The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, November 20, 1872, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ADVEJEtTINEMEN'IIIi.
Advertisementaare inserted at the rate
of $l,OO per square for tirst insertion, and
tor each subsequent insertion 60 cents.
A liberal discount made pn yearly ad
vertisements t.
-
A spac e equal to ten tines of this type
measures a square...
Business Notices ': . set under a head by
themselves immediately after the local
n ews, will be charged ten cents a line
for each; insertion.
Advertisements should be handed in
t, lore Monday noon to_ipsure insertion
chat week's paper;c.-_,s.
BusitteserDirectory.
BEAVER.
FILAGNEW. J. M. 13VCIIAN AN
ACNEW 3 SUCI4AINAN,
Attorney's at Law.
Thlrd Street, Beam. Penes.
Oppofine the Arra office. .
J. V DUNLAP,
at Law_ Utii,.; In (Le Cirllrt LIOUr.r
bugitiet. prompt!) attended Le
maro'72.ly
t 11 1% eue. exi,e
3;.,utra ”t• ate .{!Luce , ulSce.,
t. Is LA IN unp....b. Office
J, .itit.• I hirtl
r l'a
_
, A DLEat..Dvatt..i.t..2lc... over Mr. flair.
over
1 ii;!Uu M el"re, (tune r. h Great CUrc
, • t, .311 warranted t‘,
• ,r., e rue a Ali. • [ liana. 1)
• M h.R.ON tiorne) at-law.K(•dsvi .
io I H tn; !Ur Ml,' I) tft
Int n ein.p Cunningham A. hu,i
.•.a rated to L.1:11 will rccrnr pron.p/ and
• writion. 1e31.1)
B YOUNG, Attune)' ut I-1w a lake and
eov Third et rust of the Court Ilou
prompt!) diletidcd to. ave;;ly
_
it ,itEEkni:: Attorney at Law, °lnv! du
!lord st... th-lud .the Court House._ All busi
. •-•• protuptl!, uttadolod to.. 'jet:, lOU
I , P. KUHN, Afton.) ;It i..21,a CMS t
r• • Ld actor:l ell eel, Bracer. Ps tuarAio,ly.
ME_ N FTT, PIfre.ICIAN 11. ND tq
:ne i. is TI II th paid to trostment or Female
lc,atrme and oence on Third ~.troet,
!of C ourt-I.lou.pe aprlT7l.l)
i \ ItY ME.ItZ, Mailulaviorer and Dealer in
I 1 awl (loiters. Mali ea. Isept-cly
), ' 1 Eli tsitwitt., tivl.4o
1) Apothecary, Main Pt.
actull} eutui.4,undrd. t,e1)1.;1)
Etc
• 11.4 IOA I E, Dealer tu patutr. 011,glase,nails,
1,14te-gt.o.. glns.es, frames, Larded
tio•Aer--eol. an , .l fancy luw Is. Falls e‘ ts t
Brt,Orn
\ - LstN Lit &13,1,:iti11A51, - . anufacturersofcar,
but gi,a6. spring-wagons, buck-wag
• a,a sentries of every description, Bridge S..
pract , cal workmen. Successors to Georg.
marbly
• , , _ r _
1 • LAS GN EiTiER, d..alttr in %Watchis, Clocks
l' • ~r.tl Jeuelr. It , pairing neatly executed.
..]..,y. near rails-el. thovlll-ly
~ V NIPI'FAIT, Wiser - .5.,. Confectioner • ke
el • , r••atli, IJ) rters and Game in season. ' Bade.
. \t s. \Viddinzs, Sc.. supplied noel
ty sNirfil. opposite Press °Mc., kirunavvlty.
I •i)l,llVr in the best building hardware.. gnu—
• and patty. which hr turuhdles to contract.rs
~.00ers cheap for cash ttct2:3 71 ly
11 • x, F ME.I'l, Bridge street. dealer- in fresh
:ueal and Int cattle, Will ,islt fiesta er tin
....,..,. Thurs.:ay and Saturday , of exch vivid:.
.g•12.7,'71-ly
•t. ("NIA - Dry Girtid -, ,, Urocerros. Non. •11,
,; i...wurr. S. Ilte,t prier rwr .7,wr , 1
produ, ge•uerraly
l rah i.roat: why ..N.,•1,1;
( • • W IVI ER. V. nwilmak, Jew rik, nun I ),,
Li •2".:4 I:road w e•-•1127 . ;1 II
11 Ni II Nit: A 1)••al , r iu Itt, T. Ir.
,lunar Family Grurcric,.
,•. tx.deri ware., ware. Sc Ili ad
•i,.nr Flitl,•-•••t ~.,1311. 7 I Iy
• It 1.22 Brow], ay. -Nov.
I;rl:2:hßyn. mattes tr..:lttm•nt of chronic
tLIIII female weskrte•e., a tr,..CilittY eon
'anon free to the poor e, er) 'Oll/du) (row I to
k. p M.
l'hot • 1, -rapt) lin I iery
• • •,I I ' A
,01 eN••C,11;11. 4r
11 A"
I. f i ;,' .
11l
=EI
mon
).,, roo.. his , :.ll RANI a ndst. ti e
) : • 1111.12 1 , 4411•14. 4.44414 , 44 41 “ ith
r I , 444 , 1 to 41,1 • i ly
=I
I - \ Est r.
n 'll3 I Frinr- m Is-- .0, is!
E 111.0 M
‘,11.1.11.AN LI K .IL II
,55,5.- 55.5. ist , ..ticlAZl: 11 , 1 Emil
rfl ra cs,,gr- , It N..
tw.2 - .: •.1
) t,.1
I • • is h k••• A L •••
. 1 ...• •4o ir‘
rtte .11,t1 II cr,.. , n 1.41, i •
' I C. 11F.
- Sin ,
'tvi;il.l,7l
. fr,m
I r P.ipt••
.r7e2.!
El
RI .tVEit V
‘V ‘• I. Wl:h . '
• NI , .
it r
BIE
a, Kioair
- it r 1 I /
it it ".•
zr,i, ly
111
Vl{ 11)i; Ell AT I•:K
‘l4lll.tztc -, :ir ,.
‘,3,••r y
.1,, In ( L
• 1:111 aztzl l 71 1)
- , <
iill F. , , , FP, and
•
• tt , ,tl fuld nilccr Watehep,
11, je1,1571
F 3-!), .1...0i1, Tail,
nrl.7ncl.
• -• Itrl.lt wn'• r, l'a ft
- r Eli. 1
• NA ttri tilt lint, lll
l• - . ri st-p I I.' I.( IP( • !••••.'i .! I 'Ft i
I 1:, - r Ur ) 111 IT, Cap.. k•
1111 itll.ll7l(lllTllll:+Gnat's',Ate. I 1,1•• , 5,"'l
I'l ••“ - '011. 1 ) r .t.-1.1 , n.ina!!!
rinut! , _!!
F A ... of
f
" ‘ N t' V. \ r ‘ o - 1 1 ; I N rBrr; Nti(l
• TON I arts, lt s, i• rit ii , I ‘11 . 1: 4 LI ) 1 .!./. l i'r
• 1.•,••••• ••• 1/4 IV ',IV I' .•
uk 1• . 1 II E VEFI it E!!!. 1
1 / „ 1);:v F:1111I,) 31.1(' I 11--:\ E
NOW MANUFACTURED.
,11 I - . \ NEI) 3, 10,
~,ucce. s ,ors
" ;" And si till if it
• and ~.tiernlsts Frc
••61 , 1k C,WINI ) whom ur will •ili• Ili•
• • . in s • art-1111k i,,rapnunned En ail hours In
RoChe•lef
I'. Fifth A'. , In
1•••NIIT .1 1 ,4 1 ik k F ‘ 11.4 Dry4....00d5.
" • . 3 Y
Brighton Paper Mills,
fsakrrc „.„
rI.I M ...11, t ,
• N }` , ir' BEAVER FALLS, PENN'A,
I,•inct,
110C11 ESTE R
\ a p • -
„
,r , ••T .1
MEE
Fa.htiot,ahle
urn,hltg lluod , Vll.l
• , N 1
t,,t1.1..1 1,41
I '1( -WAN! BUY 11 , Mannlact,,,rr ‘,l
11. n. Vietualking awl tior.,builig
1 1 0 -I, he.ler. Pa t..• 11 4t.
1 . 111 , 1. E R .t. I 1 I
t.r.rerwo hii.l Nll.l
• ,t A
1/: 11
J
;I A \ K Dral , r to 11,.r, t
111:11 rtm.
01 , / li4lCht , ter b . 22. y
:11,10 az I.uw.mtrb Nr. ..f
111 - ndo• ordt . r;
dOTIC PrlCt,
,ter Pct 23n 1 , . I
I 1. 11. \tau Mai wrrr and
I 1.1 ttht,S,
' T•(•;.:4
111 N NEN 1),";11--:
- comportzitled SVakfr at .
~p 11.1)
r. kt F. It S NUNtt... holevai* 1),•al
Groerrie*.Ylonr Yrrd t.rettlt
..!r..n S. Nall* Cot Water S dame..:,
1. tt S ell Contr. rtor* liD.l
.•ro !titer* tti rt,1141. Dttorr: Shultrret
t ,nit , r Loth Sc 12ocheAter •,rei2l.ly
• itt t‘ LE Lt W ILLI ANS. SllCCerporet
• - A co . Dealer* in Sacced.:.and
• - I..ch R ,, tio . •ter ..P .2 S• Y
I HC••••• l.i EltY !•• 1i1.F...t. CC;•AI. AI[1).
• It *tall.Ol and , thitt nv..r .. - I*.ly
' ' F.: propro.tor-ol
,nd to- cOrllni.qtarour nrci .trt
IS II I).•ptil ~ t :19.1y
BM
.1.1.11{,11; ;,•,.
.md pr. 'nip.' V
t,.. r Pa , 1y
ALLEGUENS tITV
I A\ Ei,trir•: Ain :.n n:4l,
, t ie a ..pectrt!ty 4 officr.
1„, A :44::1 4-41 1:11. ;-••:.:1
VANE"' HT
ft!'• ELI S (J.- Dei:rn , II
al. 1., 11,-/ • Wlll - 1!A. ,(•r0C1 • 1102 4 .
11 g!,,i I,lf t• paid for (vino ry
1 , . 1 y
4 11%( ELLANEOUS
I I: V' • I . Bracer county.
and Inan,fl LUNIIF-11 Of 101
- • .1 -der ,aut.7l y
•
MEI
\u. t()NIE, H.
. r rts, ••• 0. It.t.l!‘
h tS'. P. )11 !1.1 11r.11,111•14. to tht
.• • try Oflicr r
r ave. 111,1.tdu
TED EVIMIEDIATELIV. 0
PI'HENTICE:• to tnt, Irpolter BUEIt:C , S.
• -,41 .ppIT wttttout gi.4l4ll4.l4Tence.
t,RANT. Now .... Ye
5 FOR ?L RICH PANELED SOLID WM.,
Q NUT CASE ORGAN, ‘ ,1,1- 4 h .44 4.444
I,c‘c Factory
(Ind hand Melocleonn
- 4 - .1.7.n: 1! IroU) VV . ) rIIAI pU:kr.l. or
* Moderate 1.1'1a., Call and Clamthe. at
niruir room' , of
( . 11.kitiA)TTE NE.
\ 'tztt: AN. :1,•
t Prince &Cu urgent. eepl..,rn
rff - Lar.tu i&r sale at this Oka
Vol. 54—No. 45.
J. D. RAMALEY'S
OPERA
Lat Louse,
GENT'S FURNISHING
EMO )R,I UM
7 7
No 0-4 Vittla A venue,
Tt►e next Gooch - at Lo we'd
to .11y lidtircss, nn rtppr. , val
mas - 24 ly
SPEYERER & SONS
n. LARGE :ind SELECTED
NEW GOODS,
LOWEST CASH PRICES;
C. - 1? OC7 IE - 11 rES,
BOOTS ttii, SHOES,
I I A & C A.l 3 ' ti 4 ,
WIIIT E LEADS.
4NP .1 I._l it'l7 .N 10' K 4 Oil.
=I
CANTON CITY
141 11A Mt ELS FA I 1:1,( )L'R;
1.; lio; lii iii N I
lUMMIIIII
:0 E.-
1)O KEGS Wii6;./.V; /LS;
1(ITON ()1: 1 11EI:1.IN(4
vIil:l . .
AI n 1 1 1
Nl.e nit NV 1'1,1.1.:134,4
RAG ANI ) CARPET
30, I=l
- AN I
A 1!(. I Q l cl At
N Gr( )( ) I )ti'
Fall and Winter Wear.
11 , 1. , • , 111, I,— , •,,
.11 , 0 114-I‘ , r,mri L .1
(1;1 n;)
FOlllO Ill' itA LI:
iLn.I in nark a ni:tnn• r ;t , .1..1 hi
,Is.•
alid ~f
Odl and see us befoiy tearing your
Orders Elsewhere
WILLIAM REICH. Jr.
noiv4;7thly rirtagewater, Pa
W. NV 13 A.ll ,
.Sticres•=or tr) Barker it
noLEI+• LE AN I) RETAIL DEA LIA:
CHROMO LITHOGRAPHS,
Engrarings LillioaaapliA. Plain and Colored. Mo
rogrophs, Passe Partonts, Monleing. and Picture
Frames of till kinds, R 7 Fifth Arenue, 6 l9 doors
boy° Smithfield St,.] Pittsburgh, Pa. imah-72:,1
THE
Miscellaneous.
AN()
PITTSBLTRGH
Prices
Ill.( 1:1'
r,t.lc6. ‘ f
F 1 M THE EAsT, bou g ht at
I•I)SSISTING j
I2V --?"..C>COI3S,
EENS \ H E,
tioLl,my.\ity
ROPE AN 0).%1:1:
N.\II\I:•T~wCK
.1.1 , H , I. FiN: 0:\
1'..41 N . TS
I , IIV .\ Nl} IN (HI.
MEI
lEEMM:I
EMU
/ZEE
COSI
ME
M9l
I:()(JlJ-i/.JL P'
tY. t
.•:.„_
. _
-1" `",•Z ITI..c 7 . , ....!- - s , : ii• '
.7 . e \ '..,-•
./.4 , ...L. •••}l,?"' 0C
- • ' .. ' c-- "" . N..• al Z. e.....'t•
%-• ~,,c4e,„ , 7.
. • ~T: -....-, 7.-1:; ex ...f.,- ~..- ,1...... VI
, /:, ~.... .•,,-. i, V' „ !. , 4;7 1 74 • 7 . .. ' . ..1
-4 ' :7l i ; ' ' ': ,: i.:-.'* . . 4-1 .., •'t . t.- -1 :-7 ',:-',
' . : 1 ' ~ .• -4 - I t. ),, . , : :-:-,
~, 1 - : : - . ...-)4 , ...-...-: ,• • • ; .1-:,-- -2 ,
-- - --
PRINTING
11.4 NN/L LA .
ROOFING,. BAILING,
Hardware. Glasal. hlraor.
Whole%ale d Retail by
Frazier, Mazur & Co.,
N 2 Third A vrohe
PITT~BI . U'
7ir Knell Int, in ,IrVinn.le
CLOTHING ST ORE
WINTER 01V ti
. 1,
1 - 111 ' _
1 .
A IT cw Stock of Goods,
=IEEE
GENTLEMEN'S FURNIEING GOODS
ALWAYS i)N HAND
Pcisiri~r
Miscellaneous.
!\\" sue s
DRUGGIST
Prescriptions Carefully and Accurcite
ly Cbmpoundexl.
BESTTILE ASSORTMENT OP
Garden and Flower Seeds.
Vaints, 401.115,
DYE STUFFS:
ANILINE • PIES OF ALL COLORS;
GLASS & PUTTY.
Special attention gtven to Pecare the beet quality
of lamps and Lamp Trimmings, Lanterns &c.
A Large Assortment of
Ton, ET A ItTICLEs, SOAPS,
1311 US HUS &
I' TEN '1 E C 1 N Es,
Main Str9et, Gelver Pi. iDec7. '7OtL
5, % Zti 1 3 1
VA $)
Bridge Street,
BRIDGEWATER, PA.
IS WEEKLY RECEIVING A FRESH SUPPLY
OF 000115 IV EACH OF TUE FOLLOWING
DEPARTMENTS:
DRY GI- CI C 1 S
Steubenville Jeans,
Cassirneres and Suttinets,
White„Woolen Blankets,
White and Colored and
Barred Flannels,
Merinos,
Delalnes,
Plaids,
Ginghams,
Cobergs,
Lawns,
Water pr4tol:a.,
Chinchilla,
Cloths,
Woolen Shawls,
Illown and Black Muslins,
Drilling, Tickings,
_ Prints,
•
Canton
Snl;ar • Mola',sea, White Silvernripa
Golden and Common Syrups. Mack erel in bar
. rel, and kilt , . Star and Tallow Candler,
...nail Spier., and Mince Meat. Al~i.
SALT
Ilardivare, Nails, Glass,
LOr to. Door Inlets,. Mi:"... Screws.. Table
n bk. SpOnllo, Sidle; Belk, Coal
It Vir. Shovel.. rind Pokers. Nails and (lasm.
shos els. .2. 3 and 4 toe Fork.. Itakee •
and snag., Corn and Garden Hoe.
\V4 )( )1) EN W A It E.
Buckets. Tins. Claims. Butter Prints and Ladles
Liiieed Oil (t. White Lead
Flour.
Boots and Shoes ' , T.
DIES' MISSES' AND CHILDRENS' SHOLA,
Rifle Powder and Shot,
• Blasting Powde and Fuse.
1-'l(lur revci K Qua-enw« - urc
II hetlV) ,00d. delh•ered free of charge
Ity atli-ntion to butducaa, and by keeping
0•11,42111lly on harm a well EL,POI ted stock of roods
"r ot, IPr dill . .. re-at 1:1111* aPuall) kept Ina country
fl,War t •lPOW l SlA:ra."fled hopes in the fixture au to
VA. •-•
ALLEGHENY CITY
`'l' A 1 - 13. I; I LA) IL TS C 4
NV( )4( ) I )—"FI • it:S . INC;
.\ • wet:. Bid tmterj t. Band kaki,. With all join'',
;,1,.t rericty Liu futnndhed on rhort
WILLIAM PE( IPLES.
I 'or. Gratuttn
=MI
rit;. I.XTENIVE• LINE OF
HOSIERY
Sbirt s mrl Irawer?4
Goilts. FinishiliE Googs;
TRIAINIINGs
FANCY GOODS,
and Flannels,
an lo•
MORGANSTERN &Co,
r nbr
13IPURTERS AS .101110:HS
78 and 80 MARKET Street,
PlT7'l3l7eGit.
M N SPECIALTIES t,,r the S:4l7;pli
". 1 ,t..!5.3111
1 4 , lEctimra Nana,- Esher of John l.
I Moore dreocArel Letters testamentary to
estab• of John L Moore. late of Ilanover two
-hip In the 4 -minty of Beaver. der'd. hat Ing been{
;wanted
granted to the subsertber. residing to the town. I
POINT PLANING MILLS,
or Independence. in said county, all persena
ha nig Claims or demands against the estate of
the der...hint are hereby requested to make
i „,a the ,cim, to the uhrterslgli,l WithOtit
nt 1:1 t;11 MOUIIE, 1•1 r
r. 2.3 Lm
Homes Still Larger
F'( THE MILIION! NIANI-F.kuTt-ttEit ~,
,
liar, o k .port unities are now nir,red for P.TUripg , f s'ash, noors,Mouldings,'lloor-bo(trds,
hor, in a mad. healthy• an4„ennyenial climate Weallier,lioards, l'alings". I;rark
for oh. third 01 their came live years nonce
'rut: '...:ATI(INAL. REAL. ESTATE AGENCY ebt, &e.., J.e. .Ilan, s.
ha. , lor pale real estate of every description. locate ...
1 - 11 , I 1 the Middle and :southern States. imprcered
stncA e7rain and fruit farms; rice, rigor and rot. i DE.kLERS IN ALL KIN DS II F' f:tol.
p:au tat !env.. timber and minerat ands.l city. B Eli, Li.TIL SI II \t.L Es A NI) '-. ,
range and rural residence, and business oands;
rn.II , and tllll-1 tab,. factories. Sc. III:11.1)1N i; TIM RElt
IN-ite tor Land Register containing description,
h.-anon. place and terms of properties we have
for sale A ridress-.8. VV. CLARKE. lil CO. hiaNi: :.: pur"litt-ed i lie t heti rritori.ll in
The National Real Mate Agency, tore-I of Mr .!. ( ' A iidt•r , 4 in, owner of the
477 and 119 Il.nna Arentte, Wa.rhingten, D. C. several patients cover lit: r 1 rtain 1111 prove
nvos.i, inents in the emistr:.etion anti joininly • , f
wrath( rboards and linings I r houses and
other huildingr., we are the only persons
authorized to make and sell t ) e 'aim
within the limits of Beaver cotintv Par
ties interested w!ll please obsery et hi,4.
CARPETING.
~ ~ 4' ~
HENRY Mc CALLUM thrpenterA' Supplies (wistatitly Kept
ott Honor.
r)1 FIFTH AVENUE.
12(
I tir.n.l, thy kirm“ as,ortrn , nt 14, be
rtc,y cm, of
CARPETS
Oil Cloths,Mattings,&c.
orttm , prompt) tittetolot to
Carpets, eto .i' at II 'hole:rale on the most
HENRY IIcCALLI—AI
LEMON & WEISE
The old and well-known thin of Lemon t Weise
01 Pittsburgh, Pa., All!nnfacturene of
COM Farifituro & Chairs,
No. 111 Fourth Avenue,
Where they eoritione the business in all Its vari
ous branches. setittOzn
GEM
Flannels.
.13con,
'fable Linen.
Irk!' I,incn
Crash,
l'“untcrpancs
iloiserV,
& Jlii
Groceries
(':IR BON OIL,
In great variety
Late ItteCALL TIM 'BROS.
LL GRAD ES
1:ea.,0,1(11,te
FURAAITUARE.
Ilave P.emovet to
OpOtiete their Old Stand
,
•
, •
,
Beaver, Pa., We4nes***olloo.•,:ls72.
Railroads.
1,) A I 112tIOA DS. —Pirranunou, FT. ric:VNE
Catcato flAttAra.v.--Coultensed Time Table
from Oct. 27th, 1572.
rK&I Gotriu
No. 6.
MAIL
OM
STATIONS. ;IFNI Ex
1 -
Pittsburgh ..I1 145ssi
Rochester. l5O
Alliance ,' 510
Oreellle ~ 64 6
?d0nate1d......:1 8.55
Crestline i tt .. •• 1 1 .11 ')
.*)
Pores, . ...1141.3
Lima Iltlttecu
Forl Wayne. i•. 2)
Plymouth • 4.15
Cbicazo '' TA
Tlt•lNtl 401
No. 8.
MAIL.
EIZEMCI
Chicago... .
Plymouth. .
Fort Wayne
Lima
Fort t . . .
61SA.'tt
tin
1 ettorx
'245
400
4
1130A31
I Nieirm
113
120
4 , 4
I, OW
Crestllnc
"
Mansfield i D
mdl le
Alliance.... ..
Rochester
Pittsburgh....
rifr No. 1 dully except .
8, daily, except Sunday ;
daily, except Saturday and
• F. It. Mialkt.S, Unn
VIAV ELAND 4.t ILA 11.1«),k It.
On and after Oct. 27th, IST2, trains will eat
Ktattonil daily (Sunday,. excepted I As
GOING SOUTH
6T6T - 10 - BtR. M•IL E SP,
fi45A m
Cleveland.
Hudson..
Ravenna .
Alliance .
Bayard....
Wellsville
Pittsburgh
WI
'O3O
I 1115
,159
, , 12.51 , 1 c
3o
I=l
MAIL , EXP . ', ..( Cull
- i
Pittsburgh i 6:10All 11.5sm '
Vi'ellswille ... .IIS. S 5 1 3411 - 1 !
Bayard .... . ... ' 1,10:0 453 I
Alliance .. .. 1 1123 1 517 i 721 A a
Ravenna i:lllttra ' 545 1 nl5
Hudson. .... ....i 1245 .40 1 til i
Cleveland i 155 720 ;1015 ,
MX=
1 eavro. Arrive..
Bayard 12-10 & 630 p. m. I Nllml. 3z00& 900 p.m
6,40a.m. e‘lpm. Bayard 9 - ,45 a p 11:1
lil VER DIVIgION
iaoLNI.I EAST.
MTATIONS. i:ACCOM
Be .... &ZAK lllsoA xl 310px .
Bridgeport 655 11141, 8511 ,
Stetilvreville. .. 657 12.12 pis I 4rd
815 145 620
'Rochester. WO 245 715
Pittebargb 1040 350 K2III •— .
ISOLIVO WE. T.
- -
STATIONS. I MAIL. ESP'S. ACcOld'AcCo3l
,-
Pittvburgli P. ... &WAY 145px 425r1n
Rocheder. 740 245 530
t5O 1845 7OO
Steubenville 950 • 452 MO
Bridgeport........ 1100 550 41145
Bellalr • ; 1110 605 920
F. It IdTBI
er and Ticket
Genera/ flisseng
Mis,-ellanerms.
Now-Goods! Now-Goods!!
A. C. HURST'S,
B hIDG EWA TER, PA
Being lust returned from New York and Philadel
phia, having purchased for cask a Floe Assort
ment ol Divas Hoods,Cassimeres, cassinets,Jeans
and all kinds of goods for gentlemen's wear; with
Hats and Caps of the tat cat Nty
FLANNFA,S ()F EVERY KIND
and ()L()Itl.:11 A LPACAS.
Large Stock of Fall I•Atiawts;
sf . :ATlFS T— .l,l4 l iii' L ei ( " )l/S1
(Jivers:
Embroidery of ail kinds;
Wi..i t'rider%%eur I.duti , ..: an ' (1,
CA Rl'FYl'►
A Complete As.voetlmht hi ereey 1)e.
seelptiort (11 tin-p 1 . ,: lhr bited De
:rig/IA and, Nmer))l qj blt,r,
silited to the Fall
.`sethom; Gast 1.,M)10 , h, hem:-
aml rrlt kinds h( Kill(lemoister,
;IT VERY LOH' PI:IcEs
(;(i-fiTS,OII, 1.(1111-A&TIll.
A h:r;:e .rock. to which 1 in vac your not onbon.
bring determined th rell 116 liihOttirgh
kirtuot! A. C. HURST.
twvll;tl .
1871 Fall and Winter, 1872.
Boots, Shoes & Gaiters!
.1. 1.1. 13()11.1LA.N 113
,VOB. 53 and Tr:, Food Street,
Ila-just received one of the Largest, hest Selected
111111 • 111.71peet Stork.. bi(111011 direct from thii
an ufai tortes for cash, before Mr recent nthmew
In I either, and will he sold at flit low est Neer
-1 and Boston Prices. Philadelphia Cit
Made Goods at Manufacturer' prireq, thus Navin
ireleit and expense
N EW GOODS RECEIVED
Special Indncementa offered to ca.h or Short
Ilnyers. Eaatern hills duplicated A ll tlr
der= f.ano Country Merchaute ymariptly attended
te. a - 1d anti , faction gmarat.teed all and exam
ine nn,' .cork and pricer., at
I;, II ( ) A N 1 ) S,
:"):1 ( NVO(xl til l
IvATEIt,BT, iowIIEsTEIZ, l'A
HENRY WHITEFIELD,
Miss RaClic! glared through her
ntuim shaped mv taclu glasses at the
trim ag, re robed in sober gray.
"Yoti-child!" quoth she. Why,
you're stiCh a chit of a - thing."
"I inn nitieteen,
"What cam you do?"
"A little of - - everything, ma'am'
Patty answered 'demurely.
"What's your nainC."'
"Martha, ma'am, please." '
.Ipparently the cross-examination
that followed was satistactory to
Miss Itachel Penrhyu, far she finally
told Patty she might "conic and
try" at seven dollars a niontii.
"I may go Inane for iny ciothes,
ina'atu?" said Putty, with drooping
eyelids and hands bolded.
"Yes - , but be sure you meet we at
the railroad at four inwiseiy."
Patty promised, and ran home to
Mrs. Peronel.
" here's in girl: " ' . pen. waled
the matron. •
haven't got any. I'm a girl
myself, liessie—at seven dollars a
month, hind —no followers!"
"What under the sun do you.
mean p'
And Patty explained.
"Don't scold, Bessie—now don't,
that's a darling. I'm Caliph Aa
roun Alnischid in disguise, that's all.
it will be such fun! Where's my
gingham dress, and the little linen
collars, and the big bib aprons? For
lay bubble would burst altogether
if 1 shouldn't meet Aunt Rachel at
the station at four o'clock precisely."
What a change it was, from the
swarming, city streets,-radiatingsein
tillations of heat from every curb
stone, to old Peurtizm home, where
century old elms formed a green can
opy of shade, and the clove-pinks
A orlo, - ;2;1y1 ALLEG EN Y. PA and old fashioned blue-bells blossom
-
ed along the borders. And "Mar
11.3CHANDLER. Dentist. tha," the new uutid, settled into the
HAS of encti up an office at his residence m Ito.
cheater, above the Diamond, nest to Dr. A
'1 grooves at once, as if she had?lived
Shallenberger's office Ile revectfully invites I all her life under Aunt Rachel's roof
any per.on wanting anything in his line to call on l tree.
hatistaction guaranteed In all operations.
"I believe 1 am going to like this,"
aug2l:La.
marincr Slhop-Work made to
nr.kr 0v41.1Y
UITI-i-Df.M.)Zillet:l l Z
'co Purchaser. 4,1-
D Y - GOODS
At Boggs & Buhl's
(Mc Car Poplin Alpaca , ..., at
en'. 4—a ileci(l,4l bar:: c.n.
AN ;INIEN:yr: STOCK OF PLASN
Dress 1-Mbries
IN ALL THE NEW SIIADEs
28 . i nt. ocade T.111 . 0(1 ,4 10 31 (Tut-, Worth
50 rent,
LOWEST PRICES r' ,- 11 BLACI"L""
for quality, than any luais,e. in the
BOGGS & BURL.
12*4 St. 4
Gold &Wes "ateheli:
ims
GRAND OP*NING
E. P. ROBERT'S
No. 3.
Nit Ex
No. 7
Pacitx
01911
uns
110ra
3117
U
640
GI 0
710 Am
5:15
:125
145r*
500
310 Am
TSS
0(1
:135
13.1 rm
200rx
300
530
.21
¢-11
955
113
210
5 1 5
b2l
No. 16 FIF:RAVENUE.
7 , 5
915
1:15
2."3..)1
Same Stand occuPit:o o 7l2s YearkPrist
Now Itobutl4lo . lshed
z, it d
'0 CAST
2.
FA FA
NO 4.
Nit Ex
No. 6.
PacE
4 fti i Pit
LIMAN
2,
rd'i
910
1'4 , ,
4
4,10
920 Mil
Mtpy
2.11
•
721
90
11',0
1 Nix
229
GRAND STOK !OF GOODS.
W's
kis
S5l
1106
110 PE
89
115
, 5, 2.tt
; tin. 4
Ilantkomest Storftip 110 City
New Goods Arronig
LADI ES FINE GO AVIATVIEEk;
0E N TS' AMERICiGOLD AND
712
0.111
irtsrx
No".
6, oil
tor.daY:
"on. 3
Sunday
oral Tlekom A
LADIES' &, L;ENTSL pit) CHAINS,
lUCII GOLD J 1 1 41 4 R Y
1111. 1 1C14 .
kek..4 , li
___l.-
4115ru
t 0.3
555
645
155 pm
80•2
.ITI
413
4-11
820
S 01411) STERLING:* VER WARE
FINE SILVER PLAIED- WARE,
R E NC H CLOChS,B & - e., 6,x
- -
E. ROOZRTS,
No. 16 Fifilte4venue,
re — Patrons and the poDUenerelly are Inn--
tett to vi.lt the New Store if In the city Re
mdratter lem now at No. 14,, path Ave , and not
No., 21 ne heretofore. • nor IQrlry
SWLECTMiSre,ELLANY.
MwtL. ksr's Accom
"Loves me betterffiitr... the whole
world, does he? said :ratty Peronel,
shaking her brown teddrilly rings of
hair over a faded rose4iud and a knot
of crumpled ribboir...,oo dare say;
hut you see," grimly addressing
Notice, "I've heard AO sort of thing
before. Love must 40 an awiul epi
demic now-a-days. • - 'And all the
world's a lottery; and ti for one, don't.
want to draw a blank. -0 dear, dear!
how 1 wish 1 could madly See into a
Mall's heart! how tvish I had any
means of aseertaining*hether Ralph
Petirhyti really carta for tne,or
whether he has heti,kd of Miele
Ilutchinson's *lO,OOO-0 dear me!"
and l'at ty sighed a slgbileep enough
to stir all the red cinnatnon roses that
are nodding their turbaned - crests at
t easement.
And then she jumpetltip, and went
about her business. •
Which chanced to _begirt bunting
just then. For Mrs—Maurice Pero
net, Patty's cousin,. wits: Chronically
in the suds, so to Abe*, on the do
mestic service queatlinn, anti our
Patty knew the losttlCor every
ln
telligence office In to •'
"It's a cook this ti v . ,„` It Bessie?"
!4:1 id she. -
"A cook," said, "o,Patty,
Patty, don't get nfl )" go to
h'lnettiffltriftriniNni ~L 1295
right," Patty assented reflectively.
all away she went to the Intelligence
It was eras, ded, on, this hot July
Clay, with the inkeellamlims assem-
Wage of forlorn teminity who are al
ways seeking situations, and like the
lover in the "Mistletoe Bough,"
"hod them not." Fatty looked
round dubiously. She was some
what of a physiognomist, and she
(1.41 nut exactly like the looks of the
row material wherewith she was sur-
Its,
lye, 1
rounded.
"I had better bide toy time a lit
tle," she thought, and down she nes
tled into the corne of a prodigious
sofa, - to wait with what patience she
,ks she ( seated herself, the shrill pi
ping violee of an old lady beyond
iliatie silence vocal.
"You won't do for me," said she.
"No followers-- r that's my rule. My
kitchen ain't a place for all the lon tin'
feller 4" in town to smoke in. Ask
eve rybody in Darlingville; if you
want to know what kind of a house
keeper Rachel Penrhyn is. Every
body in Darling Ville knows me. No
followers, no ribbons, and no hoop
skirts."
"I guess, then, ma'am, you won't
do for me," said the Milesian damsel,
with an indignant toss of her jockey
hatted
head ; "I don't go nowheres 1
can't have my young man come and
see me of a Saturday night."
' Patty Peronel listened with mis
chievously sparkling eyes and cherry
cheeks. This, then, was theeccentric
Aunt Rachel, of whom 14alph had
I told her—the grim old spinster who
"kept house" all by herself, in the
quaint village of Darlingville, where
the elms lined tne streets like green
irt led sentinels,and everybody went
to bed at half-past nine o'clock.
Very sudden resolves will sonic.
times rush through our brains, light
ning ex press lash ion,. in a short space
~1 time, and almost before the shrill
tones of Mis.-4 Rachel's falsetto voi c e
had ceased to vi brave on the air, Patty
Peronel stood dipping odd it tle cour
tesies before her.
"If you please, nel'Aiti, would I
ki7
- •-~.
BB
NEW NEJIPER,
MAGNIFICENt:?ISPLAY t
MA=MMI
PITTSBURGH, PA.
PA TT Y'S PLOT.
wawa
said Aunt Rachel. "l3ut then, of
course, a new broom sweetti clean;
and 'l'm 'most afraid to believe in
any one, since Keturnh Smith expe l
rienced religion and ran away with
my silvepsugar-basin 1"
'aids 3s Mr. Ralph's room, is it?"
said Martha, with her hands in her
ruined pockets,as she stood regarding
the apartment that had just been
opened to be dusted and aired.
"Yei l this is my nephew's room,"
said the. old lady. "lie comes out
once in a while, and I always keep it
ready for him. - I've no family of my
own, you see, and Ralph seems very
near. to me."
"Dear met" said Martha, "what a
lot of photographs over the mantle."
Miss Rachel nodded.
- • "That middle one—it looks a little
like pad, Martha, I declare—"
"Does it?". lisped Martha, inno
cently, as she looked into her own
smiling, saucy eyes, under a fringe
of crepe hair. ,
"it's mY'Atkpliew's sweetheart,"
wenton the-garrulonsolci lady,- "the
gal That he • loyes
,the best - in all the
world.".
they'engaged?" Martha ven
tured to tUdr,The tell-tale ros*sdytlng,
her cheek us sne gently spoke.
"Well, no, not exactly. 1 guess
she's rather pretty, but flhe's got no
thing of her own, you see ; an' there's
Ahnira_,Playfair—the one on the ;eft
hand edge of the chimney—"
"The one with the twisted nose?"
roguishly asked Martha.
"Her nose way be a little to one
side," severely remonstrated Miss
Rachel; but handsome is as hand
some does, and Alinira has thirty
thousand dollars in the bank."
"My !" cried Martha, opening her
eyes wide. "Thirty thousand dol
lars, ma'am! I should think Mr.
Ralph would marry her at once."
"So he ought," said Miss Rachel,
rubbing her spectacle glasses yam
mently. "She'd have him in a min
ute—so all the neighbors say. But
he's just possessed in love with that
little Peronel girl. Ile'd rather
work fora crust a day, with her to
share it, he says, than to teary Al
'aka- Playlair with, ll her money."
"That is noble of him," cried Mar
tha with sparkling eyes. "I respect
him for it. I—l Wean I should re
spect him for it if—"
•'Well, I don't see what it is to you
one way or the other,' tartly broke
In Miss Rachel. "J / est give the remit
a good (lasting, Jerett's all I ask of
you, for as like as not Ralph will be
here to-night."
"To-night," cried Martha, aghast.
"Yes, to-night. Why shouldn't
he?"
That was just what the little serv
w, &owlet eoulti not answer.
"1 must go away this very even
)g," m , he thought to herriell as Ale
polished away at the' claw-tpoted old
u~ahugany table. " Bevan-4e if he
should eowe and find cue here--(di,
good g,nteiouq."
She dropped her duster in, dismay.
for there stood Italph l'enrhyn belore
tier, with all his six lee! ofaliitude,
his brown eyes twinkling iniselliev-
ously beneath their long li:sties.
`Patty," he cried, "is i hi- - ; the sti ry
of Cinderella and the Little Glass
Slipper?"
"No," she answered, eolering like
a whole garden ,of rose. "Its the
story of a naughty little girl who
could not tie satisfied without finding,
nut w het her—"
hether Ralph Penrhyn really
loved her or not," he the
ng seat emu-- Welk' w t
eriw
thought's - nine ~,,,
when she came in, and nanal tier
nephew and Martha the hotf , ernaid
whispering behind the nntslin cur
tains. I know what 1 -hp nk! have
rhi - iught —that a wedding w , ts very
eminent.
So it wit.; an4l Aunt con
soled lierscif that iiiter ten 'final
and dollars Nviis 0, very nu li;t"1i
tune. -Ixtlger.
LOVE .70111 .t PICESIDEVI
Ex-Co)yernor \Vise, of Vir in
his recently published and verve: , ver
volume, entitled "Seven Decades of
tile Union," gives an account of Pres
ident Tyler's semnd marrhigeilart is
very entertaining. Ml'. TylPr be
came a widower while he was Presi
dent, losing a it ifs who was a very
noble iv,anan, a member of th)• wed
known family of ('hristian, in the
Ohl Dominion. lie was a domestic
man, and a pure man, and a second
marriage is the !mist natural thing in
the world when a Wall ha-; hooll 11.1p
py in a first marriage; but then it ;-
thought that a widower should marry
a lady of experience not unlike his
o wn, Mr. Wi s e says t h a t i r w a s in
Mr. Tyler's roach, taking a drive
with him, in )larch, Ist 1 , Vt hen he
soon discovered that his frioni
talk only of love and of ladies.
"We hall Wat - , -: o il Mr.
wis e , "that an old fool is the wor s t
fools in love sickm.ss, and he show) 41
the usual signs of its contortion 1,1
hideous straws of seeming. Ile.
it out at last. that he thought »! )--
riage, and wanted to 1.114)w our op!..
.0n on the suhjeet. 'W4.11, eour-• .
you have -on , ht and found out soini'
honored dame of di g nity.
bring grace to the NVtlite I loft- , a 1,6
add to yourdomestiocondorr." '
110 dame, hut a sW(.4-1. !,,1
wilt,, pray, of lalll - 1 . 1 Cit'grri • ,
or should an oid President win?' Ile
told us; and we uttered lair
by asking: 'Have you really
won her?' Ile esprit , [ : ' 1"0 , and
why should I not '." o
that he was to., far advanei d in hi,.
to be imprudent in a love serape. '
'llow imprudent' he asked. 'Very
easily; you are not Only p.i.l thy mid
dle age, {he was then fitly four. but
pill are Prosident of the United
States, and that is a dazzling - dignity,
which may charm a ilAnisol
than the man she marries."P» it)!'
he cried, chuckling, 'why, my dean
sir, I am just full in my prime':
but has John y. Mason never told
you about an old friend of hia, :h.. a.;
south side of theJtunes, rich and full 1•11-y tt )th t!.t.
of acres, calling his .\ frican N%;tin r, )lormons are not idle. i'4.. ;•!e
iii
Toney, into council upon the topic of S tit Lake ('sly not )-it down to
marrying a miss in her teens? To- thin!: iv 1"1 the r" i , ao.Y
ney shook his head: 'Massa, you ink tf iy4irk mg al- I 111)111 )ghani
you can stand clot:"Ton4 y : 1 . •)1;11; 1, e ‘, c , ) •%_
why not? She is so sweet, so heau;)- r -14 eps. )) . .4i)reinv I .) »pi,) ;;.),\ ,)
Jul, that she would make me ri-e ton). ton rel).4-4-, t•iftti•o "Proph-t
from a bed of illness and weakn• ' t,o I. 4:41 - 1. • ton 4 , 11 tit ,. ~ , ,i
woo her 'Or a bride; but I and yet rtes. \\' iii' tee *,r: 1 [tans
strong, and I can now, as well as even oonsidering \\ tied.) r I )i.,,ht •)cI .r) -
I 'could, make her happy, , Ye= l)•y Y.4)nlet t te• •I • 4.)
but, unts.sa,' said Toney, 'you is now 4.-u:1 litlt t, the great ..`)
in your prime, dot's true ; but iel 4•11 Proph) tlia•l no tole to 1).•-tow u. on
she is in her prime, ivhere den, In,- Indlitig ),,s, oil! h
sa, will your prime be?" ;•4•-• to ' - or 11.-tant
Ile laughed heartily at 'loney's han •41.11:d ttkl •)ty which .\.1);-a
-philosopical observation; hut :oh n- ham visited, which I ); , Vin
ward, in seriousness, said that he ally ile.icgt 41, tthit.l heame the
longed for a renewal of his domestic "Zion" 01 r,actt d sol,g, the glory of
life, and had been fairly caught by
crusatierslof old and the I,roto
the flame of Mrs Gardiner. \\'e re- type if s aly ;l to,a It the
monstrated that his lifo was renewed ('hrist)an of mori•ern [lays, a 111.1
nu
in his children ; that he had •datigh- ' doubt have been shorn of half its -es
ters, lovely daughters, full of. graoe, ry if the gospel rat the Monlnt,ll:, a`
to do the honors (.1 . the IVliite taught by Brigham 't dung, d ouse, and some of them a ere -the been preached v 4, ititta iivr
elders of his intended. What if fun- Brigham accordingl:,• sent a mission,
iiv dissent should make domestic t and that inlssiou ntt New ork
jars, and his latter days be 0 - 4)010(41? Thursday.
.4
Ile had, he said, always been ti ,„ T o the - ' world—and ev
tender to the pledges of his past love cry Inie in Utah fsa ;4 10 - iv;4e.th
e
for thm evr t withhold rom him er .la4W.tor - such a mssion
their filial e con o fidence, or f deny to Mast quite e‘traordinary. i
In
him his part•ntal authority to judge deed to /MY 1 ""' "1"))1"S tiny knu"l
and not 1 . 4)r his Own happiness. NVe edge tif the history lit t!)e past
a n event is ...\b , t people
S:IW f.,atne was up, and then said:
"We see you are bent upon your either despise the . Mormons or pity
them as ritlictiions,enthusiask. But
last love, with or without counsel,
and you have ever been too lucky fur facts ate s tut.horti thing:. 1 /Ili• 1110i1- 1
US now to doubt or distrust your fate. and years alter the hirjh Of 1 L ilt t ht .
--You are going to marry the dam- treading of whose sira,t Al :ICI, tile
set, and we are not foolish enough to Bard of Avon says, sant:gilled the
.1„. ,
f .c
0
make two enemies by opposing the
passion cif the wooer and the won.'
The marriage took place outhe Nth
of June, 1844, President Tyler being
then, in his tifty-flfth year, and the
bride, Miss Julia Gardiner, about
twenty, and whom we remember
being much- spoken of as a beautiful
girl, and a Washington belle of those
long gone days. She was a New
York lady, of good family, as the
phrase is, and descended, as we have
heard u from old Lyon Gardiner, who
flourished kr the Colonial age, and
who gave his nainelo Oardiner's Bay
and Gardiner's island, on and in
Long Island Sound. The marriage
proved a very happy one, and Mrs
Tyler, who liks survived her husband
more than to years, Is not yet old.
Mr. Tyler, some years after the mar
riage, said to Mr. \Vise, when the hit
ter noted that his friend kept •'a dou
ble-ated, four-wheeled wicker car
riage for small children”—"Yesaou
see how right I was; it was no vain
boast ; when I told you I was in my
prime. have abousefUl of goodly
babies budding around me; and if.
you gompAVlth me to Sherwood, I
Will show - You haw :bountifully and"
,raphllY lbavir been. Ailesifed. They
are all so near • ill age that they are
like stair steps, and the 'two youngest
are so much babies alike that each
requires the a rse's coach, and we
have to have one with two seats !"
`So that the, marriage turned out
well, despite the tact that the gentle
man was old enough to be the lady's
grandfather; and we are glad of it,
for Mr. Tyler had .4-;o mtwh injustice
alone him as a public man, that he
was entitled to compensation in his
private life.
A Cone enuie,d Murderet C7iwages
Clothes with nil Wife and L•'s-
efli)ez.4.
c., ::17,)Corr.fspcnrieile,
Over live thousand people were as
settaikti liere to-day the purpo- , e
of witnessing the executinn ()I Mar
tin B ynard, one of the wurderers'of
Silas Weaton and his three children,.
but they were &tome(' to be wofully
disappointed. It will be remembered
that two criminals have already been
executed for this crime. Martin
Baynard was also to have suffered
the ennalie penalty of the law when
the other tit u. we're lionglll, but he
respited Ron' time t(i time, to be
used as 0 witness against tite elder
Bayard and another, who were also
itopileated in this terrible murder,
under a statute of this State which
provide; that a condemned felon van
testify as a witness against other iiar
ties to the crime. All preparations
were tirade, the scaffold was in readi
hess, the (Toad had been arriv
b-g from all quarters for several day.,
!"tyltio s thrtr.c,:cdy. During
/own -11111111 tit 111I' 11 . •• ut ti. cion
‘l,•iliupti man y,a,
and th•0t44.1 in hot allehdacice uvai
Lim. A day did not pa,:s that she
o u, not in hiS reit ter several hours.
ahil, at ate last moment, with a hero
ism w(prthy of a more table cause,
sLe ~'yet bins train all ignominious
death uhun the -Milord. rh, night
that, was to have been the last of Bay
ard's earthly existence hod arrived,
and upon the earnest, tearful and sor
rowful entreaty of his wife, the jailer
compassionately allowed her to pas,
Ike r(-•w remainiug hours or hi-i lit
‘‘ uh inns in lii , ceil. L\lf,rtlinv, broke
eiclir :maand already the as-
MU/V
v th.; arrival ~rtac hour
about -is: a.
tll l. Jit/i 1111111. 111.try1 t.l l , \, , H 1 1/1.•/.
tith
s t.ll 1,1,1r^l Ltlc:rt/.,rt 11,1
( , 4lk I
I.
4, 1
I, Ili i
.l lill \Nr;l- .•,
:it
it o k
Ilit'at --
HI , 1.1,4 lin . 4111,11114 , 1
-,10:111r1 ,1,1 / t •:::1 •-•
ing t••• • .
Wi r lt 1,1,
vc.1 , ..:..w1111 , ,..; ha.
1111" 1/1:
1111.•[ hi
111c 11 I!, tlit•
(•1-,)ticlilll up I.lrll r ‘S.I
- \\11;11:111 In IL14 • Cif )11. ^.
1 , 1.t.tt•-• bland, ‘l,-11.:-. lio.•
It 11 ;rani Lai,+- t
;Indiii;r,l .-ii i
11.• I‘lll iii; I
\‘ l ,rd , I , r tit!,
kt •,_to•
;
1 I
I h:• I I L Hr•Hxi'l
o i• 1.1 I
• • .11,k1
11,
i ~:' Hi I
It.i•-( , 1 :11 , M 4
iti
%. t p
~I."‘s, • I
Hurt tt• 1110 V. tlll,lll
)p 11;1- 1 ..1;
W: t•re , 1 . 11111
111 lilt' thilt -ut•it 1•••
ht a.. 11.1. 111:j:
MIME=
th ,. ir
il. it
ti.trd
k..vt•t• t.., .ipt
'1()::13()1.S %C.l)
1;031.1.1i11C.
MiTC==EMI
BIM
il.'i. ;il•t,, \,.
•
V., :
r‘•
MI
"ri,
Established 1818.
hills and dales of Palestine, all the
nations of Christendom, aroused by
the voice of Peter the Hermit, pour
ed forth in thousands and tens, of
thousands to rescue the Holy Land
from the nowerof the Infidel. When
the great Papal Hierarch preached
the first Crusade historians tell that
S the unnumbered throng around
him shouted, "It is the voice of God!
the voice of God!" the echoes of that
tumult of applause were heard from
east and w e- it, from south to nerth,
in the palace of the King and in the
cot of the peasant—everywhere the
impulse of the heart moved the
tongue to say, "God wills..it."
The days of chivalry ate past. The
Crusades accomplished their work;
but they and their work are now
things of a bygone age. But, unro
mantic as the present era .is—plain,
busins9s. like, prosaic, as every one
knows'it—there is still a romance
which lingers about the everyday
things of life which they who run
may read if they list, but whiCh the
more casual observer could never dis
cover. The Mormon mission to Pal
estine is an example in point.
There has been lately a grand
movement among the , Mormons.
Brigham Young has at last awakened
to the fact that, whether he lives or
dies, the world will certainly "go
0r,," but at the same titne he realized
the need of keeping up the religious
zeal of the Saint.s,"and also of curry
ing out certain private schemes of his
own. The result was—the mission to
Jerusalem. Let any one fancy going
to Jerusalem I The Prophet has an
apostle on hand who is rebellious, or
a high priest who does not see things
exactly as he ought to do, or an elder
who is troublesome, what can be
done? Send him upon a mission, by
all means—and upon a mission he is
sent.
Such, though not expressed in
words, k the programme of the
modern Saints.
But above all things, let us-see the
miss ona ri es. Among the tta4noted
of them is "George he is
called in Utah—who is anything hut
one of the "learned kind." A wicked
apostate said once that if George A.
tumbled into the nether regions he
would not only set all Inc uncom
fortable iliac , im fire,. hut grease the
wheels of all who carne thither.
(ieorge A. is not only a relative of
"Joseph," the ,hounder of Mormo
nism, but also the historian of the
Church. As such he goes out to the
Holy Land. With him and the
company Miss Eii7.ll iloxy Snow
goes. Geor;_re A. is a stout, jolly
looking fellow, but miss Snow bears
upon her lace the shadow of sorrow.
soo was the spiritutal lie of "Jo
sepii,"gatal since, by proxy, she has
bei•n the "W . iie“ of Brigham Young
Sno ir - ; a I,VOlllan of intellect, and prob
ably sought with an uneducated mind
:mod the wond,rcul shoo, Mormon
rt v,l,ithtn for a foundation and truth
hiCh Mormonism could never give.
she now g,leS with the pilgrims to
ancient Lion in the hope of their turn
itig her of pot sy it its chords
bo reit overstruhg. Childless by
"The Prophet" and by his successor,
she looks like the wierd sisters of the
Bard of Avon, for. the fulfilment of
her vaticmation of an age .I•et to
come.
tint poPt , ' ss got s nat
\1 i h her are others (lually z:•:11otts.
I.lt, and I,eavy ; six
(.et in 114.01103,1 w he\ er —oollwrekr‘
)LI :111(1 WII,) the
14t " t.4"6:::106.11tivirt'L i t t
rvl(tic Llri;zhani Young's nephew.
th.o: thy howl I,ll,rothcr
tp,,i. PANT-. ;In' on
:t. NA:iv ii) I.un , 11l win
MI
. .
1, , ,1t• Ito y i.I, u. tlit-ir
\‘l',ll tl.t.
it-Ltrll I 111,11 1 i! CI
I;righani prnkiltly, i- to
,\lurnioni-to in l. 11.1), I,lltl
tiy is -etol- this mission to
l',tl( (it 0r.,4-e .1 .\,l
- .lupp,r, hit ti , •
1,riZ!):1111 \' ,, ul,lu rltal , v. -An:- to
1',14.-41110 t i•k.•
I:,t'tliß. 11()-1.4)ii lirl. zi-;
OEM
y ':1":111t; 11
,1 t•rol
I , ur,t In an tht•
t.l
uutt
. y tt%ii
, trtt I tir, tit
lAA
; old r ,Ire
rur,t, hut
.;,1 pr thi.
riihr currrut , ar , k•••• 1. , r.•
lirt• 1..01.11 a-t. xv()rl:
1 , 1.1 t a qut...--
*CO , II limo. It .1- , it
-.•vt.zity
tr.ivi r , 31,,1 litany a hut.:l:(-1
unitHu-: a rtlt t t 1.r1t1 , 1 !Ay
1 lit .1 it Ica , rhoe . lo . (l,
1,1 l.y :tu
1 1 i _::
MI
=I
001
IME
:- , unlitit , r -4 tr. ( t-
taut. VI ui It
,:ccupipol zilmo-t \ I.y
rycintly t-ruct ,., l :It g r(..,t
~1111 prt•-wilably
prermition knov, n t t Ilu
~ f our c!:ty. 1)1(
lt
1, iy 111 , 1- by
(I,•partiot•nt,,.,,iii
!.l.:!:,litig. ! Went! \‘,atcr.
high 1:1(1 to it,
;dui t %%ert . not,
is t nic,i , g.o, tn,u-u,illy
.Iyc t' t,. inft r,
'JR• ur,ticru stleguarik
„t avail, and th,:t iiiir
ii;trcituu-i•s :tn• at the,
atr)P o,lllll,igathin which
ehi,ilice may
Thi• \‘,,11:(1
-ion, kit i! , 1,11,1 , 11 y
Engineers
3it i-4 . 111;1 X 1112,1.11:it, t h e Strength
-trucltire :,,, the streng . tli ut Its
part, tin 1, Uu,unh our stone
wa I,- a.:(I irnti Ilttor, :nil hearts tire
tit rectill triwitr.l certain source..
they'are \v(irtti tiothin.,z
',.re hill; • a
in:tterial to”-tart it, and
t.• point, iii\l
-1"11.Y hy .iri,a
nient-en-ily penetrated, awl hy Man
ii.of-,nt thinly e.ivered
();.VI n li.t"-C1 Onditii)11.4,:11111110st(111
tl , :hal 111. , tire atlvances
in
tle. air, I,ir reaclt
of ul'tlt
ttary Ira aliparatu-,
food flir tt , t It tilt the 1W el at
ItiAt it I.l4'in , ,tut.t -, , ,oppint:
it hen tt ilc-tructive ,ig . eney
:.nil more ,wilt 111,m
it :ill :111 - ,1
t., 11 , where it lielieved
vain,
iginihinetl at( I of II ( 107, ,, T) adjacent - "
cities, :1 cv...litlagrat:ori filch v•milil
hay': been believed hail it
nut terribly real, fo,reo,
upon us with a simplicity anti
(lirt-ctm--,4 it !licit c raunnt evade or
Ignort
ncr%: , .. 4/7/ - Why tioltll ether Sew
ing . ..Machines dray their olopari , on
fr(in the Singt•r?
.1 rtslyrr—ltectittse the Singer is tho
;alitl;frki sewing Jinchine of tht
%%urttl. It. 6: Co.,
No. 10 Sixth Pittsburgh.
N IL :CI, HOOFS
tc , ii:" WTI r
.rt (H,Llntry, •-.ly-
Vor.. 111 it
• rt
' • ViCinltV 4;
in - BEA WEB ARGUN
Is published every Wednesday lu the
old Argus building on Third Eitreet,llea•
ver, Pa, st 12 per year in advance. '
Communications on subjects of local
or general interest are respectfully so
licited. To. insure attention WWII of
this kind must invariably be accompa
nied by the name'of then thor.
Letters end communications shotall be
addieased to
1. WEYAN , sver
. ,
Idle Danghterit.
It Is a most painful `speetaci6 - in
families where the ;nether is the
drudge, to see daughters elegantly
dressed, reclining at their ease, with
their music, their drawing, their fan
cy work,. and never dreaming of their
responsibilities; but as a necessary
sonsequence of a migfoct of duty,
growing weary of their useless IlveQ,
lay hold of every newly invented
stimulant to rouse their drooping
energies, and blame their fate, when
they dare - not blame their God, for
having placed them where they are.
These Individuals often tell you,
with - the air of affected compassion
(for who can believe it real?) that
poor dear mamma is working her
self to death; yet no sooner do you
propose that they should asSist, her
than they deelare she is quite in., her
element—in short. that sho-tever
would be happy if she only had half
so much to do.
1"0, that I were beautiful!" . is
tfie unspoken wish of thousands of
women to whom nature has denied
the charm_of a pure, fresh, transpa
rent complexion. To gratify this wish.
Ilagan's Magnolia Balm wart
ducal. The - cosmeties of the day had
been pronounced poisonous by the
most distinguished chemists, and it,
was also hound that their ultimate
effect was to wither the skin as well
as to paratize tne external nerves.
The ladies hailed with delight the
advent of 'a healthful, herbal and flo- .
ral preparation capable.of imparting
to their faces, necks and arms - a por
celian sniootliness and a ,tinge like
that of the finest oriental pearl. They
soon discovered that it was "a new
thing under the sun," incomparable
and unapproachable. Unquestiona
bly the Magnolia Barn has been the
,hat toilet success of the present cen
t u ry.
Catarrhal Bronchitis.
Catarrh, in which the. lining of the
nose and passages which lead into the
lungs is a common ihfirmity, and by
most persons is readily understood,
at least so far as to be able to dis
tinguish the nature and•character of
the disease.
When it descends into the bronchial
stud follows them in their mi
nute ramifications throughout that
lungs, it usually receives the plain
name brorrehitis, and unless cured
may end, and often doesend,•in fear
ful pulmonary disaster. When it
confines itself to the membrane •o;
the nose and upper part of the throat
It passes by the name of catarrh,
which name, however, is hardly suf•
ticiently significant to design ite that
character of the dism - tse. By catarrh
al bronchitis, therefore, I mean that
the upper part of the mucous mem
brane lining of the nose is affected,
that it extends . downwards and al•
fects the lining of the bronchial tube f
which ramify the lungs. hr. Keg- A
eels Lung Care is a specific 'for thi s r
diseasc,as far as any one medicine ea;it
be a specific. Heal the bronchial
tubes by !miffing good blood, whicA
hr. Keyser's Lung Cure will enablq
the system to do, and the diseas
will soon be eradicated. Sold at Dr.
Keyser's, P 7 Liberty street, Pitts
gurgh, :-1.50 per bottle, or 4 for-it-I
Colonel Davis, United States
Consul- at Cardiff, has been
oil trial there for assaulting an 01.1
man whom lie met on tbe public
highway. When the Colonel was
UNCATiitty l dut...kleatiett _that, he had
"I was excited by his language. to
f
1 11 , x7tfal
wople. !
iilood which 1 i.howed in defence of
th , )-e people, and striking for the
Irtviloin of the ~,lave under the broad
and beautiful banner of the St-US and
-tripes. I.uutl laughter., Lie said
cnt thing very di.re!Tectful of the
of the l'uit , l.l Steite , ."
Jwlizincitt t:,
Harrill:l loud! difficulty wa," rern.r
wul Oinlinor%
11:0Q1‘1,i1 the parent
L , :elif•ral debility, 'and pm -
mature dev.ty. permanently cured
the and nu ex
real tii c.in !ung re.,1:4 thel)int-
M:iltien Lane, New
York. per too. Or pi t .
for ; Oki is CUlir.-
IC!'..t . :,k •1.
.111)bairet 17 emperauct:: ' \
tINt glass i f
;- tip. t next trill prt
1111'~itulil~ at tirst.
!uttirt , wiritri,giehabl3
011,-1
1) I , the drum, ta',:cri morn, 1100 P,
and -ve•
1. i- the extra one, at elo. - en I be
nt' o.
i- the dip, thought good for
I. .
ti i. the in, not -o pure as of old.
11 i- the u.uel, otttku he gou
1 the inner room he wed
.1 i- 111, 11.• there tilt to th 3
.
h.i (,f (,)nseleilc:•
1~. ~.. _
E=M
the• hich
witinighz;
BM
OEM
•
I' 1 t •• )r, pentli les; patiper
lwevotile.
(2 i, the itiarrel, the product of
ruin runt hrin_•; to your
t.iu• -uirt rind ne'er known lio-
T tia. tremcns, and mark this as
true.
l'hev make few call; ere death
nukt etkue.
I" k the undertaker wh3 t. , 11
your aid.
V k the `•alley whore your tludy
laid.
Nt," k the ttretehedues-;,
:tailNl UV,
ecrablo drunkard; a'.one cau
know,
i- the yeariiing for inisspAit
time.
i. tht ;Ivnitil of t'oT , drunlCara's
( limp.
'fatly the islands in tho
rive r are lively with rabbits. Thu
presence of t he cottontails i:pecouned
or by the (Act that during tile winter
they oro:-s over the river on the ice
from both sides of the stream, and
[wing- unable to get back when tho
lei; di-appears they remain there and
breed and rai, , e their young.
hundred dollars reward is'
otTered for information 01 . the where
abouts of henry Ileinir , h, a Uerman,
about :p feet 9 inclu in height, dark
etimplux ion, and about . - JO years of
age, who has been missing from his
home iu It.tys 'ove, Bedford county,
Pa., since the :25 tll of August. It is
feared he has eommitted tuieide.
strict is the liquor law at Edger
ton, Wis., that one of the churches
recently had to postponeconnnunioil
service because no wine could be oh-
I [dry Ward Beecher recom
mends the use of it liturgical service
in tln Cong,regatioual trturch,forre - .
spend rig in many respects to that et
the Episediati Church.
When you d e spair of good beware
of evil.
zr..vJ
=HMS=
1„ , ztr.l,z,