l)'c Stnua, ?Nero: iifoomfiei )ai 3 3STEW "YOBK C O NTIN B NT AL Life Insurance Company,' OF NEW YORK, STRICTLY M UTUAL I ISSUES all the new forum of Policies, and pre sent an favorable terms as any company In the United States. The Company will make temporary loans on Its follcles. Thirty days' grace allowed on each payment, and the policy held good during tliut time. Policies issued by this Company aro non-forfeiture. No extra charges are madefor travoling permits. Policy-holders share in the annual protlts of the Company, and have a voice In the elections and .management of the Company. No policy or medical fee charged. , Justus T.awkknce, Pres't. M. B. WrNKOtH', Vice Pres't. J. P.ltooEus, Sec'y. J. F. EATON, General Agent, No. 6 North Thlfd Street, 4.29 yl College Block, IJarrlsburg, Fa. Incorporated by the Court of Common J'lcas, in 109; by the Legislature, in 1871. The Peiuisjlvniila . -Central Insurance Company. OF POTTSVILLE, PA. Capital and Assets, $156,000. .Premium Notes J100,000 00 .Promissory Notes 60,000 00 Cash premiums due or col lected for the year 1871, $2,028 00 'Cash premiums due or col lectud for the first three months of 1872, 1,800 00 'Cash from other sourcujt and agents, " 1,200 00 .Judgment Bonds in Com pany's office, 1,100 00 Total Cash, ?0,128 00 ' Total cash and note assets, April 1st, 1873, 156,128 00 J AMES U. GRIER, JOIIN D. HADE8TY, Secretary. President. DIRECTORS i John D. Hadcsty, A. P. Helms, Benjamin 'Teter, A. Sutermelster, James II. Grler, E. F. Jungkurt. Ellas Miller. AGENTS : II. II. Hill, Edward Fox, John A. Kalilo, Ed ward Wesley, Charles F. Deibert, Win. R, 'Griffith. E. F. JuDgkurt, General Agent. Arrangements have been made with other llrst-claBS companses to re-insure risks taken n the cash plan in such amounts as desired. Liberal commission allowed agents, and ex clusive territory, If desired. This Company confines itself to fire insurance exclusively. OFFICE) No. 191 CENTRE BT., POTTSVILLE, PA. IVOTICIS. Tbe Home Reserve force of The Penn sylvania Central Insurance Company of Pottsville, Pa., will bo in Pon y county in considerable force, And act an the Com pany's Agents until a full line of Local Agents can be appointed when the reserve forco will be rocallod. JAMES II. GRIER, Beo'y of Pa. Central Ins. Co. , InHiirnnce Notice. On and after the tenth day of April, 1872, The Home Reserve force of lnsur- .auce Agents belonging to "The Pennsylva nia Central Insurance Company" will leave Pottsville in heavy force, and occupy ton .different counties of the State, where tbey will continue to act as the Company's Agents until a full lino of Local Agents .can be appointed, when they will be recalled. As a body of men, I believe they are supe rior Insurance Agents, and most of them speak the English, French, Welsh and Ger man Languages. The City Insurance .Journals, with all their sneers at Mutual Companies, and continual cry of Fraud I Fraud 1 1 &c, can cot muster any better In surance material 1 Why don't the City In surance papers tell the public that no Mu tual Company broke or failed during the .last ten years? Why don't they tell the nubliothat more than lmlf the Stock Com- ftanios 'started within tbe last ten years lave? It is a. well-known fact that Mutual Companies cannot fail. 1 JAMES II. GRIER, . 'Secretary of Pennsylvania Central Insur ance Company. '618 New Carriage Jflaiiiifuotory, 1 On Hion Btkbbt, East or Caklisli St., New Bloomfleld, I'cnn'a. THE subscriber has built a large snd eommodl. oils Hlmp on High Ht., Kant of Carlisle Hlreet, -New Bloomrleld, l'a., where he Is prepared to man. tifovture to order , , Gti rr iagos Ot every description, out of the best material. Sleighs of every Style, - built to order, and finished In the most artistic and durable manner. Having superior workmen, he Is prepared to furnish work that will compare favorably with the best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable rates. 4KKPAUtlNO of all kinds neatly and prompt lydont. A tall Is loUcltsd. , SAMUEL SMITH, tut SUNDAY'IlBADIlTG. Mysterious Ways. A hank Of blue yarn tumbled of! thd line, under which Deb ducked her head, to gropo in a corner of a certain recess in the attio for bits for the ragman's bag, and fell directly into hor great apron. " Dumb things speak sometimes," mufr tored Dob. "Now I might ha' forgot how soon master's socks '11 be worn out only for that. I'll sot up a pair to-morrow; no, after tea." Then she pocketed the yarn, bundled up the rags and descended. A woman and child sat in the kitchen, old Silas Dono's nicco and lior baby. A year or moro had passed sinco news came to that woman of her husband's death; and the horror which had come with it was in her eyes now. No wondor, for hi the depth of the rod embers on which hor eyes wore fixod, she saw that awful picture of a man crossing the "dead line," and dropping across it at the flash of a sontinol's mus kot. A picture that haunted Miriam Eldrcth sleeping or waking, night and day. "The ways of Providence is strango," said Deb shaking hor head, and poking the fire; and the woman turned with a Btart, thinking of the things that had been meted out to hor in her very girlhood, for she was not yet twenty. "Awful strange," contin ued Deb. " It's so curious this yarn should pitch itself at me when I ought to have thought of using it up and didn't. ' And a ghost of a smilo crept over Miri am's faco, and the smile sot tho baby crow ing, nnd the baby's crowing awakened brighter smiles on tho mother's face; and Dob seeing them playing together at last " two babies, poor things," as she said to herself, laughing aloud in hor glee, "Thank the Lord, she's got somo life in hor yet, when she's roused up," she said to herself, and set the table singing all the whilo; and then, hor master not being at home yet, went out to hunt in bis room for what she always called " scrabbled paper," to wind hor ball of yarn upon. She found a piece which suited her at last, stiff, yel lowish, and crackling, and lying in an other wise empty desk-drawer, and took it back, crumpled into proper shape, and began to wind her worsted. She had wound ton yards or so, when a furious knocking at the door made her start and break it short off, and thero was no more thought of tho knit ting that night, for at the door she found a group of men who bore a sort of litter among them, on which, crushed and maim ed and dying, lay old Silas Done . A boiler in his factory had burst, and he, with a dozen poor workmen, had beon hur ried Into eternity. Ho had but a few mo ments to live, bnt in them he called his niece Miriam to him. "Don't cry, my child," he said, "I shall be better off than if I lived iongor. Three score and ten years are enough for man. The Rible says so. And you are safe. know I could not trust to John. You aro comfortable. This house, and enough to keep you in it, is yours. Dou't part with Dob; lot her live and dio here. You'll find the deed of gift " But there the old man's voice failed, and he said no more, and in an hour was doad. Miriam, now that her last friend was gone, oould only weep and sit holding her babe upon hor knee, and wishing that they lay together in the silent peace of death as tho good old man, who had been so kind to hor, lay. But Deb, half broken-hearted as she was, went about the house, putting it into that shadowed order in which the home death has viBited must be found; and com ing at last to the kitchen, where ti un tested meal was spread, and on the hearth of which tho fire had smouldered low, pick ed up her ball of worsted from the floor and sobbing, "T wont knit master's socks now," finished winding it, for any disorder seemed to her an insult to the dead. After that there came for both women only hushed watching beside the dead un til the day of the funoral. The day brought John Dene, a grim, hard-fistod, middlo-aged man, who had not time to visit his father for fifteen years. He behaved decorously enough, and was crisp and shiny in new mourning; but, as soou as decency permitted, ho began to set tle affairs with such gusto that it was evi dent that nothing else had been in his mind from the first. " It appoars that thero is no will," said he, sitting with his elbows on the parlor table the day after the funoral, " so I have nothing to do but take possession. How soon '11 . you be able to move, Cousin Mi riam " Miriam looked at old Deb. , "I suppose I shall not move at all," she said. " Uncle Silas gave me this house, and enough, he said, to keep me iu it.". John grunted. .'"Oh, bo did, eh?" he said. " Well, you'll let us look ' at the deed of gift, or whatever it is, wont you? I'ni a business man, you know." Miriam looked at Deb again. "''' "Deb beard him," she said. "He told me so on his death-bed, and yes he said something of a deed of gift. There must be one. But that can't make much diff er ence, Cousin John.' You will do what he wished, I know." ' ' .,, Cousin John stared at the speaker bland ly. , V If there is anything to prove it, I'm suro I shall,'! ho said. "But a statement from tho party interested don't stand In law. . Of course you know whore ho kept his papers." ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 And Miriam Indicating tho library; tho man of business and the legal gentleman who had been summoned to tho spot 'pro ceeded to make search, but found nothing. In fact, before long it seemed quito Certain that old Silas Dono must havo been wan dering in his mind when ho spoke of a deed of gift. At least his son John said so. ' So you see," said John to his poor cousin, " so you see, Cousin Miriam, we'vo dono our best. There's no such document. You'll have to work for your liviu' like oth er poor women, I suppose. And as you can't work hero you'd better go to the city. I'vo got some rooms I can let you cheap in a tcnemont-houso, and I'll recommend you to a tailor I know for slop-work. You'll get on very well. There's women working for him that make as much as twelve shillings a week, I'm told," And in despair Miriam took her cousin's advice, and Dob went with her. " At least you'd have a home, honey," she said. "He'd never turn you out of doors, mean critter as he is." But Miriam had no such faith in her cousin. It was a hidious place enough a rickety building with wooden Btairs, and two fain. ilies on a floor; and the back room at the top of tho house, with the dark bedroom attached, the apartments destined for Miri am. John had gonorously , permitted her to bring with her a chair or two, a table bed and bedding, and her boy's cradle, and she furnished the desolate place .with them, wondoring, with her country ideas of houses, at the "large wardrobe," until Dob said: "Blossyou, missis, you don't, know the city. That's meant to sleep in. It'll do very woll for mo." Dob did sleep in the dark closet, nnd tho mistress with her babo, iu the room out side, slept in spito of the noise beneath- the wake in one Irish domicilo, the " party" in another; the explosion of a paraffin lamp in one room, and the wife-beating perform ances in another: slopt bocause of their fa tigue But there came nights when thero was no sleop for them for the noiso and for wondoring how they wero to live. Miriam made her needle fly, and Deb knit stockings to sell, but the rent swallowed up most of the money, and food was very dear. Even the baby loft off crowing ond began to pine, and at last was taken ill; and then tho moth. er could only sit and nurse it, whilo Dob worked for both. Sho was a marvellous knitter, and her great egg-shaped balls dwindled away under her needles at a rapid rate. But never quito to an end. Always upon the hard roll of yellow paper remain ed a ball about the size of a large egg,, " I wound that for master's stockings," she used to say. "Just there the yarn broke when they came knocking at the door carrying him homo. I shan't never knit that off; jus leave it so to remember him by always." And there was a sort of romance in the fancy, though old Deb did not know it. ' Knit, knit, knit all day and half tho night, but after all there was nothing to spare after bread, was bought. Cousin John collected his rents himself, and called in vain for many a day. ' He was patient at first, thinking the baby must die soon. But it lived to wail and moan, and keep his money from its mother; and by-and-by John grew angry. "Think what taxes I pay," be pleaded. " Now you're quito a prosperous woman, if you choose to be. There's Solomon '11 give you as many shirts as you can niako at throe-pence halfpenny apiece, if you'll take em. . You ought to pay such a low rent as this." And ho frowned on Miriam, who only looked down upon hor poor baby and long ed for the only home for which the poor are charged nothing the quiet resting place of the grave. ' And matters grew worso and worse with her, so bad that there was no small fire upon the hearth and no leaf upon the tablo. Deb's last pair of stockings had produced money enough to buy the medicine the child needod and no more, and there was nothing left save a great hank of yarn, which, since an old gentleman had prom ised to buy tho stockings, might save-them from starvation. In that hope tho old woman hud made ready to wind the ball again, when the short, sharp knock they knew so well start led them both, and in walked John Dene, buttoned to the chin in his warm overcoat. " Well," he said, " ready for me now ?" Miriam shook her head. . , . " Ready?' cried Deb; "why there's neither fire noc victuals here and that poor child's worso thun ever. Where to get mouthful I don't know. If you were a man you would put your hand in your pocket and let us know." " Don't beg from him?" cried Miriam, "I ain't begging," said Dob. "He's your cousin, and ' he's robbed ' you. He knows that the house is yours, and the ground and all. He knows you didn't tell a lie about what old master said. He cheats you because he doesn't know." John blushed scarlet. ' ' ' "' )' 'ye given you house-rent free for ' two months," ho said, " and theso are my thanks. See here now. I've ' a tenant for theso rooms and tho sooner you're out the bet tor." ' ' . " '; " You mean to turn us out?' asked Deb. " I moan to liavo rent for my rooms," said John, avoiding Miriam's eye as . he spoke. " You soo I'm not so rich as peoplo think." ' ' Deb aroso and stood before him, flaunt ing her bull, with its protruding paper, in his faco. " You sco that, Mastor John," sho said; " that was wound to knit your poor pa's socks. I'vo kept it so over since; just so much was wound when the worsted broke, and I ran to open the door. It seems to me as if ho knowed I keep it so long o' my love for him. I wound it the very night your pa on his death-bed gave that house and ground, and enough to keep hor and me and tho child, to tho mistress, Miss Mi riam. I heard him say it; and I believe he can hoar me tell you so at this moment. I'd scorn to say it, Mastor John, if it weren't overy word true, and you know it." ' ' "I don't know what you'd do, woman." cried John Dene. "What I require is evi dence ; give me that, and I ask no moro. But you haven't got it; and what has all that rubbish about a ball of yarn to do with it ? I know my fathor wore stockings-i-I don't care who knit 'cm, or when. Don't flourish that in my faco, you old fool." And so speaking ho pushed the old wo man whose attitudo was actually some what threatening aside, and in doing so knocked tho ball from her. hand. 'She caught it but only held the worsted: nudas it unwound in blue-gray coils, tho founda tion of its greatness foil unloosed at Miriam's feet, she . Btoopcd and picked it up. Some thing arrested hor glanco. . - "This is parchment," sho criod.' "It is a docuinont of some kind. Where did you got it, Dob?" .. . ; " Out of the mastor's room tho . night he died," said Deb solemnly. And Miriam, holding it tight, cast hor eyes over the lines written upon its surface and signed with her dead uncle's name " Deborah, it is the deed of gift," she cried. . i And Miriam spoke the truth. Tho little document which so ordered things that she need waut no longer, had beon with them through all their tribulation and starvation, under Deb's ball of worsted! i , . .. "I've took care of it so long without known' of it," said Dob, " and I'll keop it safe now, and nobody don't get it from me." And it may bo doubtful whether Deb slept in her anxiety until the paper was in proper hands, and Miriam and her little one restored to their old home with ample provision for their comfort. Thore they live now, and if you visit them old Dob will toll you the story, adding byway of climax, "The ways .of Provi dence are mysterious. If that worsted had not tumbled into my lap I shouldn't have wound it; and if I hadn't wound it I shouldn't have got that deod of gift I thought was scrabbled paper; and if I hadn't kept it, where should we have been now ? The dear Lord only knows." And so Dob ascribes their salvation from starving to the ways of that mysterious Providence that is around and about us ever. AN INTERESTING INCIDENT. A SHORT, little, square-built, dark- JLJl skinod twinkled-eyod young fellow, was known the regiment over as " Little Potior." The name came from his trade before war times, and from the fact that he was always talking shop, and examining clays with all the enthusiasm of a geolo gist. He had the faculty of becoming in terested in anything that any other man was doing. Standing near the picket fire, though uncomfortahlo, he could always Buggest a way in which to make the coffee boil, and would gather up little splinters and pile under or about ' tho little kettle with tho keenest enjoyment, although the coffee belonged to the most taciturn man in the company. He shewed this kindly interest in every man's affairs, and of course was universally liked. At Shiloli, in the midst of the second' day's battlo, Little Potter left the company for the purpose of getting water for himself and several of his companions. A quick chaugo of position, a new line of battle formation, aftor his departure, and Little Potter was seon no more for several ' days. After the rebels retreated, he was acting as nurse in the brigade hospital. , He could't find the regiment on his return, but found the hospital, and the division sur geon ordered him on duty, and discovering his excellence as a nurse, would notj lot him return to tho company. , Thore was a quarrel between the cap tain and surgeon, tho former seeing . Little Potter as a skulker, and the latter seeing him as a useful man who had tnado a mis take through no fault of his own. The cap tain reported Potter absent without leave, and he was court-niartialed. The sentence was that ho should forfeit six mouth's pay. The men of the company were very indig nant, but Potter said 1 nothing. The 1 stop page of six month's pay told sorely on him, but he weathered the storm, and came out as serene as though, he had never been court-martialed. ' '''' ' ' ' i 1 Much clothing was lost at Shiloli, and a list was made out of .clothing lost In : the battlo. The sergeant would ask : 'Well Blame, wlmtf did , yon lose at Shiloh?" Answer ; An overcoat and knapsack." " What did you lose at Shiloli, Potter?" With indescribable drollery, Potter said wlth.a sort of lisp that was .characteristic : " I lotht thoveuty-eight dollarth :" This was was tho only reference ho made to tho court-martial and the six month's pay until tho, morning of the terrible De cember 81, at Stone River. In the hurry of the company formation for battle, Little Potter was the first man in place, after the' ' ordorly, and though the shortest man' iu tho company, ho held his place there in face of the rule to the contrary. There was a sweeping charge That company loft thoir dead further to tho ' front than any other regiment in action that day. Thoy were cruelly crushed, relentlessly driven. Little Potter was a giant in doing. Ho kept his place next to the . orderly when the company was broken and scattered, with a precision that would under other circumstances have beon droll, he formed on the orderly whenever a chargo was made, aud whilo it was every man for him self. As he was ramming home a load, a ball struck him in the fleshy part of the leg, .cutting a great gash and tearing his clothes. . He wns advised to go to tho rear. The reply was : . , , , , " I will show them who is a coward." , A shot struck hiin in the loft shoulder, and he became : deadly pale. Still with tocth and right hand he managed to load his gun and fire. Another shot struck him in the thigh, and he full. Ho was dragged to a stump and placed so that the raking fire would not touch him. Ho deliberately crawled around and placed himself so as to face the rebels, and as the company gave back in one of those hand-to-hand fights, little Potter kissed his hand to the men nearest him and nestled down with a sigh of relief. , Days afterwards the sergeant found a pair of black eyes glistening from festoons of white sheets, in a hospital at Murfreesboro. They belonged to Little Potter, broken leggod, broken-armed and bandaged. He could not move and hardly speak. But as the tearful men bent over him, he lisped: " We waxthd them, didn't we?" , The rebels found him braced against tho stump punching at them with his gun held in one hand, as they ran by. He was taken to the hospital, and here, day after day, went his old comrades to see him. ' They did more; they wrote to General Rosecrans, telling the simple story. They carried the letter along the red tape lino, from brigade quarters to division, from division to corps, from corps to army headquarters, and re turned with an order from Rosecrans him self, directing that the six month's pay be returned to Little Potter, that all charges on record be erased, aud that an order com plimenting his gallantry be read on dress parade, and 'that a copy be sent to the man who behaved so nobly. The order was read on dress parado, and the docu ment with all its array of endorsements and old Rosa's letter' was 'carried to Little Potter,' by men who could scarcely speak. Ho seemed like one transfigured, as one of his old-time friends read and re-read the order letter. He had it held down to his eyes so he could see the, red lines and of ficial signatures. Then camo his first tears. ' " Now, boys, I don't ' care to got well. It's all wiped out, ain't it? I was deter mined to got well to wipe it out, you know. But now torn up as I am, it is better to die." " " ' . ; ' And the next morning, with tho' order and old Rosa's letter on his breast, Little Potter died. And still we can hear the griz zly old surgoon's words, as he came totho cot " Dead ? Why God bless the, boy," 1 i' Extreme Cold. . ..-. Dr. ICano, in one of the expedition In search of Sir John Frankiu, records that "on the 5th of February, 1854, the alcholie thermometers indicated the terrible tem perature of seventy-five degrees below the freezing point of water, At such tempera ture cholorio ether became solid aud care fully prepared chloroform exhibited a granular pellicle on its surface. ' ' Spirit of naptha froze at fifty- four degrees, and oil of sassafras at forty-nine, degrees below zero. The exhalations of insensible pers piration from the surface of the body in vested the exposed or partially clad parts with a wreath of vapor. The air1 had a perceptible pungency upon inspiration and when breathed for any length . of time it imparted a sensation of dryness to the air passages,1 inducing the men to' breathe guardodly and with Hps compressed.1 tSTA story Is told of an editor who died, went to heaven, and was denied ; ad mittance, lest he should meet some delin quent subscriber, and bad feelings ' would be engendered in that peaceful clime. Hav ing to go somewhere, the edltoV" next ap peared in regions of darkness, but was pos itively rofuwd admittance, as the 'place was full of delinquent subscribers. ' Wearily the editor turned back to the celestial city, and was met Vy the watohman of 'the port als with a smile, who said I " 1 'was mis taken, you oan enter ; there is no delinquent subscriber in heaven." I" ' t t