2 ARTE!*IItS WARD. FT JAMES PARTON. In the beautiful town of Cleveland, Ohio, eleven years ago, I was Introduced one Sunday morning, to Ml; Charles F, Browne, who had recently acquired ce lebrity by bis Artemus Ward letters, in the Cleveland Plaindealer. He was then twenty-five years of age, of somewhat slender forra.but with ruddy cheeks and a general appearance of health and vigor. He was local editor of the and had the ready, cordial and off-hand manner of the members of the Western press. Like other professionalimmorists, he was not particularly funny in ordinary conversation; on the contrary he was less so than Western ,editors,,usually are.. I. was far from anticipating the career that was in store for him i still less coaid I have foreseen the premature :i death of a young man who presented an exception al appearance of good health. If he were, alive to-day he' would be only thirty-nine years of age? \ He was born at Waterford, in Maine, where his father was a surveyor. His na live village, as he say‘s ; in one of his pa pers, “does contain ovet forty houses all told; but they are milk-white, with the greenest ot blinds, and for the most part are shaded with beautiful elms and wil lows. To the right of us is a mountain; to the left a lake. The village nestles be tween. Of course It does. I never read a novel in my Hie in Which the village did not nestle. Villages invariably nes tie.” In this secinded hook in New England he passed the first fourteen years of bis life, during which he acquired such education as a‘rather idle and sport-lov ing boy could acquire in the common and high schools. He was sent to learn the printing busi ness at a neighboring town, called Skow hegan, where, in the office of the Bkow hegan Clarioh he learned to set type and work a band-press. To the last days,of his days he held this place in abhorrence. Q*& of his friends has recorded that he was accustomed “to set up a howl of de rision” whenever its name; was mention ed ; and that whenever he desired to ex press the least degree of contempt for any person or thing, be would speak of them as worthy of Skowbegan. How many a boy has reaped a full revenge upon a teacher or an employer by turning out to be a genius, and consigning him to uni versal ridicule! At sixteen he found his way to Boston, where be obtained employment as a com positor in the office of the funniest peri odical then published in Boston, the Car pet Bag, to which Shillaber. Halpinc and Saxe contributed. As he set up, from week to week, the humorous contributions of these writers, the conviction grew up on him that he 100 could write a piece that would .make people laugh. I think he must have been reading Franklin’s Autobiography, or the preface to “Pick wick,” for in putting his talent to the test, be employed a device similar to that used by Franklin and Dickens in offering their productions to the press. Having written bis piece in a disguised hand, he pul it into the editor’s box. Great was his joy when it was banded to him soon after, to set in type. The first piece, I believe, was in the style of Major Jack Downing, whose let ters, be once said, bad more to do with making him a humorist than the produc tions of any other writer. About this time he happened lo read Bayard Taylor’s ‘Views Afoot,’ in which that popular author gave an account of his making the tour of Europe, and pay ing bis way by working at his trade, which was that of a printer. Captivated by this great example he started for the Great West. When his money was ex hausted, he would stop for a while in gome large town where there was sprint ing office and replenish his purse; which done, he would continue his journey. He stopped short of China, however. At the town of Tiffin, Ohio, he obtained a place as compositor and assistant editor, at four dollars a week. Prom Tiffin he removed to Toledo, where he procured a similar position on the Toledo Commercial at five dollars a week. It was upon this paper that his talent as a humorist first attracted attention, and he was soon per mitted to devote bis whole lime to filling the local column with amusing abuse of the rival paper. He acquired so much celebrity in Ohio as paragraph ed that he was offered at length the place of local editor of the Cleveland Plain dealer, at a salary, munificent at the time and place, of twelve dollars a week. Most of the noted humorists—and the great master of humor himself, Charles Dickens—have shown a particular fond ness of persons who gain their livelihood by amusing the public—showmen of all I kinds and grades from the tumbler iu the circus to the great tragedian of the day. j Iu the performance of his duty as local | editor, Charles Browne had abundant op- j portttuity of gratifying his taste, and he j gradually became acquainted with most of the traveling showmen of the "West ern country. He delighted to study their habits, and be used to tell many a good eto.-y ot their ingenious devices for arousing the enthusiasm of the public. Much of this showinidn’s lore he turned to’ 1 account in tb'e letters of Artemus Ward. j Therj are dull times in a place like Cleve'and when the local editor is hard pul to fill his co’omns. N* J-lnw. no court, no accident, no fust ionable wed ding, no su- .ri.se no police repnr*, no trotli .g much, no anything. One day, in 1859, when the local editor of the Plaindealer was in desperate want of a topic, he dashed upon paper a letter from , an imaginary showman, to which he affix*- ed the name of a,Revolutionary General, whichaiways asbeing odd— “ArtemUs Ward.’* The lelter rali thus: 2b the EHtot o/tke F^ndeaUr^' A. \ “Sib ; —downtordsyour place. . I want you to H write me a letter, sain’ hows the show bizness in your place. My show at pres ent consist sof three moral BearsTa Kan garoo—a amoozin little Raskel ; t’wqnld make you larf to delh to'see thc little cues' jnmpup And raqueal—waxrfiggera of Q. Washington, Gem Taylor, John Banyan, Dr. Kidd, Dr. Webster in the act of kill miscel, lanyus moiral wax statoois ol celebrated pirQts and murderers, etc., ekalled by few and exceled by rone.” The showman proceeds to urge the editor to prepare the way for his coming, And promises to have all his handbills “dun at your offiss.” “We must fetch the public somehow,” he continues. “We most work on their feelings—come the moral bn ’em strong. If it's a temperance community, toil ’em I sined the pledge fifteen minutes arter Ise born. Baton the contrary, if your people take their'tods, say that WattTls as genteel a fellow as we ever met —full of conviviality, and the life and sole of the soshul Bowl. Take, don’t yon!” ‘ L Mister Ward concludes his epistle by condensing its whole meanibg In a very short postscript: “You scratch my back; and I’ll scratch your back.” This letter made a wonderful hit. It was immediately copied into many hun dreds of newspapers, and was generally taken as the genuine production; of a showman. ' Other lelters in the same vein followed, which carried the name of. Ax temns Ward and the Cleveland i%»n dealer to the end of the earth. For two, or three yeats they figured in the funny column of mrtst of the. periodicals of America, England and Aiistraita.' 1 • • ; {} : • -i ; But except the .reppUiUoa. which the letters gave, they were of little advantage to the author. His salary may ,have been increased a few dollars a week, and be ad ded a little to his income by contributions to the comic papers of New York. No man, indeed, is so cruelly plundered as the writer of short, amusing pieces, easi ly clipped and copied. He writesacomie piece for a trifling sum, which amuses perhaps five millions of people, and no one compensates him except the original purchaser. There are, for example,comic dialogues which have done service for fifteen years at negro minstrel entertain ments, and now make thousands of peo pie laugh every night, for which tbe au thor received three dollars. Artemus Ward, anxious to boy back tbe family homestead in which to shelter tbe old age of bis widowed mother, soon dis covered could never do it by mak ing jokes unless hd”could sell them over and over again. So be trie^/ comic lec turing. The first night the experiment was a failure. A violent storm of snow, sleet and wind thinned the audience—in Clinton Hall, N. Y., —to such a degree, that the lecturer lost thirty dollars by the enterprise. A tour in New England, however, had better results. He lectured a hundred nights, by which be cleared nearly eight thousand dollars; and he was soon able to establish his mother in ♦ the comfortable village home in which he was born. 1 thought 1 ought not to conclude this article without letting the reader know why this bright and genial spirit is no longer here to add to the world’s harm less amusement. Well this is the reason : Wherever he lectured, whether in New England, California or Loudon, there was sure lo be a knot of young fellows to gather round him, and go home with him to bis hotel, order supper, and spend half the night in telling stories and singing songs. To any man this will be fatal in time ; but when the nightly carouse fol lows an evening’s performance before an audience, and if succeeded by a railway journey the next day, the waste of vitali ty is fearfully rapid. Five years of such a life finished poor Charles Browne. He died in London in 1867; aged thirty-three years ; and ffow lies buried at the. home’ of bis childhood in Maine. He was not a hard drinker. He was not a man ot strong appetites. It was the nights wast ed in conviviality which bis system need ed for sleep, that sent him to his grave f ifty years before his time. For men of his profession and character, f>r all ed ; - tors, literary men and artists, there is only one lie should have taken the advice of a fctage driver on the I plains, to tyhom be offered some whisky; and I commend it strongly to the count less hosts who see this paper every week : * “I don’t drink, I won’t drink ! and I j don’t like to see anybody else drink. I’m j of the opinion of those mountains —keep j your top cool. They’ve got snow, and I’ve j got brains ; that’s all the difference.” ThK Bank of England covers five acres of ground and employs 900 clerks. There, are no windows on the street. Light is admitted through open courts; no mob could take the bank, therefore, without cmnon to batter the immense walls. The clock in the c jnter of the bank has fifty dials attached to it. Lirge cisterns are .-link in the cour*. and engines in perfect order are always in readiness iu case of fire. This bank was incorporated in 1094. Cipita', $00,000,000. THE RADICAL: FRIDAY, MARCH 28. 1873. ■■i- " - ■ I ■■■■ A; '- A iiMae on au Inclined. ' ; Plane* ; ; r-; -, ’ ; j Elmira Gazette, welearn that there|fi^4 iire, y tim t B mh»efsii(r'daya agof .3A?*is& : ;of caw, ■ were them broke. ud^U : alone’and"' unchecked twenty-five hundred feet ran. ‘ The velpc ity it attained was Inconceivably swift, andthe runaway^ likeaatrenk of grafted lightning as It flew dong the down hill track. :. 9 ~ \f reached ihe bottnm of the plane the. safety-car of the -mine? just reached the mouth of the pit A terrific collision wasthe result. The B»foty. w» weighing 2500 pounds, was struck, by the coal car and hurled up into the air many, feet and j crashed down through a house over the , track. There was not enough left of cither the coaj or safety car td make a decent sized toothpick. White ‘ the car wW on its" destructive down trip one of the wheels flew off, and crashed through a bouse in Ite line of travel, going clean through it like a cannon ball.fresb from a hundred pounder. l ln this house were . two men» who fortunately were not injured, but" the scare they sustained was about as bad as death. No . one was hurt about the mines, which, under the circumstances, is re* markable. • Bow DrlnMlng CaaMi Apoplexy. It is the essential hature of all wines and spirits to setid ah increased amount of blood to the brain. The first effect of taking a glass of wine or stronger form of alcohol, is to send the blood there’ faster than common, hence the circulation that gives the red face. It increases the ac tivity of the brain; and it Works faster, and so does the tongue: But < suppose a man keeps ota drinking, the Wood is sent to the brain so fast, in such' large quanti ties. that in order to make room for it the arteries have to enlarge themselves; they increase in size, and in doing so they press against the more yielding-and flac cid veins which carry l the blood out of the brain and thus diminish their size their pores, the resultrbelDg that the blood is not only carried tb’ thel arteries of the brain faster than is natural or heatbful, hot it Is prevented from leaving it as fast as usual»hence a double set of-causes,, of death are in operation. A man may drink enough brandy or other spirits in a few hours, or ip a few minutes, to bring on a fatal attack of apoplexy. . Josh Billings on February. -■ - Josh Billings in his almanac caBts,hia horoscope over February thusly: man born in this month will bee^j^^lr looking, but too much prone to tow in when he walks. He will hav two wives, • • and a small hand, except when he whist; then he will have a big won.' His furst wife will bee kross eyed, but his Sd won will bee krnss awl over. He will have fore children, and they will awl pass through the meascls, with great credit to themselves and no disgrace to the meas els- Tbe yung female born during this muntb will show grate judgment in the sorting ov her la vers, and will finally marry a real estate agent. She will have a fu failings; bnt who cares? she wouldn’t be interesting if she didn’t. At twenty ate she will be a widow, and at stated In tervals will be inclined to gush a little. (Fer the sake of variety we say, let her gush.) The Spanish papers give horrible de* tails about the outrages perpetrated by the Car list leaders in the northern part of the peninsula. They say that thes3 hor rors surpass in atrocity any thing that has ever happened during the numerous civil commotions in Spain since the begin ning of the century, and they demand that the government should inexorably exact reprisals. One ot the Japanese boys at school in New Haven received, a few days ago, what he considered a grievous insult from a white comrade. Instead of resenting it with violence, and anxious not to in fringe in the slightest any of the rules of; the school, he sent a polite note to the : master, requesting permission, according, to the custom in his country, to kiil the , boy who had insulted him. The request | had to be denied, and there the matter|j dropped. lj Feeling is a much slower sense than sight. It is that if a nua had ani arm long enough to reach the sun. andi were to touch that body with the lip of his finger, he would never find out whether it was hot or old, as be would be dead before the sensation arrived at headquarters, which would require 100 years. ; The SPRING SESSION of thi* institution be * _. AVAiianfru «iq tlmt An tfitQl* i ©ins lst,'iS*»i. As exchange informs us mat an iniet j ° Thc deßiKn of tbe i» lo providc . !or ?hc foreigner recently wrote to his lyoang of both scsea tho advantages of a thorough ~ , 1 ‘ Normal, Classic ard education. spe hotnc friends that when a great man attention being given to the triiiniag «t dies in the foiled Sutes. first .Oil* J done is to propose a fiae statue in his . j.h. vkazby. Principal or honor; next, to raise part of thc necessa- j bami el bigger, becretarj sory money ; nest, to forget to order any 1)ITTSBlU(i H statue; and last, to wonder what became J V* of the money.” A New York paper complains Ibat JAMES OLD, free loye and divorce courts have terribly m liberty street, Pittsburgh, pa. undermined the institution of marriage ; j Aho. RYNGRS. i£x,. aud particular *> ■ , , attention paid to FURNACES, Public and Prorate and that now the last step toward | Buildings. novi«Jm emancipation has been taken by a man j who has invented shirt buttons that cm be put on with a screw driver. With this device the last necessity for a wife is gone. yy %fr- £•. tv \ v’ ' 'fat ■ - - . • ■* .“V- Am<*ko the gifts which have been made to humanity, none, in the lower sphere of virtues, should call forth onr ihankfulness more than the gifts of cheerfulness, and wit and humor. They civilize life. They w perpetual anymanbave buoyancy, if he find him* seJfcgiyeir to Wft, in thename of heaven do sUppwii lt. Multiply the 'drops wbich spring oatpf thKprecions fount* :'ain;~ A wait. kkoWs lEUrtfort merchant. who paid a dollar for feat tn; the top-gallery at the opera -the other nljthJ, was very much edified by, seeing several young oien, who had owed "him" many: months, occupying four dollar seats' in the parquclte, with fashionably attired young ladief at their side.- He thinks U few years hence they won’t 1 be. able to buy even gallery tickets. “What do you call that?*’ indignantly asked a customer at a cheap restau ant, pointing at an object that he hail dis covered in his plate of bash. “Wristband with sleeve button attached, sir,” said the gaiter briskly. “Well do you consider that a proper thing for a man to find in his hash ?” asked the Customer in wrath. ‘Good heavens, sir!” cried the waiter, “would you expect to:find a ten dollar silk umbrella in a fifteen cent plate of hash ?” “Now, my .young friends, suppose twelve men buy . twenty four bushels pf wheat to be divided equally, how many bushels is that for each ?” Boldest of . the boys—“ Please, sir, we’ve not gone that far.” “How,is that* Yonr teacher toll me youhadlearned all the first tour rules!” Boy—“Tes, sir ; but we have always done our sums in potatoes and turnips—we have never had wheat. ’’ There is some talk of a geological sur veyor Rhode Island, but the work may be delayed on account , of its expensive nest The professor who is expected to make it, says that if be is expected to go qver the State. it will take him at least two days, and he won’t do it for less than nine.dollars and a half. Not to him who sets out in the morn ing’with resolution and gallantry, bdt to him who holds out till the evening of life, dees the promise apply, “He that endu reth to the end shall be saved ."-j Pavel A North Carolina roan recently laughed a plum stone out of bis nose that ‘had been embedded there for six years. Moral; Always be merry when afflicted with plum stones in the nose. A gentleman going to Texas asked a friend fora letter of introduction. The friend opened a drawer, took out a large and handsome spring-bladed daggerknife and a six chambered revolver, and gave thereto him. Women are like horses—the gayer the harness they have on, the better they feel- We got this from an old bachelor who was early crossed in love”. .The married ladies of a Western city have -formed a “Come-home-husband’a Club.” It is about four feet long, and has a brush at the end of it.; |lnr lUvrrtiiWmfttts, M [ESTABLISHED 1530.] WELCH A GRIFFITHS, > Manufacturers of Saws. . SUPERIOR TO All OTHERS. EVERY SAW WARRANTED* < FILESiBELTING & MACHINERY. al iarLIKKKAL MISCOUNTS. aA CVyPrire Lists and Circulars free. « WELCH & GRIFFITHS, Ronton. Jlanw., Ac Detroit* Itilclr. The Quujk is published OvArtzbi.7. 25 cents pays for the year, which Isnot hair the cost Those who afterwards send money to the amount of one dollar or more for Seeds may also order 25 cents worth extra—the price paid for the Guide. The first Number is beautiful, giving plans for making Kubat. Homes, Minis® Table decora tions, Window Gardens, &c., and a mass of in formation invaluable to the lovur of flowers. 130 pages, on fine tinted paper, some MO Engravings, and a superb Colored Plate and C annuo Cover. The First Edition Of 200,000 jest printed !n Eng lish and German. JAMES vies: Rochester. Sew York. p RAN KVO R T SP R I N'OS MALE AND FEMALE ACADEMY NORMAL SCHOOL. feb2l-4t jMARBLEIZED MANILE WORKS! (jar TPA P ir Agents wanted ! All JSJ I U classes of worsting people, of either Brx, young or old, make more money at work for as. in their spare moments, or all the t ine, than at auy'hin:. else Pan ten Vr* free; Ad d’css G. Stinson & Co.. Pott Luul, Ms. aovS-ly i AND &*iv Largest OrganEstalillstimeiit in tlieW orld 7 EXTENSIVE FACTORIES. ESTET £ XTOMPA NY, W ■ \>ys' ‘ ~ I . |. i osteu^tt^e^Org^ns The latest and best Improvements. Every thing 1 , that is new and novel. The leading improvements in Organs were introduced first in thiaestab < llshment. -4-—-.. ESTABLISHKD-laitt. - - j arsend for illustrated Catalogue. QN L Y tE N CEK T 8 ! ! 1 EVERY MAN HIS OWN PAINTER; (ir t Paints —How to Select and Use Them. A plain treatise, Containing sample card with 42 «ctnally~palnted-*Bhadea ana tints, with Inst rue* ions for exterior and intcrior'House Deco ration; ; -t \ t “-*» copies, bound in cloth. for $5. Sample copies, paper cover, mailed 'post paid, to any address, on receipt of 10 cents, by the Publisher. , , ' ■ HENRY CAREY BAIRD. Box 1C24, Post-Office, Philadelphia. . See tiie following valuable extractsfrom press no tices; r : “A very valuable book, and no one intending to paint should fail thread if.”—N. Y. Tribune.' “We did not know so much could be said on the subject of painting a house until we read this ex ceUent book of Mr . Baird’s.”—N. Y. Herald. “A want long fell at last supplied.”—Scientific American. - " ' " “Not only a necessity to the painter, but vaiua ble to every occupant of a dwelling.”—N. Y. World. “Bay 45 conies .of this book and distribute them among your friends, if they will heed the advice . therein, yon could make no more valuable pres ent,”—Chicago Tribone. “In publishing this book Mr. Baird hae done a real eervice to the community. "—Toledo Blade.. “We hope the publisher will sell 100,000 copies of thie book during ’Td.”—Boston Advertiser. . “We have Just painted oar hoase as advised by -the author, and congratulate ourselves that no dwelling in our neighborhood excels ours in ap pearance.”—Harpers Weekly. “In selling a sample copy foflO cents, Hr. Baird must feel certain an order for 35 bound in cloth will follow.”—Prank Leslie. “We know the town and conntry paints therein recommended, and can vouch for their value and the excellence of the “Harrison” brand of white lead.”—Philadelphia Ledger. ONLY TEN CENTS! OPTION— As tic wed by the offleial organ of the LIQUOR INTEREST!*. Subscription f 3 per year; Club? of 10, (35. Address American Liquor Men's Advocate Vo., No. P)0 Liberty.street, Pittsburgh, Pa. BY SENDING or.lv 35 CKNTS to .UMKS W. REMINGTON, at Moandsville. Marshall Co.. W. Va , ybawilf receive by return mail 300 useful receipts. WORKING CLASS-MALE OR FR- M\ MALE. • (60 a week guaranteed. Respectable employ ment at bom*, dayor evening; no capital required; fat! instructions mid valuable package of goods sent free by mail. Address, with sis cent return stamp. M. YOUNG & CU.. !■» Corrlanlt St., N. Y’. dhC ffli V dhilAperday! Agents wanted! All dpO lv classes of working people, oi either sex young or old. make money at work for ns in their spare moments, or all the time, than at anything else. Particulars free. Address G. Stinson ft Co., Portland. Maine. JJORRIBLB! I suffered with CATARRH .thirey years, and was cured by a simple remedy. Will send receipt, postage free, to all afflicted. Rev. T. J. HEAD, Drawer 176. Syracuse, N. T. ■yyiTHERBY, RCGG ft RICHARDSON. ; MANUFACTURE U 9 OP IM-Ming MacMnerr Generally. Specialties:—Woodworth Planing, Tongue ing and Grooving Machines, Richardson's Patent Improved Tenon Machines. Ac. Centra!, cor. Union St., WORCESTER, MASS. I. B. VriTHSRBT. O. J. BUOO. S. H. RICHARDSON. gTATIONARY, PORTABLE a BLAST ENGINES. Saw Mill. Flouring Mi : l and Blast Furnace Ma chinery. , H. &F. BLANDY, Newark. Ohio. MFor^S^^Pblind. Bleeding. Itching or L I cerated Piles that Dk Bino'B Pile Raim fails to cure. It is pre pared expressly to care the Piles, and nothing else. Sold by all. Druggists. Price $l.OO. USE the Relsinger Sash Lock and Support to FASTEN YOUR WINDOWS! No spring to break, no catting of sash; cheap, durable, very easily applied; holds sash at any place desired, and a self-fastener when the sash is down. Send stamp for circular. Circular aid six copper-bronzed locks sent to any address in the L T . »„ postpaid, on receipt of 5U els. Liberal in ducements to the trade. Agents wanted- Ad dress REISINGKR SASH LOCK CO. No. -418 Market St.. Harrisburg. Pa. Q.RANDEST SCHBME OF THE AGE $5 0 0,0 0 0 CASH GIFTS. 8100,000 FOR_ONLY 810! Under authority of special legislative act of the '6rh of March, 1871. the Trustees now announce the THIRD GRAND GIFT CONCERT, for the ben Silt of the PUBLIC LIBRARY OK KENTUCKY, to come off in Library Hall, at Louisville. Ky.. on TUESDAY, APRIL Bth, 187 S. Ut this Concert the best musical talent that can be procured from all parts of the country will add pleasure to the entertainment, and TEN THOUS AND CASH GIFTS, aggregating a vast total of HALF A MILLION DOLLARS currency will be distributed by lot to the ticket-holders, as fol lows : One Grand Cash Gift.. One Grand Cash Gift.. One Grand Cash Gift One Grand Cash Gift One Grand Cash Gift One Grand Cash Grift i 24 Cash Gifts of sl.oooeach 50 Cash Gifts of WW " : 80 Cash Gifts of 400 '• 1 100 Cash (»:fts at “ 150 Cash Gifts of 2iH) “ : 590 C ash Gifts of 1«0 " 9,000 Cash Gifts of 10 “ Total, 10.000 Gifts. all cash £>oo,ooo ' To provide means for this magnificent Concert, ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND WHOLE TICS RTS ONLY will be Waned." ‘ ‘ Whole ticks/*. $10; Haive*. SJ; and Quartern, $2.50. Eleven tchole Tickitefor SlOO. No di scout a on less than $lOO orders. The object of this THIRD GIFT CONCERT, like the two heretofore given with such universal approval. is the enlargement aud endowment oi the PUBL C LIBRARY OF KENTUCKY. which By the special act authorizing the concert tor its benefit, is to he forever free to all citizens of eve ry State. The drawing will he under the super vision of the Trustees of the Library, assisted by the most eminent citizens of (he United States. , The sale of tickets has already progressed . an far that complete snccess is assured, and buyers are therefore notified that they most order at once rf I they desire to participate m the drawing. 1 The management of this undertaking has been I committed by the trustees to HON. THOS. B. BRAMLETTK, late Governor of Kentucky, to whom comm uhlcaf ions pertaining to the Gift Con cert mav be addressed. K. T. DURRKTT. Pres't. W. N. UALDEMAN, Vice PrtVt. JOHN S. C AIN. bee y Public Library of Kv. FARMERS’ AND DROVERS’ BANK, Treasurer. : As the time lor the Concert is close at baud TAnril Bth). parties wanting tickets should in their orders immediately if they would avoid the rush ■and delay absolutely unavoidable in the few days the drawing. All orders and applica tions for agencies, circulars and information will •meet vnth prompt attention. IHOB. K. BRAMLETTK. Agent Public I/hitry. i.outsville. ISy. g°°K AND JOB PlUNTivu mEATEE RABI£ AL! 5 POWER PRe BS JOB PRINTING OPPICK i JOB OFFICE THE “RADICAL BUILDING; BEAVER.PA, regardless or cost PRINTIKG EBTABLISHMENT. TWO POWER PRINTING PHEB&JSS, And is prepared to do all lead? of r»t o:mg 1N the BEST STYLE OF THU ART, Low [Pabices As caa be obtained at Pittsburgh oi elsewhere. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. BUSINESS CARDS. CIRCULARS. BILL HEADS, (100.000 50,'J'JO 25,000 20,<00 - 10.000 5.000 24.000 25.000 32.000 30.000 30.000 59.000 90.000 K.*C<’JtOO OD lilC tfiit ftOr THE BEAVEK 8.11)10*1 KVERY FTJIPAV PLR ANNUM, I> : :/ \ THE BEST IS USA VSR COi'STy OFFICE IN CORNER DIAMOND, The proprietor has fitted ap A new and complete RUNNING aa good and at aa LETTER HEADS BLANK BOOKS, CHECKS PROGRAMMES BLANKS, HANDBILLS, LABELS CHECKS PUBLISH £l> at J s. kvtan. •DODGERS. NOT ft*. TA'KS At „ &’ :k c<* Mo •: NIN i*-.,prv:nr.