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Three do 1 square, 12 lines $ 60 $ 75 41,00 2 squares 24 linesj 1 00 1 50 2 00 g squares. 36 lines 1 50 2 00 8 00 8 months. 6 do. 12 do tJ lines or less, $150 $3 00 $5 00 1 square, 12 lines 12 50 4 50 9 00 2 squares, 24 lines 4 00 7 00 12 00 8 squares, 36 lines! 6 00 9 00 14 00 Lalf a column, 10 00 12 00 20 00 One column, 15 00 22 00 85 00 business Curbs. DM'LAUOHLIN, Atterney at Law, Johnstown, Pa. Office in the Ex change building, on the Corner of Clinton and Locust streets up stairs. Will attend to all buinj connected with his profession. Dec. 9. 1863.-tf. WILLIAM KITJELL" ttonifir at ato, (Sbmsburg, Cambria County Penna. OlUce C'olonutle row. IVo. 4. 1R3 C THUS L. PERSHING, Kj. Attokkt at Law, Johnstown, Cambria Co. Pa. Office on Main strest, scond lloor over Bank. ix 2 Ta T. C. 8. Gtrdatr, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON'. Trovers his professional stirrke to the trtlMns of EBEXSliURO, aaJ surrounding vicinitv. OFFICE IN COLONADli ROW. Jane 28, 1864-tf J. C Scanlan, ATTORN K Y AT LA W , F.BBSSBtTRG. Pa., OFTICK ON MAIN STREET, THREE DOORS EAST .-p the LOGAN HOUSE. December 10, 1803. -y. R. L. Joiixstov. Geo. W. Oatmak. JOHNSTON & OATMAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Ebenaburg CamVr'.a County Penna. OFFICE REMOVED TO LLOYD ST., One door West of R. L. Johnston' Rjb tdence. Dec. 4. 1861. JOnN FENLON, Esq. Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Cambria county Pa. Office on Main stieet adjoining hi3 dwel ling, ix 2 PS. NOON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, EBENSBURG, CAMBRIA CO.. PA. Office one door East of the Post Office. Feb. 18, 1863.-tf. G EORGEM. REED, ATTORNEY AT LAW, EBENSBURG. Cambria County, Pa. OFFICE IN COLONADE ROW. March 13, 1864. MICHAEL IIASSON, Esq. Attorney at. Law, Ebensburg, Cambria Co. Pa. Offiice on Main street, three doors East of Julian. ix 2 W. HICKMAN. B. T. HOI.L. G. W. HICKMAN &L CO., Wholesale Dealers in MANUFACTURED TOBACCO. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC SEGARS. SNUFFS, &c. y. E. COft. THIRD St MARKET STREET. PHILADELPHIA. August 18. 1863.-Iy. arddv k oniii r. 'vsaaaav BKKTY3H QNV kiavas aaa ? ann SVO HUH Ai HOJ N3AIO saxYHviHJiacnniHj jis3hoih , "I7.r ut." " : , ,An 0Sce on Centre Street, next door north of Esq. Kinkead'g office. ' rotc-enlon given Immediately JOSEPH MTJOjrAtiD. THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE Select Mt. Twice Loved. " Forever, forever ! the home that was to Lave been the home of all my life ; the husband that I vowed to love all my life ; his family that had become mine to leave all forever ! To loose reputation, friends, all !" So spoke Estelle Yergen nes, as she- walked slowly through the bmall but neat apartment, to which it had Leon the joy of her husband to bring her some two years previously, when she bad come a young and happy bride from her mother's home to his. Then she had loved, then she had faith, then she had hoped and dared to look for ward to life. What long weary days and months had parsed by since then! How one by one had her illusions faded ; how had long weariness made her almost de sire death rather than the dull monotony which, like a heavy pall, had hung over her young life. She walked on slowly and sad through the small neat rooms, till at last she stood in what was her husband's study, and paused in front of a full length picture of herself that was hung above his desk. " How will he gar e on this when he returns and finds me not T Y'cars ago he would have cursed me for he loved me then ; but now he will discard the picture as he has discarded nie, I will not wec-p ; why should I ; I am nothing ; I have been long nothing to him ; I go to love and happiness, ridding him of a bur then on his life." As he uttered these words Estelle drew from her finger her wedding-ring and laid it on the writing paper which lay ojen on her husband's desk ; then taking a pen she wrote beneath : " Farewell ; forget me." For wne moment she bent over the desk, thru knelling before it, she pret-sed Lcr lips on it, and a tear fell on its polished sur face. "Now it is over!" she exclaimed; " now I Lave renounced all forever." Then with a firm step she passed from the apartment, and, going to her own room, threw over her dark grey dress a large black cloak, turned from the mirror which never was to reflect her image ag.iin. Madamtt is going out," said the po lite dapjHT servant, emerging from a kitchen that looked like some elegant amateur cooking plaything. 4 Yes," said Katelle, " Monsieur will be back to-night ; tell him there is a note from nic on his table ; that will tell him where to tiud me." A pleasant evening to madame," said ihe woman, xlitcly advancing to open the door, and shut it after her mistress. "Uood bye, J-iinnette," paid Mine. Vergennes, and thus it was that Enclle passed from her home for the last time. In a few minutes she was in the crowd of the Rue Houlevards, and then passed on with rapid step to the Iiue St. I lonorc. At the corner of the Place do la Made leine, just beyond the place where the tiuit eie aux jleurs is held, there was a car riage waiting, and pacing the pavement in front'of it a gentleman who every now and then would rush to the corner nearest the boulevards and look with a straining; gaze at the ever-moving crowd that came toward him. At length he descries the dark, unobtrusive figure making her way with quick step through the gay and busy multitude Then ho utters a cry of de light and dashes not towards her, but back to the carriage. He opens tho door himself, lets down the steps, and,, bidding the coachman be ready to start, he waits, looking eagerly towards the corner of the boulevards. The pavement by the church is entirely deserted ; the lady in the grey cloak has turned the corner, she ccmes along, the shadow of the tall marble columns fall ing on her as she passes, and at last she reaches the spot where he stands. Her breath comes quick and fast, her eyes are wildly bright, and her cheek glows. She cannot speak, she holds toward him two little trembling hands and tries to pmile. He seizes them both in his grasp, then placing his arms around her waist, he lifts her into the carriage. Another moment and he leaps in himsolf, closes the door, and in a loud tone bids the man drive on. The coachman gives the horses a touch with the whip, and with a start and a snort they start off at a rapid pace. Then for the first time the gentleman turns towards Estelle, and putting his arms around hor presses her to his heart. "Mine now forevcrmore." " Yours alone Octave, for I have left all else ; the world is naught to me now ; from this moment I am no one ; I have renounced even my name, and if you for sake m, I have bat to die. EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1S64. " Estelle, my life is dedicated to you from this moment. I know all you have sacrificed for me." " Ah ! nothing if you love me ; for what is all in the world besides love? I have made no sacrifice. Y'ou know, Oc tave I have not deceived you ; I have loved my husband devotedly, passionately, I was content to share with him his me diocracy of fortune, and to wait the re Bult of those talents which it is said he possesses. But alas I he cared not for me ; I was nothing to him ; I shall be nothing in his life ; scarcely will he per ceive my absence." " Estelle, you know not how much tenderness there is in my love ; it was the utter neglect with which I saw you treat ed that first interested me in you. Be lieve me, Estelle, had you been a happy wife, I loved you too well to have sought to take you from it. Now you are to me a holy trust, the only woman I have pas sionately loved, and to you again, I re peat it, I devote my life. I know society will turn from you-for this one act that binds you to me forever, but the world is open to us. I am rich ; never till now did I know the value of riches ; and so long a3 this heart beats, you, so help me heaven, shall not know a pang." Octave Scran drew Estelle toward him, and she laid her head on his shoulder and sobbed. Strange are the workings of woman's heart ; to feel at that moment that she was the sole object of love to a true heart restored her to her own esteem, healed the wound to her vanity, yet never did the house she had left forever appear in such a seductive form ; and leaning on the shoulder of her lover, she regretted, if not her Lusbund at least his love. But the carriage bore them on ; they reach the railroad station " Chemin de Midi," and in a few minutes are rushing on with all the power cf steam. Meantime, weary and full of thought, Henri Ycp'ennes comes from a loiijr ses sion in the courts hack to his home. ''Madame is out," says Jeanette, " but she has left a note for you on your desk in the study." Henri scarcely hears what she says; he is absorljed in a difficult law question, and if he had tbought at all aeout Estelle, it would be think it was a a relief that she was not there to interrupt. Takin" out a cigar, he laid down on the sofa in his stuily, and opening his briefs, began to rea l the difficult point over again. Jeanette was tiie first person who in terrupted him. The dinner was ready. "And madame ?" She had not returned. Then Henri remembered what Jean nette had said, and went to the desk. There his eye fell on the wedding ring, and the few words written beneath told him all. For a few minutes he stood, not stunned by the blow, but recalling as he gazed on the ring all the events of the last three years. The love that had laid dormant iu his heart all arose with its strength and passion, and, as he thought, his conscience told him how he had neglected her, how for the last year this young, beautiful, loving wife had been as nothing to him in his home. One look he gave up at her portrait that smiled down on him ; then throwing himself into a chair, he laid his head on the desk beneath, and wept as man weeps in his life but once, tears that are the very heart's blood. At last weak and exhausted, he looks up once again, he gazes on the portrait, and feelings of pity and tenderness came over him. He has forgotten his own sorrows ; he thinks of her only of her whom he had sworn to shield from all evil, till death should part them. It might yet be time to save her ; she was forever lo"t to him, but perhaps he might rescue her from disgrace, from the long life of wretchedness that must inevitably be her fate. lie does not waste time in seeking in formation ; but, like a good lawyer, goes at once to the right source to the Kue de Jerusalem ; there one of the French de tective officers will soon put him on the track, tell him all. Meantime on goes the train, night has come, and the fugitives, the first emotion over, have began to get anxious as to pursuit. They may be traced to the railway station, resuming their journey south next d ay by a later train, so that if Henri shall have left Paris in search of them, he will have had time to take one of the trains that starts in the night. With a feeling of security, next morn ing they re-entered the train. They have been undisturbed ; yef, Estelle has left l'aris, hejrhome, her husband, her cares forever. 'Twenty-four hours and they will be on the Mediterranean, safe from J1 parsuit. Pot all st once there is a DISTRIBUTED ALIKE. UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW. THE RICH AND strange commotion, a violent shock, a sudden scream, that is the concentration of the agony of hundreds, and then Es telle remembers nothing. Vhen next she opens her eyes and gazes round her, who is it their glance encounters? Her husband ; yes, Henri Yergennes, and with a shriek she turns away. Then she tries to recall what has happened ; she tries to account for his presence tliere ; but in vain, her brain is still full of confusion, and a dull pain numbs all her faculties. It is Henri's voice rouses her at last. He came tow ards her ; He is leaning over her. " Estelle," he says, " can you rise ; it is necessary wc should reach l'aris to night." " l'aris ! Y'ou " murmured Estelle. " Uo you remember nothing !" " Why are you here ?" said Estelle, evading the question. "I will tell you all. I was on the train in which you were, when " Oh !" exclaimed Estelle, " I remem ber now the horrible crash, tho screams, oh! where," but here a deep color came into her pale face, and she buried her head in her pillow. Octave Sernn is dead," said Henri, in a cold, calm voice ; "you I believe are uninjured ; I am not here to reproach you, this is not the t ime, but to save mv honor and yours. Your flight was known to none ; you niuft return with me ; jour guilt will be thus forever hidden to all but me, and I shall keen the secret for mv own sake " " What if I will not return V "I have not thought of that, because 3'ou will return." " Will you take a faithless wife back again beneath your roof ?" " liise, Estelle, I am your husband ; I will be obeyed, and answer no more vain ues(i.ns ; we must be in Paris to-night we must'lte together to-niorrow at broth er's wedding; there is no time to lose ; the train starts in an hour. In an hour I shall come. and take you, be ready." Estelle, as soon as he was alone, threw herself down on the bed, and wept bitter ly ; she had the crime of murder on her conscience ; yes, Octave had died for her ; why had she not died, too. At that mo ment it seemed to her she had never loved any one but Octave. For Henri she had the most profound contempt, Forgive a faithless wife Y forgive her ? take her back to his bosom ? she dispised him. Still she felt she would be compelled to obej' him, and drying her tears, with dogged resolution she began her preparations. 1 lenri found her ready, and without an other word, drew her arm through his, aud led her to the train. Once again Estelle is beneath the roof she thought to have left forever back to her home honored as she was. Her hus band's sister is there waiting for her. She speaks of Henri's absurdity in taking his wife on so hurried a journey; she asks details of the terrible accident. Henri never leaves the room, and under the in fluence of his firm, cold eye she contrives to give coherent answers. At last they are alone ; then Henri bids Estelle listen to him. " Madame," he says, " it is right you should understand your position. I have saved you brought you back for the sake of my reputation and for your sake." "You cannot think I shall love you," said Estelle with contempt. "Madam," continued Henri, with a cold, sarcastic smile, women of light vir tue, women like yourself are to plentiful in l'aris for me to ask your love Y'ou are here merely as the representative of my honor. Because I have sworn to pro tect you, I saved you from the ignominy into which you had thrown yourself; I was prepared to take you at any cost from your seducer ; death saved me the trouble. By tho way, that you may not there is a trick on my part, here is an account of the accideut in this paper, you will find his name in the list of the dead. Madame, you are the mistress of my house ; you are to the world, to our friends, even to my family, all you were before ; and mind, that neither by word, or look deed you betray the past. " Y'ou scorned and neglected roe, Henri, when I was faithful to you when I loved you now do you think me so base as not to dispise " " Madame," said Henri, " allow me to conclude ; you have heard my first with regard to ourselves. To me alone, of all the world, you are not a wife ; you are a woman who has forfeited all esteem and all rcspeot ; to me alone you are the imstress of Octave Seran, and as Buch a woman shall I look on you and treat you. Never speak to me when there is no wit nesses ; you will know nothing of my in terests, nothing of my feeling, nothing of anything that coneern in lou have no rights ; you are a creature living on my bounty, at my mercy a criminal living ever with her judge remember this, Madame ; but remember, also, that you have not the privilege of complaint, nor shall you dare to breathe to any living ear, not even to your confessor, one word of your past crime or your present punish ment." Henri left the room. Estelle's first impulse was to fly the house ; but then whither could she go ? Even her own relations, when Henri should reveal the truth as in case she rebelled he would would drive her from their presence. "Octave I Octave!" said she wildly, bursting into tears, " why did I not die with you?" But there was nothing but submission, and wretched and heart-broken Estelle submitted. Henri kept the conditions he had made strictly ; in his public, in his own family, his attentions to his wife were greater than they had ever been; tenderly he cared for her, gently he spoke of her he was grow ing richer ; his genius was emerging from the crowd and bringing its reward ; luxu ries increased around Estelle ; her home was one of splendor ; she had numerous servants around her, atid a carriage at her command. Her diamonds and dresses were the envy of her friends. Her own relations congratulated her on her happy marriage. The world, too, told her that she should be proud of her husband, prophesying that he would rise to the highest honors. But Henri had never changed his manner towards Estelle ; in difference, silent contempt marked Lis manner towards her; not for an in.-tant did he win to forget that she was to him nothing but Octave's mistress. All intimacies, too, were forbidden to Estelle. " I cannot trust you.'' he would saj ; " you may find another lover ;" or, if a young and irtuous wife would seek Es telle's friendship, he would command her to avoid it. " Y'ou might corrupt a virtuous woman. You are not fit society for her." Spite of his solicitude in public, he never noticed Estelle's health or sickness in private, and when he himself was suffer ing, resolutely refused all her care. So for five years they lived. Perhaps, after, all, the quality which inspires most love in the heart of woman is strength. The Indian squaw loves her husband for the number of foes he kills ; the woman of civilization loves man for the power cf his mind, the strength of his character and will. Estelle, for the first two months had revolted and resisted ; she had mourn ed deeply Octave's death, but it stemed impossible that she could weep for him beneath her husband's roof ; she was ashamed of grief for her lover in his pres ence. So gradually the grief faded, and rarely did the image of Octave intrude on her mind. Then came a deep feeling of humiliation. Then a spirit of defiance arose in her ; but her husband's calm un alterable authority soon subdued her. Hearing the world's eulogiums of him, seeing him surrounded with its admira tion, she grew to be proud of him, to In proud of the homage she received from the world as his wife. Then came bitter rejHmtance for the past, deep remorse, as tonishment at the folly which could have preferred poor Octave to such a man as Henri. She came to love him passionate ly, devotedly, and to feel that such a love was utterly hojn-less. Y'et, wherefore? She was beautiful, young, admired ; he might be made to forget, he might be brought to love her. Patiently she began trying to win back his affection, but Henri perceived her intentions. " 3Iadame," said he, " do not try your arts on me. I am not to be seduced, and if by a strange irresistible fatality 1 Lad conceived a passion for you, a degraded woman and a faithless wife, I would die rather than yield to it. " Pray, Ma dame, try no coquetries on me." Estelle turned away, her brow burning with shame ; she was a creature of deep feeling and sudden impulse ; she was desperate, and all her woman's pride had been deeply wounded. She fled to her room, despair in her heart. That night, when Henri returned home, on his desk he found, as he had found five years before, Estelle's wedding ring, and the word " farewell. A deep pang shot through his heart ; had she left him again ? Was she so de praved, so corrupt? He rushed to her room, threw open the door, and crossed the threshold he had never passed for five years "before. AH was still and silent ; ho dashed back the curtains cf the bed ; there lay Estelle, pale, beautiful, and very still ; she did not turn as he approached her ; she d'nl t more; he rmt hi hand on THE POOR. VOL. 11 NO. 44 her heart, it did not beat ; Estelle was dead ! Then Henri knelt beside the bed, and pressed his lips to her brow, in one long and sfraining kiss ' "It is better thus," he eaid ; "she has spared us both a life of torture, for I loved her." t3 "Oh! Angeline,". said a young horticulturalist to his love one evening, " If you could only see my Isabella. How each day she developes new beau ties so beautiful ! hanging over me so tenderly no honey so sweet to tlie taste." Angeline suddenly fell to the floor liko a flat-iron. " " " Yillian !" she cried, "you love an other!" and swooned away. "Oh! I have kUed her!" exclaimed the young horticulturalist, jumping up wringing his hands. "Oh, Angeline don't don't! Y'ou musn't for the world, Angeline I didn't mean it I only meant the grape vine !" Angeline recovered. A minister once delivered a stron" sermon against visiting on Sunday even ing. After tea the young clergyman said to a friend : " Come, let us go to the Deacon's and spend the evening with his daughter." " How?" cried his friend, with much surprise, " is it possible you can make, such a proposal to me, after the sermon you have just concluded ?" "O pshaw," said he, "I only made those remarks in order that we might have the bettor chance with the girls our selves." Aunt E. was trying to persuada little Eddy to retire at sundown. Y'ou see, my dear, how the little chickens go to roost at that time." " Yes, aunty," repiied Eddy, "but the old hen always goes with them." Fowler met Chapin the other night, and says he, "Tho street cars are going to stop running after to-moiTow." " No !" replied Chapin, " what for !' " Because they can't catch up to it ! and Fowler dodged round a corner. Once on a time a little boy was naughty, and hi mother said to him very solemnly: " It' you are such a bad lit tle boy mv son, you will not go to Hea ven." " Well," Paid h. pouting his lips, 1 btiieve I'd about as lief stay in town." C.T A brow-beating counsel asked a witness how far he had been from a cer tain place. "just four yards, two feet and six inches," was the reply. " How came you to be so exact, my friend V i Beeause, I exjectfd -ine or other would ak me, I measured it." S3" A lVr.rsyIvii1iaeditors.13-s, "some body brought a bottTe of sour water into our otneo, with a n. quest to notice it as lemon lx-er. If Esau was grien enough to sell bis birth-right for a mes of pottage, it does i.ot prove that we will tell a four-.-hilling lie fr Jive cents.." C?" We note in a contemporary's col umn the advertisement of a lady for a husband. "None need apply under six feet !" Whew I but the lady" goes in fe rociously for I Iy-men. C3" Jones writes to a friend and closes by saying : "lam glad to be able to say that my wife is recovering slowly." C- A Mr Henn has started a new pajier in Iowa. He says Iw; hopes by hard tTatcLiiig to make a living for him self and his little chickens." CJT " Well, John, did you take that note I gave yon to Mr. Smithers ?" in quired a geutleuian of his rustic servant. " Y'es sir," replied John "I took the note, but I don't think he can read it." "Can not read It !" exclaimed the gentleman? " why so, John V " Iiecause he is so blind, sir." 44 While 1 wor in the room he axed me twice where my hat wor, and it wor on my head all the time." 3 A kind hearted wife once waited on a physician to request him to prescribe for her husUind's eyes, which were sore. " Let him wash them every morning with brandy," said the doctor. A few weeks after the doctor chanced to meet the wife. " Well, has your husband followed my advice?" 44 He lias done everything in his power to do it doctor, but he never could get the brandy higher than his mouth." Sts- .Nothing is a more certain preventa tive of old age and its accompanying in firmities than a slit in the wind-pipe ; but we can't recomend it to good membra of society. Y