U U 11 . " . '" 1 111 '"" 1 """ " ' " - "" 1 ". ' 1111 " ' '-""i"' -IJr."Ji'i!i'''7Mi ;vrr ' i 'li'ii'irVYrnITi-iniNiin.. ' i mi....". !;rr'li V n ' .n t ' irr'ZJmSSa n " r r. -....i- r. . v '., Il m,,m,L2... ''rr1,- 1 " ' J " 1 .."J".n'.'-"n ,' , 'IS'." ' """"i JOW 4!JU 1! JU ; ; 1'4 3 d,, U- u- CllS l-H :at 1 iu :ha ,n er en iaa ora J. 5 o the a. eri t and t a ha-rga row esi-t un-f ab lies :ity, 'I us f n S 03 !arl LlSSl i sit t. -I er fir .ill oi ill-on- ilic, lor i. J.C. nn HUTUIlinSU. Editor. 1 G. IltTtJIIIKSOX, IMibllNliei tTTl1' Attorney at V Law, Ebensburg, Pa. ji 24, 1867. - JJTfENLON, Attorney at Law, A Ebensburg, Pa. jsT 0R'lce PPoslte tte Kank. IT Law, Ebensburg, Pa. V . . i. T-i r: 1 4 p2 Ofhce in uoionnaao iiow. lju.- FY. TIEK.lN.UI, Attorney ai liair, Ebensburg, Cambria county, Pa. ja-UInce in uoionnaue nuw. .J"- J 0I1NSTON & SCANLAN Attorneys t Law. EbensburgPa. . nrr, n nnneit th Court House. rty "Ffwu w , L. JOHSSTU.1. tjr.u .I j tMKS C. EASLY, Attorney at Law, ' Orrolltown, Cambria county, Pa. t Architectural Drawings and fpecifi- ITX SHOEMAKER, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. Articular attention paid to collections. o:fice one door east of Lloyd & Co.'s Sinking House. janJ4 CAMUEL SINGLETON, Attorney at Law. Ebensburcr, Y. Office on High ,:rfet. west of Foster's Hotel. Will practice in tbe Courts of Cambria ana joining counties. r:v Attends also to the collection of claims Isukiiers against the Government. jan24 ,1 EORGE W. OAT 31 AN, Attorney at !J Law and Claim Agent, Ebensburg, mliria countv. Pa. Pensions. Back Pav and Bounty, and .' MHitarv Claims collected, lloal Estate Vjvi;it nnd scM, and pr.j-ment of Taxes at Book Accounts, Notes, Due Bills, I j lanA?, &c, collected. Deeds, Mortga- 1 ...' i"ftr.ient5. Letters of Attorney, Bonds, r rXi;V written, and all lecral business , irf.'L.V attended to. tensions mcreasej, ,n? rfM:ili7ed Bountv eollecied. rin24 JJW - j J) DEYEIiEAUX, M. D., Thysician It. and Surgeon, Summit, Pa. y-Orrice east of Mansion House, on Bail Qii street. Night calls promptly attended at his cfiice. may23 rvKXTISTHY. J The undersigned, Graduate of the Bal- iore College of Dental Surgery, respectfully era his jirofeosional services to the citizens Ebensburg. He has spared no means to Jroughly acquaint himself with every im ovt ment in his art. To many years of per lal experience, be has sought to add the irtpd pinerience of the highest authorities ; Dental Science. He simply asks that an pportunity miy be given tor ms wors 10 cd's. Us own praise. ftrmctt: Prof. C. A. Harris ; T. E. Sond, p.; FT. Ii. Handy; A. A. u:andy,i'. ii. aus- ;a, of the Baltimore college. Xkisr"Will beat Ebensburc on the fourth t'jaday of each month, to stay one wjek. January 24, Jfc07. LOYD & CO., Xaiiccrs Jj Ebeksbcbo, Pa. tzf Gold, Silver, Government-Loans and :her Securities bought and sold. Interest luwtd on Time Deposits. Collections made i all accessible points in the United States, iu a General Danking Business transacted. January 24, 1667. TT7" M. LLOYD & Co., Ikivkers T T Altoosa, Pa. Drafrs on the principal cities, and Silver t-i Go! J for sale. Collections made. Mon- tt-.t.ved on deposit, payable on demand, st interest, or upon time, with interest r rates. liana . h. lmvd l'resi't. jous lloyd. Cmhier. iPtftST NATIONAL BANK OF ALTOONA. GO VERXMEXT A GEXCY, AND -SIGXATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNI TED STATES. Corner Virginia and Annie sts., North rJ, Altoona, Pa. ihorized Capital $300,000 00 a C'AriTAL Paid i.n 150,00 00 'ill business pertaining io Banking done on arable terms. Vernal Revenue Stamps of all denomina i always on hand. ') purchasers of Stamp, percentage, in :ps, will be allowed, as follows: $50 to 2 per cent.; $10C to $200, 3 per cent. 0 aud upwards, 4 per cent. fjan24 Successor of It. S. Dunn, Dealer in KKDHUGS AND MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS, AM) DYE-STUFFS, PERFUME- W K;v) FANCY ARTICLES, PUKE ir ma XNU BRANDIES FOR MEDI KU 1 LIipES, PATENT MEDICINES, &c. -i . ''cr, Cap, arui Note Papers, Pens, Pencils, Superior Ink, And other articles kept by Druggists generally. "nans' prescriptions curefullt compounded. Office nn.NTain Strfpt. nnnositi flip Mnnn- :Houj.e, Ebensburg, Pa. - . -ii ljan24 ft r SdAlUlETTS DVSEET, House, Sign, and Ornamental Putnting, Grain- Glasinj and Paper Hanging. Siy Work done on short notice, and satis :;on fruaranteed. Shop iu basement of T,'n Hall, Ebensburg, Pa. my9-Cm L VMUEL SINOLETON, Notary Pub lic, fcbensburg, Pa. JSce on High street, west of Foster's IIo- jan2l "JALI COAL! COAL ! The subscriber is now carrying on the ry of Wm. Tilev. Sr . at Lilv Stmn. tije Pennsylvania Riilroad, Cambria coun- "na will be glad to fill all orders, to any nt, of citizens of Ebensburg and vicin- . aaiisiaction as to quality of Coal guar (1 in all cases. WM. TILEY. Jr. 0;ialotk P. O., Jan. 24, 1807. 1' AVE YOU SUBSCRIBED ron ' THE ALLEGIIANIAN ?"' VOLUME 8. .1 rr-" i r- EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1867. Xal-ttlo Poarl. I was bitterly discontented that morn ing, and there is no denying it discon tented ith my home, my husband, even with my baby. I rcmembor the morning well ; it was gray and cloudy, with a low, dragging mist, that chilled one to the bone, and hung the trees with reeking moisture. Tho black mud, about the door of our western home, was thick and deep ; and the bare floor of our one room was badly stained and soiled by the careless feet of the rough-shod workingmen. I had been cleaning up all the morning, but tbe more I cleaned, the worse matters seemed to grow ; soap and sand only served to render the black foot-marks more visible ; and when a sudden puff of wind whirled the smoke and ashes down the pipe of my cooking-stove, covering the books and tables 1 bad just taken so mucn puins in dusting off, I threw myself in the rocking chair, and burst icto a passion cf despair ing tears. We brought the rocking chair with us, Ned and I, when we left our cottage, on the outskirts of the city, and journeyed westward. It was a pretty cottage ; my eyes fill with tears even now at the thought of it. with its low, breezy windows, through which the odor of roses floated tho live-long summer ; and its clean, well ordered rooms adorned with those charm ing, useless, little tojj, that go so far toward making a home pleasant and at tractive. It was my first home after mar riage aod a woman always loved that home better than aoy other. We were happy, Ned and I; as cozy and comfort able as two robins in the heart of a sum mer apple tree. Ned was a cierk, but with a crood salary, with fome little addi tions flowing in now and then from other resource. And when our baby came, "Liulo Pearl," as we called her, our hap piness was complete. But altera while the new rapture began t9 cool ; and as Little Pearl's blue eyes deepeoed and expanded, Ned began to cait about hrni in a sage and fatherly manscr. "We muat do tho beet we can, for Little Pearl's eake, Bell." That was the opening remark a dis closure of his plans followed. lie had caught the western fever. "Westward the star of cniDire makes its way," Nei quoted, with te!Iing empha?:s, adding, "we mut follow, Bell, and build up a name and home for Little Pearl !" I assented I alwavs did to Ned's plans; though, in my secret soul, I felt that the movement was a had one. We sold our pretty cottage and furniture at a considerable sacrifice ; Ned left his clerk ship; and the November after Little Pearl's birth found us in our Western home. Ned had urged me to bring out our servants; but in a fit of high-etrung hero ism, I determined to be muid-of-all-work myself. Ned would havo to sacrifice his eas and oomfort I would not be behind him. It was comparatively light in the begin ning, when only Ned and myself wero to provide for; but after a while tho hired men came; and baby required more atten tion every day. The fall rains set in, converting the spongy soil into black, adhering mud. 1 worked late and early, but found it impossible to take care ol my babe, and keep our rude homo in any thing like order. I bore up aB long as I could ; but at last my strength utterly failed, and, sitting down in the rocking chair, I sobbed like a silly child. I tho't of our old home, with its pretty, well or dered apartments; of the hours of plcasan leisure and social enjoyment to which I had been accustomed ; and then, with a fresh gush of team, I looked out at the low, trailing mist, and around the email, untidy room in which I was imprisoned. It was wrong in Ned to bring me to fuch a place, against my will, too, I thought bitterly. At that moment, 1 heard the voice of the sick hired man calling for water, and catching up the pitcher, 1 brushed away my tears and ran up to. tho rude loft where he lay. As I reached the bed, I saw by the sun that it was almost noon, and dinner was to cook for Ned and the hired men. . Giving the invalid his water, I paused a moment to mix a draught of medicine, my thoughts full of the smoking stove, and the duties that awaited me below ; just then, shrill and clear, came Little Pearl's cry. I threw down the dose I was mixing, exclaiming, almost angrily : ' It's no use, I can't get along, no mat ter bow hard I strive. What fchall I do now? Oh, dear! I do wish I had no baby !" My very finger-tips thrilled with terror the instant the unwomanly wish had passed my lips; and, clearing the steps at two or three bounds, I rushed to the corner where her crib stood, eager to clasp her to my bosom, and pour out my remorse in tears and kisses. ' I snatched aside tbe cur tain. The crib was there. So was the snowy pillow, bearing the damp impression of her head ; but Little Pearl was gone. For the instant, I stood dumb and almost senseless, then a swift thought came to my relief. "Ned ha6 stolen hex to frighten me," I cried,-and rushing out, I searched for him ;n vain. " " - - - "... The mist was thickening into rain. I I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAKPRISIDENT. Hbhrt Cut. knew well enough that he was too careful of her to expose her in such a manner: yet I clung to the belief that he had takon her as I clung to my life. There were fresh foot-prints in the black mud about the door leading outward toward tbe wood lot, where Ned and the men were at work. I followed them, my head uncovered, un mindful of the chill wind and driving rain, plunging ancle-deep into the yield ing soil, at every step. About half way, I saw something in the path before me. It was a little crimson stocking. My heart leaped for joy. Ned had stolen her, and she had kicked it from her foot on tho way. It was cruel in him to frighten me so. I wonder if he had heard that silly wish of mine ! Half a mile from the house, I met him and the men coming home to dinner. lie started forward the moment he raw me. "Why, Bell!" he said, "what's the matter ? Is Little Pearl sick V One glance at his white, startled face convinced me that my hope was in vain ; yet I cried out, angrily, "You've got the child, Ned, you know you hayo don't torture me any longer ?" "Bell, what do you mean ?" "She's gone Little Pearl. You stole her, Ned, to frighten me." "No, on my soul, Bell." "Then eha'g gone ; God has granted my wish. Oh, my baby !" I was rushing past him, but he caught and held me fast, commanding me to tell him fill; and I did. And then his after words thrilled my soul with horror. "The Indians 1 the Indian boys!" ho cried; "they must havo stoleu her. Come !' They followed him without a word, and so did I. Over the spongy prairie mud, the chill wind and rain driving in our faces, through dense, dripping woods, down to the shore of the water. Iut we were too lato. The last canoe was moored on the opposite shore. God had given me my wish. I had no baby. Little Pearl could not be found, altho' our efforts were ceaseless. Her crib re mained in its corner, with the impress of her head on its pillow; but the little laughing face that had looked up at us from the depths of the coverlets was gone forever. I had ample time to perform all my household duties then. There was no little quivering cry to detain me when I was busy ; no .clinging . hands holding mine and keeping them idle. My wish had been granted. The desolate, inconsolable sorrow of the days that followed, no tongue can portray the tender longing, tbe sharp, stinging remorse. But we lived and worked, for life and labor must go on, no matter how fcore and weary our hearts may be. At the end of five year?, Ned looked round him on the ripe fruition of his most san guine hopes. He had built him not only a home, but a name, in the new country. We had pleasant rooms, and luxuriant furniture, and birds, and flowers, and all the attributes that go to makeup a happy home. Alldid I say? Not all. We were childless. Little Pearl had never come back, and God had given us no other child to fill her place. But we de sired no other, our grief for her loss being dearer and more sacred than any new love could ever have been. Poor Ned! That unforgotten sorrow, together with his arduous duties, made him an old man before his time; tho sil ver threads were thick on his temples, and the furrows on his forehead deeply cut. When we went back on a visit to our old home, the friends of his youth did not recognize him. His life had lost its im pelling aim and motive. One night, in tha great city, we were returning from the opera, when a voice startled us with, "Please, sir, a penny to buy a loaf!" It was midnight; the pavements were glazed with ice, and the countless stars overhead glittered in the cold blue sky like so many points of steel. I was dreaming of my home in the far west and longing for the hour .of my return home. A strange feeling of tenderness bound me to the spot where I lost my Little Pearl. I could not bear to be away from it be cause of a foolish fear that she might come back and I not be there to welcome her. The slender, pleading voice broke iu upon my reverie, and glancing out of the carriage window, I saw a smsll, childish figure, and a tiny hand, blue and cold. "Stop the carriage, Ned ; I shan't close my eyes to-night if we pass that child." My husband started up from his half doze and obeyed me. "What do you wan'?" ho asked, kindly, bending over and taking tho child's Laud in his. "A penny, please, sir, to buy a loaf for granny ; sheV sick." Ned took a silver piece from bis pocket, but I caught his arm bcl'oro he had drop ped it into the littie, waiting hand. Some thing in the soft blue eyes, looking up so pleadingly in the winter starlight, thrilled my heart to its inmost core. I yearned to clasp the little shivering form to my breast, to stroke back the tangled, golden hair from the squalid, want-pinched face. Take her up, Ned," I entreated ; "she will freeze if we leave her here. We can put her out whenever she likes." And good natured Ned, who never de nied me a thing in his life, complied. Down dark and unfrequented streets into one of the lowest haunts of vice and pov erty ; then she guided us up a long flight of stairs into a cheerless attic. An old woman lay upon a heap of straw, her face wearing that cold, greyish hue which is the unmistakable precursor of death. . ."Have you come ?" she questioned, ea gerly, as we entered; "gi me the loaf." . .The child ran to her hide, and began to stroke back her gray hair. "A good lady, and gentleman's come," Bhe lisped, softly. "I'm gtad jer come," she said, addres sing JTed.- Fm goin', you jee, and some winter. She ain't mine, though. I got her from a squad o' Ingins, when my ole man run a fiat-boat down the Mississippi. They'd stole her from some one, and bruug her by our cabin, and she was sich a putty little thing that the ole man and me struck a trade for ker. I alters kept her clothes, the ones she had on, in case her friends might know her, if they ever tut-Ded up but they didn't; an' now I'm goin', she'll be left to herself. You might look arter her, madam, couldn't ye?" "Where are the clothes she had on?" asked Ned and I, eagerly, and in the same breath. She looked into my face inquiringly, and then pointed to an old trunk. Ned broke it open. There they were in a faded heap; the dainty embroidered slip, the tioy pinafore, and ote crimson stocking. Its fellow lay iu the bottom of my drawer in my far western home. "Oh, Ned!" I eried, "she u Little Pearl." And po she was. We had found her at last, our baby, our dailing. Counterfeiting In tbe United States. The peculiar circumstances under which our nationality was developed were favor able to the growth of inventive genius. This is eviuced in the wonderful strides we have made in almost all the labor-saving and mechanical arts. American inventions are in demand all over the world, and the highest personal honors that our citizens have yet received abroad are due to. the fertility of our genius in thu important particular. In fact, we are gradually achieving a reputation before the world of being a nation of inventors. Let us beware that a few unprincipled men do not degrade this proud distinction by making us seem to be a nation of counterfeiters. The ingenious and deserving men who create and introduce valuable inventions are public benefactors, and it is an out rage that the fruits of their labor should be so often stolen by unscrupulous imita tors. The evil consequences of this spe cies of rascality are not restricted to the inveutors merely, but permeate every interest and department of society, and the men who are at tho bottom of it are a stink in the nostrils of the body politic. Thousands of dollars are annually filched from the pockets of our industrious and worthy citizens by the evil which we are endeavoring to expose. Io fact, the sum total of losses sustained by the people through the cupidity of counterfeiters of coiu and currency is an inconsiderable fraction in comparison with the amount of their contributions, unwittingly made, to the counterfeiters of various commodi ties. As instances of what is here com plained of, take the inventor of genuine Essence of Coffee, an article proved to be of great use and convenience to travelers on the Plains. No sooner is his article made known than the market becomes flooded with an endless variety of worth less imitations, all labeled "Ebence of Coffee,'' although most of them are as innocent of even the slightest mixture of coffee as Satan is innocent of holiness. Of course, the real inventor is injured, as the masses soon arrive at the conclusion that such a thing as genuine Essence of Coffee never had an existence at all. So, too, the man who puts up genuine ground spices soon finds that others are imitating his pure article by putting up a compound of corn meal with a little mustard, corn meal with a little ginger, corn meal with a little pepper, logwood with cayenne pepper, &c., until the whole catalogue of spices is one stupendous adulteration, and the ingredients employed are not always merely worthless, but absolutely poison ous and detrimental to health aud life. In short, there is hardly a single genuine article of value that has not some such homicidal attempts made upon its life by men without conscience, whose only aim seems to be to "put money in their purse," no matter how. Among the notorious imitations of this character that have re cently been foisted upon the public, the most flagrant and unblushing is found in the attempt to flood the country with counterfeits of "Spear's Anti-Dust Cook Stove," on article which our readers will remember wo have frequently mentioned in the columns of this journal a possess ing uousual merits, and being at once an honor to ito ingenious inventor and an invaluable household convenience where ever it i introduced. But Mr. Spear is not permitted to reap the reward of his invaluable invention unmolested. Small imitators have arisen, and on the wings one.rjughter look, arter. her4 .pointing to tfor-chihL- SheVa."gbo3 little filing ; I've had her with"mesix:'Ters come next of Mr. Spear's well-earned popularity are directing their ludicrous flight towards the summit of fortune. Beware of them, as their flight is as certain to end in dis grace as the stoves they have botched into shape, with a stolen trade-mark upon them, are certain to result in disappoint ment to all who may buy them. The latter are inferior to Mr. Spear's stoves in size, as they are inferior in every other quality. A word as to this difference in size : -All stoves are sold by the size of tho boiler holes on the top. Thus, for example, an eight-inch boiler bolo is called an eight inch stove, a nine-inch boiler hole a nine inch stove, &c But within the last two years the trick has been resorted to' by some manufacturers of putting an eight inch boiler hole on a seven-inch stove ; so that the body of the stove, although shown to be an eight-inch, is in reality under size. This fraud is in many cases practiced successfully, as not one woman in a million, or man either, can detect the deception by simple eye-measurement. The dealer applies his rule to the boiler hole; the latter is found to measure eight inches, and so the stove is proved to be an "eight-inch," when in reality it is very much smaller than the true "eight inch" size as sold by Mr. Spear. Of course, all the sizes are liable to this species of mis representation. Mr. Spear's ctove tifts its ovrn ashes and makes no dust or dirt in a room ; the counterfeit attempts to do the panie thing, but, like ail other counterfeits (with clean ly housekeepers), it will not pas3 current. The counterfeit stove, instead of tilting its own ashes, dirties the floor of the kitchen, and gives the housekeeper double trouble; she wishes she had never seen it, and, like the man who has a sick head ache, after drinking a cup of the extract of coffee (counterfeit, of course), be ex claims, "humbug !" and seriously doubts if there be such a thing as "anti-uust" stoves at all. That the execrable imita tion anti-dust stoves, which we are here exposing, are humbugs, we readily admit, but they are no more like the genuiue Spear artie'e than bad cider is like good champagne. "What we would especially impress upon our readers is, that all genuine anti-dust stoves have the name of "Spear" cast upon them, and are only to be obtained, in Philadelphia, at the stove headquarters, No. 11 1G and 1118 Market street. Mr. Spear, we are glad to - learn, has estab lished agencies lor the sale of these cele brated stoves in nearly every town through out the United States ; but again we say, beware of the spurious humbugs that are recommended in their stead, and avoid them as you would a plague. His imita tors have stolen and appropriated his trade-mark, "Anti-dust," which is a fright ful breach of all law and public decency, but as this name is the only thing about the counterfeit stoves that beaTS any re semblance to the genuine original, adven turers with a small organ of Conscience and a large bump of Imitation will hardly surrender it without a struggle. That these imitations should be offered and placarded at 6toTe doors on our business aveuues, for no other purpose than to deceive people by inducing theru to throw away their money on a miserable counter feit, is positively disgraceful to the mer cantile integrity of our city, and ahould be rebuked by all honest people as aa insult. Mr. Spear's Anti dust Stove has a large oven, bakes bread evenly, while the coun terfeit stoves have a small oven and either burn the bread on one side, or do net bake it at all. Mr. Spear's Anti-dust Stove consumes the gas, thereby saving fifty per cent, of fuel ; the counterfeit does not burn the gas, consumes an extraordi nary amount cf fuel, and is in all respects an unmitigated humbug. We may here state that Mr. Spear is the inventor of the gas-burning, principle as applied to cock ing stoves, and his patent has been coun terfeited by Dearly every stove manufac turer io the United States. One honorable exception to this rule is the establishment, in Pilttburg, of Messrs. A. Bradley & Co., who purchased the liight of this patent ; but there are thousands of cook stove sold with the word "Gas-burners" on them that do not possess a 6iugle appliance requisite for the consumption of gas. A more shameful imposition can hardly be imagined. We are iuformed that a small concern in this city, some time since com mitted an infringement upon Mr. Spear's patent, and admitted the fact through their attorney, at tho same time boasting that they owned more patents than any similar concern in the Ui.ited States, and it is a well known fact that tho concern referred to have, for the last two years, been extensively manufacturing an imita tion of Mr. Spear's Anti-dust Cook Stove; and while they hac not the temerity to cast Mr. Spear's trade-mark upon the stoves they manufacture, they have, nev ertheless, the audacity to use it on their circulars for the purpose of assisting the sale of a spurious article. Undoubtedly, this wholesale uoiairness is the very high est compliment to the merits of Mr. Spear's invention, as no one would be fool enough to counterfeit the bills of a bad bank. The question will naturally arise, why does not Mr. Spear prosecute the people who are thus infringing upon his rights? "We understand that this unselfish leniency T S R M S : f ER AIVXfJM. I $2.00 IN ADVANCE. NUMBER 34. is, about to terminate, and that Mr. Spear is going to commence suits forthwith against all infringers of his patent Anti dust Cook Stove, a8 a matter of protection to himself and the public. Among needed enactments, there are none more necessary than a law that will adequately punish all classes of counterfeiters. And now, as multitudes of our people will want new stoves during the coming fall, we would again cautiou them to ht aar of counterfeits. The counterfeiters and dealers in counterfeits will spare no pains to entrap the unwary.. They, in iact, have gone so far as to furnish their customers with circulars containing Mr. Spear's trade mark, "Anti-dust Cooking Stove," in order to facilitate the Bale of the counterfeit article. " rWe repeat, in conclusion, that the Spear Anti-Dust "Cook" and "Parlor"" Stoves are the most desirable stoves in the world, and that the counterfeits are comparatively a worthless cheat ; that noce are genuine without the name of "Spear" upon them, and that the only place to obtain them in Philadelphia is at the Headquarters, JVo. 1116 and 1118 Mirket street, and that the genuine Spear article may be obtained by applying to the principal stove dealers la any of the towns or cities of the United States. To stove dealers throughout the country the agency for the sale of these celebrated "Spear" stoves is an object worth sccuiing. We throw out this suggestion as we leara that some openings ot this character may yet be obtained by prompt application. -Philadelphia Press. Spirit llappliiaS. A correspondent of the Ilollidaysburg Thij, writing from Huston towuship, Blair county, under date of August 26th, say?: "The people of our neighborhood have been for a week past very much excited by spiritual manifestations in a house at the Springfield Furnace Mine Bank. The inmates of tho house are persons of integ rity and good standing. An orphan gitl a member of the family, who was the special medium or victim of this pheno menon of spiritual communication, also bears a good character. Tho rapping always commenced about nine o'clock in the evening, and continued until after midnight. Before appearing each night, the medium experienced a dullness begin ning at her feet and extending upwards. Then a low tapping was heard over tho floor, like some one walking, growing louder as it approached the girl, ending in loud knocks, like the stroke of a mallet. One moment, it was overhead, then under the floor, on the wall, &c. It would re spond by distinct raps to every question. It was asked how long since Mr. Lincoln died, and the number of years was imme diately given. So in regard to the lapse of years since Stephen A. Douglas died. A member of the family becoming vexed at tho noise and confusion, remarked, ."I am not afraid of you, my trust is in God," when there was such a succession of "thundering knocks" that a portion ot the plastering fell from the wall. People came from a distance to investigate the matter, believing it to be collusion or trickery, and went away firmly convinced that it was an intangible, unsubstantial spirit, and fouud that "there are more things in heaven and earth than were dreamed of in their philosophy." The rappings continued one week. The girl had several convulsions, after which she sank into a partial trance and the noises were heard no more." Gen. D. II. Hill, of the late Confed erate army, has a high opinion of the military skill of Joshua, and thinks he displays a superiority over noted Generals of later times. He says : "Joshua, the successor of Moses, was distinguished by the favor cf Heaven, and yet was one of the most renowned military leaders of his own or any other age. His strategy and maneuvering furnish an interesting study, at this day, to the student of military history, lie will oec that the mistake which Washington mado at Germantown, in attempting to take Chew's house; which Greene made at Eutaw, in attempt ing to take the brick jail, Joshua did not make when tho five Kings fled to their cave or stronghold at Makkedah. He did not, turn aside from the great object, but gave orders : "Stay ye not, but pursue after your enemies and smite the hindermost of them; suffer them not to enter their cities." Had Jackson at New Orleans been famil iar with the tactics of Joshua, he would have made his night attack of the 22d December just before day, and thus have anticipated the great victory of the 8th of January. Is it not strange that mili tary men in modern times, with all the history and experience of ages beforo them, can discover no mistakes in tho campaigns cf Joshua, who marched and fought au;cs before Alexander, Hannibal, Cicar, and Napoleon ? Whence did ha derive his strategy? Who taught him the art of war ?" President Johnson, who has "filled all the ofiices in the gift of the people, from that of alderman up to that of Pres idout," has been elected an honorary member of the Mutual base bail club of New York city. 1