The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, June 28, 1871, Image 1

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A DVESTISIMEMITII.
Adverusementsare Inserted lathe rate
of sl,ooVer square for first insertion, mid
for each subsequent insertion 50 cents.
A liberal discount made ea yearly. ad
vertisiemelita.
A spice equal to tea liain et this type
meseurm a "guars. • -
;Busluesa SollOM alig. Bidder.; held
themeelVes immediately after the load
news, will be charred -ten cents a line
for oath insertion.. - _
AdverUllielantisi • Jaucluld.ten hairded in
before Monday coed 10 Wears trillectiori
iu that week ' s proper.
Business Direetoiil.
•
• •
TAMES CAMERON , asiorney as'Law, Beaver,
ij Pa. Office on ad sc., in 1041=lorinrei
copied by the 'Akan ge . All DSO.
. nee entrusted to him will eltWeliromOt sad
coreild attention. •
4.011 N B JOUNG AtioaceyiiLaw7lirde,, sou
residers., on Tatter.. met °Me *art / I °W. e .
Ithillels c Zar atieseeees
jaw, Ofilal On
J. Third e‘swaser Sbeifirest• All Onal. ,
Dili promp
uy e IS!!
LOS. RI'MBRIeLY.
411. wing., Fang 0N01M1,4k..041.the comer of
Third and Seminary drolls.•• Je1471.1y
4276.. - Ci.TYLE. practical Watchmaker and Jetty
1.7. eler. on Third greet. Bearer, pa, (nearlypp
postte Moorcie Drag Store. • aprlSr 7 / 1 11:
P: KUM, Attortwy at•law. .odite east
re. end °Mated street,Brver. marIMIT,II
‘ll. J. S McNUTT. !Veneta' ago Eitturizog.
Special attention paid totreilmentof Female
Dlrearee. Residence and name cm Vita street,
a few doom waled theCoublbuen. apar7l: l 7
liar! MOORS. DresErial and dealer in paints,
el oho. pure medical Wines and
lisle tan, GlasS.
Fancy wale, Lampe and og thd
solutions ruefullyruefullyconiymunt. tonslikl7
.1111CNILY,
Shoes and Oaiteret Male tpeakirl;
BEAVER, DRUG STORK, Bugs i andrleweb;
tions p ; u ally a Apg:oll2.: Main a (sepl4 .
Q. J. ANDERSON, Dealer In the !weekMY
Oa son Shuttle Sewing Machine, 31 at. Bea
cord to another column. sePRMY.
— I.IIEACONL Mrs. E. H., Dealer In Milllnery 000•31
I) a Trimmings: Third St , Beaver. ap4B.ly
11 AMICSMOORII. Eitomy• Lk Itestannint Choice
Tam; Best (WPM, ToMmw and Cigars. Con
fectionery and Vegetables. Main cot
0•
IL•ANSHUTR. Dealer In Tinware, Stoves.
• Orates, &c. West end at. as&fr,l2
A • CZI and get your propertj Inured. catty
prrrsevuon.
T MORGANSTERN, Dealer [nitrate &Shoes,
el.
/9"- No 113 Market St. Pittsburgh, Pa. feepllkly
ROFT A PHILLIPS. Real Estate Agents, op.
L_./ visite Post 011 ice. Publisher' of the •••timil ro
tate Register," sent flee. Pittsburgh. [sepl4;ty
T .- HENDERSON a BROS., Whoimale - Drag.
el .• gists, PM Liberty St. Puissant', septeur
e D RAMALEY'S l• AT PARLOR, 211 rink Av.
el • mine, (near Market St.) Pittsburgh. tsepl4;ly
LY A.: CLARKE& CO., Booksellers and Stattott.
• en, 119 Wood IR.. Pittsburgh. Pt. iIIePILILY
O:3ILIPH HORNE & CO, 77 & Tit Market Ist,
Si Pdtaborgh-importere and dealers In Notions,
Trimmlngt, Hosiery, White Goods, Ac. UPIdilY
Ie.YMILR & BROTHERS, French and Aimed
can Confectkinem. Deakin la nuts. fruits.
• 128,11) Wood St. Pittsburgh, feepli;ly
e s A
MOORE. Dealer in ntra Au, Co ff ees &
si• Family Groceries. No 20 Fifth Avenue, PRts•
burgh, Pa.- sepl4;ly
eIOIIN BIGGERT & SON, Dealers In the New
Woad Family Sewing Machines. 116 Market
Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. sepHily
iGlut weLiNfax & CO., Denim In - Wt.
V/ pets, Ott Cloths, &e. Special rates to Clergy.
11 Fifth Avenue. Pittsburgh, Pa. bleptlity
1 - ,:s P. Flowerier to J7ll/17R - iii'..its, Dealer In
Watches, Clocks,. Jewelry & Silver ware. No
lialfth Avenue. Pittebnrgh. [septkly
Iyir A. LYONS, House and Sign Pahttex; writes
TV • to order Show Cards for every business.-
\o. 7 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. reepkhly
rip C. FlliLrON,Matirer of and Dealer In
1 • Furnitine and Chaim-Rosewood. Walnut,
Mahogany add Oak. 45 81111thfield at. [octs;ly
ALLEGIIE7Ir CITY.
I)l , l l •!•FlALlNANE.ElectricalPhysicbin; (inr . onle
eas made a specialty. Oco ee, 187 Bash
Mgt. sienna, Aliegheoy City, Ha. [sepl•Cly
NEW BIZIOUTON.
1.
rMsTEAD & WISNER, Dealers in Boot.,
Shoes .t Where, near rilesnon'a Confedlon•
• r!„ Broadway. 10111,1
1 1 \, lu l l ' 0
n Y r ru l irrn T g E 2a. " ,li tle a r l:4
Pre.. making. Cor. Apple ,kßroadway. ° Je2P,Y
fr n i ni., •ru n N ,e ltE i s t rAU b l u t n e r. S ; L i ri s. Kerno w e it e t ;
ail tlnfliellea• les of the IMISOD Priem qw. Wm.
stlekland, cor. of Paul and Broadway. my24'71.1y
DROSPECT MOUNT NLItSEIREIi. - Ever
/. greens and small Fruits. Three Miles I,ast of
New Brighton. (uirD) E. THOWAS.
1 NUGs.-011.LILAND .t KERR, Druggists'
sir. jj pew d A rtut= rl , l'oßecreoadwmaytot.dßP alls
ble.l ' ' febttly
Eh. F. SIEMON, Bakery & Confetionery,
IT IL It. street. Special attention given to wed
dings and balls. (sap' lity
1 1 - trOX i a in lit: B ß E rMio 3i n. e S mils ee a n dv Ta t i sp lo riFy
• gi lg r i gij l . 3i LE , Dentist. Broadway. New
Iseplgly
. Willson's Block.
11. '4;r()„Vi`;,ayi'.hg.° t pgo h t%raphs from re.touch
•ll negatives .
AV INT kit B EDISON, Jewelers and
conlsts, Broadway, N. Brighton. [replhly
J. 110W 1 TER, Groceries , Queensware acid
eI •
Ileurehold Goode. Broadwity. • teepitly
E V lL N d r , t ll 'G rAceVa, .h r on i ee l ri a titTo r ;A V V d T
nay, Ne. ' Brlghlon. Pa. [1;11111.1y
MIFF & STEINFELD,DeaIers in Dry Goods,
ti
Fancy Goods & Notio ns; Merchant Tailors &
Millers. Broadway. l'etr4l Y
BEAVER FALL. •
i D • U ng sanattn V rd r aleri W. i:„ O,'.glcaarnoupala
to manufactory of FlneCalfoots
of latest style.
apitertina
1! l i t io L s, ' ne ft w C 2:l l l T Va Zea l) . erafnintit Improved
Follr.
liT eepliay
KlNCpiyb i d. ;iiie em
Millinery, onerf3Lnn streets.
iknier
*chitty
I.EN HALLPHAN N Artists &121 , 0 Paint.
err. also, Rouse and Sign Renters, sin St.,
roarer Falls. sepithy
A. i
lice, at l n w ßoo n ts and th d oes ... c . f
rlor quality, Ma i n )aridly
BRIDGEWATER.
IL4. BART DARRAGII, Staron, Portrait and
..11 Photograph Painter. Work promptly ran
i 11114/ at reasonable rated. • • matt(
, CHIME UKIDEG(iEIt llouhe and Sign Pain.
I ter, Bridge St. Bridgewater, Pa. aprll:l,ly
tIIREUL, Bridge •trmti Pa,
.) . Dealer In Gold an;Silver Watches, Clocks,
Jewelry and Sliver-Ware, Spectacles, dm. Watch
and Jewelri repaired. [febls7 7
1 VAiirl El. MILLER , Fashionable 'Pallor. :None
I Y but experienced workmen employed. Shop
1110 ridgy[.. Bridgewater, Pa. • febB'7l:ly.
I MAID, PORTER, 'Pinner. 13ealer In Tin. Cop
e) per and Sheet-Iron ware, and hot, Clatern
Cutups. Ilrldp at, Bridgewater. - (acpbblY
iA BITATINER, Manufacturer and Drl(ler In
Uoota and Shoe, Bridge St., AlAdgewater,
septtly
l'a.
it C. lit;ltsT. Dry Goody. BC.
fiats, p...Purs, -
.1.1• Carpets. 011 Clothe and'frimmings. Bridge '
St, Bridgewater. sepltily
1 H. LOU EBTY. eiler bi Iltu - Sii - andShoes:
ef • Bridge Street. Bridgewater. ' sept Cly
HANAUItft, 311111nery, Trimmings & Notions
•-Bridge at., Bridgewater. eepikty
V. WEINMAN, Manufacture of Boots and
.I_4• Shoe.. Bridge St.. Bride water. (.914;17
11RS. BRUIEN, f/entlemenl. Clothingtleatised
and pressed. Water St. above Bridge. istil4;ly
0115 WOODMUFF, Marble Cutter; Moun
t/ insets S Tomh.tonett of all descriptions made
to.order. It... Market and Water etreene.
STILES Oroceßes, Queen.ware. Win
e/ • • duty Warp. Flour. Feed &. Country Produce.
Dunlap's curare, Bridge St. Bridgewater. (opeltly
111 1. I A i
a 1 11 , rA k er. N ?e i t i t' a 1 7 1 1,".rdlanrkt,° 1 1'nunittee'r
cud at Smith'. Drug Store, in Bridgewater, will be
promptly attended to. Cash on delivery—Lovre.t
Yard—McDonald'. Point. setry
ROCUESTE 111. •
JW. HANKINS—DeaIer Iliana,Shoes 1 / a t•
J
ten, and agents for Singer's dewing runclrine;
Nos York and 1111.. Sta. Rochester. (featly
sl l relNl i i tilt= UunlVlUrdrAlel'all
nail...lied. Repairing neatly done_ Prices Low.,
.team St., Rnelteraer. Pa.. isula;l3 ,
Btria - 211111T11 CLL. Fancy Dry tkaoriii: — N — O - -
V lions . and Millinery. Madison at.. near
mond. Rochester, Pa._
_isepl4ll.ll
_
flie
,Furniture of all kiDtia. Drlghtou it., above
How Yaetury. Sec adet.
Pa.li Water at., Roekea~er,
...i and Coure....rm— y
IXGRAIIAII BOYD. Wagon & Carriage Baker,
Railroad at., Embattle. Pa. (euP 1 1:11
t.,;AMUEI.IritiNNEN, Druggl.t. Pre•irip •
i•.l lion,. cledully compounded. Water it.. Ho
• . Orrpttly
•
!TY IikICS ioletale
Deal
er, lu Dry Goods.Grocerlas,flour,rced.Gratn,
•rores,lrond Ndb.Coa.Water blames sta.
i s iFItEDERICK, Baker and Confectioner.-
1 -c • Wedding Cakes and Ir Cream furnished
promptly. On Diamond, Rochester. (reptaly
pod LE b !ZTO
yLVrallitrig, lTh — radjoaTrtera
I. or Foreign Domestic Dry Goods. /Notion&
'trimmings and Fancy Goods generally. Water
•rnst. Rochester, . • . (seplaly
m I LLEit G CO, Contractors and Builders.
• W ntracturcra or huh. Doors, Minoan. dc.
Deld In Lumber Lath le. Roeheater...
tiy ‘ Tr ki,4 llll.lr. WlLLlA3lB,olacoes•Ois toe;
lens Itt Sawed and Planed
Letnher. lath & - ithin g les. Rochester. opt8;l9
LIVFRY STABLE 8 (AA L YARD.
h.q
I . een IL It. station and tatio
ocilitoPP ELIAB.. Manufacturer of and dealer
to Tin,Copper and !Meet Iron Were..Roodng.
Spouting, Ac., attended to. It. Yorkyt.. octliklY
4.:TEFPLER A CLARK, proprietors o Johnston
1111 ltoow . 'Good accommodations and good eta
hie. Near H. R. Depot.' octltly
I IL MILLER., dealer In Dont.:l3lmme.Galtere.
dc. Repairing done neatly and promptly.
purr nO-the Diamond. Rocheeter r Ps. octlikly
I WALTER I BRYTHER, Miumfecturem of
U %Vega., Coaches, Bente'. BprlngAregooll
, ralteye. etc. Blackomn.Mig and harselbotintr
dune in the beet manner. Itocheyer. Pa. nolßy
EAST LIVARPOiIco
•
KE BllllNKlLL.—Alyerneral ameoctisent of
Wormier. Qpeamswamt, Stornoway% C Caned' L A ir, de. Coe. ad I Broadway. mass 1y
ItYitall TilbißSON—Dealert In MT-
Goode Magog. Boota Shoo% Usti 1 Cape.
al. dall•Clotbs. QuasaawateGlaraware. Bar
e ° , molidwitY4 Cook at. E. lb •• • ourt,ly
11 HILL &CO
4. 4 " Prised prniggist.Hroar'L
colaPollutleit Pth" sair".lll4,
, 1
, .
. , ..
•
MIMI jimmikornimpoir -
i ! •
I
••
Vol. 53
No. 25.
111110C/E6L.LNEOUL, ~ ' , Bat/roads.
gOIIS THORNlLEY,Klannhistefer of the Great
gy Republic Cooking Stove. and Patentee of Per. RAILIROAIINL
tatea asl
exteoa top and Oscars Fellatem, Pa. .
LEERY' RUSSELL. atonements Menufictarer. —.-...
Order, premptly attended to. Vupart. Pa. EMS, PT.WATHE 41 CHICAGO HAMM.
Poi es address-Ileaver,Pa.
\ zi
Isepl4,ly On and after May laldl, MIL &Mae win SIM
Statitma dally.2l . l_ a . yll
at i.O ass. P.
Miscellaneous. grroViss".unr PlUstuugh at riff. ..;
Dry Goods,Carpets&c! • ...0..: Wan-
SPRING STOCK JUST RECEIVED.
leaden Vail in & Icelellui.
S UCCESSORS TO
reeSA GORDON,
IVO Feral All
egheny...
`The CHEA PEST CARPET and DRY
GOODS HOUSE In the TWO CITIES.
GOOD CARPET only SP cents per y'd,
AND AT ALL PRICES.
We arc Agents for some of the beat Car
pet Mannfeeturers totkilicimotr3r, ,
And we can offer Extra Inducements i'e
Buyers.
, Como and see our Complete
LINE OF DRY GOODS, and examine our
superior wide No. I Brown Minnie% very
heavy, at 12% Ms; and all other goods at
astonishingly low prices. Don't tercet to'
give us a call. lad Federal Street.
- N. B. Mr. H. 8.01 VIM, Salesman, for
merly of &over county, would be pleased
to see hie many friends rapril.3m
Join v. realism_ W. J. SIPIIIICRIL '
duo. c. rrrrr use, n. J. arsgaasa,Ca&A'r.
SPEYERER & AcDONALD.
"JANA—EI - I,N,
Water ASY., Rochester,
tionssar-zzaemo.paw
ded en Thne miteCollec
promptly atten to
Government Coupons .Bought on
Favorable llrrma. airropoodemes
&Roiled. • (norol6;ly.
Inectant 1-14311 , 81* For
The
amid
jertnarLisii. Yousgamen; New thstle and Erie Express
leaves Youngstown st tie p m; New Coale, WEI
Having been &Meted with that terrible co a t - pm, miles at Pittalmigh, kilt p. m. Returning
plaint 'completely unfitting we for business for lams Pittsburgh 7:00x. m: MT. at New Castle,
weeks at a time-for the last twelve year, and at Ih3o a. m. Youngstown, 10:10. a. m.
teat found a remedy that gives Yoetown, ew and Pittsburgh Ac-
Instant and Complete Relief comrtion leaves Youngstown, eatl cm New
Castle,l:lo a. in; arrives at Pittaleurek. 1 10 a
have concluded to have it prepared Ibt vile, so ie . g etere i es , t eey ,.. pm e b eig h . *be e t en. ...
thet others similarly il feted can receive the ben- „N e N ew cl eet l e. eci e ie . r --
entof it, assuring them that.• • . ' F. R. DUES,
R will do all, and more than all prom- General /Weaver sad Iletet Apra.
i iced for it; • CLEVELAEDa PITTSBURGH RAILROAD.
and, that persons cnee using, will never be with- On and Mtele'llfal m *Sal 1871. trans • will, leave
oat it, Stations da il y (Sun excepted) as fellows
As numerous others who have used it emote t:emr.
can testify. ._
Can be had at the Dam Store of WILLIAM IL rraviowa , MAIL Anv
[Ur'. il
',..
BUECHLINO. Rochester, Ps..pr will be sent by
,C .... 1e .. ve s tateL .. ___ . .. . -.. , .(ilea Mr. 4ittr,la mall to any address on receipt of one dinar. and
ten cents to pay pottage. CHAS II HURST, ~..,_ ,__,......••• '• • ••• • •• •
novie,l4 ly] Rochester, Beaver comity, Pa. 4.14.4.0, , 060 513 550 ',„.
Ravn= .. i'o3o 551 633 ' ~.
Alliance
11 710 int 635 I
. L ilk It ill v o WBa2 li yard int
ellsville .... J. 11M35 g i p
-
Bridge It
Street, POING wows.
BRIDGEWATER, PA.
STATIONS i NAIL EXP . II.IACCOR
, — I/ ~„
18 WEEKLY RECEIVING'', FRESH SUPPLY ~,.W.1 61 1 1. e 1,=• 11 flint 1—
OF GOODS IN EACH Ole THE FOLLOWING ...W. I "r". v. ,
DEPARTMENTS: Alliance WO 610 735ttai
19113rx 558 815
DRY GOODS. ff=, 1268 917 am
Steubenville Jeans EnclidStreet
Cleveland MO =I Lois
CasSinieres and S'attinets,
.wise NAST.
White Woollen blankets,
White and Colored and STATIONS. I ACCON KAM. Kl.T'SiAccom
Barred Flantiels„ Hellen I'
1 ZAN Wet Larat i ,
Merinos, Brl
Detainee, ase d =ia. ... 1 nal 1226ru 710
Plaida, WelltrvUle sso 155 840
- 131hghains, 4 Bearer
„ •,, Cobergs, Rochester 5:91 SS Sp
Pittsburgh 940 SW Imo
Lawns, _
outgo 11 , 11“.
Water Proofs, ' STATIONS. II stmt. Rairs - leco 11
Aaron A6OO
Chinchilla.
Cloths, Pittsburgh I 610 ms Hera 430r5
Woollen Shawls Rc'c l mt" - , 70 lip MG
_ Beaver
Stalth's Perry ',•
,
Wellsville. ail 3i5 Tii
Steubenvillpoet.e sill 410 lial
lite=l tan 506 938
1110 515 1010
Brown and Black Muslin,,
I)rtllinp, Tintlngs,
Printp,
Cant• Fla nets,
Joconcts, • 3
Takla:Linen, ,
Crash,
' • - - Counterpanes. _
' Hosiery,
Gloves.
• & Mite
Groceries;
Coffee, Teas, Sagas, Molseses, White SllverDrl
Golden and Common Syrup!, Mackerel In bar
rels and kits, Star and Tallow Candles,
Soap,„splees and . Mince Meat. Also,
• SALT.
Harthiare, Nails, .Glass,
Door Loeb. Dom Latches, Hinges, Screws. Table
Cntleal, Table awl Teatipoons, Sleigh Bella, Coal
Boxes, Fire Shovels and Pokers, Nails and 01w.
Spades, shovels, 1,3, and 4 Tine Yorke, Italics,
lielthes and Spathe, Corn and (hrdan Hoes.
WOODENWARE.
Bockats, Tubobrivii 3 . 4s lprtg i rs . and Ladles
Linseed Oil & White Lead.
Boots and Shoes
LADIES' MISSES' AND CLULDRENS' SHOES,
vela variety.
'Rifle PoWder and Shot,
'Blasting Poirder and Fuse:
Flour Food at Quounowaro.
JI heavy goods delivered free ofehirge.,
By Mee attention to beelnese, and by keeping
constantly on bend a well swotted stock arcade
of all the different kinds meetly kept In a oonnu7
store. the ifenlerslgued hopes in the future as In
the past ton nerltand anelve a liberal share of the
public patronage.
11. S. lIANGW.R.
dec9.4lltty.--Jy7rhird.
--ei
MILLICI Z. DOW IT.
iiturALUFL Sr, CO.
Contractors and Builders;
PLANING - MILL
AND
'AbTs2EßßAtztbaTAM`4l>a
D'oora. Eigx,sl3.
• - AND SHINGLES
Constantly on hands, and 'nde to order.
11ochester,
Orders by mall will receive prompt at
tention. ? Itiart3;ll—ty
JJ. ANDIIINSON, haring taken hold of
• his old Foundry n. Inßochester, Pi.,
wilt be pleased to meet hie old customers an d
friends who haw want either the BEST COOK
ING STOVE. Heat* Stove, croak other Iliad of
Castings or best mated al woaktoanaldp. The
brudnew, will be conducted by
jesktfj J. J. ANDERSON *SONG. •,
MEYRAN SIED LE.
Battelle*:
HEINEMAN, 4Ent4x4i BIEDLET
N 6 .42 Fifth Avennii:rililiiirgh, Pa. -
GOLD ADID SILVERSMITH
And dialers In
FINE JEWELRY,
WATCHES, DIAMONDS AND
SILVER PLATED WARE:
•
. Agency for all the heat makes of
vrAmertmots.
' SETH THOMAS CLOCKS.
Special attention paid to the repelling and
adjusting of
FINE WATCHES.
0ct5:"70.1y.
Brighton Paper Mills
BEAVER FALLS, PENN'A. .
PRINTING. •
MANNILLA,
ROOFING, BAILING,
Mardware, Glans, sera..
RAG AND CARPET
1 XL
MA.NITIPA.C'rITIMEO
AND . SOIAiAT
Wholesale dk Retail by
Frazier, loftier iCti
ea Thud Avenue.
• PITTSBURGH.
PrallP tikes Is ezdamga.
- 7 7 MIMS. • SW& XV* *au .. &Ws
• ...„-- ---- ---.....
Pttbboalit. ... ... . .. Mass 10111sIt WWI Met'
Ibsebester ' .. 10 '. tlic,ni 60 -...... f seg !;,
Alllseet. Lia 0 0 P 4 § • W .
E......
Mate:. .. .. . • ...1 _
e..',"".„ .
....
~ ....."'- .„ e..-
Oarllle. • 1 60 ' 441 ,'
, - 161111 423
Wooster
Elit e. iii b, iiii;,,
• l.7a, M. • TRI -. . 7 IWO
Cleat! D 7 lie. le, _
.. 444, -o i liso .
Uppity Ilsoliesky..
Forest • • • l
i ii• _ •iii..., Ali n
ilOa
L. ,s• Mtl. um! 1159 `s. '<-. 1155
VagWert. " . ...- • ...:_ ....., -
Fort Wage. 1 1 Men :ma , 41111
ColgmbL
~
=th 1 .641 • ith - 1311sw 80
s r o .... '. . ..:1 • • • . •..., ~..,.. •
Mingo. - 1 ail • 7110 ' cr nibs%
TOWNS 111011.11 tact.
frATIC9II. . i i BilrAll. Sium's
1—.......
Chicago.. .. . : ..... Mix 01Pst 560e 1 9110 re
ValpaildsO ' ..
i 936
.:_nyesouth - 1 110 WI 945 Mese
WSIICIW
Fort Wayne 1 21011 110. 1111111 314
VsnWert. -, . . ... ... ....
Utos . iii IsrAi am 915
Bilift.l!:': i
' 1 1 - ' • • ' •
etedliiiii • iii . " 111 a.
•a
.....i. '
D. • '''ll li 2... ta - ti : Al
ter °m i115......._.... 1 . 101 . 467. 5e 1149
311 Canton • 1 ...
..
.... ..:.. ....
Alliance 1016 860 Ma 101gi
Salem. * - 1
Rochester 11111sw iltli liii ' .4i6 .
Pittsburgh 1 03 mom 935 eta) ,
TIMCARAWAS, BRANCH.
I Leaves.'
N;PbUadelgila 6;Roi.it. • Anives.
'''JV
'lfiseetkinewai
SILKS, SILKS,
MIL+ 13. El.
Fu l Lines of Bonnet and Ponsorea
Olebrated
Black Silks•
Good Medium Black French Silks, from
$1 to $2 per yard.
Cheney Bro.'s American Black Silk, $2
per yard.
Fancy Dress Silks in Stripes, Checks
and Plain Colors—a complete assortment.
Japanese Silks, all qualities.
Irish and French Poplins, Mohair Los
trey.
Wool Dchthms.
Spring Empress Cloths.
Black Grenadines aud Domani.
All New Designs in Spring Dress Gonda.
New Spring Shawls.
Silk Sacques and Basques.
Ladies Suits.
Nottingham and Tambov red Lace Cur
sins, Chintzes, Prints and Gingham.
wrrn A POLL LINE OF
I omestic and Housekeepiat GM.
133=
James Caldwell.
18 and 120 'Mend Street, Allegheny
nprs,Brnj
I rue re : i Di ti DP
QVIIING axe swims poioas.—Tbe
kJ undersigned begs leave to Worm his Mends
and the public genendly that be has most escetred
a pew stock of goal' of the latest styles for
Spring and Samoa wear ,whlch he offers at very
rsoderat rates.
ORNTLEJIHNS FURNISHING
GOODS.
CONSTANTLY ON HAND.
Clothing nada to orb, on the aborted notice.
Thankful to the pidgin for put Omni, I hope
by close attention to business to merit a soothe.
ante of the name.
DANIEL MILLER,PA
BRIDOZ AT.. BRIDOL7rATER.
innr 240
J. MOORE
DRUGGIST,
Prescriptions Card/ally and Accurate
ly Omaix)uarkrt
ins REST DRARDS OF ASSORTED
e el 1. a 1 xL a 1
WINBB AND WOE;
Paints," Oils.
DYE STUFFS:
ELM TITEk OF ILL COM
GLASS. & PUTTY;
Special otttatko glees to MIPCUII 011/ add fallially
oir Loops and Liao Tviaftligs, Igaterns ie.
A Large Assortnent of
TOILET ARTICLED, SOAPS,
inaUI3HES &
PATENT MEDICIIIEE,
_ /oft.
Xsla Bengt. Berm Ti
MOI
AR
-To Debiiitated
thenfrOmn al / 2 verAlmnPlaiii
haviU l Plrtei
those
, To
tn within wn Con- .
To Norvoos
. To Children Wrusthrg AWay,;
To any with Debilitated Digestive.
Organs,
&Attiring roam" qf thekor kmi dov
tio=ll=r°l
.
' • " ' each es ' .
. • ttok lawn& .
• .
• • • Cr Blood . to the ! • • ,
, I Best Adall of the ,
I aousa&. Naarkllleart; '
' .. toot•Dleguetfbefookralt , • •
or Weight la the litoeuoa. -
, Soto Dialog or lilt- •
total at the pit oft elltoatailOwto•
• =the Head, Itarded mad DlSealt
, 71/uttoiag at the bent, Cica
las 'or Flettettagtleemalloas what la • Irak
Posture, Mauer of Vlsloo,Dote or Webs bo
Ave-the t , Pent sad Dull
Pali
a tu t he
of Peemplratkia, ew
' nitee ether tad Byte. Pala ta the
altlateatambestalMeeot sae
luLattlesh, Conant
of BIN, a
• •
• - ViteuThr -
as ,
HOORAH'S HEBY AN MR&
sitAosst ;Mato/ or
,fiptrits of
any kited.
Is different from a others. It Is corn
posed of the pare Juices, or Vital Prim.
elple otMoote,Hey be afid Barka,
(or as medicinally terined Extracts,) the
worthless or inert portions of the Mgr&
diems not being used Therefore, In one
Bottle of these Bitteis there is contained
as touch medicinal virtue as will be found
in several gallons ofi-.OrdinarV mixturea.
The / Roots, ete.., used In this Bitters, are
grown In Germany, their vital principles
extracted in that wintry by a scientific
Chemist, and forwarded to fife manufac
tory In this city, frrhere they are eom
pounded and bottled. Containing' no
spirituous ingrAllente, this Bitters is free
from the objections urged against all oth
ers no desire for stimultmta am be In
duced from their nse,i. they moot make
drunkards, and - atnnot under any'circum
stanbes, have any but a beneficial effect..
HOOFLANDS GERMAN TONIC,
Was compounded for those not inclined
to extreme bitters, and is intended for use
in cases wken some alcoholic silmulent Is
required id , ohinection with the Tonic
properties of ,tfirsßliters. Each bottleof
the Tonic contains ono bottle of the'llit
led, combined with pure BANTA CRUZ
RUM, and flavored in such a manner that
the extreme bitterness of the Bitters is
overcome, forming a preparation highly
agreeable and pleasant to the palate and
containing the medleinal virtue of the Bit
ters. The price of the Tonic is $1.50 per
Bottle, which many persons think too
high: They must take Into consideration
that' the stimulent used js guaranteed to
be of a pure quality. A poor article 'could
be furnished at a cheaper price, but is it
not better to pay a little more and have a
&nod article A. medicinal preparation
should oontain none but the best invisti.
eats ; and they who expect to obtain •
cheap, compoimd, and be benefitted by it
will most certainly be cheated.
1 0 .01 PLAND'S
G an
Bitters,
GERMAN TONIC,
PODOPHYLLIN PILL.
WILL WWI YOU.
They are the Greatest
BLOOD
linown to the Medical world, and will
eradicate diseases arising from impure
blood, Debility of. the Diguitive Organs,
or Diseased Liver, in a shorter time than
any other known remedies.
The Whole Burnie Court of Podia.
SPEAK FOR THESE REMEDIES
Mao would ask for more Digufged or
Stronger Testimony?
Han. GOwas W. WOODWARDjOrIIGATIF CAVOU.
fief of Me Buprense Court of Thutiptram lat
pwrite* : resext ..ifenabr of Vorigreafrons Pm:my/raffia.
Ruth If, IBM
I and Rodaaad'a German Bitters "fa a gbod
tonic, htdlaeaaes of the dlgedtva organs,
and of great benefit to eases of debility and want
of nervous action In the rotor". Yours truly, I
GEORGE W. WOODWARD.'
Hon. Joan Thom% on, CAW Anat . ,/ ql [Ai Soo
prone Chart of Runey/oanta.
PUILADS2.IIIIU, April la, 186 .
•
I consider Hoodand's German Bitter*" a valua
ble medicine In GSM of attacks of Indigestion or
Dyspepsia. I can certify this from my experience
Of It. Yours with respec
JANIM THOMPSON.
lion. throws SuAnswoon,lialice of Aeßupresw
(bort Alum/Ira/4a:
POILLADZIZZIA, Joie 1. MI.
I have found by taped mica that "Gormand's
German Bitten' a very good tonic, rellevlng
dyspeptic symptoms almost dbeetly.
GEORGE SHARSWOOD.
lion. Win. P. Rogers, Mayor of CUy of Balla
to. New- Tort!
Mayors Office, HUMID, June 29.18 M.
I have used "Hoodand's German bitters and
Tonic" In my family during the put year, L and 'can
recommend them swan excellent tonic, Imparting
tone and vigor to the system. Their we has limn
productive ordecldedly beneficial elects.
WIL F. EOOlllOl.
1100. Ju. IL Wood, Itz-Jiayor qj Williasseport,
linsasirtrania :
I tike great pkaaore in recommending "Roof.
land. German Tonle" to any one who may be If.
Meted with Dyepepaia. I had the , Dyapepala to
*idly It was im
irible "
to keep numb
i:::
a toy
to walk half a Twobrttlent eaak ielrectel
mile.
.a peraxt care. JAPES X. WOOD.
HOOFLANDI3 GERMAN BITTERS
AND
1100FIAND'S GERMAN TONIC
Will cure every Case o['
VI AIR& 611312111165 9
Or Wasting away of pie Body.
TUAT
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN REMEDIES
At• tbs . aterlidoes you require to purity the,
Blood, motto the torpid Liver to heathy Kik%
sad to embis you to pan middy throe& soy bud.
aloe or a:voltam
• flu. iidUFLAND•B
3) : 3)103'31M3)3611101 9
Or Substitute for Mercury Pllls.
TWO PILLS A DONE. '
The Most Powerful, yd Innocent, Veg.
It is DM neuseary to take a UMW Gilbert pills
tothe desired abet ; two of Om set
q sad powestally.cheaslag the Idler thee.•
seek sod Bowels of all impurities. The
togredieet la Phdosbyllia, or the A keirdie - 16:
=Maimirsk.. "WM Is by wy Mite Imre
I, Wag sad starellag tbm the Masbate
itselL Its - Mw slim is epee am User, dem
lag it Some all obitmetk••• with ad the
mum m ki yet hee hut tl vai li e s&srklas re.
suits attached to us of that
pwr diseam, la which the atoet • tithartle
is imitated, these pills Milers talks eatlaletthe
emy awe. They 2111V/L0 TAIL.
In awes of Um Costatatet, tad
• treuereativemas. Dr. goWNICII Grim= Mite
°Vitale should be used In COI MUM with the
Pills. The
two
elibet of the Mete or Taft
balms ip the spat: The Mien or Taste garl
ts 04 Blood. strength's' the NILITIMICIOIILLTLI
Liver. sad gives streketWalCalg6
• K lim
au year wave the
Op the systew with Mors (*Teak, asill so die.
ew Asa Maim It. hold. a ern assail MI
Seeollett Um It is Mb 11007LANDII OMR.
MAN 111100112111 that are so ustrenatly used
sg=••••••••••• sad do awl stow tk
tame you B lake surthieg eke
be I 7 laY Wield se_good. beams be wakes a
lerCh i l tt. , nen lbarediso wit/ be stet
2 47itsetntr, Moe Man tothe
111110 AL OwITCZ. at SW 0
CIAI STOLE, SLI Last
CNA*. M. EVAPIII4 Prepskoter
' Formerly C. M. JACKSON& CO.
Mi I
These Remedies are for Bale by Dreg;
gists. Storiftepers and Meade* Deakins
eempehere. jeailkly
B
, • . . .
Beaveri - P, l Wednes4, y, June.2B, 1 71.. • •
4 ,- Frat „.. .u.; . Y tur
but to me
' ' •
"e r n co re
the extent of the
A_ j..... 1...
Oili ' Svituwel - .1 speciality. Weber* thus and determined
rly
' ' • , . I- - * a =teat of hundred/ of cues of Om-
alphisw, many of widekbelng Incipient
,hitva been Mtrea by us In a very
Wow
A c k ' ' . *mime. And whilst we would not
. ' • told out Induceinenta or promise &cure;
. .
._ ' tl; Ito- the *lsar" of this dreadful
et NEW , ANFLELEC I PIT ST9CE 0 :o..alady, we wo 'dime may, that arxhave
'' - -2- '''' ' '':' '. "'''' " ' • ' , • Oared many that so nearly reeeni-.
\Lake' 00 1 4 WatCheL Fed ConmimptSon,that It was impossible
' 'io delethilne thereof. br any other mom
,i:ill 4 s .. s'li i llo**AL: LINE, 91=ypeatignation of the urinary se
.
7 , den ,f • . ' ' atcbas,, ,y i ' Among thew we might mention Llv
' - • ." '• ' • ' , " 7 ' i-7 -' . . irikomplahst, Dyspepsia, Heart Meese,
lbr •Thisinesil. t•• • ''.,', •_Meekenies. °Weakness, &e., en
- -•' ' ''' •"h, -' Theackdbaumi Wilmot math resemble
TIER WALL :••.. ' • *Mal evtipeteutaaypi- They
764 , , : 8 7(;, ' 1131: 1 19 , 121T 7:: . : '•
*R4 , 3 An— " V i bl e eeli 6ll4l ,X l el .l" ;' l3gb.' ueue; lll2l-4 Petel "Pwwra ta the '
- And geode die;nwarftWr rimie. '''''' '• ' 'and Wee. beat" and dal* fel- • 1
..,,- . , 1
.._ , ~ . Am.
____.- - \ ed.bY - , wmknasa, Alibi airasta,i 4.
Milo won MU tab*. iTaPh 3ll4 u l ' tLi "u fc ' ec° " um P'•
an ti
- "' • ' ' ' . •
I,
the
ho Pelletal' ! , nfrued heu Mit:
. jug
New
. 3 / 4 171° .
: n" :
.-:
.
was yet yet ermable as ntmotentha of j
NM'S Y WATOlif , IWARRA.IO2O,,, =,--. . . a 640,,,:ma_,Nt.—. ,
- - ..- - " 41ALT LIFE.
Price. the Ltni ' tie t i e My. .
• ' ' The following ' annual addreen was
• : delivered before th-a-pteriiy Bode
_
1.,,...... 4 .,..' • Uns e at Lstiyette Colleg4conimenee-
E. P. Lim. L - tilti went, Easton, Pa:, June N%inpt.,
No. 1.4.3 Flit Avenue. by OA A. 3 . McClure :
• k
Mednai.
NDER.
MI
HOWLAND'S
WITH
1100FLAND'8
PURIFIERS
:ItEMEIIIIIF2II ,
TIIAT
table Ctdhartio known.
Goid
PlTTlnVitell. PA.
• t
Teatebret fite Silver Ware:
I
.LAZARUS, O IS &P. '
PERFECTED XCTA OLE&
oeopotagooma to
SELEC2' ' ()TRY.
1=
I!MEE
?BS rums.
Mom! to alkOtri
I are 0001
MEI
=3
T r o we mer ti r leu tuit i T l ithia l wit 7e li sni etethe are
... ,
For Pre been talking Caleb, - and Caleb has
And the 'mount of It sr minded to 'try once
more to apes.
go I coos bens on the bealiama— only a word to
•,(CaleliM st a icking Pea-rtees,iusd °Seidel coos to.
,_ • dat
dust to tell yen d end panosi hoarthat were chang'd
oar min, -- - I , ,
So linear up Um payarr, yea we It wain t signed ,
And now, if parson la t‘•, t i tli e walk with him
taeranis i
I want to thank him bane.
for lame gs ; leas kind
of Mtn to tome.- • • - 1
lie showed tnmehe Chrlstisnepirit, stood by ns ATM
. and.
We mightn't hare changed our mind. •sualre, if
he'd been a lawyer too. -
There I How good the ma feels, and the gums and
blowld . trees;
Something about them lawyers ashen me Awl at
'0 •
I ween't = to state particulars to that, man,
But It is right you should know, panels, about oar
change of pun.
._
We'd been Kano days a wararhe a, little, Caleb
and ma, ._ _ I
And wished the hatedul paper rd the bottom of the
rem
Dot g
add.
goreweeds sue t twa
pager lot 41•111411 g. and the
kw
That thawed the tee letrest as, and Wet things
You see when We *mad to a division,- Wise was
thing' tint wouldn't divide,
These was Onf reieirry9ssold baby, she eosldn't
To go with am man War, bat bit Anil whim
Patin low;_. • , i •
'l'llatay wtth yeign iteditanuna; and whom they
Timm Ulllllll wee Gorsedibini Bias. to Oa all oar
wed dsy -
a...Aser erlilltsda.asidahonallt Me
The ahektlit caws islitiief., her sampler
on the van, ~ -
With Wryest old Mines worked in—Teyphean
- and goatee, and that.
It bagelto be bard than. tom, bat it vow lar
der MAL L
Taltn' or Caleb established down at Sielleurys•
eine;
Tone dollars a week, 'twoold cost him: no
mendin• nor sort of are,l.,
And board at th e Widow Xesthaat's, a woman
that wean Aka hair. i .
, lawyer, end Ittebed
mktied op 1111 z sad
Still we went on I ; 1 agreed to khlt some
And make a doses striped Marts, and • pair of
ma'am/ [melts ;
And he wen to eat a door way from the inteheit to
e shed,
"Sere y th oa climbing steps mach, In frosty weath
er." he mid. .
Ile brought me the pen at last-1 felt a elnkice—
d
an he
Looked as be did with the agar, In the eprlng of
slity.three ;
'Twos theta you dropped In, parscro, , ,lwasn't
mach that was Mid, •
"Little children Isms one another," but the thing
was killed atone dead.
I should like to make coofesslon ; not that, I'm
going to my
The knit was all an my side, that never was my
way.
Bat It may M time that wom u—tho' how 'Us
ain't INM—
ANtrifle more mgritratin' than men know how
to be.
Then. pima, the neighbors' meddlin'—it wasn't
pftrin' on,
And the chart/ a laborin' with nit; 'twas wore*
than waited
AM I've thought, and so has Caleb, though Maybe
we are 11119111 r.
If they'd kept to their own bast Dem, we should
hare got along.
There wm Deacon Amos Purdy, agood man as we
know,
Bat hadn't a gift of labortn` except iirßh the
scythe and hoe;
Then a load came over In peaeh•tlme; from the.
Wilbur neighborhood.
"demon of prayer," they called It; didn't do an
atom of good.
111 ten you about the heifer—one of the kindest
and
That brother brother Bobtails gave me, the 411 be moved
oat West,
I'm free to own It tiled me, - that Caleb should
think and any
She died of omitrulsioner—a cow that milked font,
gallons • day.
Bat 1 needn't have spoke of turnips, needn't
have been an cross,
And did hard thing en d hinted se If lima ail inn
lose ;
And ra take It ell back. parson ; that Ire shan't
ever break oat, •
Though the - cow was choked with' a turnip, I
never had ¢doubt
Then there ate slate of doctrine, and views of a
future state, •
Tm wining to atop dlieusin'; we can both *Wed
to wait
'Twon't bring the wile:da= sooner, disp l utin•
about when Ita doe,
Although I feel an assurance that mine's .the
haipturst view. ).
• .
But the bleemeteet truths of the Bible, Tir'
learned to think dater Ile
In the texts we hunt with a - matte. to prove our
doctrine* hp,
But them that tome to no m sorrow, and when
M!ESE2IM=
aloOs tbe dsases•
Ow mottos of Caleb. passoa, seem raiber misty
with Ms,
It dual quite stood to num, anCtor gospel
hal clear.
That bib km) better Itl:Hearso for hula' qua-
!clad hors.
rve bomb su idgettadoo ; by panto. If that
Is so.
Ton osodn't have dotted i p faithful to , reconcile
folks below .• r. •
I 101 l soother uptake. sad hold It straight sad
MOM
TI we can't be peacesble bete, we won't be peace-
able diem.-
Bat there's tilt, Motet he wads, you koow It
Ilsia•Z mip tadw the wsploo that ht. own band oet
OUL
And ine so be laid beside kiln Elan ioy time thews
•
to cos.. •
As It -se IhsionY • mind Die but 'twos tbst us
rime tow so.
And sow that some sea* OM WO think, have talks
fres oar eyes. • -
••• imp koala es to • casts have made - as
k store wtas,
Why Cal boc eb 113 11 : lottle9/ear. au the Lard parts
laysl iss.
Wail emelt albeit better, and try our best to
ewes. .
,--Corruption high places has re
• ved a severe check Iti the arse of
Governor DaVid Butier.of Nebraska.
The Governor was charged with the
appropriation to his own uses of the
mows of She State, and was im
=convicted, and removed
ice. There is too much talk
of omoim corruption in these days.
and too Utile done to punish the of
fenders. The case we have cited
proyes, however, that in the young
commonwealths, a,t least there is a
determination to- demand a higher
standard of morality.—Philadelphia
The Mobile REDiger favors 'the
umnination of Geo. Smock for the
Preddeocy by the Democrats saying
he is the only soldier irk) graduated
from the war on tbe Fat aide
with true and constitutional ideas of
ARGUS,
•
GENTLEMEN OF THE LITERAL
Trues: I have cheeen a common,
homely theme—Every-day
Many of you may hastily pronounce
it uninteresting and uninstructive.
It, is not set forth in your list of stud-
les; It is not a favorite field of rheto
ric. Most students habitually over
look it; too many great teachers for
get or ignore It. It does not mingle
with the pleasing inspirations which
are busy weaving future garlands for'
the graduate. It may unsettle some
delightful.castles reared by-your mo
ments of repose from weary labor ;
but it is the life each and all mast
live. Let us look at it soberly, and
cultivate it kindly, and it will reward
us with many cheering smiles and
charming attributes.
While our every-day life is the
theme that should be most familiar
to all, it is the one important part of
education that Is most neglected.
Yon . may here becisme what the
world of letters calls a greet scholar,
and yet be to the world, and in the
world, a novice. if aucCessful, it will
be an accident; if usefel, it will be
grudgingly acknoWledged only when
you are dead, if even then. Mere
scholarship, in its .relations to the
great purposes of human life, is like
an intricate machine in unskilful
hands. While it will run itself, it is
well; but when it wants direction its
- beauty • and Its mechanism go for
noujiht. Our colleges and higher
schooli are of inestimable value, but
they cannot do everything for the
student. They can store the mind
and fit the man for the ceaseless les
son of life ; but when they have done,
the: of. learning has but com
.meneed. ; When you shall have pass
ed -safely through your - recitations
and examinations, you are just fitted
to enter the boundless school that is
ever open around us. •
The world itself Is the master
teacher of its countless pupils. It. has
no swab= or. .vacations. Its. vast
books are neNer closed. Its million-
Its
suasions and vengeful man'tatt
throng upon us wherever we are. In
its somas of instruction, aiming to
make man each day better than be
fore, it Is as varied as the handiwork
of God; and yet how many of all
the living profit by these multiplied
teachings as they swiftly per?
You have read, and doubtless often
quoted, the trueism, that "the prop
er study-of mankind is man." It is
the plain, broad channel of advance
meet, for the study of man involves
the study of everything. For him
all things were created. All of the
world'aneauty is but a tribute to his
excellence. All of its thorns and
brambles are but chastening rods to
make him mindful of the purpose of
his being. The grandest themes of
the painter -and poet relate to his
destiny. The pulpit is inspired by
thestory of his redemption. Senators
and commoners win slistioction only
as they promote his happiness, and
that heroism is enshrined over all
that has achieved his amelioration.
It is an imperative lesson to enable
us to know something of ourselves.
Whether we would pay court to the
fickle goddess of famef or aspire to
wealth, or to usefulness, or to the
nearest possible perfection of human
I character, the one unending study is
of Men. The supreme problem that
confronts the 'faithful student from
day to day, and from year to year,
ever revolves closely about himself,
'and yet it takes ,In its scope all of
nature's infinite variety of evet-pm
eat and ever-changing text-books.
Look out upon the world's tumultu
ous school. Each one so like his fel
low, and all so unlike; yet each va
ried • understanding is bountifully
furnished' with endless sources of
culture. Did all -pursue the same
beaten path, the world would be
monotonous, and most of ita beauty
and teachings would be lost. But no
two have Just the same aspirations, or
garner the same harvest from the
cradle to the grave, and are , insensi
ble of the riches they have cast aside.
The-absorbed astronomer may ex
plore the heavens when opportunity
is presented, and then pans on
through the world unconscious of its
ofibrings. The geologist may delve
into the recesses and rocks and forget
the living in his search for the rec
ords of the past. The scholar of
books performs only what some
other mind bids him—all else are
sealed treasures around him. He
could solve the most abstruse prob
lem, for the student, but would be
confounded if asked to solve the
problem the student himself present
ed. Many righteous men teach from
the Holy Book 'and teach in vain.
They know only what they tench,
and not, to whom they teach. The
I thoughtless, plodding son of toil re
jects all things save as necessity
theme
learned
master. Thus do the
learned and unlearned jostle on, like
truant children, discarding the best
means of usefulness to their fellows;
and dooming to pitiful thraldom, the
immortal element of our existence.
HI were to call upon the learned
young men before me to tell of the
great epochs of human history, you
would answer promptly and correct
ly. I could tell you nothing of the
_world's mutations that would be
novel to you. Bo much you have
learned, or are learning,. well: Do I
not understand Me as assumtpg that
you should have learned wee, for I
have already told you that life is one
unending lesson; and here, when all
has ptiia done that can be done, you
are only fitted to begin the great
study. Let me kindly, and, I trust,
pleasantly s ti lt ed p
lead you
from the stilted plane that youthful
ambition builds, to look into the
fountains which havegiven the
world its varied eras. You have
studied its heroes, its .mm, its patii
ots,, its pieta, its schoWss, and lbs
masters. I would now have you
study the sources whence they came.
The marked events of the world's
history may al be be traced to the
every , slay life of the peoples who
were the chief actors therein. You
would point to Omar on Alexander
as the great hero of the ancients;
but without Borne, Just as she then
Iwas, what could Cesar have been?
i and without Greece, trained as one,
• stast military camp, Alexander 1
might have been a slave instead of 1
'the conqueror of the world. Heroes
-mare made and unmade, not by dr
eumstances alone, but heroism must
. ,ever be the Joint creation of the man
and of the occasion—tho people must
' !find their true typo with thepartien
lar elements of excellence which
• meet their supreme I want. 'We
'speak thoughtlessly of treat leaders,
• forgetful that they are created, and
uthat their followers have had much
p ito .do. with their creatton. Rienzi
deserved greater honors from Rome
than ever did Ciesar,, yet the one
' was
than.
of Rome when she was' ,
mistress of the world, stud the other 1
i failed and fell ignomin io usly , and is
remembered only as te last of the 1
Tribunes. He was nooverthrown
by rivals, as was Cassaewhen he fell
P at the foot of the statue of Pompey.
/_4 ( The boisterous.fountains of ambition
which made \ rutus 'a murderer,
gradually like subtle poison
through the of the people, and
patrician and lan alike were
tainted and y Weser had a
party, and Antony a party, but
Rome had none, and the sad sequel
is told in the single sentetice—"Bi
east fell from the vices of/the pm
le." - -At last a mere handful of
banditti possissed the apital of the
once proud empire, and her liberties
were overthrown because her people
had lost all their noblest attributes.
Washington was perhaps the only
Man who could have won the inde
mudence of the •eolonieN" and yet
them were those in the revolutionary
army-no-less brave, and much more
brilliant ; It was rare wisdom that
called film to the 'chief command.
Had Arnold commanded, he would
have lived a patriot, fought desper
ately, and • lost his cause. Between
;Washington and the people there
was a common inspiration. They
mutually led,mutually followed,
mutually safferid, and mutually tri
umphed. The desire for liberty be
came part of the every-day life, part
of the every-day devotion, of thecol
palate ; and the . patriot hero became
the Father of his Country.
Lot us'for a moment transpose the
two chief military leaders of the ear
ly part of the present _century.
Transfer Napoleon -to Britain and
Wellington to France. Could there
'have been a Marengo, an Austerlitz
or Waterloo? Had Napoleon been
in.the English army with all his fie
ry zeal, be, would have been cashier
ed before he reached a colonel's
commission; and had Nellington
been under the eagles of France, he
would have lived and died a Babel-
tern. Bat each in 'his own army
was a great captain, and each typifi
ed the people he so successfully com
manded. The people of IFrance cre
ated Napoleon ; the people of Eng
land- made Arthur Wellesley Lord
Wellington. "Soldiers! from Utak)
pyramids fo,rty centuries template
wordsour#gtions," were theypiring
of Napoleon to his victorious
army in Egypt.-- 41 England expects
every man to do his duty," was the
strongest appeal that could be made
to the British soldier. , Napoleon
would apostrophise the I"sun of
Austerlitz; and hurl his; columns
into battle like the whirlwind; while
Wellington- would silently, calmly
and stubbornly maintain his position
In the presence of defeat, and wait
for Blucher. The people-0r tbsoatwo
Powerful nations moulded their lead
eni; and trireugh them moulded their
entW i Ta l ullter i Vati h ff t !na, differ ;
would have created other leaders,
and the annals of their heroism
would have beep no lees glorious;
but the names to which ambition so
proudly points would be unwritten
therein. Napoleon quickened and
developed, but did not create, the
every-day lifeof the people of France.
The ripening fruit fell before the fit
ting harvester, and since then France
has obeyed, but never loved, another
name. Never was she so great as
under Napoleon I. The glory of
France was In the keeping of every
household. Honesty, vigor and ad
vancement inspired all eases,. 'and
their every-day life. was written in
blood on the battle-fields of almost
every nation of Europe, and com
memorated in the'grand column in
the Place Vendome.
But peoples, like inctividriels,never
stand still. All exceptions to this
rule are but insignificant. France
gradually and imperceptibly declined'
under the restored Bourbon rule, aid
was ready for the gnawing cancer of
the second empire. Trey worship
ped the name of Napoleon, and gave
hearty enthusiasm to the feeble im
mitations of the weak pretender who
usurped the throne. They merited
their ancient renown in the Crimea
and followed their. emperor to May •
`decay but 'aw was indellibly stamped
upon the French nation, for her once
great people were enfeebled by stu
died profligacy and debauchery, and
their decline grew more marked with
each returning year. At last the ter
rible avenger came. It was not so
much Prussia as the every-day life
of the French people. Under the
first Napoleon Prussia might have
defeated them
in battle, but their
honor and their nationality would
have been preserved. But their de
struction was hastened by a feeble
' and corrupt and corrupting court, un
til all France could not create a lea
der, because her' people had lost all
their qualities of greatness.
It would seem that an overruling
Provideins meant for all mankind
to haven most impressive lesson in
the late Franco-Prussian war. We
read and speak of Bismarck and
poleon as if they - were its authors.
They were but borne by the flood
tide to the grand, consummation.—
lied Bismarck been a Frenchman,
he would have rotated from local
turbulence to exile; and had Napo
leon been a Prussian, ho would have
been a tnirdltate author or a soldier
unknown to fame. But while France
was declining in the moral, mental
and physical qualities of her citizens,
the German popple, under a weak
but honest ruler, were advancing in
all that developes and ennobles a na
tion. It was said that the German
universities triumphed over the Aus
'
trianakt Sadowa, and that in the late
war thesoldier of Von Moltke march
ed with a • professor's gown in his
knapsack. These are exaggerated
but significant delineations of the
every-day life of the German peqple
who won et Gravelotte, at Se' at
Dietz, at Strasburg, and at Paris. The
eliery-day purity, patriotism, Indus
try, religious, zeal, andl universal
education of the German people. ri
pened them for German unity. The
Fatherland is their first love, and
Bismarck was their master architect
to rebuild the lost empire. Calm,
clear-sighted German statesmanship,
called him as the best type of the na
tion's want, and ho saw the founda
tions well laid, and everything at
hand for thelmposingstructure. Jie
could ,not miscalculate ihe venture.
The every-day-life of forty millions
of Germans was steadily and surely
preparing them for the great work,
Just reward.- William now lavers
and he gathered the (alma of their
the Imperial crown.
are marshals of the empire, and BLit
and the princes
rnarck is Fines of the realm—all
weariug welPearned honors ; bat the
thoughtful historian will record the
story of the households of the father
land. moulding the solidarity of the
German peoples.
• Thermopyhe was made memorable
by the everyday life of the Spartan
people. They were not more . cores
ageous than the ether soldiers' of
Established 1818.
°mem . but they were a law unto
themselves in warfare. Had It been
an arbitntry decree of a bloody de
posit, that they shocildinever retreat
In battle, they would have defied It.
Had it been an exceptional cam mend
of Leonidas, it might have been dis
obeyed without peril to reputation.
But it wartthe law of the Spartan
_people, Made by and for themselves
—conceived by their idolatry of un
ialtering bravery, and it was obeyed
by the soldiery because each man was
but obeying himself:They could
have retired with credi i accordlng to
the generally accepted aws of war,
as did their comrades• but they had
erected their own stra nge standard of
heroism. None could hope to sur
vivo the unequal conflict, but death
itself .was nothing , when weighed
against the honor of the Spartan till
sen in arms. They fought and fell,
and the column Abet commemorated
their willing sacrifice bore the faith
ful inscription—" Oh stranger, go tell
to the Lacedemenians that we lie
here in obedience to their laws."
. You will better appreciate this im
portant lesson when we glance at the
startlingevents which have jest tran
spired in our own midst. Most a
ydu were 'susceptible of intelligent
convictions, touching th e great war
of the rebellion, from its beginning to
the consummation of its logical re
sults. It is said, however, that chil
dren believe that all the mighty re
volutions of war or peace happened
long before they lived, and it is quite
true of men as well: Few; indeed,
who witnessed the colossal struggle
between the North and the South,
can measure Its marvelous achieve
ments or itsmomentous consequen
ces. Its heroes sprang from our own
every-day cirelts, and we cannot in
vest thew with the romance that his
tory will weave so beautifully about
them. The grave questions to be de.;
ceded in the cabinet and in the field,
we decided ourselves in our every
day actions. Our every-day educa
tion and advancement advanced the
statesman; and standards of the na
tion, and as a people we were almost
imperceptibly and unconsciously
working out to its crowning triumph
—Man's noblest struggle for Man.
The thoughtless and superficial blam
ed the politicians, and charged them
with the country's misfortunes. It
was not so. They were bad enough
and way have quickened the conflict;
but when the passions of civil strife
shall subside, and the impartial his
torian conies to record the most thril
ling annals of civilized warfare, it
will be truthfully told, that two brave
and powerful peoples had exhausted
compromise on irreconcilable differ
ences of national policy, autfacceptell
The inevitable arbitrament of the
sword.
'A quaint, uncouth and untried wan,
was called to the chief magistracy of
the nation to grapple with issues of
Incalculable moment. Experienced
and cultivated statesmanship was ap
palled at theeonsuming disorder that
beset the government, and they had
little faith in the wisdom that was to
guide the old ship through the tem
pestuous sea of bitter sectional es
trangement. But the guiding star of
national safety was the single-hearted
and faithful ruler who was from the
people and of the people. I have
heard him lament in profoundest sor
row, in the dark.days of thestruggie,
that scarcely a score of senators and
congressmen were in sincere accord
wine hia convictions of public diltY.
It th. L- -x.vuu.ma
and to compl a i n—it was his to decide
and to act far thirty millions of his
trlllnr... , PluNy twain to the oat •
patients which arose with each day
—he was the guardian of the noblest
patrimony that future generations
could ieherit. , lie resisted the im
perious demands of one-idea leaders,
until, in his calm, (intent re fl ection,
he felt that the fullness of time for
the great epoch of the war had been
reached. He looked solely to the
necessities and to the sentiments of
the people. "What Ido about slav
ery and the colored race, I do because
I believe it helps to save this Union;
and what I for bea r, I forbear because
I do not believe that it will help to
save the Union," was one of his trite
and pungent sentences addressed in
reply to a sincere criticism ; and it
frankly defined his whole policy on
the great question that was convuls
ing friends and foes; alike. Had he
been a supreme trickster, or what the
world (salsa trained and subtlestates
man, he might have made the
wounds- of the country seeni less
ghastly than they were, and deluded
the people to be content with healing
the surface, leaving the terrible gan
grene deeply imbedded in ,the body
politic, to sap its vitality and finally
break outafresh with resistless viru
lence. But he believed 'in pelf-gov
ernment, and believing, he main
tained it. At Gettysburg, in •dedi.
eating the resting-place (if the mar
tyrs who fell in the decisive tettle•of
the war, he declared the high resolve
ttuit ever animated him—"that gov
eminent oft he people, by the people,
and for 'be people, shall not perish
from the earth. He advanced only
as the people advanced. When they
faltered under the grinding exactions
And sore sacrifices of the conflict, he
parleyed until they were reinspired.
His whole administration, touching
the th reatened dismemberment of the
republic, was but the varying record
of the every-day current end inspir
ation of the grad fountidn of popular
power, Its violence was severely
I criticized, but it was even rocked up
on the boisterous waves of • revolu
tion: The whole contest, from Its
Aneeption until its issues were finally
decided, was but one continuous res.
Nttetionary progression. It was
honestly and earnestly assailed by
the highest waves of partisan hostili
ty, but ho was faithful in the one
supreme purpose of national unity,
and a people equally faithful, genet
ously forgave in all minor issues Watt
they could not approve. Had ho
been called to the Presidency before
the war, with nothing but tho oklin--
ary political strife to quicken the pul
sations of the nationalheart, he would;
have been but an ordinary, and per;
haps an umsuasseftd, executive. Un
schooled and unapt in political man
, agement, ho would have been pant
! lyzed by the abler and more adroit
machinations of jealous rivalry, and
the logical sequence must have been
failure. But a great occasion impos
ed great duties upon the people and
upon their chief ruler. It was for
them to count the cost and to pay the
appalling tribute. -They felt, as their
president so forcibly expressed -It in
his first messalre"This is esTentlal.
Ilia people's contest. Onthe side of
e Union it is a struggle for main
taining in the world that form
substance of government, whamd
and
substance
an
II th em,
big object is to elevatentnhfotivengpoin
of men ;"And the ma i,
only could titiecanfu y lead
rational
n tri ce b . ulation, to their
: f t d f e e 11 16-ra ul
In been a czen of
the South, and ardently' in sym
pathy with Itit; cause, he could no 4
have administized the - governme t
of the. confederacy for a twelt,% -
month. Nqr Cotildlifr. Davis, with
his•confmed administrative ability,
have conducted the war as the execu
tive' of the Union. Men of the type
of these two rulers were not rare in
both the North rind South daring the
war, and sincerely devoted to their
respective sections; but they were
felt or unfelt just as their leading
characteristics were in accord or in
antagonism with the great purpose
of their people. Had the causes of
these two civil leaders not been essen
tially. and irreconcilably at variance,
.there would have been no dissevered
_ .
ins mizAfika.4acus
Is pribllshed every ikeedeiy In the
old_Argui building on Third iltreeti Bea.
var. Pug 4;2 per year in advance. '
Communications on subjects of local
or general interest are respectfully sir
ikited. To insure attention Pr= of
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Letters and communications should be
addressed to
J. VIEYAND, Beaver, Pa.
States and no war ; and being vitally
discordant, their rulers and heroes
were created for widely different pur
poses, and of necessity from the
most opposite of elements. Each
was the true creation of his ownpm.
pie, and I believe that both 0110611 re
possible measures of duties assigned
them. One was successful, and suc
cess is the most, successful of all hu
man rewards. The other failed, and
must answer for all the errors that
that failure sogreedily; groups.and
magnifies. The confederacy was
reared upon despotism. Its boasted
corner stone was caste. Its theory
of government avowed the inequality
of human rights before the law. A
cold, polished, able and sincere des
pot only could crystalize such a
movement, and except a' conflict that
braved the progress of, enlightened
civilization. Ile was the o&pring,
not the parent, of a monstrous wrong.
However diversified their views may
have been at the beginning, for four
years the southern peoplewaged ,war
for the &solution of the Union,fand
proved their devotion on many
bravely contested battle-fields. Their
President was but their chosen lead
er, th eir faithful exponent, and his
fallen was_ but the consummated
failure of every-day life—of the hab
its, cunt/idioms, and teachings, for
more than a generation, of eight
millions of our fellow citizens.
Equally marked were the oppo
site reqnhunents of the northern and
southern peoples, in selecting their
great captains from widely opposite
characteristics of military - genius.
Grant and Lee were confessedly the
heroes of theruinguinary struggle. In
their respective positions, nonecould
have been greater—none more suc
cessful. But had Grant been a con:
federate and Lee a federal, both
would have been good soldiers—
neither a successful general. Both
reached supreme command over stars
which had glittered and paled, be
cause they • respectively tilled the
measure of their peoples' necessities. '
The contest was unequal with respect
to numbers and IrOUIVIN. The,,
South required thegenlus to husband,"
to protract, to give brittle only when
superior forces were neutralized by '
position oreireurnstaisces. The North
'demanded swift - and-crushing blows.
Ita hungry-cry was, battle—victoryl
(Jne sought its most trusted and skil
ful defender; the other called for its
most persistent aqd obstinate assail
ant. The South
found its true type
of a warrior early in the strife. The
North would have revolted at the
Wilderness campaign had it been at
tempted one year earlier. In the late
all of 1861 I heard the inquiry made
of a gallant officer, whoaubsequently
commanded the army of the Poto
mac—" Why do you not advance?"
The answer ,was—"We • could move
directly • upon Mammas and Rich
mond, and capture both, but it would
cost ten thousand men to do it," and
cavil was silenced. Ten times ten
thousand men were killed, wounded
and missing in military movements
well meant to economize the terrible
sacrifice. Then half as many more
fell in the campaign of 1864, which
was wisely planned lu accord with
the nation's Inevitable need, and
executed with marvelous heroism
and skill. limit fought Just one de
fensive battle during the war. He
lost it, and lost his command.- Lee
conducted two offensive campaigns,
and both were disasters: • "I pr=
to fight tt answ.sz .......ano .r I
•-st —....rnar," was Grant's echo from
the Wilderness, of the throbbing
popular, linnn , t In the North. "A
renewal of the engagement could not
be hazarded," were the sober words
with which Lee assured the South
that though Gettysburg was lost, the
army was not sacrificed. These
chieftains were the fisithful..creations •
of the every day lives, the purposes,
the hopes, and the wants of their
peoples; and their achievements
were but the patiently and painfully
wrought consummation of years of
mingled thought and action in the
hothes of the nation.
The same causes which have ineat
, ed the heroes and sages of the world's
history, have been the chief agencies
in the rapid progress of Christian
civilization. Its origin was divine,
but the means employed for its diffu
sion are within the economy of hu
man efforts and influences, and the
every-day livesi of sincere Christian
people are the Most impressive and
successful of all its teachers. The
every-ddy life of Christ silences the
scandal of the scoffer, and it resolves
the doubl.sof thousands whose frail
ties question the offices of faith. His
was the one perfect life among men.
Ho was sorely tempted, and Ho knew
not sin. lie was reviled and perse
cuted, and Ile prayed for •His ene
mies. His teachings were pure as the
fountain of lespiration, whence they
came, and Illadally walk and actions
confounded aaluful world that sought
in vain for the blemish on His gar
ment. Even those who relect Him
us the Messiah pronounce him the
best of men, and confess the happy
influence of Ills seund precepts and
blameless example. At Antioch, the
seat of learning and luxury and moral
profligacy, ills humble followers
were classed us Christians. They
were distinguished from the ways of
mankind about them, and the Chris.
lien era was thus 1111171 ed. Tram
it thence through the revolutions of
nearly two thousand years—through
the gradual triumps of error by the
gradual corruption of the persple—
through the terrible penalties which
slowly but surely came as withering
vengeance from heaven ; and through
seasons of moral darkness which an.
paired as if hope had fled from man.
, In all these wonderful mutations, not
mere rulers or leaders are answera-
We for results. They were but the
creatures of the ebbing and flowing
tides of popular degeneracy, or of the
struggles of the people for their tem
poral or spiritual amelioration. Tho
, State corrupted the Church ; the
, Church subordinated the State, and
the battle-axe smote the altars where
the faithful worshipped. The name
9eginac t il r i ne ttsousd r nmedaterifo
and ceremonies of the Church were
prostituted to the flagrant abuse of
•eitemal government, until national
and religious decay made civilization
a reproach. We point to the Refor
mation as the date of the new Chris
tian-era that has so rapidly advanced
and ennobled the human race. But
the'tounders of Protestantism. Its
foundations had long been laid; Its
t w io h n en ? e L n u d th w er h a e n t d w ea m lt h l e n Re we r re nnna bui
. ers eten j e co luld nsist hee ent n d fin eve h t l i n on ned , an d hy
had been framed and.
materials
the imposing temple.
The martyr of Bohemia had gone to
the stakes century before, and Wick
liffe had taught still half a century
earlier. The lino of reformers is un
broken from the date of the Bon-of
man until now. Their were periods
when there voices were hushed, and
when they would have tatight as to
I th e winds had they dared to teach ;
but there were every-day lives, in
every State whose purity of 'charac
ter and action were like thp silver
dew-drops of the morning when the
earth is parched to desolatiott . And
when the struggle began, th
.i
world
was in travail for two eentu ef be.
fore the Reformation wasborti: The
" reformers before the Reformation"
are not unnoticed in history; but be
fore them still were the ever living
currents of Christian life. Like the ,
waters of the western desert, which
hide from the weird and burning
waste, rise again where there are life
and beauty, - Christian excellence and
Chlistian Influence coursed onward
through= agesof degeneracy, until
(Concluded on iburth Page.)
LI