of no weight, if it be rendered clear fhat success Is Jeopar dized by the selection of their possessor. The hour is inopportune for the requital of party services or the elevation of party idols. Our first duty is to save the Government ; and we mistake the character of those great men who are now prominent for.the nomi nation at New York, if, in the spirit of self-sacrifice, they, too, do not say " every thing for the cause, nothing for men." The choice of a candidate is not difficult when. an invincible will for the preservation of the Government, a spirit of cordial co-operation for success and a determination to sacrifice our personal preferences to the common good; are brought to the task. The mass of our Democracy are deeply imbued with these sentiments, but they regard success here as a vital pro-requisite to final victory, and therefore they insist upon the nomina- Lion of one who can assuredly carry Penn sylvania. There are such men, both sol diers and civilians, men of large minds, thoroughly trained in the logic of our gov ernmental system and in the traditions of our party, of spotless reputation, of un blemished party record, and surrounded with the prestige of success. Give us one of these, and our march to victory will be an easy and a triumphant one.—Clearfield Be publican. The National Debt Statement and Ftnan• dal Prospect Before Ds. Mr. McCulloch makes slow progress in the reduction of the national debt, notwith standing the extraordinary amount of taxes imposed and the vast income of the govern ment for the last few years. From the official statement published yesterday it appears that on the let of this month the debt was, in round numbers, after deduo• ring the cash in the Treasury, two thousand five hundred millions. On the let of May last year it was two thousand five hundred and twenty millions. That is, there has been a reduction, apparently, of twenty millions in the last year. This is a very small amount, if oven it were an actual reduction in the burden of the debt, considering the immense income and resources in the hands of the Secretary of the Treasury. But the debt has boon only nominally reduced twenty millions, while the miserable financial poli cy of Mr. McCulloch has vastly increased its weight. Out of the twenty millions re duced about eleven millions were of the debt bearing no interest, and consequently the people were relieved of no burden to that amount. Thus about seven millions only of the interest bearing debt have been liquidated last year. Bat against this we find that Mr. McCulloch's transformation of the currency interest bearing debt to the gold interest debt, to the amount of over a hundred and thirty millions, makes the bur den over six millions a year greater than It wee before, which is equal to an addition'of a hundred millions to the bulk of the debt. That is, the country is relieved merely of the Interest on seven millions paid, amount ing to seven hundrod thousand dollars in currency a year, while by the change of four hundred and thirty millions of cur rency interest to the gold interest debt the annual payment is increased aboutsix mil lions and a half. We are required, at the present price of gold, to pay six millions and a half more interest on the debt this. year than we had to pay last year. This is the way in which Mr. McCulloch's figures mis represent facts, and such is the wretched and ruinous mismanagement of our national finances in the bands of this incomoetent Secretary. It is said the Committee of Ways and Means has appointed and instructed a sub-com mittee to take into consideration a revision of the terlft, with a view to provide for an ticipated deficiencies in the revenue. It may well be alarmed as to the future. The re duction of the revenue to the amount of a hundred millions a year, by the law recently passed exempting manufactures from tax ation, and from other measures lately pass ed, while the enormous expenditures and extravagance are kept up, will certainly leave a frightful deficiency. If Mr. McCulloch with an income of five hun dred to six hundred millions a year, cannot - reduce • the debt more than a few millions, while at the same time he actually increases the yearly interest six to seven millions, how is it possible to meet the demands or government with a revenue cut down a hundred millions or more? Congress may try to btidge over the diffi culty till after the Presidential election, and probably by an inflation of the currency; but this would only bo a temporary expe dient. A bankrupt treasury must be the consequence, which will be followed by such a revulsion and crash as have never been witnessed, perhaps, in this country before. A reckless and corrupt Congress and an incapable Secretary of the Treasury are hurryinglis on to this inevitable result. —N. Y. Herald. litlllzation of Cowl Dust. Many experiments have been made with in the past few months, with a view of turn-• ing to available account the refuse coal about the mitres. It has been estimated that the actual waste of coal is about one third, at the mines. The screen separates it from the coal fit for use and it can be pre served, so as to be of avail in case a suc cessful issue awaits the experiments. It is now thought that a chemical poems has been reached which will render the dust fit for fuel. An assemblage met at the New York Chamber of Commerce one day last week, to witness the tests of a firm, who claim to have reached the desired result. It is said their ef forts proved highly satisfactory. Their preparation ignited as readily, burnt as freely, gave more heat, and burned for a longer time than the ordinary coal. The fire lasted from ton to twelve hours without replenishing. But, while in those respects the success of the cxperknont was placed beyond a doubt, It does not yet arise above a chemical curiosity, for the Wrest essential of cheapness seems not to have entered into the tests; and whether or not the fuel can bo brought into competition with wood or coal rests entirely upon the assertion of the:inventors. They allege that It can, but the secret being looked op in thole own bosoms, it perhaps will never transpire how cheaply they can make the article. It would seem that the agglomer ate is free from sulphur, and can ho used for all the purposes that coke is now re quired for, We should be gratified if we could announce the entire success of such a discovery. In tho hands of liberal and en terprising moo, such a thing would work a fortune, and be the means of cheapening fuel to a very satisfactory extent.—.Phila dclphia Frees. Legal Ingenuity. A remarkable illustration of the difficulty of so framing statutes that ingenious law yers cannot pick them to pieces is contained in the decision just rendered by Judge Ben edict, of the Eastern District of New York, in the case of John B. Adatte, charged with counterfeiting fractional currency. Adatte was' tried some time ago, and• convicted, bat obtained a new trial because of the ex clusion of a witness in his favor. On the second trial he was again convicted, under that section of the statute of 1864 which makes it a crime to have, in one's posses sion plates of Znited States notes without the authority of the proper official& A mo tion was made in arrest of Judgment on the ground that the statute had reference only to the poseesslort of the genuine plates, which Adatb3's - confessedly were not, and the Judge .austained the, motion and set the priaoper at liberty! NIIMER 19 Brews Items. Denver supports four newspapers Butler laving to answer Evarts It he can. Paris has a newspaper entitled Heaven's JournaL. A Minnesota editor weighs Ca pounds. A heavy writer, surely. The population of Detroit Is, according to a census recently taken, 66,358. H. H. Lloyd, the well-known map pub lisher, died in New Jersey last week. The Spanish army has one general for every two hundred troops. The Germania recently took out $1,000,000 in specie for Europe. A now Democratic pater is soon to be started at Council Bluffs, lowa. Young grasshoppers have made their ap pearance in myriads, nearSionz City. Seventy-five periodicals, ranging from dailies to quarterlies, are published In Chicago. In the Paraguayan war it Is calculated that 40,000 lives have been lost from wounds and 40,000 from cholera. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner has become ono of the editors of the Louisville (Ky.) Churier. Fanny Few, It Is reported, receives $5OOO per annum for her contribution to the Now York Ledger. The seeds of the gigantic trees of Califor nia hardly exceed fn size those of the mus. Lard. A large number of lady artinteln London earn a comfortable living by wood engrav ing. Incomplete of returns of the Arkan Has election show 1318 majority for the Con stitntion. The registration of Washington city, com pleted, shows 16,991 votes, of whom 6,737 are colored. The bolt factory in Pittsburg was entire ly destroyed by Are on the 3d. Loss $lOO.- 000. Insured for $.10,000. It is proposed to put up a commemorative tablet on the precise spot whore D'Arcy McGee fell. Prayer Books, it is reported, aro now got up with looking-glasses placed on the inside of the covers. The Wicomlco and Pocemoke railroad, between Salisbury and Berlin, Maryland, was formally opened last week. L. Zumbush'sjewelry store, Indianapolis, was robbed on Sunday night of goods val ued at over $l,OOO, including seventy watches. Gen. Canby has postponed the meeting of the South Carolina Legislature until Con gress shall have approved the Constitution of that State. The French astronomers to be sent out for taking observations on the eclipse of the sun of August 18th, will be stationed on the peninsula of Malacca. The Boston Journal says there will be some five hundred Independent delegates to the National Republican Convention in Chicago, from New England. In Bt. Louis, while thesoup from the flesh of a turtle was smoking hot on the table, its heart was still at work with regular pul sations in a basin of water. A clergyman in Illinois, on alternate Sundays, preaches in churches ono hundred and sixty miles apart. Ho travels from one village to the other on horseback. Fifty-four millions of Bibles, In 174 differ ent dialects, have been distributed by the British and Foreign Bible Society since its foundation. It seems to be the fashion in England for the parents of a bride to give a party on the evening preceding the wedding for the pur pose of exhilliting the wedding presents. Eighteen persons were poisoned with arsenic at a boarding-house In New Or leans on Sunday, but none of them have died, they having talon an overdose. - - A trestle work at the Erio Railroad depot in Jersey City broke down yesterday, pre cipitating a locomotive into the river. The engineer and fireman were drowned. A Mississippi editor begs his subscribers to pardon the shortcomings of the last, the present, and the next number of the paper, on account of "twccongestive chills"which disturbed him. A party of students of Dartmouth College are reported to have broken into the college chapel and destroyed the organ, in revenge for the expulsion of some of their class mates. Accounts from the interior of Alabama and Mississippi report serious damage to plantations from the late rains. It is feared a general replanting of the cotton will be necessary. Charles Dickens' expenses in America were fifty thousand dollars, and his no profits one hundred thousand dollars in gold. He carried off three large packing cases full of all sorts of presents. The National Medical Convention began its session In Washington yesterday. About 450 delegates were present. .Dr. S. D. Gross, of Philadelphia, delivered the annual ad dress. The Indians captured and destroyed a train near Tulerosa, New Mexico, on April 18th, killing seven men. They had pre viously killed thirteen persons near the same place. =All the diamond cutting done in the United States is performed in the city of Boston. It is also well known among police officers that all the diamonds splen by ex• pert thieves aro sent to Boston for sale. Grape growers in California are giving great attention to the manufacture of brandy. The quality of that already produced is said to be excellent. Native brandy nine years old is pronounced quite equal to the im ported article of the same age. The corn crop is by far the most valuable one grown in the country. It is cultivated over a larger extent of territory, thrives well under various degrees of latitude and returns more money to the agricultural community than any other cereal. Tho case of the Commonwealth vs. the city of Philadelpala, for arrears of taxes and interest due the State, was decided against the city, in the Common Pleas Court at Harrisburg, yesterday. Tho amount in volved in the verdict is $87,512. At the Erie disaster a school girl pulled from the wreck a man weighing one hun dred and eighty-six pounds who was tightly wedged under the debris with both legs broken. Tho heroine sprained her an kle and wrist. The papers of the Eastern Shore of Mary land are giving gratifying accounts of the prospects of the coming wheat crop. They say the indications are that an abundant harvest will be reaped. From the Western States the accounts are equally cheering. There Is a young man attending college in Albion, Mich., whose heart is on his right side. He has been examined by several of the most noted physicians of Now York and Washington, who all agree that such la the case. his•ls the second case on re cord of the kind. The Delaware Connercial.estimates that 1,101,000 baskets of peaches will be realized from the crop in that State this year along the main line of railroads, exclusive of the branch roads. It is, however, too early In the season to form anything like a reliable estimate. Dr. Gabor Napbogyl, who was arrested In New York the other day to answer a charge of obtaining a large sum PC monoy from a firm in that city by means of an al leged forged latter from Senator Johnson, of Maryland, has been discharged on his own rocognizance. Tho Cincinnati 02tholle Telegraph, Rays: .' Had any other than a scion of the Royal family brought shame and ruin upon half the number of families that Prince Alfred has, he would have long since occupied it felon's cell, or be shot down as nay other boast that proye upon society. Thirty conductors havo boon disohargod within a row days by tha Third Avonuo Railroad Company, In Now York on an count or a dimnropanay betwoon their count of the number of peussongorr and the onu moration made by detectives employed for tho purpose. A young Indian maid visiting a flooring mill in Winona, Minnesota, surreptitiously got.hold of the stencils and decorated her white blanket with "Ellsworth'm °holm" in bright red lettere, after which she strutted down street, to the horror of the bachelor Ellsworth, who owns the mill. The Georgia State Constitution exempts from the Malmo of creditors all too property of the State. and $3,000 of the property of each individual, 82,000 in real estate, and 81,000 in personal estate. This feature of the Constitution is ono about which there has been groat difference of opinion among the Georgia Voters. The vexed question, whether Patti was to marry or not marry, may be considered settled. At the boat concert given at the Tuileries, the young cantatrice told the Empress that she was engaged to marry the Marqule de Canx. The Orchestra be lieves that she is to be married in the !min ing autumn, and not to quit the stage till 1870. The Queen of Saxony has expressed dia. pleasure at the untidy, dishevelled style of wearing the hair which has lately come in to fashion. Having frequently to receive English and American ladles, who some time appear *ith their hair hanging loosely about their shoulders. Her Majesty has established a regulation that persons with such coiffures shall not be admitted a% Court. The new Tabernacle at Salt Lake City has proved too small to hold the audience. of Saints that seek admission to it. But 10 000 at the utmost can now be assembled within its walls. Brigham Young has an• ncnnoed that it would be necessary to have a gallery in the Tabernacle to accommodate the congregation. With galleries, the build ing might be made to hold 15,00 C peopi ,e and the lm_provement suggested will be probably effected at some future time. Bunn= ir guars of tan How Se per year for each 614- .dltlonal square. RnA,n lilanntalsillnfebr tam 1110*IdA Initeionsatingli.Vl In? Union. Orrorou ADTIRTIIIMI 7 cent& lino.•tor Lb* Vt, and '4 cOnta for eimp subsequent lola, Eirsarm. Ncynctice Inserted In Local Column!! /5 owns Per llao. ' . BrzarAx. Norms Pintlinrrisen• Ind demand° nen per Ms. tor. . list Insertion said 6 wan for nano mibilsoritent 12 . 116140 n, /mu'. AND masa Eranninit':Anicee—....i..;....—...•• AufsueeM tialmnistastors fpm Auditors , rank:me w Other "Not ic es,” ten Ann, or leS6, r three [:=:73 Martha Stanford fell'down stairs recently in Philadelphia and broke her neck. There aro ten anthracite and ten charcoal furnaces in Berke oonnty, Shad are now running np the Delaware more plentiful than at any time before this season. ; Twenty acres of land within the limits of Reading was recently sold for twenty-five thousand dollars. The Post-Office at Alvira, Union count?, is re-established, and David A. Clark ap pointed postmaster. About six hundred permits were issued for new dwellings to Philadelphia last month. Rev. Jas. Shrigley, formerly of Reading, has been elected librarian of the Blatorical Society of Penosylvanla. W. M Straight, of Monongahela, thia State, arrived in:Chicago about titre° weeks ago with $lO,OOO in his possession, and has not been seen or hoard of since. In 1887 the anthracite farnnces in Penn sylvania produced 5813,584 tons of pia iron, which was id per cent. of the whole quantity made In the United Slates In that year. Judge Sharswood has withdrawn from hN p ofessorshlp of law In the Pennsylvania University, and has been prdsonted with a service of plate by the faculty and students. The Crawford County Medical Society have instructed their delegates to the State Society to vote In favor of a resolution rec ognizing female practitioners of medicine. One hundred and forty four-wheeled coal care, carrying seven hundred tons of coal, were recently hauled over eighty-five miles of the Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad by a single engine. The will of Isaac Barton, an old Quaker resident of Philadelphia, gives to various public charities, and the Philadelphia Fe male Medical College, the sum of one hun dred thousand dollars, the whole of his for tune, as ho died without Issue. The funded debt of the city of Philadel plan on January Ist, 1809, was $343,(177,5N 77, as compared with $35,021,092.59 on January Ist, 1807. The total valuation of real estate In the city is reported at $145,1363,317, and the total number of buildings is dtated at 108,182. The Mamnerchors, old and young, and the Sa3ngerbund, with their respective lead ers, will unite In duly celebrating Whit- Monday at Engle ,t Wolf's farm near Phil adelphia. The Ltedortafels and Liederkrans societies will spend the same day at Wash ington Retreat. The German people know how to enjoy themselves, and will doubt less make of Whit-Monday a happy day. gOOfilllta'S SMIUM ittero. H . OO VIAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, 1100FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC The Great Remldles for all Diseases of the LIVER, STOMACH, OR DIGESTIVE ORGANS. ITOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Is composed of (be pure Juices (or, GA they are medicinally termed, Li .artraczr) of Roots, Herbs, and Barks, .LL malting a prepara tion, highly concentrated, and entirely free from alcoholic admixture a/ any kind. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, lea combination of all the ingredients of the Bitters, with the purest quality of &oda Cruz Rum, Orange, dio., making one of the most pleasant and agreeable remedies ever offered to the public. Those preferring a Medicine free from Akio. hone admixture, will use HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS. Those who have no obJection to the combi nation of the Bitters, as stated, will use HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. They are both equally good, and contain the same medicinal virtue', the choice. between the two being a mere matter of taste, the Tonto being the moat palatable. The stomach, Irma a variety of causes, Ouch as Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, etc., is very apt to have its functions damaged. The Liver, sympaet th i z in g as closely as t does with the kj Stomach, then be comes affected, the result of which is that the latient suffers from several or more of the fol owing diseases : Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Ful' nese of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fulness of Weight in the Stomach, sour Eructation, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach Swimming of the Head, Hurried or D g Ullcult , Breath in Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating So nee tlons when In a Lying Posture Dim neee of yygon, Dots . or Web. be- lord the Sight , Dull Pain In the Hoed, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, rain In the Side, Back, id Cheat, Limbs, etc., udden Flushes of Heat, Burning In the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Great Doproxxion of Spirits. The nufferer from these diseases should ex erotic the greatest caution lo the selection of a remedy for ills casedurchfuling only that which he Is assured from his investliga- Gone and inquiries possesses true merit, is skilfully compounded, is free from Injurious Ingredients, and has established for Itself a reputation for the cure of these diseases. In this connection we would submit those well known remedies— HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERSt 1100FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, PREPARED BY Dr. C. M. JACKSON,' PHILADELPHIA, Pd, Twenty-two years since they were flint in. trodued into this country from German i c :. dur ing which time they have undotibUid per formed more cures, and benefittesi an ering humanity to a greater extent, than any other remedies known to the public. These remedies will etfeettudly cure Liver Complaint,Jaundlce, El Dyspepsia, Chronic or Nervous Diarrheas Disease of the Kid neys and all Diseases arising from a Disor. dered Liver, Eitomaeli or Intestines. DEBiLI 2' Y, Resilitingfroto any ettse_whiklairer pROsTRATION OF THE SYSTEM, induced by Severe Labor, Hard ships, Exposure, Fevers, &c. There le no medicine extant equal to these remedies In such cases A tone and vigor Is imparted to the whole system, the appetite Is strengthened, food Is enjoyed, the stomach promptly, the blood Is purified, the complexion becomes sound and healthy, the yellow tinge la eradicated (rota the eyes, • bloom is given to the cheeks, and the weak and nervous Invalid becomes a strong and healthy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE, And feeling the hand of time weighing hew' ly upon them, with all its attendant. Ws, will and In the use of thin BITTERS , or the TONIC, an elixer that will Instil new life Into their veins, restore In a measure the energy and ardor of more youthful days, build up their shrunken forms, and give health and happl. ness to their remaining years. NOTICE. It is a well•established fact that fully one. half of the female portion of our population Li are seldom in the on T Joyment of good health; or, to use Clintrownexpresalon " never feel well." They are languid, devoid of all energy, extremely nervous, and have no ap To pe th is class of persons the BITTERS, or the TONIC, Is especially recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN, Are made strong by the use of either of the4e remedies. They will cure every ease of MAlt- AHMUiI Without fall. Thousands of certificates have accumulated In the hands of the proprietor, but araco will allow of the publication of but few. Those, It will be obser. ea, are men of note and of such standing that they moat be believed. TESTIMONIALS. HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD, Chief Justice o/ the supreme (burl o/ Pa. writes: Pltidelphia, Marfa' , 18d7. " I find Hoolland'slierman Bitters' Is agog! Male, useful In Ms- A snowier thodlgestlve organs, and of groat 1 - 1. benefit ILI cases of debility, and want of nervous action lu the system. Yours, truly, Ow. W. WOODWARD.° Judge of the bupreme (burl of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, April AIMS. .1 oonolder ' lioolluud's (Sidman hit s' a valuable medicine 1U OW4O of [titmice of Indigos. lion or liyopepslu. 1 CAM corUfy this from my oxpurience of It. Yours, with respect, JAIIXII THOMPSON." Fling lOW. 8041GPII 11. KENNARD, r rmio , of the Tenth liaplut Church, Phlkulalphla. Jackson—boar Kir: I havo boon iroquent• ly requosted to oonnoot my name with mom• mondatlwas of dliferout kinds of medicines, but regarding tho practico as out of myappro. lariat° sphere, I have In all oases &tanned; brit with a clear proof in IV va r I owl instances and particularly In IA my own family, of thu useluluosa of Dr. tioolland's (Jarman Mb , tars, I depart for once from my usual ammo, to express my full oouviation that, for general *Wily of the &yam, and ovccially for Liver tea NA and vats/aide preparation, In some cases it may fall; but usually, I doubt not, it will be very benonclal to those who cur. fer from the above =uses, Yours, very respectfully, Kzermrsalii, Eighth, below Witco gt. Fitox lixv. E. D. FENDALL. A as Bailor Christkinairenicie, Philadelphia I have derived decided benefit from the use of Hoolliand's German Bitters, and feel It my' privilege to recommend thorn u a most value- WO tonic, to all who are suffering from general debility or from dU1431111138 angina from derange went of the liver. Yours truly, . 1). FaNDALL. • CAUTION Hoodand's German Remedies are counter felted. Mee that the I) algnatnre of . C. K. JACKSON la on the wrapper of each bet. tie. All others aro couuterfait,, Principal Oilloa and Manufactory at the Oat , man Medially Store, No. Sit ARCH Street, e Pldiadalhla, Pa. mABLKS M. EVANS J ilk Proprietor Formerly C. M. ACKSON lAN PSIOES Hoofland's German Bitters, per bottle $l.OO • liar &00 Hootland's German Touto,put up ln quart bot tles, 11.60 per bottle, or a half dozen for 17.60. sip-Do not forget tr. examine well the wilds you buy, ln oo get the mulne. For sale br lets and Dealers in Itedl• clu an I/es averyw J rnowv malt. anrIDZAID..-Tlllll LAN. eaater_rmr.p,... 'Wad i lion ir a have deolareaa Wend of $2 per • able on dentlasl alto Farmers' Zia Bank of Laneeatere • ; • , Gsk),j3, _MORE% Tioutaxer., NaW Havka, Apru wrr f Lap gimp Ittaardhsow