UL X t I " - : a f 1 r A 1SONIAN ' JJ All L JJ A EJcuotcfc ta politics, Citcrature, Vgricnlturc, Science, Hlornliiij, awb (Scneral Intelligence. OL. 31. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUxNTY, PA., FEBRUARY 5, 1874. NO. 38. Published by Theodore Schoch. if is -T 'lHr yearin adfmnce nd if not I;Jff teth -i..t t the year, two dollars iul fifty !lMn',e,1 until all arrearage are paid, .r itif ti.n ol lh Editor. 1 f 7urusiaet9 of one 8iure of (eight If nca) or 1 ,,e or tlu-e mertions $1 50. Bach additional JOB TlMt.TING, or ALI KINDS, r itrj in ihe his nest rtyle of the Art, and the mit re!on.ttle terms. WILLIAM S. REES purveyor, Conveyancer and Eeal Estate Agent. larms, Timber Lands and Town Lots J FOR SALE. 1 1 cTi -e next door above S. Rees news Depot 1 J l 1 r below the Corner Store. J ,r"l. 20, l.-CS-tf. DR. J. LANTZ, ... i i t...:i rt.. ;ijr r'JOli ailvl .tlL-Hia uitJi jl'i-iii.ioi-, it i, (. hi 1i-e "a M iin Street, in the second . rtir M'.iltuii'K 'rirk l.ui.diiie. nearly onpo- , i if s:r."ii Nli'in; llme, and be ll.itters himself t ! ri; i:ru rri ootisiuu prai-m-e u me iiiosi 4,i I i-ai ii I uUt'nii it to aI matters pertaining ,,. iii..f - i-ni.tiMl he l fully jblc t rrfrtn alt , 4:r. i iii ! leiiial line la Ilie mustciirful.tante- . 1 1 . .1 1 I'll inn iirr. i ( ll ...im i n sivcn to vin the N-itura! Teeth ; . i.. t:- i.itii.mi f ArlitKMal reelh un Riit:er. .' : v-i " -nitiiium (Ju;ii5, aud perler-l fits lu . . . ... I :i HI J. ?.l v jfi in i I he ?re-il f l!y and d.nitcr l en-lis-r'Hiri- vnnkuitlit locxptrieiw ei. or to Himj-c it A .UUlli:'. - I'm I J. m. i. i j yt. J. ii. .saiLi.i., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. :7;ie 1-t iloor above Stroudsburg House, uinn e lt door above Pot Office, O lire lionrs from 9 to 12 A. r., from 3 to 5 iKlofr.M. May3:My ) u. c;i:o. w. J itKso.v PHYSICIAN, SURGEON & ACCOUCHER. Id ;iie nl.l r.tiice of Dr. A. Iloeves Jackson, 4 i.i.mv, i-nriK-r of arah and Franklin street. STROUDSBURG, PA. J. ZS. J. SMTTCRSOX, liPESlTIXG AND MEfHAMrAL DEMIST, u-S-ijj l.ictfil in Eat St ronlsbti rpr, Pa., an- Dt i'i. t ilial lie i now treitarei to insert aru- k ! if-L-th in ilie most beautiful and life-like ti; ii.-r. AIsd. great atteniion given to lining Tr-iTviim ilie natural teeth. Teeth ex tBn'tt'J without pain by ne of Nitrons Oxide (Jb. All t!irr work incident to the tirofesMon r4ii" t!ie nuKt skillful and aj)jrovcd style. w jrii attended to promptly and warranted. if. irjo rr.jn;ihle. Patronage of the public i i.-i:f J. in A. W. Ixder's new building, op rvite Anulumink House, East Stroudsburg, July 11, 1873 ly. D U. . I,. PECK, Surgeon Oentixt. Announces lint hiving just returned from De ital Collegs, he id fully prepared to make tii.fic:al teeth in the most beautiful and life J.ia manner, and to fill decayed teeth ac-cHi-trr to th rno-t i-n proved method. Tvptti exfract'-d without pain, when de t. '5.1. by tlie use of PJitr.ius Oxide G8, 'i iittis entirely hirmtess. Kepairing' of iiiie.t u-atjy done. All work warranted. i irT re ioitahle. ilce in J. (J. Keller's new Brick build '. Mai i S reet, Stroudeburj, Pa. auj 31-tf Tlli:.S II. 1T4L.TO.V, ; Attorney at Latr, J5, in the building formerly occupied L M. liurson, and opposite the Strouds i Hank, Main street, Stroudsburg, Pa. jun 13-tf A Ii:RIC t HOTEL. - 4. V he Kuuen1er would inform titc public that t lu lea.sed the ho axe formally kept by Jacob i etht. ia the Toroug:h of Stroudsburg, Pa., i 1 liavinj repainted and refurninhed Uie same, prepared to entertain all who may patronize l'a. It ik the aim of the proprietor, to furn .rfy ij-pri jr accommodations at moderate rate J wi'l fjure no pains to promote the coni of the guests. A liberal share of public :rona?c wilicited. J rd r72-tf. D. J j. PLSLE. YI,",'K HOUSE, HONESDALE, PA. j central location ot any Hotel In town. N l R. W. KIPLE k SON, v . J -Ham .street. Proprietors. :T,,.jr:u;m-?. 1873. ly. . : i IAt'K4WA.VA HOUSE. 01'1'OSITE THE DEPOT, Kat Stroudsburg, Pa. R. J. VAN COTT, Proprietor. ; i ie riAit contaiiiK the choiest Liquors and V jHI'K ""PP1 wth the best the market rds. Charge moderate. may 3 1872-tf. T ITSO.VS "i lllllii Vornnn llninii 117 and 119 North Second SL ABOVE ARCH, PHILADELPHIA. Nay 30, 1672- ly. KV. RDVVARD A VV T 1 SO M'S fnf W i I. I t liam-burgh, N. Y.) Reeipe for CON- t-nri IONaad ASTHMA earefttlly cota- funded at j HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG 8T0BJS. r- Medicines Fresh and Pure. '" 21. lT.J W. HOLLINSIIEAD. THE MONROE COUNTY Co-OperativB Life Insurance COMPANY. STROUDSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA. Limit 5,000 Members. CHARTER PERPETUAL. Any person of sound body and mind, ot either sex, not !ess than fifteen nor more than sixty-five yeara of age, and not enga ged in any occupation, exceedingly danger ous to life, may become a member of this Company, by paying an admission fee, as follows: From 15 to 40 years of aga $3 00 44 40 to 50 " " 5 00 " 50 to 60 4 10 00 " 60 to 65 20 00 And ore dollar for Tolicy. No other charges will be made at any time, excepting one dollar and ten cents for each member who dies. The advantages of this COMPANY over the ordinary Life Insurance Companies are, that the fees are eo small that the man of moderate nv-ons can secure a competency to his fani ly at a trifling cost, and payable at such lorig intervals, and such smiil sums, that no prrson can be inconvenienced by thm. This compmy cannot fall; no panics can affect it. Person holding cer tificates of membership in this Company, .ire sure in case of death that their families or heirs will get as many dollars as there are members in the Company. Xo restrictions are placed upon traveling or residence. Applications for insurance, or informa tion, may be made to the Directors or Secre tary, at Stroudsburg, Pa. DIRECTORS. R. S. Staples, H. R. Biesecker, M. F. Coolbaugh, Win. Fine, Kindarus Shupp, J. H. Fetherman, C. D. Brodhead, Peter Gruver, E. B. Dreher. R. S. STAPLES, Pres't. M. A. De L. Van Hcrn, Sec'y. March 6, 1373 tf. MONROE COUNTY Mutual Fire Iusurance Company. STROUrSBURG, PA. CHARTER PERPETUAL. The By-L-jws of this Company, and the regulations governing insurance have, re cently been very materially changed, pla cingit upon a b-ieis equal to that of any Fire Insurance Company in the State. Important among these changes ore the following, via: Policies, instead of being perpetual, are iftued for five years. All property is classified and the rate of premium is fixed according to the risk of the properly. Premium note are taken, and all as sessments are made on the notes. Property is insured for not more than two thirds of its actu.il cash value, and the full amount of insurance paid in case of loss, provided the loss be equal to the amount of insurance. "Annual assessments" only are made, ex cept in cases of heavy loss, and where a special assessment is necensary. The Company is therefore prepared to in sure property upon terms much more desira ble than under the old system. Applications may be made to any of the Managers, Surveyors, or Secretary. MANAGERS. StogrJell Stokes, J. Depue LeBar, Richard S. Staples, Silas L. Drake, Chas. D. Brodhead, Robert Boys, William Jacob Knecht, John Edinger. Francis Hagerman, Jacob Stouffer, Theodore Schoch, Thos. VV. Rhodes, Wallace. STOGDELL STOKES, Pres'l. E. B. Dbeher, Secretary and Treasurer. SURVEYORS. For Monroe County: Silas L. Drake, Thos. W. Rhodes, William Gilbert, J. Depue LeBar, Geo. G. Shafer, Jacob Stouffer. For Wayne County: F. A. Oppelt, Jos. L. Miller. For Pike County : Samuel Detrick. For Northampton County: Richard Camden. For Carbon County: Samuel Ziegenfus. 0r"The Managers meet regularly at the Secretary's Office in Stroudsburg, on the first Tuesday of each month, at 2 o'clock P. M.) May 15,'73-tf CAN YOU TEI.L WHY IT IS that when any one comes to Strouds burg to buy Furniture, they always inquire for McCarty. Furniture Store? Sent. 26 BLANKS OF ALL KINDS fur Safe at this Office. WHAT CAN WOMEN DO ? BY MRS. M A. FREERMAN. Solomon Brown had five daughters Tht oldest of these was twenty six, the youngest seventeen. In some of the heathen countries it is considered a misfortune when a girl is born. Solo mon Brown's mind may have been eol ored with this heathenism- though be owned a pew in the church and coe tributed conscientiously to its donations for he shook his head in solemn dis approval as his family increased, declar ing that girls were, and had been since the world began, a failure. Dear little Mrs. Brown emphatically declared her skepticism as to this broad assertion, saying, with some spirit, ''that the girls could not be dispensed with, and as the Great Father had seen fit to create them, it must have been with the con sciousness that they might be pronounced good. Of course they were good." She would just ask Mr. Brown what there was that might be said truthfully in disparage ment of their own children ? "If they were boys, Lucy," said Brown, footing up a dry goods bill, "they would be self supporting. If, for instance, Matilda had been named Solomon and you know that name has fallen to the eldest in our family for generations Bhe, or be rather, might have learned a trade, aud would now be able not only to care for himself, but to render needful aisis tance to his family. I am sure I never blamed Betsey Trotwood, though I don't understand her, that she couldn't forgive David for not being a girl, I have never forgiven one of my girls that they dis appointed me." "Dear me, Solomon, I am sure the girls are doing the best they can. Matilda is a very good dressmaker " "Bosh !" cries Solomon, impatiently, "the country is overruni with dress makers. I tell you all this feathers, fuss and flummery is ruining us that is the people. Don't you understand every additional girl is an additional burden to someone? How much do you suppose. Lucy, I paid out for ribbons last year 7 Only one hundred dollars." 'But, my husband, there were five of the girls, you know, not counting mylf, and that makes twenty dollars only, for each. I am sure that isn't extravegant at all. There's Deacon Smart's Sallie paid that much for one Roman sash. Our girls are very handy about turning tieir things, and fixiag them up as good as iew. There were only twenty four yards in the dears' dresses this spring that is in the dress of each while Mrs. Million used thirty five, and I must say that our girls' were much the prettiest." "And would have been prettier still if they had been made out of eight," growl ed Solomon, desperately footing up the accounts again. Figures are obstinate facts. Solomon, in faciog the sum total of united columns, beame an obstionate man. "I tell, you, Lucy, we can't go on in this way, that's certain. Something must be done. Why don't they got married V But that was a useless question, for tLis was a New England State, and there were several thousand more women than men, and as one man was allowed only one wife, it was quite impossible that all could be provided with a husband. 'Dear me, Solomon," said the little wife, smiling humorously, "you forget that this isn't Utah that there is ac tually no one to whom we may seal the darliDgs ; that you, yourself, would quite disapprove of their going husband hunt iog." Now, while Solomon had been talking thus complainingly and confidentially to his wife, his five unappreciated daughters had been listening from the next room. "The old bear," cried Matilda, the oldest, under her breath. "Poor papa," said Luey, the youogeat. her blue eyes full of tears. "Poor papa, indeed," snapped out the second sister. "I do believe he begrudges us the bird's allowance which we eat. "Bird's allowance ! Josephine. I'm sure there isn't a heartier family of girls in this couotry than ours. No canary's portion would do for me of that I'm sure. I do think it a shame that five great girls, as able to work as we are, should depend upon one little, broken down man for their suppott. Cone, now, Silda, isnt it ridiculeus? Don't you think that we onght to do something V "I'm sure," MatiIJa said, "that I have been trying just the best that I knew how. You know I bought the machine, and then then " "Well," Lucy said, laughing, "poor papa had to make the payments on it "I'm sure I couldn't help that, because I had expected to get plenty of sewing to do, and sewing, you see-- "Is a drug in the market. No, 'Tilda, and Josephine, and Sarah, and Flora, all of those pretty, traditional ways ot a wo man turning an honest peony are out of date. I've been thinking this over, and I've made op my mind. Come, girls, will you stand by me? Have you the courage to lay aside your dainty suppers, to encase your feet in heavy shoes, te let the sun kiss brown freckles on jour lace, in fact to wear a bloomer ? "A bloomer I" the four cicd together. Yes. bit dears, for of course the work that I. have laid out for us to do couldn't begone in trains. I have been thinking that we bad better take Jacob Sloan's farm for a year," and Miss Lucy, as bhe spoke, opened a pocket knife and com raenced whittling a bit of stick in true Yankee style. "Jacob Sloan's farm,!" they cried, aghast. "Yes, dean ; I was over talking to Jacob yesterday, and he's quite delighted that we should have thought of making the experiment. He is sure, he says, that it will be a success. Only think, girls, how nice it would be if we could help the old father now, after all of the trouble he has had with us. And what a triumph, too, if we could prove to him that girls are a blessing ; at least if not exactly that, still worth being born. What say you? Will you put your names to the contract 7 Come, now, don't be cowardly, not try to find excuses for shirking a duty. Jacob never had five more 'able bodied people than we are." "But what will the world say ? And then dear Lucy, you have had an offer, you know. Will Frank Lawler be satisfied that his future wife should eu gage in an unladylike occupation ?" "If he is dissatisfied that a woman should do what she may do well, I'm very glad to have an opportunity of lerning it before I'm Mrs. Frank Lawler, instead of Lucy Brown. If I have girls, you may rest assured that they shall be self sup porting, qiite indpendent of ontside help towards gaining a livelioood. If -they have a talent for music above the ordinary possession, they may become teachers. If not, they will not spend four hours a day in useless beating of their white, helpless fiogers against some ill used piano keys. If they are greatly gifted with superior intelligence, they may go into the professions ; if not, they will Ieran trades I don't mean milliners and dressmakers, and so on but nice little light trades, like watchmaking and engrav ing and drafting, and, indeed, heavier ones, if they have the muscle. We all have muscle. There is no excuse that we should remain idle. The would is full of work, and I can'-t understand why any honest calling should be unwomanly. Come, girls, let us go and sign the coo tract which binds us to work on old Jacob's farm." "Dear me, Solomon," said the wife Lucy in the evening, "you could not goess what those girls have done." "Perhaps purchased each a new silk. growled Solomon, without lifting his eyes front his paper. 'No, mded not, cried the wife in dignantly. "They've rented Jaeob Sloan's farm eighty acres, and twenty of it in fruit" "What!" cried Solomon, the paper falling helplessly at his feet. "You don't surely mean our girls not Matilda, and Josephine, and Sarah, and Flora, and Lucy 7" "I mean no one else s girls, surely, the wife replied, a little crossly. "They take possession in the morning. Jacob Sloan is to find everything, and they are to have one half." "I'll just tell you, Lucy, what it is. This is the most consummate piece of humbug I ever heard of. It will be a dead failure, and they'll make themselves the laughing stock of the whole neighbor hood. Farmiug, indeed ! Y hy, 'lilda is that afraid of her hands that she never sweeps, even, without gloves ; and Flora wraps her bead in a towel to dust 1 ve seen Josephine do the breakfast things with the dish rag clinging to a fork, and Sarah wraps her fingers with a bit of cloth, each one separately, if she has vegetables to prepare. Brave farmers they will make !" And Solomon Brown went back to his paper with a scornful chuckle. Solomon, too, was some of a fogy. Women were women, and women they must remain to the cod of the chapter. A great pity, be bad often said that it was so, but nature couia sol be torturcu out of her old, well worn channels by education. Eve, he considered as having been a vicious sort of little body, bend ing poor Adam's nose down close to the grindstone, and there her daughters had relentlessly held it, through all of the long years since that first tragedy. Solomon believed in progression. He thought that the sciences might be bet ter understood ; that new discoveries were to be made ; that the Atlantic would be crossed in a bolloon ; but Solomon's radicalism didn't include the coming wo man. She was to be what she had been from the beginning. So he pooh-poohed at his daughters' farming not believiog that any good thing should come out of Nazareth. It was an up hill road to those five dainty daughters of Solomon Brown. But in one thing they resembled their father. They were obstinate, and when they learned his prediction as to their failure, they were quite determined not to fail. They were up early and worked late. Their straw berties were a success. They gave employment to a number of girls in the village in gathering their small fruits, thus recognizing the true policy, that women must help each other, ihey kept one hired man, and under hi in struetioo these young ladies learned to turn a ready hand to all kinds ot farm labor. Old Solomon Brown'e "pooh pooha" ?rew less eranhatio. and he began to speak with a aort of shamefaced pride of "our girls' place." Then, when the fame of these women's farming bad traveled far, and people came from a distance to iDfpeet personally their success. Solomon began to feel proud in saying! "Yes, si', they are my.girls." "Your girls are all boy9, then," said one, smiling, quoting Rip Van Winkle. "Just as good as boys," said Solomon Brown, blushing at the retraction of old sentiments. Bat theories must fall be fore convictions, and well filled wheat, fine potatoes, good corn, etc., were more convincing to Solomon of his daughters' worth than volumes favoring the "subjec tion of woman." Solomon Brown's daughters still bold Jaeob Sloan's farm. . Luey, the young est, is married to Frank Lawler, but instead of her going home to him, aa is the manner of the world, he came home to her. Under the homestead laws a woman that isn't at the head of a family that is, a widow cannot pre-empt land. If this was not the case, I do believe that one of Solomon Brown's would go west and take up apiece of land. As it is, they are all going in the spring, and Solomon will enter a hundred and sixty acres in his own name, which in reality will belong to his daughters, as it will be purchased with the profits of their farming Jacob Sloan's land. Our Fire side Friend. THE SIAMESE TWINS. Further Details of their Deaths An other Physician's Account Negotia tions for a Post-Mortem Examination. A New York Herald correspondent writing from Mount Airy, N. C, gives the following account of an interview with Dr. William Ilollingsworth, a brother of Dr. Joe Ilollingsworth, now in Philadel phia, relative to the death of the Siamese Twins : Dr. Holliugsworth explaiued that Chang had an attack of paralysis after re turning from Europe last year ; that he had been suffering from pneumonia or severe lung cold for the past month, and that he (the doctor) believed that it was exposure before he had sufficiently recovered from this malady that precipi tated his death. On Friday Eng was as well as usual, Chang not apparently very much worse. Eng was in excellent spirits, and seemed remarkably cheerful and sprightly, Chang, on the other hand, from the debility caused by his paralysis and cold, together with a certain stupidity resulting from the use of too much stimu- j lant, was fretful, sullen and snappish when spoken to, which of late was his accus tomed conduet. 1 All the family retired at the usual hour. Eog'8 wife and children slept up stairs ; the twins slept down stairs. It was five o'clock in the morning when one of Eog's sons heard, as he thought, a call from his uncle Chang. Responding aa quickly as possible, he came down stairs, and, goiug to the side of the bed upon which his uncle Chang lay, found him lying, apparently. in a deep sleep, but was startled by the ghastly and singular appearance of the features, which wore an expression of pain, if not agony, and were much darker than he had ever seen them before. After a closer examination the boy dis covered his uncle was dead, and uttering an oft repeated cry of "Uncle Chang is dead ! alarmed the whole househould, all of whom speedily came pouring into the room in their night dresses. The tumult caused by the death of Chang the hurry and noise in sending for the doctor aud for Chang's wife and children, must have so terribly shocked Log that his nervous system became com pletely prostrated, and he never uttered a word except the single expression, "And I must die, too." Two hours from the diseovery of Chang 8 death Drs. Wui. Iloillingsworth and Taylor arrived, only tofiud the twins dead. Correspondent. How long do you think Eng had been dead when you ar rived 7 Dr. Ilollingsworth. Not more than ten or fifteen minutes. Correspondent. Do you think his death was caused by any vital connection or artery passing from one to the other through the ligament that united them 7 Dr. ilollingsworth. I am confident that Eug's death was produced by no such cause. Correspondent. Do you not believe the existence of some such vital connco tion through the ligament? Dr. Ilollingsworth I do not, because I have attended them when one was sick and the other in good health, and when there was as much as tweoty beats dif fereoce to the minute in their pulsation Correspondent What, then, in your opinion, caused Eng s death f Dr. Ilollingsworth. The great shock and terror inspired by such a uuion with death, added to which wan the belief which prevailed between them that when one died the other would. 1 hese com bined to destroy his mental faculties and paraljse his physical energies, and he uccumbed to the dread visitation. Correspondent You do not thiok, then, that if the ligament had been sev ered bis life would have been saved 7 Dr. Ilollingsworth I do not. I rather think that any operation, unless perform ed immediately upon the discovery of Chang's death, would have hastened his (Eog's) death. WHAT AN OLD FRIEND SAYS- Upon my arrival at Mount Airy I fouud the residence of the twins was sev eral miles from the village, and, the hour be'iDg very late, I was unable to go there. As the doctor's information was not en tirely satisfactory I next sought and ob tained an interview with Mr. Isaac Arm field, an old intimate friend of the twiu., who was present and helped them out af ter their demise. "Mr. Armfield," I asked, "is it your opinion that Eng died from the shock or friiiht occasioned by his brother's death?" Mr. Armfield. No, sir, it is not. I am as well satUfied that blood flowed from . o. . to the other through that connecting I 'anient as that the same blood flows in my right aud left arm. Correspondent. Then you think it was the death of Chang that precipitated the death of Eng ? Mr. Armfield. Yes, sir. After Chang'e death the blood from Eng's body flowed into his, but there being no responsive vitality it could not flow back, so that Eng died from exhaustion and loss of blood, and not from any shock or fright. Up to the time of En-'s death the liga ment, which is some eight inches in length, was warm as far as -hcre it en tered Chang's body, which was cold at the time. The very nsture of the liga ment, which is four inches wide and as thick as my wrist, passing from the abdo men of one to the other, and in the cen tre of which is the navel of the twins, is- proof positive that the sauia blood that flowed in the veins of one flowed -also in those of the other. Correspondent. Why, then, des the doctor persist in saying that it was from a shock or fright that Eng died ? Mr. Arms-field. I, do not know ; but I heard Dr. Bill Ilollingsworth eay that he would rather have the bodies of the dead twins than the whole of Surry couu ty. Coirespondent. What appearance did the twins prescut after their death. Mr. Armfield. Chang was nearly black in the face, and looked as if he had died in a fit or in great agony. Eng looked as if he had been asleep. Correspondent. Do you know whether Eng made any expression of pain before he died ? Mr. Armfield. Yes. I inquired par ticularly about that, and found that ho called repeatedly to those around him to rub and pull his arms and leg, that he was cramped a sure idication of loss of blood, or that the circulation was impeded from some eause, and this confirms ihc it the opinion that the death of Chang superinduced that of Eng. NO OPERATION aX THE LIGAMENT. No effort whatever was made to per form an operation on the ligament with regard to ascertaining whether there wa an artery pising through it or not, as that would have materially interfered with prospective greenbacks, and present speculations would have been nipped in the bud. Embalmed and preserved as. tbey are, the bodies of the twins will havo a market value from which money can always be realized by those having pos session of them. lhe ligament eut m the interest of science, the curiosity would be destroyed, and, consequently, the separate dead bodies wound be of no value. I have been iuformed, on the rao.t au thentic authority, that Dr Joe Ilollings worth, while en route for the North, stated here that his mission there was to dispose of the dead bodies of the twins on the iuoa favorable terms he could ne gotiate This accounts for the veil of mystery which has been thrown over the . deaths of the twins, and furnishes the clew to the object in suppressing the real cause of the death of Eng, by attributing it to the shock or fright occasioned by Chang's death. The sum asked for the privilege of a postmortem examination is staled to be S3000 or $10,000. Frank Cowan, who writes novels, tells this in the last number of his Fajter : That a burglar should be captured by a skeleton seem an impossibility, but the fact actually happening iu Greeusburg ou Saturday night last disposes of auy question as to possibility. Brcakiug into a closed and unoccupied office of a physi cian of that towu, a burglar opened a closet (while his corupauiou with a dark lantern was in another part of the room) aud feeling for clothing at about the height of closet hooks generally, got his hands between the jaws ot a skelton, which, being adjusted with u eoil spring ank kept opeu with a thread, closed sud denly on the iutrudiug hand by the break ing of the thread. A sudden thought, striking the burglar oMiis being caught by a skelton in the doctor's closet, so ter rified him that he uttered a faint shriek,, and when bis companion turned the lan tern toward hint and he beheld himself, iu the prim and ghastly j.aws of Death himself he became so overpowered by fear that he faiuted, fell iruensible to the floor, pulling tke (kclton down upon him, and making so much noise that his companion fled immediately, and the doc tor alarmed at the noise and confusion, hastened into the ofSe, and secured tho terror-ttriekeu buicUr feliU held by the skeleton 1 The pleadiaga of the burglar, wka was reeognited by the physician a a citizen of Greeusburg for several years, and a iuan generally held iugoad esteem, were so pitiful and effective that the doc tor releaned him, showed him tho door, and bade him good night with the toe of his right boot, with a verbal reminder that if he was ever afterward in Greens burg an information would hi milo ugH'Drl him forthwith- -. c . t : V: V-' .'. rt ' i ij I'm I