BUTTER'S " STATE CAPIToi sook Bind.6rv | -BLANK BOOK MANDFAcKaL Vo. Market St , Uarruburg , f establishment ie chiefly d evn ,„, « manufacture of Blank Books for' t< 3omi«r 0«c«i, Kailrond OouiMin. jSSiiii* rsta IndliUtila, In all caeca ll of atock and workmannh Ip may )>« >M>. Blank Hooka printed, paged red pattern. Sheriff's. Attorurji Vlf, i,. of all aiaea. made and ralod to order nvi ll llC(i > rij Antes* menu. OspUcatva. Ac, forcon^V w, "“‘l lM or plain, ruled and bound to oft£f l)r J ,ur l“. •made of tbe brat Hum paper. ■ • rlaaa. and others, deairing to bare their >d at moderate Prieeia'ahoulrfgiramia j..i> * We H If the largeat aiara. Harpert Weaken I, Bailout, Scientific American. >order, aod In any atyle required. Harw,-. aloe, Kuiekerbocker, lliarnwood’eami**°»th. ra. Oodet’a Lade . Book, gatine. Piano Untie. Ac, bound In t plain and auhatantial half biudiua SitS f" or a»ar Magazines, Pamnhlet lawa, bound fie, at aery moderate prioaa. Persona !*“*?* rfroiemmtoblnd, • oanaafily be teat to at &nn> adiZ^: d' ail work an treated tooSetWiSfXrfi At iMd. tafeiy packed and rathnmdb»nb!y*‘ i.Warranted. Addreta P. '~ aOß|m A BHBH.at the IhJJTo^l^’ > Altoona, tad rhdnity. They «m giro iJSL?* v dalfcn to binding, and receive ehdmrnS SS* Ihatnt ehargea, (ur all who out, net »M7S^° kll W^TOge Vl CO w "—r—— S.r ! a , as b J. | v fa g! s i : h . «H lON ABLE PATTERNS. (T which may L« loond rrerr Qualitr -r am.l. bf Which it would be too t-dkJTSS-" g” 1 - In the line of pure, freeb andchea|f BIB * , * t^ OERIES & PROVISIONS ' of . c ;'“ n,r > produce taken In exchnnee f"r ih« liigbest market price allowed. ihe corner nf Annie and Helen street a. «... THOMAS OKS LOP. M«> 22,18«2. -JACOB WETS, SR AND CONFECTIONER Vunixu Sraiti. Altoohl, Pa, CONSTANTLY ON HAND lEAD. OAKES. GANDIES CE CEEAM ET'MEATS, of hi* own nunubctan, which he 10 i -‘II, whoiewle or retHll. at the moat regnoo- I Ueo, FOREIGN FRUITS, euch as GES, LEMONS, PINE-APPLES, srNEs, raisins, Nyrs, |iectiTe suuons. * ES BAKED TO ORDER, »r AcoMinoa. on ibort notice and in the neat *tjl« or the art. I nine and price mj stock and yon will find »d cheap •« can be pnrclnwed eUewhere. i. FETTINGER’S era! News Agency. ALL. No. 7, MAIN STREET OL BOOKS, BLANK BOOKS, NERY, CONFECTIONARIES ARS>& TOBACCO, D NOTIONS nr GREAT VARIETY CONSTANTLY ON HAND. . iMi; LLOYD & CO., ALTOONA, PA, STON, JACK & CO., BOLLWArSBrtte, At, VISTICEBS, ‘ '\Oeli, Johnston, Jack. $ Co."} ■ FTS ON THE PRINCIPAL and Silver and Gold for a*!*., Collections r> nohed 6n deposits, payable' cm demand, t«,Ot npou tine, with iatenat at foif ratee. KESSLER—PRACTICAL 'of AltwSTSSdMthfpahDc*gea^^||£ "i'll ill laialmaa WW |wt. where he fami constantly fo, Wholesale andßefoH.Dßm», CttpiCCALa. OILS. V AIUUIH- entka to business, and a deslrs to render sat ***** • Vow of pQDQc MtrMifß, Bd nHnhaAta aoppUad on waaoaaHe terms, Iran a distance promptly attended fo mrri|irtaiacarafany eMmpßiiddad U)Y FRIENDS WOULD DO ok la npioa the choke and chaste aaaort ir DIUeS GOODS m»w dtadnad open the 'eaof 1 MURPHY A HeHKK, Cor. of Tintnia'aad Caroline ata. * It. 1802. ND LARD OILS, CAM min* Xtnid, 08, D AT McCQRMIOK’S Store Ud aawrtDnat of Beedjhlfa* dMWV yor.fi.dt IUES.-—A LARGE AND ■uaortßWDt rfOnicerto* IwiMlMtfcy? 1 !, 1 ’ wor ». a-mue?* K - RAT, TOOTH, SUAVH'O •* ** ’■"A* ADS OK PRINTING \ILaH and PARASOLS' w variety, at LACHBHAN S. 1,1882. • YLES CARPETING AN® scan be found a i hAVOBU^J^ iRAL AShORTMENL G* ry, Hair and Clothe. ' assortment ow^nk -1 be fcond.t tAPO»” A— uiJL, CULOGNJ^JWfJ; iriac Crwni, Tan and Certificates for the portability, utility and prac iiCßl operations of oar Portable Steam Engines and Saw 'U li • Uabtstowm, Crawford Co., Pa., ) May 16th, 1863. j MESiis. J. k J. 11. DCVall: —Gentlemen Wo received jar Xweatv Horse Power Portable Engine and Saw Mill, in good order. We are perfectly satisfied with it; every- works to our entire satisfaction—in fact beyond our . Kpectations. We sawed 4000 feet of wbiteoak boards in uth boars* and coaid have done mare in the some time, bad we have had good logs. We take pleasure in recommending those in want of Vmw Mills and Engines to purchase of you. Respectfully, C. REYNOLDS A £. ANDRESS. We am authorized to «ay, for Mcl Samuel Milliken.oi liollidaysburg, Pa., that the 20 horse power Portable En ,iue ami Saw Mill we sold him, ha* fully met bis expec tation and proved itself to be all that was claimed for it in jar circular; /and since starting it, has sent in his jniei fur a secomr Engine and Saw Mill, of same power md aiw- Fur farther references, we will give the names of M. r Dill and Thomas M'Aullcy, Altoona, Pa,; A. L. Ilolli ,Uv. llullidaysburg, Pa.; M. M. Adams, Cresson. Pa. ;\V. i. 2eiglcr and Joseph S. Reed, Huntingdon. Pu.: Messrs, ihirley, ± Co„ Tyrone, Pa., all of whom have purchased .\ifuide Steam Engines and Portable Circular Saw Mills .■f us. We fully warrant our Engines and Saw Mills, to be ia;k'U* of first-class material; workmanship the same: ■ lf iill Brass Ball Valves in pumps and checks, and to saw L-m G,ooo to 10.000 leet of lumber ppr day—say 10 hours. Tilers solicited. Description circular sent to all cor- Respectfully, J. A J. H. DUVALL, Coruer Market, and 3rd Streets, just opposite C. 0. U. Road Depot, Zanesville, Ohio. Juuc ‘1,18634m. 0, YES! 0, YES!! THIS WAY! THIS WAY! NEW SPRING & SUMMER GOODS. TB HILEMAN has just received a • largo atul well selected stock of Goods, consisting „f Cloths, Plain and Fancy Casainieres, SatinetU, Ken- M:ckr Jeans* Tweeds, Beaverteens. Bine Drilling, and all ,-ther kinds of Goods lc»r MEN AND BOYS’ WEAR, uigeih-r with a grand and magnificent assortment of LADIES* DRESS GOODS, -ah as Black and Fancy Silks. ChaUiet, Denver, Brilliant!, Uams. Delaines, Chxnlss, Deßeges, Crapes, Prints, < rape and Stella Shawls. ManOtas, Vndcrslerrts and Hosiery, Bonnets and Ribbons, Collars, Hand kerchiefs. Kid doves. Hooped Skirts, Skirl ing, Lace-Mitts, dr., dr. ALSO, Tickings, Checks, Bleached and Unbleached Muslins, Cotton and Linen table Diaper. Crash, Ncakeen, Ac. BOOTS AND SHOES, HARDWARE, QCEENSWABE, WOOD AND WILLOW WAKE, OIL CLOTHS, . CARPETS, AC. GROCERIES. iiur stock of Groceries is more extensive than ever, and ■ciniists of Rio and Java Coffee, Crushed. Loaf and N O. sugars; Green, Y. U. and Black Teaa; Molasses, Soaps, ''smiles, Salt, Pish. Ac. Thankful to the public for the very liberal patronage heretofore received, he hopes by strict attention to bush •n sa, and an endeavor to please, to merit a continuance of ths same. ' , m , . AD-Call and examine his Stock, and you will be con vinced thvt he has the beet aeeortment and cheapest Goods in the market. . , V Country Produce of all kind, taken in exchange for ihioda at market prices. Altoona, April 28,1883. , . c The tone wm fretful, with a quality of accusation. The face of the speaker wore an injured loqk. A boy between fourteen and fifteen yean of age, ; sat reading. He moved uneasily, as if pain had disturbed him; but he did not lift his eyes from the page on which they were resting. “ The harder a mother slaved for her children the Jess they care for her.” The boy moved again; almost with a start, as though the pain felt an instant before had suddenly increased. “All children are thankless!” So the speaker kept on, talking to a friend, yet really thrusting at the boy. “Not all,” answered the friend. “I have a mother and I know my heart in regard to her. It is full of love and gratitude, and I cannot remember the time it was aot so.” “ There are exceptions to all rules. And besides there are few women like your mother. That would be a cold heart, indeed, into which she did not in \ spire love.” “ Love begets love. That is the old xt ta trite story ; and as true to-day as it was 6W J )mg a thousand years ago. If children grow U BERLIN &CO , ANNOUNCE TO U p cold and thankless towards their pa , the citiiens of Altoona and Tic initythat they hare reQtf jfthcy Clffly SCperatC from them, w BUILDING going Off into the world and treating WORK b JMEW liVlhifi. ix, the _ neglect, the fault, in most Virginia Stnet, CW,ne Sw cases, rests with the parents. They did dhcos, cBEMicMS. dyestuffs, i not make themselves lovely in their chil- PATXITT MEDICINES PMBFUBEBIBS, , „ „ PAIKTS, OIL, GLASS, PUTTY, ; ; aretlB ‘v® 8- ? ' „ ail ether articles usually Bold in the Drag buaineaa, ; XhCTB fullpWfid this & QC®d SIiCnCC lOf ’ OUR MEDICINES J eoQte monenjts. The boy had let his book arc of the purest and oest quality, anti dn? Chemical* f it v l:, ovm ond W&8 listen beii the marks of the best manufacturers. fall from before IUB ey«, ana was hblw. Painters, Ulasiers, Builder* and other*; requiring to u»e * . intentlv. His mother SftW tiUS) Wiu j PAINTS, OILS, VAHNI9IIBB, TDRPI4NTIN*» - nf what wftfl Tfflßp- KWow shus. Putty, Paint Bntthu, Satk Tooit, da., dc., ■ had a quick perception of what was passr , will find our assortment to be of ths I . l;_ miiid BEST QUALITY AND AT THB LOWKST PRICKS. ■mg hj« , , itT V |- t# . UflTO The purest Wluea and Liquors for Medicinal, Mechanl- u BRIO She, “ IdOtl t UK6 cssnll Sacramental par pom slws,» In store. . . ; . exaltation of myself above you. He who knows my heart knows that in it there is no pride of superiority. He who knows how weak 1 am, how often I fall short, how often passion gets the better of reason; how near it was to bearing me down yesterday. It was in His strength 'that I overcame aud helped my boy instead of hurting him. In His strength you!may overcome afco, and win the love of ai child whose heart is athirst j for your love, as is the drooping flower j athirst for the' dew and rain. ’ The mother of Edward bowed her face into her hahds. For a little while, her body shook with half choked sobs. Then she looked ub at her friend. Her eyes were wet, her face pale, her lips curved with pam and grief. ’ f ■ ' “ You are not hurt with me t” “ No, no,’’ she answered. “ Not with you, but with myself. What have I been doing'* What madness has possessed me T I know that love begets love —that in Mrs. Ho witt’s beautiful words, it has readier will than fear. 1 know, also, that hardness begets hardness; that driving is more difficult and far less certain than lending. And yet, knowing all this, I have sought to rule my children by pas sion and ibrce ; to drive instead of lead ing them info the right ways. No, no. lam not hurt with you. For all this plain speaking, which I so much needed, 1 thank you tram the depth Of my' heart. If it is not better with both ate and my > children in future, it will not be. your fault. But it shall be better!” , And it was better. How quickly all changed under a new order of home govern ment. Love and kindness found swift abedience where anger and harshness bad met obstruction. Sunshine dropped in through a hundred places, which had been closely barred against its sweet influence ; and Edward wondering at the pleasant change, drew nearer and nearer to his mother, and felt that she loved him. O, love !. sweet to all hearts. Ye who should give of its treasures, see to it that your hand fail not in its dispensation. It has signs peculiarly its own, which are never mistaking. If you would win love hang out the sign. HOW NEAR WE ABE TO DEATH. —A writer in the Independent thus discourses on our nearness to death : “ When we walk near powerful machin ery, we know that one single misstep and those mighty engines would tear us to rib bons with their flying wheels, or grind us to powder with their ponderous jaws. So, when we are thundering across the lane in the rail car, and there is nothing but half an inch of flange-iron to hold us on the track. So, when we are at sea in a ship, and there is but the thickness of a plank between us and eternity. We imagine then we see how close we are to the edge of the precipice. But we do not see it.— Whether on the sea or on the land, the partition which divides us from eternity is something thinner than an oak plank or . half an inch of flange-iron. The machin ery of life and death are within us. The tissues that hold these beating powers in their place are too often not thicker than a sheet of paper, and if that thin partition were pierced or ruptured, it would be just the same with us as if a cannon ball had struck us. Death is inseparably bound up with life in the very structure of our bodies. Struggle a? he will to widen the splice, no man can at any time go futher from death than the thickness of a sheet of paper.” * Queeb Place fob Revolvers. —While the search was being made of the passen gers on the Central train, at Indianapolis, Indiana, containing delegates from the Democratic Convention, one evening re cently, a soldier noticed that a lady’s dress appeared more full breasted than it ought to have been, and his quick bye also detect ed the fact that the artificial contents in the lady’s bosom were so pressed out against the dress as to make it almost certain that pistols were there. He was a very polite soldier, and in the most gentlemanly man ner approached the lady and said; “ Madam, I want those revolvers.” “Sir,” said she very indignantly,“l am a very respectable woman, and have no revolvers." “Madam,” said the soldier, pointing to her bosom,l want those revolvers.” She again denied she had any. With out further questioning, the soldier, in the discharge of his duty, thrust his band into the place of concealment, and drew out a revolver, and kept on repeating the operation until seven wore captured.— Then gathering up the pistols, he politely remarked to the lady: <• Madam, your breast-works seem to be iron-clad.” Mw. Partington on Co suestics.— “That’s a new article for beautifying the complexion,” said Mrs. Bibb, holding up a small bottle for Mrs. Partington to look at. She looked up from toeing out a wool en stock for Ike, and took the bottle m her hand.—“ls it indeed?” said she; “well, they may get up ever so many rostrums for beautifying the complexion. but, depend upon it the less people have to do with bottles for it, the better. _ My neighbor, Mrs. Rlotch, has been using a bottle for a good many years for her com plexion. and her nose looks like a rupture of Mount Vociferous, with the burning lather running all over the contageous territory.” a* A writer beautsfiiUy remarks that a man’s mother is the representative of his Maker. Misfortune and mere crime set no barriers between her and ton. While his mother lives a man has one friend on earth who will not desert him when he is needy. Her affection flows from a pure ■fountain, and ceases only at the ocean of eternity. EDITORS AND PROPRIETOR FALSE AND TRUE SMILES. Thank heaven! there are a goodly num ber of people who smile because they can’t help it—whose happiness, babbling op from their heart, runs over in smiles at their lips, or burst through them in jovial laughter. And there is a difference be tween the false and the true symbol s of joy, that enables the keen observer readily to distinguish one from the other. The na tural expression of delight varies with the emotion that gives way to it, but the counterfeit smile is a stereotype, and the tone of a hypocrite’s laugh never varies. The crocodile, if the scaly old hypocrite he is represented to be is accredited with smiles as well as tears. False smiles are, in fact, more common than false tears. — It is the easiest thing in the world to work tly smile, while only a few gifted individ uals have sufficient command of their eyes to weep at wilL Few great tragedians, even, have the knack of laying on the wa ter of affliction impromptu ; but. who ever saw's supernumerary bandit that could not ‘smile and smile, and be a villain,” or a chorus singer or a ballet-girl, that did not look as if she had been newly tickled across the lips with a straw ? Of artificial smiles, there are a greater number than we have space to classify. The Countess of Belgravia has her receiving smile, a suberb automatic effect. Count Faro the distinguished foreigner, who is trying London this year because Baden-Baden dose not agree with hint, shuffles the cards with a smile that attracts everybody’s attention from his fingers. Miss Magnet, whose heart and lips dissolved partnership in very early life, makes such a Cupid's bow of the latter whenever an “ eligible match” approaches, fortunes flutter round her like a moth round a flame. The Hon. Mr. Verisopht, who wants to get into parliament, cultivates a popular smile. In short, smiling is a regular business accomplishment of thousands of people ovhose souls have no telegraphic communication with their lips. A Frightened Parson. —A certain lady had been much annoyed by the ring ing of her door b°U by the mischievous buys in the vicinity, ttnd determined to be no more made a foul of by going to the door. In the course of the forenoon her minister called to see her, dressed in his *pruciest manner. He ascended the steeps, and gently drew the bell-handle, when the lady shouted from the entry — “ I see you boy ; if I eaten you, I’ll ring your neck!” Ihe frightened gentleman immediately rushed down the steps, through a small crowd of young scamps, and has not been seen since. 43* Two ragged little urchins, whose parents {mid more attention to the bottle than training of their children, were in the habit of seriously annoying their neighbors, who lived close by, with, their noise while playing in front of their house. One day the lady of the house came to the door and told them to be quiet or go home immediately. Said one of the chil dren to the other; hear she a ordering we, when w* don't belong to the” V Never make a poor mouth, for if you are wise yon will always effect inde pendence, though you may be really as poor as Job’s turkey. If you are poor don’t let folks know it, or they will dis cover in you a thousand blemishes —■« host of defects which would never be discovered or at least never talked about if you kept a stiff upper lip and carried yourself as if you bad ten thousand dollars insead of ten cents. It is as natural for the world to hold poor folks in contempt, as it is for rats to eat cheese. •r When stretched upon his bed in the agony of the gout, it reported to Chatham that one of his official subordina ters pronounced ah order impossible of exe cution. “Tell him ,” said he, rising up and marching across the room on his swollen feet, his face streaming with perspiration from the excrutiating effort, “ tell him jt is the order of a man who treads upon Uu-r possibilities,” gyA cockney tourist met a Scottish lassie going barefoot to Glasegpw. *• Las pie,” said he, “1 should like to know if all the people in these parts go barefoot V' — »• Part on ’em do, and part on ’em mind their own business,” was the rather set tling reply. •••Character is like money; when you have a good deal, you may risk some; for if you lose It, folks will believe you have plenty to spare. ___ jy Why is a newspaper like a tooth brush! D’ye give it up? Because every body should have one I of his own, and not borrow his neighbor's. •V Where one thousand are destroyed by the rrorid's frowns, ten thonwand are destroyed byita saUea. NO. 27.