BANKING HOUSE OK 1IENRY CLEWS & CO., (United States Treasury Buildings) -Vo. ;t2 Wall Street, X. Y. fVTK business of our House Is the same, In nil respects, ns tlmt of an lneiriorate Hank. f hecks and Drafts upon us pass through the Clear ing House. Corporations, Firms, and Individual keephiR Hank Aeenunts with us, either In Currency or lold. will he allowed Five J'cr Out, Interest, per annum, on nil daily balances, mid can check at niKlit without notice. Interest credited' and Ac count Current rendered Monthly. We are prepared at all times to make advances to our Dealers on approved Collaterals, at market rate. Certificates nf llennsit Issued, pavable on de mand, or after llxcd date, bearing Interest at the current late, and available in all parts of the country. Collections made promptly everywhere In the united States, Canada and Kurope. Dividends and Coupons m-nmptlv Collected, We buy, sell, and exchange all Issues of Govern ment Bonds at current market prices. Order executed for the purchase or sale of Gold and Kxehange, also for State, City, and all other lirst-elass securities. Special attention given to the negotiation of Hall Jload, City, and other Corporate Loans. We are prepared to take Gold Account on terms the same as for Currency ; to receive Gold on De posit, bearing interest and subject to check at sights to Issue Gold Certilicates of Deposit; to make Advances in Gold, against currency and other collateral, and to afford Hanking facilities generally upon a Gou Basis. 4 17 lm Who has a House to 1'aivt ? HEADY - MADE COLOllS, Known as "KATI.KOAD" Colors. Guaranteed to be more economical, more durable and more con venient than any Taint ever before ottered. A book entitled " I'lain Talk with l'ractical Paint rrs," with samples, sent free bv mail on npnlica J ',"V ,.r, y , , MASUHY& WJIITOS'. Globe White Lead and Color Works, 111 Fulton St.. New York. Established 1835. Beware of Imitations. 4 17 3m WATER WHEELS. THE DUPLEX TURBINE. "KOT Equaled by any Wheel in existence. Great economy of water. The oh winel sudnlita to rnfitHe stremiiH. Adapted to all kinds of Mills. Illustrated Pamphlet with Useful Tables neat free. J. E. BTEVENSON, 1J S3 Liberty St., N. Y. " TTOW SHALL WE PAINT OITK HOUSES,' -LA Hy J. W. JIasury, CI.. 22np., $1 50. Free by mai), on receipt of price. JIasury & Will ton, New York. 4 17 3m. " TTINTS 0N "OUSE PAINTING," By J. W. A L JIasury, CI. ji.. 4(ic. Free bv mail on re celptol price. JIASURY & WIIITON, K Y. 4173m 74 O How 1 ",iU,e !t 1,1 6 '"os-with Stencils. ' -lTl' Samples mailed free. 17 3m A. J. Fcllam, N. Y. CTJVCES jB- CLARK, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN Stoves, Tin and Sheet Iron Ware New Bloomflcld, Terry co., Tu., KEEPS constantly on hand every article usually kept In a ilrst-class establishment. All the latest styles and most Improved Parlor and Milrlicn Stoves, TO BUKN EITIIEK COAL OB WOOD I " Kiuiiitlnrr ami l?wtftur ..t,f i.n t., i. , t durablo maimer and at reasonable prices. Call tAtiiiHiiu ma a luck, 5 X Sew Carriage Manufactory, On High Street, East of Carlisle St., New Bloomflcld, Tcnn'a. rpiIE subscriber has built a large and commodl- a. ous noi)on mgii sr.. East of Carlisle Street, New Hloomtleld, Pa., where he Is prepared toiuail- uiucuue to oruer On i r i n o Of every description, out of the best material. Sleighs of every Style, built to order, and finished In the most artistic and uurauie manner. Havinif Slllierinr wni'lrmpn Iia U nrnnnrnrl to furnish work that will compare favorably with the best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable rates. S-IEPaIHING of all kinds neatly and prompt ly done. A call Is solicited. SAMUEL SMITH. Sltf OTICE TO LAND OWNERS! After the 12th dav of Aninist of tlits venr Msrm ults will be liable to be brought In the Court of Dauphin County for money due on lands in Perry County, unpatented. m- For information relative to the Patenting of aauun, van tin ii MitiittH S. 11. GALliltAlTII. .. , Attorney-itt Law i County Surveyor. Bloomtleld, March 8, 1870. tf. THE WORLD'S WONDER! Equalizing Oil! THIS Oil for Rheumatism in all its forms, cijjiuiiis, ih nine, i um, niiuimsui ull uesciip- thins. Cramp, etc., etc., etc., IS UNEQUALLED by any now ottered to the pub lie. It is for sale at SO cents per bottlo, by NOKTII E. BOLINGElt, Mlllerstown, Porry county, Pa. aho F. MOKTIMEK & CO.. New Bloomtleld, Pa. Kelief given almost instantly, and permanent A. Good Hog Story. 1 7110 M Donn I'intt's curious article " About How," ill Jnninrott' Magazine 1'or April, we tukc the fullow- ng original hog story : I once witnessed a fight between a po ny and a boar, in which both sides exhib ited a good deal of that natural art of war to which Mr. Corwin referred as blessing the many militia colonels of Con gress. 1 lind ridden homo one afternoon upon my little sturdy Tough Dick, and, turning hiin loose in the stublc lot, pour ed upon the ground a quantity of corn to serve him as dinner. Upon this, a huge boar, nearly as large and quite as heavy as the pony, trotted up, unbidden, to take part in the repast. Tough Dick, not lik ing tuc company nor the loss of his pro vender, bit the ling, who, in return threw up his tusk, catching the pony's nostril upon the point, inflicting; an ugly little wound. (Juick as thought almost, the pony wheeled and planted his two ironed heels upon the boar.s side. The blow sounded like that of a flail, rolling the hog over. iNothing daunted he regained his legs and again made at the little horse. The plucky creature was ready for him, and sent the hog rolling. This second charge seemed to give the boar a reali zing sense of the inequality of such a contest. Regaining his ieet again, he trotted some paces away and stood contem plating his foe from under his long ears. runting and snapping his jaws in wrath and disgust. Tough Dick, with his cars drawn back, eyed his antagonist as if ex pecting a renewal of the conflict. After some seconds the boar began walking in a circle about the pony, lie kept beyond the reach of his heels, and would at times walk and at times trot; and all the while Tough Dick kept his eyes on and his heels toward the foe. II113 continued for some time, and might have ended in the hog's retreat, but the pony was hun gry and aggravated at the interruption of his meal in an unhappy moment he at tempted to take a mouthful of corn. The boar, seizing the advantage, rushed 111 Escaping the heel, he charged in under the belly of the pony, and would have inf icte 1 an ugly wound with his tusks but the force of his attack carried luni beyond the point of danger and before he could escape the wicked pony had him by the ear precisely as a dog would have caught him. The boar squealed dismally and began turning so as to bring his tusks under the throat or jaw of the ene my. Mowly but steadily he swung around suffering intense torture in the twisting given his unhappy car. luuding the boar likely to gain his point, the pony suddenly released the car. The two had been pulling with their entire weight against each other, and the unexpected release staggered the hog, and ere he could recover a well directed kick rolled him over. I thought him killed ; but ho slowly recovered, and, raising to his feet staggered away, pausing at times to shake his ugly head, as it wondering how it all came about. Ey A servant girl who was sent a day or two ago to a druggist in New York with a rcnucst that he would give her some castor-oil, " disguised as much as much as possible, was asked bv the dm gist if she liked soda water, and replied in the affirmative. The dru2rist thereu- on pon gave her a glass BtroDgly flavored wun lemon, with much oil cast upon the troubled water. Noticing that she linger ed after receiving this, the dru??ist in quired the cause, and was told that she was waiting lor the oil. Uh, replied the man of drugs complacently, "you have taken that." The startled woman gazed at him in dismay a moment and then exclaimed 'Oh, murder, I wanted it for a man who is very sick. JBSF Thousands of ladies suffer untold miseries from Female Weakness, weal back, and other disordered conditions o their peculiar systems, of which there is no remedy so pleasant, positively sure ant reliable as Dr. Pierce's Alternative Ex tract, or Golden Medical Discovery. Sold by druggists, or enclose three dollars an twenty-five cents to Dr. It. V. Tierce Buffalo, N. Y., and get three bottles de livered free. Deacon Day. There was a deacon of a church of the name of Day, by trade a cooper One Sabbath morning ho heard a number of boys who wero play ins; in front of his house, and he went out to check the Sabbath profanation. Assum ing a grave counteuanco, he said to them " Boys, do you remember what day this is t" " Yes, Sir," replied one of the boys " Deacon Day, the cooper." Thi) Hutch Umbrella Mender Ho Tells his experience I I.W. in de umprella business now, und pells also sccond-hanted ones too, und I m maken bretty good out. De vay I comes in mit dis kind of piziness was, dat know dat dare ish blenty of vet vedder latel y, und dat every family vot ish dcr ownor over a gouble of uniprellas shencr aH y 1 lave doo or dhrec of dem proke ; so dar 1 sec mine ghanccs for to maken mon- lsu mi t, und 1 startzen nut dat dings at once t irectly. I gc t a olt bair of scizzors and a binch- ers for mine tools, and dlirce cents worth, of cop per vire und some olt valcpones, und a . lecdlc plack dhrcad, und a von-eye-ed ucctlle, and dar the whole piziness ish. JJcn Itake mine old proken pine umbrella untct mine arm for a sign, und I startzen out to f aw how it goes. De fursd tay 1 don't li kc dat dings much, so I keep avay u t vhcre hardly 110 houses vas, on acgount dat I don't likes no beoplcs tosaw me m dt .t umprella piziness und cvary dime -ven I sing out, ' Umprellas to mend,' I vas awl ul alraid somcpody v ill hoar ine. I'm proke- inter de piziness now, unt I holler out- und don't care for somcpody. 1 ish lear ned all dcr robes of dcr dhradc. Ven I ge ts a nice umprella to mend now, I tells de lady 1 vill uiakcn a nice shob outer it, 1 ind vill dook mine dime over it, dat she m ight ash veil go incr house, ash I vill ca 11 her out ven I get done. Den I sitzen down on tor stheps und pegins mit mine vork . Und ven dat umprella own ei lady goes in der house, I back und I sneak a ay outer dat neighporhood, und sells de ar ticlc for vot it vill fetch. Dat ish de vtiy our sthock vas kept ub. Some loousu ueepics vouiu call uat dings a thealen ; but dis chap don't call it dat. V mils it a shmart idea. 1 vns by Camden yesterday mit mine new piziiiu ss, und I raise a splendid silk umprella from a young Frenchman. Ho gives it nut me to mend, und ven he turns his pack away, I followed his exam rdi, linr (rnt. nvnir nub wlr noli T i..r. una the a rticlc ish now ub or sale. Y en you kiic w somepony vot ish 111 vont ot a nice silt ; umprella so near ash good ash new, you know vhcre to send him. Ven you send :i gustoiuer, I makes a pargain nut you to mend all your olt umbrellas, 1 T 1 J. 1 . unu luon 1 gnarges you some dings ; so dat'sfair. If dat Frenchman py Dhird und Bin e Straus catches me mit dat urn prella, I dinks ho vill dhry aud valk me Spanish. 1 vill geepa good look out. Yours , 1 ait a umprella to mend, (UlIRISTOPHEa Sugex, IT. D. Breaking it Easy. When t he lamented Judge Daglcy tripped and lell down the court-house stairs and 1 iroke his neck, it was a great question how to break the news to poor Mrs. Dag ley. Dut finally the body was put into lhggin s wagon, and he was in structed to take it to Mrs. B., but to be very guar dad and discreet in his language and not to break the news to her at once but do it gradually and gently. YVhcn Iliggins j;ot there with his sad freight, he shouted sill Mrs. Bagley came to the door. J. lieu he said : ' Does th e widdcr Bagley live here ?" " 1 ho viu tow Bagley ! No sir. " I'll bet she docs. . But have it your own way. w en, docs J udge Jiagley live here r "Yes, Judge Bagley lives here." " I'll bet he don't. But never mind, it ain't for me to contradict. Is the judge in?" " No, not at present." "I jest tixpected as much. Because you know take hold o' suthin, mum, for 1 ni agoin t) mako a little communication and reckon maybe it'll jar you some. There's Leen an accident, mum. I've got the old judge curled up out here in the wagon and when you see him you'll acknowledge yourself, that an inquest is about the only thing that could be a com fort to him.." figyAladyat Gloucester, Mass.. a day or two since invited a number of friends to'hcr house to tea. During the meal the guests found the cup that cheers but not inebriates so bitter as to bo unfit for use. The next day the lady of the house discovered, to her mortification, that sho had sweetened the tea with ep- soni salts, a quantity of that useful but unpalatable article having been placed on the sarae shelf with some granulated su gar. JBJa? Why do our corns ache j ust pre- vious 10 rainr xsecause our ieet swell from the sudden depression in the density ui mi , uuu vnu nuru uoru, nut ueing Clas tic is painfully stretched and pressed. A Good Story. Once upon a time thcro lived among the' hills of an adjoining country nil old gentleman, whose entire personal and real estate consisted of a wife, a well ventila ted log cabin, half an acre of not very productive land, and a violent fondness for what is somettonciJ called " tangled' whiskey. One spring morning the own er of all this property was Btruek with conviction that his laud must be plowed. But he had no horse, and found it im possible to borrow one. Nevertheless the ground must bo broken up, horse or no horse, and it was finally determined that the " old woman" should hitch up the old man, and hold the handle and drive, while lie drew the plow, lluswus accor dingly done, and the plow went bravely on, until the plowshare ran under a root and the team was brought to a dead halt. But the " critter" had become warmed up by this time, land as the old lady gave him a rap with the reins and cried " git up there !" he threw his weight upon the harncsswith a heavy jerk, which snapped the traces off short, and he shot forward against the fence, his head striking the end of a rail with the force of a mule. " Thunderation old woman !" he exclaim ed, as he wiped the blood and dirt from his eyes, " why didn't you say w-h-o-a f" Too old and Lame. The Rev. E. L thad an old parish ioner and communicant whom he had been visiting during a short illness. At last the medical attendant called and informed Mr. L 1 hat the old uian was dying: whereupon he immediately went to him to administer the sacrament; after which he told the old man's wife that her husband would not live long, and if there was anything she wished to say to him she had better do it while he was able to understand her. She imme diately went to his beside and said : "John, Mr. L 1 says you are going to die. I wish, when you get to Heaven you'd look out for my first husband, and tell him I've been doin' pretty well sin' ho left mo, an' I often wish I might see him again." The old man turned his eyes upon his wife. With deprecating expression, and raising himself a little, he replied; " Lord help thee, Mary, how docst thec think that, owd and la'am as I bo I can go rounging all over Heaven to find thy first husband 1" Old Ctcsar aud the Angel. There used to be a pious old negro in Boston named Caesar, and ho was in the habit of praying so loudly as to be heard by many of the neighbors. On retiring for the night his petition invariably was: " Lord send dy angel for ole Caesar, ole Caesar always ready." One evening two of his neighbors, good men but sometimes bored by his "style," thought they would try him on. They took position at his door and when the usual petition was made that the " Lord would scird the angel, ole Caesar being always ready," they knocked loudly at the door. " Who dar!" said the old darkey. " The angel of the Lord, come for old Caesar." was the renlv. 1 ------ r -j .Out went the light, a scrambling into bed was heard, and then, in trembling voice, that same old uncle said y " Go way dar! go way ! Ok Caesar been, dead dis ttsn yearn. A Happy Boy. " I say, boy, why do you whistle so gaily?" " Because I'm so happy, mister." " What makes you so happy '(" " Cause I've got a new shirt ; look a-hcre ; ain't it nice '" " It don't look very new. What is it made of?" " Why, 'tis new, 'cause mam made it yesterday out of dad's old 'un '(" " And what was dad's old' un made of?" "Why, one of granny's old sheets, what her mam give her." JB" A young lady of eighteen was en gaged to be married to a gentleman of thirty-six. Her mother having noticed her low spirits for some time, inquired the reason. " Oh dear, mamma," replied the young lady, " I was thinking about my husband being twice my ago." " That's very true; but he's ouly thirty-six." " lie's only thirty-six now,.dear mamma ; but when I'm sixty" Well ?" " Oh dear ! why then he'll bo a hundred and twenty!" A careful analysis by the chemist of the Board of Health of New York, of thirty samples of cosmetics used by the women for " boautifying" their complex ions, revealed the fact that their princi pal ingredients were load and bismuth. luvo specimens ; of " lilly white" turned out to bo nothing but marble dust. SUNDAY BEADING. Have yon pulled up the Anchor! Wc have heard a storv of two drunken sailors who had to cross a Scotch frith nt, night. I bey leaped into the boat, and pulled away at the oars with all their might; they pulled and pulled, and won dered they did not reach the shore. In their maudlin state they thought the tide was ct against them, and so, in a wild lashion, tbey tot k spe.ls of pulling, but no shore did they reach. Great was their astonishment; for the frith was narrow, antf a quarter of an hour should have seen them at the opposite beach. " Surely," they said. " the boat is be witched, or wc." The night wore on, and the morning light explained the mys tery to tncir sober eyes. " YVliy, Sandy, 111011, we never pulled up the anchor!" Just so ; and thus, tug as they might, they labored in vain. Many and many a sinner has been in like case. lie has tried to believe, always a strange thing to do, but all his trying has come to nothing; peace has been as far off as ever. The means of grace have been unavailing, prayer has brought, no answer of joy, the man has been ready to de-pair, and blamed fate and the devil, and a thousand other things. Meanwhile the real cause of the soul's long delay has been unnoticed ; the heart has never real ly loosed its hold of its self-righteous hopes never fairly pulled up the anchor and trusted itself to Jesus. Reader, how is it with you ? Have you heaved the anchor? Have you done with self? If not, all your efforts are idle, all your prayers and tears are fruitless, and you see clearly that they must be so. Man up with the anchor ! Let go every trust but Jesus', and you will soon bo at the desired haven. Not in Human Nature. An estimable lady, a personal and be loved friend of mine, said to me, when urged to forgive injuries, " it is not in hu man nature to forgive injuries as goading as these." You arc right, my friend, I re plied it is not in human nature; but it is in the grace of Christ. He has charged us: "Love your enemies; bless them, that curse you ; and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you ; that ye may be the children of our Father which is in heaven." The lady had a long struggle with herself, but though the grace of Christ overcame. Sho for gave from the heart, and was a happier woman, and a more exemplary Christian ever after. These are high Christian virtues. They are not imaginary, nor are they beyond Christian attainment. JBST The old city of Troy had but one gate. Go round and round the city, and you could find no other. If you wanted to get in, there was bnt one way, and no other. So to the strong and beautiful city of Heaven there is one gate and no other. Do you know what it is? Christ says, " I am the Door." He that cannot be useful on great occasions, may die without exerting his abilities, and stand a helpless spectator of a thousand vexations which fret away happiness, and which nothing is requir ed to remove but a little dexterity of con duct aud readiness of expedients. 6? The dearest word in onr language is Love. The greatest word is God. The word expressing the shortest timo is Now, Tho three make the greatest aud sweetest duty of man. Faith is the key that unlocks tlie cabinet of Heaven's treasures, the King's messenger from the celestial -world, to bring all the supplies we need out of the fullness that there is in Christ. &3T A man's true wcalih hereafter is tho good he does in this world to hid fellow man. Jt Vice does not pay ; the sin is less sweet than we fancied, and it cost,s more than we bargained for. No cloud can ovcrshdow a Chris tian but the eye of his faith will discern a rainbow in it- CGyLife becomes useless and insipid when we have no longer either friend. or enemies. JfJ There are more victims to errors committed by society itself than sooiety supposes. B" livery thin'' we add to nur i I edgo adds to our means of usefulness.