•BRis . S'"* jt ■£*-" Vn-i j.i "■-•It W:-\ IST* raiNQ, tliHr slockw* »<>*. itue in iUp Hanlwart »u 4 Cstku . £''A£w, .Angara, Ailawv Olilatt*, », PUuas. llinees. Isx:|i«, . SjHJons, Y.V BOOTS AND SHOES. MEN’S UvLP UOSB MISSES’ WOOL lIOSB, UNBLEACHED MUSLIN, MS AND HEAVY DUILLINQ.S. rui. lloebd Bootees At $t,51>@1.75 1.37 @1.50 2.75@3.*0.75@3.*0 . ty l-'W. iii. Rio Cotftoe, S.vrupa, Tens, &c.‘ fjjMllv kept in a Dry .Good* Store, J. A. SPRANKLU. " JYE COLORS b tuber tiiih, 1803. o\ Dark Green, nPX Light Green, a \o\ Mapeuta^ 0 HMArf**' Tv W*d. (“/ Maroon, f Si; \s\ Orange* f ,£Jtk wN™-* . I Jp J’urptf. C Popal Purple, &tivtnn. t&SZm StJ/ermo. Violet, s fcjS3t£jljgff’ Islloic, IHU'J SilßWlAtSCWftf K‘V«*u. Hnisiu-ts, JUts, Feathers, liMreuV CUdbyiir, aud all >s. ; WViiring OF h\) TEU CENT.-^gp c«iMr as many goods as would D Be-'adwat, Borrow, rind dealers generally. )VES, KfcT-IIIQXAVAIiK. - •KJNKI) WOUUJ RE- A large supply jrJII ilwajrs b« Oy WAE£, in greet variety. & SPOUTING- .1 i! KXJmTEM. d Sheet Iron Ware. PING, &c. wl> RESPECT- ' citizens'.of Altoona f '-nnsjantly rm band i-ifj, OjJtct >9HPH| and sizes, to suit Use rr ’ y nil sell at low price*, ott wajhifr a barge stock of 7Vn Sheet* ill articles for culioarrparposßS 1 ■ 4~i: : the rgbt pf sale in county & ITSAO£ SXUFFBRr . •Ady to be seen to be appr«cl*» >j *rery farmer, butcher or thbee m |*ald to putting np SPOITtIKO . Spooling -painted and pm up rms. fapfil i4* t 2Ss9-ljr< [SOGUTIQN, - paH® 1 •. Semipitl. Ciinary.iuid SMj|| >le trrtftibettt—ln iXHttut by mail fit '%*•. A'iUres*, Dr/ J. '.y ; pieMCfettOO, IOWftT»» -nos. i, 2, new, und c«ch pttiOff "J «tnl for sale low b j - 1T ! ' ’ ; ■ r . : .., ■ jtb T GOOD CQWflSftf"*"" f S/rop» «ttd [ FBitcnEnT . >. ■ i i i i.ir.i.T, *■ JliElir; I 1 A ibgtrft jpg”- crack**™ Just iIEAMj CllKE^^ffl McCBtJM & DERN, VOL. 9 THE ALTOONA TRIBUNE. ... B. C. DERN, g. iND /_,.,ble inrariaMr in adrance,) $1 BO AU paper”'dkcontiutted at tbe expiration of the time paid tor. TK&VS OF 4DVXETIBISQ S • - 1 Insertion ' 2 do. 8 do. • , „ t 25 i 37U < % 50 ■Poor line* or * 60 76 1 00 Ouo Square, ( 8 i 00 1 60 2 00 Two “ (“ „ r" ,: 1 60 2 00 2 60 T o r «rrtr« *e e U .naVe;."a»B tkm month., 86 cent, per .su.ro for «ch inMrtion. 8 month.. 1 your, .... 1 60 * 3 00 $ 5 00 Six line, or lem » 2 60 * 00 7 00 On# »qu»re ••••• 4 00 6 00 10 00 • I? s- Two Tbre* “ Four iiaii»column u oo io oo with liberty to chsuKe— g Hues Professional or Business Curds, notelcwa, “ K 6 00 with paper, per y oa J'""‘'n»ic»”cha«u:teT or indirldoal - Communications of a interact, will be charged a * number of insor ,,,^dfflu n tr^ntd forbid and charged .rcording to the stare f ore Tcry Insertion, lines. (Ifty cents a square Up fromthe South at hjeak of day, Bringing to Winchester fresh dismay. The affrighted air with a shudder bore, Like a herald in haste to the chieftain’s door, The terrible grumble and rumble and roar, Telling the battle was on once more, And Sheridan twenty miles away. And wider still those billows of war Thundered along the horizon’s bar. And louder yet in Winchester rolled The roar of that red sea uncontrolled, Making the blood of the listener cold As ho thought of the stake in that fiery Iray, Ami Sheridan twenty miles away. But there is a road from Winchester town, A good, broad highway leading down ; And there, through the flush of the morning light, A siced, as black as the steeds of night, Was seen to pass as with eagle flight— As if he kne’fothe terrible need lie stretched away with his utmost speed ; Hill rosu'aiid fell—but his heart was gay. With Sheridan fifteen miles away. Still sprang from those swift hools, thunder’g south, The dust, like the smoke from the cannon’s month. Or the trail of a comet sweeping faster and faster, Foreboding to traitors the doom of disaster; 'J lie heart of the steed and the heart of the,master Were beating like prisoners assaulting their walls, Impatient to be where the battle-field calls ; Every nerve of the charger wasstrainedto full play, With Sheridan only ten miles away. Under his spurning feet, the road Like an arrowy Alpine river flowed, And the landscape sped away behind Like an ocean flying before the wind ; ■ And the steed, like a bark fed with furnace ire, Swept on, with his wild eyes full of fire. But lobe is nearing his heart’s desire— lie is snuffing the smoke of the roaring fray, With Sheridan only five miles away. The first that the General saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops ; What was done—what to do—a glance told him Then strike his spurs with a terrible oplh, ; Ik dashed down the line ’mid a storm of huzzas, And the wave of retreat checked its course there because ■ i The sight of the master compelled it to pause, With foam and with dust the black charger was gray; | By the flash of his eye, and his red nostrils’ play, He seemed to the whole great army to shy ’■ “ 1 have brought you Sheridan all the way Frou Winchester down to ijave the day.”j Hurrah, hurrah, for Sheridan ! 1 Hurrah, hurrah, for horse and man 1 •• ' | And when their statues are placed on high Under the dome of the Union sky, i The American soldiers’ Temple of Fame, There with the glorious General’s name ! Be it said in letters both bold and bright; “ Here is the steed that saved the day i By carrying Sheridan into the fight, From Winchester—twenty miles away 1” . . “ Ticket, sir, if you please!” , Between dusk and daylight—the warm gold of the sunset sky just fading into crimson, and the Express train thundering over the iron track like some ferocious de mon. Carl Silver became dimly conscious of these things as he started from v a brief, restless slumber, wherein his knapsack had served as a pillow and stared vaguely into the sharp Yankee lace of the obdurate conductor. “Ticket! X suppose I have such a thing about me,” he muttered drowsily, search ing first one pocket and .then another. Oh, here it is.- I say conductor, are we near New York V* ■** < “ Twenty minutes or so will bring us into Jersey City, sir—we are making pretty good time.” And the sharp faced official passed on to bunas the next unfortunate man who 6 00 S 00 12 00 6 00 10 00 14 00 10 00 14 00 20 00 SHEBIDAITS BIDE. both, SURPRISED. had neglected to ppt his ticket in his hat band ; while Captain Silver dragged him self into a sitting position, putting his two bands back of his head with a portentious yawn, and smiled to remember the fantas tic dreams that had chased one another through his brain during that half hour of cramped, uneasy slumber, from which the conductor’s challenge had roused him—- dreams in which bloody battle-fields and lonely night-marches had blended oddly with sweet home -voices, and the sulphu rous breath of artillery had mingled with violet scents from the twilight woods around, and gusts' of sweetness trom the tossing clouds of peach blossoms, through which the Express train shot remorse lessly. And then Carl Silver began to think of other things. “Conductor!” whispered the fat old lady opposite, jj6 the bombazine bonnet and stiti' colored shawl. “Yes’m,” Said the man of tickets stop ping abruptly in his transit through the cars, and inclining his ear. “ That young man in military=l-ap, con ductor —I hope he ain’t an escaped lunatic dressed up,in soldier clothes, I’ve heard of such things. ■ And I don’t like a bit the way he keeps a grinnin’ to himself and rubbln’ bis two ; hands ‘ogether. lie’s acted queerly alb day, and I’m travelin’ alone!” 26 00 40 00 J. 176 The conductor laughed and passed on The old lady bridled in offended dignity. Bless her anxious heart!—how was she to know that Captain Silver was only re joicing in the thoughts of the glorious “surprise” he had in store for his mother and dimple taced lister that night? Was it not a year—twelve long, long months— since he had looked upon their faces last ? And now— i On, speed oh your way, Express train, through quiet villages where daffodils sprinkle all the gardens with gold. Speed over the sloping; hills where springing grass sends up a taint, delicious smell, and brooks babble under swinging-willows —past lonely church-yards, where the white hands of innumerable gravestones beckon through tlie twilight and are gone : for every throb of your iron pulse brings one true heart nearer Eomc ! Shot and shells had spared him for this hour; fever and pestilence and foul malaria have passed him by ; and now — Suppose there should be an accident! He has heard of such things on these lightning-routes. ; Suppose he should be carried home a dead, mangled corpse; the words of greeting frozen into eternal si lence on his lips, the glad sight sealed for ever under the heavy eyelids! Strange that such morbid fancies should never have assailed him in ; the tire and smoke of Gettysburg, yet come to him now, like gusts that would hot be driven away, when he was within twenty miles of home! Would it break laughed Kate, “ they do not live here aiiy more 1” “ Not live here . “ Have you Jbrgotten that yesterday was the first of May? We occupy the house now, papa and aunt Millicent, and I.” Ohoquoth Captain Silver, “so they have moved, and ! never to hear of it. Upon my, word they treat me pretty coolly.” ■■ \ ■ “ Ah, but you would have heard of it,” said Katej “ if you had staid quietly in ! camp to get your letters, instead of roving over the country without a word of warn- j ing to your friends.” > “Give me one more kiss, and I’m off j to seer, them. One more, my betrothed wife. Does it not seem like a dream 1” ' “ And you are my soldier now,’” whis pered Kate, playing with the gold buttons of his coat with tremulous tigers. “ Mine [independent in i to send out into the battle-field, to dream i of and pray for Carl, I have always re joined that 1 had no gift for my country, i now I can give my best and dearest to aid i her cause.” “ Spoken like a soldier’s wife, Kate,” said Silver, with kindling eyes, “If you but knew how much better we rough men fight for knowing that woman’s love and woman’s prayers enshrine us wi*h a golden, unseen army —nonsense 1 I’m getting sen timental. Good night.” So there was three surprises that May evening—one for Kate Meriam, (wouldn’t you have heen surprised, Mademoiselle, to be caught and kissed in thei dark, and never know who the kisser was ?),one for Captain Silver (a very agreeable one though), find the old’original surprise, if we may term it, for bis mother and sister. And Carl has not left off congratulating himself that his “ leave of absence ” hap pened to fall in the migratory month of May. For if he hadn’t blundered into Miss Merfam’s house and kissed her by mistake, thereby bringing matters pre cipitately to a focus,: probably to this day he never would have| mustered courage to tell her of his love. ; And when the gulden armadaS ’of the autumn leaves float down the. forest brooks, arid the blue; mist of Jndian Sum uner warps the hills in dreamy light, Carl Silver is coming back to seal Kate Mcriain’s destiny with a wedding ring. Next to being a ! bride herself, every good-looking young woman likes to be a bride’s maid. Wedlock is thought by a large proportion of the blooming sex to be contagious, and much to the credit of their courage, fair spinsters are not all afraid; of catching it. Perhaps the theory that the affection is' communicated by contact is correct. Certainly we have known one marriage to lead to another, and sometimes to such a series of “ happy events” as to favor the belief that matrimony, as John Van Buren might say, “Tuns like the cholera.” Is there any book entitled “Rules for Bridesmaids,.” in secret circulation among young ladles ? It seems as if there must be, for all the pretty bench-women act pre cisely alike. So far as official conduct is con cerned, when you haye seen one bridesmaid you'have Seen the whole fascinating tribe. Their leading duty seems to be to treat the bride as “ a victim led with garlands -to the sacrifice.” They consider it necessary to exhort her to “ cheer up and stand by.” It is assumed by a poetic fiction, that she goes in a state of fearful trepidation to the altar, and upon the whole would rather not. Her fair aids provide themselves with pungent essences, lest she should faint at ihe’“ trying moment,” which.—between you and us, reader, jshe has no more idea of doing than she hjis of flying. It is true she sometimes tells them that she “ feels if she should sink into the earth,” and thus they respond “ poor dear soul,” and apply the smelling bottle ; but she goes through her nuptial martyrdom with great fortitude, nevertheless. x In nine cases out ■of ten the bridegroom is more “ flustered” than the fragile and lovely creature at his side; but nobody thinks of pitying him, poor fellow ! All sympathy, compassion, interest, is concentrated upon the bride, and if one of the groomsmen does recom mend him to take a glass .of wine before the ceremony, to steady Ills nerves, the advjce is given superciliously—as who should say “ what a spoony you are, old fellow.” ; I to.] BRIDESMAIDS. Bridesmaids may be considered as brides in what the lawyers call the “ inchoate ” or incipient state. [ They are looking for- Ward to that day bf triumphant weakness when it shall be their turn to bo “ poor, dear, creatured,” and Preston salted, and otherwise sustained! and supported as the law of nuptial pretenses directs.. Let us hope they may not be disappointed. A Dime for a jKiss.—A traveller near the close of a weary day’s drive over a lonely and a mud gesticulating wilifly to his meek oxenj.er* ; claiiried f “ Rare up! rare up! ye hasten and throw the load overboard,” ..is Cr The coal fields ofPennsylvmiia have yielded ,<>n an S honsof |hehllf*ttT*t«»ptl*.wr NO. 36