& ©o 2k jKsisiLasiiiiass* Whole No 2869. Railroad. Trains leave Lewistown Station as fellows: Wfttward., Eatticarii. Philadelphia Express, 663a. m. 12 17 a. in. Baltiiii"re '• 4 40 a. in. j'ust Line, 6 41 p. m. 6 00 a. tn. Pay Express, 10 61 a. m. Cincinnati Express, 6 06 p.m. Way Passenger, 9 34 a m. Mail, 4 29 p. m. Emigrant, 10 2S a m. i'lirougn Freight, 10 15 pm. 111a. m. Fast - 8 *" • m. Express " 12 30 p.m. 12 33 p.m. ■Stock " 6 00 p. m. 7 22 p m. Local •' 7 30 a. m. 3 00 p. m. ■Coal Train. 105 p. m. 11 01 am. ■Union Line, 8 56 p.m. Fare to Harrisburg $210; to Philadelphia 6 85; io .Altoona 2 50; to Pittsburgh 6 60; to Baltimore 5 20 ; to f/crk 3 20 office wit! be open 20 minutes before j *hu arrival t-f each .passenger train. LV £. ROBESON, Agent. *J-Galbraith's Omnibuses convey passeugers to j nd from all the trains, taking up or setting them sown at all points within tiie borough limits. Poor House Business. The Directors of the Poor meet at the Poor j House on the 2d Tuesday of each month. Kishacoqullias Seminary AND NORMAL SCHOOL. mllS Summer Session at this institution will begin j 1 April 9. 1866, and continue 2o weeks. Cost Tor < Boarders per session, 575. -Day scholars, $U^ special attention paid to Normal Class this session : The assistance of the County Superintendent is ex- j pet ted For particulars address j mar'2l-3in S. Z. SUA IIP, Principal. j 0-30. Wi 3333?,, Attorney at Law, * Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at- j -'.end to business in Mllflin.Centre and Hunting j don counties mv 26 ■ -.T/Hio -Si v&o ; DENTIST, OFF EftE h i professional services to the citizens of Lewistovvr. and vicinity. All in want of good, neat work will do well to give him a call. lie may l*> found at all times at his office, three j doors cast of H. 11. A It. Pratt's store, V alley street. j apl9-ly* j M. R. TffiOMPSON, D. D. S. H AVISO perinercntly located in Lewistown. otters | his profession-!! services to the ladies and gtntlc- : men of this place and viein- ; ences—best families. , . Office west Market street, near LisenbiaCs h..te|. • where he can bo found for professional consultation Ironi the first Moudav of ea-h month until the fourth Monday, when he will be absent on professional bun- j aess one week. may 10- if A OMOABHMiirJ At D. Grove's Store. Pj;w Arrival tf Grorrrics and Coitfeelioneriei. 1 0 GROVE would again inform the public that he . ha* just received h fresh supply, to which h* wruld .-all their attention. Now is the time to boy cheap prune Molasses ; the very hot ol .Sugars; print. Coffee, 7 different kinds, put up 111 1- oaekages; Corn Starch, Farina. Hotntny, Beans,and all kind-ot Spices, rwali and fine; prime Cheese, pur* Cider \ inegar. Baskets. Buckets. Brooms, aud a variety of Dolls and Notions for Children. Also. lUlsins, Figs. Prunes, Cucoaiiuts. Almonds. Ac., beside the largest as-ort nii'tit of soaps to lie found ill town. Hair Oils, and an ej)dlcs variety of extracts, all of which will bo sold *np for cash. Ail L'lnds of Country Produce taken tn ex change for Good*. Thankful for past •invo-. be hopes by strict atten tion to business to.snerit aud-receivc acontinUHnceof the patronage of * generous public ruaylO 1866. NEW GOODS! AT NATHANIEL KENNEDY'S STORE, Cn the Odd Fellows' Hall. JUST received from Philadelphia, a very choice assortment of Ginghams, Flannels, Cheeks. Hickory,' Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods of ad kinds. ALSO, Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Chocolate, Essences ol Coffee, Queenswure. Stone ware. Hardware and Cedarware, Shoul ders, Hams, Mackerel, Herring, Shad. Hoots and Shoes, Grain Bags. Also, a fine lot of Whisky, B It A X D Y, Wine and Gin, SALT, Ac., Ac.. Ac, which will b* sold very low. Country Produce taken a„ch. ng .hrooJt, N KENNEDY. Lewsitowti, October 11, ISGS. Lewistown Mills. i-TUC RICHEST CASH PRICES PUR WHEAT, AND ALL RINDS (IF DRAIN, or received it on storage, at the option of those having it for the market. They hope, by giving due and personal at tention to business, to merit a liberal share of t public patronage. SALT and Limeburners '•COAL always on hand WM. B McATEE 1 SON. Lewistown, Jan 1, ISGa.-tf The American Wine Plant. f|"MIE undersigned having been extensively I engaged in growing Plants and manu facturing Wine for the last four years, are .prepared to furnish Plants the coming Spring at the following rates : sls per hundred, or 512 50 per hundred when a thousand or more are ordered. Each plant will make from ont to two gallons of wine the'first season, equai to the best Sherry Wines of Europe. Sam pie wine forwarded by ozpress at the whole -sale price. $3 per gallon. 'Lottera of inquiry OTders for wine and plants promptly atleuded by addressing. KELLY fc KLECKNER, fsT-ltn* Buffalo X Union ©o , Pa. L 3 O E T JR. Y _ THE FARTE.EE SEORE. BT MATTIE WIN FIELD TORRKT. The tide is deep and the waves run swift, I C With a ceaseless ebb and flowing ; Our guide star's lost and our bark's adrift, And a ruthless gale is blowing. We strive to pierce with our troubled gaze The dusk of the hearing ocean; The sea is rough aud its trackless ways ■ Are lost in the wild commotion. J Our hearts are filled with a thousand fears, . I As we onward move in sadness; ; Our eyes are dim with the mist of tears, j , For we see no gleam of gladness. Yet somewhere, still, on the farther shore, We know that a light is shining. And somwhere hovers, the waters o'er, ! The cloud with a silver lining. ! ; V. hen the wave* run high, and the atonn comes down I To toy with the crested billow; When the masts are beiu at its dreadful frown, • Like the feows of the lithesome willow; ITlien we gaze afar through thy mist and spray, With hearts that are sad and.fearing, j To catch a gleam, through the darkness grey, | Of the farther shore appearing. 1 .] i To that farther shore we ar-- drifting fast; j Each day we aie drawing nearer; ; We hope to enter its port at last. ( | And to see its light shine clearer. ( We know that an unseen hand will guide, Thai an eye is watching ever, j And we feel in our hearts, l-t what will botide We have help that shall fail us uever. —Huii'lati Erh'j"l Tint r... A Toper's Suliliquy. Leaves have their lime to fall, And so likewise have 1; The reason too's the same — Both comes of getting dry. But hore's the difference "iwixt you and me - I fails more harder and more frequently. ! TH E SECOND THOUGHT V • A Mirror for Young Wives. J 'I must have it, Charles,' said the j handsome little wile oi Mr. Whitman. J 'So don't put on that sober face.' 'Did i put on a sober face,' asked the husband, with all attempt to smile that was anything but success. •Yes, sober as a man on trial for hit life. \\ by it's as long as tiie moral s ; law. Thore, dear, olear it up, and look j as if you had at feast one friend in the | world. \\ hat money-lovers you men j are V ! 'How much will it cost? inquired ! Mr. Whitman. There was unothe: el j fort to look cheerful and at quie.-cent. 'About lorly dollars,' was answered, with just a little faltering in the lady's voice, for she knew the sum would sound a little extra vagrant. 'Forty dollars!" Why. Ada. do you think 1 am made of money?' Mr Whitman's couiitemiiiee underwent a re markahie c ha n ge of' ■<;< p rcssi o 11. 'I declare, Charles,' said his wife a little impatiently, 'you look at me a it 1 were an object ot tear instead of affection. 1 don't think this is kind of you. I've only had three silk dresses since we're married, while Amy Blight j has had six tr seven during the same | period, and evi ry one of hers cost more ; than mine. I know you think me ex travagant, but 1 wish you had a wife ! like some women I could name. 1 rather think you'd find out the differ . once before long.' 'There, there, pet, don't talk to me . after this fashion ! I'll bring the mon- j ey ut'iUnnertime, that is, it —-—' Xo ifs nor huts, if you please. The j sentence is complete without them. i Thank you, dear. J 11 go this after noon and buy the sill:. So don'.t fail to bring the money. 1 was in art Bill: l skin's yesterday, and saw one of the sweetest patterns 1 ever laid my eyes ; on. Just suits mv style and complex ion. You won't disappoint me?' And Mrs. Whitman laid her soft white hand on the arm ol'her husband, i a and smiled with sweet | ersuasion in ' her face. 'Oh, no. You shall have the money,' ' said Mr. Whitman, turning off from his wife, as she thought a little abrupt ly, and hurrying from her presence. In his precipitation, he had forgotten the usual parting kiss. 'That's the way it is always!' said Mrs. Whitman, her whole manner changing, us the sound of the closing street door came jarring upon herears. •Just say money to Charles, and at once there is a cloud in the sky.' She sat down, pouting and half an gry- , , . 'Forty dollars for a new dress, ejac ulated the husband of the vain, pretty, thoughtles Mrs. Whitman, as lie shut thedoor. '1 promised to settle Thomp son's eoal bill to day—thirty-three dol lars—but don't know where the money is to come lroni. I'he eoal is burned up, and more must be ordered. Oh, dear, I'm discouraged. Every year I fall behind. This winter 1 did hope to get a little in advance, but if"forty dol lar silk dresses are the order of the day, there's an end to that devoutly wished for consummation. Debt! debt! How 1 shrink from it; but steadily, now, it is closing its Briarean arms around me. and my constricting chest WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1866. labors in respiration. Oh, if I could but disentangle myself now, while I have the strength of early manhood, and the bonds that hold me are weak. It Ada could see as 1 see—if I could only make her understand rightly my position. Alas! that is hopeless I tear." And Mr. Whitman* hurried his steps because his heart beat quicker, and his thoughts were unduly excited Not a long time after Mr. Whitman left home, the city postman delivered a letter to his address The wife ex amined the writing on the envelope, which was in a hold masculine hand, and said to herself, as she did so— 'l wonder who this can he from 1" Something more than curiosity mo ved her. There iutiuded on her mind a vague feeling of disquiet, as if the missive bore unpleasant news for her husband. The stamp showed it to be a city letter. A few times, oi late, stroll letters had come to his address, and she had noticed that lie had read them hurriedly, thrust them without remark into his pocket, and became si 'krnt. It the thought of Mrs. VY hitman re curred. as was natural, to the silk dress of which she was to become the owner on that day, she did not feel the proud satisfaction her vain heart ex perienced a little while before. .Some thing of its beauty had faded. ' It 1 only knew what that letter contained,' she said, halt an hour alter it came in, her mind still feeling tin pressure which had come down upon it so strangely, as it seemed to her. She went to the mantel piece, took up the letter, and examined the super scription. It gave her no light. Stead ily it keyt growing u,pon .fcw that its contontfi were of a nature to trouble her hue band. Mrs. Whitman turned the'ietoes over ynd over again in her band, in a thoughtful way, and as -he did so. the image of her husband, —sober-laced and silent its he had become for mo-l of the time, of lute, presented itself with unusual vividness. Sympathy stole into her heart. • Poor Charles!' she said, rts the feci ing in creased ; 'l'm afraid something is going wrong with him.' Placing the letter on the mantcl ji;> < e. where he could see it when he came in, ilrs Whitman entered upon some household duties, but a strange impression, as ♦Tw/eight, lay upon hor heart —a sense of impending evil a vague feeling that all was not going well with her husband. • lie has beer: a little mysterious of late,' she said to herself. The idea af fected her very unpleasantly. 4 lie grows more silent and reserved,' she added, as though her mind under a fe verish excitement, became active in a new direction. 'More indrawn, as it were, and less interested in what goes on around him. His coldness chills me at times, and his irritation hurts me.' She drew a long, deep sigh Then, with an almost startled vividness,came : before her mind in eon trust,her lender, loving, cheerful husband of three years ! before, and her quiet, silent, so.ber- i faced husband of to day '.Something is going wrong with , ; liiin !' .she said aloud, in the feeling grow stronger. '\\ hat can it be V • The letter was in her hand. 'This may give me light.' And, with j careful fingers, she opened the tisvel ; ope. not breaking the paper, so that . she could seal it again if she desired to , Ido so. There was a hill of sixty dol lars, and a communication front the person sending the hill. T'e was a jeweler. '.lf this if. not settled at once,' he wrote, ' 1 shall put the account in suit. Jt has been standing for over a year: i and I am tired ot getting excuses in ' stead of my money.' The bill was for a lady's watch, which Mrs. Whitman had almost coin polled her husband to purchase. ' A-'ot ! paid for I is it possible!" exclaimed the little woman, in blank astonish ment, while the blood mounted to her 1 forehead. Then she sat down to think. Light ! began to come into her mind. As she sat thus thinking, a second letter for j her husband came in from the penny postman 'Bho opened it without hes itation. Another bill, and another dunning letter! -Not.paid! Is it possiple?' She re peated the ejaculation. It was a bill of twenty five dollars for gaiters and slippers, which had been standing for three months. This will never do!' said the awak ening wife —'never—no, never;' and she thrust the two letters into her pocket in a resolute way. Trorn that hour until the return ot her husband at dinnertime, Mrs. Whitman did an un usual amount of thinking tor her little, brain. P'.e saw, the moment he en .terc i. r i..;l the mornuigcloud had not ! pot sod Voni his brow. , ■ Here is the money for that new i | dress,' he said, taking a small roll of , ! bills from Ins vest pocket, and handing them to Ada as he came in. lie did not kiss her, nor smile in the old bright way But his voice was calm, if not , cheerful. A kiss and a smile just then would have been more precious to the young wife than a hundred silk dress- ' es. .She took the money, saying— • 1 hank you dear. It is kind in you to regard my wishes' Something in Ada's voice and man- . ner caused Mr. Whitman to lift his eyes, with a look of inquiry, into her taOo. But she turned aside, so that he could not read its expression. lie was graver and more silent than usual, and eat with scarcely an appear ance of appetite. •Come home curly, dear,' said Mrs. \\ hitman, its -she walked to the door! with her husband, after dinner. •Are you impatient to have me ad mire your silk dress?' he replied with a faint effort to smile. ' Yes, it will be something splendid,' she answered. He turned off from her quickly, and left the house. A few moments she stood, with a thoughtful face, her mind indrawn and 'her whole manner 'com pletely changed. Then she went to her room and commenced dressing to go out. Two ifoui'S later and we find her in a jewelry store on Broadway. •Can 1 say a word to you' she ad dressed the owner of the store, who knew her very well. Certainly,' he replied, and they moved to the lower end ol one of the long show cases. Mrs Whitman drew from her pock ; el a lady's watch and chain, and laying litem on the show case, said, at the same time holding out the hill she had tuluCK -from the envelope addressed to her husband ' J cannot afford to wear this watch, my husband's circumstances are too limited. I tell you so frankly. It should uever have been purchased, hut a too indulgent husband yielded to the importunities of a foolish wife. I say this to lake blame from him. Now, sir, meet the ease, if you can do so in fairness to yourself. Take back the watch and say how much 1 shall pay you 'besides.' i'he jeweler dropped his eyes-to think. The case took him a little by surprise. HE stood for nearly a minute ; then ta king the bill and • atch .-aid : Wait a moment,' and wont to a desk near by. ; • M ill that do?' lie had come forward again and now presented her with the ! receipted bill. His face wore a pleased expression, i■- -How much shall I pay yon?' asked - Mrs. Whitman, drawing out ; et-book. i ' Nothing. The watch is not de faced.' > ' You have done a kind act, sir,' said i Mrs. Whitman, with feelings trend) 4 ling along hor .voice. ' 1 hope you will not think unfavorably of my husband. , It's no fault of hC that the bill bus not • been paid. Coot! morning, sir.' Mrs \\ hitman drew her veil over her face, s and went, with light steps, and light - heart, from the store. The pleasure she had experienced on receiving her watch was not to be compared with that now t'ett in parting with it. From ; the jeweler's she went to the boot-ma ker's—and .paid the bill of twenty live dollars : from thence to hor milliner's, , and settled for her last bonnet. ' I know you are dying to see my new dress." said Mrs. Whitman, gaily, as she drew her arm within that qf her husband, on bis appearance that even ing. ' Come over to our bedroom — j and let me show it. Come along? ' Don't bang back, Charles, as il you are afraid.' Chark- Whitman went with bis wife passively, looking more like a man on his way to receive sentence than in ex pectation of a pleasant sight. Jlis thoughts were bitter. 'Shall my Ada become lost to me, he said..in his heart—"lost to me in a world ot folly, fashion, and extrava gance ?' ' Sit down, Charles.' She led him to a large, cushioned chair. Her manner had undergone a change. The bright ness of her countenance had departed. She took something, in a harried way, from a drawer, and catching up a foot stool, placed it on the floor near him, and sitting down, leaned upon hiui arid looked tenderly and lovingly into his face. Then handed him the je\vcl ! er's hill. 'lt is receipted, you soe.' Her voico fluttered a little. 'Ada! how is this? What docs it mean ?' lie flushed and grew eager. ' 1 returned the watch, and Mr. R— | receipted the hill. 1 would have paid for damage, hut he said it was unin jured. ami asked nothing. 'Oh, Ada!' 1 And this is receipted also ; and this/ and handing the other bills which she had paid. ' And now, dear, she added, quiek 'j ly. ' how do you like my diess ? Isn t it beautiful ?' imw ebibhh&lW We leave the explanations and scene t that followed to the reader's iaiagina- ! i i tion. If any fair lady, however, who, ( like Ada, has been drawing too heavily ■ ! •on her husband's slender income, for i ; silks, and jewels, is at a lose to realize i | the scene, let her try Ada's experiment. - Our word for it, she will find a new . 1 and happy experience in life. Costly < silks and jewels may he very pleasant I things, hut they arc too dear, when ] they eotne as the price of a husband's ' embarrassment, e.kentardi.-quictude or alienation. Too often the gay young j i I wife wears them as the sign of these unhappy conditions. Tranquil hearts, i and sunny bwmr , are precious things; I too | eciotvS to be burdened and cloud- ! led by weak vanity and love of show. < Keep this in mind, oh, ye fair ones, I who have husbands in moderate eir- | : cumstances. Do not let your pride j and pleasure oppress them. Rich | clothing,—costly lace and gems, are , poor substiLutes for smiling peace and j i hearts unshadowed by care. Take ; | the lesson and live by it, rather than | offer another illustration, in your own ; i experience, ol the folly we have been i j trying to expose and rebuke. MISCELLANY. Nasby on Building up Diaocraoy. CONFMMIR X ROADS, j ! (wieli is in the Btait uv Ky. - ! April 21,1 *<)•). \ 1 hev diskivored the cause uv the , dckline uv the Dimocrasy. I seed it ! ! yisterday. I WIIZ a wunderin on the neighborin hills, a musin onto the dc ; pravity uv humanity ez exemplified in the person ov the grocery keeper at , the Cg'ners, who unamimously refoos ed to give me further credit for corn whisky, wich is the artaele they yoose ,n this country to pizen themselves with, lie assoor.ed me that he had the ' utmost regard for my many virtues, ' but he diskivercd that the one he prized j I the most I hedn't so many uv, to wit: , that uv paying for my lieker. There tore the account mite bo considered ; closed. Then for the first time in my j ■ life, .1 bcleeved in total depravity. While moosin in a luelunkaly mood on this dark cloud wich fell across the i Dimooratic party. 1 came onto a party j' uv men boriu for ile. Then thelrooth i flashed over me—-their operations showed me the way to success—the i shoot* path to triumph. •\YI en,' said 1 to myself, -when men , [ seek to gain iie they bore for iy. Tha go down ne-voratp. dtven so with the ! Dimocrasy. We dug downward ! down- ■ ward ! through all the strata uv sooio-: i ty. We went through all the grocer-1 . ies—the stratum was the most ignorant ! uv furiners, then we struk the ]>oor | [ whites South, then below them j the left uv the poor whites uv Xoo I (iersey—then Southern Illinois and Indiana, thon Bike county, Missouri, and so on ! We never went upwards for converts because 'twant no use— had to come down. We got lots of converts. There was a regular sliding scale with the heft uv Dimecrats who wasn't '■ born in the party and hev slid down, ; to wit: Ouartcr dollar smiles. /_ . t ID cent nips. 10 cent drinks. I 6 cent sucks. A flat flask concealed. A bottle openly. Dimocracy. We lost our hold for two reasons. — J First the poor lickcr wo have now, kills olf our woters too .fast, and the ta>t on whisky forced •too-tliirds qf our people to unit suulclin, and ez soon ez they begin to git on their feet jired the" Abilitionists. Secondly, our lead ers supposed there wuz no other stra tum to dig into, and they gave up q. , disgust. But I have diskivcred the lower stra tum —J have found it. and when the idea flashed over my Websterian intcl- I loot I shouted llallcloogy! Tlie nig-! get* is the lower stratum, arid ef we I bore down to it, and work it thorough ly, we hev at least twenty years' lease uv power Wo must cultivate the nigger, lit must hev the suffrage. It is a burning shame that in this Nineteenth Sentry, tho full blaze uv intelligence. livin un der a Deklarashun wieh declares all j men 'tree and eka!/ that a large body ! of men shood be denied tho glcricos 1 privilege uv being taken up to the poles and voted Js not the Afrikin a man? Is ho not taxed ez we are and as much as most uv the JDimucrasv, for many of them own property; is he not amena ble to all the laws even as we is? "Then why, I triumphantly ask, is he not ; entitled to a vote? An why not in j "deed! j 'But this is Abolition ?' methinks I hear an obtuse Diinocrasy observe in j horror—'and why give them votes, who will use them against us?' . j My gentle friend will they use their ' b'lUots agin 'is ? Ef* I knc 1 * wself I Vol. LVI, No. 19- .hink not. Ivin they road? lvin they rite? -Ai nt the bulk ot them rather legraded and low than otherwise? Methinks. Aint that the kind ot stock ive want, and the kind wieli alius sets us up? Headin has alius been agin us, —every skoal master it an enjine .,• Ablishinism—every noospaper ia a eus. Ueneral \A ice of Virginia, when lie thanked Cod there wu/.n't a nuosepa per in his district had reason to,lor do you spose a readin constituency would have kept Much a blatherskite as him in Congress year alter year. I hen agin, the Constitutional Amend ment will pass, givin representashuu to voters .alone. The Dimocratie States will have more members uv Congress and more eleetorial votes than atore the war, and on them State# we depend. But my skeein is still more compre hensive. 1 hem niggers ain't needed at the South. \\ eLi th.e.ni north. A lev; thousand will overbalance the ABiislvin -majority in jS'uo.sCJcrsey; fit ly thousand will bring Ohio back to the fold, the same number will do for Moo \ ork and Pennsylvania, and the coun try is -saved—we will be able to elect the President. Thus the pittheAbol inist dug lor us he'll fall in hissclf— tl\e club lie cut for us will break his owj; head. Honey lu/. cum out uv the carcuss. The nigger smells sweeter to me than nite (bloomiin Serious— lie is moreprc cious to me than gold or silver or pr,c cious stones. Jle is the way I shah walk in. He shel lift me to a Post orfiee. Wo must give our Afrikan brother—lor is be not a man and a brother?—not only the suffrage but he must hev land, and theHimocrasy must give it to him. 1 want (jty-ret Baffin to instantly intordoof l e * ;hi,!l to give him a section of la%id, a pa r ,ov .mules and a cook stove, and each tenialo Af rikan brother two fiarin calico dresses and a red bonnet. X want him to ad vocate the bill in a speech uv not more than two hours, so that it will stand some chance ot passim On second thought i think some other man had" better interdoo.se the bill, as the fconni*, hez got sieh a Jiabit uv votin down everything he .proposes that they'd slautcr this without considerin it. on jmeral principles. J ben wo'ivi got em. Work cz'harti oz they may and it it'll take twenty years atore the Abb'shnists ken edicato tin up to the standard uv woUu ,(heir ticket, and even that time woif'-t-dc it, it we kin get the tax taken off uv whisky, so that we kin afford to use it ez in the happy days uv yore. (joyously i went home to lay the foundation uv the new temple of ikhpV ocraey. I slept that night atwecjn 2 nigers, and hev bin sliakin hands and enquiring after the health uv the fam ilies uv all I hev met. That is hard for an orthodox Himcerat—such sud den shifts is rather wrenching on the conslionse, but what gv that? The Himecrat, who hez followed the party closely for thirty years ought not to balk at such a triflin change ez this, jpariLlciiiurly when it promises such glorious results. There's a light ,1! out to glei.rr.. Thorp's a fount about to streeui, Wait a little longer I'KTUOI.KIM V. MASBY. Lait Pastor of the Church uv the Noo Hispensashuji. Hoop-skirts, like gun-barrels, arc not dangerous unless they have something in them. But when the former .are charged —powdered, wadded, and wa terfall-capped—they should be handled with the greatest caution. In many instances it is dangerous to even look at them. ll" a man roapeth whatsoever he sew etli, what a harvest of coats and breech es our tailors -will -haye yne qf tlieso days. A Western editor, puffing an express company, says: "Anything intrusted to its care will go through straight." How about cork-screws. Josh Billings said the other night * - that a good way for a man to train gp a child in the way it should go was to travel that way occasionally himself. A man makcth a wry face over a gill of vinegar, but he taketli down a ! quart of whiskey without a twist ot his snout. Brown's Mills. r pil E undersigned are prepared to buy all kinds of Produce for cash, or receive on store atlsrowu'a Mills, Reedsville, Pa. We will Lava on hand Plaster. Salt and Coal. We intend keeping the mil! constantly running, and hare rijjiiii, As*, as, tor sale at the lowest Market rates, atall times iSaj-.The put-Uo are requested to give us h call. sep-.Ttf H. STRUNk & HOFFMAN'S. CHEAP FOR CASH THK largest Stock of well-made Tin Ware in the State, constantly kept on hand. Merchants and ! Dealers are invited to give u a call before purchasing | elsewhere. MELLO\ A SMITH, ' -sa T'!i i" be" eeatth t S'hFh;:*