Vl:stuns iattos. INVNIERSON . tt YOUNG, -• _ A rTO R NE IS-4 74, A Jr, TOWANDA,,PA. onico—Morcur I ['irk street, upstairli. 1. c PHERSON, 1k- .1 you WILLIAVS ANGL 4770,07 rs-A .2=LAW, towiNuA;;PA , Ortiee-3111n attrot, oppollte Post-Office. 16reb82 E. J. ANGLE. L. wiLLTA2is. I yVIES, S HALL, ATTOILICEIB-ATLAW, SOUTH SII'E or WARD HOUSE. Del $3-73. SAM W. BUCK, dr7OIIIVEY-47-LAW, TO WANDA, PEN.PA N17.I1•711, Ottire—At Treasurers Mee, to Court House S IADILL ATSOII,2iF.T6•AT-LAW. • ti Oalef.—Roane formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A s flraelog Hoorn, 11. J. MADILL O. D. XINNILT. JOHN W,,CODDING, ATTOZNEY-AT4I/3r, TOWANDII I ?II e r - E Irby's Prug Store. ' , : 2,1$ BO 1:10MAS W.'34.YER ArtO * R XiiT-AT-LAW; WY.',LUSING. PEN N'A. l'ar!Val , t• attention Itnid to business In the Or -1,;,.,- • a• Court and to the settlement of estates. ns%.tember 25, WO. pEcK." OVERTO ATTOTINZYS-AT ), AR, TOWANDA, l'A. 10A.nTRUTON, ODNEY A. MERCUR, ATTORNEY AT-LAW, TOW AN DA, PA., .. nt Patautß; Partleular 'attentlOn paid 4,,11.1!5s in Th..) Orphl Court and to the settle. I.lt•ni of estates. iu Muntanyvs ( - )711,T0N & sLUcDERSON, ATTORN:CY-AT-LAW TOWANDA,. PA. • JOUNF t SANDEUISON F. eBRrON. Jn Wr 11. JESSUP, t • ATTORNEY AND COUNSIC.LLOR•AT-LAR, AIONTROSE, PA. having resumed the practlceof the Northern Pennsylvania, will attend to any Intrusted to him in Bradford count.y. i• wh:hing Is:Leo/isn't him, can call on H. s i, F.,..‘rg . Towatla,Pa.,whenanappointinent c • • STREETER, AND COUYSELLOU-AT.L,AW, TOWANDA, PA. Fob 27, '79 L E. . ATTORSEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, I'A. • E. BULL, • • •. • SURVEYOR. tveIiNIinING,SURVkVING AND DRAFTING. I I,ngs with—G. F. ..Ntann, over 'Patch & Tracy 5.1•1 n street, Towanda, la. . 4.15.80. ELSBREE ;Lt, SON, ATTOIiNEYR-Ai7LAW, TOWANDA,:PA. lllLsengs .01IN W. 1111 X, r raRNIET-4.1.-LAIr AND V. S. TOWANDA, PA. • t>ne...North Side Ikublie Square. Jan. 1,1875 ANDREW - WILT, - , ty • , , A.Ti'OlO:l5.t;AT-lAii. B'oek.Main-st. over J. L. Kent'a tor(33 : May ho conaLlited In German. ATM 12,'76.3 lit. S. M. WOOD gy-RN, Physi i f •,1%, cud Surgeon. Office e l'it residence, on s:r:q.t. first door uortb of M. E. Church. Apr11:10881. , . KELLY, DENTIST.--Offlce 4.9cur.3t. E. Itosentieldls,.Towanda, (7.01(1, Silver, Rubber, and M. Uri basti. Teeth extracted iilthout pain, 4 ,ct.-41-7'2. , • 1 -1 I). PAYNE M.. D' ' • • t le PIIYEICIAN AND SVIttiRON, r .110114nycs* Store. office boors from 10 A. . /0 12 A. 11 and tram 2. to 41% W. ... Special attention glven to pistc.ksicsi (DISEASES ,r Ana' ..- , or Till. XTE.S - 111 E EAR 1 - 1 L. LAMB, )• A TTORNE T-L.4 W, 103 North Frauklitt•st., 'Wilkes-Barre, l'a attention given to collections In Luzerne a• d I,lok,:kwann4 c.uaties. References: lion. I'. I 11..rrow; First National Bank, Towanda. 11 S: RUSSELL'S, GENERAL I SU B. A - N CE AGENCY ONE rIYk.WII.D WILLIAMS, -4 • PRACTICAL PLumgER or GAS FITTER P'aa of hoslnoss, a few doors north of Post-0111co r:•111 4i lig. Gas Fitting, 1t pairing Pumps of al! }:.alt, and an kinds of Gearing promptly attended to. Ail wanting work In his tine should glee Min a an. . Dee. 4, 1879. 1111tST NATIONAL BANK, TOWANDA, PA ki9TAL PAID IN t➢.yuk a fern unusual facilities for the trans .1' a general banking busivess. N. N. BETTS, Cutler imlIA; ELL, Prestd.nt. ENRT-1101SE, 2.N F. It MAIN & WMIIIINGTONSTItEETB ri I:ST WARD, TOWANDA, PA 31e,1? _09;1 hours. Terms to the times. Large stalole attached 11 - fit, 11 N , uorin #0 I= •.A1141.1.,t1y 7 / 1 EAT MARKET!, C. M. ,M Located in ,e.IDLESIAN'S BLOCK, BRIDGE STREET Keep on hand, FUSH AND _SALT: MEATS, pIUED - BEEF, FISH, POULTRY; HARDEN VEGETABLES AND IIERRE9 IN &C ear A 1.1 goods delivered free or charge + I=l COU:4TY COMMISSIONERS' MEET INGS. .r the inforMation of the public the t lit! Commissioners botchy give notice I hold a session of the Board :hies/lay at. the Commissioners' titi,ee in the Couit House at Towanda, and that they will hold a meeting of the Boaid at the 'County:House ' at Burling ton, the First and Second Monday of each month. Those Inving business toibring lwfore the Board will gOvern themselves DANIEL BRADFORD, Myrtos KnotiLtY, Co. Corns. M. F. itmcsooss, - litchi.: Wm. LEWTS, Clerk. • , 11 - •`\ F C 1:"I'0 !I S' li OT IC E.—Notice :A i• I,rt-1.3. given that al: personsindetited loth@ ...Ist. of Daniel Itussell, bite of Itomo township, d . ..- ..•-d, ril ll , t make Ammediate paytnent, and all 1 , ,i oi.• baring claims against said estate must pre. ~,.:4. tlies:, duly at flienticated for settlement to L. F. Russell, Executor. Iblne. February 16, le 2.,.._ . $. "'lon SA LE.--:-Vishing to_retire the retail buslUeev., wo offer for Fah) our - fit [live; and good:n-11i Itt the linvery attd I:. ‘..sry next to W.artl House. The buss. : • . :tillbbe4) and In prospermil couilittoo. 1 . , given butueillstely. As D. wiikiCOTT i CO. . 1 :41 , 011L1 I t 1p.f2L11111111,4f. 111 MARSH & HITCHCOCKi. PrOPfletora. VOLUME XLIL..'•-• TORANDA,PA. A. D. DYE & CO. Winter, 18811 ATTENTION IS INVITED to our first-class Heating Stoves. They aro too well-known to require any commeudation- BENJ. M. PECK. New. Heola, May.l,lo. We also have a line of CHEAP BASE BURNERS. the best of their class in the market, and well adapted for supplying a demand for an efficient but inexpensive heating 'stove. WOOD HEATING STOVES in great variety. READ [novel-7b - Ha Tho uppyght Ranges L. ki.sunme A. D. DYE & CO Wood Cook Stoves, CARRIAGEMAKE RS' AND StAiR NXTA,RE. Hard Times Spared to Death! TOWANDA,PA. “I cannot tell a Ha, I did it with-my little batehet,” when I knocked the oovera of my Immense eases of LOW PRICED SPRING GOODS, and now TO GIVE YOU A WELCOME THAT MEANS BUSINESS. -- $125,000 .73,000 I bar& laid in a uew Spring Stoelt i o Men;', Youths', Boys' and Uhildrens' CLOT AL ‘l . 4L0T1111140 I astonish the sightsener with an unri sated colleetloa of 'elegant styles and besutlfn fabrics. I delight the purchaser with prices which were never before so low. ' I affitrd all an opportunity to Henna' the unwe p t and best Spring garmentsat prices within that "m eans. TIESE PLAIN FACTS demind your atientlori, aid we respectfully advise an early ex amination, and invite It. M. Sir ROSENFIELD, C. M. INTER MEI Westminster, Crown Jewell: 300 Sold in Towanda and vicinity by . 4 LARGE STOCK OF BLACKSMITHS' SUPPLIES, o And a general stock of MAIN STREET, TOWANDA. Ton-a Oa, , Oc tolier ' 101 CLOTHING.! I AM ALL READY Which is positively a surPriSe to all TOWANDA, PENNA I NSUR ANCE C. S. RUSSELL, Agint, TOWANDA,' PA. Effiiiffi=i FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT POLICIES tuned on [be moot reasonsble terms.' None but reliable companies _represented. Loewe adjusted and paid here. Towanda, Nov. 114 1171. FARAIS FOR SALE IN TIOGA COUNTY. PA...1 bare-farms. and Wild laud suitable fur farms, formic , on reasonable terms, situated In TAU and Gaines township.. TiOr4 Conn ty and one lot In Pike township, Potter County. These lands are productive, situated about midway between three large tanneries, affording the: ery best market f.r farm products In the county. Three of the flouts whelping aro peculiarly adapt, ed fur dairying on a large scale. Containing over 230 acres. A very large spring on the centre lot , would afford water power sufficient for churning, and could be brought at trifling oast luta th 4 dairy house and want to cool the intik. Temperature, 1 0 4 r further particulars address the edttorot this paper or the undersigned. K• ilarshrield, ismarwtt, ME • .3 ._ .... . . ~ IE ti PAINTER 'UNKNOWN." [These Nord& are attached to levant pictures to the Winter Esbibitliat of old maiden, at the:Royal Academy.] Rembrandt it here who Is famous to Beauties by 'Romney are tali on the Turner and Tlthui add to their glory, • -- Van Dyck and Galisborough come at our Constable's pelmetll repose, Morland's action, Claim AN Slr Joshua well holds his men ; ' Yet there's one legend has strangest attraction, Heie mkt the men who will shine through the ages, Known by their names Wilt folks under sun. Shadow-lite he,,on historical Mo. Lives on atotosby the workti he hu Praise be may win on the keenest inspeetion a Critics may rave of his touch and his Mim i ] Still of his name there Is no rocollectio t, Tilt In the old days how patient his labors, Trying what colon would match and would ' blend. • •Winging applause, It may be from his neighbors, llojefully looking for fame In the end. • . Now fame has come, glee him due gratulation, Hero mid the princes of art we enthrone— Whom t Ah I that catalogue's grim an-otation, -• . ••Painter unknown!" ' • UVER THE WINTER EVES. Over thd winter eves, The bare.boughe clamber and swine- Throngh a rustle of withered leaves . I hear the voice of spring. Year after . year departs . On pitiless, whirling wing, But yet, in my heart of hool. ll , I fe•l the. touch of spring. Who knows? Whin In graveyard drear, I Ile, and tho thrcistles sing, I may still awake with the year, titlll hear tbe voice of spring. The Angel of Ev,ins Gulch. In the early spring 0f.1878, rumors of4carbOnate discoveries*, Leadville,. Col., obtained circulutioii. So rose= colored were these reports, that the outside world discredited them fora time, inclining to the belief that the three lines of Pacific railways and a few laud speculators were responsible for the hue and cry. But as the days passed by, pers - Ons came doWn from the new mining region with tangible evidence of its richress, and the .Leadville excitement grew in public favor- as rapidly as did the Black Hills excitement in 1875. Prospec tors who had washed their first pans of 'pay dirt' in the American River Valley in 1849. and grown gray and cynical, building sluice-boxes and 'old toms' in every mining camp of note in California, Oregon, Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Dakota,. Colorado and Arizona since that period, caught the I,,padville fevei and hastened to the new Mecca. Especially severe were the ravages of this fever in the small lead miniag towns of south western Missouri, and _many were comparatively depopulated. When the , sensational rumors . of Colorado carbonates reached Joplin, M0.,1 the first man-to .give them cre dence was an expert miner, Johnson by name. Nine yearis before. he coos th e plains to the sweet-water gold tie rs of Wyoming Territory, k)ii . nd little or no gold,- and barely escaped being scalped by the Sioux Indians; but at the time of which I write he felt the old desire to pro spect, return , in full force, forgot. the hardships and privations it would entail, and conjured up bright visions of the treasures,to be revealed by his pick and shovel in the third range of the Rocky Mountains. His family was small, comprising only himself and daughter Jennie, a buxom little miss of nineteen summers, who busied herself in keeping their small cottage neat and homelike, and teaching the summer school; in a neighboring dis- rict three months ont of the twelve. 'Frankly. father, I do not' like the idea of going to Colorado,' said Jen nie when the subject was broached. 'We are doing quite nicely here,.and then-- and then—John and I are to be married - • Christmas, sure, you know.' 'Nonsense; my child,' replied the sturdy old miner, noting his daugh ter's blushes;. 'we will always remain poor-in this humdrum place,. and as to Jdhn Purdy, he can accompany us, and you can wed- him Christmas; New Year's, or any day there may be enough good dollars in our common purse to pay the preacher.', While Jennie was averse to the proposition of her father concerning the Colorado venture, she blushed sweetly at the marriage proviso, and readily consented - to withdraw nil opposition in case John would accom pany thew. Paul Johnson and John Purdy worked side by side in the Harris mine, and that afternoon, when the former proposed that 'they emigrate to the new silver ; fields, the latter! willingly apsented. ;His -earn ings were scant twelve dollars a:week, and marriage on so small a sum was quite out or the question. He was twenty-six years old, strong, weather. bronzed snd handsome, and conjec tured that he could succeed in the Carbonate Camp with love as the chief incentive. So it was speedily arranged that Paul Johnson and the lovers should remove-to Leadvilie. A fortnight later the trio_bid an ever lasting good-bye to the Missouri lead mines. They reached Denver by fail, at least six weeks too early in the season, for the spring_ sun had only began to melt the snow in the moun tain canyons and gulenes, and travel through these natural highways was .replete with difficulties and dangers. Being anxious to push forward, hoW ever, a party of adventurous persons was.formed, and the South Park Tell road taken up. Storins—first rain, then sleet and snow—prevailed from the outset; but the silver seekers were firm in their purpose, and after seven trying days of travel Leadville was arrived at. Its population did not exceed 10,000, it being simply a collection of cabins amt canvas tents, which gave ishelter to a sprinkling of all nationalities of the earth, except ing the Chinese. Two, elements of society predominated—the honest ; and dishonest—and no' go-between classes were recognized. A man either toiled with pickla the carbon; ate belts, kept a general store and boarding house, or was a saloon keeper and gambler., There, was ari. absence of law and order Land blood was shed with that naiver Mil , . . ''''''''''''"'f . r•• , ;->!.. c;,7., ,7 ... , ,, , y-.E. ,,, : 1 7..:•7 - .•. ,,.- 1 . 0:7..--1-7w.7V.,•et. 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"" '!' ••"'"'•:•'" :.• -.:"':' :''' -! • ••• • -'•:•-• -'-:-- ' ,-•:',"-•• '''''''' ' ',-- ' '""-,i;:',, - -'• .: .::•_ - :•.,:: , • -r . ,, :; - ,!..',':''''';'''• I, ' -- 2 , •':'7. : .,'"i2!...•. ,, ! - ••: ,: "•• , •','- , :" . .. 6 1 7 . ,! ...S.' 2,1, ... , :- ,: •'.':" , .:7!L , ' . 41 , !1" - ; "...- 2 ",:-:' , •,''.!';' ,. r., - • -- 4.- .“."-•'':,:c. ,- -...., - -• ',:-',. -.''.''.•::••••••::-", ::.'-' ,- ,' .4 *- :,.•:•-".': ".' .1. ". "!;;;-.".--- ' •:.:",!!!",...., ':.:''-' -.7 •'4 -!.." .:- -.-: " ,-• , : - .•' 1 ..:,.!. ---"- ''."'-,.. !'- ,- - : . - - , '..7..'•,...6,•:..,.1:,.f.4:c,.:." , ,,•,,!;.;;;;;••••!ig:LAE1 , ..;"..,:; - ,,,..4,f,,,,y,z„,.•......7... , ..... , ‘»..1i,..,;.,?• , , , y4.4---..44.,• - .pt , •-•--....«;.... , •,, ,,,, ,...;• , -- , ___ _ . MGM Bin TOWANDA, 'BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, ; MARCH 23, 1882. I ~ r alfiter unknown." Painter unknown." —Frous PUNICA. —T. Westwood. ~, t WEE EEO - - -..: ~!-, •,‘ • -.-. 1 .-:'.2ir , " ' ....-:,..-:.;--":: -,i' -4:- -z-t , - '-..', -. :' ' • ...- -.-- •.•.•.: :'•-:-.-', , ' :. r's:- -, • : "T;ii- 1, 7 • : !•- - --- ' , f.1•• • :: - •`,- - :• . it'l , '• • , •••- •• .--•,,...,•.• '_ ;-•• it r ',.c.,` ,- .*:1 • 1-.6 . ?.i'' , •:::? '. - e-Y 4, '."''',' j' '' C ' • , " . , - - 1 .... .. J " - i .-- ~ ~.. "'' -', .- . -,,,,, . .. . ' \. ' ~" ‘,..... - , , •;,. . \,,.... „, .. ; \.,_. ' \..... ~ . ' • , - . _. lessness which has characterized_ all frontier settlements and mining camps The journey from Joplin had about depleted the treasury of the Johnson party, and 'it was necessary that the two men should first seek 'employ ment in the mines and earn the means .essential to the staking of a claim and its'development. A cabin unhewed lop was erected at the foot of Oak street Jennie- installed an its mistress,. and Paul and John found WO* at the Myers smelter. Every Sunday Paul and Jahn Made prospecting trips out from camp; and one day in July they traversed Evans Gulch to-the base of Treasury Hill. At that point an outcropping of the precious mineral was founds and in such quantities as to give promise of a rich bed underneath. A cabin was biilt a stone's throw from the new discovery, the old one in Oak street finding a ready sale, and before the first'week.in August the little party was in new quarters. A spot more bleak,barren and for bing than the head of ,vans Gulch cannot be found in all Olorado. It is just at timber line, .above which vegetation ceases to grog, an d the few dwarfed and stunted pines are sere and yellotAhroughout the year. Three sides uf the basin are hemmed in by overhanging walls of gray granite, and the fourth is bathed by the sun not to exceed fivd hours a day when the days are longest in the summer months. It was in this ba• sin that, the new cabin was erected, and a more desolate site for a home it would be difficult to conceive Jennie was averse . to inhabiting .it, but the two prospectors were wealth mad, and would have located on the edge of a volcano and dared its might, had there been silverin sight. During pleasant weather the young girt passed the greater part of her leisure moments in the camp, -five miles away below. Christian women were few in the wicked young city, and as the, season was a sickly one, the miners so unfortunate as to be strick en down by pneumonia or mountain fever received , insufficient nursing. There was no hospital, and the La dies' Relief _AssoCiation comprised not to exceed ten working members.l Jennie became prominently identified with this organization,. and either nursed many a poor felkow back to _life, or received his last message for friends 'back on earth,' as the East ern States were universally designat ed. These tender acts endeared the sweet-deed Missouri girl to the 'rough miners, and an insult to her would have been resented .by every honest man in Lake County. 'She is the angel of _Evans Gulch, and no mistake, said a blue-shirted individ ual, and thenceforward Jennie was known by no other name from Mount Massive to the High Lane. , The premature explosion of a blast in the Dolores mine injured four of the workmen, and Jennie was summoned. Freeman Hughes, one of the quartet, was lying when s he reached his side. In a- belt about his waist was $385, and, before expiring, he, asked that this sum be presented to : .; the: Angel of Evans Gulch. His request was complied witlf , by the foreman‘of the mine. hut Jennie declined to accept the dying. e gift, and it reVerted-to the county after passing through the Coroner's hands. One person who was nursed back .to life by Jennie was George Carter, a young man, who owned eight paying lodes on Fryer and Iron hills. He was pros trated by mountain fever, and when the physicians shook. their heads mournfully, and said, 'Poor Carter will die,' the Angel of Evans Gulch came, checked the swift fever, and death was beaten hack. The first clay Carter was . permitted to leave his house, he rode up Fvans Gulch toy: the Johnson cabin. Jennie was seated in the open doorway, heniming an_article of table linen, and hum ming a bar from an old,Scotch ballad. 'Don't be frightened, it is not my ghost,' enjoined Carter, as Jennie arose and invited him to enter the cabin. He- checked his horse, dis mounted, and after several attempts at, carrying on a general cOnvers& tied said, bluntly : 'Miss i Jennie, I want to say some thing—something to you—and for the life of me I don't know how to go about it.' 'ls it anything important, Mr. Car ter?' asked the young lady, &pink and red tide suffusing her cheeks and temples, and ascending to thetoots of her soft brown hair. `lmportant ?' he echoed, him voice growina firmer ; 'it is everything to one. You saved my life a few days ago, and now this life will be forever miserable if you do not become my wife.' For a moment Jennie looked pain ed and hurt, then she raised her frank hazel eyes, and replied in a low tone which bore a firm conviction of its truthfulness: 'Mr. Carter, I-- am_ so sorry ; but. really - I cannot marry you. lam engaged to John Purdy, and I love him dearly.' George Carter glade no reply. He drew back, a pace„ gathered up his bridle-rein, mounted his horse and rode away down the gulch us - tbough in a half-stupefied condition of mind. In the meantime *Jennie's father and. John Purdy had met with indit ferent success. They abandoned the first shaft, owing - to the. poverty 'of mineral found, and set to work sink ing a second, a few hundred feet to the right. This they christened 'The Last Dollar,' and laughed heartily over the name, which so nearly rep resented the ful l er apart for devel opment. Aster inspected the gulch'in Octobe!, and takiig a fancy to the location f the deserted shaft, purchased it. the trifling sum he paid to bind the sale provided the two Missourians with ample means to prosecute their work on The Last Dollar, and it, was put down at ii good - rate of speed. A feaf days suf need to convince the newcomer that his prospects Were , poor on Treasury Hill, and he surrendered his shaft and went down to Mount Sheridan, leaving the Johnson party in posses.; sion of Evans Gulch. • - The'month of Novencher brought little consolation to adventurous miners who had located ProsPed • REGARDLIRMI OF. DISIMIATIO79(./1103C ANT QUARTER: elaltne 12,000 feet , abovelhe level of the lea. The raindorele which flood- ed the valleys were converted into snowstorms bytbe time they reached the second range, and -the feathery flakes would fall 'for days without intermission. From the great alti tude of the Last ;Dollar shaft, the auno)ance caused! by the snow was excessive in the extreme. It required almost the undivided time of Paul Johnson to keep . it 'shoveled back from the dump, and about every day a miniature avalanche would break on the hill sad come down, engulfing John as he toiled in the shaft thirty six feet below.the surfa2e. About the cabin the snow loved to drift. It would come swirling up the gulch on the bosom of the piercing blast, penetrate the narrow glen, strike the cold granite walls which' surrounded the lone habitation, and: then Tall listlessly at its base. 'You had- better persuade your pop to - move'4olll2 till spring, little girl;' said Pete Firmest); the owner of the Columbia and Uncle Sam mines, in conversation with Jennie one afternoon. He was returning to the city from a tour of inspection to his interests on Mosquito Range, and looked in at the-Johnson cabin for a brief rest. ° . 'Why so, M. Finnerty ?' asked Jennie, as she poured Mtn out a cup of strong, hot coffee 'Well,' continued the man, who could count his wealth among the millions, 'this is a treacherous spot. Jake Long, of the Long and Derry mines, said to me only yesterday that he had hunted over this section for nigh on to twepty years, and had never seen a Christmas but what this basin was filled. with snow.' 'But Christmas is five weeks and better away,' replied the girl, 'and who- knows but what we may find sand earbollates before that time.' Pete Finnerty made no answer to the hopeful reply, but hia_manner, as he buttoned his great storm coat of fur and took his departnre„would have led one to believe that as an cx pert he did not hold that carbonates . were either plenty or easy of access on Treasury Hill On the subsequent morning it was discovered that John Purdy had been stricken down with the dread pneu monia—a =tidy which in the morn). tains - of Colorado is about as fatal as yellow fever on the Southern sea holm'. Paul thought it best to call a physician without delay, and set out through the heavy storm in quest of Dr. Law. The little clock on the cupboard marked 7:45 o'clock, and Jennie was in the act of entering the sick chamber, when-a crackling noise on the mountain attracted her attcn• tion. Momentarily it gq . ew sharper until it resembled the noise of thun- der close at hand. Then the air was darkened, and then came a series of heavy concussions, which broke the windows of the cabin, and swayed its rude sides until the whole seemed on the point of crumbling to pieces. A cloud, half dust, half snow, penetrat ed every orifice, and Jennie saw by the firelight from the stove that snow had arisen without to a level with the shattered windows. Her observations from this source *ere of brief dura tion, however, for there was another fall of snow which filled the chimney and extinguished the fire in the stove. Despite her sudden alarm and perilous situation, she retained suffi cient presence of mind to surmise that 'an avalanche had - occurred, and that the cabin had received its full shock. Proeuring a match and a lamp, she ignited the former, liehted the latter, and ran to John's side to assure him that she bad escaped un harmed. And.the surmises of Jennie John son were , correct, for an avalanche of snow and boulders, equal to any that ever swept down Treasury Hill, bad gathered from some unknown cause near the summit, broken loose, moved from drag to crag until the entire face of the mountain was in motion, and4hen with majestic force caught up every obstacle in its path and plunged Into the basin; burying the lone cabin to a depth of forty feet. The noise made by the moving masa in its inception was -borne to the ears of Paul Johnson as he set out for the city. Ile paused, hesitated for in instant, and then, rightly conjecturing that an avalanche was approaching, attempted to retrace his steps to the cabin and either save his loved ones or perish with them. But he never gained the puncheon door, for, when only ten yards away he stumbled and fell prone in the snow. Before he could regain his feet the snow bosom was at hand. The pine branches, loose stone, rubbish and eaked.flakes beat him down. Bruised and helpless he struggled to no purpose for a few moments, and then the stifling dust got into his nostrils, mouth and lungs, and he was suffocated to death. When Jennie gained the sick room she- found John Purdy laboring un- , der great excitement. He only vague ly comprehended what had occurred, fancying in his delirium that death menaced himeelf and betrothed from another source, 'We are back in Joplin, and the mine has fallen and hurt me on the breast,' he said in a husky tone. 'I always knew that it would cave in, but had hoped that it would first be flooded with water in order that the workmen of the day and night shafts would be notified -in time to flee : but now the worst has happened, and all are killed outright except John Purdy.' Jennie fell upon- her knees at the side-of the couch while the poor fel low was talking, and , prayed for his speedy deliverance as only a Chris tian woman can pray. She momen tarily expected the roof to collapse under its great weight of snow, and knew that in the event of such a , catastrophe deathwould surely ensue. Her only hope was that her father would come to the rescue before it was too late. The "day passed slowly to the in mates of the buried cabin. The minutes dragged by so slowly that they seemed hours, but no aid came. John Purdy grew rapidly worse as the-day wore on, and a few minutes before 6 . o'clock he expired in his sweetheart's arms. • We death was a terrible hl6* to Jennie, and shh' sat =UNE =KIM OM ME until - far in the night in mute despair. Then the *while of her soul were opened, and the •.hot. tears leaped forth With -tears, reason returned, and she awoke to a realization of her appalling 'condition. 'All now de. : pends on father,'; she would say half aloud, little dreaming of his cruel fate, and then .her _ thoughts would revert to her dead lover, and her tears would now anew. The young girl spent four days in that 'living tomb. She did not suffer from the cold, for above — her was a blanket of snow, and - between it and the rocky wall against which the cabin was built, were interstices which .admit• ted of the passage of sufficient air to sustain one human life. - 'Her sur• rounding% however, were, more than enough to drive an ordinary person mad. The last drop of coal Oil was burned during the second day, and, after that, the darksaes was as dense as. that which once settled down over ancient Egypt. Sleep was out of the question, and-at times she feared her reason was becoming clouded. 'lf I only keep up courage till father comes,' she would keep repeating over and over again. During- the second day a mountain rat effected an entrance to the snow-entombed cabin. It came from the basin aide, „fierce and hungry after the incessant storms which had placed a barrier between itself and natural food. Its eyia shone like live coals of fire, and its squeaking voice was bold and challenging. To Jennie the rodent seemed half human. She watched its eyes as it scented out and devoured the - few crumbs scattered about the room, and when it finally disappeared' n one corner she told herself thati it would come and cheer her on the morrow. Strange to say, she did not at any time abandon hope. She placed implicit faith in her father, and attributed every sound made by the settling of the snow to his exer tions- for ber rescue.: She bad no de- sire for food, and only moistened her parched lips with water at intervals. At the close of the fourth day Jen nie heard muffled sounds and voices w' 4 ,igibout. They became more audible evbry moment, and finally an instru ment which emitted a metallic sound like a shovel; rang against the window only a few feet away. from her head. 'lt is - father,' she • cried, in joyous tones, and stood erect with out stretched hands. Again came the sounds from without, and then an exclaniation of delight, coupled with an oath, announced that the cabin bad been forind, To the imprisoned woman the curse) 'founded sweeter than did ever prayer from pious lips, for it told as: plainly as words that the long craved deliverance was at band. She attempted to cry out, but her lips were mute.; her brain seemed on fire. A ray of light penetrated tho room, and with one wild, piercing shriek she fell forward on her face in a death-like swoon across the lifeless remains of her loier. When Jennie Johnson regained consciousness the scene was changed. She was lying upon a luxuriant couch in a handsomely furnished room. It was night, and a lamp on a centre table shed a soft, warm light. She attempted to arise, but the effwt proved `too serious a task, and she sank back on the pillow, weak and helpless. The noise. she made, slight though it was, attracted the attention of a lady seated at the opposite side of the bed, aud coming forward with a anger to her tips as though enjoin- ing silence, she said : 'I am Mrs. Bowe, and this is the house of my brother t , Mr. George Carter. You have been ill almost unto death, but now the crisis has passed and you are out of danger. Do not speak, but take a quiet and refreshing sleep. You are safe among friends.' Jennie ‘ closed her eyes without a dissenting thought, and in a few mo ments.was sleeping as sweetly as a babe at its mother's breast. The next morning she awoke, greatly re freshed, to find Mrs. Howe, Dr. Law and George Carter present.. The physician pronounced her convalesc ing rapidly, and briefly described how she was rescued from the ' snow tomb at the head of Evans Gulch. On the - day succeeding the' ava lanche George Carter went_up to:the gulch to inspect some clabis he had purchased on the opposite side ; 'Above the basin he saw the track of the snowslide, and, following it, dia covere 1 that the Johnson ca bin had been swallowed up. In. a state of great apprehension he returned) to camp, and notified the miners I of what he had learned. The news ran through the streets like wildfire, that the Angel of Evans Gulch was in peril, and before night a , hundred strong men, equipped •with shovels, were at the head of the. gulch. The outlook was almostlopeless; but the miners attacked the great bed of snow, prothising themselves that they would release the woman, whom 'they had re-christened Angel, if such a feat' was possible. At noon on the third day, the body of Paul Johnson was found. The discovery, wille a a l sad one, sufficed to accelerate the, willing xrdy of men, and they l pr- ed without cessation. George Carter directed the work, and never left the post at the fore. At intervals be was almost bereft of reason thrOugh fear that the cabin bad been crushed to a mass of ruins. At last, however, the cabin was gained, and the piteous cry of p6or Jennie, as she fainted, assured Carter that she still lived. In answer to that cry he leaped thro' the window, and in another moment reappeared, bearing the woman he almost idolized. She was revived by the cheers of the miners who - gath ered about on every mind, shouting and applauding in a half hysterical fashion. But there was an " unnatural light in her eyes which caused Dr. Law to look grave, and he:whispered to Carter : 'Poor girl, I fear the shock is too much for her, She 'is now delirious, and her mind may be totally unbalanced.' i Strong hands prepared a litter :of pine branches, and the patient was carried by four sure-footed miners to Carter's residence. Then the bodies of Paul Johnson and . John Purdy were conveyed to an undertaking .es• tablishmeat and gives decent burial. ME 1 II 'N (- - lennie's delirium developed into brain fever, and for a fortnight her recovery was despaired of. The best medic'al skill in the State was sum moned, and by and by with , careful nursing, the crisis was passed, and she awoke to life and reason. 'Jennie, I know you only care for me as a friend,' said. George Carter six months later as he stood by her. side in, the parlor of his Leadville residence, 'but I love you as deVoted ly "as on that day sine months ago when I asked you to be my wife. If I was to repeat that question now, what Would !your answer be V Jen nie hesitated for a brief moment, and then her reply was spoken so low that only George Carter heard it. Its exact words are not known to this day, but they must have been favorable, for George Carter clasped the Angel of Evans Gulch in a warm embrace; and kissed her ripe lips a score of times. Knee-BteeO*s—Why Not. Black velvet breeches flourished when George IL was king. Then a change came o'er the masculine leg. - Somebody with abominable calves or probably with no calves to speak of, took it into his head to wear top boots. Eierybody else fol lowed in his footsteps. "The mode makers of the age," thunders the London Chronicle of 1762, ‘'have taken an antipathy to the leg, for by their high-topped shoes and long trouser breeches with a broad knee band; like a compress for the rotula, a leg in high taste is not longer than a common councilman's tobacco stop 'per." Toward the end of the last century doe and buckskin breeches were much worn, and even in walk ing it was the fashion to. have • them so tight that marvellous gymnastics wkre : required" to put them on. Farley a gentleman exclaiming to his tailor, "If I can't get into 'them I won't have them." On this sine of the Atlantic knee breeches disappeared about fifty years ago. In England they were worn liy certain members of the clergy and reign as court dress. By the light of such facts why should a nineteenth century frenzy seize our population at the bare mention of these garments, and why shoulT the wearing of them be regarded as a ;'malignant form of idiocy ? There are men of brains' who, endowed with a love of beauty, confess to a hatred - of the all-prevading trouser , and to desire that knee-breeches shall prevail as evening male attire. --- ,Why not? Why should all men be as atrociously alike as broom sticks? -Why should gentlemen-and waiter so closely resemble each other as to ;be undistinguishable? Why should color, grace, beauty be. con- . fined.to one sex when the history of costume tells us of times when the dress of man charmed like that of women ? Why do modern artists shudder when ask to paint or to model contemporary man ? Because of the angular hammer-tailed and the ungainly trousers. I have heard a clever merchant declare that the decadence of sculpture was due to the disappearance of the human form and the -reign of the unsuggestive clothes. Aye, it was a New York merchant who fell upon his .own garb and thus metaphorically rent it asunder. There is nothing what ever to be brought forward, in favor of trousers, except that they serve to cover up bad legs. Men without calves, when arrayed in the broad cloth of the period are as pleasing Apollos - But shall' all male beauty be sacrificed to the calf less ? Cannot art assist nature and supplement proportions akin !.0 the Meagre pipe-stem. Men on the stage are no better formed than those off, yet they creditably endure the ordeal of knee-breeches.—Miss Kate Field in Otir Continent. Distinguished Americans. TWO STORIES ABOUT WELL-KNOWN PEO PLE, BEGINNING WITH THE ' PRESIDENT. When a yoting lawyer, unknown to fame, Chester A. Arthur happen ed to attend service at the old Church of St. JOhtos, in Washington. There he beard for the first .time the rich soprano voice of Ella Herndon as the notes of the "Venice " rang through the , old church. She was the daughter of a naval officer, who won distinction by his services in the Mexican war and commanded an ex plaring expedition up the Amazon. But his crowning deed of valor was upon the ill-starred steamship Cen tral America, that foundered near Havana with several hundred passen gers and more than a million in gold. , By his bercoic efforts about half the passengers were saved, and, faithful to his trust, the gallant captain went down with his ship, which he refused to desert.. Soon after het great sor- row he sought the acquaintance of the fatherless girl, and she became his wife. Now every Sunday,' on foot and unattended, ,President Ar thur finds his way to the little church and sits in the pow where the beauti ful Mrs. Madison worshipped-so long ' ago. Perhaps amid - the' " Venite ' to day he hears " the sound of a voice that is still "—the voice of one whose portrait hangs in his chamber. Amid the pressure, of State duties, it is said the r r esidOut never forgets the daily tribute of flowers to the memory, of this lady, , who, had she lived, would have graced the White House.--Correspondence ' of the Pa; Titian. • The institution of Lent, it id thought, is due to the efforts of Teles phorus, who was Bishop of Rome in 130 A. D. For a long time after it was made a yearly observance, it extended only 'over the strict period of forty days from Quadragesima Sunday to good. Friday. The four extra dap, including Ash Wednes day,- seems to have been added in the latter part of the fifth century by 'Felix III;, so -that the forty days consecrate by strict traditional right TO the period of fasting might thence fourth - count to , • the beginning of Passion week Indeed of the Friday in its. - ;;~~~~:~ ~r:::..,. _.. ESE 11.50 per. Annum In Adiranos. 111 Fair were the dreamland days of old, When In the sleepy suinmer shade, Beneath the brothels on the wold - The shepherds lay and . gently played Nude_ to maidens who, afraid, ' Dresi all together rapturously, Their white, soft bands, like white leaves laid, In the old, dear days In Arcady. Men were not then, as they are now, . Haunted and terrified by creeds ; They sought not then unceasingly to know The end that'as a magnet leads; Nor told with austere fingers beads; - - Nor reasoned with-their grief and glee ; Bat rioted In pleasant meads, In the old, dear days In At. cad,. Fhe tutors may be wrong or right—. The present Is distinctly wrong, For life and love have lost. delight, .4 And bitter even Is our song. . And year by year gray doubt grows strong, , And death Is all tbt seems to dree : Wherefore with wsail hearts we long - For the old, dear days la Arcady. - The Weaknesses of. the _ Great Swift relieved his tense and tragic moods by harnessing his servants with cords—on one occasion he in- slated on harnessing his learned and respectable friend Dr. Sheridan ani driving them up and down th. stairs and through the. rooms of 'his deanery. - Peter the Great sought to unbend himself by being wheeled over the flower-beds and neat par terres of his host's garden in a wheel- t barrow.. Cardinal Mazarin is said tot have been OA of shutting himself up in a toom and jumping over the , chairs, arranged in positions varying according to the degrees of difficulty in clearing them. Of this weakness on the part of his Excellency an amusing anecdote' is told. On one occasion, while engaged in these title leticsi-he forgot to lock the door. A young courtier inadvertently entered the room, surprised the great man in his undignified pursuit. It was an embarrassing position, for Mazarin was, he knew, as haughty as he was eccentric. But the young man was equal to the crisis. Astiuming the intensest interest in the proceeding, he exclaimed, with well-feigned earbest ness : "I will bet your Eminence two gold pieces I can beat that jump." He bad struck the right chord, and in two minutes he was measuring his 'leaping powers with the Prime Minister, whom he took care not to beat. He lost his two gold • pieces, but he gained - before long a mitre. Samuel Clarke reliev ed his theological pursuits in the same way, and on one occasion see ing a pedantic fellow approaching, said - to the mil who was sharing his .amusement : " Now we must stop, for a fool is coming in." Old Bur ton,•the author of the " _Anatomic of -Melancholy," the only book which got Dr. Johnson'out of his bed be fore he intended to rise, found his chief recreation in going dow,n Folly Bridge at Oxford and listen ing to the ribaldry of the tiargees, " which did' cleare away his vapoureB, and make him laugh as he would die." , -Innocent 111., probably the greatest pontiff who ever sat on - the throne of St. Peter, relieved• hie graver amusement of playing at nine pins with the potentates of Europe by gossiping familiarly with an. old monk on a seat at a fountain in the Vatican. He would listen for hours to the stories and anecdotes with which. his humble' 'companion, ' who had traveled a great deal, regaled him. The lighter,bours of good Bishop Corbet have, been very graphically deseribed by one who knew him well. His lordship's: favorite companion was his chaplain, Dr. , Lushington. When the busihess of the day was over, the Bishop delighted to descend with his faithful headman into the cellar of the episcopal palace. Cor bet would then doff his hood, saying, " There lies the. doctor;" he would then divest himself of his gown, add ing': " There lies the Bishop." The glasses were filled, and the toast was drunk, "Here's to thee, LuShing - - ton ;" "Here's to thee, Corbet." The celebrated Dean Aldrich was the . slave of his pipe-- There is a story_ which not only amusingly illustrates this' weakness on the part of the Dean; but gives us a curious glimpse '-of the free and easy way in which the dons and undergraduates of those days used to live. A senior student laid a wager with one of his college chums that the Dean was at that in stant smoking his pipe, that instant I eing about_ten.o'clock in the morn ing. Away, ,therefOre, he i went to the deanery, where, having made his wayinto the Dean's study, he ex plained the reason of his appearance at so early an hour. " Ah," replied the Dean, with the utmost coolness, "you have loat,your wager, for I am not smoking, but filling my pipe." NUMBER 43 THE BY.GONEWAYS. White Deer: It has always been a superstition among the bunters or Pike county, Penp , that to kill a white deer would take away all good lack from any one so thoughtless as to fire the fatal shot. White deer .are among the rare animals that roam the woods. They are so rare, in fact, that many people believe them to be myths Old, Minters declare that they have seep deer as white as snowirunding over the Pike county r, l idgekin years gone by, and relate inotaneis of the fate which overtook men who were so' rash as to kill therm A well known resident of the county express es his sacred belief in the supersti tion, and relates a singular incident to oho* how well—founded it is. - White deer, he says, are all gone from - our woods now, the last one having been killed in 1872 by Horn beek Shinier and two others. That deer was well known to all the old huntqrs, but of course none of them ever raised a gun against it. Horn beck moved away from - this county about;the time the war broke out, made some money in the army, and bought the Exchange hotel property in Wilkesbarre. In 1872 be was . worth $BO,OOO He was , a good. hunt er, having learned how while he lived along the Laekawaxen. While camping up on the Shohola in the fall of 'l2 with L. E: Beirabs, of- Port Jervis, and Henry Frank, t think ' his. name was, of bilierne _OOl4 l they heard that the white deer had II -4 ball Seen Ole; Asir . L iw =, spite of thnpiotestsof the ieetl kw*: ere with them, they determined- to' drive the ridge for the deer andLkill They succeeded. in starting- the ileer,_and got& shot at it, killing • it and bringing it into camp. Not long afterward Bhimer's -health - be gan to fail, although he was as rump ed and strong as an fox before, and still a young man. Hedled a linger ing death two or three years after mard. You all know that be- was brought to thp old homestead up the river and bided: It was found that within a year or , so he had become • involved finanelally. He died in tbe midst of domestic trouble, and out of the fortune be had in 187$ there was hardly anything left.- His prop? arty in Wilkesbarre was all run down and was scattered it publii sale. In 1874 Henry Frankrfailed in business and died 'with a malignant disease, with scarcely enough money to bury him decently. L. E. Sevens, one of the liading merchants in Port Jervis in 1872, soon afterward became &bankrupt. lie was never the man that he was before, and the other - day he blew out his brain! in / Port Jervis.—Afuncy Luminary. Fashion !otes. Buccal:ma are cheap. Ramona grow wider. lEiorr Bros grain trims spring - bonnets. Bonyrowans are embroidered on new „parasols. Suxge jewelry is worn with black Len. ten dresies. lESTRETIC peDwipers represent "a lily or a sunflower. - NEw passementeries resemble applique" embroidery. . • NATURAL flowers are fastened on Pea -cock feather fans. TtrEquoise blue beaded lace bonnets ' are worn by blondes. I - '--- CuEvotT cloaks for children are im ported' for the spring. TRANEWAREN'T sleeves or lace or of d beads remain ha "favor. Crain shoes, to match cloth dresses have patent - leather foxing. "Anew perales" have hieroglyphics, arabeiques and other quaint designs. INDIA shawls are cheaper now than they have been before for years. - E3antonmitv and moire trim the black cashmere dresses Worn during Lent. Si' n= lace and English crape are • combined on light mourning drerses. • New cotton satines are imported in boxes, with a fan and parasol to match. EMBROIDERED' edges appear on all kinds of spring and summer - dress goods.- Mita straw bonnets and hats will be the fashion with plain suits next season. • "Co42.3ressed " fl annels that require no further pressing afe used for dresses. SATIN ribbons are losing ftvor and can • be bought at reasonable prices for chil dren's sashes. • _ THE new . embroidered trimmings are seldom done' by hand, as machine work is, less costly. • * RIBBONS of two shades of red, such as pink with garnet, arc used on white or: black-dresses. BurrosED gloves are sold ,at half 'price because those With clused wrists are more fashionable. COLORD satin ribbon bows are worn at the throat with Byron collars, made of lace and insertion. Fun, Fact and Facietia. WilAfT day in the year do' women talk the least? The shortest day. Sow good services ; sweet remembran ces will grow from them. Oun_very worst 'passions will often pro. duce sublimer effects than our test. Uunscommo forwardness oftener' pro ceeds from ignorance than impudence. To correct an evil which already exists is not so wise as to foresee atul prevent it. • EVIL would not be half so dangerous if it'did not often wear the semblance of virtue. . _ I How many dog-days are theiv?—as many as there are dogs, for "every dog has his day." THE generality of men love, like plants; latent qualities, - which chain brings to light. " WHAT is love?" asks an exchange. Love, my friend, is thinking that yon and the girl can be an eternal pic:iiie to each other. LITERARY : "I occasionally drop' into poetry," as the man said when he. fell oto the editorial waste-basket."—Bete_ York post. ' . • CAN keep its" Can a woman keep a secret?" asks an eachinge. She- Can. That is to say, she caplceep telling .Boston Transcript. • MUSICAL : The cat is the great Ameri can pi ima donna. If bootjack. were bou quets, her nine lives would be strewn_ ith roses.—Louirrille Cotrier-Jouritat. DErtsrrios of a baby :'"it is *unpos ed of a bald head and a, pair -of lungs. One lung takes a rest' while the other runs the Shop. One of them is always on deck all the time." , . ' Tux suebass of St. Jacobs' Oil through out tho civilized world ~is without a par allel.*Riehmencl ( Va.r&outhern Planter 6-Farmer. MUSICAL criticism : Ali Indian chief in Washington went ',tuna the Ideal Opera Company. "Wheal!. W. Whitney gave gave a particularly low note the chief said : " Ugh ! him heap dug out?—The Score. . " DIDN'T you tell ms that you. could hold thu plow 2" said a farmer to a grecu Irishmanorhom he had taken on trial " Arrah," said Pat,. " hoW could I bold it wid tiro horses drawing it away from me? lilt give it to me in the barn, and I'll hold it with anybody." Ha who makes a baseless insinuation against a neighbor's integrity or honor is guilty of an'irkjUstiee which is atrocious. and . monstrous in comparison with the petty depredation of the despicable - thief who breakslnto his granary _and sump. titiously carries away his Corn. IT is all very well to admire a pretty girl in a sealskin Tacque, but when one of ttuare charmingly-attired and attractive. appearing demoiselles is hard. to blurt out; :a was heard in Tiffany's the other day, "Obi ma, ain't them terra firma or patents just - lovely?" our faith is shat= tered. f! Tams are two sides to everything," said the lecturer, repeat it,; there are two aides—" At this juncture S tired looking little . man stood up in the. front sent to say : " Well, if von have no objeo tions, I will step out and see if there are two sides to this hall: I know, , there is an inside, and if find there is an outside you'll know it by my not coming, back. You needn't be alarmed if shouldn't re: turn." And as be walked up the aisle he was followed by the admiring eyes of thd wiiole audience. Their sympathies were with him, but they were deficient in mor al courage. Father Is Ciento; Well. My daughters say, " How much better father is sWe be used Hop -Hitters. He to getting well after his long -suffering from a disease declared luourabis , and we are so glad that he used your Bitters.".w" A - Lady of Row i tiltsr. X. Y, , II =EU =il