The post. (Middleburg, Snyder County, Pa.) 1864-1883, August 03, 1882, Image 1

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    . .vJumn one year, fftOOO
IVhftlf, cohimr., one year,
jefy srt.IitioniU Insertion, 0
rVossionsl ami oiwinew warn
-r UiaitS linns, twr yenr, 5.00
anil Aii "' ; "
LlitoriM notice per lino, 13
hi rlvnrtixemont for a snorter po
nd thn one year are psyablo at th
thixv re onlorotl. ami il not piiltl
a pefson omcring inein win uu iihhij
-noiisiulo for iha monov.
Poetry
AMERICA.
Bt JOIIX BOYt.lt O'RKILLV.
owl at tha Reunion of the Army ot
the l'otomao, nt. Detroit, on
June 14, 1882.
,it War nor Peace, forever old ami
yoiin,
nt 8trengtlit my theme, whose soiik
w yet unsunir,
ht People' Strength, tits deep a
lurlnft dream
( truth that loethe below the truths
that teem.
k buried ruin of dead empire
seek,
itiitllaii, Syrian, Persian, Roman,
Wreck :
Loin shattered capital and frieze nir
rslse
lis stntoly structure o( tholr golden
Uys :
lielr laws oooult, tholr priests and
prophets ask.
. ,. U 4 1. 1 . ! ...
luask.
lielr parable from birth to burial n,
he acorn genu, the growth, the
dttusoleafed tree.
I word of riant life ; the sudden day
lien like a new strange glory shone
decay,
golden glow aiuld the green ; the
cimiige
Liu hrano.h to branch at life's reced
lug range,
111 nothing ntand4 of towering
ttrength and pride
ve naked trunk ami arms whose
veiiH are dried
Ll these, too, crumble till no sign
remain
mark Its place upon the wind
swept plain.
Iiy died the empires T Like the for
est trees
ll nature doom them T or did slow
their roots and poisou all their
spriugs t
old time story auswera : nobles,
kings,
v uiadij ana neen cue mine, uieir
names alone.
I history holds ; Its wealth, its war,
their own.
fir wanton will oonld raise, enrich,
ooudomn ;
toiling millions lived and died
for them.
Wr fortunes rose In conquest, full
In guilt;
people never owned them, never
built.
i olden timet ! how many words
are spent
weak regret and tdmllow argument
Jlirovo them wiser, happier than
our own I
oldest moment that thp word huw
known
karilng now. Thoe vannte 1 times
I were young ;
ir wisdom from uuluttere 1 pea'
liiauts sprung ;
lir luws from nobles arrogant and
I rude ;
ir justice force, their whole
I achievement orude.
IU men the old are wise; who
I change the rule
Jeauatlons speak, and send the
I old to school T
httot the past for all the good It
I knew.:
! ooble Uvea and straggling truths
Ithelr due :
Iwk, what freedom knew the eoni-
lmon men
served and bled and won the
lvlctor.es then T
I leaden are immortal, but the
tordes
ly led to death were simply human
lewords,
Inowlng what they fought for,
by they fell.
kt change has comet Imperial
Europe tell I
th s warden ory from twenty oen
tarles' peaks 1
as Held the word of Plevna
peaks i
I martial draft still wastes the pea
nt farms.
en kinds, five million men In
as ;
earth mapped ' ont estate-like,
hedged with steel ;
ighborlng schools the children
"rea to feel
ural hate, disjoined In speech
sua oreed ;
forges roaring for the armies'
nd
cities builded by the people lined
eowllnic forts aad roadways un
dermined ;
tvery bastloaed frontier, every
tato,
"olon, sword ed, standing by the
CUel
tarn oar eyes from those oppres-
lands i
Md,one country all defenseless
Unds,
1 nation -continent, from East to
west.
retches heaped upon be bount-
wu breast;
r vines, bar marts, ber skill of hand
WW
VOL. 19.
That bring Alaildin's dreams to light
again t
Where sleep the eonqueron t Here Is
chatme for rpnll i
Such u n watched fields, inch endless,
thoughtless toll I
Vain dream of oldert time I The rob
ler strength
That swept Its will is overmatched at
length,
Here not with sword but smiles the
people greet
The foreign spy in harbor, granary,
street ;
Here towns unguarded lie, for here
alone
Nor canto, nor king, nor privilege is
known.
For home the farmer ploughs, the
miner delves,
A land of tollers, toiling for them
selves (
A land of cities, which no fortress
shields,
Whose oien streets, reach out to fer
tile fields ;
Whose roiuN are shaken by no armies
tread ;
Whose only camp cities of the dead!
(to stand at Arlington, the graves
among
No ramparts, cannons there, no ban
ners hung,
Xo threat above the Capital, no blare
To warn the senaton the guus are
there.
Hut never yet wanrdty fortlled
Like that sod height above Potomoc's
tide ;
There never yot was eloquenoe In
speech
Like thoso. ten thousand stones, a
name on each ;
No guards e'er pressed such elalui ou
court or king ,
At these Prtctorlans to our 8enate
bring ;
TUtt army of the Potomac never lay
So full of strength as in Its camp to
dav t
On faUl Chieronea's field the Greeks
A lion raised, a somber tomb that
rieaks
No word, no name, an emblem of the
pride
Of those who ruled the iuseot host
died.
But by her soldiers' graves Columbia
prove
How fast toward morn the night of
manhood move.
Those low white Hues at Gettysburg
remain.
The sacred record of her humblest
slain, .
Where childrens children in their
time will come
To view, with pride their hero father's
tomb,
While down the ages runs the patriot
line
'Till rich tradition makes each tomb a
tdirine.
Our standing army these, with
specire glaives,
Our foi'trciwed towns their battle-ordered
graves.
Here sleep our valliant, sown like drag
on's teeth ;
Here new-born sous ronew the pious
wreath ;
Here promt Columbia bends, with
tear-stlrred mouth,
To kins their blood-seal, binding
North and South,
Two clasping hands upon the knot
they tied
When Union lived and human Slavery
died.
Who doubts our strength or measure
it with those
Whose armed millions wait for coin
ing foes,
They Judge by royal standards, that
depend
On hireling bands to threaten or de
fend,
That keep their war-doge chained in
time of peace.
And dread a foe soaroe less than their
release.
Who hunt wild beasts with cheetahs,
fiercely tame,
Must wateh their hounds as well as
fear their game.
Around our veterans bung ao dread
or doubt
When thrice a million men were mus
tered out.
As scattered seed in new-ploughed
laud, or flaks
Of Tpring time snow that fall in smil
ing lakes.
Our war born soldiers sank In the sea.
Of peaceful life and fruitful energy
No sign remained of that yast army,
save
In field and street new workmen,
bronzed and grave ;
Some whittling teainstera still in nay
est
Some qalet eltixen with nedeJled
breast.
So died the hatred of our brother-
feud t
The eonfllot o're, the triumph was
subdued
Wbatviotor king e'er spared the van
quished foe t
Row much of mercy did strong Prus
sia snow
When anguished PurU la dust lay
prone f
Th CrerasM trumpet rang above ber
loan,
The olian of Vbtoo spurt bar temp le
mm'
if ,
MIDDLEBUHG, SNYDEU COUNTY,
Her Arch of Triumph
spannod the
triumph, too,
Not thus, O South t when thy proud
head was low,
Thy patoimtt heart laid open to the
foe,
Not thus, Virginia, did thy vlttora
meet
At Appomattox him who bore defeat;
NO brutal show abased thine honored
Htate J
Urant turned from Richmond at the
very gate I
O Land, nioxnatilmous, republican !
The lost for Nationhood, the first for
Man I
Hecause thy Hue by Freedom's self
were laid,
Profound the sin to chanii) or re
trograde.
From base to cresting let thy work be
new ;
'It wm not by aping foreign ways it
grew.
To struggling people give at least ap
plause ; .
Let equities, not precedents, subtend
your law ;
Like rays from that great Kye the al
tars show.
That fall triangular, free states should
grow.
The soul above, the brain and hand
below.
Believe that strength lie not In steel
or stone ;
That pearls wait the laud whose
heavy thr n,
Though ringed by swords rtnd rich
with titled show,
Is based oil fettere' I misery Mow ;
That natlous grow where every class
unites
For common interests and common
right rj
Where no caste barrier stays the poor
man's son.
Till, step by step, the topmost height
is wou
Where every hand subscribes to every
rule.
And free as air are voice, and vote,
aid school
A Nation's years are centuries t Let
Art
Portray thy First, and Liberty will
start
From every field In Kitrope at sight.
"Why stand these thrones between
us and the light T"
Strong men shall ask : "Who built
these frontier towers
To bar ont men of kludred blood wfth
ours t
O, this thy work, Republic ! this thy
health
To prove man's birthright to a com
mon wealth ;
To teach the people to be strong and
wise.
mil armies,' nations, nobles, royalties,
Are laid at rest, with nil their funis
and hates ;
Till Europe thirteen Monarchies are
States,
Without a barrier and without a
throne,
Of oue grand Federation like our
own I
m . . j..
rt Th Post,
REBEL PRISONS.
BT PR. tt noTHKOCg.
The coarse I bad-marked out was
very simple. If tried to reach
Sherman on the east side of Maoon,
flacking towards the sea shore, I bad
many large pluses to pass, andsuob a
coarse would throw ns in oontaot
with the many marauding forage
parties which would naturally fre
quent that portion of the country,
My plan was to go to the westward
of Jkfaoon, in a Northwesterly course
until the Obattabooohie River was
reached, then following due north
until the blue-hills around Marietta
could be seen, trust to fate and Sher
man for deliveranoe. These plans I
had stated briefly to my companions,
who bad adopt! them, and looked
upon roe as Moeee, who was to lead
tbem to the promise land.
Travelling through the woods dar
ing the night, one of my four oom-
rades got separated from the party.
The next morning we reached over
flowed portions of country, whioh in
dicated that we were near the Flint
River. While debating as to the
beet course to pursue, one of my par
ty declared be beard the bounds,
whiob we soon found was an uu
plea sect fact.
Not moment was to be lost, and
wading end swimming with almost
frantio exertion soon brought us to
Flint River, th current of wbicb
oneh swollen by freshets, was
running swiftly Getting upon logs,
we floated with the stream for sever
al hours, until we thought it taffr-
cient to baffle the dogs from further
pursuit It was nearly noon, when.
wet and exhausted, chilled with be
ing so long ia the water, we crawled
upon the opposite shor, and wen-
glad to run to get op a little warmth
44 we emerged fW8 the Wtor, we
fin
found a sensation in ibe tbnpo of an
alligator, who lay just below as.
like floating logs. That day we
traveled inoossantly through twamps
and woods, and water, which over,
flowed all the low portions of conn
try. The only food which we had
between an was a "pone" of Johnny
cake, which we bad starved onrsoives
to save in prison. Wn had a pockot
compass, which was intrusted to ran,
small quantity of salt, and bntcbei
knifo, such as was issued to Jnnsa
cbusotts soldiers at IloaJtlllo. Nihi
enmo upon ns, durk and rniu an I.
found us still travelling through the
dark forest and wet swamps of the
country. About t velve o'clock, see
ing a bright UliimiuatioU, w'lioli
looked like a picket or camp fire j'wt
to the right about a quarter of a
mile from us, we wont upon lilgbor
land to got an observation, and sat
down on sotno fallen logs to consult
ia whispers ni to what we hid boU
tor do, ah ut reconnoitring the light.
Just thon I was certain I beard
tomothiDg move ia the log on which
I eat. I sprang to toy feet, with
club poised to strlko perhaps it was
a boar. I challenged the log with
the common expression among sol
diors. "Are you Fed, or Keb T'
"ynnkeo," came the reply ; and era
erging from the og. which for the
first time I observed was hollow,
came a bainan face or form, which,
after shaking himself like a watur
spaniel, asked, in tones strangely
familiar, "Woll, boys, what next."
"Going to tie your haude, old follow,
said I, ''until daylight shows enough
of you to soe if you look honest,"
"Well, well ! ' laughoil oar tnysturi
one prisonor i "why, don't yoa know
skityl" and sore enough it Was our
missing comrade,
lie had escaped hounds like onr
selves, by floating down the Flint
River, and by a singular coincidence
bad fallen in with ns again in the
manner related ; the hollow log be
selected for bis botol for the night.
As he was a sharp follow and b id a
watch, be was quite valuable a J
dition to oar party.
Whou this eurpriso was over, wo
onootuoro held a couiultuliou ubont
the fire which had attracted our ut
toution, before the incident narrated
occurred. We ooncludod the safest
and bust way was to roconnuitro, in
order to ascertain the naturo of our
uoMibom, uud boo if dauber was
threatening us.
We found it a camp flro noar a
tout, at which But a solitary picket
with his gun t it was on a cross-road,
stationed, T suppose, to intorcopt
prisoners. Quo of our nainber got
neur enough to have knocked him
over, bad it boon doeirablo.
At another time that night we
heard a voico behind us, but con
eluded it was some picket tent, of
which there were many scattered ov
er that part of the oountry. I can as
sure you, we did look a little out,
while passing along. About three
o'clock that morning it stopped rains
iog, and we lay down together under
a tree, to get snob rest a best we
could. It was such lodging as we
wercaccuatomed to, aud the three
middle ones bad sous hopos of
keeping warm.
At daylight, stiff and more weary
than when we lay down, we resumed
our journey through the woods.
Our Jobnney cake was eaten, and
daring the day we stopped only to
piok a few berries whioh grew in
the woode. We got nothing else to
eat during that day. Next day,
about noon, we came npon some
eattle braweing in the woods. We
killed a small yearling heifor, one
holding ber as best he could, while
another oat ber throat with our
sbeatb knife. ' We eat the meat snob
as we desired and divided it among
ourselves. The skin we out into
strips, with whioh, and with some of
our clothes, we constructed rude
haversacks, in whiob to carry onr
meat, We bad no matohee, or otb
er method of kindling a fire, and
of coarse eat oar meat raw. with
little salt we bad to season it
Thus day by day, we travelled
inoessantly. keeping away from the
negroes. Our first ooofidenoe in
negro aid was not brought about by
any preconceived ideas, but by ao
eideak . "We) discovered it was pos
sible to trust tbem, to some extent,
from the following inoident. One
day name accidentally npon some
negroes vim king in the woods.
We ran away qulukly, thinking to
ke. 04. 0- 4b44iaran, One of
l'A, AUGUST II,
tbem called after ns, saying, "dou'l
be afraid, taassa white tu rn.''
Sjme idea that they might give
u something fo oat causod mo to
turn back. advanced cautiously,
ud speaking to an old, wbito-head
ed negro, I said ' Uuole. enpp se
yoa know what kiud of follows w
are "
Well i ,?I reckon," he replied, rol
ling up the white of bin eyes,"
We are hungry, aud want some
thing to eat sadly
Well, aid Uuole, "you does look
mighty kind of lean. (Hop into de
bushes whilo I penis round to seo if
wo got somo hoo-ciiko."
And off he trotted. Wo kept a
good lookout to see that he did nol
betray US Hut ho came bank with
throe pouos, which ho "clurud to
g.joduoH v.n hilf iioy U hl for
de d;y. It was light "rt hard
times in dom diggine."
"Woll, Uncle, said I, I suppose
you knoif that Unolo Abe iu Ciiiiing
down thin way to sot yon all free
when he gets the rbs licked.
"Yes, yoe," said tho vonorablo old
negro, "I'se boloivo the day of jubilee
is comirr, but, poar to me, its a loug
time t looks like it never would come
specially ia nay time.
Diddiog him Hod spoed, wo wont
on our way with lightber huarts at
tho thought that there wore friends
iu tho midust of our euomtes.
S irao old negroes wo mot would
ebamo the chivalry iu point of hu
manity aud good, shrewd practical
souse. Ono of my comrades who
had escaped for three or four days,
before this tirao, told me ha mot a
negro in tho woods with a gnu aud
dog, who told him ho had livod in
tho swamps for sovoral years, defy
ing the whitoman. Ho offered to
take him, provide for, and koop him
all winter in his hut Ho refusod,
thinking to be successful in getting
into our lines. And I was afterwards
in for mod by some reble officers that
there was a nogro who, to escape
punishment, bad ran away from a
plantation, and bad subsisted iu the
swamps for a long time without being
captured.
We were entirely out of provieions
on the eighth day of oscape, and iu
the morning had halted ir. somo low
land in the wuods uear a clearing to
pick raspberries, which grew iu
abundance, Suddenly one of our
number, notod in our truvoU for his
acute bmiriug, declared tho dogs
wero after ue. According to pre
vious agroomout, when wo were but
iutiod such wutf tho cado, wo separat
ed, each rncning iu dilTorent direc
tions to givo the dogs atl tho trouble
we could, as possibly by tho method
some of us might csoupo.
Nearer and nearer the dogs came,
I jumped into a little brook which
ran along through the low lnud)
whioh was not wido enough to
amouut to much, as my clothos
brushed tho bushes on either eido.
To In Continued.
Bid news comes from Niugara
Falls, for a distinguished New York
professor has discovered that the
falls themselves have been receding
about half an inch every yoar. Ho
calculates that about 1,267,70 ) years
have been required for them to eat
their way np to their present loca
tion, and also believes that iu about
3,128,000 years more the twenty-five
miles of solid rock betweon tho vil
lage of Niagara and Lake Krio will
have been eutirely washed away,
whioh will be bad on the lake, but
still harder on the backiuon who are
depending on the falls and strangers
to gain ao honest living.
Some people are too smart. A
man saw a pocketbook lying on the
pavement and was about to pick it
up, when be remembered what be
had read about "tricks on tiavelors,"
and let it alone, A man behind bim
pickod it np. aot fooled, boy T"
ohuokled the first man. "No, said
the second, "got f 10,"
Loeic. "Pa, am I a little sinner?'
"Yes my sen, we are all sinners."
"And, papa, the Bible says the devil
ia the father of siunere, does'nt it t"
"Yes, dear, I believe it does." "Tbeu
pa, are yoa the devil T" Uis offsprings
logio was too much for biru and he
slipped out of the room without an
swering, foutors QaittU,
Hmokeing end oho wing are two
evils, aud be wbo select! the former
obtws tbe In
4y
LSS
nl
no, ro
r
A Lady of Taste. ' ,
Tho woman who dresses In sronrd
ano e with llir canon ofgnod I ante,
puro and simplo, relios on her nv
judgement iu selecting articles fo
hor own weir. Sin earn not how
rocont a it'itpo if it bn nwkwar I.
WlntoYir law fisliion dictates,
slio follow a 1 i.v of hor own, and if
novor behin I it.
She woais v. ry beautiful tl in,"
which poopli gunni'iilly siijpio I
be bron'it from Piris, or, st least
nude by a French milliner, bi'
which 44 often t ro brought by hei
self ia to vii, nn,l made Up by Ix
)vn maid.
N it tint hor coHtmno isoithi r ri
ir now ; n i tin contrary, nho wont
iuiny a lia; dro4i, but it U nlwa
protty, an I nl 1 1 y an old unn, I ut t
ia al -v v -fill.
Slio dual iu no gaudv confnsi
of cjIom nor d'KM she i.-iVct a sin li
e l sobriety ; b it she either n fio-h
you with a spirit. si o utraht.or com
po3 you with a j'l dicions luirtiioii)
Not a scrap of tiusol or trumpet
appoars upon hur.
She will not wear gilt buttons v
jot beading or anything "Ion I " f.i
she fool Ih it hor dre should In
long to a modoit solf, and not olml
longe attention.
Slio always pleases, and lur socn I
of suocom simply consist iu h
knowlodgt of hor own station au
h ir own loikj. And no worn. in ua
drois well wh d o n jt.
After thiii wo nuo I not say tha
whoever is attraoto 1 by tin coatmn-
will nut be dU ippohto I in the wear
er. Suo may not bo baodsoiuo qui
accomplished, but wo will answ i
for her buing even tempered, well
informed, thoroughly so neblo, aud a
complete lady.
Pithy, Pointed Sayings.
Angels from friendship gnthi-r
half their joy.
The minds of men dhTcr bb tsndi
as tlroir faces.
Night is so lovely that she Lath
made many posts.
Pain may bo suid to follow ploab
ure as its shodow.
Charity, though ne'er so secret,
Gnds a jiibt reward.
In tho tinman breast two muster
passions cannot exist.
1'ussion is a fever that leaves uu
weiiktr tbuu it liuds us.
Love is a poBHion whioh kiudlet
honor into noble net
Old flillidx, liko tl listed bWOlds.
Hid still tlllf-tid bt'ht,
I'nnctimlity is due puliteuess, cu
pceiiiily iu tho grout.
The dust upon which wo tread wub
ouco alive aud wiotohud.
Inteutious, an will u nctious,
must be good to be acccplulilo.
He who spuiids all ho gtU in ul
tho high road to beggary.
Moiltriito your uppotito so that
with lit lo you tuny te coiitciit.
Epl'tilhrO lllld CoinillOU BLllBf
uiuke tho best couusullui s.
Many men fuil of miccosa in liTc
for want of great occaniuiis.
No oue protends to hate an injur;
more than he who oflurs it.
For any man to match above Li
rank is but to sell his libiTty.
Coosult uot with a fool, for he can
noithcr give nor keep couusol.
Login nothing until you have con
sidered bow it is to be fiuisbod.
Idloness is the refuge of wouk
minds, and the holiday ns fool.
We should forgive frooly thoso who
injure us, evon if we do uot forgot.
We cannot lay ia a slock of pious-
uro as we would lay iu a stook of
tlour,
A Common Carolina Liar.
"Old B" says that some years ago
ia a Catoliua town a crazy man w e
brought bofore the enamiuiug board
to settle the questiou as to whether
or not he should be sent to the asy
lum ia Columbia, After the doctor
got through with his examination
one of the commit too, an old farmer,
said i
"My friend, did you evor borrow
any bags or jugs "
"Yes, lots of them."
"Did you ever borrow jour ctlgh
bor's newspaper
"YeSjtnany a time."
"Well, now what becanio of the
jags, bags and newspapers 1"
"Why T carriod them back."
The old farmer gave a blow al
most as loud as Nancy art s whis
tle, and said I
"Oeotlomeo, he's no lnnntie I
Jast simply a common I
the asylums in tbe world
Jweat eure
wan of lying.
'I'll 14 t'OMTi
Published every Thursday Evening
JKHHMIAI1 CHOt'SB, PrtwY
Terms of Subscription,-
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paid nM"- al the rf !i'jfi of tlie pub"
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miIm -riptiip i : ido of Hip count
pavaiim: in advam k.
iiVl'ii'siiiis lillinif mid usini; jprr
tddl'C-ll d ,f Illil'M't lC('iiC KllltM-l llif r
md sre li, Me I'm tl e pi ire of ll r y,vt
Suffer
no lrncjr from DyKpcp
Ma, InUiyoMion, wtintof
Appctitolos3of Siro ngth
luck of Energy. Malaria
Intermittent Fevers, Ac.
drown's iron dit-
TEHS never fillstQ curd
Pstrw Ji I MFMK Al. C'V
tifnilrmen Kr yf.iK I have)
Iwn a tzr.t tuRvrtr ffttm I 'vwmi
nw :onli1 ;i-t rtn rthi thvinar trtra
rvriyt.itg liuh w.ij frKHtiiiiriitt
! tini l rtititf rn t!if lvl f sj
ffntt..1, wh t hJhrri r-rncrlttsjtl If
I n wn'a Jiu.st lit rttk, Irlrd
I tllr, wmH ni Ht aurpriainsi mullet
I'rrvif iia to t.'tkmit RNowN't mN
l irtm, cvrrvtluiitf 1 Me itrrttd
Hi. cim I s.tiUrr-T gfjtly fntni s
I uu ii e,ft! it i in the imfi
li h w.t HiitsrrnM. Mm imk
iiii( . wn'h Hon l?liTHH all tnf
In uMfw ,1'SMm enV riutVl any
ti'ue miliont any d .irsNsll r
ntlts, 1 nti j.r.ti iiiHy atHricr
W'1-". Mr. W J Flvnn,
Mavcnvk si., L. lkt.
nnowN's inoN dit-
TEHS notu liko n charm
on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic
symptoms, ench as tast
ing tho food, Dclchlng.
Heat in tho Stomach,
I Icartbu rn, etc. Thd
only Iron Preparation
that will not hlncken tha
teeth or give headache
floM by nil rrjviyitj.
Brown Chcmicul Cot
Dultlmoro, MJ,
S' ttieat nil trrn rittrr ftr ttile
(nvn ( ticrmi al 1 , tallimm. and
h9t intHl rrU Utxt anj tiaU
uiAtk va wrtar.
HIWAKfi OF IMITATIONS
0 . .
Tho CVrpenlcr lifgans
i. itor.i', Vt. fi r i.nidl.iT . f v uri. Himoiu-umit
I'.l.l rxTI'll OlIIIS (Lu ujd U.a.ral uitH k
Uku lvi-iitJ ni
Woroostcr, M:ia., XT. D. A.,
Wall Lruui-U tUit.i- kL4 Man ruuma In
New York (No. 7 W.it FowtMnih cie
London, Madrsi '- St Petersburg,
City of Mexico, Berlin, ' Barcelona,
SwtftnM, ef Torn In rvory rent,
liur&bil.ty lit . i ry irl,
rtrlMiibH nii.-vur (U i.ul vt iuTiiifMiiirs,
Are liarai t rl.lic ( n.u :Ai2ISS OUiVA
Fr'ry Inxtri'iiK nt
WAnnANTEU l.f ljuhT Yf2Ar3.
MOST ltkMAIII.H UF.AI.KUA th
r.hi'kmit4i.4.Ait luit il fttiy dtui.ti Uv turm t
h"w rto illnH-k I ) iii I. i. My f.ir K it.
I'yii uU luluiuiaUua M W wlMiro )ou oM
luuu.
OVER 100 STYLES,
lUuglng lo iirlrofrora t XI. Com f l,300.U0kaiovm
A Sfa'illM l(yvpH' fmilxTiSi th flitte
rvrr putilUbvd, kCkf f'KkJk) to IuUsm1
lug iiutciifUMjru.
Aililrcss or clt upna
EL P. CiSm'Ti WutesU Miss, U. t L
MARBLE WORK
LKWlMliL'lUr, r.v
ITALIAN AND AMERICAN MARDLE
MONUMENTS,
I'oinliAtonrs, Sti.titos, Urns, Tnsef
I. AMDS. for ('liildi-fii's (i svpk.
W, I.iuhl, 7WAii;i, Marlilr and
Sh'lt Muni', A-e.
K t hnjie nLd liiro ipintri'liM i-mHiilonH
n Uilim cl. in iuula. ltirml at tii ftlmv
titina l iiirl-l wnrba. ahmtlif innnU His urnltl
ltina.1 nant, imlurr vurrlianlnn l.r Irra.
HAMI Kl, HOW KN, Jar
Julylt'li-tf Ml.Mlahur, Hsy t'o.r
rnnu;s.
I will mill ifi tti r--l i fur lnTt
Vrr-Ilil llMtm Itlnt illl ri.fliva Tirf .
Kri-rSfc-a, I'liul'lra all I Mlnd-li.a. If-aTin
u ..i. n'l... mar in-auiMBi in.. inraii.
tlmn Inr r""'Uiolii a lutirrUnt ynwiii ! hair
oa a hal I lia.d or m -otli iai-i. Ailim la
rl,rn Jo. Mni.. Ht.V V A.VIItLK A I tl., I "
Aarofay M. N . V.
TO CONSUMPTIVESe
Tha a.Warlliar hvln bran Mtmiaaillt
flttrail of ibM dr. ail rtlaaaa, Duvaumpllua, ay , .
atmtiln MmwlTi I' anttoua Xo inaaa ti
ua rannw-ranaM-ra tnu mantl owl. To an1
wkadaalra ft, ha will aml a wff t Hi
nrlitloa naod, (naiii rhartia )lth Ik itiraa.
tlnni Inr praparlnK ami aln in aam, tthkife .
thay III flil aura I'aMk-rllaiidM ol.laX
t'NaMniiimit, Ath m. Hrani liHIa, A.
rariiaii wnmuK in fitaKriinian, will pi
a l.lr... Kr . K. A. W1L.MUN1 IM I'aa
Wllllaimiittrli, N. V .
ERKORS OF YOUTH.
AiltMIbtal M whnriitarad fnf yarrairMaa.
Ntnout riEim.iTV. f kkm a rue im
I A V, ami all thaafaeia ol ynaitliir taMlaMT
ilon. will fur th .aka or a:l rlnn hnmaallr.
aaoii imwaiiwiQ iin n.iii miN ii ni
il da-
raolloBlur oiaalnit IhaalniBla ramaily a; btri .
Iiwaarrd. rtmlarar wlaMnw W- mill kr
tha ail trtUar'a riiarlba ea a a by
ilrcaRlaa lit ntfataoaS.laana.
JOHN U.UlW(,4Ok4. R, T. .
rk l, ly.
,.,.,, WarrumU, Xuv Sutr
uidbrain,