falVt D. BUEHLER, G & BOOK STORE, 11AM13EltSBURG ST-REST, =I ATIONERY OF ALL RINDS, LRUOS AND MEDICINES; UMERY AND TOILET SOAPS 1113tell'A NT! suppltt.4.l ht v.liolts,hle MI JAMES CRESS, DR-u-ogisr, Brunrs Builsbing Batto. et., rrrttsrr o WN. VING opened a tie* DRUG f. HIE and fitted it np In the beat style, I offer •1 pure and fresh Drug, to the eltfeees of .•an end rietnity at the :wrest market rates, ug in pelt of Y and AL:ulieines, Pure lors .for Medicinal Purposes, Patent 11;q1eines, Horse Powders, Spice., Dyes nod Dyo Stuffs, Perfumery, :ups d Fatty articles. A, full assortment of Stab uery of all k inda, Cigars, Tobacco and itare's flectro-Nlagnetie Soap will wash-with soft wetter, cold or warm. Clothes Wastisti itioap are mule hezintifull3 white 'without •t. blueing.. This is the beet Soap In mm. Try e warranted not to injure the hands or fabric. ...town, May 13.—1 y JAMES CHE'rB. DR. R. HORNER, AND DRUGGIST, Id Drug Store, CIIAMEERSBURG STREET ET F PYS BURG ledleal advice without charge. 1:=1113 , MEDICINES,PATENT MEDICINES, STA LY. PERFUMERY, SOAPS,DRUSHES,TOII, RTICLES, DYE STUFFS, SPICES, BAR• SODA, CREAM UP TARTAR, LAMPS, COAL OIL, AC., ae LIQUORS for medicinal prirposee 11°1 - Tier's °LIEN, a reliable remedy foi heeds, rough skin, gc. • titles warranted pure and genuine HUBER'S UCH STORK y's old Sland—Baltimore Street, GETTYSBLTRG, PA. purchased this uld and popular Stand, 14111 In au rutirely new and fresh Stock, all aysortment,cunsisting in part of AND FAMILY MEDICINES 'T MEDICINES—A LARGE ASSORTMENT. LIQUORS a WINES FOR MEDICINAL PUR ' AND FLAVORING EXTRACTS. ROSES t,DI'.E.STUFFS—DOW A STEVENS• DYES. lON DYES, AND TIIE ANILINE DYES eII EAP_En AND BEST IN THE MARKET. HE NEW AND ELEGANT PEILFDALEB AND ILIT ARTICLES. TE'S, AND OTII ER SUPERIOR SOAPS Y , e HORSE POWDERS-THE BEST AND RAPF.ST; ALSO, FOUTZ'S, ELLS, DALE'S it: tA N, STON EBRAK ER'S AND ROBERT'S . ATIONERT . OF ALL KINDS. ' TOBACCO AND SNUFF-TkIE 'DEBT:' LANDS. ICIANS' PTION S AND 'FAMILY It. 'API'S CAREFULLY CO.IIP';UNDED. ICIANS AND COUNTRY MERCIIANTS SUP LIED AT REDUCED FATES. ?n.• yarn iArd ♦T ♦LL 1101:18 or' TEE NIGLLI.- 4Virht 8.71 aft?ie doer. it 1, 16CA.-tf ; 4. 3 hotograph (galltritS. XCELSIOR GALLERY IPTONSc MYERS successors to C. J. Tyson. O T OG . RAPEJS, OTO MINIATURES -IMBROTYPES, tte., .eoscopic Views of the I_TTLE-FIELD, STEREOSCOPES, OGRAPH FRAMES, LB UMS REAT AT GRESTLY RED CICED PRICES. • goal iu nothing but theliesVof its kind. Call law our 140ev. ran be furuisheil from all negatives ever La f3%-iON'S .OLD STAND. —tr E OVALI :TTYSBURG SKYLIGIITGALLERY undersigned - takes pleasure onunneing e citizens of Gettysbnrs aed le generally that he:has removed from hie on West Middle street, to Baltimore street v opposite tbestere of Fabnestock-Brothers. be sop occupies, has been recently Sited 7 tot his business. The location litlD ad ore, enabling him to take pictures In all vreinther,and With a correctnesennegnalled *else, FE-LIRE PHOTOGRAPH'S, ize and descriptioh,executed In the Eneat Ocular attention given to the CARTE-DE and in copying AMBROTYPES and DA. - °TYPES of deeeasecifriends. Also— TILE GRTTTSBEIRG GEMS, le of picture which hat become varoapoptee. hepotale,noturily for their betrety, hi:afar , and convenience. ISIXTRIN for OMR only. Afoul—THE PORCELAIN which for then b(14.1..y aaadurabLakfm• ed. .11165. 11.10/1•1 1 111111 , 7 A. Varbli N iI 0 . ' W" a - MX WORKS, OF B `iar,lollE AND EAST MID- %MN:FATE THE COURT-HOUSE,- fITTYSB URO, PA., DIISCRIPTIOR OF WORK XXECUTKD IN X FIXEB2 STILE OF TILE AIM 1 i47.-:1 risBURG MARBLE YARD. MBA'S k BRO York treo4oettyaburg, Pa. Whore they wd to furnish al I kinds of work in thoirliao MONUMENT'S, TOMBS, lIRADSTOBRE, MANTLES„&c., kc test auticeoind 6.6 chimp u thb vs • eall. Prodre• tau in subsea for =l3 %rr s Discharges.. • . kb, peeper Docket, I am_prepar. ID somaa , DISCHAZGI4 le ac e retest Act of the Legislature oz aro cautioned *phut deisy • nouvrosta, ,N em p r & Do order of Memo comity lEEE n ars*, neriannionn4 PROPRISTOII2 AXD;PITMMM retrea t between tke Cbood-hoeueateti Diamond , Gdtysburst, Pa. TEREB OR PUBLIC LILO) Tun Stan earii Sarum is publketnal oeuj 7rl day morning, at $l.OO a year in advance ; of lAA it. not pail within tbe.year. No enbecripflone discos• wined until all ^restyling is* pahl,unlann 44 the op tion of they'd:disbars. - ADVCII2I3IIII.II4ITe are Inserted at reasonable rates,- A Mania deduction will barna& to persons adverti sing by the quarter, ball year, or Sear. Special no tices will bo inserted at special rates, to be agreed upon. Alla - The circulation of theBlall AM) SltNTl3lll.ill Mi hail' larger than that ever audited by any newmpaptir 1,1/4 Adam„ r ooty and, na so advertlebing medium, it cannot be excelled. Jen Wear. of all Mode will be promptly executed, and at fair rates. Ulaad•bills, Blanks, Card., Panipb let3, he , in every variety' and etyle will l.te printed at short notice. Terms CAVIL OFFICIAL DIRECTORY COCWIT OPTIC/118. President Judge—Robert J. riskier. Associate Tioiges—lssac Robinson, Joirrib J. Kohn. Prothonotary—J scab • Slol bora. Repiste, and Recorder—Wm. D. Dultzworti. Clerk of the Courts—A W. Mint . D Writ( Attorney—Wm. A. Dan sn. rcensnrer-11. D Wattles. Sheriff—Phillp Donn. Clironer—Dr. W. J. McClure. Sarre/or—Jens. D. K Cbsinsissiorsers—Nicholos W lerman.Ja Lot t,Moses Ilsnmiu. C'erk—l. M Walter. tinsel—Wm. "McClean. Physician to Ist/ —Dr. J. Wi . Directors of Me Poor—Rohjamin Doirdorff, Jobn R.ihri, M olio Getz. Steward--Jonsa Johns. Clerk IMMMEO la—Win. McClean. Physicinn.—J. W. C. O'Neal. Auditors—MArtln Bollinger, Jacob Pittentnrff, Ja- cob Hull 11010 P aserrengte. Burgett—Teter ere. Council—W.B miLtoa, Alexander Spangler, David .W.Arren, rge A. Earnehaw, A. M. Hunter, Wm. F. ,r. Clerk— - ,roruiall Culp. Treruurer— So ae Con. IStlltam Young, Henry tv,rt, Dula Wills, David Emldlehart, Wm. Mc Flierry, William I).l.llmea. Joshua Mutter, Marcus EN.III4VII. Plan NATlolill BASS. OP GETTIMICIIO. Prrsi.lent—Ge9rge Throne. Cash ler—George Arnold. _ Teller—A.M. Hunter. Directors—George Throne. David McConangliv,Jadin Brongh, ELLibert Bell, John Horner, George Arnold Jacob Ml:weld:Lan. tVEB CUE] CENSTRIT. • President—J. L. Schick. Secretary—William B. Meals. Treasurer—Alexander Cubans, Managers—John Rupp. J. L 11111, Josiab Benner. George 'Spangler, George Little, William B. Sluals, Aleaandereubean. ADA.IIB COUNTY MCNEAL INSURANCE COMPANY., PresidentL-George Swope. lice President—Samuel R. Rowell. .S:eeretetry—David A. Buehler. Treasurer—EdWard U. Fa buesi.ck. Cbnintittce—Robert McCurdy, henry A Jacup King. ADAXIQOUNTS 41011.1CL'ISCISAL S.JCIS,TY. Pre . , it/silt—Samuel I.l.erbst. Vise Presidetas—William McSherry, J. S. Withcrow. Corresponding &cretary—tinury J Stallle. Record.ng Secreiarg—Edward Fahnettock. Tre,surer—David Wills Managers—William B. Wilson. William WM,lo..lonas Roams!ln, ElieMs Penrose, John U. McClellan. BUILDING ASSOCIATION. Prcsiden t—Ed ward G. Fahuestock. rier Pm. ickn--Wllliam A Duucau. Secretary—John F. McCreary. Treasurer—Jacob A. Vanagers—C. floury Buehler, J. NV. C. O'Neal.juliu Rupp, Joba Culp (of 11.4-Ww.Chritzman. G. Fatinent.k. Secretary—Wm. A. Du uc Trcasur,r—Joel B Danner. ..ltanagersA. D. Budder 31. Eirbelberger, 11. 11attles, S. IL Russ',ll, W. A. Duncan, .1. B. Danner RAT= CoYPANT. President—George W. McClellan. Ser.-tarp ,End Treasurer—Samuel R. Ruesell. Managers—G. W. McClellan. George Swope, B. B Buehler. S. R. RaganlL, 11.3. Stahle. atrrisarna RAILROAD. S•yursfralor—ltobert 31cCurdy. S-,retary and Treastaer—David Wills Ftre. Second. Trains depart 9.00 A.'3l. LLO P. 31 arrive 12.90 P. M. 4.30 P. M The first train makes close connection for liar- Aisbrees and Eicstem nod Werteru points, the second train. .irigh BaitinioCe. .essocuno39. G , tly ..Loth,e, N 0.124. 1. 0. 0. F.—Hoots 'other o Carlisle sr.d Railroad sit eet a, very Tuesday evening. Union Ettrammrient, No. 12.1.4 I. 0.0. F.—ln Odd lows' hall , let-dud 3d 31onday iu each mouth. good Samaritan lodge, No. 336, A. Y. 1.-Ihirner of Carlisle and Railroad streets, 2d and ltb Tbareda.) in each ausath. _ _ • ::..n. Ressookts Ledges No. 180,f. 0. G. T.—On Daltd. more street, every Monday evening. .74tsysterg Lodge. No..— I. 0. G. Tln Star an. Sentinel Building, every Friday evening. • Cayugas Trait. .N 0.31, 1.0. .12. At—l n liceonttughy's 11.11, every Friday evening. Pose No. 9, G. A. Et —l.ll Star and Sentinel Building, every tintarday wen jug. Adder trertson Ni.. 214 S. T.—ln Star nod dentine Butldi ig, every Wednesday evening. esiniteuts, .Pr,sbyteruta— Rev. Edaill Fertihr, Stated, Supply.— Sers•lces Sabbath murut ug, and 'Wednesday evening. -r.., , ftheran,(Christ'sy—Sastur, her. C. A. Hay, D. D.— Services by Professors of College. and Soulluary al ternately, Sabbath morning and everting and %Wednesday evening, During vacatieue, Sunday ceasing eervLce omitted. Lutheran,(Bt.Jaates')—Rev. E. Breidenbaugh. Ser• vireo NUR:alb morning and evening,and %Sedum -4 day evening. . . _Methodist ipiscopca—Revs. J. B. Van Meter. J. B. Shaver. Services SabLath morning and evening, nod Thursday evening. German fteforsted—Rev. W R. H. Deatrlch. Ser. viceis Sabbath morning and evening, • Wednesday CM/nese—Rev. Joseph 8011. Services let , Sd and Sth Sabbaths, morning and afternoon. PreSbytergati.—Bev. j. Jamleson.—Ser►kee by special appal osmosis. groftoothual Zardo, &e. J. o_o VER, ATTORNEY AT W, will promptly attend to collection ea nd ochre Balinese entruated to hie care. , N;fme between Vahnestock and Danner and Ziegs .er's stares, Ualtimore street,Dettysburit,ra• May 29,1867. - DAVID ER RUEITI, ATTOR NEY yr LAWt will promptly attend to collec tions and another business entrusted to his tare. 1161-Office at his residence in the threestory building appoints the Court House. 11.1ettyaburg, May 29,1867 D AVID WILLS, ATTORNEY AT LA W,Otlice at his residence in thetiontit=eas corcer ofeentre Square. May 29, 1867. CLAIM AGENCY.—The under signed will attend to the collection of claims against the U. S. Gdsernment,'lncladiug ; Military Bounties, Back Pay, Pensions, Forage. kc., either in the Court of Claims or before any of the Departments et Washington. R. G.cCUARY May Mt 807. Attorney at harr, M Giet tya E burg , Pa J OS. H. LEFEVER, ATTORNEY A 2' LAW LITTLESTOWN. Pd., - , Will promptly attend to Collections, Conreyeences, IVreting of Deeds, Leases. &c., and all other basica.. entrusted to his care. Vrederlek street, at the office formerly gr-upled by Drs Shone, flinger and Mehring. May 20, 18815.-le* ICCON/rGrIT, Attoineys and Counsellors. D• McCONAUGHY has associa ted JOUNSI KRAUTE, Esq.. In the practice of the !R. , . at his .141•411ce, one door west 0(8E12E11E4 Drag store, Charnhersburg street. Epeeial attention given to Butts, Collections and settlement of Estates. all legal boldness, and alms to Pensions, Bounty. Back-pay, and Damages Oast Q. dtates.at all [lines, promptly and efficient. afleadod to. - Laid warrants located. and choice Farms for sale lowa and other western State,. [NUT. 27 ,1867.-t DR. J. A. ARMSTRONG, Having located at NNW SALEM. will attend to all branches of hie pecfeeeion. at. • Will be found at his office when not professionally ni p ..g.l McKinuIITSToWS, P. 0.. '1 Adams ronnts, P. r DR. J. w. C. O'NEAL Liss hie Orece at his sentience in Baltimor street, two doors above the Compiler Office. Gettysburg. May 29, 1887. R. WM. STALLSMITH, Dent- Ist, having located in Oettystnirg, offers . his services to the public. Office in Baltimore street, in room above Minolgh's Coniee , ionary, where he will he prepared to attend to any case within the province of the Dentist. Persons in want of Poll or partial sets of teethßre invited to a ll . Terms reason. able. [April JOHN LA.W RENOE HILL; -- Den Oat, dhambersburs street, one door west of the Lutheran Church, nearly opposite Dr. R. Aloriler's Ortliffitore, where he may be found ready an d willing to attend any case within the province of the Den Liiit Persona in want of fullest- ofteeth ere belted to sill. [1(17,29,1867 • 1)R. C. W. BENSON HAS 4L &Will:0 the Private. of Medicine in LIT TLICETOWN, end deers ids -invites to the Office at, his house, corner of Lombard street and FitatidryaUsy, seer tee Reneged. Special attetion giretLto Skin Diseased. _ [Litelseuen, R0v.13; 186? FARMERS, Attend to your Interests ! "GETTYSBUIie FOVNDRY: sebscriber, Areuld tattrm Ufa mit. m Ti t . others, tbat ! hobo staleasuilictarlagrartous kind. of clualnigi and alecktulkaluietti order, =idiot, no. T WSW= Alni POWERS, (eve digarsot stow et Novato , _LOLOYZHABED HUL LERS LN D PA RATOWMANYODDitit CUTUNI STRAW AEA HAT OUISURS ; ODRN PLANERS& PL arr a s. each u Gat Planba, Plaatethillikehiqui Cora Planets; Ma • . • .. WMFMMIO .11101141 RAKE, _ • th• latest Rumness:it; also lL biIIZIOUIPAI MP" MSOLIAIIIe 401/01,11AX. • • -• • wal whimaanbows - "- 1WW468.4.4111.U14 1 1111.11 SClPAWStbrOlgetsemas,, ate IRON 141ingi r i m anseeere or Porches, et sysislAtrA m eburte e, Mast low rates. • 70118 /AMID ;4‘ tz April 1,,11p Tre curer—Jac .b Benner CM A. Buehler, -Vm. Golan, W. en, John Y. McCreary, A J. ho F. McCreary. Treasurer— IM=MEII33 13303:333 JOHN W. EILACTIL July 24. 1'.65.-tf toundrg, err r.~as?4~''=~.i ~~. . H 'vr .: VOL. L.I.X. NO. 4. , guointso tardy. I OLIN W. TIPTON, FASHION 'S' AIMS HA FMB, Aorth-Bast corner of the Diamond, nest boor to GeOlellaa's ,Hotel. Gettys burg Pa., where he can at at thues be totindready to attend to all bustnessln lifeline. its bas also so excellent tssistant anti will suture i t t isfeet itv Outs - all. May V. itOt. QIIDVEYOR AND DICIENSED CONVEYANCgiI. The undersigned, having L. ken • jOu.eyancer's License, wilLin connection with the silica of COUNTY giIItVEYQS, attend to ,he A'RITINO OF DEEDS.HONDS,RELEASES.WILLS ARTICLES OP AGREEMENT, OLEEK/fill OP SAL' . tO. slaving had tonsiderable experience In tbl■ line, be !lopes to receivea liberal abare of patronage. Stud nese prompt v attended to and charges reasonable. Poetallea address Fairfield, Adam, J. B.WITHBROW. Lbnn May 29, 1862.—tf _ - ROOMS ! BROOMS! The undersigned COD filmes to manufacture Broome at meow stand le Carlisle etrect adjoining Railroad Depot. He sill have during the fall a full supply on band, and wilt be able to furnish them WNOLP.SALK Utt RKTAIL. Broome made to order or on the 'liaise. Persons having Broom Corn would do 'well to give hire a cull. 8. R. TIPTON. tiettisberg, Nov. G.-3m - C A It .D HAVING diaponed of the "EXCELSIOR GALLERY" to . Messrs. TIPTON and kiTzu, I take the oppor runty of extending to the public my lancers thanks for their liberal patronage In the put; and knowing my successors to be prompt, thorough, energetic and practical Photographer., I ark for them a con tinuance of the same. They baring Maintained entire control of the Excelsior Gallery fur the; t °years, I know t h at they will exert every effort to render full satnductiun et aH Units. C. J. TYSON. GRANITE-YARD , GETTYSBURG, PA., ON RAILROAD, NEAR FREI/311T DEPOT. PETER BEITLER Is prepared to furnish GRANITE, fur all kinds of BUILDING AND MONUMENTAL PURPOSES, ut rewionable rate;— Curbing, Sills, Steps, Ashlers, Posts, Monuments, Ceme tery Blocks, &c., t and tinlibed In every style deslred. by br,t of Lrkmcn lia-Ordurs from x digtance prt;mptly attended to Juno 3.—tf JEREMIAH CULP, GETIYSBURG, Undertaker &Taper-Hanger, is prepared to funnel/ on short notice and reekboneb!a EICII OOFFEVS OF ALL STYLES. Ile also keens ern hand a bar, assortment of WALL PAPER. ahi hhe xelle at I et cosh rates and it de sired will furnish hands to pot it on the 11,11. PLAIN & FANCY .810. N EXECUTED TO ORDER. 44- Yerk olifeet-it few dourseset of Lut heron Cidirc May 2;, 1869 tt. ROBERT D. ARMOR, GAS FITTER, PLUMBER AND • BELL HANGER, Earl Middle aired, half a square froas Ma Motrl-haws, GETTYSBURG, _ PA., • W ILL premptlj attend la aIL der. In his line. Work dune to the most satis factory meaner, and at prices as. kiw agree ptissibly be afforded to stake a living. _ GAS PIPE.! furnished, an wall am Chandahers, Brackets, Drop Light. tc.; also PATER PIPE.. Stop,. Top an I Frost dpigote. and,lo short. everything belonging to gas or water fixture*. Belts Long. and Inrnlsbed if den iced. Lacks of all kinds repaired. ' (Dec. 21,1.867:je1 MARSH GRREK PLANING MILL. THE undersigned has established a PLANING NILL,on Marsh creek, feu r Int les froM Gettysburg, at which be will manufacture: DOORS AND DOOR FRAMES, WINDOW SASH AND FRAMES, FLOORING, WEATHERBOARDING, Chair and Wash Boards, with everything elsemade at such a factory, and needed in the building line The beet of lumber will always be used, all lhoroughly dried, a kiln baring been put up fur the purpose. Orders &Melted, and promptly attended to. Prices as :ow as the iowest, and every effort made to accom .. modate customers. JOHN. . PFOUTZ. May 20, 1889.—1 y Attention, Housekeepers I WASHING MADE EASY. HAVING the agency for Adams county for JACK 8081'8 UNIVIIItAAL WASHING COMPOUND. Patented Jan. 10,1866, 1 respectfully Invite the attewp Von of Ladle" and Housekeepers. to It as Lae most economical nod valuable Washing Compound' In use. It require.' no rubbing of Clothes—washes in bard mi well as soft watio . , and does PO , injure the{ Most do 'Halite fabric; preurves and - 11.1es the colors; removes paints, grease and stains of all • Inds. Gls. k n trial and you will use nothing else. Rights $1 each. For turther Information apply to Cli.AB. 11. ETALLiMITII, Oettyshurs, Pa. have'been lor•rmed thal parties in several parts of the county are selltne what mutants to be Jackson's Compound. As t have the et... Waive right to Adams county, all persona are hereby warned against selling or purchasing from other parties. Aug. 7. 1888.—tt F URNITURE - . •• D. -C. SHEA_FFER PETERSBURG, (Y. 8. 2 ) PENRA.,_ Is prepared to offer:to the Public, anything In Ws line as cheap as ea be bad In the county. + llM.Parchaeerz will do well to call -and alumina+ ivy stock Left baying elsewhare. FU RN I T U RE nude to order, Repairing doneuslat. cheap al.d witb NE L.BAIERY. NEWPORT & ZIEGLER. Meabaelesl ilakaibb, Career . Waabingma ; mid mist, .111ddle strasts, Qattysbnrg, Pa. Constantly on band the beet of '" ' BRKAD, • • • • CRACKERS, • CAKES, PRETZELS, to. ParsiMa Iristaag &deb BgeMl will bkaeilimi *vary , morning, by having their '111111119•S and retidencimat the Bakery. Every abet wide eoplesist. • • • • GIVE US -- A- GALL. lelay EL VW. A LLXINDS 0 1 / 1 3LAX13, Coduada4, Adiaintatas IX tor's and tratecataTS,Deeda. liertigeeCll4o"4" • Nato& Peoadwary Midaa v id* and without waiver N eredidacm.alliPPagod. Sabpainasand Ihrsdatineu lidir *IP . 1 .0 0.. airs lbawnrat...a.. rdivart,'Outtery, ar.' HARDWAAB Arta 0 ROOSHINS: TRZenbiorlberahavelnitretarnadfrolathneittea mitt an lamest* supply of .11A111W4itit ORO -1388I1t8, whisk .1.84r7 are offering at their nld stand In ealtitiore etreet, at prleent snit the times.Onr a to:k c ((valets la part or tJarpentart*Toole . . Illacksalth'grools. ilto sr lid's"' , i Oslotn•t Malries Tools. INOWAeoperellitsres • ' - ,' •- - ....... ar . itrot t oggral 0, sIL X X ;* - alAtablAs4ka..l3l4r,s(Ssigst is' 'taw asysiral dipisllsnoola siostiosiodliiveo.lite ;eel Sr bool at Ws lien. ;-ey obeee of '' Ailtitti leen , _ _Vele sad lad be :00Abl; Ai* erthslein their lia• •11/91 VtgoUesleve Ibroaebassaya ti 11-0 nge* to eats" - DAVID inlarlllit; - . JOAL s.siatimp. . I.r»hlal. • • _ . . t . , • • \ . - . • • Y 1 • • • --.44,..rw 1 ';' , • 2 t.l , . . 7 4, ' . . , • • •11 f • 'l4 =OA= SHAWLS, CARPETS, before, and arejust trFrh trota the ("Mee FAHNESTOCK BROS Lave an elegant azaortinent .f ; DRESS GOODS which they are telling very cheep FAIINESTOCK BROS Largest stock of Furs in town. If you want bargains earl arid btiy from them A great variety, and at lots prices cia Laud at CHEAP GOODS If you would save money buy at the SIGN OF THE RED FRONT CHRISTMASPRESENTS Buy a set of FURS or a handsome DRESS PAT TERN, the most useful Christmas Present you can make At Gettyeborg, Dec. 4, 1864. tf 1868. DESIRABLE 1868, DRY GOODS I • MOST EXCELLENT ASSORTMENTS ISELL for very small profits, and aim at doing a very large Bilk:tem. FASHIONABLE SHADES OF TIM SILK POP LINS. Liamo S ptoms swans or FRZNCH WOOL POP LIN. FASBIONABLB SRAM% OF ALPACFLI. POPLINS. FRENCH CRENTANS, P/Q.17103, nratce.urs AND BLACK SILKS, PLAIN SILKS. PLAID SILKS. - SWISS MIIFLINS,\IACONYT MCGLINA. CAMBRIC. BLACK ALPA,OCA.OOLORLD, ALPACCA, BLACK • ALL WOOL ostath. =vow giIAWIA,CASEWERII SELAWLB,THIEST SHAWLS. _ CLOTRik CASSINO/A& CLOAKING S. LINEN DRILL ING, _COTTONADB, _ , TABLB oorrima, tts&g,razapti, NAPKINs, ToW BALmoRAL SKIRTS, HOOP SKIRTS. PLAIN I..nm rad HAN DIESIICHINFIL 11411131,01 DRUD RANDKISROURFS, /IBM STITCHED HAND mci.c.auss. NICLADus. inBezw,asruzass'B6LovzB, viir,a24b atocadscia. 11111 COMllltantay marine the latest atylal \ of . Drees and rano goods.. liy etnek nelitetreet eyntl , ti gA4= ll lflch ft restl i te let= 41rie (TEAB . ending ateared that-I can wifely challenge compari• eon with ellothar Stores In witty olg oda and low nem atatioa. . POIIOIE. fiatobgrg, Pa. , April 29,1868e -0r NE W ,GOODs. Cheaper than Ever! REBERT & ELLIOTT; Baltirnoreet.,thes Court zrouse, H ATEjuirt. °pawl aNM Mal billintinsilt of Springaii.diStumier Goods OF ALL , RINDS, C'LOTIO Cosa h liagog Ts which they to lavitiatteskwo—hoges ogmatised et 101,9111 edit t Mew. [Spin I, d Illedotott pry gado,' Sot4itys, a'. NEW GOODS OE OLD PRICES The undersigned wonld respectfully Inform the paLGc generelly that he Is ttalidolng business at the place formerly occupied by Dumont! a If ormarr, and that he 'millet returned from the Cit lee with the beet selected stock ster brought to this ulnce, which con L Plata Cm poet .of, CLOTHS, CASSIMERS, CASSINETTS, MERINOS, POPLINS, SKIRTS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, SIISPISDERS OIL CLOTHS, GLASSWARE, QUEENSIVARE, SLc Sum of these woods will be eold lower than ever FRANK D. DUPHORN Nov. 96. 1868.—t f FURS. /1.1 rE lITE Cloths, Cassimers, &c FA HNIGSTOCK BROS FAIINESTOCR BROS. is the plate to boy of every description FAHNESTOCK BROS riMirDl4' NZIM lirmartki* BE grll Ooodo,';gotteni r &c. CASSIMERS, CLOTHS, 0 VERC'OA.TIIS, all styles and prices, by the yard,' or made to order, AT DUPHORN'S • NORTH-WEST CORNER AN E. 4 BE Nov. 27.—tf DELAINS FURS, elrpenttrs thud nntrartom w m. C. STALLSMITH: Si. SON GET T cllO, CARPENTERS & CONTRAC MRS Are prepared to do all kinds cfCarpenteting—ooatniet- ng and erentinn buildings of at kinds, Repairing, to They koop congtnuily 9n hAnfl and manufacture MM DOORS, BTUS TERP. 111,INDS, SASII, DOOR AND WTSDOW FRAME'S, CORNICE, DOOR AND And any ugier t!, Building Line Busoned m lterlet c••unt an tly un baud, axperlenend workmen alwaya In reaflineas, and work ekrantOd with dLipatch *..Orden promptly olitprAlod t C. 11. STALLISMITTI Bept.lB, 1867..—tf TO THE U I LDING COMM UNI TY AND ALL OTHEng WHO WISH. TO IMPRO VA". • THE undersigned respectfully in formtrtle public that continnei the cf. , CARPENTERING BUSI...NTS• .atbla old stand. on West street, Gettymbstrg, and M ready at all times to sccommoisto those wanting any thing dose in his line ' Us lewrepared tafiarithdt all ktodsof work for bm 'ling purposes. of the •bast tells,. and as n.tly err cheaply as ft can b e m . , ge ., e t any other -stabliaburout In tbecounty. Itiperialscad nand. +always Tn readl aegis and wort eXecuted with . olmitneas and dispatch. • , Air Thaaktolfor past Essors.he holm" , bY 4 LIWoMtw to onentese to receive* liberal share of public pat ronage. Hay 29.1/187. WM. CIIILITZM AN. GE(). U. CASHAIAN, GETTYSBURG, PA., Carpenter and Contractor , R ESPECTFULLY informs the public that he will continue the Carpenter ba• ainesa In all its branches, and..in prepared to take con tracts for putting up and repairing Building., at as reasonable rates an any builder in Gettysburg—all work guaranteed to be of best quality. B. hopes by strict attention to business to merit public patronage. Shop on York street, recently occupied by Nal/manic .Rowe. *O-Oct. Notice to Capitalists 1 PMIXONS desiring of iffseating, and realizing nearly NINE PER CENT., are requeatad to call at the Gettysburg X ationih Bank , AND OBTAIN CIRCIILATIS OF THE UNION-PACIFIC GEbiTIIAL PACIFIC &AILIWAD COB.•GRATIB: These investments are daily growing tillaror sad /islet Increaaing. SirBONDS can be had at all times at` bia Bank and where all information concerning maid beefb meats will be cheerfully even. Dee.18,147.-tf a. 11111fORY HAM Oaslain. GETTYMBURq NATIONAL BANK.' -GOVERNILLANT BONDS 01 . 0 kinds BOUGHT and SEVEN-TIMM T BON DE con sorted Into FIVILTIVEN TV BON Diktrithoti t charge. COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES CASHED. Thearouxerrannuit paid on6OLD andEILVER. STOCKS and BONDS, oral) kinds, bought for persou without camtGING COMMISSION. ORDERS PROM:PTLE EXECUTED. Interest on SPECIAL DEPOSITS adeaueed 1 percent els; 5 PER CENT. tor I year, 4 PER CENT. fora months, PER CENT. for 1 months. Persons wishing information In regard to U.B. Bonds and Stocks of all kinds, are invited to give tie • call and ape will eye all larossaatioa eheerfoßy. .1. E3ORT BAIR, Catlike. Gettysburg, Oct 80,1867 , rf ' FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF .. • ; GETTYSBURCrPENNA., . 9 Is agent/or the Sate of. the First Mortgage Union Pacific Rail Road: 6 PER CENT GOLD INTEREST, BONDS, armarlsit . rage, Irish is,reat payaible aealkagulalli . crust eanatar. All neceirag Information styes, - • GEO. ARNOLD, Ofiehler‘ eattyabare. FIRST AATpaNAL BANK • 01 1 GETTY&BURG wax,' ALLow - - I -. Intoroot on SPECIAL DITiMUn . 0 &Dor, t s PER aim PlNezniirid ? OE iris* -' ' a a a ..4 . , ,a.i . a 6 IffillT , a , ~i. a a 1. 64 , _.,. . WALI:4IIp COMPOUND ItNiNMDST4ffniiii#l:a" - COUPONS. ' • WUL Merzobnoo, - ot +ll i & intio ts •SONDS Of * ' wino woo onOLIMIL :11 Z 1,- P" kafil ' lbi le+l94-tic.. CtOLIS 4 littGylitli ...... - ,:,..- s'.•r ..., , I. 11==ibitig " g t T ' VNIV4IIIthrWr GM. ARNOLD, Osobinr- CoMptnwg, Nov. 0, 1810,41 C-ET7SBURG, PA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1868. AND 0 N Y FOR CASH We bare tl, fs day marked .11 Goods to tLe LOWEST CASII PRICES, tad to giro our Cus- tomur3 I - alit:clic-fit or SMALL PROFITS, from thiq date we lalrpoFe doing i ntrietly rash L6si➢PM, ur,d will Bell at tL• VERY LOWEST CAM PRICKR to all Mornay Liv,,r. =1 stow h WQODS IZIEEEM WINDOW LIRACKETki, BTAI.LB.If 1111. Ainaurizi. = jai Hootland's German Bitters AliD HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. 4 ' ' the Great Reinedles for all Diseases of the .I.IITR, STOMACH, OR AMPS- TIV,E oaq...dxs. fhthiland's German Bitters Ts composed °tette pureja lees (or, as th ey aro medlel nanY (ermed..Extracti)of Roots, liarba,and Barks, ma king y preparatioo, Melly concentrated, and entirely free frets ateaketleadattriersof ems kind, HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC U a combination of ill the Ingredients of the [littera with the purest quality of &into Crux Rum. Orange, &C., making one of the meet plemunt and agreeable rem edies ever offered to the public. 'Thaw preferring a Medicine free from Alcoholic ad mixture, will use 1100FLA.ND'S GERMAN BITTERS Those who have no objection to the combination of the Bitters, u stated, will use HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. They are both equally aced, and contain the same medicinal virtues, the choice between the two being • mere moiler of taste,theTouie being thee:lod p.datable. The stomach, from a variety °lemmas, Inch so Indigos tion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility ate.. i. very apt to have its innetione deranged. The Liver, rympathisitqg as eloseli so itdoes with the Stomach, then becomes al erted:the result of which le that the patient suffers tutu several or inure of the following diseases Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fullness of 'flood to the Head, Acidity of theftomach, Nausea, Heart-horn, Disgust for Food, Fulness or Weight In the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pito! the Stomach. Swimming ether lead, line rieJ or 1)i cult breathing., Pr t e i ring at the Heart,' Choking or Suffocating Sr ons when In a Lying Posture,. Dimness of Yarloo, Dom or Webs before the Sight Dull Pato in the Head, Deficiency of Perspira tion. Yenoeunataattie Sk in and Eyes, Plato In the Side. Deck, C helot, Limns, et ' t Sudden Flushes of Ifeat, Ranting In the Flesh, Consta r n im aginings of Evil, and Ureat Depression of Spirlte s reined; for ha The sufferer from these dimwit should exercise the g ce r s a :, ' p e" urfh a ::: " n n g o i n n ly th th e a:Vrlc i h i ls le assured from Ms Investigations and Enquiries pommies tens merit. Is •kiifally compounded, la it ea from aqui iuu•lntrredients, and Las estt,Lli•hed fur Itself. rel,utation fur the rute of the...11..161.e5. In this connection we wouldsubmit (km. well : k MO , n remedies-- HOOFL AND'A GERMAN BITTERS, AND 00FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC PREPARED BY Dr. C. N. JACJESON, PHILADELPHIA, PA Twenty-twoyeareeinee thee-mere lint Introduced in to this coup ivy from Germany, during which Gm, they have undoubtedly performed a:wren:lr., and benefited so trerteg humanity to a greater ortOat, than any other remedies known to the public. These remedies Trill etrectastly tern LlverComplalut, Jaundice, Dyspepsia. Chronic or INerroor Debility Chronic .Diarrtites, Plena," of thei. Kidney.. and all Di , run unclog from a Dlsordered Liver, Stomach, or Intestines. DEWLITY, Resulting from any Cause whatever; PROSTRATION OF THE SYSTEM, induced by Severe Labor, Hard ships, Exposure, Fevers, etc. Thera la no melicuie extant aqua/Lie these remedlea la much dares. A tone and ♦iaor4 IJ:opined to the • bole ay stem, lbe appal/arbour - vac theta ad,fitod 4 enjoy ed. the •tom•ehdittette ye otootly, the blued is bard! ed, the coo- Vexion becomes/wend sad healthy, the !allow Maas le eradtt:ated.tr• 1:13 the ayes,* bloom is given to the cheeks, and the *telt and iiervona Invalid becomes a strop( and bealikt beteg. PEASION4 A D VANCED IN LIFE, And feeling the Lend of time setilittng heavily upon them, with NI be attending We, waflibtf in the 11111111.4 this 13 ITTsla,t or the TONIC, an elixir_ that • 111 iruAll new ufr into tbeir vein., restore himmilitrre the energy nod 'kWPII . ammo Yon WI al daya,ballit 6Y thetrehrutk. en term." end give health lad happineri to thole re. . . 244:1 , Tt4;ne"''' It 1* a hell-establitired het that full, one-ballot th• female pension 41 our populatkro are Nadas In the our Juytnetst °flood health i-or, to use theirown expreeekut, “ne'ver SW well." They are laturnid, devoid of at I suer , aittrutu sip nervous, eau hats no appetite. To' tins dues of person. the BITTY.RLI, or the TQ,NIC, to esoecintly recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Ate made strong by the nee of either of these remedim They will cure every ea.. , of MA RASMUS. without filt. Thousands of certificate. have accumulated in the hands of the proprietor, hit 'Wiwi" .&W of the pit. ileatiou or but a ba, Shone, It will be observed, an men of note and of sorb s tandtog that they must be be lieved. TESTIMONIALS. HON. CIEO. W. WOODWARD, Chief ittgiCe of Me Supreme Ctrowi of Plassa,„ writes Philacte!phis, March 16,1807. “I and 'lloofland'a German Bitters' la a good tank, tmettO in diaeasen of the digedtive organ', and of great benefit fir clues of debility, and rant or DetTeal action in the syctem. Yours, trt li , . WOODWARD.” RON. JAMES THOMPSON, Judge of Ike Suprons Choi qf Pentuyfetuds. Philadelphia. Ap.1128,18615 .1 *modeles gloofisad's German Bitters's pahsabie ntoiftias In case of attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia, I can seal* this f om my experience of tt. Yous, with respect, J AMES TIHOMPSON." PROM REV. JOIMPEI R. KEENARD, D. D., Fluter of Mt Teeth Bapart Church, Phfiadelphio. Dr. Au:Lion—Deer 9 irt have beau frequently re quemod to connact my name with recuraumodaAlose ul different k I nth ofmotheihev, net regarding the practice ea oncof ety appeopristg 'tonere. I have in all came de clined; nut with a clear proof in various instances nd particularly In my own family-of the useltdnees of Dr. Hoeflead'it German BI tzars, I depart for on •e from my usual worse, to 0i1:4.4 ut) fu I Ic on action thatforgew era/ debilirly of the syxtels, andmpeciatlyfor Lime am plata', st Er a safe and atilt/at/4 preparation. In some ctutes amity fall; bat 'lewdly.' doubt nut, it Will never, beneficial to theme who 'offer from the above 'stun'. Yours, very reipectfully, J. 11. KENNARD, 'Signal, below Como gi, rROM REV. 3. D. rEYDALT.,, Ate/lent Editor Chrirlian Chronick, Philadelphia. • L have &rived decided benent tram the ose a l goo f- lama's German Hi t tere,and feel it my privilege to recona inebd them as a mo.t van:sble tone, roan wh o are saf retina tram general debility or front dillasee• arising from derangement of the liver. Yopra, truly E. D.' PIINDALL. ll=l CAUTION Hooflana'iGermeo Remedies ere counteradiet 800 that th • einnetureof C. M.JAOHBOIt le on the wrapper of each bottle. All others IT. counterfeit. Prinetpiel OM ea end ifaen factory altheeerumuMati. clue eforti s No AN ARCH mrset,ilMadalph4ips. CLIAIM,EB N. SVANS,Nrofmt m . ' ' Formerly 0. *. JACKSON & co. • PRICES. Ha:den d'et ermail Bitters. per bottle, B 1 00 hell doz en, 00 Hoelland'etlerman Tonle. put up In 'tart botthe,lll 00 Per bottle, or a half dozen for 17 60. 407 - Do net forget to examine well the article yen buy in order t 0 'get the genuine. Rah. lb. 11 1 %.-ly leor allay all Prniiii" cod dealer. in nigdidnei• coal, gumbr, ghat, &f. GETTYSBURG L'I'ME KILNS. TWO unitorslgned has bought oat big' h mair para. nor, W. dtriza t iad now continues Tft triiI743T,JRNMO BlIEIM)38g hhohell-eat the Gettysburg Liisitilts;'••4lmisses• of t6a italiroad sad Yore attrition stmt. Moak tut yationaye, turn •••Tivroorto isserws its contin•ual• by proixoltiog thebuldej Y Idiertms ly and onii. large • wale •• p•••41-41wars i s üb i • goOd.lo and giwiug go a l main 3 Fil• ParMortatid *am mayilook for the prow/SU/agar or d ers . Be elleeiatbiusi lb* , CoAL 811841Z1414, Gllalat **most perdu Made. -1141 pies NM II csa• alacklillatiftel ea . itiatitotimed. inrium.!4-• .7aPoslogirr= v i m r , tvg, simbumak bolo; Cl,* and soli Ulm tort Duraura, • 4....dt Ifirthlrldt ewaKMOOS She And ffitar //Mind. [For the Star and Sentinel WHAT THE sums TEACH VU. Our Summer months, are quickly gone Our time of birds and flowers, And our songsters now are warbling, In gent .1, southern bowers, But when the melting now of Spring,l Run down our mountain's aide, We'll hear their sweetest notes again, Commingling in the tide. They will not tarry long, afar, They love our deep, cool atiadog, Our pleasant,sunny valleys, And lakes, begirt with glades. They love our leaping eastaidea, Our rivers' gentle am, They love . our healthy zephyrs Breathed whereso'er they go. They love our sparkling fountains, Gushing so pure and bright, In which they see' heir beauteous forma Mirror'd by morning light. Devttion—child-like, Al may learn, From those happy, artl ea For they point us in their songs, To the loving Saviour's words: Saying—" Come ye heavy laden," Come to me ;—yoke meekly died ; Cake my easy who upon you, Bear it patient by my aide. I will lead you to the Father, Efvery day, will teach you more; I will show yon of the mys tery Which He planned in days of yore ! Listen then to voices lowly, Fondly whispering to your heart, "God is ever near to guide you, Lonely traveler—if thou art Without thy /evil; without money, Neither sandals for thy feet, (Wet tbotiseek ?—Thou host the pi o iae That the Saviour you shall meet"; Or In lordly halls of geandeur, Docked with diamonds, rich and rare Ale will bend His ear-to listen, To the heart-felt, earnest prayer." [For the Star and Sentinel EVES ISG. 'Tis evening—the sun has sunk in glory behind the western hills, and the gentle dews of heaven descend and kiss the earth. Pale Luna shines coldly, and the glistening stars speak to the mind of immensity un bounded. Evening—and the tired laborer rests before his cottage Bre, and dreams of happiness. Evening—and the child, weary ,1 its play, kneels before the nightly couch, and the zephyrs waft the pure prayer to heaven. Eveulng—and the yearning spirit of the child of genius is borne away from earth scenes, and dwells in realms of thought. Evening—and the Christian lifts his heart on high, and thinks of that land where no night nor , eve can come. Eve ning—kneel thou, and ask the care of Him, without whose protection, thou world et never see another eve. .1. 13. G. • I Lincoln, Blaine, Nov. 20, 1868. Rim:axis° • SALurs.—A most amusing atom to told of Judge 13., now occupying a • psnt. in the Pennsylvania State Gcntern meta. Traveling, some years tine, by raft to Harrisburg, on a blazing hot day, Isith some friend;, the Iron horse had stopped to water, when suddenly be drew his white handkerchief from hita pocket, and began waving it vigorously in the air, at thesame time bobbing his head out of the window in a very energetic manner. "What are you about, Judger asked Mr. Q., without rising from his seat, "Why, don't yuu see yonder? There's a lady waving a white handkerchief, and I'm returning the palate," "Who is she, judge?" asked Mr. Q,, is he lounged in one corner. "Well, the fact ia, I don't exactly know; I'm quite nearsighted, and I can't recog nize her; but she is dreamed in gray silk, and stands yonder, under a big maple tree, nem" rpy friend John A.'s house." lir. Q., hobbled over to the judge's side and gazed in the direction Indicated, but saw only tbat the judge had been exchang ing saintett for ten minutes with an iron gray mare, whose long white tail, as It napped away the files, had been taken by him for a white handkerchief, waved by a lady in a gray silk dress. "HAD 'Em."—The Dayton (Ohio) Jour nal has the following good story; Most of our readers have seen the small pair of alligators in one of-our up-town drug stores. Yesterday they formed the basis for quite a joke. The present cool weather is more than they can endure, and by their stupid actions they enter their moat solemn protest against a change in the at mosphere. Their owners thought to thaw them out, and for that purpose took them to the kitchen fire of an adjoining restaur ant and left them in charge of. the sable cook, who answers to the name of "Lucy." Shortly afterwards a couple called for a warm meal. "Your order sir ?'' asked the attentive clerk. "What can you give us r. "Anything, trom an alligator to an oyster," was the response of the attentive and oblig ing clerk, who Is ever ready for a joke. - "Let us have an alligator!" "Yea, and the order was transmitted to Lucy. No sooner said than done. lu it came, squirm ing lively, much to the terror of the lady and amazement of the gent, who thought oysters were Preferable. SLZDOMO A PARSON. —I was a passenger on a steamer from Panama to Bin Francis co when the rush of travel on that line was immense. We were b dily crowded, and there was. no room for chairs or tables, yet we were bound to have our game- of "old sledge." A Baptist minister, with lust for gold, had deserted hisloch, and occupied a sleeping place on the cabin-floor. He was s large, corpulent men, and finding him a sound sleeper, four of us squatted srounil him, and commenced to play on his broad : scoring the points of the game on his black vest. We played for several hours, undisturbed except by an occasional snare.of uncommon force. I had won con siderably, and one of my opponents, Jim Doyle by rustle, beet:Wag excited at my turning up "Jack," !goner% down his first upon the lower part: of the parson's stomach with great power. The pious old gentle- man was awakened thereby, and looked up with some surprise; but seeing the state er the case, Unletly exclaimed. "Chi on with your game, boys; but If you. are going to pound me in that Inarmer,.yon had better let Me turn over." . , A Cussinus once took for his text these words "'lam World, the Mesh and the Devil' and oomarmeed bis sermon in this runner: "I Shall pass over the Mesh, touch lightly upon the World,_ and hasten as huts se I can to the 'Devil," Wonder what the sequel its ti. • ' - rzimutsalaßetkp Mixtry."-Abec ing Wait ,topieLla lion's den, otid; "Mt tbos ke!ot; In** 49.41. the *ow for nottdie, we it d1d1t!3,,P4111411, WA" THE DA VIP UT EIK-IX•LA. W. "I never will forgive him," said old Mr. ming.on, soltmnly depositing his great gold spectacles their green leather case. "Nor I. neither," sobbed Mt Reming ton, heedless of the unwonted disorder of her cap strings. "To marry that bold, dashing girl without so much as waiting for our permission." "But you know, my dear," suggested the old gentleman, "we shouldn't have given it to him if he had waited half a century." "Certainly we should not," said Mrs. Remington, emphatically. "To think of our only child treating us so cavalierly, Able—the only one we've got in the world." "He hail made his hed, and must lie on it," said the old man sternly'. "I will never receive his gay city bride here, and so I shall write him immediately. We are scarcely fine enough for a Fifth avenue daughter-in-law." As he spoke, the old man picked up a crumpled letter that he had thrown on the floor in the first paroxisms of his anger, and smoothed out its fold with mechanical touch. "Why only think of it, Able," said Mrs. Remir.gton, "Mahala Buckley served for six weeks In this—this girl's cousin's fami ly, and she says Evelyn Sayre could smoke a little paper cigar just like a man, and used to go skating with her dress all tucked up to the top of her boots, and drove a barouchc, with the groom sittinpobehind, and " -Bless my soul," said the old gentleman, his breath nearly taken away by the cata logue of enormities. 'Bless my soul, you don't say so. And our Charley is married to such an amazon as this." So the old couple sat In the roomy porch of the capacious old farm house, with the Michigan roses tossing Mlle pink billet dorm into their laps, in scented showers, and the delicious orders of the fresh mown hay coming up from the meadow fiats by the river, as miserable an old couple Bayou would want to see. Meanwhile, Mrs. Charles Remington, a bride of three weeks standing, was making herself supremely happy at Niagara. SLe sat on a fallen log, among the delicious shades and seclusion of Goat Island, that bright June day, with the lights an d shad ows chasing each other across her lovely face, and turning her long chestnut curls to MAGNET eons of gold. Dressed all in white, she was fastening a wreath of wiltl flowers Into the tibbon of her coquettish little list, and singing some old ballad softly to herself. Evelyn Remington was very handsome— neither blonde nor brunette, she connived to unite the charms of both in her rose-leaf complexion, bright hair and misty brown eyes, and the smile that dimpled her fresh, scarlet lips were real smiles, messengers straight from the heart. Presently she was joined by her husband —a tall, handsome young fellow, In a white linen suit, and graceful Panama hat. - . Two letters, Evelyn," he said lightly, `‘and bad news in both." - "Bad news! Oh, Charles?" and the roses faded suddenly away from the bride's cheeks. Re tossedittscriter lap a rivritlen letter, cm one of 'blue paper, 'signed "Able and May Remington," a keen ei presalon of their disapproval of the mar riage he had contracted, and an assertion of their firm determination neverto receive his wife as a daughter. Evelyn looked into her husband's Ike with her bright eyes full of tears. "Oh, Charles, I am so sorry." He laughed and quoted to her the old scripture phrase : "A man shall leave his father and mother, and cleave unto his wife." "And now don't you want to see the oth er letter, Evelyn?" It was a summons from the mercantile thin with which Charles Remington was connected, an earnest entreaty that he -would visit Central America, in - their in terest,-tmmetliately. •Cool, isn't it? to request a bridegroom to walk off in that sort of way, for it is too rough a voyage to ask you to undertake— shall I go or stay ?" "40, by all means. Should I ask you to linger by my aide, when duty calls you away, a poor wife I should be." He kissed her flushed cheek with admir ing tenderness. And where shall J. leave you, my bonnie bride 2" "Oh, I will make a brief visit home in the meantime. It cuts our , wedding tour short, but then you know we have a life time to finish our honeymoon ins" So the brief Niagaraso,lourn came to an end, and atm. Charles Remington, for the season, was a widowed bride, "He will be back soon," she said to her self; "and, inihe meanwhile, ob, I must de so much, "Yes," said old Mrs. Remington, com placently,. "I think that was a splendid ides of ours, Able, sending for Lot Chauncey's orphan to adopt. It'll teach Charles and his *tuck up wife that we're in earnest about wham. wrote, mid Marian Chaun cey won't have no city airs or graces. I'm dreadful anxious to see her—Lot was a like- y-looting fellow, and my comiu twice re- moved, and folks dl4 say his wife wail a regla! built beauty. I guess likely she'll come by the stage to-night." "I guess likely there site is now," said Able, who, sitting by 11le open window, caught the first glimpse or a slender figure coming up the path,- and carrying a well- packed carpet bag, and Mrs. Remington ran forward to kiss and welmotne the . new COMM', Madan ; Chauncey was exceedingly pretty —M's. Remington soon discoyerecl that—a bright, winsome liWe creature, with golden brown lair that would curl, in spite of the restraining net, loving bagel eyes, and tremulous red lips. "Oh, Abair quoth the soft-hearted old lady, at the end of two days, "why didn't Charles wait until be had seen Marian Chausceyi. Is tiot she sweet—don't it seem like a gleam of sunshine in the old house when she is tripping around?" "She is very pretty," said Mrs. 'Reming ton. "A n d th en ," plumed the old lady, "she's bandy. She knows just where every thing is kept, and how 'to do everything, and she does up my caps emolaitgly, and you should hive seen bow skillfully she droVe me to meeting yesterday. Oh, Able, if Providence had only seen 8$ to send us a daughter-in-law like dear little Marian OhatuMeT." Ms. Remington's speech wit - Cut direly short, by the entrance - of the subject of it, with her apron full of eggs and her hands full of wildflowers. ' ' “Mrs. itemingten," she began, and "then amides hermit with abruptiost: 4 '01411 caned Wire by4lhat long, formal nrene-L. m ay I asp snathiefitt- idOf courescretrey darthig,t aid the 011 , 1 ,heeWe old Jai! " 10141 I•eniy wish ,ir t m w.eve reer4eViten . - • iferintila 844 tiniMf 0044$wtheir stein Of pearly white eippi ft BY BRIRLIY BROWN WHOLE NO. 3540 a basket on the table, and then came op to Mrs Remington, kneeling dot and " : nest.- ling her bright head in the old (lady's check ed apron. "Mother," she miumured itettly, "yon do not know how sweet the word sneak— And you will always love me and cherish• ire, and let Me ben real daughter to you t" "I should be a hard-hearted old cormor ant if I didn't pet," - saki the °kJ i lady with her apecutcles dimmed with tears." In short Marian Chauncey ti came the light of the old farm-hone; the bright little guardian genius of the low celledrcsma end wide airy halls. She read the paper to termer Remington, she compounded cake, jelly and Syllabi*, to the astonishment and I delight of the phi lady—Slie kept the two old China vases on the mantle{ brimming over with a red rain &roses; the knew by instinct just when ,tad/rkett. the room for the old man's afternoon nap sin the wide chintz covered sofa, and she waebetter than ten doctors when Mrs. Remington had one of the had nervous headaches, "I really don't see how we ever contrived to live without Marian," said the old gentle man. "gut she shall never leave us," said Mrs. Remingtos, decidedly. "Marian, little bright eyes, I've got news," called the old gentleman one mornl ing, through the hail ; "leave those honey suckles for some one else to tie up, and dime in here. Charlie is coming home." "To stay, sir ?" • "No, not to stay-,-of course his fine city • wife demands hie permanent devotion."— Mr. Remington could not help speaking with a sneer. "But he will spend the day here on his way to New York. I should like you to see Charlie—and I should like Charlie to see you. Don't blush—if you're not better looking than his Filth _Avenue wife, she most be a paragon among women, that's all I've got to say." • "When will he be here, sir ?" "In about an hour, I should judge from his letter--Charlie always did write an aw ful scrawl—m's and n's just alike, and half the time forgets to cross his t's ; but I Bop p, , se that the fashion, now-a-dayi ?" Marisa Chauncey crept away to ber ro , m to brush out the red•gold curls, and adjust the blue ribbon at her throat, and wonder ed shyly ro herself what "Charlie" would ),ay when he sew the new element that had contrived so to Interweave Itself into the old home of his boyhood. "But I dou't think lie - wilt be angry," said Marian, in a half-whisper, as she pin ned a white rose into her breast, and pre pared to 'descend, in obedience to Mrs. Remington's call of: "Marian, Marian, come down and see my boy. " Charles Remington stood in the middle of the floor, with an arm ronud his radiant Iliac mother, while the old gentleman from his big easy chair, delightedly watched over the tableaux, as Marian slowly advanced. "Charles," said Mrs. Remindott beaming all over, "this is our new daughter, who—" But Charles bad sprung forward and caught the slight, willing figure in his arms while the golden hair floated in a perfect cascade or curls over his shoulder. "Evelyn! My wife 1" Mt. Remington stared at hie will. Mrs. Remington wait/Ad hex huabareL z "He's mad,- - whiispered the ,pfd -moo. 'Charles," he added aloud, "you are Miss taken ; thia Is Marian Chauncey; our adopt ed daughter.' "No, sir, it is not,"- faltered the young lady in question, "I am•F l ielyn, your son's wife. I have stolen into your hearts, for I longed to share your love. So when you sent for 3rarian, who Is one of my dearest friends, I persuaded her to remain at home, and allow me to personate her just for a few weeks. Father, mother, you will not turn me out of your affections now 9" "And you knew nothing of this ?" de manded old Mr. Remington of his son. "Not a word ; it's Evelyn's own Ides." And Evelyn, half laughing, !Alf crying, stole* into her mother-in-law's extended MCI "It don't seem possible diet she is the nth Avenue girl," said the old gentleman, "come here and give me a kiss, Ma—Evelyn, .1 mean." "SO'she is our real daughter after all ?" said proud Mrs. Remington. Evelyn had conquered their prejudices with the enchanted wand of love.—Fire. aide Companion., • Howes Warta; the eminent. French artist, was returning from Versailles to Paris, when there .hafeen,al to be le the same carriage with him two English sister ladies, very prudiah and prim, and of a cer tain age. Verne t's appearance was striking, and the ladies after scanning hire eutircly whenever they thought he was looking the other way, began to communicate to one another their oliservatt..es, upon W In rather a loud whisper,"thinkiiig, apparen tly, that as they spoke in their own lungnue they were at liberty to make what com ments they pleased. The veteran painter was ,intensely amused, but was too much a man of the world to manifest the engineer consciousness of what was going' on. It was not long before the train had to pass through a tunnel. Vernet, setting ihe op: portunity, leaned forward, t 0) as to be with bearing of his neighbors, rood applied a smacking salute on the hand. On'emerg= lug from the temporary obscurity, his face had assumed a mischlevotti expression, whieb,as he(mended, was soon interpreted by each lady to the prejudice of the other, each charging the other witit having receiv ed from the Inuitaehred strangee.the mysteri ous kiss In tie dark. * Akrrtved 'at the ter minus, lie all Were alighting, Vernet offered hia hand to help his *llow-travelers out tot the carriage, and Then with a graceful bow took leave of then, saying as he retired, to their dismay, in perfectly correct gu g lish : !'Adieu, ladies I suppose I _shall never have the sattsikerlon of knowing to .which of you I am' indebted' for the unexpected valuable favor I received In the tunnel.'-' As old weather worn trapper was retstnt ly seen muttering along the main street of one of our Westein villages. Pausing in. front of! little meeting house for a moment he went in and took a seat among tie one. gregatlon. The preacher was discoursing on the test of "the sheep and the wolves," and baying evidently been dhateing a con: bust between the two subjects, says he, "We who assemble here frail week ,to week, and do our dutT and perform * our part, are the sheep l now, who are the wolves?" A pause, arid our thirtil t 1 e trapper rose to ids feet,' ' h ►a'al sinmiget, rather than see the play stopped, I IYIII be the volt!' 'The preacher itimished, A otsumuk wat oitidiag kis min for stslbitikit hlio at Miiii64-or rather next morning—mid said, "Wby, viten I Wait of. pm! se, my hate would not alloir me to. Or onto' ttio• house alter dark 'Lads doom of a .fralp34 yew hidMiiteertd Mt I Mae Mailfgato, Wtromfro.4 stood alai kilter vary noddy voolitsmait,, 101' itinfbunded rite betitien dad' Vird, yba young rasa! I" I &Gk. alma time— ' Opt% aillt*Pa. . Dc . B. al BMW (Timothy Theomb;) who it visiting tlrlteertaitd, cities not agree with tiame wlfirtiaint * that the imiothutioa of rat whisky will Prcle pamKow-1bt"..""... vc , ,Ho write/ from Lammas io time gliptingaidd Awl •RepuLi Forge laid three weeks, thessqu'le work ing population, men and women, haveheen in these vineyards gathering the crop. The teams areitiPloyed in tea porting the Im mensely large casks of new wine the presses to the cellars - of their owners, to the , valute of the dealers who have purchased ' l 4 and to the railroad depot for transporta tion to the storehouses of speculative In otherquarters. There is an endeavor on the pan of these people to throw a" roman tic interest around tht ir vintage. The casks go through the streets with gay bouquet' of flowers In their bungholes, but ftom what I have seen of the effect of wine . here,. the show is al' a sorry farce. There is no ques tion that tbe people, would be better, ieschappler,and much more prosperous, if there were not a vineyard In the Canton, We have all been told b America, and I thily belle'Vecl it, that, if a people could be supplied with a cheap wine, they ISt* not get so drunk—that the natural desire for some sort of stimulant would be gratified in a way that would-be not only harmless to morals, but conductive to health. I am thoroughly Undeceived. The people drink their cheap, white wine here to drunkenness A booster set than hang around the_ mul titudinous urea here it would be hard to find in any Anterictut city, even where they enjoy. the Jimmie of the- Maine law. The grand difference In the drunkenness - of .an American and Swiss city is found In the fact that the man who has wine In him in good natured, and the man who is equally charged with whisky is a demon, There Is no murdering, no fighting, no *misting. The excitement is worked off in sliming, shouting and all sorts of insane jabber.-- Then the steady old white wino topers come into blossom. If you osnitnagine a cauli flower of the color of the ordinary red cab. bage, you can achieve a very adeqnsto con ception of faces that areinot uncommon In all this wine growing 'region. So this ques tion is settled in my mind. Cheap- w ine is not the cure of intemperance. The people here are just ss intemperate as they are In America, and, what is more, there Is no public seuument that checks intemperance in the tenet. The wine Is fed freely to children, and by all classesis regarded as a perfectly legitimate drink. , Failing to find the solution of the temperanod qftestian In the liable law, failing to percelvo it In the various modes and interemeuts- of the to torte, I, with many others, bags looted with hope to find it in a cheap and cota paratively harmless //hie ; btu, For one, I can look in this direction hopefully no longer. NocLan PaassaverioN.—The London Herald tells this singular and touching story : Not many years since, certain miners, - working far underground, came upon the body of a poor tallow who had perished In the suffocating plvforty years Vetere.. Some chemical agent to which the body had been stliected--an agent'prepared In the labors tOry of nature—had effectually arrested the progress of decay. They brought it up to the surface, and for u while, till it trembled away through exposure to the atmoirphere, it lay there the image of a fine, 'tardy young man. No" convulsion had passed over the face in death—the features were tranquil ; the hair was as black as Jet, No oue recognized the face-.a generation k, had grown up since the day on which the miner went down his shalt for the hat time. But a tottering old woman, who bad hur t led from her cottage at hearing the news, came up, and she knew again the face which through all these pears she had nev er quite forgotten. The pout miner !me co bare beat lug ittUthaucl on lite-day -Ober thitt.on which he died. They were rough people, of copra; who wore looking on ; a liberal education and refined feelings are noCdeemcd eseentlat to the man whose work is to get wale or event tin ; but Acre were no dry eyes there when the nay_ . headed old pilgrim cast herself - upon 00 youthful corpse, and poured into its deaf ear many words of endearment unused for forty years. It was a touching contrast ; the one so old, the other so young. They had both been-young those long years ago ; but time had gone on with the living and stood still with the dead. FIBILING FOS Mos.—Mere aro several ways of catching rats and mice, but in these days, when there is a rage'for almost every thing new, perhaps the following anecdote, related by a connny correspondent, may furnish the hint of an original mode of cap turing these animals : "Several- years since my cousin, Miss , used to keep a district school.-. Among those who attended it was a 'little boy of, perhaps, four yours of age, but too young to speak plain. One day, while the others-were at their studies, he got posses. Ilion of a pin and string. He bent the pia into the form of a fish hook, tied the string to it , and put on Its small piece of cheese. He had seems mouse corns up through a hole in a corner of the hearth, and sat him• selfto hob fur it, as if it were a fish. He was observed 'unlashed by my cousin what he was.dolng. Platting fur a mouse,' was the repiy,.. As thls,pastime was not allowed in school .hours,, the teacher, by way of punishment, ordered him to continue bob bingfor the mouse,. Sn tho little fellow sal grave as &Judge,. taibbing away, until soon the mouse took a strong bold of the- cheese, and the boy giving a. &laden pull, sprang into the Middle of the room, and singing the mouse round his head, satapielaed the a hole behoql With the exam:union, 'llbn - or, I've got hlnt.'"—ll7. _ . Mu Quakers, at the the South, whoper slatently held to their peace principles, suf fered seriously during therebellion. Dolt would net exereptthem from-fighting,' and they were 'often subjected to peculiar trials in maintaining their faith. One Friend who • refused to fight was forced to stand an hour and a half on a battle-field under fire. lie escaped unharmed, but the guard was shot. Another was compelled tostand up with a musk ded.to his side, in the trenches of of ' .tersituw, exposed to a terrible Are, he also escaped unhurt, r A STORY 18 told many yeas or Deacon whose wife said one day at the table that she would he willing to die for sinners. "What's that you say, wife r asked her husband, footing up from his hreakfast in surprise. • Upon her repeating the alaternent, the deacon oplj replied, "If you are willing and God la willing, I have no objections... A 'saw evenings since a comp° shot from this office returning to his home observed a Well dressed-man vomiting over, his clothes, and with due appreciation of the Nulae of a nice suit, remarked to the drunken man to bold his ,head hasher over and save his clothes. Raising his head the Intoxicated individkat, with offended dignity, hiccup ped t 40 8 ea here, Who's superintending this pair" you orme • Rev. Dr. EicottorNew yo l i til 4 soyeahi . i n his puipit that lie would. advise every young man at the outs* el L ide. - eareer :—t. To boa good Oluistiash Imre hi. Ute ; 8. Toiplisigstatwillgo-Titn he will / 111 **PIT.,V!* vOrisstAs *mak SodiolKs 44,Prfill1 1 4, 11 0,49trinkat "WO* =Ei Ii!TY are young the lonlikleg ofa party I,fkg arrows? 'Xisierturn tbiti iti bfriOttiottt s tx4, - 01 vOlll ti a qtifY• et till they seroa., EEO EMlg= MEI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers