The star and sentinel. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1867-1961, May 06, 1870, Image 1

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    Suds*.
.EAtovAL.
H 4 TR ZIOVED ro
11-west' Corner of Centre
, quare, Gettyabutg, Pa.,
Aldan » lakPlif4o VIII male Ali fry old lita.
a and all wLe may fairdriati with • call.
Is addition to au Block of
00ER1ES, 170210E8, &O.
I have added
ENSWARE.,
FIRE PROOF
AND GLABB-WARN,
wie\ I lu•itu tiro pub* to MU miod szaadia.
AMOR :11011.11RT.
11170-t
WM. J. MARTIN,
Wholesaltand Retail Dimileri
OCERIES AND LIQUORS
rat. lot el Groceries that I am selling Cheap
OICE LIQUORS,
Rye Wista.kg eight gears Old
Eery Old French Brandy
OTHER HINDS OF LIQUORS,
oral mum - Moist of BITTEitB, aansegv bleb I.
'+-Herb Bitt•tv
re - Liquors for Medical pur
ist -- wm.J. MARTINI.
a le Cutlery, Glassware, Queens
&e., at WK. J. MARTINIS.
1 39. 1869
BOWS & SON, 7
DEALERS Ilk
CERIES, NOTIONS,
TOBACCOS,
LLSO,
e, Wooden and Willow Ware
A general assortment of
Goods usually kept in
a FAMILY GROCERY.
4.11117.-t.
BARGAINS
•t tha maw
ROCERY
IN GETTYSBURG
JACOB W. CRESS
ING opeurd anew Grocery.lu Gettysburg...
• aorth•weet corner of the Public Square,
t received • eplendidueSortineut of FRESH,
ROCERIES'
lag Sugars, Coffee, Molasses, Syrup, Teas
,Tobaceo,9alt,Plib,lleass,Bbotilders,ar Also
ENSW AR E , CONFECTION 8
rultsAlospa.raseyArtleletandPietloarLiner
• • Win alsokeep on !mad FLOOR and rzln
to.
. purchased for CASH, I an prepared to
ilrheep Give me •oalland Judge tor your.
J; W CRIBB
EMMEM
ROCERY.
WY. E. MEALS 11.4.8 OPYNXD
cery, Vegetable and
Notion Stour
said Aloft:dna Meals t Brother's Marble
yard, fa . .
EAST YORK STREET
•Ispropared tosol sacheap as the cheapes
la kin Hai. Give vas call.
I MY—tr
nitro and gontrattora.
0. C. CASHMAN
GETTYSBURG, PA.,
enter and Contractor,
.PECTFUL LY informs the
blictbat h• hes removed tohis new ihoo on
;==tl
rod to takocoutracto for putting up •nd
g Buildings, at as reasonable rats
I. Glettysburg--all work guaranteed tube o
Illy. H•bopuby strict sttsiotion to buil
eritpublicpatrooage. Ulra Ml•call
11169. -If
. CHRITZMAN,
GETTYSBURG, PA.,
enter and Contractor,
Ravioli moored to loy now Mop
hingion street, -between Middle
net Ciambreaburg streets,
• aced Steam Power.' as prepared to far
Indoor work for balkling purposes, of the
r al,sad as neatly andshisiply salt Cab be
other astablistuaentin the inmenty.•
II
• Heads always II readiness and worn Ga
tti Keay tans sad dispatch.
• s for all kin& ofitrasketa.liorellalloald
-Irani 117 Sited and on ,easchable terms.
1144.-11
C. - `Btallsmith.SL Son,
GETTYSBURG, PA.,
enters and Contractors.
s, Shutters, Blinds,. Door
dWindowFrames,Cor-
nice, Door & Window
Brackets, &c
Ira hid •cd maniseactarod to, order o
T MATERIALS,
try expatieased workaten,aad at
SONABLE PRICES.
roPtunpUy attended to
1M11...1111
ar.
BOWES.%
LETE MANURE,
I===l
Phosphate of Lime,
monia and Potash.
au x :IT •LL Laginiso maw
• PERTLLIZZR FOR ALL
atoCßOPStials
of tito reduced cart o law , I
to roil KOMPUITI f
MAM III MA! s •
awl by the aid of am obrobbracyii Jr
asalitios.
) also hi quality. I Warrumall
rithritostrom
1(111 , 22, MrsOfacts
Gray's Wary kfrat,
amtalaii sL Ms ellasiifte atl plant
Z, VIM/ POlll4 soataladai me won focal
balm. lirdity to the aell.
•••••
• VOw fw biNibmiPlet• Namur' by
Pesailissoish NOW ism,. Dsl,
loadoad OS I I tor IlMelesd litates,
a 'Wei of three you* arid, has rs.
• It bs Gs but Artaiser wow
t , SHARPLESB k CO.,
Delaware Avenue, Phi Mo ws
ULM REYNOLD%
loaf„Street, Baltimore, Md.
.4e
,
psommtaii. /Hmm
Bain 11) OSUMI alltrUteuse anda
,
Gettystvv,
MUG OP PUNLICATION:
Tao pun AND SiiintrittLis published every rti
darmaratsg. a< OLIO s year la advseee ; er See
Lt-tot paid *lade tbe leer. Nottubeeriptloas
eouttnued unto all mums are Paki , unless at
the (ohm of the publishers. _
Abramsloom are limited at -rewleasbie
ratio A. nbaratredoetion will be made to persona
adtwilatao by the quarter, hair year, or year....
Special soden win be Ineetteit at special rates, to
be Weed We&
agrThe drealatkm of the dun Jam Efemon,
Is one halt larger than that ever attained by any
newspaper In Adams county; and, as an adrer
tltlnß it cannot be excelled. •
Jos Wbaz of all kinds win be promptly execs
ted and at fah' rates. Rand-bills, Blanks, Cards
lsaaspbleek 1s every variety and style, win be
" - Med sit abort notice. Tama Cain. .
gratessbut (cards, At.
en 117
A O •B. .WOODS,
Sas reentnatt
/Vl7' AT .11
' la Paletioe el Law s R
ad attend
any briars In titti Chnortt im sosaty.
J. EL Deaner% Jrnettinin, Ikon Met
toms ad tite Mama& [rant{, 1110-4
M. KRA,UTH, Attorney at
J• 1014 estsymbeng, Pa.
boslasell proalilitY ottewhol to.
0 ac., btreet.solith of tholicrartekusurs:
Join L$ 11111-11
. t
.
idnOONA.IIGHT, Attorney
Draa
1)• um.; adloorpato door eartofeiliataa's g
ttoro, Oltsabotiberg street.
3 Pecial Itttitivo gives to oaltii,oolleaticlassa4
tottlomoat 'or all legal bail*** aid
it 46 c.• eealloaa, Bounty, Ssok-pay, sat 1 'lsaisipe
4.1..4c Q. ltotos,otall:tenoo P raliPtl.Tud riDo/oad
ly ottoolod to.
. i s I...wrest* osliated,sadaltolo • Fara II ref Olaf
n Lows sad other western Statiti.
Jams It 111119.-tf
A J.. COVER, ATTORNEY AT
• L riemptly attain" teeollipetieassa
•11ot►ar BulnuinatristAdSoldsoare.
°dee between Vahoestosk tad D d Zlop
•r'e , tores, ialclaorestrist i 9 et ty 'burn ,Ps.
May 211.18_67' .
&VID A. B UEHLER, ATTOR=
4I i tT LAW. srftl proartly,attood to 00110.
,o• .04 Mistime business satrustsd is biasses.
or . ilk* ti Ws residence la Lem tliestsSory balbthog
oel to b • 'out ammo. illitttysbarcllla729,lllBl
&YIDWILLS;ATTORNEY
ST 4 • Mollies •t. h Is Fos Id onoelathellos tlssiss
orator ofOsstritilinars.
U7294161'.
DR. H. B. HUBER, -
oar!/ Climsamber#tay U 4 Washigefilies abut
orsoarrs 041.. Two's 2/1111.3 Norm
Jam* II fllifftf
DR. J. W. C. O'NEAL
Ham kis os.. residemela BsMien s
giro Oars t be Opinidisrolla• .
Goariloug,lllsy2ll.l64ll/.!
JOIIII L. HILL, M. D.,
DENTIST
doom ittiamberalterg stre•t, aoarly opposite th
Bogle Hotel,
0Z1TY111117141., rixr•a.
Ofir•Havliog *yogis ocoastaall prsatle• over !Opera
pugilists Ma beippgaidol: Weft.
na. J. E. BARK.STRICEIBRA, Dad
-1J irc hartim 10“ 1 4 la Gettysburg. Aron
*rid* to tits pal ` Oaoeia York MVO% am/7
oppadt* alollmiLts„wlkoro Ito will - too_ mom! to
ottoott * 1 $I wind atkopmittoo intim DOLMA
P• noes% Etsal Of feu or 'Ulla lo otoottootkot
rt tod tooolt, Totascosoosobto
_ Jo13110;t110.11:--tt '
DR. H. W. LzFEVRE
Li/anew/Pa, sidasna• ea., Pa.,.
AVING panasaaatly kaatod la that plans, w
LA. eagage tit ski unteral prattles at Illed'avt as
Surgery. Ogles la Leathart strait, sou IkSthotar
treat. " ' [Asig.ll4.lsllo.-t
,Sarstn,
NEW HA WEBS SHOP.
J N' 0 L
rsimile id* friss& aad thcpibbe die MO'
Ihe has muted the Itatawermaklag ty , C. awl
°Palled *Abet as Ostibi• Moo t
lag tits Petweager depot, where ae wl
wad keep ea Lead all klade of
“111411111
00LiA111
wain
Limn
frLyarare, &c, ao
erYIA wIU be sot/ et_titalowedd sapir
TRUNKS of all
and MINDING attaadal
Having been working at as bestow illir t a lP =
ass naaraaty the best kind of warn, isllb~neN
ander lay own sapsriatandanins. Glenne a IsiGL
Nay I, Una.- 4t JON. OULP.
D inn KATIMULY J o*e i. agsaway
"Best always Cheapest."
Tazßoassad Cheapest,
SADDLES,
BRIDLES', - _
COLLARS and,
HARNESS of all kinds, in the Count
are always to b. !mad at tb. old awl well kaowa
atand,Baltlaoesat~esitotto Presbyterian Clam*
(HoCREARY'S.) .
Our Riding and Wagon Saddles,
are the lawn esbinsatiallrftlit sad nesteet.
Our Harness, ()gain and silver mount
ad,) aro Oalaplar• is wrlpeotand warranted to be
of the very beet aaiaYi workaawhlp.
Our upper Leather Draft Collars,
dam nor es sea. Thiry are the beat Firma Sad
most darebblL
Our Heavy Draft .Harness,
aro at Ws to ortar,aa ClOap .a they era be sal. sap
where and la the word'esbetantlal manor.
EUlag addles; Whips, Lashes,Dratt
Ussass, in.r-sets e d start Okla is the Ila Amu
ballar or diempgr.
Our prices
hat 'lima micas to tbelowesttillog standard.
& Meru piliqearge_forout4elll sAbtilauseaaliag
1445 sr sore:
We Wort astklag bat tkd bait of stook dad will
warraitfir ~ tttel•tnrrsdortteNhnoryrupW
.adi re
l'ltiaiti — dtradstravors welavittrattdaties to tar
trasetit Iludkr. •
swift* a Oil I dad uukallaitliktaall altreatUrt
14111 t
1da.20.1,df D. 1116011/4111r a Kai. -
$103171111W.
sitiebiing ever,ibiraliderslippelaver onUlis4
9 11 111A04-11AILUNGIIIILMIIIIII,
dot M etr.ttUtsvt,laSettloltlsttr,i 91tVairing .
I where tkussimbaApmered pid so VOIR brae
ateserkula 61 gbolflit OW! dor: l o44 l er
• lotetistit memill4His •
riAtiaMMOWlleus,m3.,
es email. lehleei-theywitt aloes* et &me. Wrest',
seimer 'WI be se,Pliad ea preempt],
es/ metleemeteethromporeskite. .„ ,
eraluiviumai
• vitiallipakkoilit ink*.
• large Ist oc mpg ia46l4x#,,va t iumo a 411,4 f.
Tluialtealhe thirillb*l_ Wray's' / 14 4• 1 04bre Imo
1o7•• by Am, ihspouditied slug fatywriirtaltii !
eery** large ett are ilk 1110161111114 " • •
YarMati ` WINO, =441:
Buggieit
REMOVAL
s" l " .. aWkilae
0A110a69145r, TROTTING & PALL
the- 'yip BUGGIES, ..r4 &Gum
. Tratqa"
MIS work a ztas y poi
aketerisi mid b$
fie beet•f• llMMSutir Aft. rgiP
WWI&
ies
JWI ISI7
a t
ADAMS COUNTY
MUTUAL nal IMIUMANCIK OOMPAMT
nejoartito. tir. Imo r
mum.
I s = ea ..)1711=.111usioll
1=1"94117 .4/044141=6
. _
S.3.•••10 Itai; - -
Straraers.74ktiagailles.D. 4 JA•llo.ll.llhear
7, Ls. fun% . tobseitilek,G•ttyArarg; /sae
Kiag•M1P1410.6446 .
IL A. lieldwitrabia; AbdislP.O t,
j.
;
Le. sou Wl447.l4besic a. CeditiOstimign
T. -
*ll.Xbieesaysay Is linen la lis eierstiesa to I
loamy of Mums. It las lowa taerretteairow e
haa IT . rivplisi INF NW Reelkid ,
• 88 • 1 . 11 ;h6ilialri Ire
assasitlag 0".
ania•••sa
Ara i mativrawasatea• • was al i lia
*Nay oar se 1 • 11 !
alehaimit.PX. Palk
VOL. LXX. NO. 24.
Removal! Removal
ROBERT D. ARMOR,
GAB FITTER, PLUMBER AND
BELL HANGER,
as Do found atlas reddest oa
Corner East Middle and Stratton See,
GETTYSBURG, PA.,
WILL prompt attend. to all or
dors la W lino. Work doss la the most Darks
rootoe7 malsoor, sad at plow as low as Gas possibly bs
afforded Umiak, allying.
-GAS PIPE
.
.ridokal, at VIM flitasdollort, Brackets, Drop
*loo WATIOIt posh atom Top it'd frost
Wiota i riadAti stmt. everything boloagra g to poor
water Mara.
_De imam gad f ritlaboil if dot Er od . Lock 01 a!
Ueda ropoire lls lL rape/ 20,1870- tt
GETTYSBURG BAKERY.
MHZ Inset Ileirpott Ziegior baying boon die
sobred,tit• adder/dined willoontLodetbellsklbir
business, to Illtta branched. at the old attend,
Corner of South Washington and TF est
Middie streets, Gettgaburg, Pa.
All kinds or
OILACKIRS,
OSZIO,
BREAD,
ROLLS,
'IRITZILLiI, Lo
eonetanuy tisk** and slime eto be had fresh.
With Diatirysers extetiew• and ovety deposition
to ideas% he teals that • esti proem Ise eetielbction is
all asset. Ord r..otl.it.d,fnd promptlyattandid ta.
With many thaake Ibr the panels', bestowed es the
mid gra, its coutiatisae* is ;Oat.
HALTZIII NIWPOBT,
Apr19.,111119-tf
STEAM SAW MILL.
Taadoralgaid has la operation a VIJAY SAW
J.
RILL, at tie Spank Manaufs, war efoolfoak
.bwil 1111WISW, awl la plowed to paw to order bill. of
• warn OIL PISA MULLOCK,
or any kind of Timber desired, at the shortest nett:»
sad at low rata Hd also issaudastans
PAILENGS, &AL
L - .0 M B- E R
delivered et aay point at the LOW 1312 DATIL 3
per osat. will la deducted for a e.& payloads, or
kayo* will be charged fres no linseed dolhery of
Lumber. Timakilal krona favors, be would desire
a °mamma* Isr Mare.
All Litton shoot& too aadr.sod to kin at errata
Lore P.O. Alms soma
1111 2LTINANNA la.
d0t.1i,111110.--ft
IC.E CREAM SALOON.
JOHN GRUEL
ousatniurstraa arr, ezrrrntrao,
mai door to AN* Beta,
Was always ea Mad& Isms assorts/at of aU binds of
CONFECTIONERY,
loads of this beet atetszials, With Frans, Almonds,
las Oakes, do.
ICE CREAM,
stirred to eastroasmaad orders lbw Yamili es or Par
tiespomptly Haviag moas• lacopsassodatioas
for sad Oontlemssi,eaddstorattaed to please,
is Writes his *leads to eve blot a °all
5,1F0.--tf
•
Survey''' . g—Gonyeyanemg.
S.J. ANTITIFEROW,
FAIRVIZLD, PAL.,
Nader' Me woke. to the public so
PRACTICAL SURVEYOR,
ge se. oropared Se earvelaterse, Lots ha, ea Tow
Istoroa. Moolles hikes .setok
he out ono snow prepartag
Olin, BOOM 141,11.1111. I,LLIACISAI-
?MSS Of kOiIIOILIVINS, womILIMIO
smar„
*ion had eel üblooible expatiate la thdatts•All
boom to metre • Metal share of potroarogo.
we promptly attended to sad o homes roaeosable.—
PoOtOdioeoldreee, tetra adazasee.,Pa.
a... 1.1141/....d
GRANITE-YARD ,
IitETTYBBT.TB4, PA.,
cur B4ILRO4D,IflalltOll7 DEPOT.=
PETER BEITLER
proper“ tornsnlab OILANITD. for 141 kind s of
AND NONIIIICINTAL PIIRPOILIS,
at reasonable rates—
Curbing, Sills, Steps, Ashlers,
Posts, Monuments, Ceme
tery Blocks, &C. ) ,
intend SWAM In every style desired, by beet o
Nlll.Orderstroin i 41stencepr9nantlyattended to.
Jock.—tt
COOPERING!
PETER C 141. P
Hao oonusoneod the--
000PERING BUSINESS
In all Ito knack's at lito rooldotios on th. linatam.
Virg me, at tile end of Cora* nttoot. Gott7
Maio "Wolof dotqlo
PI- cso olForibsoo node to mitt ap
ar
Az Mani.
CIO ZZILIVAIL
. . . MUM lITANDII,
MIA
.111,Ctri /11.4./taILL
I aloontaanhotszo sadlnyoLgolp,Clinor Burgs.
Ann ell other kotto t
o Clotting.
.Itoptalas dm*
loointy Ind el"!ap ‘ . as
A 1111241011
BUSINESS.
Uphatatering Trimming.
VTIAL I 4 I I -7 4. GULP
112 474b u 1e=..4=1"1"'" ..
Covering Sofas, Chairs, Mat
tritium, and Vpholstering
in all its branches,
84A1ie.atimilla.11 Watson. of Triwaist
iggr ie rtiolielistrema Was publis
BLACKSIvLITHIN G. •
.
JJ.. ;HOT,LRRA UGH
Ef+ , * pea*. 11,eiriaftWilmir ea Wooldastea
admit Kett dear to Oluitsolaa's Ceopeater
owl sorropand to do all kinds
ElleAtaaaaasOle aalea.aaillaalionsearealpablie
1t11411111,0110f all kinds. Give ao:aaal I.
Al a% Serlll4-11 •
JEREMIAH CULP
GE2TYSB MG,. PA.,
trid g ri t iE. eY I W er- 4 1111 gO4
striParaosriek s•"°' lut!"'", 010
conws Q.1 7 ALL OMAR.
loam kimono basal • law qiimmitetitALL
2, ls2.MOMO s iri l t,
- 400 * o.4istrt Eati# 'PerArz
avoirittrktoetabiLe:
.1118 tr
7 , 441 ,.
wt.
i 44140
. , .
_ .
-I
.
....I
o . •
' .
.. , . . .
' , ft....
14.1*".74. . n \ '..••••
•
1 ..' ..
'. - I ..: \ . i
I I 0\ 11, , ,
\,.....................:
........, Nit> i
. Z ' . ' 1
.'.:°'., .. : : . 1 - .:
:.•.. . . ' ' j4 t . .., , j ~ .. ,
• ' 1
. - .
••••...„
-.•. c . .
. ,
i. .
LOOK HERE
THE. tuidersigned has leased the
Ware-becesontheconser o t 8 tratton street and
the Itallroad,Gettyibarg ,Pa., eadertll e oa th
Grain & Produc.e Business
•allitabgaiehea . The highest prices wi 1 'slimy,
be paid for Wheat,Eye,Oarn,Oste, Oinverand Than.
thy Deeds, Piaseeed, Sumac, Hay and Straw Dried
inwitallakikay.ilaan t aboaidere and Peter
tow, with irrerything else In the country produce
line.
GROCERIE S
constantly for sale ,Oeffees. ilniart Molasses. Syr.
wpm. Tass Bplams, Bah, Okoacr, Innegac, Soda,
Binsiard, Aare*, Broome, Buckota, Blacking, Soap,
La. Blio,ooaL OIL, fhb Oil, Tar, to : ma col all
kismia;Bpikesand NnilsOncoklng and °hawing To.
He Is always able to supply* ant rate •rtfel•
or flour,with the dllforen t Moat el Feed.
Aloo,Geousd Plast“. witbGetutosaadotheriertlll.
sera. COLL.by thab asbill,tos or oa rlead.
He will also ram a
LINE of FREIGHT CARS
toNo.l66Nortb Howard street, BALTIMORE. and
No.lll Hark et street, PHILADZLPHIA . All goods
mint to altharplaca wlilba riosivad and forwarded.
promptly All good. should be marked 'TRESS
OAR."
April 9,1819.-e
JOSEPH HMI. • J. I. MEIJI
• Joseph . Wible & Son,
PRODUCE D EALERS,
demethaset earners' Railroad and Washington struts
GETTYSBURG- PA.
IFlVALT h .rOottitifyorpg2l..." l .°L - Ilf,,sni
.
conataatky oa I l i r s:a for male all Made or g
GROCERIES.
The beet brands el VIRTIL/ZZRS constant') off
hand, armoured at short notice. .
April 211,1176—tf •
NEW FIII-11,-.
A. E. ECKENRODE,-
ELI pekes nee Warehouse. lataly occupied b
Ilp at Graatte Station. 02 the fine of tb
wUldealla
thcayeteanyelitism!' of zala 2 sidles from Ilcutendown, este
Grain and Produce •
giving lb. lifeboat maiket price. I will also keep
o sly ostbandlbr saloon bled* ors."
GROCERIES
olasees.ilyrap Toss, to., • lib Sal
ilabh Drire. Mods, Itscomeaud Iced, relweeee, to
Also. ebb b t brands of /LODI. wink MD of al
kiEde I Moot DooL.
I respectfully sollcit tbs. atroaageofeurfri soda,
sudlivit• Ste public to eall a dex min • ay stock
Jac 42..4 f A.Z. /23/12111t0Di.
ROBERT M'CURDY.
FLOUR, GRAIN, GROCERIES &o
EI undersigned Ispaying. t kis Wars.bouso,la
Diablo s root adjahalps nebler'm nall,the
kf tOF
FLOUR YEZAT JIM oATS BUCK
waSter, OLOICES Aim Tigaree4*s,
POTATORI,M,"/Fo6
tailliairituproleurst Iva Ma &cal lbobr • solUag
— Ohms. 4 aisimpelbrnes,
A LABOR SUPPLY OF GROORRIEB,
KoliusssAirtips,Coireos angrari,te. with dale /IA
Oijs,Tar, damps, Bacon sad Lard, Tab:wens Ac. Also
thebestbrillas OLGUIL ' with /BID of all kinds
Hs liketwts• Wks
SEVERAL VALUABLE FERTILIZERS,
114Ipb I e run e Geito, Rhodos' Phosphate and •
• Yasbap Guano.
Whilst *spays tbithigioat ataritat prippaforall
b bays; Ito sells at tho loaroot Wring proilta. Ha
alas &tame of public patronaga, rsaolvod to Elva
sat abittlastaavenyosas.
ZOBERTMeOURDY
Z51,723,111119.—t I
NEW FORWAR DING
AND COMMISSION HOUSE.
HAVING purchased the extensive
Waiehowee, Oars, to., of Mr & 2.11131•11111,
MO undersigned Intend imparr on the business, an.
der the Ono of Dumas • Co at she old stand on
'the corner Of Washington andlialiroadet 00000 , on a
inure exisadvelealefhan lierStokwe
SIPA insmaarline of Freight Oar. wl 11I• • out
Warshaw every TIIISDAY 2.00 X, sod worn
laudation trains will be run as occasion may requit•
By We arrangement we are prepared to corm
IPreight at all times to and from Baltimore. All
basis/mot We Mud entrusted bo us; will beprampt
lyattemdemi to. Dux eiqe rpn to the FrazOops• •
Iltmuso_n#lions, 'ISO nortb' }toward Street, Datil
Mare. Xelig defurmintid to pay good gin*
alma amidealfgirly, irielaviteo7 , r7b o o. to
airs call.
Jai.t.lS•l
gouts ollotanranto.
E , GL . Ir WOTL ,
Tisolargest and almitoolaxiedioas La
GIiTTYSBZW, ?BINA.
MINIM orozaxamsvag WASEINGTOP STYLI!.
Volorz T TATE,Proprietor. •
afrlapapjah A ts,forP ra and lAissgs,ran
• Um D•10i, os arrlyalseddloputaziontii
!rabic airsto•rwitusadressesabl•sszgop.
Kay"
LE Y ST 0 - Nit 11.-Or EL
ozrryniveile, Pd.
WM. lc:
• .r• • ,
NOW OPEN , .'
1 9118 isanewilosure, anthsaboon.
*us RP 40,1” , 4ippri0n4.1474...0.
lout, being is 4118
voilopi
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4
astbaWonperdoaof awn: ZYlll7lltrapg
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NE W-HOTEL •
rumps __HOUSX
iktzszvoizza....animum,, P2NICA
4 Fe inieirdirseit 9 111 4rialtetl, mi rt itaitins
M i lit ili fk iseema t r ilillog 1t i1". 1 4
sik " r " m tkooto li pa4 lMl"li gro l eat
is
k
inal" III* of slotrico sombar otat i ods.Vg
i t sb it4S a wa j es il 1 1Mt=
ostr , ; • moo sOM Ma iists..+
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41112,12ort i rrli == .4 =11q .gr oTn,
4
f i haa l Up * ill alb Unit IWii i...d 1 liOntki iii
. P mr,-••
• ••111111 /Ws otpoll& jialatpOset I. wolooolitalli
otillito4 sad SO Wort will IN spared to dmorro it.
Aor l ll‘,l3lo.—tt - W..P. swan_
' ' • :
X. (MEM lAN. OMB
§ZED OAT AIOGEZ
F 0 4174;3,FET*8-LE
e .
OF ALL KINDS
JOHN CHUB
DEA.LEE IN
GITT7IIII3IO, PENNA
WILY :HIGHLY,
ALICCAIf 0031 AN
JAM/1111/11/GRAX.
.201 Mllki; Is Its
:2•ti a. ,
'Baltimore Lock Hospital.
DR. JOHNSTON,
Physician of this celebrated inertitation, has Dis
covered The wort Cortatn. PP•edy,' Manna and It
&anal Lolled, oho World for all "
DISBASZEI 01 141PRUDINCL
Weakness of the Back
of Limbs, ffirleinrei, Affection of the - Kidneys or
_Bladderlnvoluntsry Discharges,Ampotenoy, Oscar
si Debility; Nervousness, Dyspepsie, Langoor--Low
_Spirits, Coefitsion of Ideas, Palpitartion of the Beets, Timidity, Trembling Minna. of Sight or 0 idd I n ass,
MIAMI of the gesdirlireat, Noes or Skit, Affection,
of the Liver, Lungges,, Stomach or Bow 4e—those marl
hie Gimlets arising from Solitary Habits of Youth—
mast and selitaip practices more, total to their
victims than the bong of the Syron. to the Mariner.
of Ulysses, blighting their moat brilliant beet* or
anticipations, rendering marriage, Ac.,
TOUNO SRN
Rapidan'', who hive become the Victims of Solitary
Vice, that dreadfel and deslanotive habit which sao
nosily. sweeps to in antimely grasp thousands of
young men of the most exalted tsknate and brilliant
Intellect, wbo might otherwisehnve initiated Listen
leg Senates' with the thunders. of eh queue., or wik•
NI to ammo, the living lyre; may call with dtil can-
Mac e. •
hi IRBSAGE
Married persor 0, or Young Yen contemplating mar.
Huge. aware of Physical Weeklies. (Lose of Procree.
five Powerrluipot ency ), N ervous Narita, ility, Pal
pitation, Drivable Weakness, Nervous Debility, or any
other Disquablication, speedily relieved.
He who places himself under the care of Dr. J.
may religiously ,00nlide In hie honor as a gentleman,
and confidently rely upon his skill as a physician.
ORGANIC WIAKNESS, •
IMPOTENCY, LOSS OP POWER;
Immediately Oared end Full Vigor Ithrtored.
This distressing Affection—which renders life mis
erable and marriage Impossible—is the penalty paid
by the victims of Improper indolgencee. . Young per
sons are too apt to commit excesses from not being
aware of the dreadful consequences that mey tree.
Now t: who that upeerstands the subject will pretend
to deity that the power of procreation Is kat sooner
by those failing into Improper babies Plan by the
modest, Besides being deprived of the pleasure of
heldthY otrafifing, the meat serious and deseredive
symptoms of both bOdy and mind arise. Tim systehr
becomes deranged, the Physical and •Mental Pune-
Lions weakened, Loss of Procreative Power, Nervous
Dy 'peps* Palpitation of the Veen, In.
digeetinn,Conetimetronal Debbie, and Wasting of the
Frame,Cough, Consumption, Decay end Death.
A CORI wAstarrito IN TWO DAYS.
Relief in Mx Bovril NO Heronry
Persons Ruined by Ignorant, Tithing Pretenders and
their Deadly Poisons, should aptly Immediately.
DR. JORBSTON,
4stsbes of ths Royal thaw' 'Ontitiloss, London.
tishists pf ops
and
themoet amitpeat Vol legal in the
United States and the poets! . spitrt at whose ills has
been spent balls hosplutle of /milks, gang Rim e .
dedphis and eleswhere, has I ff ectiti some of the mo,,t
astonishing cam that — war" Stet known way
troubled with nimbi' btedh• hissit' and sore When
uleoP, great pecNwittreil k beinglaitssed at. sadden
wands, bashfulness; with dertingtmeit of mind, wore
enrol inunedlately.
TANI PARTICI:MAX NOTICX.
Dr. S. eildnissos all hinnte who have fujored 'them
selves by improper induigoode etl4l Priftilry h eld%
whl rule both body and mind, lion tt ag them for
either boatman; study, society or marries*.
These are 1 101 a 8 of the r i and mebuicholy e ff ects
"produeed by thooarly lin to ofyona, 'is: Wm know
of the Beck and Lizahri. Pairs* lath. Used, Dimness of
'Bight;Loes of Muscular Power, Paipliation of the
tg , ;lo
Heck t, Dyopegsta, bereave Irritabil era ligament
of the Dif,oll4lT6 Munetlaus, Ottitral Debility,gimp
toms of Uonsuraption,
Nth T.ll.l.l,Y.—The tearful effects oa the mind aro
mom to be dreaded. Loss of Memory, Confusion o f
Ideed,'Doptirsion of Spirits, livid Forebodings, herr.
sloe to /Moiety, Sell-Distrust, love of Solliade,-Timid
ity, ae., are some of the evils proclaimed.
Um:winds of persons of all ages one now Judge
what it gni cause. of their declining health, lofting
their vision; becoming pm/6 : dt nervous ace
conacisted,baring a atpgalar aura 'Poo tbp
eyes, cough and symptom/ler noiption.
YOUNG YIN
Who hive injured themselves* • certain practice,
indulged In when alone, a habit frequently learned
from Intl contymniene or fit. school. the effects of
which are nightly telt, even when asleep, and U not
cared, renders meirriageimposes hie, and deer** both
mind and body, shohjd apply ispipisdiesejy.
"What • pity that • young both, the Pope of his
country, the pride of hie pimply, should be ■oltthbed
from ail yrayeats Mid employm. nt of life by the
consequence of donating hum the peth of nature,
and inoulglag a cerusla secret habit. Bud PM/WI
most, before contemplating
Reelect that • mad ailed sad body are the most no
esseary requisites w promote connubial happinestear
lamed, without times the Journey through ht• be
comes a weary pligrbeage, me prospect Weide, dm It
ens to the view, the 'pied becomes shadowed w ith
despair, sad libel erl- the asebseebaly selectee
tee the happleem of &DOOM la blighted with our
owl.
DUNA'S OP neurvirsos
WINS lillogiddiod and Imprudent votary ofplese
sure bad.saa bartmea - hbtliee a•adda fhla pan
tutdamintajlt too pram happens that an al-tinted
Dense of Oleo of 4rania of dlscovery deters hint
from applying to thole who, Iran edwatlon sod rt.
•PflotilinftlYt oar aknienefriand pot, &arta. till the
conaltutkinal symptoms of this horad navae makes
their appearance, each es ulcerate( sore threat, dis
eased twee, nocturnal pans to the head and
&WIWI of sight, deafness, maw 011 the thin bones
anis arms, bioispea an the heal, face sad eigarmauss,
programing with fright:tit reputity, till at last the
palate of the Mouth or the buns* of ath weft hill in,
and the acting of this await abeam beanies • horrid
objector commiseration till death puts • period to
hie dreadful salberag, by mottaing Lisa to that radii.
catered onentry .frona whence no traveller return*.”
It la a melsochuly fact that thousands DIX victims
to this terraria dimes., through eoliths Into the
bands of Isnot ant or nnaniniaPagglingliiil,
by the na of that deadly Poteue, Sleteory, at, de.
stay the cunaututunt, mad incapable of curing, keep
lb* unhappy stare. er month slier month taking their
noxious or inj awes monopole:le, sod hatred of bang
roared to a renewal of Lila, Vigor mid ilapplorskla
drew& lave him with ruined Health wino over his
galling dterapinunent.
to such, therelore, Dr. JORBISOA pledges himself to
primate the meat /el peel ay, and from his
e.utthave practice spa Oessracluk. in the grpat
finspitals of Europe, arid the' fiat 'ln this Country,
rig: gngland, hpasee, Pnliadaliibia,! and aliniabsolii
ia ezist,n,d tp °Oar the must Cantle, 40.14 and Xl
teOthal ht the World for all incases of Ifni
priloanisa.
DR. JOUR STON,
Office. 7 South Frederick st.,
atriato.
left bond side /Mug from Baltimor ß e streeto z , z, a
few
doors from the Center. ball not to *beer re name mad
number.
B? io letters received unless postpaid and contain
ing • lamp PA 00 wiest up ill e reply = passim. writ
ing shutdd state age, and send a portion of advert's,-
want disoliblag symptoms:
Tharstaro soansny Paltry,. Desigalag and Worth.
lasi Impostata adisrUslng theansrives as Physicians,
Whin with sad rutwheg the -Malta of all who an.
furtanatedy Lii intO their Pulver, that - Johnston
deem It nwasswity to say lospelPy to .t e as unite
aintad with Its rePolottaa tLai Its. Clo4olllllllllll or
Lnplalnaa always bang in his olio* •
- 111 4 1100Mild2rt? OP THE PRAM.
The many Unman& oared at this Bitablishment,
year after jeer aa4 the nomeroes Lopornat ge)tgloal
Opetefkate perioneed by Dr. Johaston witnesift by regmertipattge if gm prom aeennay other *sr,
sone, - boticey of which are appearedeamin and &gala
before the pohlfc, besides bir stendinj ss r gentle
man of chancier aad reepeoethility, Is a eafaeletit
gitaritobet, Sentient/en&
SKIN DISEAII7O SPISEDITX CjTEEp.
Mardi 11;19104-1140 . ` 4 I"
Vitchkrings
MARICET.!
NEW FIRAII
..
eines D. & I MAM** 11:WIBLI,
• •
it
iVTSCI entered lnto parrnership in the BUTZEI
, 112111111 IBINULIM, It on In all Its
braltottee : je{ls}pdeot .
•
. Fresh Meat Fiv-ry,Day.
•
Beefevety Tuesday end gotordar. m
orning- • bog
netts ereryWedneeday, thiznday and Friday morn
rkst stand at Geo.B.Sjover'e rethletwoonCham
bsralmugutraotomond Sqaare. .
They hertag hit stock for sal* will And it tO tb els
ady'tesetopaten or address the e etr '
'lrY4llll'*ivaaii,
esti, Middle 4treet Market
THZ 0017BT-HOIIIII.)*
Every Day in the Week.
stnouir iv ....pco.
yr-ks..fthr..H.,•. • week s Tuadq, Wsdasts ,
tisTandTatardaywralags. lidabOrsalor Matta*
etteryday. Orders eft at may sairkstibabi cottoning;
triljiteprotaptlAtOsartid tits tollowindlitandalt•
1 iIiORONA :00DOin.
_JAaeld :
. .
COUGIta INPLUENZA
&dd.,
PlatariAteonaldtbs,' .11.srBtindbag‘ of tlini
4dinsa, aid wary ablanana-.taw
Throat, tamp and Mast, "
ant paraunisaft 'RAM ble thi us of
WISTAR'S BALSAM
OF:WILD -
.
saitv is kilotr* PriParstles does., not dry up a.
eastob a aigi tint exhisaek Std. as ir 'tde raw wft
sad *edicts** M,t it loosou and dawn Ma biya
and &Jays Ornatienh taw INTO" Ltd oasis qf Ad
Consumption can be Cured
by a Atalaiy moat to ibis &Oa
'ward bandrolik of maffiinabiwinniff a d 3y ibm
,prcyreapora. • ._g .1.; L
" Prepared by OMR W. rowara scot, BaliCas
mold by diabanamaraw inpallrartbi4ysien
al 7.
-
par ADVIRTISUMIXIM
VII MR MD
er'ETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1870.
titt An and SJentinti.
Still site the schoolhouee by the road,
A ragged beggar sunning ;
Around It still the sumacha grow,
-,.And blackberry vines are running.
'Within, the master's desk is seen,
Deep scarred by raps official ;
The warping floor, the battered seats,
Tbe leek-knife's carved initial ;
The charcoal frescoes on its wall ;
Its door's worn still, betraying
The feet that, creeping slow to school,
Went storming out to playing!
Long years ago a winter sun
Shone over it at setting ;
Lit up its western windo v panes,
. And low eaves' icy fretting.
It touched the landed golden curls,
And brown eyes full of grieving,
Of one who still her steps delayed
When all the school were leaving.
.For near heratood the little boy
Het childish favor singled ;
Ills cap pulled low upon a face
-When) pride anti shame were miusied
Pushing *hit restlessfeet the snow
Tovright and left he lingered ;
Ait rentleesly her tiny hands
PA blue checked apron fingered
Be saw her lift her eyes ; he felt
Tl!sgioft hand's light caressing,
A i nd Wrd the trembling of her voice,
AB if a fault confessing.
"I'm sorry that I spelt the wprd ;
I bate to go above you,
Because"—the brown eyes lower fell—
" Because, you see, I love you!"
!Mill memory to a gray haired man
That tweet ohdd face is showing.
Dear girl the grasses on her grave
Piave forty years been growing !
He lives to learn, in life's hard school,
Ifoir fewtwho pass above him
pament their tiinmph 4n4 his loss,
Idke her—because they love him.
The Wiltshire boors who lately had an
eating.tuatch against time probably never
heard about Hercules, Ulysses, GOON and
therefore did not know that their achieve
ment had been far outdone. The two sweet
youths wagered with each other as to which
would eat a given quantity in the shortest
time. One got rid 'of six pounds and a half
of rabbit, a loaf of bread, and two pounds
of cheese in a quarter of an hour; and he
wasso flattered with the applause of the
bystanders, that he finished off with a beet -
steak, a pint and a halt of gin, and a half
pint of brandy. So fig goal—or rather, so
far bad. Now, Hr. Badham, in his "Prose
Halieutics," tells us that, "amongst immor
tal gluttons, Hercules the beef eater was the
chief; he would eat up the grilled carcass
of a cow at a meal, with all the live coals
attached to it. The etheity of Ulysses ha,
competently attested in the. Odyssey. hlllo
carried an ox round the stadium in his arms,
and thcut with as little difficulty in his in-
64, 0 ' . .•
If It be alleged that iheae three 'ancient
worthies never lived except in the pages of
mythology, there is no difficulty in finding
real mortals that will serve the purpose.—
Lucullus had a room in his house for every'
kind of Supper, each at a particular cost ;
and even his cheapest supper was worth a
moderate fortune. Apicias killed himself
when he had only eighty thousand pounds
sterling left, fearing that he would die of
staryetipp, One epicure bad sauce for a
pair of partridges prepared from two dosen;
mi l d twenty dye legs, of mutton cut up to
supply one choice plateful of special deli
cacy; and a dish prepared at endless cost
from peacocks' brains.
Boehreer, a German writer, described
somewhat fully the case of a man at Wittee.
berg, who, for a wager, would,,eat a whole
sheep, or a whole pig, or a bushel of cher
ties, including the stones. His strength of
teeth and power of swallowing enabled him
to masticate, or at least to munch into small
fragments, glass, earthenware and flints.—
He preferred birds, mice and caterpillars ;
but when he could not get these delicacies
he put pp with mineral substances. Once
he devoured pen, ink and sand-pounce, and
seemed half inclined to deal in the same
Say with the inkstand itself He made
money by exhibiting his powers in this way
until about sixty years of age, after which
he lived nearly a score more years in a more
rational way. Although a Latin treatise
was published in elucidation of his marvel
lous powers, it may not be uncharitable to
suppose that there was a little ellie.ane7
the matter, win the case of the Are-eaters
with whom we are familiar at the ham and
in_the streets, and who doubtless live upon
more reasonable diet when not engaged in
money.making exhibitions. A story is told
of General Keen igsmark, an officer engaged -
in one of the wars waged in bygone
times by 13weden against popteel a n d p o h p _
mia, which illustrates *tit. the
.pig-eating
attribute and the fear !hioh ,such an
achievement may possibly prodUce to the '
minds otlothers A peasant ban* to the
King of illWedell's tent dliring tik , siege of
.Pragie, and olfered to det'our's hate hog
for' the 'muse:meat of his thilesty.:' The
genend standing by, said that the-Jklow
ought to be burnt as a sorcerer. If ettled
and irritated at this, the peasent exclaimed,
"If goer Majesty wilt but; male- that old
gentleman take off his sword and spur% 1,
will eat him before I begidt the pig," ad
cempapying this offer with a vain ex:p aaa l qn
pf Month and jaws. *Wee Se he Was-In
battle, Kcenigsmark could dot stand this i
he beat a lusty retreat frotn' y ttie tent,' and
hurried tO'his own quartere.'
.
In'the time of Charles the first, Tlyior,
the Water' poet, gave an ateolint of one
prieholas . Wood, a Kentish notni - Who had ik
poWer of stowing away . a IparyfilloOijioan-
Fity of food at a meal, wo n ted
with having on one otairilon devoured s
whole ;raw sheep i on ' moth& free dollen
Opt= s on a third, leyeral ottatits ; on' a
fourth; eighteenyarde of black puddings
ions
while on two other mesa the quartt ities
set *doin Were sixty pounds of cherries'und
three peck of danuious. But It v►H! be
better to disbelieve these - ststenn' ants, and
attend mare to the moderate thong's' sun
'Startling accounts given by Taylor, that
+'Two lopes of mutton and one lope Of
veal Were mist as three sprata to lihn. Onas,
at Sir Irtiibam St. Legerfs hOuse, he show
ed bhiself So violent of teeth and`stomach
ghat berate " is' much as wcfuld 'hate served
ihtfty toeti;so that hfs belly Was' lik e t o
turnbaitkOpt brad! but that the iteri
.
lag Man tamed him to theme and annoint:
ed his Passel saul butter to
snake it l idadeb sod *l4 l n is i 4/eiw:ardi
pang h id in bed s he Idoin. *WY Mom and
'bold ill the, wigle,Abieb, wisn'the 110;10
poderatood o he comnargle4 him to ire . Lid
In the sp2ll.sed *en So! moire l on
Arks bad ,litiooNeltlid :with Aelluir'. 41t A ilte
Owl ofAsOfr MIS Owe Nl*
Ifbo, hz ails of religious enthusiasm, itis4
IN SCHOOL DAYS.
BY JOHN 0. WITTrrIER
°Kt:4T EATERS,
Ito maintain a - Lenten fast tar forty days and
forty nights. Breaking down in this reso
lution after a few days, he took revenge on
himself by becoming an enormous eater,
devouring.large quantflies of raw flesh with
much avidity. Somewhat over a century
ago, a Polish soldier, presented to the court
of Saxony as amarvel of voracity,one day ate
20 pounds of beef and half of a roasted calf.
About the same time a youth of seventeen, -
apprentice to a Thames waterman, ate five
- pounds of shoulder of lamb and two quarts
of green peas in fifty minutes. An
achievement of about equal gluttOny was
that of a brewer's man, who, at an inn in
Aldersgate street, demolished a roast goose
of six pounds' weight, a quartern loaf and
three quarts of porter, in an hour and eight
een minutes. Early in the reign of George
the Third, a watchmaker's apprentice,nine
teen years of age, in three-quarters of an
hour devoured a leg of pork weighing six
pounds, and a proportionable quantity :of
peas pudding, washing tl 'ND these edi
bles with a pint of bran , taken off in two
draughts. A few years i , erwards there
was a beggar at Gottingen who on more
than one occasion ate tweh o pound of meat
at a meal. After his death, his stomach,
which was very large, was found to contain
numerous bite of flint and - other odds and
ends, which nature very properly refused to
recognize as food. In fact, setting aside
altogether the real or alleged eating up of a
whole sheep or hog, the instances are very
numerous in which a joint sufficient for a
large family bas .disappeared at a meal with
in the unworthy corpus of one man,
It is clearly evident that many of the re
cords of voracious eating point to a morbid
craving which the person suffers, and which
is as much a disease as the opposite extreme
—loss of appetite—while - being still more
difficult of cure. Medical men have at hand
a stock of learned Greek names to apply to
various manifestations of the disease. Dr.
Corpland describes a case which came under
his professional notice, There were two
children possessing insatiable appetites, of
which the youngest, seven years old, was
the worst. "The quantity of food devour
' ed by her was astonishing. Everything that
could be laid bold of, even in its raw state,
was seined upon roost greedily. Elesides
other articles, a 4 uncooked rabbit, half a
pound of candles, and some butter,were ta
ken at one time. The mother stated that
this little girl, who was apparently in good
health otherwise, took more food, if she
could possibly obtain it, than the rest of her
family, consisting of six besides herself."
As to fire-eaters ; they have always been
exhibitors rather than persons possessing a
real liking for this peduliarly hot kind of
food. There was one Powell, very eminent
in this line of business towards the close of
the reign of George the Second. It used to
be jocularly said of him that "his common
food is 'brimstone and fire, which he licks up
as eagerly as a hungry peasant would a
mess of pottage ; aqd such is his passion for
this terrible element, that if he were to come
hungry into your kitchen while a sirloin was
roasting, he would est up the fire and leave
the beef. Some of the former paragraphs of
this article contain incidental notices of per
sons wallowing mineral substances of vari
ous kind ; and it appears that medical men
recognize a disease called lithophagy, or
stone eating. Reesonelmee been 'known to
devour, opt merely spiders and flies, toads
and serpents, and other living creatures-not
merely cotton, hair, paper and wood, but
cinders, sand, earth, clay, chalk, flint, glass,
stone, musket-bullets, and earthenware.—
One man could swallow billiard-balls and
gold and silver watches. There Is an ac
credited case in the medical journals of
New York for 1822, of a man who could
swallow clasp-knives with impunity i but
one day he overshot the mark by swallow
ing fourteen—it killed him. If we would
go into the particulars of all these kinds of
voracity we should have to establish three
grades--digesting without mastication,
swallowing without digesting, and eirpply
swallowing without either mastication or
digestion. Ilut every one can trace this
matter for himself: As to earth-eating, the
young women of certain lands are said to
eat chalk and clay to improve their coat
plexions
Cases have been known in which the
limitation to the cibantity of food taken at
°noels brought about rather by the effects
of fumes and vapors upon the brain than
by the exhaustion of the degtutitory powers
of the ester. One of those persons to whom
a whole joint is a mere tripe, was tempted
to accept a wager to the effect that he could
not take three shillings' worth of bread at a
meal. The man who laid the wager pro
vided twelve new hot penny loaves, and
steeped them in several quarts of ale. ; The
effect of the ale upon the hot crumb of the
bread was such as to lend* off the glutton
ink) a drowsy helidessPeas long before he
had come to the end of his allotlbd task, and
he was greatly mortified alterwirds at hav
ing lost the wager.
If the propensity be really due to an ab
normal condition of the *system, a morbid
craving which physiologists and physicians
can trace to an organkienras, the person is
no more to blame than other patients suffer
ing wader maladiet, Ent if hetoasts of his
achievements, and Makes them the subject
of bets, we can have no•dilEctilty in settling
the degree of reprobation due to him
'About'forty yearaugti there was an inscrip
tion on the window of a small roadside inn,
between peckbam and filydenitarn, record
ing snobs boast t whether railways and
other novelties haveswept it away, we can
not tell, bat Boole deseribt'd It thus
"March 10, IMO,
Thomas Mount Jones &nod here,
Welxpoundsotbacon,driWk OfiPte o 4 Pq B3 q
;boort"
'Cis nonsense, sad a iibol upon the four
footed races, to call such exhibitions of glut
tong bmtal or betatli s seehig . that .rea
brutes and beasts eat only when they ue
hungry, and /eirreoff when they have bad
etioagh.—AU the Year Roun4
-, A Mimosa To Teuavis Gmests,—An
amusing incident mowed the other night at
the National Theatre, Wanhinf on. Id the
Croat iow of the parquette sat a beautiful,
bright little boy, about three and a, half
'years old, whose appearance and childish
(though shrewd) ramekins bade attracted
much attention, and wliri,'. with a nitaral
curiosity -of char/bpi:A, asked- the- meaning
of every/1001On itruck him as peculiar,
amougmbleh, the large-exodus of gentle
:oat to take "Isautile"avie one be asked
the Weed who hadidolueberge ; "Where
areell thesefeoplegoiogi , istiss play overt"
Se was Aoki they warettigoing to take s
drink." He watched then.file past as he
looked over the front or-the parquettsc and
took a stout, elderly smwlemialkitly aback
by asking idm.! in a pasiebtbrauditdwirtdae,
"Are you goitg.te-teke_Wrisink t" AIL La
the vicinity. fairly; yeast :with laughter. 'sad
clapped•theirliandemi* delight, doubtless
-4o tbettatenkshimat orithat partioa, of the
Audit:nee witoinwelsoliwithht the hearing
pf tbsupe&r: Isieleered the eidgpsatimaqt
Aliottglithy his , loaksthatiamste seta Sack
proMptatither 0414 bqt sack use sios;thik
(mei it Ism just as stated above..
120 W TO BE A MAN. -
Not long since a boy of some seventeen
years of age called on a merchant doing a
large business in gew Yotk. Being bust
ly employed at the time, the boy had to
wait a little before getting an opportunity
for an Interview. Occasionally the master
cast a glance at him as he stood respectfully
at a short distance. He was rather poorly
clad, and showed evidence of pretty bard
work ; but his face indicated honesty and
common sense, with a firm and energetic
manliness, under the somewhat rude ex
terior. Besides, the broad forehead and
temples indicated to any one having a
knowledge of phrenological developments
the possession of superior powers of me
chinical discernment and contrivance. A
pfactical business man requires but brief
examination of a boy to declare as to his
weight and worth of character.
When at liberty, the merchant said :
"Well, my young friend, what can I do
for you ?"
"I called, sir," he replied, "to ask you
fora situation as an engineer. I *as told
you were having a new engine built, and I
want you to give me the place. I want to
run it for you."
"Are you an engineer ?" asked the gen
leman.
"No, sir; but I can be," he answered ,
Betting his lips firmly together, standing
squarely before the gentleman and looking
him full in the face. "I don't understand
the business well ; I know something of it
though. But I can be an engineer, and I
will be. And I wish you would give me a
chance."
His modest but determined manner
pleased the merchant. He was having a
new engine built for a certain department
of his business, and could of course have as
many experienced operators as he desired.
It was no object for him to take up an in
experienced boy ant attempt to train him ;
no object but to help the boy. Buoh deeds
he was noted for ; a fad which no doubt
ban encouraged the boy to make his applica
tion.
"What are you doing now ?" he inquired.
"Working In a machine shop in Brook
lyn, I have been fireman and I often
worked the engine. I think I could get
along pretty well with one now, if anybody
will have a littlo patience with me."
"What wages do you get ?"
"Five dollars a week, sir."
"What do you do with your money ?"
"Give it to mother, sir."
"Give it to your mother ! bumph ! humph !
humph what does your niother do With
it?"
"Well, you see, there's mother, sister,
and me ; and mother takes in sewing.—
They don't give much for sewing, and It's
pretty loud work, too. And then with the
other work she has to do, you know she
can't get along very fast at that rate, so I
help her all I can. If I could get an en
giceer's place I could get more wages, and
it would make it easier for mother,"
"How du you spend your evenings ?"ask•
ed the gentleman.
"I attend the free school at the Cooper
Insetute, studying mechanics," he replied.
"I spend all the time I can get studying.—
I know I can be an engineer."
"Do you drink liquor;''
lie looked qp with an wression of as
tonishment on h is countenance that snob a
question should be asked, but answered,
ftrmly, "No, sir."
"Do you thew, or smoke, or go to the
theatre P"
"Never—can't affl)rd•it. Mother needs
the money. And if she didn't I could make
a better use of it. I'd like to have some
books, if I could only spare the money to
get them,''
"Do you go to church or Sunday school ?"
Ile held down his head, pretending to
brush the dust off the floor with his foot,
And replied, "No, sir.:'
"Why not?" asked mgreltant a little
sharply.
"I haven't any clothes lit to wear," he
replied. "It takes all the money I can get
for us2b live; and I can't have any cloth
ing." He looked down at his coarse and
well-worn suit. "It didn't use to be so
when father was living. I was brought up
to go to church and Sunday school. If I
can get to be an engineer 1 shall go again.
I know I can run an engine."
He told him to call at a certain time,
'when he expected his engine to be in use,
and he would talk farther with him. "Ant
he must have that engine," said the mer
chant to a friend to whom he related 'The
eiremnstance. "He will make a man, that
boy will. A boy who is determined to do
something ; who gives his mother all his
money to lighten her burdens ; who does
not use tobacco, and does not go t.q tie
theatres whq spends Ilia evenings in study
after working all day, such a boy would
make a man and deserves to be helped. I
have not told him so, but I shall take 1114
put him under one of my beat engineers un
til he is fully capable of taking charge, then
let him have the engine. He will get twen
ty dollars a week then instead of Ave, and
Will be able to *ten a mother's burdens,
have clothes to wear to chuich and buy
books to aid his bustuess.".
A. noble boy, though hid& n among hard
conditions and under unattractive garbs,
will work out and sbow his manhood. He
may not always find friends to appreciate
him i but determined, virtuous, and willing
to endure, he will, in due tne, =guar.—
/tot/Le' Journal.
How TIGERS Dam —The reports of ord
cera engaged in the'reVenuernd topographl
cal survey in India go to prove (bat an ex
traordinsry number of deaths occur di gist
country through wild beasts. The report
says of the Season 1867-8 :—No small ob
struction was occasioned to the progress of
the depredations of tigers which infest the
district. A tiger, reported to have
,killed
one hundred and twenty seven people, stop
ped the traffic for ninny weeks on the road
between Mool Chandalt, till it was shot by
a lieutenant. In Chindwerrah one tigress
caused the desertion of inoan villages, and
threw two hundred and fifty square miles out
of cultivation, Another old tigress la Kur
nool killed sixty-four people, stopping .the
post-runners and police patrols, and driving
off the laborers on the public wmks,
The atatiatacal tables !bleb accompany
the papers..she -lbat,- the usslter, is one of
very high importance indeed . Bliaugulpors
is a large Civil railw ay station on the Ganges,
within a night's run from CAticuita7 l Ili/
years 1;04 pen4le'viSre killed hy wild beasts,
while in .the whole, province under the
Lieutenant=GOyernoi ,of Bengal nu fewer
than, 18346 impel; of death were 41611 0 .ie
ported dap* the same period, aflout' Low
beige; 'Patted , bY. ilgeis 44 leopards; - and'
over s 4;ooo by wolves:, When to this Io idded
the many iundreAls allied kaarTy . lo buds, th e
ToNabb;thli bentfil'Provinces; Madms'and
eisewlinik a swfllialenity Oistry ides is otr. '
taiiied s oftbe fearful scburge 7 ' ' ' '
'dikes the milk an -warm 1. , said
'll6l3nArKthe ptik wompaiwbek ehntraeght.
Primilsto the duck oab Ina "Pkose,
the paudp handkr isbrakk and slams
ook the water from the Idler."
3
WHOLE NO. 3612
THE ORE= SPOT.
_The late Noah Winslow was fond of tell
ing the following incident of his mercan
tile life, and he never closed the uarration
but with swimming eyes ;
Daring the financial crif-is of '57, when
heavy men were sinking all around us, and
banks were tottering, our house became
alarmed in view of the condition of its own
affairs.
The partners—three of up, of whom I
was the senior—met in oar private office for
consultation. Oar junior had made a care
ful inventory of everything—of his bills re
ceivable and bills payable, and his report
was, that twenty thousand dollars of ready
money, to be held through the pressure,
would save us. Without that we must go
by the board—the result was Inevitable. I
went out upon the street, and among my
friends, but in vain.
Two whole days I strove, and begged,
and then returned to the counting-house in
despair. I sat at my desk, expecting every
moment to hear our junior sounding the
terrible words, "our paper Is protested!"
when a gentleman entered my department
unannounced. I could not locate him, nor
call him to mind any way.
"Mr. Winslow," he said, taking a seat at
the end of my desk, "I hear you are in
need of money."
The very face of the man inspired me
with confidence, and I told him how I was
situated
"Make your individual note, for one year,
without interest, for twenty thousand dol
lars, and I will give you a check, payable
in gold for that amount."
While I sat gazing upon hint in speech
ess astonishment, he continued: -
"You don't remember me ; but I remem
ber you. I remember when you were a
member of the Superintending School Com
mittee of Bradford, I was a boy in the vil
lage school. My father was dead ; my
mother was poor; and I was but a shabbily
clad child, though clean. When oar class
came out on examination day, you asked
the questions. I fancied you would praise
and pet the children of tit* and fortunate
parents, and prise wp by.
it was not as I thought. In the and
you passed by all the others, and came to
me. You laid your hand on my head, and
told me I did very well; and then you told
me I could do better still if I would try.
You told me the way to honor and renown
were open to all alike, no one had free
pass. All I had to do was to be resolved
and push on. That, sir, was the turning
point of my life. From that hour my soul
has aspired, and I have never reached a
great good without blessing you in my
heart. I have prospered and am wealthy ;
and now I offer you but a poor 'return for
the soul wealth you gave me ig that by-gone
time.
"I took the check," maid Winslow, "and
drew the gold ; and our house was saved.
And where, at the end of the year," he
added, ,"do you suppose I found my note?"
"In possession," he said, with streaming
eyes, "of my little orphaned grand-daugh
ter ! Oh, hearts like that man's are what
bring earth and heaven nearer together I"
P1T31 4 - T Loy Lrrrams.—Dear MidB
After long consideration and much medita
tion upon the reputation you possess in the
nation, I have a strange, inclination to' be
come your relation. If this oblation is
worthy of observation and can obtain com
misseration, it will be an aggrandizatiotp
beyond all calculation of the joy and exul.
tation of
PETER H. POW/ A T lON
P. BQllcit your acceptation of the
love and approbation, and propose the an
nexation of the lives and destination of
Peter H. Portation and Maria Moderation."
THZ •NSWEH.
Dear Peter ? I have perused your ora
tion with great deliberation, and a little
consideration at the great infatuation of your
weak imagination to show such veneration
on so slight a foundation. After mature de
liberation and serious contemplation, I fear
your proclamation is filled with adulation,
or sayings from ostentation to display your
education by an odd erthmeratipn or rather
multiplication of words - of like termination,
though different in signification. But as I
admire association and am in favor of an
nexation I acknowledge my approbation
and indeed my inclination to acpept with
gratification the lora and adoration set
forth in your declaration, and will, with
preparation, love and animation remain
with resignation and rejoice in the appeila•
tion of
MRS. MITI!! H. PORTATION
P. B.—l suggest the - Information that we
meet In consultation and make some prepar
ation for the Anal consummation of the In
tended annexation, when I will bear the
same relation to you home and occupation
that Peter H. Portation would then bear to
KAMA MODIRITION.
A LADY was recently out walking, &acorn
ponied yb her nurse and two children near Bt
Louis, when one of the latter was missed for
a few motenta. On being called, he answer
ed from a little distance, rSere I am, mam
ma, behind the stump. I'm playing with •
big beautiful worm, Iv'e got a chip, and it
opens its mouth ever so wide when >G touch
its teeth with the chip.''
Ails lone to see the character of the child's
playmate, the two women went to the spot,
when, behold they saw* rattle snake, two
feet long, Coifed against, the butt of the
stump, and the child thrusting the chip a_
ite bead. The snake appeared per
fectly passive, not ellen giving the usual
warning with Ica tatties t 'Tt a needles, per
haps, to say that the mother was frightened
beyond the power of motion. The nurse
quickkremoved the child, and one of the
hands despatched the dangerous play
mate.
An Illinois pastor receiving at a donation
party eighty-nine dozen of edit. A Maine
donation party rivals that Instance, a pastor
there having received thirty one bushels of
potatoes, seven bushels of corn, .11, beef
tongue, seienteereaminie plea, four pounds
of cheese, a pair of guinea pigs, one pair of
mittens, five hanks of atnaking yarn, and
Ann dollar and eighty-four cents In Money-
}Lwow ye the printer's hour of peace
Kuow ye an hour more fraught with joy
tharr ever felt thelLald of. Greece when Mo.
ed by Venues iontogeta boy ? Tla not when
news of solemn ode; aka:damns all with
eaddneas AU ; not yet wheathrother printers
quote thneffuelon of his blunt warn quill.
/3itt,
.01 tie when the weathea Gdr, or
clad In rain, or bail, o; Fawkr, I've come to
pay you for your paper, ,
REV. Row IvArtAlteraing.krefikehed a
po>lerf sermon ,on Honda? evening upon
cranial noripPtion, and illttatiated patina-
Jarly,the.igear,,Yuri regiidature. Ho Bald
_that f91621*k0; la meat hung up
, andarld ;Erre openly than men are qua
ter d j j a p ai i up In Al/hanY." Ho also
enecrated` people who, knowing the
'wickedness of thtde epresanlittiVes.. yet
take thain by the hand and are friendly
with theta.
A REMIARKAIBLZ
•
Tii5 . 11114 , 07 .t a Kan Wks paame4
UM, 1i tie restteNtlary Pleasantly.
I• In 1881-2 there lived in Monroe county;
Mile., a planter named Woeley. He was a
half -broad, at. least there was a good deal of
Cherokee Indian in him. He owned about
200, slaves, and had all the worst habits of
thuold lime planter—drinking, gambling,
and horse-ming. These pursuits alternat
_ ed formed his sole occupation, the /denta
-1 dolt being managed by an overseer. He
had the virtue of poroeising a sort of Indi
an ; veneration for the sacredness of his
word. He would not execute II note for any
purpose whatever, and held all men in love
reign contempt who violated thvir pledged
word. He had no compunction In killing a
man in what be deemed a just quarrel; but
his word was his bond. This was a well
knoWn character, and he could have got
credit for thousands on his word easier than
othee men could have got hundreds. At
the lime we speak of he had killed several
persons in gambling quarrels, and he was
looked upon as a man not to be crossed ex
cepti at the risk of life.
One night, while playing cards la Colum
bus,'; a quarrel arose about the game. His
opponent was a known desperado, and he
gave the lie to Wooley-'s statement about
the game. Bowies flashed out simultane
ously—both were slightly wounded, when a
lucky blow laid Wooley's • opponent dead
upon the floor. Next morning Wooley was
arrested—arrested because he did not care
thattit should be otherwise. Wooley had
carried his killing so far that the judge felt
bound to commit him, in or der to avoid the
imptitation of being affected either by fear
of his desperadoism or wealth. According
ly to jail went Wooley. The jailor was a
weak man—weak in courage and weak to
reals the influence of a douceur. After
bearing his confinement for a-day or two,
Wooley sent for the jailor.
"See here, Jim," said he; "you know Int ;
you know I never break my word. Now,
I wait to go out and have a social game
with the boys. You can just leave me the
key, and when it gets bed time I will come,
lock myself in, and it will be all right."
This arrangement was enforced by mate
rial considerations; and night alter night
Wooley used to 6ome oat and enjoy his
noctUral liberty. The Court sitting soon,
he got the case put off, and giving bail In
the sum of 110,000, was released.
At the next term of Court, Wooley was
put upon trial ; the jury returned a verdict
of guilty, the judges sentenced him to one
year in the penitentiary at Jackson. The
Pares were duly made out, and the Sheriff
proposed to start with him lor Jackson, bat
Weakly demand..
"You know, Sittwitr," said he, "that the
conoor Is poor—can't afford the trip—and
so I'll just lea my boy Cesar drive me down
to .11Mkson, and save all the expense. Got
the papers ?"
The Sheriff produced them, and, ere he
was aware, Wooley 'lewd them and put
them In his pocket.
right," meld he, shall be off to ,
morrow awning."
The Sherif/knew he had a desperate man
to deal with, but when ha .reflected that
Woolty never broke his word, and had,
besides. over $lOO,OOO worth of property
he could not move, he made a virtue of ne
cessity, and left things to take their turn.
True to his word, Wooley left for Jack
son, end in time arrived. Putting up at the
Idansion House, banned out, visited all the
gambling.hells with which that town ever.
abounded, and the next morning drove up s
to the penitenthu7. Entering the ware,
room,
,he inquired :
"Where shall I ,n 4 the Warden r'
"I arn the rpm," said Colonel Dickson.
"Well, I've brought you a prisoner."
"Where la he ?" Inquired the Warden. _
".11Sre lam the man," and Wooley
handed over the Sheriff's mlttlauts.
The warden was amazed. Had he a
la
natlo iu deal with, or had the man killed the
Sheriff, and then come to the prison to him?
He could not tell ; bat he determined quick
ly to keep the man, since he offered him
self.
"Now," said Wooley. "lets's go through
this place and see how it lotas," and through
they went. As they returned to the guakd
room,Wooley had talked so pleasantly that
the warden telt reassured, and sill j‘..cose
ly :
"Nuw, ]tr. Wooley, what branch of tht ,
busineu do you think you would,,like best ?"
"To tell you the truth, colonel," said
Wooley, "I never did a day's work in my
life, and I don't think I'd like any of your
cussed'. trades. I'll tell you how we can flu
it—l'lltelerk for yon, just for the name of
the thtOg, and we'll live jollly together, ti II
the year's up, "
The Warden saw he had a character t , .
deal with, and concluded that a man whu
would go Into a prison of his owu accord
would ilot rue away, and acquiesced.
Woole 'y "staid Ms yesir accordingly; nominal
clerk or oompanion byday and a gambler la
Jackson by night. He kept the ward roam
supplied with Savanna, and a sly nook ht
the office always contained the beat of lig
"Jr°. his yaw up, he left unregretting hut
regretted, for at heart he watt a good fellow
and made the warden It good companion.
Jackson Citisen. •
"Warm Dm Yon Bnays,.'—in one of the
burrnsofArkanatta i a man had been drinking
until a late hour at night. When he start
ed for biome, honest folks were In bed, and
the Mulles were all shut and dark. The It
quor belted taken was too much for him
and be did not know where to go. He as laa
rtalfilentii Into an - empty wagon-abed, and
fell upon the ground. For a long time he
lay In the uueonselouaness of a drunken
sleep, aid would have frozen" (Ibr the snow
on the ground showed the night to be very
cold) had not others less losemdble than him.
self beets around hips. This abed was a St.
vorite rdscleavous of the bogs, they rushed
out Wired the new comer arrival, but soon
returned( to their bed. In the uttnestkind
num, and with.truest hospitality, they gav e
their bipid companion the middle of the bed,
setae litiag on either side.of him, and others
answering the mute of a qttilt.—Their
wanath.irrevented him from being injured
by the alytesure. Toward morning ate a
woke. Siding himself comfortable and in
blissful Ignorance of his whereabouts, he
supposed himself enjoying the acoommoda
don , ofa tavern, in oompany with other
gentlemea. reached nut his hand
catching hold ceche bristles of a hog, exclaim.
-" Why, Afieier, when did you ahnv
last ?"
Wncii'ru the Metbodistoinweb, iltmbgb
its dellinstative Connedlit, has expressed it..elt
at all ton the subject, It has uniformity dein
onstratedithat it is aurae friend of the noel.
mon - sottitols, and fully coinpreheulA thr
danger diet threatens them. The following
resoletimis recently passed by Out Near York
East , Coniteatee of the Methodist Eplacop &I
Church,
, Ltre a flat expoarit of the doctrines
everywhere proclaimed bx that chord& on'
the subject to.which we allude:
%Puniness, The great politicsl and iliac &
Ilonai prigolple- , fundament it to &node to
'laws and Ins lied ins are e-icllug4 el by or.
ganized suospirscles against them wad by
the wril l 'ul though legalis it spproprkp
Om °fie eys recired fr an t it.:tlon to sec.
tartan columns: belt. •
.Thseohqtri, That we ample tifeollY pretest
spinet thi, maintainance; Oth•tsr, itt the •
icito
whole, of nominatiourd f:oikacAs oid mats- .
unions by ppropristiar from les i:lithr t y• or
monirlpal as unjust' In prinalphs, in
imical to' public weldirti,,,4l4 anise . -
°bale to tree itepublium4sucyt -4 .
MISSY lomels, ortiedfantemitax.eulot
nearly Asullwadeed . wlldplieunitlivavoim. •