JUL V. II II I! I I II v ; jTODD IHTCULSO, Publisher. volTl PREPARED EXPRESSLY FOR "THE ALLEOH A V. LIST O F lOST OFFICES. Post Matters. Districts. Joseph Graham, Yoder. Joseph S Mardis, Blacklick. Benjamin Wirtner, Carroll. Daul. Litzinger, Chest. John J. Troxell, Washint'n. Mrs. II. M'Casue. Ebensburar. Post Oftees. Beau's Creek, Bothd Station, Cirrolltown, Chess Spring?, Crcsson, Dbensburg. Mien Timber, 0;illit7.ia, tilea Conncll, Hemlock, Johnstown, Loretto. Mineral Point, Minister, Perihinjr, Platt-viHe, Ruscland, St. Augustine, Scalp Level, Sonman, Sjmmerhill, Sumaiit, Wilmore, Isaac Thompson, White. J. M. Christy, GalliUin. Joseph Gill, Chest. Win. M'Gough, "Washt'n. II. A. Hoggs, Johnst'wn. VTm. Gwinn, Loretto. K. Wissinger, Conem'gh. A. Durbin, Munster. Francis Clement, Conem'gh. Andrew J. Ferra! Susq'han. G. W. Bowman, White. Joseph Mover, Clearfield. George Conrad, Richland. B. M Colgan, Washt'n. Win. Murray, Croyle. Miss M. Gillespie 'Washt'n. Andrew Beck, S'mmerhill. CIIL RCIICS, MIMSTCRS, &c. l'rtshyterian Rev. D. Harbison, Pastor. Preaoliini; every Sabbath morning at 10J oclock. and in the evening at 2 o'clock. Sab bith School at 1 o'clock, P. M. Prayer meet ing every Thursday evening at C o'clock. l.:h'Aist Episcopal Church. Rev. J. Si! axe, P.-ei.lier in charge. Rev J. M. Smith, As lisuut. Preaching every Sabbath, alternately a; I'.'i o'clock in the morning, or 7 ia the ftaiaB. Sabbath School at 9 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7 'dock. U'tWi Independent Rev. Ll. R. Powell, pas;or. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 1j o clock, and in the evening at 6 o'clock. Sabbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. Prayer Cfjting on the first Monday evening of each couth ; and on every Tuesday, Thursday aai Friday evening, excepting the first week :a each month. CdUmtstic Methodist Rev. John Williams, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at J i:il C o'clock. Sabbath School at 10 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meeting every Friday evening a: 7 o'clock. Society every Tuesday evening at T o'clock. Disciples Rkv.Wm.Llotd, Pastor Preach ing every Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. 1'jrtic'ular Baptists Rkv. David Jenkins, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 1 o'clock. Sabbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. Catholic Rv. M. J. Mitchell, Pastor. Ssrrices every Sabbath morning at 10 J o'clock ai Vespers at 4 o'clock in the evening. A IIDESI!LTRG 1IAIL.S. MAILS ARRIVE. ! Eastern, daily, at 12 J o'clock, A. M. i- Wtitern. ' at 12 J " A. M. MAILS CLOSE. Eastern, dailr, at 6j o'clock, A. M. ! Wtitern, "" at 6 J " A. M. tor The Mails from Butler.Indiana.Strongs- town, 4c, arrive on Tuesday and Friday of tach week, at 5 o'clock, P. M. Leave Kbensburg on Mondays and Thurs days, at " o'clock, A. M. V. The Mails from Newman's Mills, Car rolltown. 4c, arrive on Monday and Friday of eaoh week, at 3 o'clock, P. M. Leave Ebensburg on Tuesdays and Satur days, at 7 o'clock, A. M. tn Post Office open on Sundays from 9 to lu o'clock, A. M. RAILROAD SCIIEDIL.E. WILMORE STATION. TCeit Express Train, leaves at 9.45 A. M. Mail Train, " 1 Et Express Train, " 8.24 P.M. " Mail Train, 10.00 A. M. ' Fast Line, " 6.30 A. M. COl'XTY OFFICERS. Jtidjtt of the Courts. President, Hon. Geo. TvIor, Huntingdon ; Associates, GcorgeW. Eley. Richard Jones, Jr. P'othonotary. Joseph M'Donald. Clerk to 1'rothonotary . Robert A. M'Coy. Register and Recorder. Michael Hassor.. Deputy Register and Recorder. John Sean lan. Men.Uobert P. Linton. Deputy Sheriff. George C. K. Zahm. District Attorney. Philip S. N'oou. County Commissioners. John Bearer, Abel L'oyJ, David T. Storm. Clerk to Commissioners. George C. K. Zahm. Counsel to Commissioners. John S. Rhey. Treasurer. John A. ttlair. Poor House Directors. William Palmer, Dvid O'llarro, Michael M'Guire. Poor House Treasurer. George C. K. Zahm. Poor Unit J. Kavlor Mercantile Appraiser. Thomi Auditors. lita i. Lloyd, D r , . ' -. las M'Connell. anicl Cobaugh, ary Hawk County Surveyor. Henry Scanlan. t.oronfr.Pcter Dougherty. wptrintendent of Common Schools. S. B. M Cormick. EKCSIIL'RG 1SOR. OFFICERS. Ju'tie, of the rcace. David H. Roberts, "Y'ison Kinkead. urje, Andrew Lewis. 7W Council. William Kittell, William K. 'Per, Charles Owens, J. C. Noon, Edward Qoemaker. Clerk to Council. T. D. Litzinger. Rorou.jh Treasurer. George Gurley. f'hh Master. William Davis. School Directors. Edward Glass, William V Z,st Rese S. Lloyd, John J. Lloyd, Morris ' vans Thomas J. Davis. Treasurer of School Board Evan Morgan. Ca6.George Gurley. Collector.. George Gurley. Assessor Richard T. Davii. Jt4ge of Election. Isaac Evanf. i'rtert.J)yi. p. Rhr, Je J Ertns. Love's Future Foreshadowed. BY FLORENCE PERRY. How strange it will be, love how strange when we two Shall be what all lovers become You frigid and faithless I cold and untrue You thoughtless of me, and I careless of you Our pet names grown rusty with nothing to do, Love's bright web unraveled, and rent and worn through, And life's loom left empty ah, hum I Ah me, How strange it will be ! How strange it will be when the witchery goes, Which makes me feel lovely to-day ; When your thought of me loses its coleur de rose When every day serves some new fault to dis close When you find I've odd eyes, and an every day nose, And wonder you could for a moment suppose I was out of the common-place way Ah, me, Hcjw strange it will be I How strange it will be love how strange when we meet, With just such a chill touch of the hand 1 When my pulses no longer delightfully beat At the thought of your coming, the sound of your feet, When I watch not your going adown the long street, When your dear loving voice, now so thril lingly sweet, Grows harsh in reproach or command Ah, me, How strange it will bel How strange it will be, when we willingly stay Divided the dreary day through ! Or, getting remotely apart as we may, Sit chilly and silent, with nothing to say, Or coldly converse on the news of the day, In a wearisome, old married folk sort of way ; I shrink from the picture don't you7 Ah, me, How strange it will be ! Dear love, if your hearts do grow torpid and old, As so many hearts have done If we let our love perish with hunger and cold, If we dim all life's diamonds and tarnish its gold If wo choose to live wretched and die uncon soled, 'Twill be strangest of all things that ever were told, As happened under the sunt Ah, me, How strange it will be 1 Orislnal Tale, Written for The Alleguanian. TIIAT SLCIGII-RIUE. BY TOBIAS TANDEM. "There's that anxiously expected snow at hist, thank goodness ! And now I'll get that sleigh-ride I won so fairly, though I must say, at a tremendous sell-sacrilice Hut the ride had to be had, at all haz ards. Ha, ha, ha ! Hurrah !" It was a dark, damp, disagreeable De cember day, and the leaden atmosphere seemed to benumb the faculties aud op press the senses of everybody. It was a dav when a person's imagination would wander back to the bright, invigorating days of spring, to the pleasant, calm days of summer, to the balmy, refreshing days of autumn and then unwillingly returu to this particularly uncomfortable Decern- bcr day, rendered doubly unbearaoie uy the comparison. It was a day when, had a person occasion to go out of doors, he would perform his labors with expedition, so as to eet back in ajrain ; or, had he business down town, would stalk silently and swiftly along, as if the destroyer or an urirent creditor was after him. It was a day when even the tricksome little lap- dog and sportive leiine accompaniment, treuerallv so full of life, seemed completely under the weather, and lay coiled up by the stove, silent and unapproachable. And no wonder. Everything seemed wrong topsy-turvy upside down. The mildest aud most even-temperea ien uis posed to grumble at the want of discern ment shown by the clerk in giving us such weather. The streets were almost deserted. Save and except an occasional pedestrian, whose business engagements, perhaps, overbal- anced uis inclination, auimauou was sus pended. I was aroused from a dreamy reverie into which I had fallen, by the above ju bilant and slightly triumphant exclama tion, proceeding from the coral lips of my fascinating mend, JHiss Julia Leigh ton The way it fame was this : I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT TnAN EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH Miss Julia and I had eaten a philopena (a double almond) the previous evening, under the condition that the one who sho'd surreptitiously kiss the other first should win the loser, as forfeit, to pay the ex penses incident to a sleighing excursion out to the romantic village of C . I had determined, in the meanwhile, to take my Julia out sleighing the first op portunity that offered, so, as the calculating reader will at once observe, in any event or under any combination of circumstances, I would be the fortunate gainer of at least one kiss by the present operation. I was surprised surprised, though, in a very agreeable manner, and in a manner which of all others I prefer when, a few hours later, as I was sitting by her side, in total forgetf illness of our short-made con tract, Julia leaned over and gave me a pure emphatic, unadulterated, and unmistake- able "buss," not one of the sic kly, second hand contrivances wherewiih very senti mental persons are wont to regale them selves, and wherein the principal part of the perlormance is the puckering, a la alter eating a persimmon, but one that sent the warm blood rushinjr and whizzinir to my heart, and from thence back to the tips of my fingers, and even to the extreme points of my boots. Shades ol Mcthusaleh! Words would be powerless to describe the innumerable charms of my peerless Julia. Her beautiful golden ringlets hunjr in profusion over a neck of more than ala baster whiteness. And such eves! you should see them. They were not black, neither were they blue, and I am confident they were not brown but variable, cha meleonishcyes,changing with every change of her impulsive nature And her , but, pshaw! words are vapid, insipid, and when applied to Julia, totally insufficient to do justice to the subject. Should you wish to sec just such a charmer, however, you have only to lull in love witn any concatenation of hoops, whalebone and cal icothe effect will be the same. At least it has with me, and I have the experience of a dozen encounters to back the assertion. In the meantime, softly and silently descended the crystal flakes, covering the ground with a chaste and beautiful sheet of white ; faster and faster did they come, "Filling the sky and earth below," and piling themselvc? one on the other, until a sufficient a mount had accumulated to form what is technically called by far mers, "good sledding." The merry jin gle of the bells was heard in the streets ; fast horses and handsome cutters were in demand ; slow horses and indifferent cutters were well represented j juveniles who could boast of no turn-out at all, pulled each other time-about on their little sleds, and things natural ajrain begau to seem life-like aud So Julia and I made arrangements to forthwith carry into effect the true intent and meaning of the proviso attached to our agreement of the previous evening. After supper, a 2.40, a splendid sleigh, a superabundance of buffalo-robes and other fixings, and myself, "might have been seen" drawing up before the Leigh ton dom icil, and, had the observation been continued ashort time longer, Miss Julia and myself, comfortably ensconced in the aforesaid sleigh, "might have been seen" taking the initiatory steps toward the fulfilment of "that sleigh-ride." To say that sleigh wasn't narrow would be an assertion open to strong doubts to the contrary. It teas narrow so narrow in fact, that Julia and I had to sit in very close juxtaposition. But, as to a philo sophical mind, such a state of affairs would be of trifling import; to me it seemed decidedly preferable, inasmuch as it afford ed me the privilege of "Wo-o-ah !" Here occurred a small discovery, to the effect that our horse's qualifications, be sides that of "fast," comprised that of "fractious," being an attainment the ab sence of which could easily be overlooked, especially by timid drivers and ladies. Long and devotedly had I loved this particular piece of feminity now nestled so snugly by my side : but I had never told my love. From bashfulness, and a dread of being thought "too previous," she was in a very fair way of living and dying in ignorance of the fact, so far as I was con cerned. I had determined, . however, to let concealment no longer prey on my cheek, but to inform her of the state of my mind on the first opportunity. That opportunity had now arrived. Merrily and swiftly did we glide along over the clear, crisp snow, the horse's hoofs scattering a penetrating white mist over us, causing us to bundle the robes closer and sit nearer. Ah ! how delicious is the first sleigh- "We had discussed and settled the usual topics of conversation : the last ball, the beauty of the late style ot bonnets, (Julia had one on ; I decided in their favor ;) PRESIDENT. Henry Clay. and the various other et ccteras of high life in the country and for a time silence reigned. So to begin : "Julia, dearest, do you think " I got that far, and "stuck," so I ingloriously subsided. "Think what, did you say?" asked Ju lia, turning suddenly around, and looking directly in my face. There was mischief in her eye. I have since, after looking at the matter on all sides, come to the conclusion that she knew more of what was coming, or rather what tee isn't coming, than she would have me believe. "Think? Oh, ah! yes; do you think it is going to rain soon '(" I said, at a ven ture for 1 was slightly disconcerted. She laughed a sly, chuckling little laugh. "Rain ! NVhy, yes, I think it will rain before long. Don't you think we had better turn back, or have you an um brella ?" I was perfectly well aware of the fact that the was laughing at me, although I was looking intently in another direction. But, thought I, this will never do : I, Mr. Tobias Tandem, Esquire, give up a fixed and settled determination a deter mination signed, sealed and delivered, (only in my mind, though, mind ye,) because a woman laughs at me. vso-sir-r I resolved to take a more roundabout course, and, like the hunters in a grand circular hunt, come gradually to the point "Julia, dear, is it not pleasant, on a beautiful night like this, when the little stars overhead are merrily twinkling, and the grand old forest is reverberating with notes of sweetest melody, and when every thing else seems hushed in repose is it not sublime to sit in a comfortable sleigh, with a spirited steed in front, and a lovely girl by 3'our side, and glide over the crystal sheen with the wings almost of the wind ?" Julia wasn't rendered speechless by no means. She acquiesced in every par ticular, except that of the person cited as companion she said she'd prefer one of the other sex. "As I sit by your side, Julia, on this our first sleigh-ride of the season, memory takes me back to the many happy days we passed at school together when young which term is not to be misinterpreted to mean that we are "old" now. Doubtless you remember them also. And the hill behind the old school house, where we often coasted together on my l'ttle cutter. Don't you mind, when one was absent, how dull and monotonous seemed the sport that when together was so pleasant ? the fun was departed. Life, Julia, is only a long coasting-hill : thinkest thou not we could glide adown its deseent better and happier 41 one sled than otherwise ?" "Do look at that horse, Mr. Tandem; I am afraid he is going to run off, and per haps upset us, too : and you know I hate so to be upset," said Julia, at the conclu sion of this affecting peroration. "Upset, indeed I said I, a little mined ; "not while I hold the reins. Git up, horsey !" I do not know whether our fiery Pe gasus understood my imputations of his inefficacy for doing bad, but, be that as it may, he soon undecived me. For scarcely had my huge boast escaped me, ere he took the bit in his mouth, cocked up his ears, spread his mane, and travelled. I have journeyed in the good old-fashioned stage-coaches ; in the slow but very sure canal-boats; in the swift cars; in four-horse-wagons; in carriages, milk wagons and carts,, but I do not recollect of ever taking a trip under such auspices as just then. Johnny Gilpin's famous ride wasn't a circumstance to it. We M ere going along very rapidly. My whole attention was turned toward keeping the horse in the road, for I didn't wish him to run against some tree, or worm-fence, and knock himself, sleigh, and perhaps us, into everlasting smash. My intentions were praiseworthy, but not ot much avail. For, all at once, the runner of the sleigh hit a stump, and away we went and away likewise went the horse, with some few pieces of the sleigh attached, but considerably the largest por tion remaining behind. Julia and I landed about nineteen feet from that villainous snag, right in the bo som of as beautiful a drift of snow as ever was seen. It was very cold, though, and occasioned some considerable decline in our opinion of the magnificence of sleigh- ridincr ere we extricated ourselves there from.' After an exhilerating walk of about a mile, Julia carrying the whip, and I the buffalo-robes and other "fixings," we came up to our "fast" horse and magnificent sleigh in full anchor in another drift. . After a great deal of tugging and pu ling, and considerable repairing, for in- stauce. tacking the various pieces of the sleigh together, tying odd enipped off bits 8, I860. of harness, etc., we concluded to risk it rain. We turned our horse's head homeward. I ruminated for a considerable part of the way on the mutability of things iu general, and sleigh-riding in particular on the sudien and somewhat unexpected termination of my tale of love on how, instead of popping the question and being accepted, I had been popped out into the snow and on my very elaborate exhibi tion of the rapid and easy descent from the sublime to the ridiculous. "Mr. Tandem, if I may be permitted to inquire, is this a fair specimen of the beauty of 'coasting down the hill of life together on one sled?' for if it is " "Julia " "For if it is, I propose it's a humbug. You are, I perceive, quite competent to assume the reins in such a juncture, and an adept in the art of steering ; but, for the present, I will content myself by re questing you to exercise your peculiar ingenuity by steering for home as fast as possible ! And, to stop further colloquy, she be gan singing : "Did you e'er go riding, In a sled Dancing' flitting, sliding, In a sled? Care behind you fleeting: Flits the time ; Heart and bosom beating So sublime ! Spirits buoyant humbled, As we go, Tippling, toppling, tumbled In the snow." Jul ia for a long time, thought I upset her on purpose, and would hardly believe otherwise ; but 1 at last succeeded in con vincing her that it was ali the fault of that "fast" horse. TMt-m : Don't take fast" horse when you go out sleiehin with the gal you intend popping the ques tion to.l It is also due Julia to state that I at length overcame her objections to the "down-hill" business, and we now double team it through life together. We date our happiness from the occa sion of "that sleigh-ride." A Thrilling Story. "Is is just twen ty years ago, yesterday," said our narra tor, "that a party ot us tellers went up the river on a skatin match. I he da- was colder than ten icebergs all stuck to gether, but the ice was as smooth as glass, and we made up our minds to have a heap of fun. Bill Berry was the leader of the crowd. He was a tall, six-footer, full of pluck, and the best skater in all creation. Give Bill Berry a good pair of skates, and good sailing, and he could make the trip to Baffin's Bay and back in twenty-four hours, only stopping long enough to take a drink at Halifax. Well, we got to the river and fastened our skates on ; and af ter taking a horn from Joe Turner's flask, started olF in good style, Bill Berry in the lead. As I was tellin ye, it, was a gol dogoned cold day and so we had to skate fast, to keep the blood up. There were little breath-holes in the ice, and 1.1 11 every now ana men we wouia come near goin into em. 31y skates got loose, and I stopped to fasten 'em. Just as I had finished buckling the straps I heard a noise. I looked around and saw some thing shooting along the ice like light nin'. It was Bill Berry's head ! He had been going it like greased electricity, and before he knew it, went into one of them cussed holes. The force was so great as to cut his head off against the sharp cor ners of the ice. "It is all day with Bill Berry," said I. "And all night, too," said Joe Turner. J ust as he had got these words out of his mouth, I looked at Bill's head, which had been goin' on the ice, and all at once it dropped into another hole. We run to it, and I heard Bill Berry say, "for God's sake boys, pull me out!" I looked into the hole, and there, as true as I am a sinner, was Bill Berry's body, which had skootcd along under the ice and met the head at the hole in the ice. "It was so thunderin cold that the head had froze fast to the body, and we pulled Bill out as good as new. He felt a little numb at nrst, but alter skating a while he was as brisk as any of us, and laughin' ever the joke, we went home about dark, all satisfied with the day's sport. About nine o'clock in the evening, somebody knocked at the door, and said I was wanted over to Bill Berry s. I put on my coat and went over. There lay Bill's body in one place and his head in anoth er. His wife said that after he came home from skating, he sat down before the fire to warm himself, and while blowing his nose, he threw his head into the the fire place ! "The Coroner was called that -night and the verdict of the jury was, that "Bill Berry came to bis death by skating too fast.' " TERMS:$1;ao 1Jf ADyCI NO. 29. How lie Kept (lie Wedge. Old Ben was a jolly old soul, and much addicted to the use of intoxicating drinks. He was very well known about the neighborhood where he resided, and was most generally to be seen in a "slight ually corned" condition. As may be Bop posed, this genius had a number of boon companions who followed him as leader and were, under his able tuition, already adepts in the various arts of "smilinV "imbibing, etc. It was just about the time of which wo are writiug that the temperance cause was creating a great sensation through the vil lage where lived our hero. Meetings were held, the public mind was excited, and numbers signed the pledge. JNow leij, hearing of these meeting. determined to attend one, just to see what it was like : and. accordin?rlv. th nptt. evening found him and his companions seated in the lecture room awaiting the issue. The lecturer that night was unusu ally eloquent ; and Ben, who was of a very exciiauie nature, Decame so enthusiasaio that when the usual invitation to sis-n th pledge was given out, he rushed up to the stand and affixed his name to the document. His example was contagious, and all his friends went and did likewise. The temperance folks congratulated themselves on having achieved so glorious a victory ; for all knew that Ben was a man of his word and would do as he said. On the other hand, as may be imagined, Ben's situation was, if not absolutely unbearable, very disagreeable; and, now that his ardor had cooled, he began to deplore his rash act. But what was he to do? He had signed the pledge forbidding him to drink any intoxicating liquors; and his honor (Ben was a great stickler for honor) would not allow him to break it. A few days after this, Ben and his friends were going on a fishing excursion ; and the prospect of a hot day, added to their long abstinence (three days) was unendurable. "I'll tell yer what it is, Ben," sagely remarked one of these worthies, "we've been and gone and done a foolish thing ia signin' that ar consarn. Our fun'U all be spiled to-day because as how we ain't got nothing to drink." "Hold on a bit, boys," replied Ben'Tve got an idea. Wait here till I come back." And without waiting for an answer, off he ran to the village store. Presently he returned with two or three loaves of fresh bakers' bread and a gallon of "red-eye" N hat are you goin to do, Ben ?" asked his astonished companions. "Itcmember you've signed the pledge ! "I know it, returned Ben, as he pro ceeded coolly to cut the loaves in two, dig out a small place in the center, and rour in the liquor, which the bread absorbed like a sponge : "I know it : I've promised not to drink auy more rum : but I didn't say anything about eating it " lhey all saw the ruse, and gladly avail ed themselves of it ; and, as may be sup posed, they returned that night, rather wet." This coming to the ears of the society. Ben was arraigned before them where. after having told his tale, he had tlte secret satisfaction of seeing his name scratched off the list. A Bashful Man. Washington Irving at a party in England one day, playfully as serted that the love of annexation of the nglo Saxon on every occasion "proceeded from its 7nauvauc honte rather than its of a bashful friend of his. who beinsr ask ed to a dinner party, sat down to the ta ble next the hostess in a great excitement. owing his recluse life. A few glasses of wiue mounting to his brain, completed his confusion, aud dissipated the small re mains of his presence of mind. Casting his eyes down, he saw on his lap some white linen. "Good heavens," thought he '-that's my shirt, protruding at my waistband !" He immediately commenced to tuck in the offending portion of his dress ; but the more he tucked in, the more there seem ed to remain. At last he made a desperate, effort, when a sudden crash around him, and a scream from the company, brought him to his senses. He had been all the time stuffing the table cloth into his breeches, and the move had swept every thing off the table ! Thus our bashful friend annexed a table-cloth, thinking it was the tail of his own shirt. fiSf" The following very good rules have been adopted in a school down in Maine : No chewing tobacco in school hours. No kissing the girls in the entry. No snapping apple seeds at the master. No cutting benches with jack-knivev. No nove-lfl allowed to be bro't to school. i t i IT