The Beaver eirgus, Beaver. Pa.. Dee. 604 WI, -.,•lildtion Thirteen Hundred. ibites of AdvertWog. 17 00 5 00, 10 s'7 00 $lO 00 DO 5 .00 , 800 12 00 1800 l onhhow 1 10 '5O 15 00 15 00 20 00 33 01) .Vij 00 SS Ob tO 00 '22u • 38 00 GO 01 100 00 . d Executors' Notleett..... 63 00, palme, ten cents. - to be made Quarterly, except w4ieb must be paid - - , - - to. P. 140 WELL, 40 Palk-Row, N. York. ANI) t. fq-:TTE.NOLL at Co, 37 Park. itow. are the axle agents lo? Tits' IteAran ''oit city. anti are authorized to contract • ailvarti4emeuts fur ne at oar Advgrtieens to that City are re that/ [aeon with either of iho iiii TIME TABLE. Laud & Pittsburgh R. R.—Trains Bearer Stallus tullows: Nor -9 19, Mail, '2.47 p. ca.,Evining Fast west leave Beaver Station as fol m .•[. :.I6 a. m ; Accommodation and Ea.- - • ..zit to llettair.t 5.45 p. M. :a. Ft. &C. Ir.. rmins going List Station at end of bridge) as 101- r Areom 6 03 a.m.; Enonaccom. accom m.;•13. Falls In. _ ‘A est leave lioetteater Station, (at • follov.s: B. k' areom. 10 a. in.; .1, 1 . 1 p. Erie night expresb i. 45 p. , 411 7Z7 p. - m. ...• East k..yti Hui:tester (Upper) Be . • : 11. F. accom .8.05 a. - m se. - New Castle necom. 8.40 a. In; m: Beaver Falls awns. lg. 15 • • •flail 2.tlp. ra, Erm cap. 4 10 p m; I, v.; t. m: Eric mail p. m. Be , .'ct. leave ItoeheSter(Upi) Ulllcagotuml.ls a. tn.; Ene esp. ~,r accom. 9..554.11. - Chicago Clncazo exp. 4..53 p. :Now p. Erin cvp. 5.4:1 p in; [leaver n :16 it attention of the public is directed following :siew Advertisements h appear for the first time in the PS tO dit3, "tirl ,- 11 agO All riet.en 31 Notice. 2l .?r. JOhnotou Co C \ 01.1 c, r. J C. Ayers,. C in jitieo. P. Rowell-S. ...............0 • ~, () I RK. Co—M. flartkhoro .4,41:tt t icheit-Jame. Gerard S. Co ; t • For slito--1.). M. Draielux3..,.o Naticar.--E floopa. taqtw , ...... "• -r The Lady's Friend. —Dr Keyser._ , • Mrs. Fast_ • -small Walther • \ ..... .„ s. • , Ur , Utdsbne 1.1 Snellenbnrir C9e, Wetheril I S, co Seutt z .• Smith &Co no Uncertain Sound.— 'nod of the Evangelical' !lurch, which met in Alto°- t he 61th of September last, ••!„. 10;lowmg temperance reso- That any member of the ~• Lutheran Church, within ~ t tins Synod, who shall en , •!.• manufacture sale or use of -age intoxicating, spiritous or , NS iue : foreign or domestic) considered guilty of a ,t the cardinal princi , I`,t-t , tian religion, and on re : • .ball he amenable to the and may be admonish ,: , r. expelled at their (lis- Sr.moi Pt.s.—SometLing new mind ..r.. 1,1 rend the advertisement-in our Invention of the Age." Fountain Pen is mincer pro 14 3 T1.T...f2 , 1ty 10 of tory : Agents, bare 1• n thence to Introducing.n good and saleable jantry,ly tumid the World. —Through tick .: ,1 - ,,titid the World are now isgu heir t. 1 .1.1-1:i in golt4 and ssl days. The line of we-Are - art', in from New - , :•, Francisco, say 3,30 n miles, an , •tico to Yokohama, 4,700, from 'long. Kong, 1,600 miles, thence+ 3,606 miles, thence to Itotn . 1.400 mile., Bombay to Suez, fr an Suez tis Alexandria and 11.11,1 to London, say :1,300 miles, and 51 London to New York, .3 ‘ ,1.1.10 miles. of fbn rge. - 3I a! Andrh-saorn - P Drug ,•• at -. 1. - flannel, 0, Roche-ter. . ,;-: •• 4Dr \ It , ••••Ime lil•rman :•,yr • " . 1 ,- 11.1. .:Itt•i) I‘uCII Introduced • tr t , from Germany. and for any per , t,au a-, ;ter; e.,, Ic t ; bras cold .-•tamtiot, ~ r any ,11-ea. ,,, 0f ' r le, e q ual It, the ~rid hottle,7 - , cent. In all ca,, the c, t t try ed iI p. rf, et ,au - • ,i, e n ; dose. Will 3u) • • 1,0, Y 74). \: they don't want any A corre,paident • Wr• helieve art actual or,topn - :..•• .d the nl,l clothes wale .utterer in Xliehigan himpronahty at.ont two .):,1 pants and one Linn- Wnre It lowe.t & I , tii ‘ll-1;‘•• CCU A rn.drong, • .n....-ter at East Liverpool, t thin, •• -'mod bv a 14o:emu - lent officer. i.•% eland, on a charge of in his money 'order ae - 11,e facts in the vase are, that got his hooks "Landed," •-• th:e• 20 tuake his report, • r—luired to I,e made weekly, to .-tina.tec at Cleveland, and for the adding_ a little cin the shape to the 4:tius of the °dicers, he , t • the expense and trouble of a eland. 'Divert. is no eharze • NI r. Arne-tr,nq¶sr onibezilintz; :111114 of the kind, and all V. ho are . •ted with him, «ill bear uk out in atement that the t' hale aettckak 1.• ikei for. The Lail required witsilf lwodred dollai .- s, not t51:.,000, Av teleo-aph, ahi en Wa, prompt- •T , 11E, 111 , • r. lel , 1 . 1.•• .11'itn , •burgh, and all tne at -1••• had ,d .inha St. , • ~,o.•/•• •••:•••••• •f -t• ME I iirt.f.t att , ration to .-Nles,rs advertiseinerit "f• ier rivvr rt:rn oil v for 'an an l art.clisert , es resulting. I • I cEll. ik , as repcirteil, are • ' 1 , . Mt•••••r•i. limene physicians or high o, , ,roughly reliable. El •••Illte lout trip and price. - f 1! , •+.1 . •••1 cloroh.roh's - .• j, 71) here -r, rumor , oirrent just now to .1. E.luar Thomson is about ••• ••••• l'resitioury of the Penns -1- • • •. r •.:•1 company, to be stiveeed- - A %; -.qt., at present it% efli i'n'..l,lvnt, and Scott it turn • •- , -led by ('ut.A.K. McClure. Burners, Wieks, • ::• : , •r., and "Standard" Re ,,11, at lingo AndrieAsen's EIZIES 11 " n. Nlillward, former- comrrese'for the Fourth - a ilist.rwt, and U. S. Marshal ar, died Tuesday of last l rL wood, Delaware. Mr. ye:p-s ago, 4leti a prom it, tho peties of tials State. T; ukil and examine our here. Orders care .4Jot tl 11 , 11 I ihn rChAUII: Pll , ,bor , h. je7;:y °dicer% Appointed.— , .1,11 ; : h, General Manager of Railroad Co. assumed the the Cleveland and Pitts it. Friday, Ist Instant, of that road to the for- The following are his wl, also entered -upon the.r respective offices on I: V. French, Assistant lien- Cleveland, G.; G., •A lid ft , r; office at Cleveland l E , gtrsoll, ~fnee at Cleveland, J ohn Thomas, Superintendent, Welkville, ).; Win. Stewart, F'rtl Freight - Agent, office at Pitts- R. Myers, General PassengerTieLet. Agent, office tt Pittsburgh. ' i il,I. • %LI, 41 ' I,ll .cea.—Sterllng Silver. Table Ware tatiOn pieces. John Sterensca's Sims Market street. Pittabrargh. }e7:ly A Few Words to, Boys.who are, Learning Trades. —We wouldn't giyn, a bauble, says the , Philadelphia 'herald, for the young MO who it con- tinually watching his employer and (he clock, during workiiqg hours, who is never at his post a minute before the ap pointed time for beginning work, and who is alwayS ready to abandon it the moment the hour for quitting arrives. Such youths think they arum:one. They pride themselves upon being able to give the least possible amount of their agreed - -weir employer, and appear to )ition beyond that of putting work hours and, getting out stnedl of the shop or office as speedily as possible. This is a great mistake, and one which the young man only realizes fully in after years. . The boywho thinks he is accomplisNing a shrewd thing when ho deceives +his employer is indulging a fatal delusion. Employers as a general thing are not fools. They readily detect who of their employees manifest an intergst- in their business and join heart an hand with them in endeavors fdrlifil -prosper ous. The youth wit() displays !gaper zeal in regard to his master's pusiness welfare rarely goes unrewarded, and when such a one is promoted to a more comfortable situation, is given more privileges, afforded better opportunities for learning his occupation, is paid bet ,terwages and at the close of his appren ticeship appointed to places of trust and profit, his time serving companions wonder why he is thus favored. They orget that if they have failed to receive equal favors the fault is their own. They have not d erred them are not entitled to them, an consequently do not obtain them. The; are properly served. Boys, if you would be successful iu life, cast aside all these unworthy sub terfuges. They can prove 'detremental to your interests only. They lower you in the estimation (rf your employer, and cannot fail to lower you in your own estimation. Be manly and honorable in 1 aIL you do. Go to your placeof' determined to deal fairly with sou you are serving. tte faithf interests, and you will thereby your own. Resolvo that you w ter your profession, whatever it BO that when your apprenticeahlp is ended you can start in life a competent workman, and with habits of diligence and faithfulness to duty, which cannot hut lead you on to success. PUTLE Glycerine, Camphor Ice and Glycerine, and Cold Cream at Hugo An driessen's Beaver Drug. ,tare. CM WATrTI U.EPat CO - your watch to on: of or der. -cud it to bAn SaMi & hnh:ll It s' VI he repotted nod returued Inc ut expre-s charge,.. Alt work warranted. {e7.ly 11(y:(4 W HEELINii, W. V.., Nov. 15.—110 n. John S. Way, (it Woodsville, U.. Judge of the Belmont and Monroe circuit, was found dead at an early hour this morn ing, on one of the streets of that town. There was no signs of violence, and the presumption is that the Judge, over come by some intirmit2, - , had fallen ear ly in the night and perished from expo sure. —What reflections the above telegram brings! John S. Wray, a good lawyer and a kind hearted gentleman, taken (ill' in the prime - of life uy the too frequent use of that fell destroyer-of somuch hap piness, and the agent fso much misery —intoxicating liquors! Judge Way's sudden death should not only bea warn ing to professional men, but to all others to neither " touch, taste, nor handle the foul destroyer." Read again the above dispatch, and resolve—and keep the res, olution sacred—never again to touch nor taste that which destroys happiness and brings misery—intoxicating liquors. P.:. Stnee the above was in typo we have roeeived the Barues-ville Enter - prise of Nov. Pi, Iziving the following addi tional particulars enn the death of Judge Way " Wei learn from parties that arrived front \V oodstield to-day, that .ludge Way was found (lead On the street in that place on Wednesday Morning. lie had been spending the latter part of the pre vious evening at Minsterman's hotel, in company with Messrs:Clark„ Campbell and Adams of St. Clairsville, and was last seen alive by theca when they bid him good night. Mr. Ctampbell bacitsi ken the journal of the Belmont Common Pleas Court to Judge Way to have it signed by him ~ 'hut he deferred signing that evening because be desiaed to make a tew wore entries in tine-morning, and could not see tt ell at night. At three o'- el,iek in the morning Mrs. Way became alarmed for her husband's safety and, bracing the storm that was then raging, ‘i eta out to find him. She passed with in a new feet of him, but her search, as well as that of other parties, did Dot re veal his presence. About 7 o'clock, on Wednesday morning, the rent-snits were dn.:coveted. in the street leading . from the „hotel to the Judge's residence, :tad with in tifti- yards of his brother's do , •r. lay upon his hack, sleeping the calm sleep of death: with his face and body covered w it It a mantle of snow . which had fallen atter he died. A glass lantern, with its t'andle horned to the socliiet,w :Ls standing On one side of hit, and an um brolla a as It its tt 1110 other. The s,:yrie that ensued. utter the discos cry of the re littart-r0W1111,4.. I= mid too,' or 1,,k , 411 V:Ir1.1.11 - . • I tofound at .1•,/, • •.• • SOnd ,•! 14 11 irkt•l j.. 7 finest assortment of chi Freni haniDieri'lliet extracts, perturned hair izly , erine and heal et stoat& tooth, hair, nail, and cloth lirmAlie-, or\• combs and laliffv toilet 4rtii•les snitaliio for pre.ents, at J H Andrlessen's Delver liru:.; Store. A Pol.\ Itt Tin- wide spread irdluenc-of .Irneri , an .kill :wd enterprise Irot,, i\iit,tripped the eonipre hen.ions nf.‘inerioans thiunselve.. The fabric.. of otrtantills elothe the savage~ of both colitiVlit.. They wrap the loin. of Arriiia, and the tawny skins ..d` South Ainerwan pampa.. 1111 t. Vrlder .till are trial the products of our , kill A late \ islt. to Aver ,t; . laboratory and chine to 1.. m shinwrsi u. that the whole surliwe of the h ;t i,it a i,l e globe pays it. In time there; there they eater to and .eiii4 i te the require ment. alizio.t all natio:pr. Their pub heated,. are in the trans tiourues (lint erect '1„1.4.. Their lit ter, reiel trim Mid written lii many tongue., for vi high thee i el:iit a long range or c the:i'r 4111 - tiv;3. Their daily mail of half a 'them adviees, and! , remittanee. from the i•Irl•11' .1' the World. We were overwhelmed aumzetheirt, end our ieitilers would be 11: an inspection of tick uonderfully ex vii, health-dealing enterprise. -- 1 1 011/7,S i 'oolt ( n., : rr-c // f';•. = WA I TII 1.1 V.ATCIII. 4 .- A, 4 7,1 for the pal, 01 !hr., WtilOes In , Ite city f Pit t.bunr,ll we arc e"hrulent If our ability to pll-Ase in St}} ler SOl , B f Gh., En M ir ket -tr..ct rttrburell Too Lute.- 0,1 a coniin nieation from col. Walton, of Me Indus try Fur (" , ,mpany, too late for thiv paper. The col. hula Fox Hunt on Thatiksgiv7 ing day, awl his ooinpany was vltreev , - ful tw" f,)x es . and mud) small game. lie promisee Issue an order for a general Fox }flint soon. "purl). - are all right-so iv his Berk shire wale swine' lvhi , h he speaks of in his eom nnteation tritiinitn;z., mil linery and all kinds of tinvy goods, c a n and s.OO Will Smith it co. le il-a THE RIsl: IN TIM Ittymt has brought down coal as well as many other hoth ornamental as well as useful goods; for further information call at Bence's Mil linery and Tritnthiug Store, Beaver, and see how cheap they sell Shawls, Woves, Hosiery, Ladies' and t;ent's Underwear, Shirts. Velvets, Trimmings, &e. The largest stock of Millinery tioodß of the season has just heen opined, with all the newest shapes and latest styles that can well he ()Mai ned m :New York; also new Collars, Ribhons, Bows, Hoods, and Winter goods generally, at Renee's, Third St.,Beaver. Butter.eggs and chick ens taken in exchange for goods. [nov22-3t. As the seagim of frosted feet is just setting in, the following remedy for re lieving the intense itching produced thereby will come quite handy to same unfortunates: Dissolve a lump of alum in a little,water and bathe the part with it, warming in before the tire. One or two applications are sure to give relief. CLOCK 9. CL , CKC.—AMetterin * Clorkp fan ~to .pcucnc PtyleA 113VVO•I prices. John Ste,sssou'• Sons , 9J Alert:et street. L'itts burgh je-1y A FRES/I lot of French Candies and fine Confectioneries just arrived anti for sale at Beaver Drug Store. Care for the Bimill-poz.—A. For-. respondent says he etied'fillidielf . Ora l severe ease of smalt-pOx by the . i ? Nv 7 04 remedy, and begs ft*,?likpliikiuSA that other 11M d sufferers may find' ail:y' I@ was simply by taking a sweat of cream Of tartar--one tablespootiftrl of cream of tartar, one tablespoonful of brown sugar, .put into a large-ahted„ howl; boiling water poured over it, till ing up the bowl; theft' letit be well stir red, and the patient, drink it all, as hot_ as it can be, Wien, ,(beiug,:Of cqurBg, 1R; bed and well covered up). This sweat universally sends the disease to the sur face, preventing afterwards sickness or death, or of being marked, which is greatly dreaded by sonie, especially the ladies. SKY Rad enough to look and, feel bad yourself; but no exerts° for havingyour horse lOok add feel badly; Iv-hen for small sum you can buy Bhcriddn's Oat , airy anidition Powders, which. given-'lO grain two or t 4i reo timea t week, Will make him lookwd feel well. Melivrxt's Colel)rated Stontach Bit ters, a fresh supply, for sale; only at Hugo . Andriessen's Beaver Dritg Store. The editor of the Baltimore American C. C. Fatten, esq., who is a member of the National Republican Committee, stated in his paper a' few days ago that the Committee would pass a resolution at its first -sleeting, recommending the Republicans of all the States to refrain from sending Federal office holders as delegates to the National 'Republican Nominating Convention. This will bo s done to. show the falsity. of those who, assert that the voice of the people will be stilled at'the nominating convention, by delegates who are • dependent on Presi— dential fami. This is all very avell, will not these same Mike holders use their positions after all, to select such delegates as will carry out their wishes ''cntioa ? If the National tuld prevent the office hol .lng any part In the selec- Id be. made. As it is we do not see that the committee's reborn mendation accomplish much of the good; •"- - .7.4-Wrin sr s now fairly upon us, and the teams are ba.stoning to the lumber woods in various parts of the country. Our advice to every man who goes to the woods. be he captain, cook, teamster, or any other man, is to take along a good stock of Dr. Johnson's Anodyne Lini ment and Pcurbon.)(' Purgative Pitlx. Many months of labor (in the aggregate) may be saved by this precaution. FINE Toilet Articles, suitable for holi day ' , resell ts, at Hugo Antirlessen's Bea ver I ~tore. ••I Can A fiord To."—Mrs. A. T. Stewai t, the Wife of the New York mil lionaire, has discarded rich and gaudy' dressing entirely and appears in public IP , \V in only cheap and plain attire - . A friend of her's inquired the other day why she had made so complete a change In her wearing apparel. She answered promptly, "I can afford to." Would it not ho better for the country at large, and would it not lift almost' insurporta ble burdens from Mms:in:ls of fathers, husbands and brothers, if their daught ers, wives and sisters, .would pattern af ter Mrs. A. T. Stewart, and Amax only `cheap and plain clothing - or apparel am heir means would justify ? AN entirely new stock of millinery, Including the latest novelties ha Lam and bonnets, just received " Mrs. F'lit's. She will also sell at, 'greatly reduced prices a fine lot of shawls t black and colored velveteens, opera flannel, felt skirts, hosiery, gloves, ladles' under wear, ladies' and children's hoods col lars, ribbons and all articles tumidly found in tirst-class trimming stores. Also a large stoek of toys and fancy arti cles, writing desks, portfolios, vases, statuary, .t e. 5 I 'Or ner of Third and Sem inary streets, Beaver, Pa. inovL.l4-2t. WANTED.—Agents to sell the paten!' Adjustable Stove Shelves, an artiele of great practical value to every family. These shelves can . reatylybeattitched to any stove, anitarer .. . an inals ponsablo ankle. where they have been once used for raising bread or biscuit, warming victuals and plates, or drying any small artielea, doing away with burnt Mr 4, \ eget:ll,les, meats, etc., that have been placed In the oven of the cool: stove in good condition Mbe warmed, hut are unfortunately forgotten and have been burnt or dried. Persona de siring to eairry on a protitoblo bmkint+s &trim; the winter, will find it to their interest to send for a descriptive circular to Demmler Brothers, at No. lt2tt Smith fiel , l street, Pittsburgh I' \\ ' inevand Lill uors—for tnctli fi nal w.e old v —altt . ays on hand at BeaNer Sion.. -- A W ii*CollPoil II Justice of thn I'o:u hint ,, elf a divortp, a f.'v wPA, That is not much ahead of the Beaver elunty Justice, who, a short time ago, executed the acknoiiiedgrinent of his awn lii•ed, which stated that he had "examined hi, wife apart from her said hnshand, and that she signed, sealed and deli% red the same as her voluntary act and t.oe,', freely and without any fear, threa a c r eumptilsion of her said hus band it-, fur., t h e ,•iieripegt ever known, tl,e cheap st}ire of Will Smith it Co.'s, IZu4. (leco3-2,w -At estriin Flitristel,—Tho maj , •rtiy ~f p '11.1.• are not nwar,• of the beneficial s wearing Ilan nrl 11( . .Xt lc) tlic 1)(Kly, bath in rrlrl and warm 'NT:lliter. Flannel n , )t an nnerantormhle in Iv3rin wvather I,lh vi• Frv(iin•nt ( , )11:.; aml e.m.;t:int hacking rough 4 (1.1.71 r: ~n Then! , is n nee I pi grc.it :11 , 11t tL NVai , l, trhi It ~1 1, 1 ( . 111(1 , Wearl IP , of 11-all,t \Nilo prcler uuar W :11 , t 3 If health, I 'ha ,t , i• the Ilatuir.l ran hc• c •it tittimr. always Lt.:tell tl2. :,t th, 1:1 , •k There are .4"arr4.1,," any e,l ,miden climiLre4 of weather fit h , : th cr who wenr flannel garment amt mothers. t-perial , llntil,l en(;,:ivor t.. pr ,i1cl? for their little pf,•l,!(- • i•: pr(:?, retire to all ihn=e 5•11owy • - Artsirle trittimityz , which fashion corn. men "LirrT.l: I'Avona•rns."-1 largo sup ply of thig erlehrat ea brand of Puro !la '.:ma fKars just received and for sale ouly at Hugo Andriesson's Heaver Drug Store. The Masons in Connell MiVOC:fit ton of Masons is now in session at Phila,lelphin, Messrs. ti. B. Wilson, S. 11,, French and G. - W. liatnilton, Of Beaver, 14. ft on last Monday for Phila delphia, as reeresentatives of the Lod e° in thin plane. Now is the time to secure bargains. NI rm. Fast has this week marked down her entire stock. Special bargains elm he had' in opera flannels, millinev t hos ieryand shawls. It will be tAI the inter est purchasers to examine her prices hergre buying elsewhere. The Heaver Corinty Ministerial Ammociation will bold its next session in tho Ensrlish- Lutheran Church, Roch ester, Dee. 7th, Is7l, at 2 o'clock, p. m. The subject for discussion is •• Should Christians eno . a..re in the modern dance 7" The public are respectfully and cordial ly invited to attend, and take part in the discusloo of the que,tion. ' JOHN 11. AroltEY. &C'y. The •‘Etilkit Liverpool Gazette.” is the name of a new pamit just started at East Liverpool, Obto. b. B. Martin, ,iv editor and proprietor. We wish the, , Garette success, J sToN SISTA LL k ,„l-0 0 w EU have slated %hems Ivesdn the manu facture of wagons, buggie.sjind all kinds of vehicles. This firm certainly can de fy competition In qualitr:and price, if we may judge front the work now fin ished and on exhibition at:their rooms on Market street. They will be pleased to receive a liberal share of public pat ronage and will try to redder satisfac tion in the wood work,Oroning and painting; as well as In repairing of all kinds. Blacksmithing, in all its branch es, promptly attended to. CM= tes at all, we apprehend, 1n0v29 2w %. grand IMXII •'-, To Make Glossa) , lihirta.—Pat a little common lirgua wax:o3;ok iitttgelk say two ounooe to tl,lO PPPd;-..thn. - if Yell use any tilitiPilfillit 4 l. 114":1 )1 k ishe, you use it wurin,olhorivise it. will got. cold and gritty. fitul ' B l4`Purlllen, giving it the appearanceof boingits' hied, with. grpa,lo. " Tili 4rereflt . rt ith l : o lPi?' statist—lt: can b 0 4 0 .1 1 * t ec i id v i rTyrier or, of that aniiii.iliow , thilis 1 40 Piiii fishing shirts; "-Starch the fronts and. wristbands ns sliffsgut *nil cline Wire, piiitt iv t ioo Ws; ,A'tii?cit 4ind thi , then starch ofga o: ItOtt` yoiti. iiiiiti ITT, the usual, wriy ? t )(lug tho -linen oleo and firm, butwil Mr f4 l / 3 1 atlePlit at, A good iinill 't ift th e , •plalts; your shin Ils no polishing, Wit rOu 4 oughe to havo '1; 1p rd ho sante size , as a common shirtbriard tultitio of ht rd,wimA: and oovoted With only Arlo ply of plain cotton koth. Put thisb,..o4-C1 in , to the breast of your shirt; itatnp the front very lightly with aAittia'aiiongo,,tlion - fsike„:l4' .. polishing iron whioh is flat and beveled ' a littio at ono etpi r polillt ffy9t,4s ;with: the beveled par aking.carp not foil c: Vvii the linen up intq. , lake blisters ;of cotirso this iociiiirr i' if y e careful, 'stun ' you miti eua e finish - Ift much wanted. H EM-sTITVIIED. chiefs for 15 cents; chiefs for 10 and A Good Cure is setting in with dry aqd vforday . sm mat ic willboUp_mr of our roaftei'ulie 'Panful' disc, benefit Of tho wo copy from tho friend, of ours wit tunes from neuralgia, hearing Of,a noted; physician in' (lot - wank WholtiVeriabir cured that disease, crossed the oceattuticl visited - ,Gerwauy for triataleni. Troyes . permanently cared after tishartiiojciurn . ; • and tho doctor freelyr gave him the alms pie remedy used which was.nottfing but a poultice and tea mad_wtiont our omit. tnon field thistle. The leaVes are macerated and used on the parts affected Its a poultice, while a small quantity of the leaves are boiled down in the proportion of a quart to a pint, and a a' small wino gitiss of the do. covtion drank before each weal, Our friend says he has recontrupaded it far and tical , and has never known it to fail of giving relief, while in. almost every case it has effected a cure; It is certain ly worth a trial. Est nnotnkttain *dippers, Jaya canvass, perforated, eapl board, Brocha scarfs, and•ladies' underwear, at reduced prices al, Mrs. Fast's. The !widow of Petor Stoiltrer, of Mt. Pleasant, Xce - sttnoreland couuty,was last week awarded $1!,070 for the killing cf her, husband by the breaking down of a bridge' over Sewickly creek which ho wa crossing at the time with a heavily laden wagon. The supervisors tit Hump field township were the th i ;lenthint,4 in the suit. BISONS, Of all colors:apt.' widthseasli ribbons, fancy. ioows, nec. tic., Laney and plain, collar Sr., at eogt, at Mrs. t • s. Thanksgiving Day wa..tappropri at, Iv ,itqt•rvet.l at the Soldier:: Orphan :tt Ton turkies, be• aide, duck S and chickens, entered into the "fowl" part or the good things sot bethre the 'children and guests on the oecaiiion. A hari.n.t. day was spent by all—pupils and the triends nt the.sehonl. In the eve ning t orphans, asststed by the piinet pal and teach: n, gave an entertainment t C.uuNiiting Or Si ffig ipstrumental mush% oriental e,kayS, 4c• lain:Own and recitations, which was ered iralyie to the children of our fallen trews. A.ltitr which, truit was distriluited'to all, and the company retired, Ppling that sol diera' orphans were well eared for at Phil 11,i)ahurze CFI 111 ST NI As 01 . /FTSI, TOTS, Toss, Toys!—B. NtUlhairri tkos just received the largest and rnost enni 7 plete ..tuck of Christmas Presents ecei I?rought to this county. All are invited 1, call and seo for dicuiselvos. A tumor vorving a large portion Of him under lip has been the cause of a good deal of anxiety vnd pain to Mai. Thoma. 4 Met' reety of this place, for SOllll3 tune past. tni last Thursday, Dr..l. S. McNutt of I;eaver, assisted by Dr. Mahon of Al leghen t City, rhmoN ed the tumor by t;i , •al instruments and sew'ed up the wounded 1 art. It 1, now healing apid -1 unit hope., are entertained that the threatened cancer has been averted. Au ; Erect ruttitietiti.—A writer on Cry . 111,Lly C , 111d. 4 11111 , the habit Or 1,11f1,..1114', in Which a huge ithmher of persons indulge, as injurious to health. 11 says: "An erect bodily altitude Is of N.t , tly more importanee to health, than is generally imagined. Crooked bodily i,osiipuis, maintained for atly length iff utile, are 111,:tys injunons, whether In the sitting, standing or lying posture, v. hether sleeptitg or waking. To sit \‘ ith the body leaning, forward on the stomach, or to one side, with the heels elevated to to level with the head, is not only in had taste; but exceedingly detrimental to health. It cramps the stomach, presses the vital organs, inter rupts the tree motions of the chest, and enfeebles the functions of the abdominal and thoracic organs, and, in faet, unbal ances the whole muscular system. Many children become slightly hump=backed, or severely round shouldered by sleep ing Willi the head raised on a high pil low; when any person finds it easter to sit or stand, or walk or sleep in a crook ed po s ition titan a.straight one, such per : son may ho sure his muscular system is badly deranged, anti the more careful he is -to preset e a straight or an upright position , end get back to nature agatn, the better.' -IL will gratilywz 1,, the nunreruus friends of Elwood M. Coe, formerly of Rochester, and a sOll Cop, of that place, to lu.irn of his appointment to the Chief l'lork.hip of the liem•ral Ticket Department of the Indianapolis and St. Louis railroad, in St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Coe, who is now about Is years ed age, went V• CAL two years ago, and was employed in selling tickets for the P. C. it St. It. It. It. in Chi cago 111101 1111/1101 , 1 since , when, he removed to St. Louis, and there engaged himself as a clerk in the olliee over which he now has chief control. Promoted All who know him -will he pleased to Lear of his promotion to this responsiblo position. lie has our best wishes for his success in the discharge of the dut es devolving npon hlin in this new field. \V bcsiwak for hiin a meritorious ca reer a usefulness, the confidence of his employers and many future hoer-, as the reward of his honesty, industry and uprightness. List, of kitten.' reumaini►ng i❑ Beaver l'o,t ()nice, Dee. Ist, 1;,71. Mr James Allen Mr Geo W Davis Martha I. wires Mss It II Firkee Mrs Sarah MeCul-, MEI John Morgan, esq, 4 Messrs Tucker Al Miss Mary Jane Me- Co Cußough Mr Julin A 'nails Mr Ilt.nry Miller 'Mks Hattie Wilson Mrs lary Patterson MARV A. MO; Frtvg, P. M. ARAMINTA. — I paid tnq attentions to A raminta Wear from the first day of April to the end of the year; but I found that I made no impression. The reason of thin, to others was plain, which to me was a mystery; could not rise to explain the why or the wherefore I could not obtain control of this maiden's affec tion. A model Adonis education's no name for tie intelligence stored in my brain; I really thought Aranuinta quite lame not to perceive my attraction. was master of music, I played and sung, I quoted the classics, until sore watt my tongue; but still at mysidesh6 listlessly hung and said what I will never Men tion. Our reverie was then interrupted ' by a friend, who handed ace the card of 5.. - Snellenburg, the heaver ciaunty Clothiers• Eureka! I found it in New Brighton, Broadway, at S. & J. tinellen-i burg's. I procured an array, was accep ted and married the very same day, which accomplished my great expecta tion. moral.—Reader, go and do as I did, and happiness, prosperity and wealth will be yours. IiCSIO7IWINEKIWItri:I46",I4Iqm TAW. HOW#IER ASUMOOthifil* TER. ' J . L. BY Omuta ma, • ' ~ 1 , - ."r•riroE 11. A;G P6 L T P i Ef , t4X 3 ie oi f il g 4 •geaCt 4 blIeliVCI .- t i l in. ' A lilto and Iss Nancy Sawyer •heleUge was the iedding ono -in Lewis. -burg, ita it; is in mo: t '66entl-44aitillein ' - 10diatia. If may be permitted Ow Inv c did and charitable 0. ANL of , th u i nape rbaroffeeci.the lAtddtfttnqn, I . 't Ilene ttalminto old Qtataltorlbeation,nud say that MlsetAire yer , iirtts a Itfothodlst and likewise a Christian., 11164,2,17hit0 was a Methodist, betta foar!sWi aot likewise. As ,to ' first part of this assertion, Atoka w ropui to • doubt Miss Nian.. l * .cy's,Diet, • Sao no* gat haitay e gr ineetiiiK (fort "the itad.-n' leek ` > ii antretitild witues a good experience.in the quarterly lovo-feast. But it is Dot open these grounds,that, , l beg° sair °Pin lonia( attsi Nancy. Do not even. the Phariseeash° same? She fiever dream ed that she had any right, to speak of "Christian Perfection" (whleh as Mrs.' sParttugton said of total deptaviiVis an ' 4moe, l llent doctrine if it is lived • up-to); but NV 111 11 woman's heart its ot tick - a ( .good purposes, when beral one ehristlike hi .# l . l ,* b i r la l a t e :A e n, R ways sy w a ch 11, and when leer -'feet 'tin upon °tread* or ?ritik illY a Pelt:Mk :teeth:T . 44o not 'knew ) does not poptiesS 11. ; lyzing her experiences out therAtatC4dl7 her • F managed tis live , on 3 and be so t' encomia' lure° of rplexity , to mamba And 'now that 'Nielson Id not= rti VI • the 'was n eral Outcry orntnit iptertned ld Uti , ? if,jo h tho t poot4touse before she di „,,,,- at Nda.y I-Sawyer was the richest Oman in Lew- ITiburg,, though nobody.know it, and she herself did ;not once suspect it. , a . 'How. Miss Nancy and the preacher -pouspirwiltagether, and how they man -1 aged.to kiwi; Mrs. 'l'homseu'e case up I at the time (.f the "Saeramental Service" lit the afttirtuaan of that Sunday lu Lew ' isburg, anti 'how the predator made a touotilng statement of it just before the regular "Collection for the Poen" was taken, and bow the warm-hearted Meth. oduits put In dollars instead of %dimes . while the Presiding Elder read those passages about Zaceheus and other lib eral people, at how the congregation rsalig more lustily than over, after havingper formed tint (lbristiattratttHaow; allitltfe happened I Cannot telkeittpAnathdir'a. time to tell. But I can asarlifif on that the nearly blind English woman did not rnoin with blasphemous Old 'Alowley any More, and that tbe , blue-drilling gaper frock gtive way to something better, and that grave little 'Shocky evens dahced with delight, Audi tleettited, tbataiod, hadn't forgot, though thetightlriar do had., And Mrs. Matilda White re- Marked. that it wawa shame that the .col lection ter amp/or ut a.Aiethodist sacra mental servieeelroutdbogiven tea wo man who was a member of the Church of England, and like as. ot never sound ly ixniv orted 1 And Shocky sluptin this mother'a erne and prayed God not to forget Eltannab, while shocky4 ) 4lollter - knit tit44ings for the store dh turd tit*, and day end bight Abe prayed and hived. The Sunday that Ralph spent in LoW isburg, the Sunday that Shoeky spent in an Earthly Paradise, the :jundav that Mrs. Thomson spent with Shoeky -in stead of old Mowley, the Sunday that Miss Nancy thought Was "just like heaven, - was ,alue,,ati eventful Sunday, with Bud Mewl.. 41e had long adored Miss Martha in his secret heart, but, like many other giants, while brave enough to face and tight dragons, ho teas a et:W ard In- , the presence of , the women that ;he loved. bet tut honor him for it. The man who loves a Woman truly, reveres, cam her nrotoundly, and feels abashod.iti her presence. The man who is never abashed in the presence of woluanhopd, the man who tells hiClote .f . vithotittA e n treinor, is a heartless, Shallow egetlSL Rnd's nature was.not j,1M0. - ',::But' it we deep, true, ametliadrk. 1,44 /Mei** Hawkins Was thealitekVixonten. Wha vvas he that hri - ehtstdottillPillf tik` tier? • l ~And yet on thatStiDdaY, tviLlill hierip 7 ; ph:XL:inn carefully boinitfp; with Salt cleanest shirt, and with his heavy boots freshly oiled with the tat of the raccoon' he started hopefully through fields while. a ith 811Uw w the house of Squire I:Lsw- - : isms. When ho started his spirits• Wer e, high, but they descended exactly-1U titti-1 portion to his proximity to the °Tucker his love. Ile thought Intaselft well enough. He wished his'shoulders were not, so square, and his arms net: so Motif. -- fie wished that lie . ,littd -book-tar nin' enough to court in nice.:l4:WOrdiS. And so, by recounting his owiidetielen taes, tie succeeded in Making: himself feel weak, and awkward, and generally good-for-nothing, by the to lisvalke - d, tip between the lorig rows of hollyhocks to the Squire's front thier„ to tap at which took. all his remaining strength. Miss Martha rtruiveif her perspiring 10% i2r most graciously, but this only eouvitimil Rod tM?rtl than ever that she was a superior tieing. If she had slight ed him a bit, so as .to awaken his cum. , ba tail yen ess a little, his bashfulness would have disappeared. It was in vino that Martha inquired( about his arta and complimented, Las I I.,,nrage. Bud could only think of his, feet, his clumsy hands, anti his slow t , mr ie. lielllll4Wored le monosyllables 11 , 1111.; his red silk handkereinel- dili gently, "Is vdtlr arm iniproviugr asked Miss Hawkins. , "Yes, I think it is," .alc3 Bud, hesti/31 crossing his right leg over Lis left, and Vying to get his inns out. of sight. "'lave ynn Initrd from Mr. Pear son L ti(4i, IVI, "Ni, I auFbsvered Bud, roam. ving his right foot to thu dour again, bo caw,e it I,wit.erf--40 big, and trying to namii his left hanctintObia pocket. "Beautiful sum he, isn't'?" anid the. "Yea 'tis,'' answt NJ Bud, sticking his right flint up 4M file rung of the chair and putting lifer ht hand behind "This route looks like 'the snow' cre have at the East," said Martini. ;Pit snowed that way the tune i waswas ' lo Bqs• thoz-," , ' - Did it° ' said laud nit thiniflag'ialr, tl, (+snow at all,,bil s thinking how ..,aueli better he would hive appeared 110 be left his area and logwat home: '.., • "I suppose 7%tr. -- flartsooltirorlcrrinr horse to Lewisburg'" "Yes, he did ;" and Bad hung both hands at his sal, "You lt "Vo Nverosr ry liihd.:: • t i, This set Uila . heart :i 4. 1 v logs el e cho could not ihiy -strythhim but he ked eloquently at Miss ljaw k ins, itllew: both fei t under the chair, and rammed his hands into his pockets. Then, sudden ly remembering how awkward he least look,'lie imintslintely pulled his hands out again, and erhssed his legit. Whop was a silence Of ia.tew minutes, •dttring whieh ilud.inadel, up his mind to do the most desperate thing h could :think of -to ifeekare his love and take:the:don- Asequipsees. ' ' ' ' Yon see, Misi .llliWitins,".ho gnu, forgehing - bobte end' lists ill his ony, "I thought air 'how I'd come oars here to-day, and'!—but here his heart stalled 'him utter ly—"andi- - Pot- ---- .Y"..' - ,.4 rni glad to see you, Mr. leauer.. " "And I :thought I'd tell you —" • Mar-' :tha was sure it was conling'now . ; for ' Bud was lb dead earnest, "and Illipug,ht I'd Just. like to toll you, of I onlyknow'd how to' toll ft right—" hero Bud' , got frightened, and did not dare olosb the semence as he had intended—"l 'thought as how you might like to know—or rimier I warded to tell you—Mel—the -that I—that we—all of us—think—that I—that we are going to haven spelliti'- , school u l'bewsday night." - ' • "I am real glad to „hear it," said the bland but disappointed Martha.; "We used to have spelling-schools at the East." But Miss Martha could not re member that they' lad them 'ho Best ing," . ILard as it is for a bashful man to 'talk, it is still more difficult for !Mu to close the conversation. Most men like to leave n taVornble irnprewdon, and a bash rill man is alWari wafting with the forlorn hope that some favorable turnin the talk may let him out without , abso lute discomfiture. And so Bud stayed a long time, and lion - he ever did getaway he never could tell. Mr Emanuel Pat terson Mr David 11111 Ja., A sinew, rare Mr Liankm MrSichke 4 •Squar. haukins "this is too f o ott u uo that n Wick b e Keerful hoo ybo an yore familly tacks cider with fer peep! wont Stan it (oo hey the Mon wat's sportin the wuns teat's robin us, sported hi vur Fokes kepin kumpue with 'em, u:been a ossifor ov the Lau, yor Ild toil been mi_giek yor Barn tu. - sd Tat;kite:Neither id present." 444. This letter accomplished its purpose. The squires spectacles slipped off sev- 11.c.(14e:+, the Frithld of Sinners dies," Cil AV'T Ell! XXV U CHAPTER XXVI A LETTER AND ITf4 CONSEQUENCES ibeltdjusted. It he, liad heels threat._ lied per:WO/Lily he Weitlithot haVehHh6. l it so,mtich. But the hay-stacks were Or to Mtn than the apple of his ghois ... vThe barn was . More precious thin s wig. Anti I. • vittikipitialle touch Bud Ina ten ..,_ . a . vingelthilb later egttFSig . ire's weakness far better il li e n w ew re tlto ba sr n illing-berk.. To ' Mormon"' hay- gloss -ad t at ! ill i t IC outited Indinq pp Shp ylit),„4.Vl,Urnell % as too much lb/ Ille VAWKlZineart3 to. tend. Evidentlk thedapger was on the ide of his blew,. But how should he 4ttenee Martha 4:11:4 . p Bud ? NI did dot vat ha , stifellithatif a ighly as shad,iii% 1 . .eatii I h of think the now red barn, with the great Mornion press inside and the gal loping Indian on the vane worth halt so Much as a Inoralp t ielp e t 9p. ii „ rid hearted action. Mee a; i 1 1 hi have sactiticed anything rather than for- Sake' the'veor. -But Squire Hawkin's lips shut tight over his false teeth in a way that suggested astringent purse litrhigs, and Squire Hawkins could not sleep at night if the new'red barn, with -the galloping Indian on the vane, wore in danger. AI artim.tattat be reacheatihmo how.- , , ,, - : So, many adjustings of that most ad justable wig, with many turnings .of that reversible glass OP( tese.irela" to frighten Martha y e int mar .that he had been threatened, and to make . her understand, what it, cost herWWII. to understand; that she must tuiri , the' bold shoulder to chivalrous, awkward ;Bud.. whom she loved moist tenderly; partly; lierhaps, because ho did not re, ..tnlnd her of anybody Nitta ittineratt Abe .st. .1.- . ;q - - .IT Tuesday evening was the fatal time. Spelling-school was the fatal oeetteloo k Bud was the victim. Pete Joneabad his revenge. For Bud had beep all the even-, lug trying to muster courage - eneugh' to offer himself as Martha'h ,escort.. He, was not encouraged by 'the Pact that lie had spelled even worse thee usnal,while Martha had distinguished! herself :bid holding her ground against Jeems Phil lips for half an hour.' , Bat: be acteeedid his courage to the sticking place, not by 1 quoting to himself! the , aftg.at . "Faint heart never won fair lady," which, in deed, he had never heard, but remind? )ing himself that "ef you don't rusk noth , in' you'll neveugit uethin'." So,. when the apolling- school higt ' adjoutted, ho sidled up to her. dnd,leoklogdreadfully 1 solemn and a little foolish, he so*: "Kin I see you safe home ?"'", • And she, with a feeling ghat her uncle's life was in d auger, and that his salvation depended upon her resolution—she, with ' 'a feeling that she was pronouncing son- ' I tence of death on her own great hope,,l answered huskily: "No, I thank yoti." If she had only known that it was the . red barn With the Indian on top that was in danger, she would probably have let the galloping brave take care of himself. It seemed to Bud., as ho walked home tn °railed, disgraced, disappohoted. kr . less, thatallAhe wield. had...genie Wn in a whirlpool of despair. "Might a knowed it," ho said to him self. "Of course, a amen gal like Mar. tha a'n't agoin' to take a big, burly,blun dodo' fool that can't spell in two sylia - Lies. What's the use of tryin' ? A Flat Crielfer lea FlatCricker. You cap't make nothin' else out of him, no more'nor you can mak a China hog into a Berkshire." CI4, , APTED xxvii 'A: Joss AND A GAIN • • Dr. Small, Silently,' 'attentive, basidll ,- ous Dr. Small, set himself to work AW bins up the wounded heart of Bud., Means, even as he bag houp4l up his bro ken arm. Tho flattery - a ifs line ;3,44, ivllial ( looked at Bud's tuusere.s so ad- miringly, which gave attention to his lighest remark s yiss, not, .14ast on t , young Flat CregilrlillrelMet at least Pete Jones showed no Inclina tion to revenge himself on Bud. Was it 'respect for muscle, ocylas i; Mau : onee of timalPe 'Ae tidy' rate,' the etihi centrated extract of the resentment, of Pete Jonbs and his clique wasbow ready to empty itself upon the head' of Hart- - sook. And Ralph found hinntelf in his dire extremity without even the support of Bud, w hose good resolutions seemed tb glve way all at once. There have beeu Many men of culture and more favora ble surroundings -who ‘, lutve„theown themselves ea-0 , 14030S •000ebblatio,M , As it was, Bed quit school; avoided Ralph, and seemed more than ever un der the influence of Dr. Small, besides becoming the Manisa; of Walter John: son, Small's student and Mrs. Matilda White's son. They made a strange pair ' —Bud with his firm jaw and silent can nowtwinner, and Walter Johnson with yig 111M t lt chin, his nice cravat ties, and gene :dandy appearance. 'Tote the desefidd jai& darkest Irak c oy Ittly - fiat? * . a..4115t YrfttD ritt- ' gredlint. in ...Ralph's cup. In vain he seaglik an interview., Bud always eluded him. 'While by all:Ahe faces about bins Ralph learned that the storm was getting nesn,r to himself. It nught-Aer; if it had-Only been Pete Jones alone, t might .blow over. But Ralph felt sure that the .relentless hand of DI. Smalt.was present in tit his troubles. And he had owy to luta:cult° Small's eye to know how Ines tingthahable was a malignity that burned siisteadi/y and so quietly. Bun tht-re I) no-cup of unmixed bitter -1303. With an iiinoteitt man there is no tight so dark that some star does not shirr. Beside his 'religious faith Ralph had one strong sheet-anchor. On his re turn from Lewisburg on Monday Bud had handed him a time, written on common blue foolscap, in round, old-fashioned bawl. it ran : "Duir :—Anyhnoy who .an do so gooi.l thtng as you did for our Slimly, am not be bad. I - hope you will forgive :me. All the appearances in the world, and that any Wsly says, Can not make rite think you anything else but a good Own. 1. hope God will reward you. You must not answer this, and you hadn't bet ter s.se me agairli, or think anymore of whet you spoke about the other night. I shall be a slave lor thee years more, and thr I must work for my moiler and Stucky; but I felt so bad to think that. I haul spoken so hard 14) you, that I could not help writing this. R e spectfully, " HANNAH 1 . 1105150 N. - To 31n. R. Ilswrstioa, Ess". _Ralph read it over end over .What ele he did with it I shall not tell. Yon want to know if lie kissed it, and put it in his imsont. Many a man as intelligeht and - manly as liartsook has done ignite as foolish a thing as that. You have been a little silly perhaFs—if it is silly—and you have acted in a sentimental sort of a way over such things ; But it would never do for etc to tell you what Ralph did.— NV Miller he put the letter In his bosom or not. lie put the words in his heart, and, metaphorically speaking, he shook that little billet, written on coarse foolscap paper—lw shook that li a letter, full of confidence, in the face an il,fas ol , all the iitlanotics that haunted hlin. If Hannah believed an bun. the 'whole world might di iw , t him. When llaanah was in one sole and t h e whole world In Ike other, of chat acco u nt was the world ? Justice may t, blind, but all the pirtnres of blind cupi4tirm the world can not make Love IfTirel;?-And it was welt that Ralph weigh ed things In this way. For the time was coin,- in which he needed fill the courage the blue billet could give hint. (To BE CONTINUED.) Lomi out for the holiday goods, at Will Smith tic Co.'s, Rochester. dee6-:2t President Lineoln'S Murderer Agttio.—Wilkes Booth has again been seen alive in the flesh. This time a Chi tageeetor is the man that has set eyes on the murtiorer of Lincoln, and a Fort Wayne reporter has interviewed him. "Tell your readers,'; says this veracious actor, "that J. Wilkes Booth, the mur derer of A brahani Lincoln, passed thro' tho city to-day. I saw him myself. I cannot be mistaken as td his identity. I know him intimately for a number of years I have supported': him behind the footlights, and I am willing to make my affidavit that lie was , on hoard the 2:`25 eastern hound train on the Pitts burgh. Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad this afternoon. I NV Et-4 standing on the platform, waiting for a fritald, when.st)d-, &nip attention was attracted b: a pair of eyes looking intently 'at me through the ear window. :The sight riv eted me to tire spot, for t immediately recognized in the person before me the assassin of a President, Vie., dte. CI üblidnie witsziniii.-LAite of the silliest .things a newspaper pub lisher dn do is to offer to Oub his paper with arty other papei or"anagt ¢ ine. '.lt shows that lie has a very peer opinion of his own publication, and _tries to obtain for it a circulation_on:the mrit? of spur other periodical. i.et trOliilp4eri4aild or fall on its own merits. 't tit is worthy of . patronao it Svill 130 patroidied. is not, it wilt not. The editor who Ta bora, and that Vegallgi n(g1;n4 , 0030 , 1 coed. If ho idles his time:away, and tin be found anOrlaireielsaihluihistillica of business, he will not only lose the re -0004 of the co tnunits; in which he lives, but his pa - ,134..e r opt_a tnis7, orablo , int daoiroti.vivt. 11 0 ' to the wall. " :77 7' n,TNC ER No. ss`-'o' . ; ~;is c sii , i c ,,r 44 ,- ~; ~• ; { :!..roopai-;;••,, t ee • Jap ' -. K . FO fatale Stile, l ' 1 - .l " f/ Youtaitaht. (ireliifohairilf '• • - 3174 Gi. • iiiii!) OD Crat - 6, a i gl oyp inb yti : , DELEiiiii.v:i.aotiltk* : 0 :,'lblotiralito GO'Otlii Paisley , 81 4);04A, - u 'Stripidi ghawia,.: Lace - Citirtaiile. ' ' ' ' "--- Persons visitiiik PitiBliurkh atelibsitedtt fully invite 4 to examine our stock,,' ifit, pris_eft N viltlioilliteMitOVlll 4 o‘ry,iif.- - -4 ! co iwaretemailw.r. , .r. . . ~... ; , . , • Li 4 t:-...:-..-:..-- , t , - • 1 i Ttilel . tr ,,,,..„,...,,,,,;,,,.. „.. thft, oui il Aitigiiigenhiet 9 eollol' ceived a tdraitiMi l Itoni-Vhcatland; . 4 in hip to look out for one Ni(illlant, Era' is (or 4i,ojeo.mi l battoeM EW fro \: trunk',bfebkiiiii-hodia'h - bu m p g to IV: tily and whb"hatlef lotMd*Min":Withsl6ooeine I Cook eouaedetdtkartbhallmitaabd4J the nest-tnorning,tad.thesatigiirititmief , Lendeei liae, fellow ~in a house in W.est New Castle, iffe , urfret lullollteillbasellf l - , ; tak thp Wei litho taw alit tlib back way; - titit'CoOk kalcluaaAratcapterect him t a il t i le g arl ait , iNgamivartwilik=n, =venom, pp mjo i c, .. ~ . A stated • tinkly, , *kW, , n. ft, ,dn ' tbdn'ght asp 'ocanWri w 4 tr i tc Ile was wearing it . 6 bi ' Ile " ( iiiirti !tack to SlottOok toitiuttßatilti B FP 49_ Ah 9 Mercer jail. /%18, is , S vfir! ._u4,,k l 4lu_ WI locality for litai-t 4 44:B„_whel?" UO°Z lB after there. —Neth agatie'Udtettrim' • • _ , .„. ,.. 41 1s ICI U , , Threttugulagt in the tee, Paq Dee. 11 1871: Mikis P'"Oare` her Zanies Mortal:l AitniterliarrySioore Soseph BreCrtiive. Frodolph lit Ranh' Milt Calii,:fineidat John Toitahr: ~ Mimi Iseure , , White U 4 Castle Wold,Deb Sehp,Zinkikalin Tf. ::TAX I4 4s O - )1, - - 1 -.!+ -11 7 - -...., ~__----- . Funs, very _ chene. itt - will 'smith dlt Co.'s. ----.6f16:12*-: Viselaimied tette Post Oftlee at kraus James M Adderiton Isabella Batto aloe Burns, , Miss Lina Berry - cJaciab Berry J Clark Gross • , r 'Mrs Susan griali blrs L C Bay* , , John Ilenalt Good William Hamilton PIT 1 nksTinvnship,slaughterm4, last !isfek, three pigs, which and4r4isteg,atd weigh pbundm. Th ;Were IrotnAhOwitliVi , ter, and wercs i hbont 0110- 7 0141 , W34 - * killed. _ !rle::," • Ttsoksglion# in Beaver bytiti, aloyJng ttp of Eit siness places, „ a ftpryteeilltt, several of the churches; analbsithe usoil , dimoolltitin of turkeys, chickens, ducks, itc., on °cautions uf,this,chitiacter. We have heard *filo irAparatileyeaults frpi ever eating on that day, tiubjtidge that headaches, ellowpareibut Au444l4trion the succeeding 4tlh eoflattment fiartitiatt Ili Olf PPY - 1 aician in Sioux Citj,i lowei,)Usei an 'obit= meut, mad&of ettaretsti and lank. P re ' iretittAtting In small 'pot. l'hie plied freely over the race, hind*, and i neck as soon ; 1a: the-disease la .distin guished, and continued "synito toms of stipPerative lletfet turn! ilesited:i The application allays the itching e and seems to shorten thqdtKl4,o4 of the &s -ense. and leaves the patient without - a blemish, the eruption, protected by the ,etntment, not even showing tiigna or itiap4.4ation; the charcoal preventing the inforrof light, tired the lard that *fair. FURS at * r irrSinitl4 Co.'a, cheap. dace-2w A Mercer Mercer county has a village called Fredonia, and although it is net large, considered In the light of Use census returns, it is eepalolo eiflfUlrnishing a sensation after _ . 1 9045 0 t 314 1 1*, 1 4 0 .7..!P7 the matter is 'in thd Mere.* Die patch Quite a sanitation was created In the village of Fredonia, in this county, a few days ago, by the elopement of a black smith's apprentice ! 'a youth about sev enteen, with the wile of his employer, a 'a - ot iina. old enough to be his mother, with a family of some half a dozen chil dren. The young man had been living in the family for about a year, and eve rything seemed to ge off smoothly, un til the unfaithful wife discovered "an affinity" tor. the apprentice stronger than that which bound her to her hus band. So, procuring the services of a woman-in the village to come and live with them, she fixed things up, and she and the youthful James went away and got married, after which they coolly re turned to town. On being interrogated as to why she had acted so, she replyed that it was no body's business who she married, but on learning that the constable was after her, she escaped by getting upon the moving train a hundred yards below the station. The young man's father came and took him homo (and should have cow hided him) but ho gave the old man the slip, and skipped for parts unknown. The blacksmith does not seem to take the loss very seriously to heart, and to all appearaucea, at least, is well satisfied with the housekeeping of his new cook., InternsHortal Horse Rhee.--Nfr. McDaniel, owner of ' the horse Harry, Bassett, having recei v ed a challenge from F. Gunton, of England, tcrmatch the for mer's horse against Sterling,on the Salk 'Stark et heath, for 410,000, regrets that he is too old to travel ; but proposes Legit Gretton shall bring Sterling—or any oth er horse in the world—hero to test speed on Jerome Park or at Saratoga next spring, for either $25,000 or $40;000 aside with $lO,OOO forfeit. —•-- Fusts at Will Smith J Co.'s, cheap: " The Minerva."—We have s col lection at our (Alice, of old newspapers, some of them printed us long.aso as 1799. The oldest one published in Sea ver, is "The Minerva, which bears the date Dec. 19, taoS. It was published by Joseph Israel and in size is about one fourth of the dimensions of ths.-Auous at the present time. Its advertising pat ronage was quiteelimiteil. James Wil lson was the only person who siivertised dry goods in it. J. Coulter was-Sheriff, and be had three 'males—two of teal es tate and ono of p sonal property—ad vertised. Every Disease as Its Upon this broad f et is founded the whole art and science medicine. That every disease has its curable stage, under proper treatment; there can be uq doubt. 'The Curable period is during the early part of the disease. of comic& 'fbo in curable being the advanced condition— the last stager' To show the precise nature, extent and locality of the disease is ot,the first im portance in the treairrientOS any case. This is precisely the reasen given by Drs.Oldshue, of Pittsburgh, for bringing into requisition the Micnfscope, Test tube, tirinometer, and aLlthe chemical apparatus for the scienWle examination of the urine in all chronic' and win pli tutted cases. The long afflicted have pot been slow to appreciate these scientific aids, and the consequence is, t office is one continued throng or vistients, from all parts of the country, seeking the advan tage of this skill in diagpoals. A knowledge of thaftepropriate reme dy, Jiowever, is quite important, as 'Without the remedy ooadvantage would Le gained by knowinthe disease. Every disease has- remedy. This is verified in the facifthat different wed- Ickes spend their action upon different part* of the,humati sjsitent. 4s , rich particulay disease spends its _pcifidpal baneful Million upon a certain organ or tissue of fho body, according to its peculiar nature, so each particular remedy spends itgoodicinal action upon 'almilsWo organ strAissue, according to , its medicinal qualities. • .lAaving a knoviDdge of the true na ture of the case, as also of the appropri ytq the titict matter o fd import ' Lis is its propewrju.eareparaterun lyosaitteaudedapptios: - bould fighnod,"ltsd'lxtfareaszamprinedaft- icabbyle,thaell physiciansinedicines ; being purluto the hands of the pa ant or nurse. , 3this is done in the o ffi ce of Dra. Old. s ilithkrbfbreo lll Ati one o , All their nillelicinely are compounded and their preepriptions filled by their own special dissection and under their own-supervision. Neinedicinza are passed from. their prescriptions but through their hands. (obit {QED WEEKLY BY mum 6 cc. , -81tteirrepAilw.e. Ne:,4 Rid Wheat, - - 3 1 35 No. 1 White Wheat. - - - 46 .Neweorn, - - ( 6/0 Old Vernet _ - - , -; - - 65 W y tiot,,,„ -,• . • ' 45 ia . 70. • • -,• • ME ~ r ~•t 167, ki • = MOE Mil I I, - bßivi--TgeZtevebtbei Z),- 1871; at' b ;-EsPies N.L itt Hancock- eounty, West tat ~Y pitei sultana spiry , . • • 41It OE:-Ort lkroveinber •23th, l toock ociiidty,-Wdst Sweatingeo.- I - 3 LJAI4 ? -4lzi Hessver.hiondly,moilong • No4ember 21tb, Moggioi Booth , iilleof - dohn Tatou, in the 414,year of • 4otag,dl r.,_ AUTOlLBLlA*TAullaekson.uoulatytker4 attl i tinNth of November ARS).fra E ." Oti i thaUt lieVt ,rAbssa(;) wife ofSamu 1 esq., of South &Aver tuwrship, Beaver county, Pa., °Sol 09 0 $ 62 / 9 411110 . ' JptiNSTON:. ,2 -4iithnteth of "N ovetubet, • 1871,, al.litaitatidem* in Chip , jews tp., . ; Bitaya;•,, admit,: •P 4 .M James A. 4° 1 4 4 0 411 1 01,4 43 sF.ears. " Illißeenatheous. , .1` 4.miltiali r ai if Fiiddou inscrueston r t re ktkRPER'S BAZAR. . it b really' the oolit Illuetrated chronicle: of full ton in the ronutry. Its supplemeuti aloud ate Worth the stabseriptten price of the paper. White folly maintaining its position as a mirror of rash idri, It also contains etches. poems, brilliant es says. daddies general and personal gossip.--Bos ton Saturday Erentayt Goma& There 'tterer was say paper published thlt SO delighted diei heart of woman. Never mind If it eqt u a new bonnet; It will sate you ten times the ce to the household economy it.teach eaCe.Journal.es .The • young lady who bays a stogie number of Barper.'s Bazar ta made a subscriber for . Thidltaran is excellent Like all the perledi which/he Harpers publish, it is ranker. ideal well edited, and the class of reaticrelor whom It is intended—the mothers and daughters in eve. rage families—cannot but profit by its good reuse and good taste, which we have no doubt are, to day, making many homes happier than they may Den before the women began taking lessons ouai and household and social manage cant *one this good-natured mentor.— The No lionarirM • trf:J. titijalB:r-lIA/IPELeff Hazen, one year 44.00 Jt Alt tetra Copy of either the _Magazine, Weekly, let -Bigger, will be supplied gratis for every Club Iktbi'ciibers at $4. each, in one reMiltanCe; 'ar b oSPCOplee for Pa. without extra copy. Natietiptiony to'llarper's Magazine. Weekly,. 'sod Bazar, u) one address for one year. SIU or, two of Harper's Periodicals, to one address fur one year, $7. Back .titunbers can be supplied at any time. The four volumes of IiAIIPEIVIS Bazar, fur the yearailStßebli, '71.1 and '7l elegantly bound in green morocep cloth, will be sent by express, freight prepaid, for $7 each. e - postage on Harpers Bazar 14 ceuts a ''sthEb must be paid at the subscriber's rit. Stildress, HARPER it BROTHERS, New uoviatiliv ME .. 1, . COAL and NUT COAL .1W SALE. The hblaererined le operetta , a COAL BANE oaMeEhiley's Rtin, shoat han s ‘vai between Ha etteateta.nd Batesville, where he wilt he glad to - • ttreters for lump or out coal Orders can aloo be left at B. Mulheles, In Bridgewater, or at JetirrPervls• to Beaver, or at the Aeons °Mee or et the realdence of ,the undersigned on Marketstreet," Bridgewater. Coal on th e platform at all [lmes. Coal delivered at abort : notice.— raring =Or on delivery, Prk:ea as towns the low est. 1.1.15-4/ J. C. MOLTER. MPH URINE #1 CO. 77 & 79 Market, St. nvite the Attention of etose buyers to ;theft cx tenelvd line of Hoisery, Gloves, Gent's Furnishing Goods, Underwear,. Handkerchiefs, • Corsets, Hoop Skirts, • Laces, Lace Goods, Buttons, Braids, Tapes, and Notions of all Kinds. Millinery and Straw Goods, Hats, Bonnets, Flowers, Feathers, Velvets, ,Velveteens, Ribbons, Frames, Ornamental, etc. AT LOWEST EASTERN PRICES NEW GOODS EVERY DAY A.'l - F N Rochester Building Asst No. 2 Starte ,Meetin g Et cry Wednesday, at 7 P. M. AT A. SILBERMAN'S STORE, VA TER ST., I?OCHESTER, PA First weekly payment dne and election of a Board of Directors on December 6th. , 18:1.. We take subscriptions HERMAN SPEYERER, , JACOB WACK. ED, KELBER, lABR. SILBERMAN. Rochfster. Eb.. Nov. 15. Itt7l.—noyls-4w. CHEAP FARMS ! FREE HOMES Union Pacific Railroad A laud grant of 12,060,004) ACRES of the beat Farmiiii and Mineral Lands in America.. 3.000,000 Acres of Choice Farming and Graz ing lands on the line of the toad, in the State or Nebraska, in the Great Platte Valley, Not; for sale, for cash or long credit. Therm lauds are in a mild and healthy climate, and for grain-growing and stock-raising, unsurpassed by any In the Untied States. Prices range from $2. to $lO per Acre EMBEDS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS i;500,000 Acres of Government Land Be tween Omaha and Nebraska, open for entry as Homesteads only. • SOLDIERS OF THE LATE WAR Are entitled to Free HonaeAteada of 160 Aereq, within railroad limits, equal to a DIRECT BOUNTY of $4OO Send for the new edition of descriptive pain b• let with new maps. mailed free everywhere. Ad dress. 0. F. IM7IS. land Commissioner U. P. R. R. Co. _Um ' Neb, sept6:3m PRING AND AILTD3III3D. GOOD9.4The 1 , 3 andelelgced begs leave to Inform Ms Mends and the public genendly4, hat he has jtlid received a new stock 01 goods', of the latest styles for Spring and Sommer wear ,which he offers at very modem rotes. G h:IVTLEMILVS' F GRNIRIIING GOODS, CONSTANTLY ON HAND. Clothing made to order on the shortest notice Thankful to the pobile fort past-Roots, I hope by close attention to business to merit a conthan &nee of the same. DANIEL mi,LER,AL BRIDGE ST.. DIIIDOEIVATER, mar 24:tf J. D. RAMALEY'S OPE 4 Hat House, GENT'S FURNISHING EMPORIUM, No, 04 Fifth Avenue, The Best Goods at Lo4*-est 30oode sent to any address, on approva nuty24-Iy. ~~~~ #4lll IMIN LNotice.s of the Press ALSO, WHOLESALE ONLY. 5c09.0-3m On the land of the LOOK HERE., ANT> MUOlifitla 1gt1:1 Prices. 1 XECIIIII,I3V,-1110111011Lettere. tests -IL/ meatary on the - estate of Daniel flats, Lite of the borough of Beiver, dee'll... ri b4rfs,ll/oon. Rant' ed to th e undersigned; betide fl nereyi MOW 10 all parties ludebted to told estate to make Mom , 'Mate payment, amt to those Wring elalumagatast [Sesame to praseut !hem properly aathentleated foraetAlement. SIDS. ANN IKIRT. ituviAt - , EllEtlE-1.1( NOTICE. dtaertiftoettako thus opporttusity_of • .L-fornitatate n , pobtlethes them Wire Ifers7, It Or. Y V 6 g111.1; ti bow enuttleted anti in su 'maul olpeistkni. Veristeie! an lelottitt Abel& 'lke river, wishing to cross without their testras ‘ milk be accouttoodatod with stabling tree of chit*. ,lharise week dill: the Vent wilt bit op crated- it all talon- . 9n Sabbath , oil i still be emptily' to etoPelifl-F!tumb•goinit people and fan .Tirti L i da' t itE lease this: eisok-ilde share tO mi n titer before I altttlet. This levies plenty of time to erase A c river and procure their tickets before the cars lea Se. The patronage of the public la re . spatially solicited. • • norEstet) ktAXWELL CO "Thi4ussition hel ablyt kiddias t hibestag he World." etinect Work • • 'ei HARPERS MAGAZINE. , • Notices of the Press There are iew intelligent AMeriCall families in lOWA Ilsatmsn's Maoszt.sta would not bo' an Se. pteasted as& Wetly welcomed gone. These is - u 6 monthly Magazine on lutelligeot readlag ;mai ly can lean afford to be a:ll4mm. • Many Magmata are accumulated. Itarrrstra fa edited. Anemia notl.Magatitte that Is printed which shows more latelligttut Patna expeucreil on its articles and.me chanical exoeittlon. There Is not a cheaper Mag azine published. There tit not;confessedly; :amore popular Magazine In the world. —Netspglput lic.medead. ,laietoaltory of Mom:aptly and history, Ment ion!, telenee and art, uneqoalled rdaY Other American panic:Mein. • • • The volumes are as valuabierm a mere work of reference u any.eyelo pmdia we calk place in out Ithrertes. Hammes 31Aokause is a record at travel evefy where Once the, how of ita mintbliptirnent. Livinge time and G*01:1 Cumming in Africa, Strain among the nes, curd' Was Browne falba Rut, tip.e on Om 3Mo and illargregm on thedianirm-!-Mileett, itu cent.travelers of note have ietn - theirmont Im portant .direoverfes reproduced.in thatepages.— Moot of our youngerand Many 01 oat OIM Writ , era And hero their literary biography. Oar artishi ace the beat evidermea of their geniaer and the moat enduring op:timer , ' or :theft work in the Magazine..—.N. Y. Mondani. /a, la WIC of the wonders of journalism edi torial management of Ilairaries.—Tae Nation, New York. Subteteriptitip.fte.— - OV4, TERMS:—Harper's Nagai:as, one year, $3 60. An &atm Copy of other the Magazine, Weekly. or Bazar will be supplied gratis for every Club u( Five Subscribers tit ti each, an one remittance ur Slx copies for 01, without extra copy. klultacriptious to flarpera Naga:int..; 'fleetly and Bazar, to Late addrees r one year; Stith or, two of IlarpperW Periodicals, tn mat stfldf as for ono year. Back Autabers can be supplied at any lime. A complete Set of ni.UPEft'S MACIALEVE, now CollritritlElg 43 YohRmes.. In neat cloth Watling, wUI be sent by ezpress—feetght Men/en:4e of pur chatter—Cut (tt1.23 per volume. Slngle.irobames by mall, postpaid, fa. ClOth cases, tor binding, emits, by mail, postlasid: The posun,te on Harpsr's Magazine cents a year, which mast be paid at the trobstriteer's post tAlcr. atildreeK, 11A.it PER itS, ltew York. nov3w 4, A Complete Practical History' of the Ttmee„,” The 8e.,(, Cheapest, and .110:3t Snceess- Jul Family Paper in the Union." Harper's Weekly. SPLENDIDLY ILLCSTRAiED. ..Nroeicea of the Press. The Maki Neurpaper of our country. Com plete In all the departments, of an American Fam ily Papft. Batters's WSZKLY has earned for it. ,elf a rl ,, ht to ha " A Journal of Civiliza tion.'—'f. 3. Erening Post. The beat pablication of Reclaim in America, and BO far alleZd Of all other weekly journalese not to Permit of .any comparison between it and any of their number. Its columns contain the finest col lections of reading matter that are printed. • • • Its illustrations an, numerous and bmiutiful, be int furnished by the chief artiste of the country.- -Boston Trareler. Heaven's NV =SIT It the brat and met inter esting illustrated newspaper. Nor does ita value depend upon its illustrations alone. ILI muting matter is of a high order of literary merit—varied, Instructive, entertaining and unexceptionable.— A.Y. diva. Supsoriptiono.-1k47,2. TElt.ila—ilarper's Weekly.— year $1 00 An Fstra Copy of either the Alagazie4l.. Weekly, or Bazar will be scipplied gratis for every Club o f Fire Subscriberattit $4 each, in one remittance; or. Six Copies I.r ttlo, without extra copy. Snliserlptions to Itarper'e Alagaziae. Weelly;:; and Bawr, to one tuldwurs for one year $10; or. two of Ilarper's Periodicals, to one adaress for 4:1110 year, $7. Back Numbers can be supplied at any time. The Annual-Volupies of Ilaarcn s Weriz.tx, in neat cloth binding. will be sent by express, free of expense for $7 00 each. A roraplitte Jft, corn. prising Fifteen ;litanies, sent on receipt of cub at the rate of $5 25 per vol., freight at experts" of purchaser. The postage on Harper's Willy is 20 cents a year. which must be paid at the subscriber's pwi.Ht office. Address, HARPER d BROTIIERS, - New York. novftw James I. Brady t Co., COrnor of WOOD ST., & FOURTH AVENTE, Pa. BANKERS, Have for .Sale First Class State, thun ty; Municipal and Railroad Bonds. GOLD, SILVER AND COUPONS! Purcbased on the most favorable Terms. Interest allowed on Deposits made with us, in Currency or Coin, subject to Check, without 11 it ice, GOVERNMENT 5-/0 BONDS, Of issue of 1562, Redeemed. Without Charge. Morey LTA'ned on Government and State Bonds. and other reliable Col later*. JAMES T. BRADY & ('O. HOLDERS OF 5-20 s OF 1862, Which utll be paid off in December, 1871, have especial reason to consider the question of converting them into some other good, reliable security, un less they desire to receive coin for them, or make an exchange at par for Bonds of the nett' issue, bearing at; average • jo s rate of 41‘ per cent: In view of these facts, those who desire to take advantage of a change of Invest ment. into other reliallieToin Secnrities, hearing 7 to 7 30 per cent. interest, should act soon in making thesexchange. tuay3-ly:ch'd oct 11 A.LL sFCTTRX TIES Sold hare our personal' and careful examinatiOn. Whdher you trish to Bay or Sell any kind of Investment, St curitiesi (loomll, or wrile to S. McClean & Co., IF3A.7WHIERS; (Lock-box 137.}) N. 61 Fatirffi Avenue PITTSBURGH, PENN . 11., Financial Agents for the Loans of the Government and various approved Railroad Bonds ; • Drawers of Er.- change Drafts on allparts of the Uni ted Slates and Europe; A General Banking, Brokerage and anamission business attended to. Money ademwes made upon ; approval / nollaterals.i, Checks and :Deposit Accounts ,Upt with Individuals, Banks, Bankers, d Oar poratioile. Interest allowed on Tian octll ;8m Grey, Possiel & Rese, No 81 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburg, Merchant Tailors, AND DEALERS LN GENTS. FINE FURNISHING GOODS. SUPERIOR WRITE SHIRTS nn HAND AND MADE TO- ORDER', A PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED GENTS' FRZE,_ DRESSING ROBES, .S 1 UFFLERS. New Styles in Neck Wear Just Received from London UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY, ENGLISH SILK UMBRELLAS, SCARFS, GLOVES, &e. AU the LATEST STYLES for the hest city and country Trade. oet4:3m rffr Btanke, DUI-heads., Cards, Poster*, dm• ant!! execnetd at tilts office. Bxecutris
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers