ADVERTIBINGII ATE& St Vno. 3 mos. 6 mos 17r. 1.50 1.75 3.50 , 6.50 12.0 0 3.00 3.60 6.50 9.00 20.0 4.00 5.25 9.(4) 17.03 25.0 0 11.50 17.00 26.30 4.1.10 13.30 nm am mO 20.071 40.0) 00.03 MOO 30.00 60.00 110 00 200.00 e o B en a a r re ra • area Squares Stu Square,,, . Closrtor Column Holt Column. Clae Column Professional Card. sl.ooper Hue per year. Administrator's and Auditor's Notices. MOO • Clip Notices, 20 cents per line lst Insertion 15 coats per Ins each subsequent Insertion. Ten lines agate constitute a square. ROBERT IREDELL, JR., PußLiermn, ALLENTOWN. PA Coat :ant( Lumber. CHAS. W. ABBOTT JAB. M. RITTER. Uns9n Street, near Lehigh Valley Depot, Allentotoii RITTER & ABBOT 11, MANUFACTURERS OF flask,Noors, Outside Blind:. Inside Blinds, Mould • ings, Brackets Baltietera, Picket., Stair Rail ings, Window Frames, Door Frames, &c. SCROLL HAWING TURNING, PLANI M NG. ATCHING. FLOORING Ana RIPPING DONE AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE. ALSO. STAIR BUILDING done and HAND RAILING made to order. . . Having WINV had almost nye years' possession of the Mill, refernishod it almost wholly with new and Improv ed machinery, and havin none but experienced work men, we are prepared to g defy competition from at home and abroad, both in price and workmanship. Do you contemplate building 1 Call at oar Factory and satisfy yourself with a personal examination. Drawings for Imildings, brackets, patterns for orna mental work,,scrolis for porches, can be seen at ell limes by calling at our odice. Any information to the builder furnished cheerfully and freely, by calling at the Manu factory, on Union street, at the Jordan Bridge, Allot, town, I'o., or by ]utter through thermst office. • tug 3-Iy] BITTER & ABBOTT. A FILOORT. B. OTTO. R. IC OTTO. 0. W. MILLER FILBERT, OTTO dc MILLER, MADIIIFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN LUMBER, W L LIA.AISPORT, PA. MILL ON CANAL. WEST OF MAYNARD STREET OFFICE AT TILE MILL W F CRANE 40001. 1 aug 70-1 T EIS rt 3 nub Oil etoti RICH AND ELEGANT CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &C S. C. FOULK. NO. 19 S. SECOND ST., PHILA., (Flrel Carpel Storo below Market, Eaxt Invitee attention to Me mplendid tomortment of Imported and American CARPETS, which will be cold at a very mall advance. Goods warranted an repremuted no that All can buy with confidence and satisfaction. Spectactro. 'SPECTACLES! SPECTACLES!! 17 ETE GLASSES, Ste. spAegf,x,z°mlrl.V.°o::2,';!;o:"°` all alada of CHAS. S. AIASSEY'S, NO. 23 EAST HAMILTON STREET, ALLENTOWN, PA Raving devoted a great deal of care and attention to the Spectacle business for thew lent few yearn, I tied that my buelnenn In that Mohan increased no tench that I have do tennined to matte It a SPECIALTY. There in no article manufactured in which there is so much deception prac• tined an then is in Spectacle Olesses. Knowing that the public have boon frequently humbugged by parties pro. exorbitant have a superior article of ()lawns, upon g prices for ihnni, thereby training the no. °wellies and infirmiii. °rage, I have taboo pains to se lect a largo and complete assortment of the finest and bent Mennen ever manufactured, thus affording all persons needing Spectacles an opportunity of purchtmlng at reit '""bi° Pricer. Persona haying no/ dtfficulty in being wiled elsewhere will do well to give me a rah, as I find confident that no one will fail to be suited. Remember the old Wand, No. Si Eant Hamilton street, opposite the Cier. man Rolm mod Church, Allentown, Pa. jun :3 'GS tf Clothing, GREAT ATTRACTION 1 NEW FIRM! NEW GOODS! CLOTHING ! CLOTHING GRAND SPRING AND SUMMER OPENING; GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES! T. OSNIUN & CO., Successors to Metzgar & Oamun• BARGAINS AT TUB GREAT CLOTHING EMPORIUM IN REIMER'S BUILDING. NO. 605 HAMILTON STREET, ALLENTOWN, PA. We would Inform the citizens of Allentown and the gar rounding country that we ore prepared with a larao stock or goods for FALL AND WINTER WEAR, and offer Into to the public at reasonable prices. To those Rho buy their Clothing ready-mode, they are prepared to offer BA ROAINS• . WHOLE SUITS MADE TO ORDER! COATS, PANTS AND VESTS Cut and medulla the latent style, and by the best worknien. OUR STOCK OF CLOTHING, CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES le larger than It has been before, and we Intend to sell at •ery SMALL. PROFITS, and give our custoutera the bone. fit of our low purchase. Great quantities and varieties of NECKTIES, CUFFS, COLLARS, And everything In the line of GENT'S IPURNISIII.NO GOOD'S, MEN'S, YOUTHS', ROTS' and CHILDREN READY—MADE CLOTHING, CONSTANTLY ON HAND. do D o • , 3n a lf r o e rugh t e tr ilmi, No• SOS Hamilton street, third T. 08MON, S ICO/1 H• Scnott. Iliac.. LYRA • mar 24 if lIUTWON & M'CONNELL, FURNITURE IVAILEROWIN, NO. BD9 MARKET STREET, /EL North Shlo PUILADELPHIA. PARLOR, DINING-ROOM, AND A M I3ER FURNITURE. Of the Latest Styles and Debt Manufacture. ALSO, Feather Beds and Mattresses. seral•Nn C°NSIIOHOCKEN BOlLlillt AND COIL WORKS, JOHN WOOD, JR • 1 MA II F•CTIMII II OF "k; L T R I D I 1 0 1"" NIIEI.ICWRZ L(A All kinds of Wrought Iron Colin, Totten. for Blast ',or nate, UtleOlnotorn, Smoke Stackm,lllant Pipon.lron W heel barrown, and everything In the Boller and Sheet Iron lino. Also, all kinds of thou nod Steel Forging,. and 131acknutith work, Mlnern. Tools of all kinds, such us Whew Buckets, Piclin, Drills. Mallets, Sledges. &o. Ilavlng a Sloan, hammer undsel of tool, of all kinds and skilled workmen, 1 dotter myself that I coo tutu out work with promptuens and dispatch, all of which will i.o • warranted to be nrst•clann. Patel/Big nollorn, and repairing generally, strictly M ended to., am 17 MORE l'opullux than nny Other I ALWAYS ON THE LEAD. . The Glory of the Morning and Any Other Time The Celebrated Morning Olory Stoves are tnenufnetnrett this Sear In greater quantities Onto ever before, t o trive t tito groat emend for It first. days glove. They uro sold by WM. G. RITTER, DEALER IE STOVES & TIN WA RE, 831 Hamilton St., Allentown. 'Twelve hundred of these Stove. have been solo to lids COllO7 durlog the peat Ave ear, every on,• of which has Ivan unlimited natlsfactlon,whlch Is the best recom mendation they need have. Always on hand all kinds of Stoves,llaugoa, Furnaces, Orates, Tin Rod Shcet•lron Ware. A torso variety of modern Cook Stoves, such as • REOVLATOR. Islth Revolving Top. RUT BLAST EXCELSIOR COOK. • SPEAR'S ANTI-DUST COOK. ALL RICH COLD K. IIk.DL. ETC Also. a large •arlety of the noel approved Boating Stoves. oet..tr . . WANTED.—A good Shoemaker. Bloat be a good workman and eober and ateady. Wage. good and pAld regn lady. Innen.° at the 1409. EXPIIIIBI3 - OFFICE. (7ATASAVQQA. PA. VOL. XXVI THE Kramer FALL WITH ONE OF THE LARGEST AND CHOICEST STOCKS OF MEM DRY GOODS! To be found in the City embracing the Latest and Newest Novelties of the Season,adapt able for Ladles' and Men's Suitings, guaranteed to be sold at October 11- THE ATTENTION —OP IsieNUFACTIMERS, DEALERB & IMPORTERS Iron, Steel, Hardware. Railway Supplies, Lubricat ing WIN. White Lead, Etc., 19 INVITED TO TILE IRON WORLD AND MANUFACTURER, TIIE Largest Metal Prize Current IN TUE WORLD. The hiding journals of thin country and Europe n cog nile it hn tho Itepr,eutatlvo Parer of Ulu A tater- ICon Mots] Trades. The publishers have ever since tills jour nap was estab lished, Ono!ol ed the shiest ce-pondentc owl solicitors to be prorated ; expending inure or ey for their calories alone than the entire expencec 01 many prominent Ilemis pv:rdor.4,';',,';',';',',:^,',l'.',?".;.J'ii,r"."4.l?::cTrd,:bi'.l'l`,e4'. ';' i - hs . eplutrto i Ns World lc far greater thou that of any clinllar publication In this country. =E;IIIEMM:II I===tEM The Insr 'Tar ni Ern and in r ri pe anti Tianiiro phica I A Pyu r 1,11,,, SI cow( to Nne, Lorsitsd In the very centre of the metal Interests of the United 'town. with correspondents at the trading cities of the Eant, West sod South, we do not err lu claiming that it in DIE II APB ENENTATIV a JODIL N A Lof the Metal Manufacturers, 'Workers, and Dealers of thin country. An a joutnal for machinists and metal workers, it has no rival and contains every week the choicest selections from engiumring, mining and scientific publications of thin country tied Europe. Its motto In “Progrena," and It has rompeiled other Journals, of a similar CIIELECIEE,TO POLLED' IN ILA LEAD. Ha renders compel. Iron and Stool Manufactureen, Machinists. Founders, Hardware Dealers and Tummies Ounetnithn, Plumbere, Cutlery ac Manufturern, File Manufacturers ,Saw Manufacturers, Boiler Manufacturers, and leading Hallway lthilcialn. UGLY. ti 4.00 PER ANNUM. If you aro 111 the metal trade, take a foetal paper. It will nave you more than Ito C. , . It you are a mutually Juror take Um juurital that advoratea your. Interests. E=l From a large number of notices from the prone, wo se lect the following : - . . (From the Chicago Journal of Commerce.) TITS mete WORLD •NDIII•2ICYACTrItEIt.—A Represen tative of /Merkel& Metal Manufacturers, Workers and Dealem—Thin is the title and descriptive character of a neatly printed and profanely illustrated folio of thirty•sly columns, published by the 1110: , WORLD PUOL181111(0 CoMP•IIT Pittsburgh. The folue before ns Is volume 2, I No. It. to-editorial, descriptions of uttrufactures, re• rout Inrprovrmouln, correspondence, market reports,otc., Indicates lodustry and ability. It deserves the patron age of all Interested in the prosperity of American manu• factures in general. It will, however, bo more particu larly luterentlug to those engaged in the iron and hard ware trade. /loch will welcome Ms weekly returns an an ...tie' aid to every department of their busluens. From the Cincinnatti Merchants' and Manuracturers' A SUCCESSFUL NEWSPAPER.—We aro pleased le note the evidences of meccas. lu the loon WORLD, of Pittsburgh. It is young healthy and vigorous. and has vastly im• proved In appearance and tone during the past throe or four mouths. It Is LONE one of the most attractive WM .se organs in the country. It Is edited with washed abidly, and, as its name Implies, is devoted to the iron and metal interests of the country. Its mmket reports of metals, hardware, manufactures,ho., are very full, complete and reliable. It is payin g it a high,but merited compliment, to say that it in the leading organ of the Iron and metal interests of the United States. hlsoufae. tureenand metal dealers everywhere should subscribe for the IEOII WORLD •ND AI•NUFACTURBR. SAMPLE COPIES MAILED FREE. ADDRESS. IRON WORLD PUBLISHING CO., Iron World Building, PITTSBURGH, PA THE GREAT TARIFF JOURNAL FOR WORKINIMEN, SENT ON TRIAL three months for 26 cents. The AM R• ICON %V Or.KitiO fEOPILIS is one of the finest publics tions lu the world. Contains 10 pages, or 04 columns of reading *natter, designed to Interest, instruct and ad vance the best Interests of workingmen. illustrations of prominent workingmen In each Issue. Numbers its thousands of subscribers. Only .1.f41 per your, or on trial three mouth, for 2.1 tents, elolu your name, Town, County and Mate plainly, enclose the money, loud attar.. IRON WORLDCO., Inos. Wont.. 111,11.D1P141, Pittsburgh, Pa. *San genie reamed ou :ruler) or ritrt.i.llt d utiv•tr w =I FANCY DYEING ESTABLISHMENT 0113=3121 No. North Front Sire , t. Plsamiciploto, BILANcIiOrrICE, Colt. 0111 AND Viol. Dye Silks. Woolen and Piney (Mode of every &scrip Dom limn' nil enunly of Dyeing Mullen' and Gould) mown Garments Is known. Crave end Merino !Mewls dyed the most brilliant and ORM colors, Crape .11 Merino Shawls cleansed to look like yew. Mao, Gentlemen's Apparel, tw% Curtnnw, cleansed or re-dyed. Kld Gloyeaelenused or dyed to look like now. Ca-Call and look nt our work beturo going elsewhere. Aug 2.1.Gu0 te D IMS. JORDAN it DAVIESON, Proprietors of the Gallery of Anatomy and Museum of Science, 807 CIIES'rNUT BT. PHILA. • HaveJuxt published a new mlitlon of their lectures,con. lallnag Moat valuable Information on the CoUsee. Mow goatee, end treatment of dimities of the reproductive system. with REMARKS ON 11•8111A011 and She 'orlon, Causes 011 Do WARD/ MANHOOD. with full oIEUCUOIIe for Ito 00111110 e restoratioo; also a chapter uo ERNEUE•L IN. TReense, sue the allays op WWI, behalf the moat KOK• PRIRESNIVE WORK on the subject ever yet published— eOluprlslna DA) page.. Mailed freo to auy address for TW11X133 , 41V0 cools. Address Drs. JORDAN & DAVIESON, CONSULTINCI OFFICE, 1625 Filbert Street, Philadelphia. Sep 23.17 dam cqirbr Vrbigh CLEAR TRACK in the Field 011 FOR .THE AND WINTER OP' 1871 I BOTTOM PRICES ! FURS ! FURS I LADIES, If you want to bay Furs, go to the well-known and mast reliable titoro of Importer and Exporter of Furs, 710 ARCH STREET, (OPPOSITE ST. CLOUD DOTEL,) PHILADELPHIA, Where you hate the selection froth the most extensive assortment of all (o c c ur l ions at the lowest manu facturing priced. Sets from $5.00 up to the most Costly Russian Crown Sable HUDSON BAY and MINH SABLE. ERMINE, CHINCHILLA, SQUIRREL, nod every va riety or the latest styles SA' HUES ofEcal Skin, Porsition nod Astrachan. ALL MINDS OF FUR TRIMMING, Also the finest niisortinent of FANCY ROBES, WHITE FOX, BEAVER. WHITE POLAR nod BLACK' BEAR, HUDSON BAY WOLF, Ac. ALL GOODS WARRANTED AS REPRESENTED. CALL BEFORE PURUHASING ELSEWHERE. WM. KEINATII, No. 710 Areh Mrect, Philadelphia. novls.3th Or ALLENTOWN ROLLING MILL Co ., sdc.B. to THAYER, ERDMAN, WILSON & CO., Menu fecturern of STEAM. ENGINES AND BOILERS, BRIDGE CASTINGS, RAILROAD TURN TABLES, MILL GEARING, HUFFING, Furnace, Rolling Mill and Mining Work, &c., &c. N. B.—All work guaranteed and delivery prompt. L. 11. GROSS, Sup't. auguet 9-3 m v) MOW W. KEINATH, WILMINGTON AND READING RAILROAD SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS, Free of Taxes We are offering the Second Mortgago bonds of this Com pony AT 85 AND ACCRUED INTEREST, Interest Payable January and July. I=l 1000 s, 500 a, and 100 s, And coo be REGISTERED freo of expeueo The coat, mlecellaneene, freights and passenger bust. nese are couhtautly Increasing. The receipts for the year ending octet. 31.1371. were $79,773 172 more than the year ending' Octet., 31 MN. The incrse for Plorember,lB7l, over ovember, 1170. was $1460.74. ea Bonds, Pamphlets and Bformation can be obtained of DE lIAVEN & BRO., No. 40 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA di.c2.1.1y w MRS. GULDIN'S Ladies' Trimming Store, . ALLENTOWN, PA. The trade at this old and well known entablishment Is constantly increasing. owing to the fact allot NEW GOODS are being constantly received or .the LATEST STYLES and always callable to the wants of her numerous 4:noiso mely. People should lawny. lin Where they sou OUZO toll united at low figures. ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10, 1872 MAKING IT EVEN. lam an animal painter. I have studied my art in nearly every menagerie in the country, and.so have come in contact with strange peo ple and have seen uncommon sights ; and thus it was that in order to draw at my leisure some newly arrived creatures with the wildness of the desert and jungle still within them, I joined a travelling company for the summer, and so beheld the thrilling scene I here record. . The owner of the show was a good-natured soul of the rolling stone sort, who never gath ered as much moss as he deserved, and yet allowed no fungus of funds to interfere with social fellowship or a kindly action ; and con sequently tho people about him worked with a friendly will, and except during the necessary journeying and labor there were generally jolly times among the employes of the Grand Un rivaled Cosmopolitan Menagerie. There was only one man who never larked and never Bang, never joked and never grumbled ; who was always silent without being sbrly, took . his share of things to do and seemed to set himself apart from his comrades In sheer lone liness of spirit ; ho shirked no toll and yield ed no confidence. Gradually it fell upon him, as from his own choice, to attend the cages, and to perform all the jobs that the boldest sometimes shrank from as dangerous, though he showed no signs of fear,and evinced no distaste for his exceptionable employment. I watched him often as ho busied himself about the beasts, and had to admire in this common-looking and uncultivated man the unconscious coolness and courage with which he accomplished his self-appropriated tasks. At length my curiosity concerning him was sufficiently excited to ask Mr. Kingeley, the proprietor of the menagerie, if lie knew any thing more of him than what appeared on his every-day surface. Mr. Hingaley hesitated a moment before he answered and then slowly said :—" lam rather sorry you questioned nit) about Quiet Bill—that's what the men call him, you know —for no ono else has cared to guess that there may be more connected with him than just the business he seems to belong to ; and of all the folks in this caravansary he and I are the only ones that know what he was before he came here; and if I tell you, it is just because you see the 'man's a man for a' that,' and because J know you'll keep the secret. I don't sup pose you remember, as the papers are so full of murders now a-days, one that was commit ted years ago in the county town of Cl—. Not a cold-blooded atrocity; though,but the 'r un of jealousy provocations and liquor, and not altogether unjustifiable either. Bill was the chap did it, and only escaped hanging through having a smart lawyer, and got off in about the same way that 'not proven' sets a man free from a Scotch trial. But the people where he lived would have nothing to do with him ; and he stayed among them like an out law, for he had neither the money nor chance to run away and could scarcely got a stroke of work that would earn his daily bread. I was bead of a small circus then—not such a stun ning concern as this on hand now , and when we put up the tent for a single day at C—, this Bill watched an opportunity to get mo alone, when no one else would notice him, and told me his whole story begging me to give him something to do to keep him from starv ing or suicide ; and he had such a hunted down and woe begone look that I could not help pittying the poor fellow ; and though I wasn't very able to take another hand just then, I gave him what change I could spare, and told him to slip off to the next town and join us there, so that the rest of my men shouldn't know anything about Lis history and chaff him about the past—for they are a rough lot sometimes and not over particular about hurting feelings either in sport or spite. And so he has been along with me ever since. I have had hold of several ventures besideS that and this, but make or fall, pay or put off, Bill has stuck by me through all. There is real grit as well as use in him, and I have seen it sharply tried more than once and have never been sorry I gave him a helping hand in his need. But it often seems to me, though he never speaks of it, that he always thinks ho is serving out his time for that old affair by tak ' tog up the hardest things ho can find to do ; for I do believe he has on his mind some rude idea of personal atonement for the blood he shed. And now you know all I have to tell. Do not let it speak out of your eyes to him, even though your tongue ain't likely to let it slip." I had no occasion to guard myself thus, for, now I knew his story, it was plain to me from his face that Quiet Bill had suffered and I have always heldthe doctrine that where a sin Is thoroughly repented of, men should allow to die out of remembrance that which the good God forgives; and so, after a silent fashion, he and I became rather friendly. I talked to him and made him talk some also about the creat ures in his charge, and praised him a little once or twice, and saw the dark blood sweep up to his brow like a girl's blush; and after awhile, when he had leisure, he would come and sit near me when I was sketching, and take curious but wordless note of my work, and occasionally suggested to me some slight points that caused me to wonder at his close and quick observation. Mr. Kingsley bad al ways a cheery something to say to him; and as I look back now lam glad to think that Bill seemed to take an unusual comfort, as time went on, out of the distant companion ship with us two. The season had been extremely hot, and August fairly blazed with the dry fierce heat of a long drouth. It was on one of the scorch ing, electric, kind of days that make men feel listless, and beasts restless and wicked to deal with, that we halted in the suburbs of a grow ing city, and spread the canvas for an exhibi tion. The big Bengal tigress bad been un usually uneasy all the morning; when lying prone on the floor of the cage, she lashed her powerful tail , and panted out low ominous growls as if the bloodthirsty spirit of her lost liberty was angrily astir, and she would start up with a sudden bound that shook her prison and impatiently pace its narrow limits with yellow eyes all aflame, and snarling lip drawn over the strong and hungry looking teeth; and once or twice she rolled herself against the thick wires, and caught them in her great claws as If she longed to tear the resting bars from their secured sockets. Bill kept careful watch on her antics, and I heard him say to himself. "There'll be troublowith that vixen." But the rest of the collection were feverish and fretful, too, and between furnishing thorn all with fresh drinks, and throwing water on some to cool them off, he had quite as much as he could do before the hour fixed for the performance, without devoting especial at tention to any one animal. There was a crowded audience from far and near; whole families, from the father down to the babe in arms, were ranged on the hard benches to enjoy the acting elephants and precocious ponies. There was even an ex traordinary number of children, for a thriving Sunday school had entered early, and noise lessly secured nearly all the front seats, and delighted anticipation shone on rows of chubby and eager countenances. The peanut' boys drove a heavy trade, and the venders of mugs of mead had a very profitable and active time and all was going on merry as a marriage boll In the ring and out of It, when I suddenly became aware that something serious was the matter, for I saw Bill Blip quickly from behind the cage of the still fidgettlng tigress, and come to a stapeaque stand in full front of the emus ed people who scarcely observed him, amidst a round of uproarious applause ; but he was in his shirt sleeves and deadly pale—as well he might be, having just discovered that the mighty beast beside him bad, by some unno ticed frantic effort, so loosened the structure of her cage that the next wrathful movement would render it fearfully unsafe. There was not a minute to be lost in the creature's evi dently excited condition, further aggravated by the sounds' of the band and tormenting at tacks of exasperating flies; and 13111 had rush ed out to look for Mr. Kingsley among the audience where he usually sat, and tell him to dismiss the crowd as rapidly and quietly as possible, not knowing what instant the nuns eery power of protection would be past, but not seeing him nt the moment in his accus toured place, Bill scarcely hesitated at announ cing the danger himself; but before his slow speech could be framed into words that Could warn, not to severely alarm, it was too late. The awful animal crouching warily in a corner of its shattered enclosure, gave one abrupt vault, and, swift as lightning, amidst the startled shrieks of the terror-stricken throng, rushed into the open space before the encirling seats. For a second it stood still there, as though dazed by its freedom, while the struggling mass of scared , humanlty, with scarce a regard for life and limb of each other, fled in frenzied haste and fright. But just as she had gathered herself tip for her second spring, our quiet Bill made a simultaneous leap and landed square on her bristling back, with his muscular arms clasped tightly around her cock, and his legs wound around the lithe and outstretched loins. Dismayed by this unexpected obstruction, for the space of a breath 'or two the tigress stood at bay then, with n horrible roar, rolled over and over in the ring. We could hear Bill's bones break beneath her appalling effort it to dislodge him, for a sudden silence fell upon the selfish crowd that swayed aside from flight to watch this shocking contest between undaunted man and untamed brute. In vain she turned and twisted, reared and plunged. Bill held fast, though the blood poured from his mouth, and blinded the beast's sight—held fast, with the grip of everlasting fate, till Mr. Kingsley, snatching a loaded pistol from a trembling ruffian at his side, who had just threatened with It some woman in the way of hie escape, stretched his firm hand, and sent a bullet straight into the savage creature's brain. One sharp convulsion of the heavy frame, one final heaving of the burdened back, and she lay still at last, ri ith Quiet Bill partly underneath her crushing weight. Tender hands lifted him and bore Ida senseless body to the nearest comfortable place, and more than ono strong man dropped unshamed tears over the maimed comrade who had so gallantly sacrificed his own life for others ; for if not companionable, Bill had done many a kindly deed for his asso ciates, In his own, unobstruslve way, that, when the hour of trial came, the roughest remembered. Turn by turn we watched by him, but we knew that nothing more could Le done for him, in this world ; and even in hi agony, he was so grateful for the interest man ifested, that it seemed as if ho wondered that any had cared for him, and it was touching to hear him gasp out, lietwren his throes of an guish, how good We all were to him. Butthe end came soon. The doctor told him, and he heard it calmly, and bore it brave ly. Mr. Kingsley and I were beside him a few moments after, when he turnial to the former, and said, earnestly : " I think I've it even, sir." • "What, Bill?" " Why, you know, sir, I took a life ; and I reckon I saved ono,ltho other day, didn't I?" Mr. Kingsley took both the cold hands In his own. "Yes,indeed, Bill, and many more, perhaps, and gave youre, too." " Then you think it's even ?" " Yes, Bill, I do." "And do you believe that He, the Great Judge who knows all things, will hold It even too?" " Yes, Bill, I do think so ; for he is full of mercy and loving kindness." " But He is just, too,'? murmured the dying voica ; " for I heard a preacher once say lie wanted an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth, and then I knew I must give him a life for the one I slew and I've always been look. big out for the chance. It was long a comin'; but I got it at last ; and I thank Him forlettin' me make It even." Mr. Kingsley was crying like a child. "My good, old Bill," he said, "I am so sorry to lose you. You have been a faithful servant, and I shall miss you more than I can say." A glad light flashed into the dim eyes, and in spite of the exquisite pair of every move ment, he toads one supreme effort, and raised Mr. Kingsley's hand to his white lips. " God bless you, sir," ho gasped out, " you took me when all the rest of the world kicked me out, and you've never given me a .mean word. God bless you ; you're all in life I'm loathe to leave." Then he lay silent for a while, and we thought ho was asleep, and would pass away so ; but suddenly he was looking at us wide awake, end spoke out firm and clear " And there was such a lot of little uns that day, too. It's all right, all right 1 I;know I've made it even l" And then the peaco of death settled down on the pale face of Quiet 13111. ONE MORE STORY OF CHICAGO " I had made," said a poor seamstress, in telling me of her condition, "my last pay ment on Saturday on my supply' of coal for the winter; and the last dollar I had in the house bad gone, on that day, to buy my little store of coffee and sugar and flour, fertile win ter's use. The fire took it all the next night." She has no husband to help her, and a young sister and three little children are dependent upon her for support; but, like thousands of others, she had made a good living, and could lay by for the future, not abundantly, but sufficient for frugal wants. Still I find her brave and happy in her new life since the fire. Her voice has a tremor In it when she tells how she sent her three children to a neighbor's for safety when the fire broke out, that she might be free to try and save something f her household goods ; how, when her own house was gone, she went to seek them and found only aheap of embers where she thought they were sleeping safely ; how, as she after ward learned, her little boy of nine years, taking a brother of seven years in one hand and a sister Sf five in the other, wandered from 10 o'clock on Sunday ight till 'lO o'clock on Monday morning, running 'a fiery gauntlet, through blazing streets and frantic crowds of men and horses, never letting go the little hands he held in his, never swerving through all those devious, dangerous ways, the whole circuit of the city, from his fixed purpose of reaching an un cle's house, miles away, and giving his preci ous charges into his mother's hands again— there is a tremor In her voice when telling of all this, till she remembers with pride how brave her boy was in that fearful twelve hours' walk, while she sought for the baby wander ers, almost mad with grief, through all that terrible night, and remembers that they, at least, are left her still. Then she turns to the cheerful whir of her sewing machine, and al. most begrudges the time sho takes to talk of that past grief. But my neighbor, whose yearly income before the fire was something more than a hundred thousand dollars, and who has only a few hundred thousands left from the wreck of his property cried about the streets for days, and wrung his hands In the sight of men over his ruin. "Thanksgiving I What have I to be thankful for ?" said a wealthy lady, last week, on that "little gov ernment Sunday,"—aa Baillie Nicol Jarvis called a like festival. True, she and hers had been burned out ; but it was also true that in their Case it way loss only, and not ruin.— Letter 0 New York Tribune. LIKE A WOMAN I= " What is she h6c ? A difficult question that to answer, my dear boy. She's like nothing on earth except a woman." " That strikes tne as being a rather vague account, to render of a person you're going to stick to for hotter for worse, so long as you do live." The last speaker both looked and spoke In an ill-used tone, but he was In the golden age still, and an expression of dissatisfaction did not ill become him. The man lie addressed was sufficiently like him for the fact of the re lationship that existed between them to be ap parent. But he was past middle age, and though lie carried his forty-live years boldly and well, it was evident that lie and all claims to youthfulness had shaken hands and parted company forever. They were sitting now on the top of a gate that opened from a turnip field into a planta tion, with their guns under their arms, and a setter and brace of pointers at their feet. And the sentences that open this story were spoken by them just after the brief announcement that the elder man had brought himself to make, that in about six weeks he was going to be married. "I am too old to in•lulge in'the luxury of rhapsodies," he said with a laugh, "but I'll tell you this, Theo,' am very fond of the girl, and very well satisfied that you'll approve of my choice." "Uncles don't generally submit their choices in such matters to their nephews' judgments," Then Bligh said, recovering his normal ex pression of benignant indifference to the ma jority of things as he spoke. " Well, I hope the lady won't object to my hanging out at the Chase at uncertain intervals, and—l hope with all my heart that you'll he happy." And then the twa men, after the manner of their kind, developed a greater "degree of callous ness at once, In order to conceal the genuine emotion they were feeling. The cover they were going to shoot was in the very heart of the Chase property, and the pointers and the setter, and the property alto gether, belonged, as may have been surmised, to the elder Mr. Bligh. It was a rather hard thing for the somewhat extravagant and ex tremely impecunious Theo to bear that this uncle, whose hand had always been open, and whose eyes had always seemed to regard Theo as the heir, was going to be married. In a quiet corner of his own heart the young 'man did, in the first hour of his surprise and disap pointment, suffer himself to say that the future Mrs. Bligh must be a played-out flirt, a woman eager to secure any chance that Is offered. "Otherwise she wouldn't have accepted him after, a three week's acquaintanceship," he ar gued ; " and if he had picked her up in any other place than Portsmouth, there would have been a better atmosphero about the affair; but I know that those officers' daughters are always lurking about the corners of the streets, seeking whom they may devour." "You will meet her to-night at dinner," Mr. Bligh had said to Theo. " She is doming with her brothers and some friends of theirs' to see her future home." And in consequence of this information received Theo Bligh went home to dinner in rather a dark mood. But this state of feeling lasted only a short time, for the young fellow was generous hearted, and quite capable of seeing the other side of things when reason strove to show it to him. As he dressed he came to the con clusion, quite honestly, and without much effort, that after all his uncle was only doing wisely and well in marrying, since ho had ound a woman he could love. And when he had come to this conclusion, he found himself rather eager for the introduction that had seemed such an odious thing to him in the morning. The drawing-room was full when he entered and his eyes went round in a rapid search for ' the lady who had brought his uncle to bay, • "flat must be Miss Dundee," he thought, as he caught sight of a lady who was talking rather earnestly to Mr. Bligh, " As expected, she's by way of being an old girl—has seen the vanity - of most things, especially the vanity of hesitating, when to hesitate may be to lose." Then ho went up to the pair, and asked for "an introduction to Miss Dundee," and found himself turned round by the shoulder by Mr. Bligh, and brought face to face with a girl whom he had not seen before. "This is my nephew, Theo. Madge," he said, looking down Into the girl's face with a proud, admiring gaze ; and she put out her hand frankly at once, and Theo took it, and told himself that here was the real " Bonnie Dundee," and all that had gone before her were impostors. "I think Mr. Bligh has been rather nervous about introducing me, the interloper, to you," , Miss Dundee said, quickly making way for The, to take a scat on the sofa by her side ; "he s more than half afraid that you won't like me, and if you don't it will make him very unhappy." So she spoke, in a girlish, alniost childish outspoken way,wlthout seem to consider or to mark the effect of her words either on the man she addressed or the by standers. " I should have known you as Theo anywhere I'd seen you," she went on ; ",you'll be exactly like Mr. Bligh when you're—" She paused abruptly and colored a little, but a moment after she forced' herself back into composure, and resumed "when you're as old as he is, I was going to say, but I remember the young men don't like to be reminded of their youth, and so I bungled and blundered. Can-you forgive me ?" Could he forgive her ? Was the Bonnie Dundee subtle, or only sweetly simple, that she asked him this, in that winning'voice of hers ? And, by the way, how did she, with her Scotch name, come with that touch of, accent—that way of softly resting on the vow els that is a speciality of Irish.women's pro uunciation of words that they want to caress? As be asked himself this, he looked -at her more observantly, and wondered also how she had come by that face and that expression. A pen-and-ink portrait of a girl whose glory is her youth and warmth and color, must like a photographer, necessarily be lma-d and crude. But no other can be given here. She was about twenty-two when Theo Bligh saw her first—just old enough to know that she had a mind, but not to be well acquainted with it herself yet. Quite a girl of the period, as far as the IVotteau•like picturesqueness of her costume of deftly mingled blue and pink went, but innocent of all Grecian bend or other vulgarities of the like order. With golden brown hair and eyes—affectionate and changeful eyes, something like Ike eyes of "My Last Duchess," who "loved whate'er she looked on, and whose looks went every ;where," I should imagine. Firm and erect in figure, fluctuating in movement, as most women with caressing manners are ; possessed of beautifnl hands and fee:, of which she was daintily fond, with an openly displayed fondness that was infinitely amusing to men, and infinitely wearisome to women, who had not the same objects of affection ; able to to vest her attitudes of listening with an air of interest and comprehension, that was not al ways altogether genuine, perhaps. Bright In heart and in mind, able and adaptable, the sort of woman to be easily molded, and whose fate would bo grand or ghastly just as It pleas ed the first man who really thrilled her to will it. This was what Theo Bligh saw when ho looked at the lady whom he had 'already reg istered "Bonnie Dundee." How had she come by it all ? 110 w had she comp by the winning grace, by the Irish eyes and suspicion of accent, and by the southern warmth and splendor that environed her? Ho must have put his curiosity into form in some way, for before the evening was over the girl found herself explaining to him that although Scotch by name, there was but little Scottish blood in her veins. "My faither was half Spanish, and my mother was wholly Irish, and so I can make no claim to being very pure in race ; if I am anything,it's a thoroughbred mongrel." And then she lapsed from that subject into one that was naturally more in teresting to her—the Blighs, namely and whence they sprang, and whom they had married, and in what way they had distin guished themselves in the days gone by. Undesignedly and almost unconsciously, there came about a certain degree of intimacy between these young people, even on this the tlret night of their meeting—an intimacy about which there was that indefinable something which can not be put into a word-photograph, but which nevertheless strikes the observant, and the malicioits, and the interested, as being rather more than kind, and entirely unneces vary. Now Mr. Bligh, the betrothed of Miss Dun dee, the owner of the Chase, and the uncle of the other innocent offender, was neither ma licious nor observant by nature,but he was in terested just now through stress of circum• stances. It would have hurt him if Thou had' maintained that air of suppressed unhappiness which had marked his demeanor on the morn ing when he - first 'heard of the approaching wedding. For Mr. high was blessed with one of those dispositions through which was a colossal vein of desire to set all crooked mat ters straight. It would hays been a fltw •in the scheme of benevolence if Theo had not come to an amicable conclusion concerning the case. But still Madge ought not to have been so entirely oblivious of their relative po sitions as she appeared to b 3 while she was teaching Theo a new and ingenious mode of playinecat's-cradle, a pastime which Theo found to be exhilarating for the first time. " Young blood will have It's course, lad, And every dog his day." This couplet forced itself upon Mr. Bligh's memory as he looked at the pair whom he had brought together, and whose good-will he had bespoken for one another beforehand. The good, true, honest gentleman had no feeling of small jealousy, no petty distrust of the pretty creature who had listened to his offer with bright•eyed surprise, and accepted with a bright burst of gratitude. But though he felt l no jealousy, and no distrust, he did feel con siderable fear lest the uniniated should mis construe that out 'spoken, well-developed flat tery of voice and look and manner of which his nephew was the object just now. " It's only her way,"he told himselyand bless her wasn't it for that I loved her at first, before I knew how good she was ?" But though he reminded himself of this truth, the remem brance of It brought him small comfort, and he glanced at Madge uneasily, and his uneasy glances were seen by the very friend before whom he desired her to shine as a bright par ticular star. Miss Dundee—or " Bonnie" Dundee, as she soon came to be called in the Bligh's set by those who were very keen on every mark of admiration that Theo Bligh bestowed upon her— was the central object in the neighbor hood for a week or two after this. The oblig ing, acquiescing friends with whom she was staying pressed her to remain, and though this hardly accorded with Mr. Bligh's ideas of de corum, he uttered no protest against the plan when she agreed to it. And so with all the flush and glory of her engagement, and her brilliant prospects and more brilliant beauty upon her, she was brought very much in con tact with Theo Bligh, and he saw that elm was fair. She was not amere Insatiable coquette. she was not a heartless fool, ready and willing to play fast and loose for the sake of gaining a little notoriety ; but she was that even more dangerous thing, a woman afflicted with that passion for pleasing that It became a fine art in her hands, and when she was following it she could not stop to count the cost of failure or success. It was a new sensation to her to have the right to such attentions, and admira tion and love as Mr. Bligh lavished upon her and as Theo offered at a respsetful distance, on the score of being. his uncle's nephew. It was a new sensation to her, and she. enjoyed it to the full ; reveling in it as one does in sun. beams after a long frost, or in dainty viands after a long fast. The idea of its being wrong or reprehensible in any way to gather these roses of love and youth and pleasure, that were blooming in her path, never entered her mind. She was only Intensely fond of the excitement of being put upon a pedestal, and being only Worshipped in the sight of all men. Given such a nature as this from the birth, and arc we justified In judging harshly of and condemning the deeds it dictates ? The girl was not obeying her instincts when she turn ed her flower-like face gladly toward anyone who seemed as a sun to her. And Theo, with all that fine, tawny beauty of his, did seem very like a sun to the girl. " Bright, and warm, and genial," she called him, speaking of him quite openly and frankly to his uncle. whose heart was begtatng to misgive him. Miss Dundee was on the edge of a precipice, and was totally unconscious of the fact. There came a day when It was revealed to her suddenly, so suddenly that it made her dizzy, and then she behaved like a woman. Wean know when people want to be to gether, and have no special end or aim that may be shouted aloud in the market place for being so, how they devise and invent motives, and exhaust and wrap opportunities. 'rho country . Is a capital stage whereon to develop the little plots. And so in this case every ruin in the vicinity was dragged In to assist In the denouncement, and every point of view from whence anything could possibly be seen was called upon to contribute to tho furtherance of the lover's stratagems. All this (line while the excursions were go ing on, to "look at" something or other that not one of them ever saw, the uncle and neph ew were in the house together, and I am sorry to have to record that It was not the guilty one that suffered most. The elder man was profoundly and justifiably unhappy, because he feared that the two people he loved best in the world might deal him the hardest blow a man can have .dealt to him. The younger man was excitedly and fitfully unhappy truly, but then he had hours of such compensating bliss. For instance, his consciehee did not tell him that there was anything actually dishonorable in his riding along Mudge's side through the autumn woods and lanes; nor did it prick him for sympathetically indorsing her views of things or for keeping the conversation gener ally in those channels wherein her words end Ideas ran most freely. Still, though his con science left him unscathed for these derelic tions from the paths of perfect prudence,there were hours in the watches of the night when the young man suffered to the full as actually as did the elder one. Hours when he painted vivid pictures of the time when lie should he away from the Chase and its inhabitants, and when Bonnie Dundee would be ruling there the lady of the land, "Bonnie Dundee" no longer, but his uncle's wife ; hours when he comprehended for the first time in 1118 life the fullness of the truth that one can not play with fire without being burnt; hours when lie reproached himself bitterly for having so tri fled with his own peace and wall-being as to have played on in the vain hope of his reason and Judgment killing his passion; hours when he realized how absolutely empty his life would be when this girl for whom his. heart was sick should be another man's -.wife, and that man his own generous, trusting uncle. ROBERT TR:EDELL, JR. Plain anti ganrp fob Printer, No. 003 HAMILTON STREET, LLER TOWN, PA. }MEGAN NO NEW DESIGNS LATIIaT STILES Stamped Cheek'. Cards. Otrenlare. Paper 11 3 o l okk e lltzte tugglOgerfltellierttiVlßClfltentin4l Way Billie,TX.NtieB..higititUNPrerg,leoWeae" NO. 2 It never occurred to the young man to think Viet Mr. Bligh suspected anything of this. As I have said, Theo's conscience had. him en tirely guiltless of there being aught in manner that could Indicate It. Nor did he do the girl the• injustice of supposing that she was aware of,it. "Like a woman she will take a scalp that's flung at her feet," be would. say to himself moodily; "and like a fool I'm ready to Meg mine there, only I eon never do it." De had firm faith in his power of self-corn l mand. It - was his honest intention just to gather a few more roses while ho might, and then go away, having made no sign. "But the Chase can never be a home to me again; I'm banished far more effectually by my love for her than 1 could have been WI. had hated her," This he told himself one day as ho was riding along with them on the very last excur sion in which he meant to permit himself to indulge in their company. Bonnie Dundee was in great force that morn ing. A pretty woman on a handsome spirited horse, which she feels perfectly capable of managing and escorted by a couple of men of whose admiration Pho feels herself to bo sever e is sure to b 0 at her best. She seemed such a cloudless creature as she rode along, disturb ing her attentions with that subtile Impartiali ty with which a well-bred woman, a and well bred ono alone, can keep two men enthralled at the same time, that gloom obtained in Thoo's soul. It was bitterly hard to feel that She could be so carelessly happy, when all that was before him was so blank and barren. Presently his uncle said something that caused him to gather himself together, and sent all the bleed coursing through his veins in a way that betrayed itself in Isis face. "Theo has been talking this morning of leaving us soon ; before ho goes, dear, we must let him know what day ho is to come back and hail you as an aunt." It cost Mr. Bligh more than a slight effort to make this speech with apparent ease. But he succeeded in doing so, and only ho himself suspected the pain his own words gave him. " Going ! Theo going I" she exclaimed laps ing from fun Into surprise and solemnity in a moment, and laying her whip with a frank ca ressing gesture on Theo's arm as she spoke, " 0:1, don't think of going, Theo ; I can't spare you—we can't spare him, can we?'" OFFICIAL REGISTER FOR 1872 We print below a full llst of the principal pub lic officers, for the ensuing year, of the Federal, State and County governments. It is often con venient for reference, and should be preserved for that purpose. NATIONAL GOVERNMENT President of the United States, Ulysses B. Grant, Illinois ; Vice President, Schuyler Colfax, Indiana. Secretary of State, Hamilton Flab, New York. Secretary of Treasury, Geo. B. Bontwell, Mass. Secretary of War, Wm. W. Belknap. lowa.. Secretary of Navy, George M. Robeson, New Jersey. Secretary of Interior, Columbus Delano, Ohlo. Postmaster General, John A. J. Creswell, Mary land. Attorney General, Geo. 11. Williams, Oregon. Chief Justice, Salmon P. Chase ; Associate Tits flees of the Supreme Court, Samuel Nelson of New York, Nathan Clifford of Maine, Noah 11.8wayne of Ohio, Samuel F. Miller of lowa, David Davis of Illinois, Stephen J. Field of California, Wm. Strong of Pennsylvania, Joseph P. Dradloy of Now Jersey. President of the Senate, Schuyler Col fax,lnd Iona; Secretary, George C. Gorham, California. peaker of House, James G. Milne, of Maine; Clerk, Edward MacPherson, Pennsylvania. General of the Army, W. T. Sherman. Admiral of the 21avy, David D. Porter. U Strong and William McKennan ; U. S. District Judge, John Cadwallader ; U. S. Marshal, James F: Kerns ; U. S. District Attorney, Aubref Smith. Collector of Internal Revenue, Sixth District, Col. John R. Breitenhaeli, Norristown ; Dtputy Col lector, Ry T. C. Yeager, Allentown. Assessor, Edward Rube, Allentown. Collector of Customs, Philadelphia District, John W. Forney. Representative in Congress, Sloth District, Dr. E. L. Acker, Norristown. Subtieribe fur the Lehigh Registes. STATE OFFICERS. Governor, John W. Geary, Cumberland county. PecretarY of the Commonwealth, Francis Jordan. Deputy Secretary, Adam C. Relnoehl, Lancaster Attorney General, F. Carroll Brewster, Phila. Auditor General, [vacant]. Surveyor General, Robert B. Beath, Sehulyklll. Efate Treasurer, R. W. Mackey, Allegheny. Superintendent of Common Schools, James P Kickers ham. Chiof Justice of Supreme Court, James Thomp son ; ABSOCiate indiCo6, John M. Read, Daniel Ag- new, George Sharswood, Geary W. Williams. Prothonotary,' James Rosa Snowden. Advertise in the Lehigh Itegiett r COUNTY OFFICERS President Judge, A. Brower Longaker, Allen town ; Associates, David Laury, North Whitehall; James Fry, Allentown. Marty', Owen W. Foust, Upper Macungie; Deputy, 11. C. Wagner, Allentown; Marra At torney. George U. Rupp, Allentown. Prothonotary, Jacob S. Dlllinger, Allentown; Deputy, .James Lackey, Alio:tins/11. Recorder, Silas Camp, Lynn ; Deputy, Solon:Mb Gross, Allentown. Clerk of Quarter Sessions, Joseph Hunter, Cala- Banque ; Deputy, John J. Thomas, Allentown. Clerk of the Orphans' Court, A. L. Rube, Allen town. Register, E. R. Newhard, Allentown. , District Attorney, Wm. H. Bowden, Allentown. County Treasurer, Peter Holler, Allentown.. County Commissioners, Stephen Kern, Washlag ton ; John Stratum, South %%DohaDJ Hiram Dal ! Ilet, North Whitehall; Clark, L. M. Engelman, Upper Paucon ; Counsel, Peter Wyckoff, Allen. town. County Auditors, F. J. Newhard, Whitehall ; Wilson Reedy, Heidelberg ; t 3 olomon Rupp, Was- onburg. • Coromr, Dr. Minim 11. Romig 1 erectors of the Poor, John Erdman, North Whitehall ; Reuben Ilenluger, South Whitehall ; Jonas Ilartzel, Allentown; Counsel, Edward Har vey, Allentown ; Treasurer, J. T. Joint, Allen. town. Court Crier, John Thomas, Allentown. .. Notaries Tublie, A. K. Wittman, T. 0. Ginkin ger, Samuel Cotver, H. C. Hunsberger, Allentown; R. Clay flamersly, Cataeauqua ; John Shifted, illerstown ; Jonathan Gro3s, Fogelsvillo ; L. M. Strawn, Coopenburg ; John L. Schreiber, Slat. ington. Pitieozi OFFICERS- Warden, Thomas Jacoby, Allentown; Ifairon, Sarah Jacoby, Allentown ; Physician, Dr. Alfred J. Marlin, Allentown. ' Inspectors, Jonathan Reichard, Allentown,Pres !dent ; Win. 11. Hoffman, Allentown, Secretary ; Stephen Kern, John Strange and Illrain Comm Wieners. ALMS House—Steward, Thomas Faust, Jr.; Xairon, Mrs. Faust; Assistant'Eteward, Thomas Faust; Sr. ; Solleitor, Edward Harvey, Allentown; Physicians, Dr.' W. G. M. Scipio, Huthsvllle ; Dr. T. A. Strasser, Milleretowm; Treasurer, F. T. John, Allentown. State Senator, Edwin Albright, Allentown. epreeentatives, Adam Woolever, Allentown; Herman M. Fetter, South Bethlehem. Get your Job Printing Done nt the Lehigh Register Mike. CI tY OFFICERS. Moor, T. 11. Good. Chief of Pollee, Wm. D.. Kleckner. City Solicitor, C. M. Runk. 'City Auditors, Joseph E. Dal Het, Henry J. Horn beck, Daniel H. Miller. ater Commissioner, Charles E. Christ. .1 City Treasurer, Jonathan Reichard. President of Select Council, John 'L._ Halo:lan ; Clerk, William J. Weiss. • President of Conunon Council, George), Fry,{ Clerk, E. Lehman Rabe. BOARD OP CONTROLLERS President, C. M. Runk. - Secretary, Jacob B. DMlngor. Treasurer, Henry J. Saeger. Collector of Taxer, John McLean. TO BE CONTINUED