SCOUR ! i- e -,-'; , . od tried und poenbar illataridadelabLesdind todioa of the pnblk. Aleoalan no Um, year cad, tbe„pr?prisun saintala amdke 'akar • • people, and remind time alidamianklegallad tugs requ'r.d lor the health, comfort and sea .4 the family through the long and Winne tir r, tOtre's Cough Batman should hot be For yews It bee beea.a &Newbold dot.thera anahrne ter the lately of their ehll- • aft srboatifik Itnin any &erase bribe throat, • t tingoot afford to be without lt. In to to oetlleatey four ounce so long to lb • Now furnish our mammoth fatal alto tad' will, is ooteanoti with the other etre, be Drug Stone. • FOR CROUP, • will be futtud intalwable, wad may always up or. iu the mu t ratreme cases. V 110 OPING COUGH. tlmouy tall vibe have and it tar thtaterti• (lama the last ten year., Is, That It in rlferrs Cllte. It. SORE THROAT. nr thr6at wet with the Balumtp—taking teu—itua you 11 lil very soon Ind rell4 D COLDS AND COUGHS' •CP to • steady nee of We era remedy._ coed in giving relief where all other re e Galled. ESS OF THE THROAT, HEST AND LUNGS. , eley. proevrirm and imentdistel.T taking h Balsam. whet) troubled with any of the ed dillicwlties. They Cr. all premonitory of Cloaanmptlon, and if not emoted, will met sweep 3ot 'tray Into the 'valley of om width none can over return. CONSUMPTION, e•wcorn roffrrer has found relief and to that hrr life has been made eamy lad pro he nee of Coe', Cough Balm. IN SHORT, 41,0 w the artrele.and It needs nn comment t js fur eels by every Druggist and Dealer In the United States. I .HE C. G. CLARK CO., le Proprietors, New HaTen, Ct ! Read ! Read ! TTENTION of the PEOPLE IS CALLED TO TRY orld's' Great Remedy, 's Dyspepsia Cure. lon Is pronounced by Dyapeptics as the, remedy that will surely tin that ag d fatal malady. For years it swept oa Its carrying baton' it to an anthnely grave, sufferers. yspepsia Cure has come to the Rescue n, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache or Acitbly of &made, Ms- Food, Flatulency, Las- e, Weariness, finally eer- urinating iii Deaf curd by tab potent remedy, as the pe t. Although but Are years before the to the tartlet of the mown ? Hear what • , of Milwaukee, says: YEN 4rEzrozr, b oighwasim4 Unicumas. 'Wm:* Juu•Sailgel- • O. Cu= 4 Da n Nips Bases, awn. fund wits hays used Cods Dyspepsia Cure, ISt PERTICCITLY sat-hatter; as a Rem - NO bealtatlost to saying that we hiss re- T WM/1T from Its use. as 7 Rasissetfully, (Bilrbs 4 ) LESTER SEXTON 'BEAT BLESSING. .L.JP. WARD, Avon, Lentils 0.1 • • d Argil*imp, Div/ost% asselaad. : — /ifOra M•savaallsamtr•tllstatetba t &wired greet beseat from tie use Ourr. illikrairesiviat far • number o: imaged with, ilogidpids, scoudirso ed • • of ositatiptitiou afkleb so pros • • mesa all Ilt• wig* lasoloostits, re yaltimg: to, at your 'Mama Coe'. nand Ur Assivetl GMT 3111 1 1• SIT •11 I wow cOmparatively, well. Bin re as • great blesaizg. Italy yours, L. V. WABI. CLEAR a YALEN. lium: Amur, of AUsetway , UM." tkii her all other mumps had 6Ued. t DRUG aisrß.. .it la ihavoast vW till yeti. it you lisnmare, iiiiiktbat bays hi Mimesis pen grata 'bra, quake in gnat ammiloisal vir- Dyapepo) owe OPMaZI=S _l4= 43.0. QUA.= 00., :400• - 141;rwiev.*.w imme.se --Vramosurg, Admit oaiiikf. Pr* 7100401011, aliisher re asd Of aitend c dettystnerg, Ps. TERMS OF PUBLICATION : THE 3.7.18 .i.:ID 3LI? Z 1 le plsblished semiy in ' .....! ._ day Moth lag,'at $3.06 a year 18 advance ; of $2.60 I Pali 'robin ita year. No gibleriPtiOlar diaCCO ge3 are pard,unless at the op ,„ *'''' Z % . - '.4:' ;:$,, 01117 a . f',.;, _ . 'ili 4 40 2111 ti606446 4. t reasonable ratoe.— 1^.1,,,-.74libeiiiilenliie&C. . t!doltv Peron'''.lt V d 'erti . I{44 , :f;"*ttl'tite Oilhair, flaillllo4 or Yisar. opeelai no ., 44Nre'llibblieeirtio-kt,epeolal Otis; to be aimed 4 . 4arl'hoetreulaticait;tilidaona. .::411fAtrtertotIt ever "at treve# . oo .:6l. In :m ne tdl72 9 m lP : er tt, anu be eiceillit trenix of Ltti itinde $1.1? ble.orTiouitly executed, 444 13 tf.gr Paniph letd ge.ifi.: Wier). virietialldlll4l,ll lie printed at i i in notice. losentot . " worma _, Preside n I Judge,ltobeikiAL Asp, Vei—tienae Atiibbon,:losepl4 J.Saha PIM rjt—Jacob . L „ RegistO thdtzworth. Clerk ef the Cowie-- A. Dl4 o• ixt A ttorney—Wm. A. Vatican. I'ranotrar-.11. I) Wattles. 'Sheriff—Philip Hann. 6lrouti7—Dr. IY. - J McClure. Siigrr ju tag° 1). S. Iler . Chnnsta —Slcholnis Whornian,Jacoli Lott ,Sloaea 11 trial in.. (,'.ark—.l. M. W.alter. - Chunset--Wm. Physician Ih . J.L.l—Dr. J. W. C. t.PN.I. Dir.:fors k f the Pour—John Hahn, Martin Getz, Aliti.j.atainato.trilurff. ,Shileard—JultaaJohns. Clerk Wulf. l'rc ceurer—Jac Beaver. Coun 4.7.-4 C. Neely. Physician—J. W. C. O'Neal. ti•litarr—tlaiiry L. Breton, Martin E Hollinger, Eli U. Ile igy. =I liarlost—Peter )13 ere. Cwsncal—W.S.. 11.watItcm,Alexas.ler Spangler, David , W.t.unn George A. Karnshaw, Ilunter. V. ". P. It tk,r. Coll,. Treasurer— .S.llll - JPI It. Russ,ll. C6,:staldt..r.leorge W. 15.211, 01 t Sqi,ol A. [lna ' Vm. Guinn, W. I'. 1.1.1ag, 'Hiram Wnrren, John F. McCreary. A. J. Cover. SJcretar—John 1. McCreary. Vearurer— ti.Fnline.tocL.. =3 nt --George :irrupt. at,hier --J. Emory B.Lit.: • T.'lo,—lleury 9. BentkiT. Directors—door go Swope, Nl:anis= Young. Henry Wirt, D.ivid Mills. Druid Keudlehart, Wan. Mc- S hurry, William D.ilimes, Jodbus Mutter.. Marcus damson. ririNT NITIoNAL U.V.: L. Or OCTLYSIJrNG. e,iticat— George Throne. aunirJ.George Arnold. Telle.J.--k. M. Hunter. Direct,,s—ileorgy Throne. David ItnConaughy, John Broogh, Robert Bull, John Horner, George Arnold lamb Minsehunn. • HVEI GILLEN CI: TART. • IstAklt —J. L. SclAck. Secrdary--Wilitain U. Meals. Treasiver.,4l.lexandor Cobean. Jlanageri—John Rupp. J. L JON, Joxiah I.lnazier, George Spangler, George Little, Wita D. ilea's, Altigander ijobeen. . . cousyr int Si/AL DISCIPASCE CON PANT. Pre.; Jr.,[- George Swope. Prrii4enl—Satunet R. Easel'. Scoradry.:—Cts rid d.Basblor. ' Traisure,r—Wward d. tabneztock. Lrec4Zir;• Castatteke—ltebert McCurdy, Henry A PiClaug, JaFob Kinx. i• ADAM iissitßry Aoatetwroam. B.CIETS. Pr, .?, f --Samuel Herbst. PruLtent Ito Sherry, J. itliorow. fYo re. pontlin, Sivretary--11enrk J. Stable. ICerord~ng .Secr eiary—E,l ward U-.lahnettock. fr, r-Duriti Wills. .1.72.,1-IVillisto B. Wilson. Wible,Jonas :tw za bn, Frederick Dieh I, W. Ross Whit e, Ellaha ot, John H.. BUILDING ASSOCIATION. 1 . ....:1./enl—Edwara o.FullueatUck. I ue. I e. kkttt—William A Duucau „ :t r 9—John F. McCreary. 7: - Ea neob A. Eltumiller. 31t..1:1-,—Cl. floury Buehler, J. W. C. o'Neal,John !tup,,, .101.4 Culp (of M.,) Wm. Cl E=il U. Fatineitock. .V.,,,quey—Win. A - , Dunc tn. r—Jowl D. Dinner. .11,a, , ,5—A, D. Buehler. M. Eichelbergar, IL D. IV It tle4, Itusa.lll, W. A. Duncan, J. D. Danner. RAT= W. laCießan. ey and 'Pi' easairer- 4 —Satuuel R. R owell. W. •McCleßan, George Bwope, h. B R. ausAell, 11. J. Stalllo. .• DETITRIIT:RG RAILROAD. . ,•..I;.itur—ltubvlL McCurdy. 'Jry and T,attircr—David l'irit. &cutad. 2.00 A. )1. 1.C.0 P. 34 .lal.l ti(loart J,l - 112 12.30 P. 31. 44 P. 311" rtto hod train utakot close connection for Ifari s &short; oat Ilestern end Western points, the second train w ithttaltintore. Ib.SIXIATIONS, GtOrs N 0,124. I. 0. 0. F.—Mesta unier • at, stioets,overyTneaciay eveuine, tra wpm ent, No. UM, J. O. O. F.—ln Odd Fels , lot rnd 3d 31011daY iu each month. Coo,! Lodge. ..YO. 336, 4. Y. M.--Corner of CArtNlt and Railroad streets, 2d and itti Thurediq to oael. month. Gre. flryht.f.ds Lodge, iro.lBo, I. 0. G- T.—On t al t l- more ir.r6et, gory Monday evening. (~ 1 3ril;exa Tribe, No. 31, 1.0. R. .IL—ln McConnughy's 11,1 cc,ry irklus evening. P.,,t G. A. 12.—1 a Star sad Sentinel Building, evert S.tturday evening. Ada el , Di,.isqrs IVO. 214 S. 7.—ln Star and Sentinel 1131:.IL ev.tey Ilieduelgay ersuilag. EMETEI L..' 4, ran. ( rist's)—pastor, Rev. C.A. Ray, D. D.— ces by Protrusions of College and Seminary al t•ia,tely, Sabbath mining and reventug and WreferialK evening. During vacation', Sunday eveutug [Arnica oturtradr• Luttierna,(St.Jahtes')--Res. Y. Breldenbangh. Ser- TiCaP Sabbath Malan and erreinhig, and Wednes• ^Ary evening. Episcopal—Care. 11. C. Cheeton. J. B. Shaver. Services Sabbath morning and evening, and Thursday eventng. Lit , 441 , 1 med—Rev. W Deatrich. Ser. vices S.ablathAunriaing and evening, 1 Weiceddity evening. (.ifjthr—Rev. Joseph 8011. Services Ist,3d and sth ixbb.alle,. morning and afternoon. Crzitcd l'rre,ytertan.—Rev. J. Janitemon.—BerTlcas by spocial appoi a talents. Troftoional eardo, J. COVER, ATTORNEY AT • L.kw, will promptly attend to eollectionaand , ,ii!ler Baal nets entrusted to biacare. ?lee between ralmestook and Danner and Zing. er's 'toren, tialticuorestreet,G ettyabarg 2 Ps. May' 9,1867' OVID A. BUEHLER, ATTOR NV/ Vr LAW, will promptly attend to collec tion, tint another business entrusted to hie care. iiiil.3ifiee at him reaidence in the threeitory building ippasite the court House. l.tiettyeburgOday29,l.BBT DAVID- WILLS, ATTORNEY LA.W,O3.lce atlas residence iu the South-oaa cov.er ofeentre Square. 112,r 29,1887. CLAIM AGENCY—The under -4laned will attend to the sollection artist= noinAt 'the U. B. Government, Inch:Meg Military Bluetits, Back Pay; Perdons, tome, Ake., either in the C,art of Claims or before any of the Departments at Wathington. R.O.McCREA.RY, 9lny 29,1667. AttorneyatLaw,Oettyaburgy• OS. H. LEFEVER, . ATTORNEY AT LAW LITTLPSTOWN, PA., al promptly attend to Collection., Conveyances, gof Deeds, Losoot, ko.,ond *II other business satnuted to Ms ow.: Xi/Oa:two Irroderiek street,at the otttce formerly oc•m p led by Dre. Short), Kilmer and Mating. May 20, 1888.—bte • M . CONACGLIT, Attorneys and Counsellors. . IsIcCONA.IIGHY has 8,880Cla • •Atid JOIINI. KRA.IITII, Esq., In the practice of the Vavrost his uhf office, one floor wastolliondsn's Drug stere,Chatubersburg street. Special offendeo given to Suits, Collections and Settlement of Estates. Al! legal business, and aims to Pensions, Bounty, Back-pay, and Damages , oinst U. Statea,at all times, promptly and efficient attended to. Laud warrants located. and choice 'Parma for ease lowa and other weatorst State.. [NO,. 27,1867.-t - OR. J. A. ARMSTRONG, Haring located at NEW BALM will attend to all branehee Of hi* Prnioesinas and will be found at bG office when not proleavionallY en: aged Meg snagrirrowg, / Adams county, Pa. J. DR. J. W. C:O'NkAL Has his 001ce at his residence in Baltimore etreet,two doors above the Comp , ilerpThce. Gettysburg, May 29,1807. JOHN LAWRENCE HILL, Den ti4t, Oflicein Chamherebork drool, one door west of the Lutheran .Church. nearly opposite Dr. R. Horner's Drug Store, where he may be band reedy aad willing to attend any cmie within the province of the Dentist. Persona la want of tollgate of teeth are inaited to call. [Hay 29,1117 D R. WM. STALLSMITH Dent -1.;„ hallo/ touted in Gettysburg, ' offers hie ertioes to the public. OlDee in York street, nearly opposite the Globe Inn, where he will be prepared to attend to any came within the province of the Dentist. Xersons in want of full or partial *Alter teettearitin• wited todan. Teruo; reseoruible. April 11,1168.—ti. DR. C. W. BENSON HAB RitSRMID thsPractice of Medicine in LIT. TLSSIOWN, and otters his cervices to the public. °d ice at his house, corner of Lombard street and Foundry alley, near the Railroad. Special attention given to Skin Dtseases. [Littlestown, N0v.111,1807 Ziff and Srt Vusurniut. ADAMS COUNTY - '4O- MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE 00.11PANY. INOWITOILATID 3 MARCH 18, 1851. 01TIORRil. reeldent—Georse Swop.. Ylce-Preabiest—Ramo•iil- 11 . Becustery R.lisekter. : Treasurer...4AL rablimtocit. n armoutmaimissaip_aphoreXeCiurly;R; A.P10k;.% i fiet=eftige . :Dise)de..ißlicaur• 47, S. R. ittseell, G. estook,Gottysbarg; Jacob Kills, ambits township ; reitatick Diehl, Iraskila ; 11. A. Picking. Sunbelt; Abdtel N. Gitt.lfe, Wm. Roos White, Liberty; O. Peter; rib (T. IL) 116.Th10 Contain, is hilts operatispea county of Adams. It hes bees In esieritgelraltlP.A.. than 17 years, sad Waist pititod boa Ma 4 pesenteut,bartng paid lows by Ire dues, Amounting to nutrias" Ai rc o. 011111114* eaa apply to olthei of • aom tas _ _ ... ::~~ n, . Vo.L.LXIX, NO. 22. LOOK HERE ! rf undersigned has leased the A. Ware-house on the corner of Stratton street and the. Railroad, Gettysburg, Pa., sod will carry on the Grail & Produce 13usiuess alittsbranches. The highest prices will always be paid for - Wheat, Rye, Corn, Oats, Clover and Timo thy nasals, Flaxseed, Sumac, Ilay and Straw, Dried Fruit, Nuts,3osp, Umns,Shoulders and Sides, Pota toes, with ererythlng else In the country produce line. GROCERIES constantly for sale, Corea& Sugars. Molasses ' Sys , ups, Toast, Spices, Salt, Choose, Vinegar, Sods, Mustard, Starch, Brooms, Buckets. Blacking. Soap, dc. A 180,0 0 41, Oft, fish Oil, Tar, dc. FISH 01 all itintl•; Spikes-and Nails; Smoking and Chewing To . • butt*. Ile le always able to supply o first rate article of Vlour,wltta the different kinds of Feed. Also, Grouad Plaster, with GI:moo-sand otherlertlll- Sem COAL. by the barbel, ton or carload. . Lie will also run • LINE of FREIGHT CARS to No. 18„ Jiurth tiosuird strnet, BALTIMORE, it/id Nu, 311 Market street, PEI ILAUCLIVIIIA. All goods vita to tither place will tie received mid forwarded promptls. AU gouda should be marked " CRESS' CAR." April 2, 1869.-tf NEW FORWARDING AND COMMISSION HOUSE. AVING purchased the extensive Warehouse, Oars, kc., of COL/ k the undersigned Intend to carry on the business, on. der the firm of litmus' k Co ' at the old stand on the corner of Washingtonandltallrosid streets, on a more extensive scale than heretofore. -A regular line of reigh t Cars will leave our Warehouse every TUISSDAY IsOOl . and accom— modation trains will be ran as occasion may require : ill this-arrangement we are prepared to convey Freight - at all times to and from ,Baltimore. All business of this kind entrusted to us, will be prompt ly attended to. Our care run to the. Warehouse of Stevenein & Suns, 1135 north Cloward street, Balti more. Being determined to pay good prices, sell cheap and deal fairly, we invite everybody to give us a call. =I M'CURDY.& HAMILTON, FLOUR, GRAIN, GROCERIES; Etc T"titlersigned are paying at their Warehouse, lu Carlisle atreotottlioining Buehler's Hall the • • highest prices for FLOUR, WHEAT. RYE, color, OATS, BUCK— WHEAT, CLOVER ANLTIHOTHY•SEEUS, POTATOES, &c., and invite producers, togive them selling Thoy bane constantly on hand fur sale, A URGE SUPPLY OF GROCERIES, idoliwieee,Syrups,Coffees,l3tigars, tc,witli Salt Fish Oils,Tar, doaps, liacou arid Lard, Tobaccos, dic. Also the best broisdiof FL./U ft, with F.ZED of all kinds They likewise hare SEVERAL VALUABLE eaTILIZEB.S, Soluble Saelll,c Guano, Rhodes' Pboeybate and A A Moxicanantuo. Whilst they pay the highest . market prices loran they boy, they sell st the lowest living pro Ate— . ask • shire of palate patronage, resolved to give sat infection in every este. July 3,1887,-4f NEW FIRM. EcKRNRoDE k GRAFT, HATS taken the Wa• &Ouse, lately occupied by Philip Hann at Granite Station, on the line of the Gettysburg Hann, i mLies front Htinterstown, and will deal In all kinds of Grain and ProduCe giving the highest market price. We will also keep coneantly on hand for kale alt kinds of GIIO. - GERIES, Coffee, Sugar. Molasses. Syrups, Teas. ith Salt dish, Oils. Tar. Soaps, Bacon and Lard, Tobaccos, do Aldo, th • best brands of FLOUR, with /KED of all kinds; also, Coal. • We respectfully toilet; the pstronageof our friends, and invite the public to cull and examine our stack. ICHINRODE, 1. N. GRAFT. - tf DANIEL GULDEN, DEALER IN Dry Gobds Flour , Grain, Groceries, Lumber, Coal, &o. MHZ undersigned keepeen hand, at his Warehouse, 1. "known as"Guldes's tillealims," in Stratum tow*. ahlpon the tins of the Gettysburg Railroad, all kinds of • GROCERIES, including Sugar, Coffee, Molasses, Spices, tr., with Silt Fish, 011s.Tobacco, Bacon. Lard, Ac. Also, LIIMBIER AND COAL, - including Building Stuff, Shingles. Lathißtove and Blacksmith Coal. Also, Guano, and a large assort ment of Dry Goods, Boots aud Shoes. Hate and Caps °tall kinds, which he is prepared tospll at the low est prices. He alas pays the highest market price for Flour, Grain, Corn; Oats, Buckwheat, Clover and Tituothj Seeds, Potatoes, Ac., or will twelve and forward - the smote market on commiselon. lie respectfully sake his friends and the public to give him a call. Ang. 21,1867.—tf DANIEL GULDEN. JOSEPH WI LE. J. I. J. wnaut. Joseph Wible & Sans, Produce Dealers, Forwarding and Commission Merchants =!EME9 6onWeast cornerof Railroad and WaJhingt‘ai street, GETTYBBURG PA Ufa HUT cash price paid for all kinds of Grain and Country Produce generally. The highest cash price paid for good Hay and liyelitrew. We will keep constantly on hand for asle aU kind. of GROCERIE-S, such as alums, Coffees, Teas, Molessee and Sirup, To , tmceos, Soaps, Spices, and everything usually kept In •Growry Store. LINE OF OARS TO BAI/TIMORE. We will run a Hue of pars to Baltimore weekly, to the Warehouse of itIGBBSON k 00., 128 North st-, carom of Pranklin, for the transportations of roods ow* way r leaving Gettysburg every Monday and re• turning on Wodoesday, July ?.4. 18613,41 The beet brands of YERTILIMIng constantly on hand, or secured at abort notice for those ordering. Aprllll . ,lB6o.—tf ' REMOVAL.—=The undersigned Ms removed his PRINTING OFFICE from the Dimond to the corner of Railroad and Washingt strertsorhere he will he pleased to meet les old friends and patrons Aprll gicstograpt gantries. EXCELSIOR GALLERY. TIPTON & MYERS successors to 0. Tyson. PllO 2' 0 tfIiAPIIS, PHOTO MINIATURES 4103110T : YPZEI, &e., ate, Stereoscopic Views of the —BATTL,E-FIELDI •• - STRIMCO3copp, PTIOTOGRAPLI A L - MUT VABJETY -, - 2 4?fli g y fßifiliri , ..4r2troim‘. -421Zgelfute&OltiliMmitigiV 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 . 1111111 1 111111 ..111.11111111110111.1111.1111111.. ''' '' , ~! .;.. A, ..,'. - ;:„'t, ;47e:it% . ' 7.:-.4 ."44 ' .... 4.'..-:' Oltittir AV Ot#Z3k;`," -k , ,. , . , ~ 7 Tr 3 47 i , zj, 1 -, ;4157 i:.:.:lfd *SP -5. ..• . •. 't ..,-;.• - ~.• ...,,, , . 7_, _ ..! - ',.., :! ,, tt - , - . , ...-...:4, - , .. !.- 5 1.. e: ........,.. - 41 .- ~',. • - '-. 14. ': -- ' ' - . - -* .1 t- ': ' ".- - ' - .:, . ~ ..... :": .• ', : • 'l`. s ~ i . . ~-..- I , NI _ ... , :i \ . .' , \,, w ..,,......... •-,,,\ '' r i1...:::: :4r :. ' 1 ' _ :., , _.: '.; ....,,.., , ...„... ! N , - ''''''' \ ''! - ."' v - \ ..----. .... '..... ,--- .• ' \ "-- • = ' -H.- ~' ' ...:.) '...' . .'i `' : \ :• - '. . .. , . ..., \,... *44,,,... , .... , - 1 10,.. • .':,.:). I ' .7:,, i •.% .. - ..\ 1 -I''' i \ . • , - N. --- ahl -/ • ' •- , r. 7,".., ,%, ~. . . ...... • - • '• 1 )k> • / -.. i tk - , - . ' • '. '. . ... ' ' - •it\ • ( ' .... • r, 4 . • ',. . ...................... , i ' \ .. I . . : ~,. 1 VI .'" i ' - .. ' 1 . ~ , • ,'''.. . ' ''.. 4.'"' kCNl ) ~ i . " ' \ '\ • K .. . -re \ i ' • . . ... . ... , .. IMMINMII/11111111/1110 tomarding *moo OF ALL KINDS JUAN CILBBB WM. M. 1110 . 11 AM, ALLICAN DER COBEAN J eMze.ll.lol. DEALERS IN ROBERT AtcCURDT, WM• 8. HAMILTON J. $. wrzu.l VAILD W1'44,17115, 0 4. gusittoo ends: MANTUA \ - M AKIN 0 'MRS. E. J . Zll ,( CitiER s prepared to do sway d Mon of Plain Sewing,' Dress akirig included. Rusidsmee—Mast Middle it., one door from the Me °- dist Church. Gettysburg, Pa. (Feb. 5.-7 JOHN W. TIPTON, FASHION AIIiddIIARBER, opposite this Eagle' hotel, Claityaborg.„Pa whereby CYO •f. u timbab•(ond ready toatteato all baldness in his lino. Pietism elsostioncelinnt assistant and will insure oaths raejlot. Give biro a call. May 29,10117. . - GRANITE-YARD , GETTYSBURG, PA., O' RAILROAD. NEAR FREIGHT DEPOT. PETER REITLER Is prepared rofaroiebtlEANFlT, for ell kind 6 of .BUILDINO AND MONIISCRUTAL PTILPOSXS it ressunatile intes— Curbing, Sills, Steps, Ashlers, Posts, Monuments, Ceme tery Blocks, &c., &c., cut and Ilialabeti in every styie, desired, by best of workpeo, .Orders from $ distance promptly attended to June 3 —tf JEREM lAll GULP GETrY,S'BURG,P.A., Undertaker & Paper-Hanger, leprepni•ed to furolsb on short notice and reasonsbi• terms COFFINS OF ALL STYLES. Real. keeTie on hand a larzn assort in. nt 01 WALL PAPER. aillch he sells at b rr. at each rates. and It -de sired w ill fureiell bands to put it ou the well. PLAIN & FANCY SIGN PAINT LNG EXECUTED TO ORDER. ir i r York et reet-a few daorsettt ofp:ttz, iftuelmrc May 27,1868 tf. ROBERT D. ARMOR, GAS FITTER, PLUMBER AND BELL HANGER, EaJl Middle stree, hatf a quart /ruin the rourt•heWq GETTYSBURG, PA., WILL promptly attend to all or dens In his line. Vnrk dune In the moat anti... factory manner, and at price as low *Atari possibly be afforded to make • lining. GAS PIPE furnished, as well ea CI andellers, Brecky,ts, Drop Lights kc.; elan WATER PIPE, Stops. Top ant Prost Spigots, and,ia short. everything 4ekenging togsteor Water fixture". Belle bung, and furnieLod dcgireil. Lock. of al lands repaired. (Der. vorT-t MARSH CREEK PL.A.NING MILL rrHE undersigned has established a PLANING Id ILL, on )litt sh creek, four miles from Gettysburg, at which be will umucifact are DOORS AND DOOR FRAMES, WINDOW SASH AND FRAMES, • FLOORING, WEATHERBOARDING, C7halt and Wash - Board', With evergthfug else made at ,rash A AuttAssi, mul need its the ballatiair lb. best of lumber will atomyli be used, all thoroughly dried, Itila havtps hoop put up for the porpooo. Orlon solicited, and promptly Attended to. Price SIP tow as flis lowest, mid every effort made to &teem modAte customers. JOHN D. PFOUTZ. May 20,11168.-1 r • 'FURNITURE. D, C. SHEAFFER PETERSBURG (X. 5.,) PENNA., le prepared to offer:to the Pubile, nytliing In bl■ aneheap ma es tee had in the county. lEa.Porehnsers will de well to call and OXlMille my stock bet( baying eliewbelle. FURNITURE made l order. Repairing done neat cheap awl with Cams , . b. ..lan 22. Plin..-11 NEW S I,N E S S . • Upholstering & Trimming. WILLIAM E. CULP HAL,7411; Stables, al i t e. :s on tab s lj u sb i t: i t n e i n i f o :pposite t4 ii; Wearer's Covering Sofas, Chairs,- Mat trasses, and Upholstering • in all its%ranches. - He also continues Ws old bushiest of Trimming Buggies, Carriages, le. , and sclicits from . the publtt their patronage. Chives Modetfite. -Gettysburg, Pa., . HOWE MACHINES! THE LATEST IMPROVED & GENTAIIE ELIAS .110 WE, JR., SEWING MACHINES. JACOB F. THOMAS, Agent for Adana:. County, Pa., Granite Hifi, P. 0., (Oul4en's Station.) ORDERB will be promptly attended to:: Machines delivered to all parts of the county and instruc tions given gratis. szeialsa public are cautioned against parties who nee thername of HOWE in connection with their ma chines on account of the popularity of the Howe Ma chines. There're DODO GENtriNli unless they have Imbedded le web 'maeltine -s medallion haring the likeness of XLIAS 110WS,Jr. on it, die ' ifeb.26—tt WHEAT WANTED. The undersigned will pay the highest market price GOOD 'VV-HEAT, ”ajniii,..oa fonws delivered at Ms Ifni, )lellbsnny'►, In Highland townablp Q GING=. Dec.lB, 18643..:-tt Surveym . ,O)onvorapeing. WI:1'14E10W, . FA IRF A.., Tandem Li, sarakst •to tha pantie as a • PRACTICAL SURVEYOR asd h plaparot to auttarylartaa, - tatfa, ise:, on row vonable tarma. tiaalpg talon out a, Olhvoyeseet's Ucensei wilt also' attend to preparing MiiitoctoltaLisstxrusimwmvs, taus if!, A It niptallS alf-MnytatitENT, Cl s ktigUlto lOrting bad atiasidiattbletztottriance ta gda.tina. Ya 4.°Pe • 1 " 40 .0 4 . "Val share ar.,Fattottage. - Dust. ava pr6olptlyi attinded wind charge" 111410DNIPW.• eaJan. I.dallogrsairsordhdrield,..Athaut surzYcdr, cm i tiKiEs wow MODE roA GETTYSBURG, PA., -FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1869. ght . g)titt ?"411..,$rntiuri. Ye birds of spripul warbling Swverly call the flowers that yield • Such rare fragrapee to the air, While to fultrro4s blowing ; Through the woods your carols ring, In tlfe'glen anif . lhoemiug nod , • While yon I.thkei sweetly where Silver rills Aro flowing. rail.breani—bird of song. k. .1140,!1fr , ,esa LI?? Sotatbura dial" Hasted\l? ille,blckaaoined tree,— Ours is tt‘!i-uo. l iu.; /Awl ; All t'ielthj.? qiet belong. Aud our - akiers blight a, thine ; NestekawAit,—a Y ntored lur thee Duiuty crumbs a; id. • Birth* 6f Flpring--eitroN4 ! Hasten wi h thy jeyoue n;•;+ , 4 Bleak the reign of dt , e.ittettt 01/ 1.111:1 brow , ol All the ell tor noteli pit.) siu Lingo r in the bit sk+lonu, fill ilwstrirul Elutes - MN:t-m- By the Queen LtNI U ty. I - 1 ARAWBUIL(A. PA. A CLP OF COLA WATER. Shortly after the. close of the war, I travelled on the railway for some hours of a bright, June day, seated beside a 'young sold ier, a cavalryman, from Wisconsin, who was on his way hr.ine, with an honorable discharge, after a service of for r years.— My fellow traveller arrived to be quite in telligent and sociably inclined, and beguiled the way by relating many incidents of the battle-field, and of tamp, and hospital life. One of the simplest of his stories, told with an appearance of the utmost good faith, I have never forgotten s- remembering dis tinctlrevery detail, while sorts of his more mnrvellons and trap,dcal narrations have quite faded from my mind. 'Our regiment," •be said, "was under Banks, in the spring of Isl 2, when he made such good time netting down the Sliohai thr.ll Valley'. It. was an awful driving, confused, exhausting, hurry skurry 'Lliange cf base,' but it'amurious That 1 chiefly re member it by a little incident, which per haps you will think was hardly worth lay ing up, and is hardly worth telling of " I signified my desire to hear his little story, and he went oo: waLone.worning dispatched, in hot halite, to the extreme rear, with a very im portant order... As ill-luck would have' it, I had to ride a vintage horse, as my own had fallen lame. The one provided 'for me proved just the most- vicious brute I ever mounted. I nad hard work to mount him at all, fur his furious rearing and plunging; And when,. at last. I reacted the saddle, be was f 0 enraged, thme was no getting him. null,r at least five minutes.— With his ugly head down, tied his ears back, be'would Ifni revived and runnel, pivoting on his fore-bet, and lacking out with his hind lev, 'till -I fancy they must have looked like the spokes of a' big wheel. When he found that I was master of the situation, that my' Land warm_ ft and my spurs were sharp; lie gt:ire in—till the next time; 'rum; a;.., , watching for a chance to fing.me over his bead and trample the mastership out of me. "I rode haul that day, both lecause of my ordets,, and for the purpoic of putting that devil of a bore• through ; but there were many obstruct ions in the r. gad—march lug columns, arti:lety, army wagons, and, above all, hosts of contrabands, who were Ithvays scrambling to get out of your, way, Just into your way : su it 'Was noun before I had made half of my distance. It was a hot, sultry, and dusty day. I had exhaust ed my canteen, and was panting, almost lolling, like a dog. Just as my thirst was becoming quite unbearable, I came upon a group of soldiers, lounging by a wayside spring, drinking and filling their canteens. At first I thought I would dismonnt, as my horse seemed pretty well subdued and blow ed; but no sooner did he guess my atten tion, than he began again his diabolical friskings and plungings, at which the strag glens about the spring act up a, provoking laugh, which bro't my already hot blood up to the boiling point. Still, I didn't burst out at once. I swung off my canteen; and said to one of the men, the only fellow that hadn't laughed at my bout with the hone : `Here, comrade, just fill this, for me.' "He was a tall, dark, heavy broweil, surlplooking chap, but, for all that ? I didn't look for such :In answer as lie growl ed out : "'Fill 'your own ranted). and be -- to you!' - "I tell you I was mad ; the other fellows laughed again, and then I was madder, and I pet says to him : "You' mean devil! I hope to 'God I shall yet hear you begging for a drink of water! It ever I do, I'll see you die; and go where you belong, before I'll give It to you.' "Then I gallopped on, though some of the men called to me to come back', saying they'd fill my canteen. I didn't stop till I reached a house, a mile or two further on, Where a black boy watered both me and my horse, and filled my canteen, with a smile that the handful of new peup . ie Is gave him couldn't begin to pay for, 'When compared the conduct of this poor little chip of -eoony, who said he 'never bad no father, nor mother, nor no name but Pete,' with the treatment I bad received from a white fellow-soldier, I found that drink of cold water hadn't cooled down my anger much. And for months and months after, whenever I thought of that affair, the old, mad feeling would come boiling rip. The fellow's face always came out as clear be fore me as my own brother's, only It seemed to be more sharply cut into my memory.— I don't know why I resented this offence so bitterly. I have let bigger things of the sort pass, and won forgotten them ; but this stuck to me. I am not a revengeful fellow naturally, but i never gave up the hope of seeing than= again, and somehow pay ing him back for his brutal Insolen ce ,_ There wasn't a camp or review 1 * as i n for the next two years but .I looked for bins, right and lett.- I never went over a field, after a battle, but that " arched for him among the dying—God forgive me I At last, my.opportenity came. "I had been wounded; endwise in one of t#B hospitals-almost weN, yet fit for, duty in the saddle. I batik above.all things, to be idle; So I beg ged or ; light employment is a- • hospital nurse, and they gave It to wie,, and said I 1114,4'3,110r well. • f/Luever kit fur our poon. b rae faiiiia ,i . gidibertt., kiwi:been sextAbrunste, With that aummettuidaevertoenfujile bospetal....lin9r I saw And ! eelbring.Agni, sack heroism es I bad never seen ow,the CogePikallOhrbelbed WIPP theliartmoehhvii serktp BeemedAmasibet 1 411 1 1mobb*nwilba, A.gruaivotwelok =NZ [For N. Star anti Sentinel SPRING,BIRDS OP ■ %ALVA \ TY GR4:('E I dREENIVOOII have followed any .one of them over the 'Soldiers' Rest,' though.it law pretty place to camp down is, In tact, my heart grew so soft here, so Christianized, As It were, that I forgot to look for my old enemy ; foe, so, you see, I still regarded the surly strag filer who.refused me water at, the roadside spring. "After the battles of the Wilderness, a great multitude of the wounded were pour ed in upon us; all our wards were filled to overflowing. It was hot, close weather; Most of the patients were fevered by their wounds and exposure to the sun, and up and down the long, ghastly lines of white bade-the great cry was for water. I took a large Welter of Ice-water and a tumbler, and f-tarted on the round of my ward, as eager to give as the. poor fellows were to re ceive. The ice rattled and rung in the pi:cher In a most inviting way, and many heavy eyes wee opened the sound, and many a hat hand was st, -4 out, when, all at ongv, none of 11:.• tarthes beds of the ward, I saw start up, with his face flawing with t and his eyes glaming, as he almr-t Fen amed out : "Water! rive me water, f,r God's sake l' "Then, madam, I could see no other tkce in all the wan!, f,r it was he ! .a‘l made a few steps toward him, and saw ife,knew me as well as I knew him, for be fell hack on his pillow, and just turned his facetoU:ard the wall. Then the devil tightened his \ grip on me, till It seemed he had me fast and\sure, and he seemed to whisper into my eUr,: "Rattle the Ice In the pitcher, ancraggravalb \ hirn ! Go up and down, giving water tol the others, and not a drop to him!" "Then something else whispered, a little nearer, though not in such a sharp, hissing way—conscience, I supposed it was ; good Methodists might call it the Holy 'Spirit; other religious people might say it wart .the spirit of my mother; - and perhaps we would all mcau about the something—any how, it seemed to say: `Now,*my boy, is your chance to return good for evii, Go to him, give him to drink first of all!' And that something walked me'rlght up to his bedside, made me slide my hand under his shoulder and rake him up, and put the tumbler to his lips. He drank I never can torget —in long, deep draughts, almost a tutublerful at a swallow, looking at me so wistluhy all the time. When he was Baas tied, he !ell back, and again turned his face to the wall, without a word. Butsomehow knew the fellow's heart was touched, as o chaplaitt's sermon or tract had ever °ailed it asked the surgeon to let me have the sole care of this patient, and he consented, though he said the man bad a bad gum-shot wound iu the knee, and would have to sub init to au amputation, if be could stand it; and if not, would probably [make me a great deal of trouble while he lasted. "Well, I took charge tf hid to do it, somehow—but he kept up the same sileeco with me for several days ; then, one morning, just as I was leaving his bedside, he caught hold of my coat and pulled me Uack. I bent down to ask him what he wanted, and he said, ins hoarse wistsper 'You remember that canteen business in the Shenandoah Valley 2"Yr:s; but it don't matter now; old fellow,' I answered. "But It does Matter,' he .said. 'I don't Know went mane me so stuirlhit diy, only that an upstart young lieutenant from our town had just been spearing at me for straggling; and 1 wasn't to blame, for I was sick. I came down with the fever next day. As tim what I said to you, I was ashamed of it before you got out of sight ; and, to tell the truth, I've been looking for you these two years, just to tell you so.- 13w when I met you here, where I was cry- kg, alinwt dying, for water, it seemed so like the carrying out of your cone, I was almost afraid of you.' "I fell you what, madam, it gave me strange feelings to think er him looking for me, to make up, and I looking for him, to be revenged, all this time ; and it was such a little sin alter all. I'm not ashamed to confess that the tears came Into my eyes as I said : - 'Now, Eastman (that was his name ; he was a Maine man,) don't fret about that.little matter any more; it's all right, and you've been a better fellow than I all along.' "But he had taken it to heart, and was too weak to throw it off. It was `so mean,.'' he said, 'so unsoldier-like and bearish';' and I was `so good as to forgive it,' be in sisted. "I stood by hlm while his leg was am putated ; and when, after a time, the sur geon said even that couldn t save him, that he was sinking, I found that the man was like a brother to me. He took the hard news that he must die, just as the war was almost ended, like the brave fellow he was. He dictated a last letter to his sister, the only relative he had ; gave me some direc tions about sending some keepsakes to her, and then asked for the chaplain. This wag a good, sensible, elderly man, and he talked in about the right style, I think, and made us feel quite comfortable in the belief that in the Father's house there must be a man sion for the poor soldier, who had so often camped out in snow and rain; and that for him who had given all his country, some great good must be in store. "At last, the poor fellow said to the chap lain ; 'lsn't there something in the Bible about giving a cup of cold water ?' Ah? madam, I can't toll you how that hurt me. '0 Eastman!' said I, 'don't, don't!' But he only smiled as the chaplain repeated the verse. Thep lie•turnod.to me and said : 'You didn't think what you were doing for yourself when you gave me that glass - of ice-water the other day, did you, old fel low ? Can I pass for one •of the little ones, though, with my six feet two ?' Then he went on talking about being little, and the kingdom of heaven, till we almost fear ed his mind was wandering; but perhaps it was only finding its way home. I do feel strangely childish to-night,' he said,— ilO feel like saying the prayer-verse my mother taught me when she toed to put me to bed, twenty-five years ago. If you'll excuse me, I'll say it, all to myself, before g o to sleep.' "So he bade us good-night, turned over on his pillow, and softly shut his eyes; his lips moved a little while, and then, Indeed, he went to sleep." "How does the Empress Eugenie dremsl" inquired'im inquisitive female of abacbelor friend, juareturned from Paris. "Like a woman ;" was _ the. brusque reply. "Of course," continued Um Inquirer; "but I. wish to know whether she .wears costly dresees," ; "J:,orukyrtand yeq h ,„.. madam," wag the.AWN- 4 10 4 1 0 . 111 1 e I WLA &Pim like a wornang .tho 044" grab , luouto oho ftioueuo l - Z:1 A JApAllSsmangeowologougs:the Gte eau bend boabega inflardcaro= 36-- four:A:lo*ft. -120 spina/ ortithilvabe _ hays3orefor tea.* mid the, Nr'll~i~tiil~wd tLe, iiliW3Mlll6e'qvltalit 4 The following beautiful -passage is from lt.r—lisseelies'asievanna.of late : I have seen the eagle in his own sphere. flow strongly does it stir ,a man's soul to see ene of these birds lying It suing, as 11 were in the tipper ocean. and slowly swing ing about as It but his thought kept him there, and not Ids wing -beat. And then, sirugg,ling in some man's.ahow I have seen the same bird tied and caged,, caring not to plume his feathers, and Lis wings aredroop• ing. How utterly unlike that bird in the heavens is this miserable bird of man in the cage! It is very much this way with men that have been in the thunder of youth, and tit the po%er and iret-hnesa of manhOoll, anti ro lust come drai.gled, and driatitiug and di. sbevet-d into a pipit_, pitting, complaining, suffering. helpless and hapless old age. I. that the eagle? That is the eagle: Isn't it piteous ? "Oh to die early !" you say.— No; there is a better view than that. "Oli that one might cut short the course of life before it comes to this barrenness and mis cry !" No; there is something better than that. Lift up your head ; remember [be you are going away from only your bodily riches, and that every single step you are pouting towards eternal riches. Oid man, half bllud, crippled and bent tied up with rheumatism and various ail ments—after all, you never were so near to your throne, you never Were so near to joy, never were you so near to youth, never were you so near to all that is desirable. Do earthly joys sound to you far distant, like the memory of dreams? Listen, then; hear those sounds that eontb wafting over from the other land, of joys that are undimmed, that are forever at the right hand of OW, —,your joys; (*their, mother, yours. Are all the good things that earth can give you, and all that wealth can purchase, no longer palatable to you ? Du you account your li.e to , be well-nigh ended, your sands run, and your experience almost as barren as the sands? s Look forward. Hark: I hear within the beat of this heart another beat The pulaatiOus of this mortal current car ry within them that other pulsation that ne ver, never shall be faint, nor cense. As long as my God lives; I shall live. As long as he garners and huld.4 • the spirits of tue just, of the true, and of the,noble in heaven, I shall be among them. Tikoyun shall go out, and the stars forget to shim, and the seasons cease upon the earth, anthill things be whelmed in universal ruin, but the ran somed of the Lord shall return and 'come to Zion with songs, and with everlasting joy upon their beads. That land is not far off. It is not far away. You are coming nearer to it; you Wive come to the precincts ; you have come within sight; you have come within sound , of it. When, after the weary voyage that I first made across the ocean—sick, loathsome—l arose one morning and went upon , the deck, holding on, crawling, thinking that I was but a worm, I smelt in the air some strange smell; and I said tothe Captain, "What is that odor?" "It is the land breeze from off Ireland." I smelt the turf, I smelt the grass, I smelt the leaves ; ended my sickness de- Parted.* 6l 4 mi4N4 eye Few. bright, MY ...easess ataanowse.- The tiumaht of the near ness of the land came to me, and cured me better than medicine could cure me. And when afar off I saw the dim line of land, joy came and gave me health, Ind from that moment I had neither sickuesa nor trouble ; I was comieg near to the land. Oh ! is there not for you, old man, and for you, wearied mother, a land breeze blowing off from heaven, wafting to you some of its odors, some of its sweetness?— Beheld the garden of the Lord : It is not far away, I know, from the air. Behold the joy of home. Do I not hear childrenshout ? The air is full of music to our Aiken thoughts. Oh, how full of music when our Joni ney is almost done ; and we stand upon the bound and precinct of that blessed land! Hold on to your faith. Give not away to discourage ment. Believe more firmly. Take hold by prayer and by faith. Away with troubles and buffetings. Be happy : you are saved. By faith you are saved. In a few hours, visions of God, and of all the realities of the eternal world, shall be yours, and you shall be saved with an everlasting salvation. "How I HATE TEE RA.tx."—Tints ex claimed a little girl in our bearing last eve ning, as the big drops puttered on the win- dogs pane, and ahe looked out alinoat sob bing at her Inability to enjoy a promenade. It was a foolish thought of the child ; but many a grown up person is just as foolish in their wishes. They would rejoice to exclude every cloud from their social hori zon. They then would be blest if they could be insured continuous good fortune —no griefs, no melancholy, no vicissitudes of condition. Al ! what a great mistake. They would .die of ennui in a month! The monotony of satisfaction would be un endurable: Our little aidictions are actual ly a relieL They enable us to enjoy again that pleasure which, If uninterrupted, would sicken us to satiety, and sorrow, trouble and pain, are the clouds and the rain, which give variety to our social exist ence, and fructify our social nature. The world was not made for incessant light or darkness, nor man for incessant joy or woe. Change is at once our annoyance and our benfaotor, Nsw lona thieves have iu training a number of dogs for summer operations. They are taught by repeated endeavors to rush into a room and seize from a counter a parcel and clickly bring V. to Ids master. Their counter is made so as to resemble those in banks, and the parcel is covered with yellow paper and made to look like the packages of bank netes that are eti changed from one bank to another. The design Is to take or send by a confederate one of these dogs to the door of a bank or broker's office, where a parcel or package o r baoi mum! 1; sect; tq qs ly,gg on tale counter, and send him In, The trained mama' darts in and Rees the valuables la his mouth and rushes out to , the place where'he expects to find his master. ANISUVILLI drugg,ist has Invented a rat pailt midis of a'preparation of phosphorus. You first catch a rat' nd paint. him. After dark he looks Tike reball of fire, and going among his Tolle* rats, they become fright rueli lUtd 'WU* the r prianigeo, the phos phoreeoest rat flers;lng of coarse sad bur , ifintursittie Na!. - 4 1 11. 13 !ho_Irv* eetebtletuk vetoel -011116:11x eigl ol 4o l, by 44 94.40 t, ropxyr.. W0400184"044649111.AT tOackeurrir whim. No woodir some pm*** iitha 14.111F00T TO THE MIRO. at nun- - WARD Betcluzß. WHOLE NO. 3558 ItiolllllN4l Ar ALL fl THE PALPLIR I=l -Nothing at all in the raper to-day ! Only a murder somewhere or other— A, girl who ham put her child away. Not heiog a wife as welt as a mother : Or a drunken husband healing- a wife, h the neighbors lying awake to IN ten, Scarce aware he tIFIS taken a wife Till at the window the thin n- rapt glis ten But that {sell In the regular way— There's nothing at all in the paper to-day Nothing stall in the paper to-day ! To be sure there's a woman died of starvation' .lows in am street—Y:4 MO many may . In CH:4 'Pry prosperous Christian na MIII r I .vo young ...irkwith inward grie .Nlak;kitw have plutly,rd 111 t he inky IA ate r.; i• a tither 1404 leataa 4 d Ia• saal t a a thief— Or a apala+r betla n)bba,l of 0.0-, ul Lwr daughters, hal,, twat ue..ur la the regular way lwrltekl UOLLI mg , at all in . the paper to-clay nothing at all in the paper to-clay, Unlaa.v you can, about Whig, iu city— [tow great rich rogues for their crimes, must pay • (Though ail gentility cries out "pity I") Like the ineauest &hop boy that robs a till. Tuere's a case to-day, if I - in•not torget ting, Ile lad only % borrowed," as such lads will— To pay some money lost in betting. But ttaire'a nothing In this that's out of the way— There's nothing at all in the paper to-day. Nothing at all in the paper to-day But the births and bankruptcies, deaths and marriages, But life's events in the old surrey, With Virtue begging and Vice in car ri- ages ; Atid kindly hearts under ermine gowns, And wicked breasts under bodden gray, For goodness belongs not only to clowns, And o'er others than lords does siu bear sway. But what do I read?—"Drowned ! Wreck ed! Did I say Tners was nothing at all in the paper to day ? LIFE LENGFII EYED I. Cultivate an equal temper ; many a man has fallen dead in a tit of passion. 2. Eat regularly, not over duke a day, and nothing between meals. 3. Go to bed at regular Lours. Get up at soon as y.c.n wake of yourgelf, and do not sleep in the day time, at least not longer thin ten minutes before noon. 42 • Work always by the day, and not by he job. .5. Stoo..working before you are "fagged out." 6. Cultivate a generous and an accommo- dating temper. 1. Never eat wkest you are not hungry nor drink when you are not thirsty. 8. Never cross a bridge before you corns to it, for this will save half the trouble of 9. Let your appetite always come unin vited. 10. Cool off to a knave greatly 'termer man me one in which you have he,emexer clang ; this simple rule would preventjn calculable sickness, and save millions . lives a year. I. Never resist a oall of nature fora sin gle - minute 12. Never allow yohrself to be chilled "through and through ;" it is this which destroys so ruar.y every year, in a few diys' sickness, from pneumonia, calltai by some lung fever, or inflsrnmatiort of the lungs. 13. Whoever drinks no liquids at his male will ndd years of pleasurable exist ence to his life. Of cold or warm drinks, the former are most pernicious ; drinking at meals induces persons to eat more than they otherwise would, as anyone can' verify by experiment ; and it is excess of eating which devastates the land with sickness, suffering and death. 14. After fifty years or age, if Lot a day laborer, and sedentary persons alter forty, should eat but twice a day—ln the morning and about tour in the afternoon ; persons can soon accustom themselves to seven hour. interval between eating, thus giving the stomach rest; for every organ without ad equate rest must give out prematurely. -15. Begin early to live under the benign influences of the Christian religion, for it "has the promise of life that now ts, and of that which is to come."—Mall's Journal of Health. • Prigoturr.—"Did you ever hga}• the story of the travelle; and tlAe horse-radish ?" "No, how was it ?" "Well, seeing a dish of grated horse-radish or, the table where they stopped for dinner, each helped himself largely to the sauce, supposing it to be eaten as potato or squash; and the first putting a kniteful into his mouth, jerked hts hanikerater from his trousers and commenoed wiping his eyes." "What troubles you, Jemmy," inquired his comrade. "Sure, Ind I ani thinkin' of ray poor old father's death when lie yiqui hung," he re plied shrewdly. Presently the other, taking as greedily of he pungent vegetable, had as sudden use or his handkerchief, whereat Jemmy coolly nqulred "And what troubles yer, Pat?" "Truth," he replied, "thr,t you wasn't hung with your fapier," BeIIiNTIFIC discovery has destroyed an other of our most popular the-ries. Hem lock, to which Socrates and pliociop were said to owe their death, is pronounced by eminent toxicogists -to be no poison at all. Sixty grains of the tincture of hemlock were recently administered to a young wo man without any apparent el sots, sind a nelson alter s, dose of twenty-four grains of the pure juice of the leaves o the hemlock only expetienited d slight muscular numb ness, which Owned °frillier an hour. From futher experiments it appears that the com mon heaths& Is neither a poison nor even a medicinal remedy. What the ancients called hemlock lit doubtless the , olcstea :trireme, L., %villeins, in OK I, s.most pois onous plant, A MSTIIODIST preacher was traveling in , one of the back settlements, and stopped at a caltin, where the old lady received him very kindly. Liter setting proriaion before hinh_elte began to question him. "Stranger, WAGP MOUght YOA be kola r“madiun, I reside in Shelby county, kentnekY.."—. ', l krs l , l 4l3ingtts, noctifentx,isit what !nought 37:544 , , data' up here .?” "Madam, I am PloYeitillifJer the lost sheep of the tribe of • u m ,l2. Jam; shouted %Ovid if m unit ; here 8 a —-- ritte hire Inhe wit'y She lby co unty, I , • WWII); ai:Ziontthg stotk, and IlEjuet bet 01 - 4. 6,• ~„ •.' laltio lot fait wyr it wxol4 - vv.; - A: • . - asmtinel. 111:0ANUDIN4li witaa.wit Tot cam., 7tliatait. il The,anxiqty which many men exhibit to seem:mutate wealth lbr the purpose of en _ci•iwing their children with fortunes, is not - sheeting's of prudence and common sense. 'The teachings a experience are very uni fbrm In regatti tbe effect of entailing wealth upon children. With few exceptions it la ate of the wont user to - which wealth can be applied: And if parents wish to lu jure their children, they might be newly sure of their end by hoarding property for them, and bring them up with the mulct standing that they ate to inherit femme without For to the that place, the children of such parents are deprived of the-beneflt and discipline of labor, and the "ondinsry and strongest incentives toiudustry and - enter prise are of no ham whit them.--Children who know that their futere wants are pro- . vided for by parental exertions and timd neas, will, of course, not engage in any thin which requires close applicrilon, ear nenkideavor and self-denial. They will grow up in indolence, love of ease, and Ignorance of the ways and means of getting an independent living. A life of ease and illness predispose and expose them to a thousand temptations and vices,to evil com pany, and tYffitngerous indulgences. And in case of future reverses, to which all are ..xposed, they must be comparatively help iCFll and incapable of shifting for themselves. D.fficulties make the man. The mecca ,,ity for Lbor, for rugged toil and self denial, is a blessing not a curse, and parents who seek oi remove this necessity, inflict injury upon their offspring; By smoothing down the rough places in life's pathway, they make their children puny, effeminate and worthless as regards all high, mauly exet- Lee. It is by elle( unteriiig and conquer difficulty that tho heart and mind an. mad.: stout and strong. But these hoarding parents would prevent the possibility of their children having any difficulties, and they call this favoring their children! The daughters of hoarding parents are exposed not only to the evils just spoken of, but also to become a prey of those gamblers in the lottery of marriage, who make the wite secondary to Ler tortune, There are at all times numbers of such men prowling around, watching their opportunity at all places of fashionable resort, to remedy their own poverty, or to repair their ruined for tunes by marrying wealthy young ladies.— The possession of a large property by a young lady, while it makes men of real worth of character shy and afraid to ask their love, unless they have equal fortunes, operates as a snare of the moat dangerous kind to entangle them with mere fortune hunters. And when these hunters of pro perty obtain such ladies as wives, they are apt to consider them as ineurnbranees to the property and treat them accordingly. I say to parents, beware how you en danger the future character and happiness of your children by hoarding up wealth tor thew to pones,. If you wish them to form vicious habits, doubtless the course is to board all you can, but if you wish them to be independeut, self-relying, and happy, th , y must be taught to depend on their owl eLertl ?ha. J. S. G. osz or Tlll . Ow Brock.. —The late Earl a Glasgow was lovely specimen of an aris tocrat, by all accounts, and something superior to the late Marquis of Waterfcud in the 'matter of deviltry. An English journal relates the followtng story of the noble old Earl, who was gathered to his fathers at the ripe age of eighty six, after drinking butts of wine and brandy, and de voting uhusual care to his hounds, which fed from silver plates on tender mutton chops, biscuit, toast, egg and sherry, while thousands el the poor around him grovelled and died for lack of the common nectissariesi of life. "This , man had an income of seventy thou sad, per annum, the major portion or which he apect in gambling and horse racing. He was 4 heavy drinker, a tre mendous swearer; a person of the most violent temper, passionate in the extreme, and, in fact, possessed nearly every vice to which humanity is prone, with barely one redeeming virtuy. Here if an anecdote as related in a daily paper, showing the arbi trary, reek:egg, almost blood thirsty charc ter of the depraved ruffian 'lle thought a golden plaster was sufficient for any in jurita he might:have inflicted on any Indi vidual, and he was \ ever ready to apply it ; as, fur instance, what he flung the waiter In the Black Swan, ai York, from the fl. et fluor window into the street, end the lane. lord complained to him on 'the subject, his only answer was, 'D—n bim, put him down in the bill:* " RAP HIL ANT IMO? a. —The Hel _ have always been remarkable for their ex cellent system of charitable relief, riltkoh but one other religions bodyMhe Quakers, can rival them. No one ever saw a Hebrew beggar or a destitute Quaker, and this is not owing to the absence of want among them, but to their peculiar and thorough ar rangements tor taking care of their pocir. Each synagogue has a committee, composed of the most respectable members, whose business it is to inquire into the condition of every Hebrew in their district, and to af ford assistance to suet) as require it. They act on the simple principle of putting the needy in a situation to supply their own wants, and du not encourage pauperism. Work is furnished to such as oxtuot get em ployment, and many of the peddlers and • glaziers in our city have been set up by them. The aged ase petitioned, and the disabled placed in a hospital or furnishe 1 with regular relief. Dram; the greet rush of travel la Cali fornia, the Panama and San Francisco steamers were always densely crowded.— On one occasion, says a oorregpandent, a party of travellers, beat on the game of "old sledge," used the broad stomach of a very fleshy fellow-passenger, asleep on the cabin floor, in lieu of a table. The sleek er snored on fur several hours, uncoil --ions of his personal utility, until we of the party became Suddenly excited and lir:night his hand down upon the "table" with fearful emphasis, when the astonished straw, r opened his eyes, saw what on going said right, boys—go on with game ; but I would like to turn over," FIIIIL:(1:11111r Rest.. — Some unto Wm.( he, given expression to its generous nature in the following sentiment; "Never desert It , friend when entities anther around him.— .when sickness fall on the bean, when the world is dirk luid cheerless, is the lime to try 4 true friend. They who turn front s Scene of distress betray their hypoerky um! prove that Interest moves thaw. If you have a frietul who loves you mid your interest and happiness, be stile :mkt sustain him in adver,ity, Let him feel that Ws former Educluests fit appreciated, via that kis love is not thrown'away. Reul"li lrlily may be .carte, but it exists in the heart.— WhoAmtnot seen and telt its wer ? IThey den Worth whonever loved a fri,•nri, or labored to makes friend happy." Sin Kenehn Dtgt‘y, of En. land, Ciov. trinthrop,the second, or Mamactiti aetts, in the elgtatteeatth century, stati,rectuu- Ilded the 17410v/tug cure, hi, tie ague t "pare the patient% WWI #4t the ,paringn in a bag foundthe ' a the iUve~t el, sad pat him in 4 tub br:Wes , Witlitl eel" frig di.: and the riettenfirit lere4g." AN Ira% : enop *bile drum thU I„ther, du otkt . ahe - iiidrcf/Ittett4l - _1&" &Atom of the7eqpi>iie tiisiiith'erv z .pen - wan' Lit 40t: lido* ?" a bistander.,"Th4*Stori Ras by mfr e,Littl,,i; GNYWili s e 0111% .4 * 41104364 Iditeld'ibiiia)bdi'," El=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers