ljc Qfixm-, Neu)J5lapmftcl&, pi. 1TE-W YORK r. , it ' . r 1 ' CONTINENTAL Life Insurance . OP NEW YORK, STRICTLY M UTUAL I Assets, -.Jtdy.HM ! I&SCESall the new forms of Policies, and pre sent ns favorable terms as any company iu the Vj lilted States. Thirty days' uraco allowed on each payment, and the policy held good during that time. Policies Issued by this Company are non-forfeit' ure. No extra charges are made for t ravelin ft permits. Policy-holders share in the annual profits of the Company, and have a voice in the elections and management of the Company. Mo policy or medical fee charged. Justus I.a whence. l'revt. M. B. Wxnkuof, Vice i'res't. J. P.llooEKS, Bec'y. J. V. KATON. General Agent, No. 6 North Third Street, 4.29 yl College Muck, HarrUburg, Fa. Incorporated by the Oinrl of Common Pleas, in 10U,- by Vie Leylsluturejn The PeiiHNylraiiia Central Insurance . Company OF POTTSVILLE, PA. Capital and Assets, $156,000. Premium Notes, 8100,000 00 Promissory Notes, 50,000 00 Cash premiums due or col lected for the year 1871, $3,028 00 Cash premiums due or col lected for the first three months of 1872 1,800 00 Cash from other sources and agents 1,200 00 Judgmcut Bonds In Com pany's office 1,100 00 Total Cash ?6,128 00- Total cash and noto assets. AprlUst, 1872 $160,128 00 JAMES H. GRIER, JOHN D. HADESTY, Secretary. President, DIRECTORS i John D. Iladesty, A. P. Helms, Benjamin TTeter, A. Butermelster, James 1. Urlcr, J. t, Jungkurt. Ellas Miller. AGENTS ! ir. H. mil, Edward Fox, John A. Ruble, Ed ward Wesley, Charles . Delbert, Win. R, Griffith. E. F. Jungkurt, General Airent. Arrangements have been made with other .first-class companses to re-insure risas uiKcn on the cash plan in sucn amounts as acsireu. Liberal commission allowed necuta, and ex elusive territory, If desired. This Company -confines Itself to ure Insurance exclusively. O F F I C E No. 191 CENTRE ST., POTTSVILLE, PA. NOTICE. The Home Reserve force of The Penn sylvania Central Insurance Company of FottBville, Pa., will be In Perry county In considerable force, and act as tlie Com' pony's Agents until a full line of Local Agents can be appointed when the reserve torce will oe recalled. JAMES II. GRIER, Bec'y of Pa. Central Ins, Co, Insurance Not loo. On and after the tenth day of April, 1872, The Home Reserve force or Insur- -anco Agents belonging to "The Pennsylva nia Central Insurance Company" will leave Pottsville in heavy force, and occupy ton different counties of the State, where they will continue to act as the Company's .Agents until a full line 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 tliera sneak the English, French, Welsh and (Jer ri an Languages. The City Insurance -Journals, with all their sneers at Mutual Companies, and continual cry of Fraud 1 Fraud t 1 &c, cannot muster any better In nurance material I Why don't the City In aurance papers toll the publio that no Ma tual Company broke or failed during the last ten years? Why don't they tell the public that more than halt the Btock Com panies started within the last ten years have? It is a well-known fact that Mutual Companies cannot fail. JAMES H. GRIER. Secretary of Pennsylvania Central Insur ance company. o id Mew Carriage Manufactory, Ox Hiok Btbiet, East or Cak-isli St., New liloomfleld, Fenn'a. subseriner has built a large and eommodl JL ous Hhop on High Ht., Kant of Carlisle Htreet, New liloomlteld, Pa., where he is prepared toman ufacture to order Carriages Of every description, out of the best material, ' Sleighs of eyery Style, built to order, and finished In the most artistic a4 . r I il A nianMf. M. HaviiiK superior workmen, hs Is prepare to lurniih work that will compare favorably wllkt -the best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable' rates. - M-KKFAHUNa of all kinds neatly and prompt ftfdona. AUU sUlelted. ,. , . SAMUEL SMITH. . Company, tut A Case of Circumstantial Evidence. A1 MURDER trial was concluded a few days since in Indiana, resulting in a Verdiot of guilty and a sentenoe of impris onment for life, which has some remarkable and singular features. As a case of cir cumstantial evidence, where thatwas main ly to be relied upon, it is almost without parallel; and for certain circumstances con nected with H, unexplained and unexplica blo on any ordinary theory, it is still more interesting. It Involves some exceedingly respectable people in Indianapolis, and al together is ono of the most remarkable trials on record in this country. The accused was one Nancy E. Clem, the wife of a lending grocer in Indianapolis. The charge agniiiBt her was the murder, four years ago in September, of Jacob Young and his wife Nancy Young, also re spectable people of the same town. This is Mrs. Clem's fourth trial, slio having on the first trial lost an acquittal by the obsti nacy of a single- juryman; on the second, ns now, been convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for life, though a reversion of judgment was granted by tho Supreme Court; on the third, escaped by a disagree ment of the jury; and now, on the fourth, found guilty and sentenced to State Prison for the remainder of her days. Meanwhile-, ono William J. Abrnms was accused of the same crime and found guilty of murder iu the first degree; and her brother, Silas Hart man, who wns an accomplice, committed suicido in jail on the night of Ills sister's second trial, wheu Bhe was found guilty. It is, perhaps, only a result of tho intense excitement the case has created in Indiana that the Supreme Court is accused of hav ing been tampered with when a now trial was granted after Mrs. Clem's first convic tion; hut, at any rato, there is no hesitation in the Western papers in making the accu sation. Jacob loung and Ins wile .Nancy were found dead on tho 12th of September, 1808, on tho bank of a river three miles from Indianapolis. Tho woman had been killed by a pistol ball through the hack of her head; tho man by a charge of buck-shot from a doublo-barrolled gun, which was found by his side. The two shots wore distinctly heard by persons in the neighbor hood, one party hearing also a scream be tween them; and another party having seon Mr. and Mrs. Young walking with another woman on the river beach Ave minutes be fore the shots were fired. It was clearly a case of murder. Mr. Young's horse and buggy were found hitched to a fence in the road near by, but why he and his wife were there and who was with them it was useless even to conjecture Tho first clow was the gun found at Young's side. There was some peculiarity about the locks, and it bad a broken thimble. Such a gun, it was found, had been pur chased at a pawnbroker's in Indianapolis that morning, by a man who was exactly de scribed by the pawnbroker and his assistant. A man had inquired for a gun at three dif ferent places between eight and nine o'clock that morning and at one of those places a little girl had directed him to the pawn broker's whore this gun was bought, and had seen him enter tho shop. He was final ly laontiuou as William J. Abrams, a re spectable carpenter of the town, and he was arrested and lodged in jail. Next, the ground whore the murder was committed was carefully searched, and there was found a well-defined Impression of a "No. 8 woman's gaiter," worn by person who had taken long stridos, as if hurrying from the spot where the doad bodies lay, until the track reached that of a buggy drawn by two horses, one wearing Bmall-sized interfering shoes. After it was settled who bought the gun and Abrams was secured, attention was turnedto these footprints of a woman and a horse. In a livery stable in Indianapolis, after careful search, was found a maro who wore small interfering shoos. One of these ex- actly fitted the impression found near the scene of tho murder. A plaster-cast was taken and compared with the feet of thous ands of other horses in the town; it fitted none of them. Silas Hartman, on the af ternoon of the murder, had hired a horse and this small interfering mare. Some farmers swore that they met him driving behind the Youngs' carriage, though he failed to respond to their recognition utners tesiiiiea uiut tncy saw a person whom they believed to be Mrs. Clem sitting in Young's carriage at the same time. Hart- man was arrested at once, but Mrs. Clem was left at liberty for three weeks longer She was not arrested for three weeks, but she was closely watched. Abrams, the confederate, was In Jail and wanted money to pay bis lawyers. It appeared on the trial that while Mrs. Clem was thus left at liberty, Abrams bad sent his brother to her, to demand several thousand dollars. Mrs, Clem went Into the cellar, and took the money from a package of bills concealed in stovepipe hole, and sent it to Abrams, ajui sue warned the brother not to come again, as it would excite suspicion. Now, it was known that Young bad 7 000 on his person when he left home, but which were not found on bis body after he was murdered. It was also proved that Abrams had received money on the day of the mur der from Mrs. Clem, when she returned borne in the afternoon. When Mrs. Clom was arrested she had on pair of carpet slippers belonging to a ser vant. No shoe nor boot of any kind be longing to hor could be found in the house, and there was, therefore, nothing that she wore with which to measure the foot-print of the "No, 8 gaiters" found near the dead bodies, and which it was evident were on the feet of a woman who fled from the scene of the murder, and stopped when the foot-prints of the interfering mare wore cached. A rigid inquiry was made in the shoe stores of Indianapolis till one wan, at last, found where Mrs. Clem had bought a pair of " No. 8 gaiters" a few days before the 12th of September. A pair of the same sizo and manufacture wore produced and arcfully compared with tho measurement of tho foot-print. They corresponded in every particular save ono; tho heels were too deep. Tho boy who sotd them was again examined, and ho at length recalled tho fact that when he sold the shoes to Mrs. Clom she complained that tho heels were too high. She was directed to a shoemaker who could cut them down for her. The shoemaker wns examined; he remembered v altering a pair of No. 3 gaiters for Mrs. Clom at tho timo referred to. Ho was di rected now to alter another pair of the same, kind in tho same way, mid the shoes thus altered exactly fitted tho foot-print of the fleeing woman. Here seemed to he tho most conclusive evidence that tho foot step of tho woman near tho scone of the tragedy was the foostop of Mrs. Clem had stopped in her flight on foot wheu sho reach ed tho buggy drawn by the interfering mare with small feet; and that this mare, with another horse, hod been hired by Si las Hartman, Mrs. Clem's brother, on that afternoon. The conclusion was that Silas Hartman was in waiting to drive away with his sister, Mrs. Clem, when tho bloody deed was finished. Thore was other corrobor ative evidence of Mrs. Clem's guilt. She had bribed and otherwise induced several persons to testi fy that Bhe was at home and at othor places whero sho could not have been had she been on tho hanks of White river on tho af ternoon of the murder of Young and his wifo. In the course of one or tho other of the trials, when concealment was no longer possible, these false witnesses confessed that they had been guilty of perjury. The chain of circumstantial evidence was thus complete. Tho gun with which Young was shot was bought by Abrams. Abrams, in jail, bad demanded money of Mrs. Clem, which she, to the amount of thousands of dollars, had produced from an unusual place of concealment and Bent to him, be- sidos having paid him monoy on tho day of the murder and after its committal. On that afternoon she was absent from home, and footsteps curiously corresponding to hers in the cut-down heel of a gaiter-boot she was proved to have purchased, were found near the dead bodies of Young and his wifo. Where these footsteps ended, the singular marks of a horse-shoo com menced, and a mare, the only ono that could be found in Indianapolis vIiobo shoes answered to tun impression, was inreu that afternoon by Hartman, Mrs. Clem's brother. Mrs. Clem had made away with all her shoes, lest apparently, her connec tion with the woman's footsteps should be traced. Sho had attempted, by bribery to prove an alibi. Hart men, the brother, when she was convicted on hor second trial, cut his throat with a razor, and killed him self. And the motive for the crime in which this guilt teemed so conclusively proved was supplied in the fact that Young that day was known to have $7000 upon his person, which was never accounted for unless it was in tho stovepipe hole in Mrs. Clem's cellar, and on which she drow to satisfy Abram's demands. To make all this the more probablo, if not most positive proof of guilt, it was sworn by one witness that he saw Mrs. Clem get into tho buggy with Young and his wife on the fatal after noon; and by another that he saw her re turning, later in the day, at a rapid pace, in a buggy with Silas Hartman, hor brother, who was driving the small-footed mare, The wonder is that with such a mass of proof before them any jury should have hesitated in giving a verdict of murder in the first degree, except that there might be a doubt whether the actual deed was com mitted by Mrs, Clom or by her brother, Hartman, or by Abrams. The f 7000 in Young's possession may have been sufficient motive for this murder but other circumstances in the case indicate a less obvious and it may be, a mora pow erful reason. Young, till within six months of September, 1868, bad been a poor porter in a hardware store, subsisting upon his daily wages. Suddenly be gave signs of wealth; changed bis manner of living; set up his carriage; opened a bank account borrowed large sums of money at large interest and was prompt in his payments, During this period a close intimacy existed between him and Mrs. Clem unknown to Mr. Clem, who bad never beard of any such acquaintance until after Young's death and tbeir money transactions were frequent and large. The nature of the business was never known, and when ques tions were asked the answers were always evasive. ' ' ' f ' About the same time the ciroumstanoes of Abrams bad put on another face. He also gave up bis trade and become a gentl man of leisure, keeping a prosperous bank account, borrowing money, and frequenting Mrs. Clem's house in an unexplained, not to say mysterious, manner. Then there was a Dr. Duzan, a highly respectable physician, .about . whom there was some queer evidence. He bad known Mrs. Clem from childhood and was her family physi cian. Mrs. Clem, before hor arrest, testi fied, before the grand jury that sho had never had any financial relations with Dr. Duzan and he swore that he never had any business with and did not know Young. In the course of the trial it was shown that Mrs. Clem was constantly borrowing mon ey of the Doctor on short time and at high rates of interest, and that at one time these loans reached as high as $-0,000; that when Dr. Duzan drew any sum of conse quence from his bank, Young deposited a like sum in his bank the same day; that tho reverse also was true when Young drew out and Duzan deposited. What was the nature of these pecuniary transactions no body but the parties concerned know; and why it was necessary that tho account should be closed by tho murder of Young and his wife by Mrs. Clem or her brother or Abrams is still more inexplicable. That it has something to do with U, how ever, is apparent. 1 he murder was com mitted on tho 12th. On the 14th Young had to meet payments in the bank of 127,000. Duzan testified that four or five days before Mrs. Clom had come to him in great distress of mind and begged for $22,- 000. IIo could not accommodate hor. Of course sho could not help Young, if that was what she wanted of tho money, but that does not seem a good reason for killing lim. One witness swore that Mrs. Clem said on the morning of tho murder that Young had just given hor $20,000. But this seems a very improbable story, for with that sum and Alio $7,000 in his pocket Young could have met his liabilities two days later, and with that sum between them, Mrs. Clem would have been under no necessity of going to Duzan nnd beg ging, in great distress of mind and in tears, that he would lend her $22,000, for tho want of which sho would be undor the dis agreeablo necessity of killing Young and his innocent wife, or having them killed by somebody else in her presence. Dr. Duzan's share in the business -may have been only to lend money to the others at exorbitant interest, but what the nature of thoso transactions was by which the othor parties one of them a wotnan acting without the knowledge of her husband, the others, poor laboring men should have suddenly grown rich and all have become so Involved that it was necessary to kill off one of the partners, is altogether mysterious, and for which there seems to bo no satisfactory theory. A Good Joke. Now that tho war is ended, it would be cruel, perhaps to specify a certain Virgin. ia batallion in General Heth's d ivlsion, A. N. V., which mode his name more no torious than respected throughout the army for never making a stand in action, or doing anything else it was ordered to do, Every appliance of discipline was exhaust ed by General Lee to forco his unreliable corps up to tho standard of its duty, but without avail; tho stuff of which soldiers are made was not in it. One of the men belonging to it was once walking on one of the roods near Petersburg in the winter of '64, quietly giggling and laughing to him self, as if his soul was in secret feasting on some very choice morsel of fun or fortune. Some one who met him inquired the occas ion of his mirth. ' We've got ono of the best jokes on Goneral Lee you ever heard of," said the follow. " How's that?" asked the other. " Why, you soe he's just issued an order for our batallion flag to bo taken from us, when the Yankeet took it from us two months ago in the fight at Hatcher's Run And the batallion man, still in high good humor over his little joke at the general's expense, proceed on his way to camp re joicing. Circumstantial Evidence. The London Globe publishes a statement which ia an illustration of tho dangor of re lying upon circumstantial evidence, even when it approaches positiveness. A gentle man went to the British Museum with a cose opened, containing some valuable medals, for his inspection. He examined a particular medal, which was supposed to be unique, restored it to the tray, and af ter talking some time with the custodian, was about to leave, when the latter dis covered that the medalwas missing. It was searched for everywhere, and could not be found, when it was suggested that the pockets of the visitor should bo examined. To this he objected, and a po liceman was sent for. However, before be arrived, the medal was found to have slip ped between the tray and the bottom of the case. When asked why be refused to be searched, the supposed culprit produced a m edal from his pocket, the exact counter part of that which was In the case, remark- ed that his object bad been to verify the authenticity of bis own, whioh being iden tical with the missing one and discovered In bis pocket, would at once have convic ted him of the theft SUNDAY HEADING. Jrcry Mind Has' Its Special Capacity., ' I am of the opinion that every mind that comes into the world has its own special ity is different from every other mind; that each of you brings into the world a certain bias, a disposition to attempt some-. thing of its own, something your own an aim a littlo different from that of any of your companions; and that every young man and every young woman is a failure so long as each does not find what is his or her own bias; that just so long as you are influenced by those around you, so long as you-are attempting to do those things which you see others do well instead of doing that which you can do well, you are so far wrong, so far failing of your own right mark. Everybody Bees the difference in children. They very early discover their tastes. One has a taste for going abroad, another for staying at homo; one for books, another for games; ono wishes to hear sto res, another wants to see things done; ono is fond of drawing, and another cannot draw at all, but he can make a machine. This difference, ns you advanco, becomes more pronounced. You are more distinct in your conception of -what you can do more decided iu avoiding things which you cannot and do not wish to do. Now, I conceive the success is in finding what it is that you yourself really want, and pursu ing it; freeing yourself from all importun ities of your friends to do something which they liko, and insisting upon that thing which you liko and can do. Emereon. Some Curious Facts. Thoso curious facts about the Bible were ascertained, it is said, by a convict senten ced to a long term of solitary confinement. The Bible contains 3,580,489 letters, 773, C92 words, 81,173 verses, 1,189 chapters and 00 books. The word and occurs 40, 277 times. The word Lord occurs 1,855 times. The word reverend occurs but once which is in thoOth verseof the 111th Psalm. The middle verse is the 8th verse of the 118th Psalm. The 21st vorse of the 7th chapter of Ezra contains all the letters in tho alphabet except the lottor J. The fin est chapter to read is (he 20th chapter of the Acts of tho Apostles. The 19th chap ter II Kings and the 87th chapter of Isaiah are alike. The longest verse is the 8th verse in the 8th chapter of Esther. Tho shortest verse is tho 85th verse of the 11th chapter of St. John. The 8th, 15th, and 81st verses of the 107th Psalm are alike. Each verse of the 130th Psalm end alike. There are no words or names of more than six syllables . . A Short Sermon. Here is a bit of philosophy worth read ing. It is an exposure of a very common delusion. It is a good rendering of an old idea: "Two things ought to bo strongly im pressed upon young people of our country. Tho insecurity of riches, even whon ac quired, and tho unsatisfying character. There is no fallacy so universally cherished as the notion that wealth is surely a means of happiness. The care of a large property is one of the most burdensome of earth's trusts. The only material good that comes from an estate is to be made out of a mod erate income far more easily than a large one, and with fewer attendant disadvan-. tages. Few thoughtful men would under go the entire stewardship of a large estate on a positive bargain that thoy should re ceive no more for taking care of it than ordinarily falls into the lap of the owner. The scramble for wealth is due to a wrong estimate of good when it is gaiuod." Some Ancient Discoveries. A Jewish rabbi in Richmond writes to tho Ditpateh that the lightning rod of our times was known in the thirteenth century and quotes from a work extant in 1291 the following; " If you want to prevont the thunders from destroylug your castle, then put on your roof metal wires, and it will bo saved." But ' more remarkable is this about the telegraph, which a Jewish oxilo from Spain in 1493 wrote: " Wo have good proof (for an invisible conuectiou) in the magnot stone. If you break this stone into two parts( positive and negative), and you lay one part on one side, even that they are separate by (a wire of) iron, then every movement which you make on one side will be visible on the other in the same movement." Something To Hold On By. ' A woman who had been a prominent lecturer on infidelity came to her dying pillow. Being much disturbed in her mind ber friends gathered about her and exhor ted her to " hold on to the last." "Yes, I have no ohjeetion to holding on," said the dying woman, " but will you tell. me what I am to hold on by?" These words so deeply impressed an infi del standing by, that he was led to renounce the delusion. False doctrine may satisfy the heart when in health and vigor, but it will not do " to hold on by" in the solemn hour of death. ' ' tar Do you mean to live without trial? Then you would wish to die but half a man at the very best but balf a man. With out trial you cannot guess at our' own strength. Men do not learn to swim on a table. They must go into the deep ami buffet the surges.