g ERDIS OP ADVERTISING Ono Square ono Insertion, For each subsequent Insertion. For ale cantlle.Advertisements. Legal Notices Frofos , Waal Cards without paper. Obituary Not ,es an 00.1.1MUldo don, rol Ling. to matte sot pri vats interests :Llano, 10 cents per lino. _ JOB PRINTI9O.--Our Job Printing Offleo is the argest and most comploto e , tabilshunent in the >mu y. Four good Presses, and a general variety Cl material suited for Olio and Fancy work of every kind, en thleB us to de Job Printing at the nhoi test notice, and oil the most reasonable terms. Persons lo want of Bills, Blanks, or anything In tho Jobbing liar, will find It to Choir interoet to give us n call. 6:oural Nuforatation. U. S. GOVERNMENT PreSident—ANDßEW JOHNSON, VICO President—L. S. VOITEII, Secretary of State—Wm. 11. SEWARD, Secretary of Interior—J.. lIIIILAN, Secretary of Treasury,- /leen NlcOottocii, Secretary o I War—FDWIN M. ST4NTuN, secretary of Navy—OfmeN ‘VELLEs, Master neeeral—WM. DENNISON. • *ternay donor:ll—J war. S. SPEED. hief .1 ostice of the nit 01 Stafes—SAT..mw! P. CHASE STATE GOVEItNAIENT. verlior--ANDIII, U CUMIN, e•iv ary of :Late—ELl SLIFER, ..urvoyor tion,al-I.CnF.S , . BARR. .• liter Gglner:il—lsk IC SLVNKEII, .%Lt,nrnQy Uen era —Wm. M. 111 :ityi,iTll I , ljuLant e neral I, lite, Stet e TrOlsurer—llENlt V D. Monne. tle of the ,nll . rniun (hurt—tiro. IV.Woon Aim COUNTY OFFICERS. ~ , .„qiio nt , .In . U raltatn. asihiciato Judges—lion. Nlicha-1 Conklin, list 11 nigh Stuart District A' [...oily—J. W. D./10181cl, Drath inotary—Suinutil Shiro:min , r 4. nu t ID, rid in Commit, 'high:ter—Geo W. North. 111.411 Jacobi:. lautity Creisurer—lleury tiorimor —David Su ith Giiatity D•iminhisioners—lienry Karns. John .y, ditch 01l \lrClrllnu t ~ap•rintundnni. .ll to 'r Shydor to 11* Dub. l'hsaici Pisa W 11. Dirie MO BOROUG OFFICERti MIEM=EU =I AQsifttatlt. Ilurges-- %%1111:1,1 Camoron "rown 15,111—./. 11 . I) I/ L' I'll,. \\, tz..l l'11:14. U. 11, Ilvr, turf 11..11'1111in ,t I.l—\ K Ilhoetn..l,llll lIIIYR, S . D. 11,11111:111 I I irk. `lasoollammer 11,01,11 vast] 1 . 1 t 1,0111 1111:11 C.. 11 1, 11111 . 1. 1,1111111./Id'll 7., \ 1 . 1171 i CllllStlibil, Fll l .l. _Ni111 • .11 1 . 11,t %V.d. Jantes IVid A5..Q.,-11i111,11 No:11,1 - .111111,r-- 1 K. •F ax \Klri.m Het r. IVard \N . :lrd. Jar b thual3 e.tt art]. 11 li 51 illiati. Strt•el. irk )larlden. .1114 Oil he lee —l. msler, David Swill than •11 off. \II •liat-1 ilidcomb Lamp 1. 1 010,45 Alex. Merk, I.ri i illicit elf uRu Es Virht Pcesby lel idn Cllur ell. Northwest angle old:el. L re, :!..luare. Rev Cm! ,:ty %1 tog. very. Sunday )lornlng at II o'clock, A. NI ,and 7 o'cloca I'. )1. Seco!. l Presbyterian Chu:, h, corner oi South Ilau uvor and Peohlret. Rev. Jofin Mies. I , : , stee iervico: eoeunenve at 11 o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'c,ock St .1 .1111 . ., (Prot. 11p1s,•,lio l l,i not theaqt. angle ul (lentte ,-luare. Rev P .1 Cie,. t(e••ter. FOCI ice, at 11 o'clock 0. )1 , d 1' M. En.4lish Lutberart L:bur. h. Bedford, between )lain ttrt st tort:: Itry 0.11111,..T0rr Pastor at 11 o'clork NI.. .10d . ..look I'. 11. I;erman 10.1,111 rd I. llllrell. 0 , 400,./ Ilan .v..; and Be, :3..0 Philips, lost, at 11 o'rlor l c .1. )1.. and 0 o • vloek I' I. 11•,i ',list E. Church (first cliargc) winner of Main 1.1 Vitt Str •ets. ICev riloulas 11. 6herlork, raktor Set vice, :At I I o'-clock A. \l.. and 7 o'clock P. M. )leLlmilst E Chord. (second rhor_e.) llev. I. lif /Wlll3ll, Pastor. I ervicesin Emory )1 I. l'hurch nr I o'clock k. kI 51,1 3j,,, kl. Church oi God Chaprl Youth 'or ut Rest M. nd COapol they.(ter. It. F Bock, l'osto . met' at 11 a, 111, and 5 mho t l'atrickl4 Catholic Church Pomfret hour Eastat liuv l'aatiir. Services every other Stlli hstb. at to o'clock. Shapers at a P. 11. ernian Lutheran Church, owner of I'omuim et and dadtirril et reels. Rev U Fritze, raster. Sort ices Si I o'clock 1.;; h • n vh.tnz,es in th, 21)J we Are no,,s.try the rilDOr nor, "x are t n.4tity uc cuLLEG I ❑,•r li-r sin 11.,Jo1kuson, 1). U. l're,id stud Pro ,s,r 111 1l r Scienvo. wthi : ,„ k '., Wilson, A. M., Professor of Natural .S..lcovo n.l . armor ik the 11 lx,eurn. Rev. ‘\'tl 130,1‘1,11, A M., Professor of the Greek and 4JeroLin S.Gna..l I). 11111 me n, A. :11., Prole Iser of NiaLbetukt- John K. Stnymtii, A. M., Professor of the Latin an d Fl ~ 1 11,11 lAnguage,. Hon .I.tmes 11. t; r:1 hAin, LL. U . Profess, of Law. Rev. 'leery C. Cheii.on, A 11 . Prhicipol of the (111111m3r lohu llo?d,.Aseislant in the (;I:iltletr :Seheol =EI rliE iNsriTrn, CoIIPoRATION : - The hector, II Jr lane and Vest ryilleit of St. Johns Church Cat lisle The Rev. F . . Cler v Li., It rotor And Treasutct. Mrs John It inn•aJ, Pt Neil.). Miss S. E. Doniters!c3, Instructor in Languagcs iss L. L. W.:latter, I nett uct, iu :latlictnatios awl Vocal Music. Mrs. M. Ege, Teach, of Einno. M isq ()rah 11131 'Leacher of I rue my and Painting key. S. Philips. Lectuicr on Elocution and Psychos. ogy. Bomtu OF :-.;cifooL DIREcToRs E. C WOllllll Erle,i(lo.lllt, JUMPS .111111ilt1,11, I It. C. IVoodirArd, Ilonry ewshom, Ilutu,rich Sevey J W. Eby, 'l'rersurtir, John :41thlr. l lee..•ngei Moot on the Int Nlonday of uneh Nionth nt b o'elork A II , nt EdurAtlon CORPORATIoNS evit.LISLE It‘st: —ltru..l,ltott. U. )1 Iloudei gun 1V 11. Ltentnut rash .1 and C 6. Pfnlile 11'. Clerk. Jun. Unapt - vino, 314, sen i ter Dns•etors, it 11 liondnrsnn, President U C Won ',yard. &tilos Woodburn. llottns Sticker, Join 'Lee, W. 11'. Dale, John D. tiorgas, Joseph J. Log. J no Stuart, jr. Flair Nml Iv tL It INK.—Priftlidaill. Samuel II oph urn Ca Kier. Jon. C hatter, railer, Abner C. Brind,e, 11, s se ger, Jesse drown Win [Car, Jelin Dunlap, hich'd IWoods, .1 'ha C. 1101,1tp, s tac Brenneman, John torrett, Hepburn, Direct ors. l(flLaoaD (7,lll'f:a Neal dew, Frederick %%lat-, t•eolol.Lr and Tie:tsar, er, Edward M. 1{1,1110: :lapel Let,lan t, O. N. Lull. Pass, ege trains three (hues a day Carlisle A ecnnutio alio. tst wird, looses Ctrli.ule 5 f):, .5. , arriving at Car lim o 5 2,1 p. !rains I.l,:ttv,frd, 111.111 A 41 and 2 42, I', Wesavard at 11 27, A. and 2.53 I' M. C 1111.18 LE 018 AND WO Ell CIOII.INY. Probident. no! Todd; rrmaNtliNir, A. I, 8pon• ler ; Superinto I en ti eorgo Wiso Dlreetore, F. Watts, Win. yl. Beaten; E. H. Biddle, Henry Saxton. It. C. Woodward, ./ 11 Patton, F. "ardour and D. 8, Croft. SOCIETIES Cumberland Stns Lodge No. It/7, A. T. M. meets al Marlon 111tH on the Sod and 4th Tuesdays of every mouth. St. John's Lodge No. 260 A. Y. M. Meets lldThurs day of each month, at Marion Hall. Carlisle Lodge No. 1.11 I.\o of 0. N Meets Monday evening, at 'I rout's building. Letort Lodge Nu, 93, 1. 0. of G. T. Th tirade y evening in Illleein's Ball, :id story. - FIRE COMPANIES. • Tho Union Fire Company wa. organized in 1789. House In Louther between l'iltand Ilanover. The Cumberland Fire Company was Instituted Feb 18, 1800. Houma in Iladford, between Win Ill) tl Porn fret. The Good Will Fire Company was Instituted In March, 1855. House in Pomfret, near Hanover The klmplro Hook and Ladder Company was lnstitu• toct In 1850. House in Pitt. near Main. RATES OF POSTAGE. Postage on all letters of ono half ounce weight or under, 2 cents prepaid. Postage on the HERALD within the County, free. Within the State 13 cents per annum. To any part of the United States, 20 cents Postage on all Iran Meat papers. 2 cents per ounce. Advertised letters to bo charged with cast of advertising. MRS. R. A. SMITH'S Photographs, Ambrotypes, ivorytypes Beautiful Albums ! Beautiful Frames ! Albums for Ladles and Gontkanon. Albums f r Misses, and for Childreng Pocket Albums for Soldiers and qv!llansl Choicest Albumel Prettiest Albums! Cheapest Albums! 4 FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS I Fresh and Now from Now York and' Philadelphia Markets.. , IF you want satisfactory Pictures and polite attention call at Mrs. It. A. Smith's Photo graphic Gallery, South East Corner of Hanover Street and Market Square, opposite the Court Rouse and Post Office, Carlisle, Pa. Airs. it. A. Smith well known as Sirs. It A.lleynolds, And' SO well known as a Daguerrean Artist, gives per sonal attention to Ladies and Gentlemen visiting her Gallery, and having the bearof Artists and polite at tendants can saltily promise that In no other Gallery can those who favor her with a call get pictures sup.- tier to hors, not even in Now York or ithiladalPhia, or meet. with more kind and prompt attentloii .. , -Ambrotypes inserted in Rings, Lockets ' Breast Pins, &o. Perfect copies of Dagnorrotypes and Ambrotypes made of deceased friends. Where copies we defaced, 11 e-like pictures may still be had. either for frames or for cards. All negatives preserved olio year, and orders by mail or otherwisepromptly attended to. December 2.3, 1884—tf . DR. WM. H. COOK,: HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN; Surgeon and Accouchour PRICE tit —his 'residence in Pitt street, adjoining the Methodist Church. my 4 . 1804. - WI EMI 25 00 4 On 7 (0 VOL. 65. ( sitigfinL THE STAMMERING WIFE BY JOHN O. SA XF: deeply in love with 3fiss Emily Prynr, I ,15,1 VII, if the maiden would mdv he mine. eaild Ithinyn endonvor to pie... her: She her entlltent, thrt . the stuttering hist, Said n' 'F ‘‘,"ll, exeept, "You're on RAN .I it :1,.--1.11 w“.-idinlic I 'floor,'. Ihrt W)11.11 we Were married, I round to cc, milli The Nnuntnering lady had spoken that truth, For often in obvious dudgeon, She'd .my—if I ventured to give her a Jog In the way of reproof—" You're a clog—yon're n dog— rb —II 1111g-11111th' VIINTI ill igollll tiler ,vlieh I said, " We eau hardly !afford Thin extravagant style, with inn- meliorate hoard. - And hinted we alight to he whir,— She kepi:ed. I snare yen. ex eeinlinglv bine, .t nil fretfully "You're ou're n .t rw— .A nc-rt iciiiiis nd, iser Again, 'Non, it happon,•ll, that 10 1 , 1111 . 1 t Sa nopla.ant and 111'1111011S 1V1.1 . 1i, 1 hogg , ',l hor hi go 1,, a 110100,0 r, Nhr oaillodlahll,lll. why 1 made gulch Alla S:111011 . , Said. ‘• re. 1 1 .1, n I. IIS - 1 • 118-1 . 11m V.. 11 11 1, 11 , -10111Pd In Out of tompor at la,,t with the i.oletit dame. A old fisoling th:it Madan, 1,1 4 greatly to Hanle 11111111 , hi,' 1•111111 111.0. I ant lid angrily 1111111-11111117,11.11- A rlant.age of II ER:43. l ,lllttla,Y:U. Fran❑ Frn,r's FECTOR GARRET CF OTTER. BY I !I I: Al"111 ,, R "Nt Br EL!IIANK CIIA PTErt =BE A c.t!..u, pure, vutniner moonlight fell upon the Ayrshire mos:.es and deans, but did not silver, as far as we are concerned, the Carr . ick Castle cf Bruce, nor Canner on's lair amidst the heather, nor landward Tintock, nor even sea girt Ailsa Craig, but only the rolling waves of the Athanric and a grey tutreted mansion-house built on a promontory running abruptly into the water. The dint ivory light illumi nated a gay company met in the dwelling with little thought of stillness or solemni ty, but with their own sense of effect, grouped carelessly but gracefully in an old fashioned but not unsuitable drawing room. They needed relief, these brilliant suE•- pie figures; they demanded the back- ground of grey hangings, scant carpet pindle-legged chairs, hard sombre prints. To these very cultivated, very artificial and picturesque personages, a family sit ting-room was but a stage, its scenery o minor importance, where lively, capricious. yet calculatin g actors were engaged in playing their several parts. The party was mostl N French, from Lb mass ef g ;inapt, daunt], ss emigrants, many of whom, were thus entertail ed with grate ful, commiserating hospitality in house holds whose members had but lately bask. ed i the sparkling geniality of the south ern atmosphere now lurid and surcharged with thunder There was a Marquise, worldly, light, lrol vain, whom athersily had not broken, and could nut sour. An Abbe, bland and double but penile and kindly in his way; a soldier, volatile, hot.) curled, brave as a lion, simple as a child ; an older 1117111, sad, sneering, indifferent to this world and the next, but with the wrecks of a noble head, and, God help him, a noble heart. Of the three individuals present of a different nation an.,l creed, two closely re sembled the others with only that vague, impalpable, but perceptible distinction of these whose rearing affords a superficial growth which overspreads but does not annihilate the original plant. The one was a young man, rtroyarit, flippant, and reckless as the Er-eneh soldier, but with a bold defiance in his tone all his own ; the other, a young girl, coquettish and viva cious as the i‘larquise, but with a deep consciousness under her feigning, an un dercurrent of watchful pride and passion, of which her model was destitute. The last of the circle was a fair haired, broad• shouldered lad, who stood apart from the others, big, shy. silent—but how earnest amid their shallowness, how noble • amid their hollowness, how devoted amid their fi•ibleness. flow he gazed on the arch, haughty girl, with her lilies and roses, her pencilled brows, her magnificent hair, magnificiently arranged, her rich silk and 'airy lace, and muslin folded and gathered and falling into lines which wore the poe try of attire, unless where a piquant, pro voking frill, band, or peak, reminded the gazer that the princess was a woman, a mocking, mischievous woman, as well• as a radiant lady. How -- he - listened - to — liCT contradictory words, witty and liquid in their most worthless accents! bow he drunk in her songs, the notes of her harp, the rustle of her dress, the fall of her foot! how be starred if Are mined I bovihe saw her, though his eyes were on the ground, though his' head was in hands, and she marked him ceaselessly, half with a flut ter and faintness which she resisted and denied-- , -angrily, scornfully.o. Alow more hdii-mots and repartees, a last epigram from the Abbe, a court anec dote fjoin the Marquise which might have figurM in one of those Jo' tors of Madame de Sevigne NI here the freshness of• the heynialcer of-Les Rodhers urvives 'the glare and ••the terrible staleness of the Ver sailles-vf Leuitj XV., a' blunt camp jest • _ from the soldier, a sarcasm from the pbil o:opher, a joyous barcarole, strangely sue - ceeded by a snatch from that lament of woe wrung forth by the fatal field of Flod den, and the company dispersed, the horse's hoofs of the singe stranger of the evening ringing on the causeway, as he made for the smooth sands of the bay, the lights one by one leaping, out, and the pale moon remaining mistress of Earls craig as when the warder on port tower peered out over the waters for the boats of the savage Irish kern, or lit the bale fire that summoned Montgomery and Muir to ride and run for the love or the fear of Boswell of Earlscraig. Had these old-world times returned by magic ? had a crazed serving man revived the Vanished duties fif his warlike prede cessor ? was the' wraith of seneschal or man al-arms co n juring up a ghostly bea con to stream into the soft air? was an evil spirit about to bewilder and• mislead a fated ship to meet its doom on the jag ged rocks beneath-.the (lead calm of that glassy sea ? So dense the vapour that sud denly gathered over Earlscraig, till, like it 11 electric flash, a jet of flame sprang from a high casement and lit up the Bath ering obscurity. No Flinn blew, no bugle sounded, no tramp of horse or hurrying feet broke the silence; the house lay in rofound rest, the sleepers slept on. though only that was no phantom glare no marsh gl ain, but the 'near presence of an awful foe. And the smoke .burst forth in thicker, moresuffocatingvulumes; the red streacn- Cms shot up again and again, the burning embers fell like thickest swarms of tire flies, lief we a single hasty step roused an echo already lost in the roar and crackle of fire. A seared, half-dressed i , ervant ran out into the court, flung up his hands as he looked around him hur rich' back, and suddenly the great bell pealed out its thithful alarum n Good folk, good folk. danger is at the door! Vur Jesus' sake and your dear lives, up and flee! The angels hull out their hands, Sodom is around you —awa Ell The summons was not in vain. Wish a few seconds clamorous outcries, shrie of dismay, the dashing open of doors at windows, answered the proclamation. horror-struck crowd assembled rapidly in the court; but notwithstanding that the Abbe's wan Klee and shaven crown appeared speedily, and the soldier shout ed, ••\Vho is in danger? in cs mina s,l 0• the philosopher instinct ively elected himself commander • he ruse, tall and erect, over the heads of his fellows; his face flushed and brightened; lie spoke words of wisdom and resolution whose spirit men recognized through the veil of his frozen tongue—cravens shrank hack, brave men rallied round him ! Where is Boswell? Mott Dieu.' the house is burning and the master is nut tliund ! Adolphe, sauce /a Allftryirisc, c esc(i ler west pis pvolit. But Where is Boswell? Show his room to me—the nearest way--quick. or ho perishes Alt, le, roil, " Down a flight of side steps tumbled the butler and a favorite groom, bearing between them the young laird, motion less, senseless, his dress dishevelled, but unscathed by flame, unstained by blood; his marked, imperious features breath ing, yet unconscious, heavy, and leth argic. The Abbe and his elder friend ex changed glances. The brow of the latter contracted in disguk, and gloom. " Adolphe and he played billiards against my desire, as if he were not, het , enough already," he said, in an under tone. "Lay him here, my friendi," to the servants, "and listen to me If you love the Seigneur, let him never know that thus it happened this night. Cover him with a mantle; he will awake to see his chateau a ruin. -1./or:s n'imporie, we will 'do our - best: Carry out - wh4'•is Most precious: bring up buckets of t water.— llla there is enough at hand " Yes; at their feet, by a few fathoms Unavailable, lay the broad seaNufficient to extinguish the conflagration of a thou sand cities, while dui house above was rent with fierce heat, to which the sea only reddened like blood, in sympathy with the midnight sky. The Marquise was rescued sobbing and shivering, but sharing her blanket with one of the poor servant girls; even the old bed ridden nurse, so blind and stupid with age that none could satisfy her of the cause of the tumult and din, was carried abroad and placed on the grass terrace - beside - the - nraster; Where 'no sooner did she apprehend intuitively the neighborhood of her proudly cherish ed nursling, than she left off her weak ;Tailing, and began to croon over him as 'fondly and: contentedly as when he lay an innocent babe in his cradle. " Are you weary, Earlscraig Have you come back sorely tired from the h'unt or the race ? Weary fall the men folk that lot you lie down with the dewdrops on your bonny curls—bonnier than Miss Alice's, for all their flecchin'—as if it were high noon.. Not but noontide has its ills too; but. you would never heed a bonnet, .neither for sun nor wind. A wild laddie, a wild laddie,. Earlsoraig ;Eager butignorant hands were - piling up heaps -of miscellaneous . goods—pic:. tures, feather-beds, old armor, plate, mir rors, harness, carpets, wearing apparel The first seized, and all tossed together in wild confusion. The moon was hid den ; air, earth, and water were lurid ; a hot blast blew in men's faces, which alone remained white and haggard, when a murmur and, question, a doubt and frenzy, first stirred and that convulsed the mass, " Where was Miss Alice?" Ay, where was Miss Alice ? Who had seen her ? Speak, in God's name'.—shout her name until her voice. replies, and men's shuddering souls are freed from this ghastly nightma e. Miss Alice! Alice _Boswell' you are safe, lamenting unseen the home of you: fathers; you are not within that turre whose foundation rock descends abet into the sea—that turret close by whie the demon began his work, where forked tongue is now licking each loc hole and outlet, where beams are bur ing, and the yawning jaws of hell a'iout to swallow up fhe rapid wreck forgotten, forsaken—the queen of he, the wooed and worshipped beauty; and sweet, ripe and rare, the sole dam ter of the race ; the charm and del of its gray heads ? O Father, thou art terrible in thy de crees ! 0 men, ye are miserable tbols She is there by the blazing framework by the window of her chamber. which she has never quitted ; her hair loose. sonic portion of her dress cast about her. her eyes wide open and glazing with terror, but strangely beautiful—with glory behind and about her; an unearth ly brightness • nu brow and cheek, and white arm stretched out imploringly, despairingly for help—help in her utmost need ! They pressed forward ; they looke io anguish ; men who had follov, ed her a fairy child, friends of lon, Handing, acquaintances of y . e,terday.— Again and again the gallant. ,sillier pen etrated the loll° doorway; again and main he swerved and recoiled from the furnace fumes that. met him—a more fearful en . counter than the fogy of the SIMS etflot tcs and the reeking pools beneath the Courage, soldats:. live mart. pour Ia retinue et pour Ia 'gloire ;" and with a shout. half-exulting, half maddened, the tiallie blood again fired to the desperate lc There a diversion arose—a rin o the opposite side of the building— ;older, of use there— a notion of foreii ()pen a closed up and disused gallery communication seized hold of these wild ly agitated minds, and offered a vent t the pent-up sympathy and distress. Nel energy supplanted stupor; and throug the deep bush of the fire there could h 2 distinguished the blows of axe and ham mer, wielded lustily by stalwart and de voted arms, eager to clear a way id' life and liberty to the captive. But the attempt was a work of time, and louder cracked and hissed the flames. .1 fiercer blaze filled the sky, and glit ered back flow the waves; the serpent ongues drew together, and shot hrough the room in a yellow pyramid. n vain ! in vain ! The zealous laborers milted in the sickness of horror and the chill of great awe. A boat a boat !" called a voice flow the outer circle. The thinker, the scorner, stood on the verge of the rocks, above the illuminated sea, hiS head bare his coat stripped off " Let Madetuois. elle cast herself troni the easement in scantly; it is her only hope. I ern swim ; I will hold her up until a boat is launched. Courage ; Mademoiselle; trust in God and in me." Yes, Marquise," he whispered for a second t his countrywoman near him ; " I have lost God for many a clay; have found him Main in this hour A Te Dueiii for my requiem !" and looking aghast upon his face in the great light, the Marquise crossed herself, and aver red ever afterwards that it was trans formed like unto that of his patron saint, ,St Francis The next moment he plung ed into the midnight sea; those who wit nessed the action declared that the re flection of the burning was so strong he seemed to sink into a lake of fire, where he rose again presently, breasting the waters stoutly and successfully. • The girl saw the design; she compre hended it, and the hoarse murmur of encouragement that hailed its presence of mind. The concentration of the flames, which threatened every moment to.bri.ig 'down a portion of the ponderous roof in one destroying crash, left i►_ freer. pas sage. She advanced quiekly-40he_ put her foot on the'-smouldering sill; she paused, hesitated. It was a fearful al, ternative. " Leap down, leap down, Miss Alice; a drowning man has two lives, a burning man but one. Down, down, or you•are But another cry mingled with.the ve hement appeal—=a piercing, confident cry, that would have vibrated on the dull ear of the dying, although it said only, " I am coming, Alice Boswell—l am coming I" He was thero,.on his panting, foam flaked•horie ; he flung himself from the saddle; he heard her answer; " Hector , Garret, save' me, save .me 1" ' He broke the circle as &union burSt c r `fir t 1\ Carlisle, Pa., Friday, August 25, 1865 As already stated a large defalcation was disnvered in the Phoenix Bank of N. lurk city on ThursdaY week, and on Friday two parties were arre,ted as the perpetrators, and also a lewd woman and a male issociate who had, it is alleged, received much of the stolen mon'ey. The telrer of the bank, named Jenkins, is the defaulter in the ease to the amount, it is ascertained, of about 8:300,000. and a yowl ! , Wan named James IL Earle, who waoa clerk in a bu,incss house. was im plieak dby Jenkins It appears Earle received 8100 000 of the money, which Was sunk in stock gambling, while Jen• kips, thnuf , ll a married man, sunk other thousands in the concert. saloons and on the lewd wrinan in que tion Jenkins was arrested on Friday morning at lus home, having jiht arrived honie, and confessed to the robbery promptly, and subsequently both him and Earie were were committed to prison, where the latter committed suicide during the night by cutting his throat with a small pocket knife The papers give the fol- lowing details: Earle made no denial of his einip'icity, but at once proceeded with the police to the bank. Ilcre, in presence of John McKeon, Esq , andAhe bank officers, he eura,fes•ed to having received $lOO.OOl from JenkiV. The first money he re ceived was $50;(700, which was supposed to be the property of Jenkins' When received the second $5O 000 he knew it had been purloined front the bank.— On being interrogated as to what h.,d come of the money, Earle said it had all been in vesk dand sunk in stocks Earle was then taken and locked up in the. 29th precinct station house. Acting upon in firtnation received from Earle, officer McCarty proceeded to No. 159 Bleecker s'teet, and addressed a stylish looking woman, calling herself' Mrs. Brown, but wl'ose real name is Genevieve Brower.— ;She was Jenkin's mistress, and becom ing conscious of his position and defalca tions, she, it is alleged, worked upon Jen kin's fears until she blackmailed him of nearly - 615,000, besides a house Full of costly f urniture About-an hour aft©r the •aum officer arrestliATharles Brown, alias Brower, said to be kept wan of Mrs. Brown, and who as charged by Earle, helped her in her blackmail operations. Previous to these arrests Earle bad been conveyed to the station ; liouse, searched and everything taken from hint. About one o'clock Brown was put in a cell by McCarty, who, at the same time, saw Earle, and asked him 'Mu' he felt. Earle said 'pretty well, and thought he would go to ‘slpep.v Ihe officer then bid him good night, Earle's last good night on earth. • -About-haV past. seven o'clock officer McCarty proceeded to the station house for the purpose of fetching his prisoners to the Jefferson Market Police Court— He s.ut the doorman down to fetch them up. In a shot t• time he returned, saying that he could not rouse Earle. MOCarty rushed down stairs, and placing his hand on Earle's heart, found that it had ceased to throb, and his pulse was motionless. Op raising him the. blood gushed from a large orifice in the neck. On the, floor of the cell was found a small pocket knife about two itches long, with the blade about three quarters 'Of an ineh, arid of ,the kind known as a lady's pocket knife. This -instrument, it is supposed, wag ClOO. 'coaled on the inside of the lowor lip; and Earle died about lour o'olook, as the door. man saw him awake about three. Tho the green wither ; he paralyzed all re monstrance; he vanished into the abyss which the great. staircase presented. He must, have borne a charnied life to reach -thus far-I,Nie a mightier roar, a perfect column of firko / thundering avalanche. of glowing timber and huge stones de scended with the shock of an earthquake, and rebounded into the sea, engulphing forever the fair slight. form within. By daring and magnanimous effort and main fin.ce, other arms bore bar k Hector Garret from the tottering walls and sha ken timndation; and the boat, rowed out and delivered the heroic Frenchman The sinking in of the turret roof satiated the destroyer, so that the farther wing of the house was preserved. Its master lived unharmed, to rouse himself from imrtentions slumber and face his cal while the lever lay writhing a raging in the clutch of wild fever. more merciful than high health. But the summer sun shining down on the sea, once more blue and clear as hes ven; fell on blind:- yawning, gaps wounds of ashes ; on shivered glass strewn relies of former luxury ; on the very grass 0! the promontm.y. brown withered, and trodden into the earth for many a yard ; on the horrible grave of the maiden who had watched her own mare in the erystal pools, lilted her s en songs to the break of; the wave WONT!) at once chains for her adorers he web of that destiny which lin ler these, unshronded and uneoffine • while seed-time and harvest, day n•,:_tht slUluld endure'' T,, Itreic,l.) THE GREAT BANK DEFALCA TION IN NEW YORK 11, I Sll ,1 , 1 •S ' iliCitic ) ()I (;,1 m y r,,,,/ ~11 'III ir (It deceased was determined onhis death, he first cut a- hole near the jugular vein, and, pushing the knife in, worked round and round till he made a hole in his neck about the size of a quarter of a dollar. As soon a; pry was a ind, the body was removed to a upper: jKor, and the coroner notile mlillis 4t ends one pha-se, and r‘ ly the most tragical, in this hit k cace. Astiegards Jenkins, the following fur ther details are given: Jenkins is a married man and has three children, but not satisfied with the pleas• tires of • ;itiinate home, visited eon in Broadway, patronizing MOM larly that of Madame Bell, where 7, .t his money freely. He gave t o o ono girl, it, is stated, $1,200, but loaned away a good deal to his friends, Amongst others, $20,000 to a party in Washington. The officer was just beginning to search at Jenkins' when Jenkins came in. Mrs. -Jenkins came down to the room where the officer was and acted very coolly, .tak ing the arrest as a matter of course. On searching Jenkins house nothing was mind having any conection3 with the :ase. In Jenkins' drawer at the bank, noney to the amount of $l,OOO, also a oort sa umber or checks from other parties were found, also about eighty letters from a person threatening an expose of Jenkins to the bank fur the squandering of tno Hey. Jenkins gave this man in all $25,- 000. Jenkins said a woman, named eve Lyons, alias, Brower, alias Brown vhom he wet in a concert saloon in I;roadway, had obtained from him $7 000 r 88,000, iu thesums of no less than $lOO up to $l,OOO. lie tiled to avoid her, but wus always dogged by this woman and her wan, Charles Brower, alias Sam Davis, who got $B,OOO to 89,000, which he put into the Greenwich Bank, where it was levied upon by the bank. Earls said that enkins had pledged himself to seerrey S to him, it found out, so as never to uplicatc him. The sum of $40,000 was found hid way in the bank, in a place which Jen- s indicated After a careful examination, it has been ascertained that the defealation in the institution will not exceed the sum of three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000,) which does not exceed the amount of the suiplus Henry B. Jenkins is in the vicinity' of fifty years of age. He is about the mdium height, and rather stoutly made. lis hair is gray, his features regular and of unpleasing, though bearing the im. cress of accumulating age, with a slight- y anxious and haggard expression, wt;ich speaks mutely, but plainly, of the trouble and care his dishonesty must have cost Earl was a native of Elizabeth, N. J, and had lived in Newark during the last ten years. lie was of highly respectable connexions, and enjoyed the confidence f all acquainted with him, bearing such a reputation for probity and integrity hitherto unstained, connected therewith have cause a severe shock to his friends. Earl was a widower, his wife having died about a year ago, and in the 31st year of his age. lie was about 5 feiet 5 inches gh, with a flowing beard and paled manners. He was a member of the Second Presbyterian Church, Newark, N. J., and very r - g - ilar in his attendance at the sanctuary. His style of living was not unusually extravagant, beyond the owning of a " fast" horse, and his taxable income last year was only $1,539. Mr. Earl leaves one child—a boy about six years of age. Vieve Brower, though possesses of a tolerable person, has not the appearance of one who could create such sad havoc upon the heart of an elderly bank clerk and at the same time have intimate rein ti, Os with an ox-butcher of .the diversi•. fled appellations of " Brown," " Brower" and " Sam Davis." - She is rather below the average stature women, and slender and graceful, but rather voluptous in figure, and appeared in court dressed in the hight ot fashion. Her features are regular, but very pale, with red lips and large blue eyes. She has not the thorOugh effrontery of a har dened prostitute. She is about 33 years of age, and has been in the New York • -market for two or three years-r-perhaps MEI Brower, this woman's paramour, who in conjunction with herself, extorted large sums from Jenkins, was . formerly a butch er, and is only about `2s'' years of age: It appears that Miss Brower was not the only woman who received the favors of Jenkins. In tho possesion of.one of the inmates of a noted female boarding house in Crosby street has been found a fine oluster a diamond ring, worth eight hundred dollars, which the girl says was given her by the alleged defaulting teller. She. also says that he frequently present• ed her with large sums of money, at • one time as high as five hundred dollars. n€4„General Grant really made a speech at BowditiCommenectuent. As he had declined to speak General Chamberlin said : " I have tried tb Aet General Grant to speak, but he said 'No,' and when he says that, word be means it. Lee knows it means something." Grant broke in, saying, continue to fiFht it out on that Zino. ", And that was Inc speech. Women as Travellers It is a very small matter for John Smith to take a journey of six or eight hundred miles. He rushes home from his counting room, office, or workshop, fifteen minutes before the train leaves, bids Mrs. S. put a clean shirt or two in his valise, takes a cold luncheon, kisses the children all round, and perhaps their mother, strides to the station, goes in at ono end just as the engina is puffing out at the other, waits leisurely till the last end of the last car is opposite him, throws his valise on the platform, grasps the rail ing, vaults lightly upon the steps, and in a half minute is talking unconcernedly with Mr. Jones, who has probably gone through the same pet formance, during the last half minute. But if Mrs. John Smith wishes to pay a ten days' visit to her mother, sixty miles away, a fortnight is not too much time to devote to preparations. Her ward robe is to be thoroughly overhauled; dres ses selected, bought, made , a dressmaker consequently to be hunted up and engag ged ; old skirts adjusted to new barques; oollars mended, whitened and clear starch ed ; Mr. Smith's shirts, stockings and handkerchiefs placed where he can lay his hands on them blind•folded, for no Mr. Smith ever yet conceived the idea of lifting up one thing to find another under it ; the various strata of rucks being tilted, the genius Smith seems to have imbibed the opinion that bureau drawers should be arranged on the same plan. Then there are the children to beseen to, the marketing to be arranged, Bridget to be admcnished, and every thing in general wound up to go ten days without stop ping or derangement. Consequently, win n the appointed morning comes, and with it the appointed coach, Mrs. Smith is not quite ready. With one cheek flushed and no collar, she gives hurried directions, ties up brown paper packages with nervous, trembling fingers, which packages no sooner receive tie final jerk than they are discovered ta be bursting out at both ends; scatters the young folks hither and thither, running down all who are not agile enough to get out of the way, and is only restrained from scolding out right by a dim vision of plunges down embankments, butting against opposing engines, splintered bridges flying axles, arid life long separation from beloved ones to which a rail road journey now-a-days riluders one so fearful liable. At length tlie last knot is tied, the last kiss is given, and Mrs. Smith, anxiously looking at her watch stumbles, over the hem of her dress into the coach, beseeching the driv er to hurry. lie politely says, " Yes" but persistently drives " No." After what she considers unnecessary delay, she arrives at the station, hurries into the ticket-office, tries to hurry open her porte-monnaie, but as that is governed by the Medo Persia laws of inertia and attraction, it refuses to be hurried Hur riedly she a.lts the ticket-master, " is the train not gone ?" His loud, clear, de liberate, " No, ma'ain," startles her, and b; fore she recovers herself, he has gone to the opposite window She waits her turn again. How long before it goes r " Twen-ty—min-utes—ma'-6111 " With a sigh of mingled relief and weariness she sinks upon a sofa. Time would fail to follow Mrs. S. on her devious way— - to note her anxious watching over "great box, little box, band box and bundle ;" her uncertainty as to which train she is to take, and her incessant inquiries of every man who approaches ; her intense unrest that looks out of her eyes, quivers on her lips, trembles in her hands and flutters in every thread of her garments.— All these things may only provoke a smile, but Mrs. S. is tragically in earnest. I have had no opportunities to observe my sex in the transition state and I am foreed to say that I do not think the fe .male-traveller is always a pleasant object of contemplation. She is never quite freo,from anxiety or bundles, and is gen erally pretty highly charged with both.— She asks the conductor the same question twice, as if she believed he might under= go a moral reformation bet Ween the first and second asking, and tell the truth at, last, though he told a lie at first. Sweet ly patient at home, sublimely patient in great pain or peril, she is ludicrously im patient on her travels. She can not wait the march of events, but outstrips the present, anticipates the future, and asks the conductor " if we'Aange cars at B" Trustful to a fault in the domestic circle, she beco'mea a very skeptic in the cars, and never believes lain] unless he says, "Yes." ,When , announces at " Passengers change cars for the East," she steps out with alacrity upon the plat• form, and immediately asks him, "Do we change gars here ?" Acute of vision, and rapid in perception at home, abroad a glamour seems„ to fall upon her.. The time-table hangs upon the station-walls, but, as if Gala' able, of' calculation, she invariably asks th't ticket master at Ant hour the trainis due ; and if it is five miut es ; late,'she goes to him again, and ,asks him how long bofore it; will arrive, Of course,'obierving the consequence of . these and similar vagaries, I amespecial• ly careful to avoid :them— Gail ../Tantil ton, rtek-Whyie a ,broken obair..iike , ohe who.despises you ? Because it can't bear How multitudinous are the dead ! How populous the silent' cities where they dwell I Close, but peaceful they rest, under shafts and spires of 'marble, or r4r chance without even the rudest memorial to the activities they once bore, the pouips they once displayed. Two hundred times more than all the generation of the living, encamped out there in church yard, cemetery, and by the way side. Myriad millions, obeisant to the awful shade, the grim spectre who rides the pale horse. Ceaseless migration from the halls of life—the great, the proud, the rich, the poor, the bond, the free; brothers and sisters all, with ono God for their NO, 34 common father, one earth for their sep ulchre, one turf to hide their dust What history, what romance, what tragedy, what secrets and mysteries are locked up with them in the grave. And how soon, too, shall we all march down thither, " where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest ;" d)wn thither where the sleep is dreamless, until the great day when the trumpet shall sound, bidding the nations of the dead to rise !—Sacred, and green, and evermore fragrant with the breath of flowers, and I musical with the sound of gentlest foot and the song of the birds, be the place of graves —the homes of the dead. They were all belOved in their day—all fathers or mothers, or brothers, or sisters, or friends—or if any were foes, their en mity lies not in the tomb. Good or bad, as ran the record of their lives, belt ours to reverence their du , t—God will judge thew : God, who is the searcher of our hearts, and who is wiser, and more mer ciful than man. Verily, it is not well for us to be thought less of the dead. What they were, and what they have done and said, concern us every hour. Their example guides, their precedent governs, their wisdom di rects, their thoughts inspire, their labor blesses, and their riches enrich us Beni- eon to the dead, and way the good God so shape our lives, that when the time comes, we may lie down, obscure it may he, but without fearand without reproach. THE LAUOII ur• \VOMAN.-A woman has no natural gift more bewitching than a sweet laugh It is like the sound of flutes on the water. It leads from her in a clear, sparkling rill; and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed in the cool, exhilerating spring. Have you ever pursued an unseen fugitive through the trees, led on by a fairy laugh—now here, now there, now lost, now found ? We have ; and we are pursuing that wander- ing voice to this day. Sometimes it comes to us in the midst of care, o r sor row, or irksome- business; and then we turn away arid listen, and hear it ringing through the rooms like a silver bell, with power to scare away the evil spirits of the mind. how much we owe to that sweet laugh ! It turns the prose to poe try ; shifting showers of sunshine over the darkness 01 the wood in which we arc travelling; it touches with light even our sleep, which is no wore the image of death, but is consumed with dreams that arc the shadows of immortality. THE MISERIES OF A Hier MAN.—The New York correspondence of the Roches ter Denio,r(tt is responsible for the follow- " Alexander T. Stewart clears one thou sand dollars per day, Sabbaths excepted all the year round Cornelius Vanderbilt pleads to doubt,: that sum, while William B. Astor rates his income at four thousand three hundred arid thirty dollars per diew. Sleeping or waking, the latter gentleman finds a three dollar bill dropping into his hat every minute of the twenty-four hours! Ile cannot set down to talk with his phy sician without having a little more wealth, if not health ; he cannot underburden his mind for ten minutes without feeling the burdeli increasing into his pocket, and ho cannot walk Broadway, however the weather. may be, without meeting a shower of money. At every turn cash stares hint in the face in the most inso lent manner.• Banks fling their divid ends at his head ; ruthless financiers beat him with coupons ; unpitying and soulless corporations dump their filthy lucre at his door step, and contemptuous bill stick ers plaster his house with greenbacks. One might inquire what the fellow has done to merit this treatment, and the only charge that can be brought is that he was a rich man's son, and therfore must suffer." AMERICAN SERVANT GIRLS —On this Yankee impossibili-tizing, the Washing ton National lute%cuffr has a simple article concluding thus: " But this we know, that pride and poverty aro wretched companions. As long as a majority of the destitute , females can sew, or, paint, or teach , or attend counters, &o.—as long as such can grati fy vanity by buying a little tawdry finery —they are comparatively hippy even if their cheeks pale and their eyes dim be muse o unhealthy Appartufervsani scan ,y fir s and food. But the very thought of entering into service of the thousands of good families who need •their aid, where comfortable food and kind attentions in illness, and refined and Chistian example are sure, in most cases, to attend the in dustrious and most worthy; instead of emigrating to the great West, to the opening Territories, to the Pacific, (where to they could easily find means of trans portation in such capacity,) and thusgradu ally softening their fate, and even advanii ing their prospects to a rank of dignity-- so hateful is the word .servant, that nine out of ten of these poor women choose almost any alternative (sometimes that of shatne)'to such a sacrifice of silly pride. And thus, while nine out of ten of our families would prefer Abe household aid of good American g??Is to that of any other class, the latter starve, or do worse,. rather than except security and advan tages of such homes. It is time. that poor Atnericah girli were getting some sense to thiSlubject. If they only knew it, the' better order of foreign• servants (especially among the German, Swiss - and French) are far more thoroughly educat ed•and accomplished than are 'nutty pre tendons misses 'of good opportunities, But these do not dishonor labor by 'con sidering honorable service .reproiah." psrmanently successfuljnmi ness man has always anted. honestly,. The Dead