mum. sfUABHaaj 13 rUBI-ICHF.I) KVKKY WKDNEBU A.Y, BY ornoE in BOBisnow . nomrat'S BuiLBiua ELM STREET, TIONESTA, PA. TERMS, $2.00 A YKAlt. Nl Subscriptions received for a shorter rwlod than throo montliM. Correspondence solicited from nil parts of tho country. No notice will bo ttik.uu of ionymnun eom in indent ions. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. m VOL. IX MO. 18. TIONESTA, PA., MAKCH M, 1877, $2 PER ANNUM M .r i l. I i TI05E3TA LODGE Xo. :igo, X. O.ofO. IT1. MEETS ovrrv .Friday ovcnintr, nt 7 o'clock, In t'lio Hall formerly occupied "tIT'vanoiesen.n.o. 1 W r-T.sV.K Hfln'v. 2i-tf. TIONESTA COUNCIL, NO. 342. W O. TJ. -A.. M EETS at Odd Fellows' Lodgo Room, .voi-v TilPHi nV fiVeilllllT. ni I o ell" rv "-' J ;.t r. m CLARK, C 8. A vahnf.u, r. s. 31 .T. 15. AON13M', a t t o it x j: Y A T J- TIONESTA, TA. ATTENTION SOI.IIIHIIK! I lmvo heon admitted to practice n nil Attorney in tho Ponsion Ollico at 1 imrton. 'P. C. All oineors, noldiora, or milor who wero Injured in tho Into war, win obtain pension U which tliey nuiy bo milled, hv callluR n or addressing nw at -uet, t'A. Alo, eluims for arrearages -.ud bounty will receive prompt nt- of pnv 'vr fcjiir yearn n soldier in teutkm. -nc ior a number or ITaviuK been v uiHUn of the Into war, and ha, . - til (w'H' vmirs engaged in the Vru ' -..o. dier,' claims my cxperU. , .... the collodion 01 ' XuNEVV. 4Hf. : - ' V. K. I.atUy, .,vr l 'H T.1W Tionesta. Pa. f O.lloe nexi door to ' -If TV 1 II 1 1411 " I Lawronco House. K. L. Davis, wftUUHY AT E AW , llonoHu., Pa. A. Collections mado in this and adjoin :u-iy l I a lut v ' A.TTORXJEY AT LAW, " ' F.W. Hays, 'ATTORNEY AT LAW, and A 1TBUO. Heyno ds HukiU MUl-,-tnecHt.,OiMity, I--- Nota n Y tt C'o.'h 3'J-lV , BMIV.KY. k ..y-vj: a it e s 31 lk r, 1t.v,v - . - Franltlin, P- taRACTICK in tho fernral IN.urU of e lifS,Si Cr.wn.rd, Forct, and Joj- CHlltlCH lawranco ' House, .r,,,i,.i-.V,,.lPntJon1:iveu to (-u.-bts. bVoVandFruiUofaniiuls lu their biwoii. Samplo room fo Nerved (,r Com- Wv-iid Agents. " CENTRAL HOUSli, I J Vunkw. Proprietor. I Ins " 4-ly " '"'" FOIEST HOUSE, a. V ARN ER rnorniToit. Onnosito iDt Court House, TionoHtrt. PH. JOHt ' ,,.,'i,i,-fiw and i loan and noued. r .L. T f(-ouh. Tho best o. UT " , roli. . UIUIJV,. .., ,wan IT n hanii. a ., 4-17-lv is respeetiutly loetiuny soiu-iicvi. W. C COBURNi M IAN A HURdEO.-N oner .! ll., I1IH11)1 Ol l'l Mavinx Uml an oxpor.c. , -Yiwih in constant pra.tti co Ih. Twelve Cohurn lr. Co . ion. Ail fee will fnws . V''V::::::.. : .1 vUit made all honri Parties ul a distance can ',,lu l second building ,tlow the Court 1 louse, '1 Vme a l a. U-e days Wodnesdays and hatmds. jxo. r. rAHK. jtf.-i r , J -i it k e co., BACKERS Comer of Elm t Walnut Sts. Tionesta F.auk of niseount and Deposit. Interest allowed on Timo'Dopoblts. CWleetion.madeonall thePrim-ipal points of tho r. s. CoUeotiona soiieitod lK - WIIXIAIH Jto CO., MKADV1LLE, - PENH' TAXIDERMISTS. IRDS and Animals , stuffo. mul mount od to order. Aitificial Eyes kept in B toct. ; - 'j NEBRASKA GRIST MILL. .j-rnw r;P 1ST MILL at Nebraska 1 town S Forest countv, has. been towl,)-uri .f 'w.t;tlod in all kinds ot t m g-inisMixcADVERTISING " v ' A N 1) . . ', .i. it lOnHUUJ uilllnii'M lowest fiaujes If. W. LEliEUUR I7MPLOYMENlSMa!oiu)dron:dc,rAvruTISt:KSholl( - p(,,ts to Gv, li ry or comnnsMon. o ly atuv .veil if Co., 41 Park Row, N. Y niilary of ti a week and fvponees. ' K.jr Eivht-.v-pa- Pami'hlct, fhow ii Va Ktanura'-turint; Co., Hi ,v A;i advn i -intr. J J it fiilars free. - lis iin. j. m. xikatii, DRESSMAKER, Tionesta, Ta. MRS. HEATIt haw recently moved to thin pi aw' for tho purpose of tncetim: a want which tho ladies of tho town and county lmvo for a lou limo known, that of having a dressmaker of exporionco nmimnr tlu'in. T mm nrrivirnd to niako all klnils"of drosses in tho latest styles, find punrantoo satisfaction. fVunpinR lor braid ing and embroidery donNn tho best man ner, with tho newest pattella. All I ask Is a tuir trial. ncNiucneo ok imi street, in the A comb Hulldlng. tf. TIME TRIED AND FIRE ' TllK ORIlJINAL ETNA INSURANCE COMKHY Dee?3lTitT, " ' - 4 j 1'onesta, Pai, PHOTOORAPksR, (sLU.'fKSSOn TO PKMIJ.) ( Pictures in every sty lonfthe 'r. Views of tho oil rejjionsTor sulo or trt n to or der. CKNTPwE STREET, near R, lWsing. SYCAMORE STREET, near iion De pot, Oil City, Pn. ' 20-tf OTOGRAPIl GAIJRY. NIUKKT, &, KCN'EIfM south of RoniN-W; Tionost. M. CARPENTER, - - Proprietor. Picturos taken 1:1 the latet etylea IS. . I liKK & CO. V110LlvSA fo KHTA1L 1 Irs lit 2Iarlwarcs- and Xnils, Slov l TiinTare. BELTIK'T ALL SIZES i Confchuttly oi ttt low prices. I ' Aiw'i!HirctHrers of i jnhect Iron, til Uasing, his Co. Kt)P Swn0r,0'o"a""aMa I0" ,lorst' wf rrv Miauonary uomr aiui Ennine. HINKERiCO., OIL CITY, PA E LARGEST FURS f.tsjaBUSHBitni Mil OJlj lUV.UUJf)! bo at con icaler in AND UPHOLSTERED o: CA RNITUIiEl X, PENN'A. Consisting ot Tai ice and Common Furniture, win. Pillows. Window hades, Fixtures, Look ing Classes, i.ve. nt for "N't'iiaiiyro county 1 the Manhattan Spring Hed and Ccl ii(J.i)ll ilHlll ch'w, iiiaiio uu-i hi uii T 1 . ltl . 1.1 . I I 1 I XL'ni'ATVilllll j ,-. .13 ill 111 1 iiiimwiu .inii.liuiii.i, ll"'i . :i ...-i. . -...I, 1 int. near -Liiuui iy.- i.uii .inn co o ly ly. Dr. J. L. Acorfb, A. KI A? U rtU liliLUi , who nas Eileen years' experience in a hirjje ,J:cssi'iii practice, will attend all fiial Culls. ( )i)ice Jn his Drug and Store, located in Tidioute, near I House. IS STORE WILL BE FOUND jssortment of Medicines, Liquors cigars, Stntioimry, (Jlass, I'aiuts, ! iirn , mi oi i no i'cm iiuuuiv, u i sold at rcasonablo rates. (. IIAi. V. l'A 1 , UU I' H I II IHTll (Lacy - ,., n,i Jin,.-; ist from New York, -li-o of tho Store. A nrst- ,,..,(, i All prescriptions 1 4 i 1,1; OATSrice. Send for catalogue on tho vci'lan. 1'or information, address fEO. 1. ROW ELL A CO. 41 Park Row, N. Y. Ulys3cs S. Grant. Ulysses S. Grant retire from he I'residcnry of the Uuited &tates?fo day, and becomes t lie fols snrvivi.g cx l'res'ulent ftf the llepublic. All who have filled tbo high trust before him rest in City of tho Silent. Ilois yet in the Tigor of life, having boen t he youngest of our Chief Magistrates, and the country in whose most thrill ing anuald he in ouc of the great cen tral figures, will rejoice to see him long among tho people who have deem ed their richest gifts his merited offer ings. The Ulysses S. Grant of lo-day and the Grant of the future history of the nation, will present very different por Imiu to th world. Time mellows the passions aud prejudices of men, and tho grave "covera every defect, buries every error, extinguishes every resentment," aud only the attributes of greatness, whether developed in gftod or in evil, survive for the criti cism and example of the generations which follow. The history of ench of the three Presidents whose names are inseparably interwoven with our civil war, starts in ob3cure birth, and their advancement was rough-hewn by their own almost unaided endeavors; and tho life of Grant presents the anoma lorn) illustration of a gullciit young soldier returning lo the obscurity whence he cm me, and to the listless career that repelled ambitiuu from his A run ma A mii(. unolilriiui vn iinf!li I citizen in humble employment nt Gal- lad to take his scaut livelihood e"; ,l, forty doixai'j a month he out oi i.. ... ,jei, inl u earned, h wu . . , J u local meeting inspiu , iug naivH that fraternal tvu." s'rcftJ its foarful shadow over the cou.,trJ and as nue known to bo skije'l " military alfuirs, he waa made promi nent in the consultation of his com munity over the terrible trial that uas at hand for free government, liegi mcnt after regiment was organized sent to th6 field, and Grant was yet hnhiml for h had few friends to mess his promotion and he knew little of "the arts which ait' self-advancement. One JaUluul menu, iUr. ii. li. usu burnc, made Governor Yatef, over come his prejudice, and a reluctant col onel's commission made tho iicro of Appomattox and the ruler who has stamped more of his individuality up on the llepublic than any of the long line of Presidents of the past. As a soldier he is of his owu school. Of all the scores of generals who brightened aud faded during 'four years of hattle, none rivaled Grant, in nny measure, in the attributes which fiually won the costly victory over rc beilion. And his military career whs as strangely varied as it was grandly successful. His first battle was i mis tuke aud a failure ; his next u victory; liU next a triumph that called out the grateful affection of the nation, and his next a blunder that was esteemed worso than ft crime. Shilob ended hi command, and but for a generous ly trusting President he would have retired into forgetfuluess. Time soft ened the bitter asperities which crowded upon him, and the recall of Halleck.to Washington to become Commauder in-Cluef restored tho fal len leader of bhiloh to the head of Ins armv. llow he won lcksburi? alter j - 0 repeated failure had mado the heart ot the couutry sick with hope deterred, .V . il l" I. .1. ... li a story uiai is iresu in every mem ory. "The Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea," was tho elo quent tribute to his victory that came .1 f x 1 ' 1 irom ino pen oi .unicorn. Agum at the battle among the clouds of Tenu- esseeiie sent out tho bulletin ot tri umph, and with one accord the coup try that clamored for his destruction but a few inotth3 bemSe, rejoiced ns Congress created laurels for him which had only been won by a Washington aud a Scott; ard his orders thence forth summoned a million men as rea pers in the fearful harvest of death. In the Wilderness battles he taught the world how free goverment made a her- i. ' i. . , - .. ... oism oi us owu. ji was ino tempest of destruction, the hurricane that toy aI with the dead, but it was the way 1 !- .. . II io peace, ami oniy uraiu wnuiu nave dared and won as he did. For a long, long twelvemonth he held the Confed eracy fn itsJyiug agonies, and saw it convulse m&civilized world aud be reave every Lome iu tho laud in its strujcrliu'r throes. But Appomattox cauio at lust, aud thero was but oue man in all the twenty millions who battled on his side, who could have lived in the trust of the nation and tempered victory with the generosity that Grant gave to Leo when tho sword of the iuaurgent leader was sur rendered. The grtat Captain of tho age, who. had won his fame on the field, taught his couutry that peaco and brotherhood were its priceless jewels. The warrior retired from the field with long disssvercd States reunited and ha was contcut. Ho had uo love for the sinuous ways of politics and no ambition to reach the one crown that was above him ; but he wns a tempt ing prize for those who struggled for power, and not until after three years of turmoil in the fiercest . passions of factious Btrife, did he listen to the whispers of ambition. His resolution never to exchange his placo at the head of tho army for the brief and al ways doubtful honors of the Presiden cy was shaken as the struggle of 18G8 approached, and not until after the summary displacement of Stanton by President Johnson, did he cast his political fortunes with tho Republi can party, whose ticket ho had never publicly supported. Ilis nomination was a supreme necessity, and his elec tion inevitable from the day he be came n candidate. lie accepted the nomination in the characteristic- brev ity of ihe soldier, and electrified the ua'ion by thekey-nuto of the cam paign : ''Lot us hive peace!" Of his civil administration exhaustive criti cism is untimely. Few Presidents committed more grievous errors; few so well redeemed them and recalled the public faith that had faltered. lie never reached the papular heart as Chief Magistrate, for he though little of the multitude iu his administration of the Government, but ho was con servative and safe and was sustained therefor.' Ho stood unmoved when the Liberal wave of 1872 surged against him, with the ablest founders of his party assailing him, and he saw their lances shivered as they recoiled before his overwhelming triumph. He ruled Hi a l uler, not as a servant; ; he made his own policy and forced obedi ence to it; ha framed his own laws when necessity dr nia'.i Jed it and com pelled obed:ence to tliem. To li'ry more than to -all others - docs the Cvl'utrf t".V'5 the solution of the dUputa that' thifaleTJttf the very exist ence "of gjverniKfJiJt aihi however men niZv jgc t'1Q decision" of Uio tri bunal, it waJ the end of turbulence, tho restoration or';t', aud he justly merits the gratitude of tu? people, for his patriotic efforts, which removed the most appalling peril, and stamped the impress of peace and justice upon Louisiana. The achievements of Grant arc of those which will grow in lustre as the passions of the age perish, and his er rors will be obscured as tlie country -and the world pay tribute ti the achievements of the great Captain of the llepublic. Philadelphia Time-?. j o Wealth 13 not Happiness. The first mistake that is made by most men is in making wealth the ob ject of thjir lives. But wealth, iu we know, does not give happiness. Tho Vanderbilts, the Stewarts and the Ast'irs have not been our happiest men. They are not the typical men in our h:mcs; they arc not typical men in social life ; they are not the typical men in the delights of life, or in the profession of learning, which perhaps yields the finest joys man can kuow. We can go down lower still, and find the men who have only one million or so, or a half million, and they do not type tho happiness of American homes. Go into their houses. Ilow 'splendid, how gorgeous, how gaudy they are, and yet they cannot rival the little homes in the love of a husband and wife, in the reverence of children for parents, in the parents' guardianship over children, in all the sweet hippiuess that affection spreads abroad liko a fragrance through the chambers of our houses. You know that almost every American gets wealth who chooses to, though he loos es it again, perhaps ; but he gets it. It is no great proof of ability nor cvi- ' deuce of success for a man to get wealth in this country ami this ago. Now, then, it seems to us that ii a young man should picture lo himself rather a quiet h6use, sunnily placed on some hillside, with a crotch of meadow in front, through which courses a running stream, shaded by pleasant tres, with a loving wife, a group of pleasant-faced and virtuous children, qiiietudo of days and peace fulness of nights, health and onientmeui of mind, that would be much better than to set up a ficticious standard aud strive incessantly for it as if he thought thi-t you uiust reach it or be utterly undone. Murray. 1 It h an oil saying that a man fdi.iuM not marry iniltss ho can sup port a wilo ; and from soma exampKs we have scon wo are beginning to doubt whether a woman cun prudent ly many unless tho can support a husband. Aloxis has bean living in a place where tho girls don't weur corsets, and ho was terribly surprised when he went to waltz with an American girl and i'ou ml that his aims reached twice around her waist, and met on Lei belt buckle in front. Anybody cau shovel buow, but the man who cau do it and not swear, U good enough to be nil cditort "Shoot Him on the Spot." A fine oil portrait of ex-Governor Dix, of New York, hai been put up in the "Governor's Room, City Hall, New York, and the event has brought the old warrior again under the conside rate care of tho interviewers. Ono of tl.cso has gleaned from him tho follow ing account of that famous order which, gave the veteran Son of Mars such a fame. The General, who alludes to his exploit with the modesty of a true hero, gave a number of facis and in cidents hitherto unpublished. In au swer to many questions he spoko in substance as follows : At the time of my sanding the order to shoot any man that attempted to haul down tho American flag, perfect apathy reigned at Washington. The authorities looked quietly on and saw our forts, arsenals aud revenue cutters stolen without oue wordrH remon strance. I confess that my blood boil ed. To take care of the revenue cut ters was part of my duty as Secretary of the Treasury, and I determined not to leave it undone. Hearing that the Hubert McClelland wa3 in danger of falling into the hands of the conspira tors at New Orleans through the treachery of its commander, Captain Iireshwood, I dispatched to that city Mr. W. II. Jones, chief clerk in the First Comptroller's office, with instruc tions to Capt. Iireshwood to proceed to New York without delay. I wanted to get the vessel in safe quarters. The Legislature of Louisiana was in ses sion, contemplating the passing of an ordinance ot secession. Sevcr.il States had already seceded, and my efforts to gel tho specie out of the New Orleans mint there wero (00,000 there at the time had been unsucccsiful. The Director of tho Mint declined to rec ognize my authority. When Jones reached tho city he sent mo a dispatch to the effect that Capt. Ureshwood re tired positively iu writing to obey my orders, .and that Ida refusal was by the advice of ll:t Collector of tho Port. I immediately left, tho White House, where I was staying temporarily, went to my room iu the Treasury building eat down, and, obeying tho impulse of the moment, wrote the following an swer to Jones' dispatch : "TitEAsuriY Department, ) "January 29, 18G1. J, "If. Hemphill Jones, Jew Lrleana "Tell Lieutenant Caldwell fof the revenue cutter to arrest Capt. Presh- wood, assume Command ot the cutter, and obey the order through you. If Capt. lire.-hwood, after arrest, under takes to interfere with the command of tho cutter, tell Lieutenant Caldwell to consider bin as a mutineer and treat him accordingly. If any one attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot him on the spot.- "John A. Dix. "Secretary of tho Treasury." When I had finished writing this dispatch, I "thought of taking it over to the President for his approval. But remembering his cautiou and pru dence, especially his paramount desire that if therti must bo blood shed the North should not spill tho first drop, I concluded to act at once on my own responsibility. I gave tho letter , to my clerk, who copied it and whom I sent directly with the copy to tho tel egraph office. ' The letter itself, as was my custom with tho originals of pub lic documents, I thiew into a drawer rerved for the purpose, lieceiving no reply from Joues, I feared my dis patch had been intercepted ; and two or three days afterward, at tho next Cabinet meeting, I remarked to Mr. Buchanan, "I am afraid, Mr. Presi dent, that we have lost another reve nue cutter," explaining to him the loss of the Robert McClelland. "What did you do about it?" asked the President. '.. "I R.c:.t word to Janes to have Brcsh wood arrested, to put Caldwell in com mand, and, if any one attempted to haul down Iho American flag, to shoot him on tiio spot." x He started, and said, somewhat sternly, with an air of incredulity, "Did you write that f" "No; I telegraphed it," I replied, lie uever alluded to the matter again, although I saw him almost constantly until the 4th of March following. About, a week afterward Louisiana seceded. Captain Breshwoud, saying that ho' acted under tho orders of the legislature, had meanwhile transferred the revenuo cutter to tho care of that body. Wh::i the ordinance of sect' sion passed be hoisted tho flag id' Lou isiana in place of tho stars and stripes. Tho order to Jones, very unexpectedly to me, leaked out through the persons who hail intercepted it, and was soon the subject of re in ark in Washington, where it was aeorded a variety of re ceptions. One day at dinner in the White House, a large number of guests being present, a niece of tho.President turned .suddenly to mo with the ques tion : "Did you issue that order?" Sho was, I believe, connected by ium -ria;- with a prominent Southern fain- Rates of Advei u .t t- Ono Square (1 Inch,) ono Innortlou - tl f Ono Square " ono month - S ' Ono Square ' threo months - (J f ) OnoSqiiaro " ono year - - 10 00 Two Squaros, ono year - - - f, Cq QunrterCol. " - - - . 30 Co Half " . .so CO Ono " - - - - 100 CO Iiopnl notices at established rate. Marrint'o and death notice, Rratl. All bills for yearly advertisement eoj. looted quarterly. Temporary adrortio mentH must bn pid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. ily. At any rate her sympathies were . strongly with tho South and wero nr dent iu the extreme. I answered bar very quietly that 1 did. She straight ened herself, and with a bearing of queenly dignity and authority, not de void of a certain s-pico of purcasm, said, "What authority had you fordoing it?" "Oh, Madam," I replied, "it was a sen timent." Tho President made uo re mark. E Some Very Unkind Remarks fibout the Young Men of tho Period. There is altogether too much sniti mentalism abroad now-a-days about whipping boys. In ancient days boys were soundly flagged, and they grew up into the men who laid the founda tion of the world's civilization. Tha men who wen our independence we'r) all whipped at home ami school when they were boys. Our fellows who went out to Mexico, and walked through the hall of the Montezumas had all been spanked by their mothers, boxed by their primary teachers, aud flogged by their fathers and tho teachers of their youth. Every man on either side in our civil war had felt the rod, and there is not a man in the country over thirty-five who does not remem ber tho good old days of wholesale flogging nt school, and foel the better for the discipline that made him thea smart. It is ouly theo latter-day young saints whose spirits cannot en dure the rod. They are the high-toned young bucks who sieze a cue as soon as they can look over a billiard table, who go into the mint-julep business on joint speculation with pocket mouey just sufficient to go halves on ono julep and two straws, who chow J,obacco s.s soon as they cut their secoud teeth, who torture their infant stomachs with mean cigars, and, as they approach manhood, go home on Saturday night into the presence of their mother and sisters as drunk as fools. They ar tha 6.1 ruo high-spirited follows who, when they, in tho old age of their youug ma:-.!;uod, take to themselves wives, being removed from their rjothers and sisters, make themselves agraeablo by frequently going ' ,i0iCJ a"u making their fa m i 1 i r cTTnvo ,.fi r the benefit tf the high-toned fellows with whom they run. It is all stuff .ami nonsense about breakinir the snirit &fthe boys. All that has ever been e itTCStrfciplishad iu t'10 world has been accomplished by men who wero flogged when they were boys. What the nw sentimental training ta to do for tho world will be -eft for time to reveal, biit no person of any intelligence cau regard the tendorly-nurtured aud mildly-disciplined youth coming up around us now, and say that he discovers iu them the elements of a groatness that is to make the grandeur of the past appear ' mean and little. Cromwell and Nelson and Wellington, and all the heroes of Euglisli and American historj were vigorously strapped at schiol, and w hen the attention of their fond parents was called to tho occur rence, they lustily ried out to Tutor Macduff to lay on, and Dk hanged to him who first cried In Id, euough. Boy human nature has not changed einco the days of Solomon, and epoiliug the youth is as much a consequence now of sparing the rod as in his day. Half the boys of this generation would be improved if they were sounJly and regularly trounced three timcsaweek. They might not all r.ecd it exactly at tho appointed time, but it would beu efit all by reminding them '.'..at iero i au authority pa ram unit to their oivn unbridled will, and it would make them grow up more law-abiding, peace-observing, honest, sober and in dustrious men than throe-fourths of them ever have any chance of being. Louisville Courier-Journal. u . !i spending ia th Either of Do not be ashameof hard Foolis poverty. wuri !:. Work for the best salary or wages you can get, but work for half price rather than bo idle. Be your owji master, aud do not let society or fashion swallow you up individual ly hat, coat and boots. Do not eat up or wear out all that yju earn. Com pel your selfish body to spare soais thing for profits saved. Be stingy Jo your ow n appetite, but merciful to oTh ers' necessities. Help others aud ak not help for yourselves. See that you aro proud, too. Let your pride be of the right kiud. Be too proud to be lazy; too proud to give up without conquering every difiiculty r too TNd to bo in company that you cJtrViot keep up with iu expenses; too proud to be stingy. A boy going out poaching shot a bird, and aii' tin r ran to secure tht trophy. O-j c.imi-i;' near to where it had fallen, he f.uu.'l a white owl, so sprawled i n ;'uss as to present to his view only ;. -i.-ad with ttariug eyes and a pair of w inga attached. Inataut- . ly ho shouted iu dismay, "We're in for it now, Jock; we've slot a cberuti'i '" Speech is hilver I 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers