Whole No. 2569. BLYMYER & STANBARGER, WHITE I CIIIIMIO) ICSRCJHAITTSj \ear Canal Basin, Lewistown, Pa., Will purchase every description of Produce at current prices. Ai.\Y 4V S ON UAX It , MASTER. HALT, FISH, STOKE COAL of assorted sues, LIMEB (IIINEES' ' BLACKSMITHS' COAL. GEO. BLYMYER, ie c2 C. C. STANBARGER. DiL J. YD&& Li J L2J ALT LI / iFFICh n ' i-( .Marketstreet, Lewistown, 1 / adjoining F. G. Franciseus' Hardware St.'re. P. S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the first Mono.iy of each month to spend the geek. my 31 Dr. Samuel L. Alexander, ft Has permanently located at Milroy, Tjfiin'J is prepared to practice all thebranch- JX, s of Lis Profession. Office at Swine hart s Hotel. my3~ly BR S A MAR.TIZVT through the solicitation of many Yjfinenls, located in Newton Hamilton in ® Tie r,,. in l>r. Atkinson, who goes to L*isn..wn. lie h pes hv a strict attention to business to receive the support ami merit the sjiprihation ola generous community. He liH: the experience of twelve yeats' regular practice, in which time he has had an oppor tunity ot treating diseases .of almost every epeeies. Office in dwelling directly opposite the Presbyterian church. apl9-3m EDWARD FRYSINtiEK, WHOLESALE DEALER & UAMFAITIRER ilUl!S.ltiß(ttl,s\ilT. &C., &C , iPiio Orders promptly attended to. jel6 £2O. 77. EL22E, Attorney at Law, office Market Square, Lewistown, w ill at tend to bu-intss in Mliilin, Centre and Hunting din counties. tay 26 Scigribt's tld Stand, .Y ir tin 1 Canal Bridge, Lewistown, Fa. '■r n; Beer, Lager Beer, Lindenberger si! iiwirzer Cheese— all of the best quality constantly on hand, for sale wholesale or re •aii. i a-t tn ho had daily during summer. iiiy'J-l- \ r JIJST RECEIVED A : EI.ECT STOCK Of Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, &c. r ai-n. women, boys, and children, which •<* ff'i 1 !'.r sale remarkably low. J. CLARK, Opposite the Union House. McALISTE&VILLE ACADEMY Juniata County, Pa, C'EO F. McF.IBLAKD, Principal &,• Proprietor. MCOB MILLER, Prof, of Mathematics* fyc. diiu./.SAYL' £>'. CRIST, Teacher of Alusic, Sfc. !he next session of this Institution com mences on tha 26th of July, to continue 22 seeks. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department 'ill be formed which wiil afford Teachers the i poitunity of preparing for fall examina tions A NEVA APPARATUS has been purchased, D turers engaged, &c. 1 chms— Boarding, Room und Tuition, per '•"•Mon, jssto ,60. Tuition alone at usual rates. •CpCirculars sent free on application. OTJM IMOim ~ SLOAT'S ELXYTIC LOC3 STITCE SEWING MACHINES. DHL subscriber after considerable search | -I for a Sewing Machine for his own use, j -/ one of the above now in operation, which or their simplicity and strength. | Stitch, Ilem. Bind. Fell and Gather with •3t basting, making the stitch alike on both f 9 w,,r k. They sew equally well " lightest and heaviest fabric with any spool rp ad or silk We feel warranted in recom ending them as the very best now in the or ever y useful purpose in a family, a Dressmaker, Tailor, or Shirt Maker.— 'an evidence of its simplicity Mrs. M., instruction or explanation from any e, commenced work on it, and ;n less than " j 'nade 10 dresses. 4 pair of pants, has not experienced the least v ,- v ' n operation. We simply ask all ' j .j at Hiis machine before purchasing, / * reme mber these facts. We warrant eve- C. ac "ine, and keep every one in repair, Bnr r . c J& enses ' f |,r ODe year. Price FIFTY Address Lewistown P. 0., *i4-tf Agent for Mifflin County. phOCKERY AV'ARE— Fine assortment of tone Crockery Ware and Baskets at A. FBLIX'tt. IFIEEOTJS© jpwsiwisißaiß) wx ©siaMßCßis imxwsNtmbg iHBmsHNm 9 MO RAM RELIGIOUS FAITH, HOPE, AM) LOVE. bT MINNIE. There is a star, whose cheering ray Illumes the shadowy night; Chasing tin- clouds of doubt away, And shedding heavenly light. That star i 9 Hope. There is a star whose gentle rav Cheereth the dreary heart; And though ali dark and drear the wav, H ill light and joy impart. That star is Love There is a sotr, whose peaceful raj- Disperses sorrow's gloom; Its heavenly radiance lights the way, E/eq to the silerit tomb. That star is Faith. Ol blesf the soul where shineth clear These heavenly tapers" light! There gloom and terror disappear Where shine supremely bright Faith, Hope, and Love! Receives Christ a? a Little Child. The profound intellect of Hishop Hut ler was able to remove doubts respecting Christianity as a divine system, from the minds ol others. I have beforp me the record of three persons who were convin j ced of the truth ol the gospel, and their | own lost condition as sinners, by the study of his Analogy of Keligion. Yet Hntler himself was in darkness in his last hours. A friend in attendance said to him, ' You do not believe it. Christ. He is able to save o the uttermost, that come unto God by him.' ' 1 never understood that verse belore,' said the dying Hishop, after a mo ment's reflection, and those words of the divine Teacher lifted the clouds of doubt, and restored confidence and peace tp Jjis | soul. All his life he had been studying i the mysteries of redemption, but the truth by which he was brought to rest on Christ j at last, was so plain and simple that the | little child may understand it. Perhaps no one ev.r won a prouder homage to his intellectual greatness, from his own age, than l)r. Johnson. Hut in ' all his wide surveys of knowledge, he ; found no lofty and exclusive portal through which intellects lite his might enter the kingdom of heaven. He must Low low and enter the door of faith in Christ, side by side with the little child. Throughout his life he recognized the cross as the only way to heaven, and this conviction deepen ed to its close. llis last days he spent in I prayer and strong entreaties, lying low at ! the throne of grace. To his faithful ne | gro servant he was frequently explaining • the simple truths of the Hi hie, often say ! ing to him, ' Attend, Francis, to the salva tion of your soul, which is of the greatest . importance.' It has been said of John Foster, that 'few spirits can have passed away from earth endowed with more intellectual grasp and penetration to meet the wonders and grandeurs of regions immense and untrav ersed.' Yet one year before his death he said, 'lf that gr-at cause of faith and hope, the all sufficient merits and atone ment of our Lord and Saviour were taken away, I should have nothing left." On his death-bed, when conscious of the failure of his mental powers he exclaimed, ' Hut I can pray and that is a glorious thing.' In the one great and all important con cern of life, how insignificant are those distinctions of whiph the v/orjd thinks and makes gq much. Are we great, hero we must become humble. Are we lowly, here we stand on a level with thp greatest; for ' whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of heaven as a little child, shall not en ter therein.' The gospel of Christ! in its adaption to man, how wonderful; in its beneficence, how worthy of its divine Au thor !— American Messenger. MORE NICE THAN WISE. I)V MARGARET LYON. A carriage stopped at the door, the bell was rung, and a few moments afterwards Amy Leslie had her arms around the neck of dear, good Auut Phoebe. 'Oh ! 1 am so glad to see you ! I am so glad you've come!' exclained Amy, her face glowing with pleasure. The old lady kissed the niece tenderly ; then held her off and looked at her with motherly tenderness. 'Not a bit changed! It is two years since you were married, and your cheeks are as round and blooming, and your eyes as bright, as when I last looked into them. A happy wife, I see. And why not ? John Leslie wa3 always a good son, and I have no fear about his making a good hus band. He was a pet of mine you know.' 'Yes, I remember,' said Amy, as she drew her arm within Aunt Phoebe's and led her up stairs. 'He was your pattern youcg liaau. Hut he isn't perfect. You don't know any until you've lived with them.' Aunt Phoebe stopped and looked up into Ally's face a little curiously. ' Oh, you needn't fix your sharp eyes on me after that fashion !' said Amy, laugh ing. ' Men are no more perfect than wo men.' ' Husbands should be perfect in the eyes of their wives/ remarked Aunt Phoebe. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1860. ' And wives perfect in the eyes of their husbands ?' ' Of course.' ' Then we are exceptions,' said Amy, as they entered the chamber prepared for Aunt Phoebe. ' For neither ol us thinks the other perfect.' Amy laughed again a gay little laugh— the sound of which was not pleasant to the old lady's ears. ' How is John V she asked. 'Oh, he's well ; and will be so glad to see you.' ' How does lie get ulong in business ?' 'Very well, 1 believe. Hut he complains of being worked half to death.' ' lie's young and strong/ said Aunt Phoebe. ' And a close application tp. busi ness won't hurt him.' ' Hut he conies home so tired out as to be right down ill-natured sometimes. And J don't like that.' ' I'm sorry,' was all Aunt Phoebe replied, and then asked for the baby. 'Oh, he's sweet!' a;;d a gtaam of sun shine irradiated the young mother's counte nance. ' Come ; he's sleeping in the next room;' and she drew Aunt Phoebe into the chamber, where her baby treasure lay. ' Isn't he lovely Aunt ?' ' Peay angel!' said the old lady bending over the crib, and gazing with delighted eyes upon the rasy infant. ' And so John is a little cross sometimes?' remarked Aunt Phoebe, as they sat togeth ip the sitting-groom, not long afterwards. < Yes, cross as a bear now and then, if I must say so,' replied Amy. • Oh, not so bad as that,' said Aunt Phoebe. ' Cross as a bear is pretty strong language. 1 can't believe it of John.' Amy's fiice grew serious; then fell into deep shadow. ' What's the matter, dear? You don't look happy. Nothing wrong, I hope ?' aud Aunt Phoebe laid her hand on Amy's arm and looked at her rather anxiously ' Oh, no—nothing very wrong. iiut ' and Amy paused. 'Hut what? Nothing very wrong?— Then there is something wrong?' ' Well the truth is, Aunt Phoebe, John isn't as amiable or good-tempered as he used to be. lie's careless and disorderly about the house; and if L say a word to him, he gets into a huff. Now, if there is one thing I do like, it is order and neat ness at home; and John tries me dread fully. I don't know what has come over him.' ' I'm sorry!' It was Aunt Phoebe's only remark on that subject at the time. Hut she deter mined to look on with open eyes, and see where the evil lay, that was casting already a shadow upon the heart of her niece. 'John will he home in a little while,' said Amy, as the twilight began to fall. 'All, there is his key in the door, and that's his step in the passage;' and she went out to meet him, closing the room door after her. Aunt Phoebe listened as they moved along the passage to where the hat rack stood. ' There!' she heard her niece say, in rather an uuamiable tone; 'don't throw your hat down on the chair in that way. Why dou't you hang it up ?' John made some reply, hut she did not hear it distinctly His voice struck her as being q little rough. 'On that lower peg again ! Don't you see that your coat touches the floor?' ' It won't hurt the floor,' came to Aunt Phoebe's ears, in an annoyed tone. ' Incorrigible !' responded Ainy. A few moments of silence followed.— Then she heard her niece say; ' Aunt Pfjpebe is in the parlor.' In the next instant the door flew open, and John hurried across the room, and, grasping Aunt Phoebe's hand, said with warmth: ' This is a pleasure! How glad lam to see you! and he held her hand tightly, looking fondly into her face. A crowd of questions and answers fol lowed each other closely on both sides, in the midst of which Amy broke in with : ' Don't put your foot on the round of that chair, John; you'll rub the varnish off.' John removed his foot without making any answer. Hut Aunt Phoebe saw his brow gather slightly with a sign of dis pleasure. They went on talking, and pres ently the young man, who had taken a seat near the window, took hold of the cord which looped back the curtain, and com menced running it through his fin gers. ' You'll fray that cord, John/ said Amy. 1 Do let it alone !' John still kept it in his hand as if he had not heard her, and still toyed with it in an absent way. 'John ! don't! You'll ruin that cord.' Mr. Leslie dropped it, without looking towards his wife or replying, and still kept on talking with Aunt Phoebe. Soon, in his earnestness, the young man forgot himself again. Grasping the top of a chair which stood near him, and balanc ing it upon one leg, he moved it backwards and forwards with a see-sawing motion. Amy's sense of propriety was outraged again. The act annoyed her, and she could not repress her annoyance. This time she said nothing, but reached towards the chair to attempt to remove it from his hand. John did not choose to let go, how ever. Amv drew firmly on the chair, and he held on to it firmly. ' Let me have the chair!' said the per sistent little woman. 'Do you wish to sit down on it ?' said John, looking steadily into her laee. ' No, but —' ' Hut whatasked her husband, knit ting his brows. ' Why will you play with chairs in that fashion ?' said Amy, with slight irritation. 'lt makes ine nervous to see you.' ' I'm sorry your nerves are so delicate,' said John Laslie, pushing away the chair. 'My wife, Aunt, has grown as particular as an old maid.' Aqnt Phoebe made no reply. She felt uncomfortable. For nearly a minute si lence pervaded the room. Then the tea bell rung, and the scene changed. They were scarcely seated at the table before John was guilty of some little breach of etiquette which brought on him a reproving word from his wile, lie did not seem to notice her. 'Why, husband, how can you do so ?' broke from her lips a few moments after wards. , You real.y seem to be try ing your self.' 4 What has he done, child ?' said Aunt Phoebe, looking across the table in some surprise at Amy. 'Done? Just look at his cup on the ta ble-cloth. A nice stain it will make.' ' \\ here are your cup-plates ?' asked Aunt Phoebe. 4 Oh, dear! nobody has cup-plates now adays,' answered Amy. ' That's just it, Aunt,' said John. 'Our Amy is growing excessively genteel. She won t have cup plates, and I'm not the fool to burn my mouth with hot tea and coffee. Koth being self-willed, there has as yet been no compromise.' 'Nonsense, children,' spoke out Aunt Phoebe. 'This is a little worse than tri lling.' The old lady's rebuking tone rath er chilled them, ami neither made any ad ditional remark. Hut the buoyancy of their feelings was gone, and was not fully restored during meal-time. After supper they all went up stairs into a cosy sitting room. They were there only a few min utes, when John commenced drawing off one of his boots, saying as he did so : ' How uiy poor feet do ache. They've been bound up in this tight leather singe morning.' ' Don t take them ofi here !' exclaimed Amy. '\\ by don't you go over into our room ? Your slippers are there.' Hut he paid no more attention to his wife than if he had not heard her. The boot just removed he placed against the wall, and went on deliberately taking off the other. ''l here, that feels better,' he said. ' 1 tell you what, Aunt Phoebe, its no joke to go ail day with u pair of tight boots on. My feet f'cel as if taken out of a vice.' 'Well, I' m downright ashamed of you, John Leslie !' said his wife. ' I hope you will never have anything worse to be ashamed of,' he replied, and not in a very kind tone of voice. ' I think it's a pity if I can't take my boots off where I please in my own house.' 'Oh, as to that,' retorted Amy, her face reddening, 'you can take tjicni off in the parlor if you choose, and put them on the what g.ot for an ornament! I dou't care.' 1 I'd) glad to hear you say that.,' retorted John. ' ou are?' said Amy sharply. ' Yes; I shall have some peace of my life now.' ' I don't understand you,' said Amy, showing some irritation of manner. ' Oh, it's very plain,' answered the young man. If I can leave my boots in the par lor, I can leave them anywhere. Much obliged to you fqr condescending so much.' And b.e laughed ic a mocking way that was particularly irritating to his wife, who lost temper, and said a great many hard, accusing things to her husband ; and then giving way to a passionate flood of tears, left the room. 4 Is that right, John ?' said aunt Phoebe, looking soberly into the young man's face. ' Js what right ?' ' Eight for you to do what is annoying to your wife V 4 She's no right to be annoyed with tri fles of this kind,' he answered firmly. 4 That is not speaking like a kind and sensible man, John. Your wife is neat and orderly by nature, and cannot help be ing annoyed at what is disorderly. This is no place for your boots.' 4 1 know it, aunt. But when a man's tired half to death on coming home, he might be excused for pulling his boots off anywhere.' 4 Yes, if he were more thoughtful of himself than anybody else. But we won't discuss this matter now. I must go to Amy, poor child.' And aunt Phoebe arose and went from the sitting-room, leaving John Leslie in no very comfortable frame of mind. She found Amy in her own apartment, sitting on the side of her bed, sobbing violently. Aunt Phoebe sat down beside her, and ta king her hand, said: 4 As soon as you have grown calm enough to listen to me, I wish to say a few words to yoo.' Amy sobbed more violently for a little while, and then, the paroxism abating, she became silent. ' In the first place then,' began the old lady, ' I would like to know if it is in this way that you receive your tired husband, every evening, wheu he returns from busi ness V In what way, aunt Phoebe ?' I dunt know what you mean.' ' In a fault tiudmg way I mean.' ' Hut, aunt. 1 cuuuot let him act in such a disorderly way.' ' Btop, my child !' said aunt Phoebe. '\ ou are wrong. The love of your hus band is more to you than these his heart is ali right; if he is manly, hon orable aud kind; do not these qualities far outweigh the small defects of which you complain ? You did not meet him to-night when he came home to you, with tender words, but in reproof. It would have been but a little thing for you to have hung up his hat when he thoughtlessly placed it on the chair; or to have raised his coat to a higher position on the rack, if left too low for your fancy. You wouid both have felt happier for this forbearance and attention on your part, and surely your own peace of mind and the happiness of your husband are things to be first considered. What is the varnish on a chair-round to the smile of your husband? Or the freshness of a tassel-cord to his tendpr and loving thought ot you ? \\ by, child, you are throwing away precious gems for glitter and tinsel. Wasting love and gathering up bitterness ol heart for the time to come. How rpuch better would it havp been, when he drew oil his buots in the sitting-room, and com plained of their tightness and of his weari ness, lor you to have said to him. in kind potisideraiiun, '■ 1 will take your boots, John, and get your slippers.' That would have been wifely and Iqvingly done; and he would have rewarded you with a gratified smile. Hut hoft- does it stand now? He is angry and you are unhappy. Are a lew little home properties to be valued more than love and peace?' Aunt Phoebe paused. Amy looked at her for some moments in a half startled, half-bewildered way, as if a new and accu sing truth was breaking in upon her mind. J hen she laid her face down against her and wept lor some time sileptlv. 'Am I not right, my child?' said aunt I hoebe. ' Yps, you are right, and I have been wrong. Thoughtless, foolish woman ! how weak and unwise I have been. Thanks, dear aunt Phoebe, for your plainly uttered reproof.' W hen Amy returned to the sitting room, she had her husband's dressing gown on her arm, and his slippers in her hand. ■ Give me your coat, John,' she said, with a pleasant smile, ' here is your dressing gown.' 'Oh, you needn't have taken that trouble,' returned her husband in surprise. 'lt's no trouble, dear/ answered his wife, putting her hand on the collar of his coat, and then helping him to remove it. 'There, she added, as she drew off the last sleeve, is your dressing gown, and here are your slippers. I will take your coat and boots over to the chamber.' All this was so unexpected to John, that the whole thing was done before he hud time to object or remonstrate. There was no mope fault-finding on that even.ng; no mere sharp er complaining words; but considerate kindness and gentle attentions from one to the other. It was a long time since the lumps had passed away so pleasantly. A shadow had fallen on the brightness of their home ; a spirit of accusation had come in ; alienation had begun ; their freighted bark had passed from calm water to a troubled sea; they were in danger of shipwreck; but Aunt Phoebe came at the right moment, and by filty spoken words, restored order, harmony and peace. Mr* Lincoln on the Mexican War. lhe following is an extract from one of Mr. Lincoln's speeches in Congress upon the Mexican war, which shows about how he stood upon that question : ' Hut as General Taylor is par excellence, the hero of the Mexican war; and as you Democrats say we Whigs have always op posed the war, you think it must be very awkward and embarrassing for us to go for General Taylor. The declaration that we opposed the war is true or false, according as one may understand the term' opposing the war.' If to say ' the war was unneces sary and unconstitutionally commenced by the President,' be opposing the war, then the Whigs have very generally opposed it. Whenever they have spoken at all, they have said this; —and they have said it on what has appeared good reason to them.— 1 The march of an army into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement, frighten ing the inhabitants away, leaving their growing crops and other property to de struction, to you may appear a perfectly amiable, peaceful, unprovoking procedure; but it does not appear so to us. So to call such an act, to us appears no other than a naked, and impudent absurdity, and we speak of it accordingly. But if when the roar had begun 3 and had become the cause New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 37- of the Country, the (jiving of money ar.d our blood, in common with yours, tcassup port of the war, then is it not tnu that tee hove always opposed the war. With fic individual exceptions you have constantly had our votes here for all the necessa ry sup plies. And more than this, you have had our services, the blood and the lives of our political brethren in try trial and on I every field. The beardless boy, and the nnn—the huiuble and the distinguished, i you have had them, and in battle the have endured and bought ; fell with you. ■ Clay and Webster each gave a son, never to be returned. From the fchnfe of my own J residence, besides other \yorthy but less known Whig names, we sent Marshal), Morrison, Baker and Hardin; they ah ; fought and one fell, and in the fall of that j one, lost our best Whig man. Nor were , the \\ higs few in number, or laggard in the day of danger. In that fearful, bloody, breathless struggle at Beuna Vista, where | each man's hard task was to beat back five foes or die himself, of the five officers who I perished, four were Whigs.' Deplorable Coiivlitum of the Treasury. 1 Independent, the weii-inibimcd Wa.-h --| ington correspondent of the Philadelphia J North America, says :—lletctoiora gross errors ami miscalculations have been cbver -1 ed up by the contrivance of reissuing the treasury notes us last as they were received, or. in other words, by renewing the debt, : without paying a picayune on account. — That authority stopped yesterday, by law, and i? will before long be plain to the coup try that the great operations of the Treas ; ury have been carried on by a process of ! 'shinning' which would discredit a ' lame i duck in \\ all street. False balances and ] exaggerated estimates will not answer 1 henceforth. 'J he people will have some j opportunity of discovering, just on the ! eve of Mr. Buchanan's exudus front office, i what is the treasury next winter. One of the earliest demands of Mr. Cobb will be. ; for a loan to cover a present deficiency, which ;uay range between five and six mil lions, and before the close of the session another loan for nearly twenty million doi lars will he necessary to pay oft the float i ing debt, and postponed incumbrances of | the administration. Lincoln on Snakes- Ihe following is one of Lincoln's illus trations, made in a speech :.t New Haven, Conn. Speaking of the right and wrong of slavery, he said ; " lhe other policy is one that squares with the idea that slavery is wrong, and itcn.-ists in doing everything that we ought to do if it is wrong. Now I don't wish to be misunder sto id, nor leave a gap down to be misrepre sented. even. I don't say that we ought to attack it where it exists. To ine it seems that il we were to forp a government anew, in view of the actual presence of slavery, wo should find it necessary to frame just such a government as our Forefathers did, giving id the slaveholders the entire control where the system is established, while we possessed the fruits. [Applause.] From the necessities in the case, wc should he compelled to form just a government as our blessed fathers gave; and, surely, if they have so made it, that adds another reason why we should let slavery alone .. here it exists. "it 1 saw a venomous snake crawling in the road, any man might seize the nearest stick and kill it; hut if I find that snake in bed with my children, it would be another question. [Laughter.] 1 might hurt the children more than the snake, and the snake might bite them. [Applause.] Much more, if 1 found it in bed with ruy neighbor's chil dren, and I had hound myself bv a solemn compact not to meddle with his children un der any circumstances, it would become tne to let that particular mode of killing the gen tleman alone. [Great laughter ] But if there is a bed newly made up, to which the children are taken, and it was proposed to take a batch of young snakes and put them in with them, I take it, no man would Fay there was a question how I ought to decide. [Prolonged applause and cheers.] That is just the case! The new Territories are the newly made bed to which our children are to go, and it lies with the nation to say whether they shall have the snakes mixed jp witli them or not. It does not seem as if there could be much hesitation as to what our policy should be. [Applause.] THE OLD CENTRAL SSHEatti AHHimiE) s Boots and Sboee Cheaper than ever. I HAVE bought a large and well selected stock of every variety in my line at very low prices, and wiil sell at a small advance on cost. 1 would cordially invite my custo mers. aud all others, to call and examine my stock before purchasing elsewhere. Look at our low prices: Mens' Boots ?2 00 a 3 25 " Gaiters 1 75 a2 00 " Walking Shoes 1 25 a 140 " Calf Monroes 125a 160 " Brogans 87 a1 40 Boys' Gaiters 85 a 1 50 " Kip and Calf Monroes 65 a 95 Misses and Children 9 20 a 1 00 Womens' Gaiters 62 a 2 25 " Goat heels 1 00 a 1 25 " Morocco Lace Boots 90 a 1 25 " Slippers with heels 1 00 a 1 50 50 a 60 A large stock of home made work constant ly on hand and will be made to order at short est notice. Having greatly reduced our pri ces our terms will hereafter be positively cash. Store, southeast corner of the Diamond, op posite the Lewistown Hotel. jy!2 T. COX