VrwiT-m UN .J.U iA aaraaaaaV-.(t tl A.dvretttlnsr llate 4m comnin one year, 00.00 One-half, column, one year, , 80.00 One-lourth column, one year, 15.00 On sqnsr (10 linm) 1 insertiott 75 Krery additional Insertion, . 50 Professional and Business card nl net more than 5 line, per year, 8.00 Auditor, Executor, Administrator and Assignee Notice, 8.50 , Editorial notice pet line, 16 All transclent advertising lei tbao moaths 10 cent a line. AU advertisements for a shorter pe riod than one yew re payable at (be Mm they are ordered, and it not paid jie person ordering them will ut a Id; aipoaJlble for. the monsv. X oetry THE DRUM. BTJAMRS W. fclLSY. ' Oh the dram! There I tome t Intonation tn the grunt Monotony of utterance that strike the ipirit dumb, As we bear Through the clear ' - And unclouded atmosphere. Therntubllng palpitation roll It upon ' the earl Thri a part 0( the art Of the musie throbbing heart, That .thrills a something In us that awakens with a start And In rhyme With the ebime And exactitude of time Goes marching on to to glory to thy melody sublime. And the guest Of the breast That thy rolling robs of rest Is a patrlotlo spirit a a Contiueutal die seed; And he looms From the glooms Of a century of tombs. And the blood he spilled at Lexington in living beauty blooms, And his eyes Wear the guive Of a nature pure end wise ; And the love of thorn in lifted to a smoothing in the skies That is bright Rd and white,' , With a blur of starry light. As it iuuglis In silken ripples to the breezes duy and night. There are deep Hushes creep O'er the pulse as tltey leap. And the murmur, fainter prow Inn, on the silenoe full asleep; While the prayer Rising there Wlll the (tea and earth and air As a heritage to Freedom's sou and daughters everywhere. Then with sound As profound As the thundering rewound, Come thy wild reverberations in a '-Antfifefcha hake the trrouud. Flung on high Like the big flag it flutter by, Wings rapturously upward till it nes tle In the sky. MULE OF TEXAS. Mule of Texas, ere we part. Tell me why you will not start; Or if really you must balk, Tray excuse, my wicked tulk. Hear my vow before I go, 111 be even with you, though. Hy your long tail nnconfliicd, . Wooed by every pausing wind, - By those keels, so wondrous swift Whiolt can nieq o'er tree top lift, liy those ears that droop so low, I'll be even with you, though. By those ribs I long to haste, By your show of d. b. taste, By 'the melancholy bray That alarms folks miles away, By your stern resolve to Whoa, I'll be even with you, though. MuKof Texas, I am gone; Think of iue, sweet, when alone, Fori fly to get a club; Then your blamed old back I'll drub If I cannot make you go, I'll be even with you, though. Boston Post. GENTLE INFLUENCES. Violets, In the leafless shade, By their odors are betrayed; Soft winds, over flower fields blown, By their fragrant breath are known, Dew, by freshened leaves confessed. Wet unseen earth'sslumbering breast; KUls, from out the bleak hillside, Swell to rivers, deep and wide; Rivers flowing fast and free, Widen to the boundless sea; All great things that move the earth To gentle issues owe their birth; And soft influence still Is best, Bringing eoiufort, love and rest Sweet domestic love Is strong Leads to right and warns from wrong, Kindly whispers mightier prove, And to loftier action move, Than thj fretful voice of scorn. Of contempt and anger born. oond in a fit the man with a new suit of clothes. Too ranch smoking is Just as in jurious to a man as it it to bam. BagaroU fool with money and the world's people will swallow bim. Candy len t food for children. A tick In 'some other form U often toor wholesome. . . . A Ciaolonali man lock twenty - Mvan drinks of whisks sod iaes- paeted to die. This aboald warq all drinkers to slop st the twenty, sixth, III VOL.19. MIDDLEQUItG, SNYDEIl COUNTY, eletit The Beautiful Singer. Oustavus Adolphns, Sweden's heroic king, was food of music. Tho sweet voioe of song, especially from the lips of childhood, often moved him to tears. One upon a time Qostavps Adolphns, after long aoJ severs fighting, had conquered a strongly fortified town, in wliinli era citizens who had been born within the limits of the Swedish rule hot bad since found new home. And all these people he condemned to death. Tbey were marched out from the town at nightfall, to be held io camp until tbs following morning, when they sere Io be shot tor treason. Several of bis o&toera interceded with tbs king-for the lives of these pool people. 2?ut Oustavus felt that he bad al ready granted enough. First io tbs ruddy heat . of his passion he bad ooneigoed the whole tribo to death i bnt aiooo then hs bad gnat ly modified tbs aentence, condemn ing only tboss of the fortuor sub jecte of 8weden who bad been taken with arms in their bands i and from this no power of persuasion or argu ment coul J move him. All the talk of his old cbuplain about tbeso eo ple haviog only joined their fellows io protecting the homes to tbsir wives and child id, moved bim not an atom. "Tbey are traitors 1" he said, "and ae traitors tbey shall die 1" At a lale hour it was past mid night Oustavus Adolpbue threw ou bis cloak and drew bis slounhed Lnt down over Lis tye; ",uT u bund, wandered forth io the dark ness. Without thinking whither be went, be bio sly walked on, answering the seutinels as thoy hailed biro, tin td at length hie steps were arrested by a strain of music Who is that t" La asked cf a s.-n-j tiutl whom be chsuced to meet a moment later. "It is one of the prisoners, siro The wife and children of one of tleir chief men bare had preiuission to r ---, niut wit5 tu8 huebaad and atliaa, " . . - The kinp nodded bis thanks for bis it for niation, and moved on, f1 lowly be approached tbc tent from which the music issued, and as bo dicw utar be beard a deep, tuauly oico : "liubb I ZAihu ! Weep not Clod Mill provide I" I The king looked in through the open seam in the cloth and saw a, gray haired mau, with an imposing I presence a grand face and head, I and a clear flashing eye, sarrouojed by bis wife and children, who clung to bim with passionate tendor ness. . ; Hnshrhe said.M"It us 'not make these precious moments dirk-1 Adolphus by that act of mercy, se er than tbey need to be. It is but cured the friendship which was to bo the fortune of war, my loved tines. Gome, my llermioos sing to me, once more, our dear old song of tbe Fatbeland I For, tbongb Gustavas will take my life, yet I love tbs land that save birth. Ood bless dear Sweden, now aud ever more I Now Hermions sing : Come let tby voioe give my poor heart cheer if it may be. Presently thereafter a beautiful girl of fifteen or sixteen summers threw back tbe silken hood from her golden curls, and began to sing Her song wss tbe Swede's oldest and most cherished piece of music the words fnll of lovs and devotion love of borne aod of country, and tbe melody was peculiarly sweet andtoacbing. Aod never bad tbe king beard it song so grandly. Tbe words fell op on bis ears with a new meaning, and tbe musio touched bis spirit with a strangely awakening power. As we cnarmtng melody swelled to grander and grander tones, and the voice of tbe singer deepened and strengthened, tbs listener felt his heart bush with awe. And finally, when tbe last riob cadenoe died away, in mellow, melt ing echoes opon tbe op per air, be pressed bis bands over bis eyes, apd burst into tears. - . - After a time Oustavus lifted sis bead and looking once more through tbe spertnre in tbe wall of the Uot be saw tba family opon their knees, nd beard tba voioe of tbe old man raised in prayer, He listened fot a few seconds aud then turned atd strode away towards bis , tiusters. wbsre be found two of ble sttrsd- acts sitting . op waiting for hip. Aod to one ol tbea be laid "Colonel 1 wish yon to go to tbs prisoners' quarters, and in tbs large teot nearest to the river it is at the extreme oortb-western corner of the camp yott will find tbs family of a prisoner named lloveo and of that family Is a girl named Hermions Bring ber to me. Assars her that ob barm shall bcfalt ber." Aod when tbs messengers had gone tbe king turned to bis table aod having found the necessary mater ials be went to work at writing. He wrote rapidly and heavily, like one moved by ponderous idess i aod he just finished his work when the Colonel appeared with him tbe gen tle songstress in coinpnuy. "Fear not, my child," tbe king said, tbs maiden standing trembling before Mm, "I have sent for yoo be cause I wieb to repay yon for a great good yon unconsciously did me this night. Do yon call to mind that you sang tbe dear old song of tbe Vasas tbe hymn of tbe father land V "Yes, yonr majesty, I sang it for my father, who is to die on the mor row. Though oo longer in Swedoo, ho dearly loves tbe memory of the land that gave bim birth." "Well, I chanced to hear yoo sing and you shall ere long know bow yonr song affected me. Here ! Take this paper, and go with it to tbe of ficer commanding tbe camp of the priwoneis. Colonel Forsby will go with you. tud my child, the Doxt time you sing that song, think of Oustavus Adolphns Vassits, aud benr wituess that hi heart w.ii not all hurd, nor cold." Tbe girl looked np into tho mot), ireh's face a she held forth the paper end when she saw the geuiul kiudly look tbiit beamed upou ber, she obeyed the impulse of the moment, and caught bis baud and kissod. And wheu she went a-ay sho bore with ber tho royal ordor for tbe free pardon and instant release nf nil tlia titiumima Tfiu nt.l !i.n' ernl to whom the order bad been directed fur promulgation aud exe cution wus oue of thoeo ho Imd 4.. ... uarassiiy pieauen in uenuif 01 iun , -. - .,. . , j , . - .Veadilrj imagine tho joy with which be re ceived it. He fairly caught the beautiful messenger iu his arms, audi kissed In r upon her forehead, aud blessed her ; aud he went with bur to the tent where ber father was held, and allowed bur to publish the' joyful tidiuys. And with tha dawn of day the prisoners to the number of 200 w,.ro mustered into Hne, many of them believing their hour bad come to receive the intelligence of Pardon !flUl Freedom I What transpired Leyoud that can be imagined full as well ss we cau tell. We only add. that Gnstavua of incalculable value to bim in com ing time. And one other thing : In less than a year from that time Col. Ulrio Forehy, of the Kinu's staff, gained for a wife tbe beautiful eioger whom sweet notes bad melted the heart of Oustavus Adolphns, aud given life and liberty and joy to aufforing men. Wisdom. A clean band wants no washing. A bad day never has a good nigbL A careless watch invites a vigilant foe A heart unspotted is not easily daunted . Nothing overcomes passion more than silence. He is tbe freeman whom tbe truth makes free. Good breeding is a letter of credit all over tbe world. He who knows not when Io be silent knows not when to speak. He who would be a great soul in future must be a great soul now. It requires a strong, good man to ssy, "I was mistaken, and am sor ry." ' Never rnn op small debts. Credi tors sre like children tbe smaller tbsy are tbe more tbey cry. ' Ueojamln Franklin says there are three friends wbo will never deceive or dessrt Ty t "A tried wife, an old dog, and reay money. ' " , . A Syracuse auiidsa has promised to marry Iva different men. Tbe papers rater to ,er ae "a promilo V h, '"J1"' M P -arf uoiely baUe." ' -tklJ toW IW vglu.'' , "MOW." , "How many of our rich yachtroen really care anything for yachting f How much bnppior life might be if the mind could be trained to for get past troubles. How bard it is to avoid listening and liking to listen to a scandal about our neighbor, w tame life would be without troubles and ditlioukies to overcome How few vslue or cultivate a good pair of lens and lungs. How tbe old are forgotten by the youog. flow unfortunate that so ranny of the aged should make themselves un attractive and eveu repulsive to the young. How strong we feel when we nev er have been sick. ow many men and women are there without a weak spit some where How whisky does bring out a man's true nature and show the make-tip and artificial side of his moral char acter. How much bettor is a "dog's life" than thut (if some woiuon. How fuw uov broom, after nil . sweep clean unless there's a clean sweeper buhiu tbeiu. llow soiry somo pnoplo are for faults which they commit again next month. How awfully awful it would be if everybody without Waruiog told the truth. How wo do love to shut our eyes to w hat we four may be reality. 7ow much good wo would do wcro we only rich. llow little good we do wheu wu are rich. How contrary and ecconlrin seems one who thiuks for bim or her self. Hon poor are the mediciual spirits Mold by oue-thiid of our druggists. How very large tho book iu which Uiig'ul bo written all we don't kuow. How veiy small the book iu which might be written till we do know. How fi.-w Imrbcis cuu shave a miiu w i I boil t trying ou hiui their coiiver - ' n I - ihiiimhii pi i. Hw .uneti more we do kuow ut twenty thuu at folly. Zow useless it is to arg lie With 111 woman wheu sho is uugry Or a man How little credit is given to chil dren fur whnt they sue, hear and un derstand. How much dignity a cigar does put iu somo men's mouths aud bear ing. How charming and beautiful are the green fields aud groves io books. How hot are the grecu fields and how the mosquitoes do bite iu the groves out of books. llow dillioult it is to tell whose boiler will blow op next. How sad to thiuk it will bo some body's boiler. How we do go on nursing our hidden pet sin uutil it fiuds us out and blows ns up. How idiotio ia to act on the max im, '-Never put off till to-morrow what can be done to day." How trucb better is it "Never do anything to-day that can be put otf till to-morrow." How few understand that if too many things be nudertakeu to-day none of them will be well or thor oughly done. llow much harder ia liviog tbau dying. How does she head f How much more money we spend than we mean to. llow Lard it is for the many to make both ends meet, and what poor) ends they are when they do meet. How very poor riches cau make men. How will millionaires get their letters of ore lit recognized and hon ored io heaven 1 How history does lie. How many troths are scorned and laughed at and bow many fictions are belived aod honored. How qnickly a man or woman gets old when tbey insist on being old, feeling old and acting old. How little young people care If tbey are fools, and bow angry peo ple are because young people dou't care if tbey are fools. "Sam, wby don't you talk to yosr matUr and tall him to lay tip trees ores l bvtvsa f "Wbst'e de ne f 18 PA, SEPTEMBER Dying Nations. Wbydonationsdie Colli vnted Greece, and all -conquering JVjtnei Vandal, aod Goth, and Hun. and Moor, and Pole, and Turk, all dua l or dying. Why t Murdered by no tions more p iworful ? Swallowed by eratlxjuakts ? Swept say by pesti lence or plnirno. or starved by piti less famine ? Not by any of theso. N'ot by the lightning and thundor i not by the tempest and the storm , not by the poiounod air, or volranic fires did they die! Thy perished by moral degradation, Illegitimate result of ghitlouy, intemperance aud effeminacy. When a nation becomes rich, then there is leisure ami the means of indnlgeoo I - in tho appetites and pnnions of our nature, which wear the body and wreck the ruin I. Ax with nations, ho with familiee. Wealth tukesawnt tho wholnftom; , stimulus of effort idleiiesi open the llood-gates of passionate indulg ence, and the heir of millions dies heirless and poor, nnd both name Bnd memory inglorioiiHly rot. If. thin, tl.MO is any truth nnd force in argument, each man owns it to himself, to his country, aud mora tliuu all, to his M ikor, to live a lif'J of temperance, industry and t ics of Crawford county aro all run-self-denial as to every nuitual gruti- niug ou lull time. fu'atiou ; and with theno haiug au ' to the glory of (1 .1. this na tion oT our will with mcrcasMig prosperity ami renown until, with ouo foot on land and another on sen. tho nttgcl of eternity proclaims time no longer. Eve fiirlation Wiuking rij-'ht eye 1 lovo you. Wluking lei t eye I hato you. Winking both ejos No. Winking both eyes twice We arc watched. Winking right eye twice I am cnaod. Winking left eyo twice I nm lunrried. 'ulting rii-Ut I'.ire fiugor Ij rlhi "...v., ! vim inrx ma f y , ...,.., , , , i , I I'mlioi, riirlif tlne.l r.,i',e 1 .1 riilit ........ n-- I fl I tt CVe W'liUUI do VOU luve f . ....Ihl'eO liirjflil .S) III .ivne .'utting left Lrtlinger 10 ilht eye'coiiuly turn out one tbu,. and sides Cull 1 see V"U hullie l.,f I.. ,n,... , ... 1 . .. .- I.. 1.. I.-. .. .1. eye Poo't do yet. Draj'ping rj clidr Yes, lUisiug i-yc-bruws Give uij s kis. Wiukiuir riilit rye tlien loll tyo Won't you come t Winking lull eyo thuu right eye Will you koj iu. i h-iiiio ? Covering right eyo with ribt baud W ll you wulk with me f C ivi-iing hit eye with Icll hand Let ins alone . Covering left ey e with right baud Have I ollutided you. C iveriug right eye with loft bead Wait lid uuotliur tium. Coveting kit eye slowly Try and love 1110. A young iu:tu who lives in Austin, and wboso moustache is like fititu, "the evidence of things hoped for. the anbstaiice of things not yetoveriu Wasbiugton- hdcii, vitnoii iijiiiu uiv pruspuuiivu l..t I. I .r.... -..:.... I iniuui-iu-iai., null a,u. uun uuiiuo that be intedJtfd marrying the old man s daughter at au earl date. "It bad better take place ou some Sunday, so that it will not interfere with your school hours,'' sarcastic ally said the old man. During the burning cf tbe MoCti cello Wine Compauy's cellars at Charlottesville, Vs., a few days siuce the flow of wine intj Scheuck's branch augmented it to siiiih a da gree tint Cochran's mill was enabled to grind having boda suspended b.i fore by the drought. This may be reoorded, perhaps, as tho first iu stauce of a mill wheel turned by wine. Tbe great Smith family have been holding a graud reunioo at Peapaok, New Jersey. Tbe reuuion was uot strictly a failure or a suocdss, as very few of tbe Smiths were there only fifteen or twenty thousand, and that included the Schmidts, Smite and Tohmids. It is not known whether there were any John 8roi,b's among them. . A Detroiter dreamed ' that he had died aud was banished to Satan's snltry kingdom, and says be fonnd many earthly customs in vogue there , About si "ls it hot every roao be a aiiked iinviUtione from promiuent rolitfion- I ery man be ny enough for you T" -ft 2'J, 1.881. NO, 11, ... .F.sslun has more lager beer saloons lliao tnlieiie. .., Throughout Tioga county the crows are vety numerotif. .... I'ennslvstiitt manufactures moro chfess than New Yolk. . . . . PotntdS sell at the rale cf three dollars per l-Ushil at I'lio. ... .The Schuylkill canal cannot accommodate its coal Imsinets. , . . . Hoi se thieve are operating extensively iu anLinglou county. .... Doks ma being poisoned in many of the towuLipH of lMewaie county. , . . . .Scarlet favor lns broken oat the second liiuu iu Shuinukui thin slmmor. ' . . . .f'liHter county i abandoouig (he raising rf Iiom to cultivato to bacco. ....The cl,;ii oal fnrnacea of Centre county have mute or li ra than they can till. . . . .The chocau fai-torios in Ven sngo coiinly are doinj a thriving busiues. . . . .tJeii H-trrison .llh-n, of War r,'u "-auditor genital, keeps a livo ry stable, j , . . .The tolling mills and fotin 1- ....Aury Styers, of (Iroene coiinl v, was giucd to death by an Infuriated steer in a drove, . . . .Tho manufacture of cnllery in Heaver county is to be increased by additional factories. . . . I'nipl-tycs of tho custom h'MiHe at l'hiladelpliiii work more hours now than ever they did. Am .TwIhi W ICillintn.p fif . lou. JoUII . Illimgtr, VI Labauon county, owns extuusive tracts of laud iu California. ....Shade trees Met oul last spring aud orchurd4 planted at the same time have died by the drought. .... tti-thlebem, Northampton j county, is the wool hit minufuc- i turer for tho euetoru part of the i turer lor tho Lui Stale. v.uij iiiriiij-iuiii uours, . . . . in i) -viiii, voi iuieer nro compaiiiea have reported to appeal at tho HtuJing to'Ji-uuiuut tbu month . . . .ThiTro is a hlitrWuitU named Isaac Hirst, iu Tiinkhaunock, who shues u horso all u round iu forty miuutes. ....Thomas Near, of Clarion. Indiana count v, is seveu foet hiih. " ' aud utteuds camp mouliugs to order. uep ....Liipur dmlcrd ia I.uliiIi couuty say that tiie tiuos and costs iu the prosecutions) to whioti thuy are subjected, eats up u II their pro tits and uiuoli of their capital. . . . .Tho relative.! of Johu IJIohs ing, of Krio, who Wii dowued at Atlautio t'ity, refuse to fuliill hi-t will, which Dir.flj llml l.iu I, . I. I... reJuceJ (0 aHUe8 Rt tUo i..iovua . . . .The small pox is spreading in Philadelphia. Sixty -to uow cases were reported duriug tho last week aud thirty-seven additional cases ou Thursday and Friday last. .... V Xnv -loriey wi I v co il lu't earn fix dollars a wnpb at the wash tub. She became a clairvoyant, and ' hor income increase I to sixty. It just shows that a man begrudges the ipjuiter lie pays for washing bis shirt, while he will cheerfully give a dollar to stick his uoso into the other world before tbe sho be gins. . . .One-half tho mills within fif ty miles of Alluutowu have stopped operation's. .... A number of houses on the block of ground between Fifteenth aud Sixteenth Streets and Pennsyl vania, aveuue and Callowhill Street, Philadelphia, have been purcbasod by tbe lteading Hailroad Company. They will be torn down and a spa cious new depot, it :s expected, will be built on tbe site. The materials of the holdings is now offered for sale. . . . . Messrs, Moody and Bankey , tbe revivalists, are about going to Eogland, where tbey will hold reviv. si meetings j also id Ireland and Scotland, Tbey aspect to be goue about two. years They ro onder lilts thea'e- frilM I'OriTi ruMlshed every ThnMdrtv Kventnjf JfiRKIIIAII CBOU8E, Proa-f Terms of StiliMftption, TWO 1X1 LIA R TER A X Kt'M. Ps ahle vithin sit month? , at f2..riifiirT ' paid wilhtti the year. No paper di ciiiiimied until all ArreuruRrs ate riaid unless at the option of the puts. iiher. Flils riptlnimiti1e Of the Cttiit I PAVAIII.K IX ADVANCI. WI'iTBoim liflim and naif1: paets addressed (ithr liecofnecnhscriherS and ro liahlo furthe price ofthermper Jeff. Davis lias reached L'ng'snJ, tin will find there, no donU, many persons of h'ih decree who will re ceivo hitn with hcarfinesit, sod gito" to him dixtingtiislmd consiileratiori The holdt rs if the rnnfeilerste cot ton loan will protmhly not be among tho mn ardent of his a tinirers, but they mihl iuvite him to Join witll them in Ik-Mid u luru'ir far com mon copsolalion. All bnclH-lor wonl 1 ;Le to shake hands with the luati named Morse who recently pot married and four week later applied to the Legisla ture and had bis name changed let llo-Morsc, THE GREAT SKIN CUIiE. INFALLIBLY CUR S Itrhiinj Hint tkitlif litti, Sera f ii?iii.i Imiior.i, t'liirf, Old Sort itH'I Mi tu'llriiil At'' f'ei'tlnnfi irJifli nil titSi f llimuiii Aitni'l' Tlt;ri-TiiTlt TUMI U NT. lr hl rur mt smn,Si.!, una HI.h1 IM i. n. l.ia In thn lnt' rnl ii r-f M'Tmi'ka Km"i.v. nt.iIi n lllnnii l'urln-r. un l Oiinrnl ol li iici in u. I'rTiMiit ;s,-, in IrMI Slitn rtiTv. fr'of suniuirti. tun nfi I Orn.tf Shin a-S Ciiiii n -' r, n riqul.lts I'MI-i. had, ami mir-try annnilvr ir,rni w 1 1 ta il..uu tlifwtroaur una uvslintf b,l-,tn. Mil It l( Ileum. Will Wrll .ria, '.'Mil l- srlmfn. Si . t'Uli-"i urffftilnltjr K.-kn-lt . rur ul It Hheuns o bo1, uvi'k, Ike, nnrta nn l lr .,r t-rn-lfn )' : fl I nl'lt In wain I ..n Uafl It art'l kn- fr nno var t imiI si.ld I , hvlp f u t'.fflklil yr. t trie. I l.un.lr-l. nf MM i ; l.M?tur. prnn-iuiii-afl hi e li-t- f i. ri!iani'iitl; re l l.y tii Culliuri It- i.e llna, I'soi Insls. II. F. t illlMntar. . Iln.1-ir " V , fiifad ol r.mla-lii .,r I.t.i.y. .f iwt-ntr T'' ' ' I- i'i tii i m KK..Lrr lnlr i,,u, aniiitK is iiimiiim n..r at- teroally. Tl.a mt w. n'lerlnl c- -n rword ur orilfiMl lu bfr a juill" at th fa- anl I'tomlDiint i-liliaoa. All aRllotaxl mtlt Imhln n I Hrl I !--. Ui iU anil lout lur tctluiunUI Io lull. kiii llltruse. V. II. Irab. a. , li.irult. Mli-i,.. aiiilar.l ! ijU all U.Mriit,i,n 1rm aktn aiaa.a a t.u-ii n ir. l un bla baO'l-, liraa ana i.-a, anl murly ,ia,ir-iy 1 Kl, ava. Th mnat i-arrtul ) u-t'.rl nu lailr.l to l.ali bini. anil allot II hail ialia.1 I a ua-a tin- I'itii 1 nl Kkboi v. tT ll trrnally, I'l 111 I HI aul t'fTiei Ml Shai' atKrnnlly. an I wi n ira I, ; ana ha ra uialDtU aritMi wall to Ibis ili,. I OlltlH. I tlun. Wui. Tavlor. rwtnn. aara : "Aitaf 1 inraa Biumr.f' ua.-01 n,a llit.i'KA If -w ,:f! a; 'au.l u .r...t at ...n.lant auilariBM o iu ku- I IS?.,!! i,n' ViWu "ll'lV,- I onun,- iu -aaa iiiaiat ran.rkaLU ..n ror.l. . I l.av hn ,11 alala I wiiu my tiiivtaa I bat I llli-lr.1 a u.l tula tl.tm m aal tha Cullcura Nan a.l.at auil IL.y wuuhl fur tl-vut. Kkln Humors. lira, s E. Wlil.iile. nrialnr, Mich., wfliaa tli ii b-r U a buail aol aitnta i trta ,r tt-r biy aar alfnu.l raw. Il?al citiaruJ -lib ai'ali, an n.iri'i. Suirore l laarl illy ana triad atary. IMtiK. I'aruiauaiitlr cural by Ijinloura Haul aaiva. nt; ui it Kama lie. un l ir amln l.y all aruavl-ti. ri a I'l'TH i hv a .Mu liolnal .lelly. aiua.II lnwa. MV , diva Ixnai. a : i i ti, raa Hum,,,, Minrisi. i..m r imi.. i-i-.. i uu Mkiih i it 4 i.i i..i H...K iu . .. i... lur barUTa and larua eunauiuara. ii. i'r,n..i al itatiut. vr K5 k I'OTTKH. B.tff.ti Mail All u.allti Irea "0 reol,l ul ji-ica COLLINS' Una I'oLiiaS' ti-iiiic t un mi'- Hi a- i : n. o ..i. Voltaic aCTTKa ,re' a.llao -a baVra ' I X-' tli f.iihho. 1 Kay lnunt ly raliaia ' -f't"'. I.ita' i) nr.plainl. Ma!. rla, l aaranj .U.iaan.l Kliln-y ami t'rlnarf tilltlruUI. a. anil in) i o w.iru utar Ilia .i ( iba aiumacb, ufnt Ilia kUuaya. nr any ata.itail .arL Hrlia i-ui. H..I.I rvarywbara Wl.KKS fiMTtlt, UOSfu.V, M J,ba. PLAIN & FANCY MM IRS. ADAM mTssKIL tf Centre IV I. tnwnahlp wiil.l ra-i.eollijlly It, fi rm ie ligblk- that aba I- iapim! lu .).. pialu aa l lag. TrwlLaI Iroi,i,. ly at aburt linr. FlIMIU liairuoaaa reacuull aulimtail. Alia;. 1, laal. WN FURNITURE BOOM? ! Ml II R ninli rii;iiil hits pMneif (t L 1'lirtilt mi- Si. ire. near the Middle liurir Ilepnt. nnd ktep eoin.tnirtf ,on' baud a liiriro Hint . !l reWi-te.1 rtttt.itof' Clinmbot KtittMa) Callr-Ht'ittftl CJltaifw. VxI-it'f SLImli-M lxtiMCAioti rftibleiw HltaiitlMe . , , souiijreNa- and PTtTvtliiiifr else kept in a flrt rla r iinimirrTMtvre. H H RENlfiCER. near the lHpo Apr. U.rtul. Uidilleb'irK, Pit , r EVX KEPLEuT . . Motarf Pntolc SnmTof, CtiTcrancir "' Ri Estate am limes iicul' ' Daa.la. Boarta aa4 Mortaa- arar4aaS aina i aaaTayaariai aiuawi if araaiCHIlf Its saa'aaM aa aaourraay. AiMhalal ftti.Bi.n. auaalaia, aAin a aal talala 0lua In l'raaaa. kaySat t' ra.. r. vi. .. f j. t.ldraaa, Mt. ra.ta Mltla, h. j . raaa-a. . ai. .' I).. v I V I .pie PtaBei