roitl-litT Itntow. 0 1 column on your, MUX One-half, column, one year. 80.1K OiMt-foilrth column, nn Vfl.ir, 15.ll) 0n aniiitxe (10 linoa) 1 insertion 73 Rfnrr additional tnnortinn, ft Profownonal and Himncs citrtH ol not more than li lino, nor your, 5.00 Auditor. Exooiitor. Ailmuiinlrtttor And Ajwiimco Notico. 2f Editorial notices pur linn, 16 All Iraiwc.lont advertising loss than t months ID cohU i lino. All Advcrlineincnt for ft shorter po rlod than one yenr are puyahlo si th i lime tliny are ordered, and II not pair! a person oruonng thorn will ue iieiu '.Mioiimme lor mo money. Pootry. A Harvest Hymn DT WILLIAM LAM DIR. We have seen the ntitiiiuer'a glory on the harvest flVMnVnaln. Rejoicing In the snnxhlne and the pure, refreshing ruin. Ann In gratitude and Kindness we have reaped the golden grain. We read a peaceful gospel, whore the rich and po r are fml; May the heroes of the harvest fluid have blumings on tlilr heads! Let earth's tuilllons all be grateful for health and dally bread. We the Uod of nature In bounte ous love uestowlng; In every year of Ufa, we reap the seed we have been sowing, Till, our burns are tilled with plenty) and our cojm are overflowing. We have onterml on a calling that will never know defeat; For honor and for daily bread we work In summer's hent, Ever reaping golden harvests of the fluost of the wheat. Hay the days of war and earnago and cruet strife be o'er, And temperance truth and righteous iiess extend from shore to shore, (iuthering lu the snd and sinful to be pure for evermore! And when we send the bread of life to nations o'er the sea, AMy we praise the Lord with thank fulness for blessings pure anil free In this life, and the better laud in age yet to be! The Little Zouave. 'Twos a tittle zouave of the firemen sort, v His faee powdtT Tjlaokene l, UU hair shingled short, His brawnycliost naked, his eyes flash lug llaiue, As over the red-field of battle he came. Thou o-r-r-rack! wont his gnu On the banks of Hull Ituu, And the great rebut army was lessen ed by one. The batteries thundered, the camion balls flew, The smoke and tho dunt hid the sol diers from view; Jlut whenoverthe oloud lifted up you luightsuuii The little xouave taking aim at. h Is man. Then o-r-r-rouk went his gun On the banks of Hull Run, And put a qnietous to some rebel's fun. The day was a sooroher, the iiieu were athirst. And the little zouavo ofteu fluently oursed; Hut still he pressed on among nlini- nel and shell, And eaoh time he fired an enemy fell For o-r-r-rauk went his gun ' Ou the banks of Hull Kun. And every shot told ou the dead list for one. The rebel's, astonished, remarked now and then; "Them red-legged devils fight wus'n our men!" For they saw that no rebel and traitor oould have One quarter the pluck of the little zouave. Bo or-r-rack went his gun On the banks of Hull Kun, Making holes lu the rascals to let la the sua. , Btlll forward, bare-breasted and sp'll big for light. The little zouave battled well for the right. Perhaps it waa luoky be never oould know How our army reoeived a repulse from the foe; For as o-r-r-raok went his gun On the banks of Bull Run. A niinle ball eaiue, and the zouave was done! There, prone on the field of his prow ess he lay In the last fading light of the linger- K dayt The wound in his forehead was ghast ly to see. But the little zouave bad done glori ously) And his meollees gun. On the shores of Hull Run, Had settled the bash of a dozen and one! Ahoy. r-,.. 8mith discovered after marriage that his wife wrote pootry, bat he couldn't do anything about it then. Ho had taken her for Utter or for terse. . Indianapolis has a reporter who write up the proceedings of the PU eonrt in soon a laughable BMoner thtt people get themselves Treated to give him plenty to write boat. ' It U zmid that the ' paper em be Ooojpraseod tat a substance w Urd ikzt cry rtiatiMMMts ran rarstob it T - " a" .. - -w.mt un tie VOL. 20. For Ttas Post. REBEL PRISONS. BY DO. n, nOTHBOCK. Wood was so ecaroe, that It was almost impossible to cook onr scanty food when it was Usno I run, as it was moat of the timo, in abnii) half of tbo squaJi of the prison, who were snpposod to have cooking nt so ils. Every reraaioiog root, where iroos had beon, w-ts dug out with the rude iraploinonts of the prison Every stump had cUimauU, who lug aroand it, and protocted thoir lights from iuvasioo by nil tho fo oo left in their weak bo.lies. This, far m n ia oar oouditioa, was bard and wearisome work, as our implements wt-r mostly ina b quate to the task, under favnrublo ciroutnstaooos, strouger men would have had tho i lvn igi. The stumps and roots, after they woro dug out, wcro oat up into small bits two and threo in ches long-, and ono iuch in thickness. vory oftoo a great doal smaller. The tools nuod to work the wood or roots op, wore a jarkknife, and often merely a sin ill pieoe of a blade with no handle. Occasionally an axo would be smuggled into prison by somo mysterious means, aud its possessor b'icuue a kind of a prince who levied a Ux up in all the sur- ror.udiujj misorabla wlvj acquired its nso. Tho Jea 1 wore gnthored up by do- tacliinoiits of prisoners, and laid iu rows outsido of the atockado. In. order to get wood, there wan great competition to fill tho oflico of strotchur-'boiiror, as thero wnq soinotimes a olnn"o for such to pick np w u I ou th jir return to the stockudo. llonco it passed iuto a siyin, 'i s vipoiiuiia aeaa man for s nno wO'j l." A etrotchor was in vlo for carrying tho sick and don 1 by fn-toniu a lilankut to two polos, provided f r the purposn, and tho rolling up tho blaukot ou the polo uutil about tbo width of tlioso of tbo ordiuary con struction. As I have elsewhere rotated in my narative.somotimos men feigned to bo dead, and woro carried oat by thoir ooinni'los, ouou of tho p ulios doiiv- iug advuutaa by tho opporutiou. vtuotlior s'l iri) pi iotidi) w.it, for four men to carry out a dead man and only two return with the etroch er, which gavo the other two mon a cbauoe for eseipo, and the two mon with tbo stretcher at tho same timo had a chanoe to gn' her wood i thus conferring mutual bunents. Nothing of this kind oould bo of long duration in practioo, for by some means or ui-ithod the Johunios soon became posted in all our sharp dodges. It was said, know not with bow inuolt trath, every boatou of prisoners sent iuto the pon woro aoojmpnnied by a spy in U. S, bluo, whom the others naturally trusted as a com rade. He found out all the secrets of tho squad and reported them to Wine, This, doubtless, will aocount for very muoh seeming treaohory among oar own men. it does not seem possible that any amount of misery oould induoe oomradei tobetray one another, even for food. . I classed traitors as follows t First bounty jumpers second, en listed prison oouviots i third, men who dug tunnels for the purpose of discovering them to the rebels, gain ing thereby an extra ration ; fourth, spies ent into the prisoa by the aa thorities. Inside the stockade, near the gate was often thejsoene of wildest hoiror. Here would be gathered together In the morning, waiting to pass oat of the gate to the booths on the out side, where medioines were distribut ed, the sick, creeping, often, npon their hands and knees, and those to siok to oreep, where borne by feeble, staggering companions, fere, also, would be gathered- the strecher- bearers with the burdens of dead i all waiting, in a densely packed throng of thousands, often in the rain, or taltry tropunl sua, where not a breath ef air stirred to revive the fainting siok or wIL It was a rale that ione, however siok, oould be prescribe.' for or receive medi cine auleas flnt aarried to the doe- tor. As it oould Diver be avoertaiued ou what day or hour medicines wero given, because the stockade doctors, as we-willud than,' woro vory 'sol- 232 MIDDLEBUHG, SNYDER COUNTY, tend to their bnsinoss, so day after day those Buffering thousands would be turned away without modtcinos. after waiting for hoars in the in tense ho.it of the maridina sin. Of ten the sink, were abandoned by thoso who carrlod tlioin, ami would bo left noar tho gateway, ia tho iotouue heat, whoro uo air oould roach thorn, ind thus nnoarod for, would die. This arose not so much from the want of feeling of comrades as from thoir inability to actually care for them. Tuo!t) who bore strotchers of ten foil fainting, and died ia that throng of waiting misory. Ono duy in July' twenty or mire men died in loss than four hours amoug the crowd of living, doad, and lying around the prison gale. The numbers who wont to the hospital ontsido corrospjndod with the nurabors who died in this throng laily. A police foroo of tho pricou dictated, with clubs, who wero to pass first through tho gato. Tho lead took tho preferutiao, followed by the sick on strotaliors; t'uw of this throng g.t modicino-i. 'A groit mass of the sick, rather than sniTur the jamming and crowding, and ra tbor than witness these depressing scenos of horror, romainod, without trying to obtain what tlioy canto for t siuco, t pass through this truly horriblo ordoil, tj go thrUh, or stand among this crovd of doad, nick, and dying, was worse than tho snfToring it was intended to alloviato. I consider inysolf rathor a tough specimon of a pi iuouor, but, after waiting, without success, for four successive hours, yes, for successive mornings, to got out ruy comrade for medicine, I boenmo cnufidont, if I persisted, I should bo "carried out with my toes tied together" (which, in prison laoguuguj uiuaut doad.) Imagine two or throo thousand mon strnggliug, BufToriug, crowding togothor, to got through tho gato, all forms of death, disease, and siok noss crowded and jammed together. Hero tho doad wero crowded and joBtlod ngainst the sick, aud the sick, iu their turn, jostling ngaiust and overturning tho dead and dying, a specticlo horrible to behold, ospeo ially among a set of mon, who pro fosid to bo intelligent Hut it appeared all or nearly all mou, who wore confinod in this belUholo of a stookado for somo timo, lost thoir manhood, and forgot the training reoeived at home. From first to lust, the system of dispensing rued initios was produc tive nf more suffering thau it ro- loived. At such gatherings the stench arising from the doad and dying was dreadful enough to make well mon sick ; while the eight of men sick and dying, andor the cir- ounistauces described, was sufficient to depress the strongest heart and mind with torror. The man piochoJ, famiuo-striakon, dirt-clot' ted couutonanoe of the poor suffer ers, the disgusting spectacle of dead men with nuclosed eyes and drooping jaws, the eyos and faoe swarming with vermin, oombioed to make the so6no one of the most intense horrors ever gazed npon by mortal eyes. One of my Regiment, a private of company 0, was carried for two suc oessive mornings to this gathering of human woe, and on the third morning be died, lying in the hot son, without au effort bolng made by the surgeons snd attendants to obtain eholter for him. Hundreds died in this uncared-for manner, which was of too froquont ocoarrenoeto be noticed or noted, it had become an every day occurrence, and men did not talk abont it as they did at first, . One would na turally suppose that apeoiaclos of this kind would excite in hardened hearts emotions of pity and remorse; but the southern chivalry gazed up on these scenes daily, unmoved, of ten remarkiug,"Qood enough for the damned yanks." Neithor wore the doad and dying exempt from their abuse add foul epetbets. I have seen a dying man rudely tumbled from the stretcher on which he lay, without tbe slight est boed being given to bis pleading eo treaties for pity.. O I eaoh inhu man treatment ia ' en enlightened oouutry, is it possible any person has lost all hie manhood, in , order to roke oat his veueewet on a helpless lying oten. - . ' OuJ of tho . (O'lrulus I was e - 4' ' sick man upon a strotcher i his sbrunkon face aud bands wore cov erod with filth, and begrimed with pitch-piue smoke of tho prison ; be had no clothing npon his waslod body save a pair of army drawers, which hud ouou beon whito. other wiso diarrhoea hul rendered his condition too dreadful to bo desciib to ears polito, or evou to bo gazed npou. One of tho prison officers at that timo crowded thro ugh the throng of tho sick and the dead i while loing so, he f jroibly pushod ngaiust this poor miserable creature, who was uttering plaintive moans and cries for morcy to which no heed was givon. In the- scramble which followed, the dying man was over turned, and, as ho lay gaspiug in his last trembling Agonies, tho samo offioor aud atteudaut passed again that way, and rudely thrust biui with his foot from his path, eayiug. ''ono more yauk, is gouo to the dovil." Sitting this afternoon in my of fice, aud cheered by civilized com forts, I can not suppress a chill of horror aud crooping sensations of shivering torror at its mere romom braiico. Such occurrances happen od almost every day, too horrible not to bo noticed, I ouly cite this solita ry iastaucu, of an unknown dying man, among the suffering thotiNaudH of the prison pen, as an example of the fiendish huto aud malice which possessed these patriots of the Uuion evou when tho doors of death wero closed upon their starved, ou buried forms. Carrying away tho dead to their final rest was but a horror lu keeping with tho sceuos described, and a fitting climax to tho lift of misery which uudod iu tho prijon. To be Continued A Minister's Cow. An oxclinngo tells this story of a olorgyman s vxpuriuuco end bow it ondod: Homo years ago thoro livod in Cen tral iVow York a very worthy aud respectable divine knowu as Futher Gross. Uo hud a hired man n.ituu.1 Isaan, who always obeyed orders without question. Fathor Gross bonght n cow ono d iy which proved refractory when milkod, refusing to surreudur tho laotoul fluid, although I u.iud all tho persuasion of which ho wan mas. ter. lie finally reported her iloliu quonco to his mvtor. "Woll, Isaac," said ho, '"go to tho barn aud gut thoso pieces of now ropo." Isaao oboyod ; the cow was driven into the et ible, tiod with a pioce of ropo, whon the dominie oamo out armed with a kuifo, "Now," he oxclaimod to Isaao, "I will got on tho cow's b ick aud you tie my foot bonoath hor, then you go on with your milking, und with your milking, and with tuy weight on bor back she must givo down her milk. Isaao oboyed. Tho feet were tiod and tho milking oouiinonood. But bossy objected, and pluogod wildly about The Btuble was low, and tho dominie's boad wns fuarfu lly bumped. "Oh, Isaac," bawled he, "oat the ropo." Isaao seized tbo knifo and cat not tbe ropo which tiod the master's feet, bat the one which tiod the oow. Tbe stable gate was open, also the yard gato. Away dartod tho frantio cow, tho terrified man oo bor back belplosnly roaring : Stop her, stop her P While madly careering down the road be met a parisbiouer, who ex citedly exclaimod i "Why, Mr. Gross, whore are yoa going V Only Ood and this cow know T" groaned he, 'I don't The auimal was finally caught and theman ruleased, muoh frigueated but unhurt. It was an Irish pilot, who, being asked if be knew the rocks in the the harbor, replied, with oonfidenoe i "I do yer houor.ivery one av them. That's wan." bo added, calmly as tbo ship strnok it, filled, and sank. "What have you been doing sinoe I last saw you V ."I've been attend ing a course of free leeluros,'' ". "A oourve of free hctures. f" " -1 t(3Z 'Vrf TOW.1- ve, I was'miriwd u wtV ater ' PA, AUGUST 21, Sarah YVasn t There. Charloy Shuv, of tho Detroit Op era Houso, was griuningat tho win dow of the box office the other day, when ia walked a chap with an ag ricultiirat bronze ou his face, ftt'd asked i "Poos any oue perforin, heroT" "Oh, yos." This afternoon " "No i to-night. "How muoh to soe 'cm ?" "Well, I can give you a seat fi half a dollar, and you cau hold you gill on jonr lap," "Wouldn't anybody luff!" "Not much I Wo don't allow any laughing in this bouse." "Well, maybe we'll ooino. a this theater ever buruod up 1" "Never." "Aoy danger of fire on the stago V N it a bit." "Any pickpockets uroiiud T" "None." Does anybody ped.llo lemonade T' "No." "Any prize packages givon out?" "No." "Twko a half dollar with a holo iu it!" Yes." "What kind of a play is it ?" "It's tragedy." "Troo.ly t Tnou that hya me out ! Sarah was to a circus last year. whoro somo ono bit a feller who crawled under tho canvas, with nock yoke, aud she faiutod ho dead away that they had to unhitch her corset und jerk off hor shoos. Let her son a play where fellers nro j ib ing with pitchforks, knocking down with crowbars and slicing mwU other up with swords, and ttho'd tumble kerplunk aud stop tho show doad dill. 1 hopo you'll dj well and nil that, but I dou't bring no Sarah to soo uo tragedy, and don't yon forget it 1" She faiutod ou mo oueo, uud my hair turned gray at tho rate of n IhihIiuI a iniuit 1" Detroit Free I'remi. Won the Wager. Says tho Detroit Free 1'ross : Fred Flasher and Jiss Floronlia Flounce wero discussing tho moutul power of controlling thought. Said FI mhor. " will give yoa a pair of gloves if you can think of positively nothing (or live luiuutos, und still bo awake." "Djiio," sho rospou lo l, 'I'ivu minutcu passed. ' I've won tho glovo!" ubu oxcluim nl. "How did you maiingo to think of nothing for tho whole fivo minutes ?" ha nnked, eagerly. 1 lastenoii iny mind iirmly on your mustache aud kept it there,' she replied, triumphantly. Tho reforoo uwardod Lor the glovos. He hud lost bis knifo, nnd they askod him tho usual question. "Do you know whoro yoa lost it f" "Yos, yes, be replied, or oourso 1 uo. l ui merely huuting ia those other places to kill time." i , . i.j We once suggested to a butcbor tha t be put his scales whore the cus tomers could see tho dial, not uoooa earily for publioatioh but merely as a pledge ef good faith. 'Ob, yes,' be replied, scornfully, "I suppose after a while, when yoa bey a five oont soup bono, you will expeot me to put on my swallow-tail Sunday ooat aod my stovepipe bat, hire the finest baok in town aud a brass band, go in procession to yonr shanty aud deliver tho sonp bono. We assured him bo was mistaken ; that no such idea bad ever entered our bead i bat we never aftorward enriched him with any more suggestions how to aoquire the esteem and respect of bis fellow citizens." A woman who waits ojloog time for her husband to roturn from tbe lodge has an object in viow, and more than likely another , in her hand. What is tbe difforence between Robert Bonuor and a bookkeeper Tbe latter keeps a ledgor, and tbe Lodger keeps tbo formor. It may be said of tbe two oolored women of North Carolina who fought a duel with razors that they treated each other with outtiug severity. They're not wholly bad nnt riA. ville way. W-" tbe ropo to lyt got Iuto a pan" kindly'pao' - vioU 1882. NO, Only tho General Manager. At a station ou ono i f the railroad tho triiiu bad nrrivod and departed when the stat ion agent was approach od by a quiet, wcll-drcssod uiui smoking a cigar, wh isaid i "Keep you pretty busy hero f ''Yum, ' whs tho jo ky reply. "Itusiuoss on tho 1 icrease 1" "Yum," again. "D j you run this station f" askod tho uuiot man, aft r a turn on ti c platform. "Nobody olno rtin- it,'' ro'cd thoagont. "Have yo i got a pate t car coupler " "Oh. no," "I was going to tell you to go t thunder with it if yo i had. Waul special froight rate, f suppose t" "No sir." "1 duu't give any panes," "I dou't want any." "Waiting for tho not train ?" "Not particularly " "Want to charter a car T" "No." Tho ngent left him on ;tho plat form nnd entered his oflico an 1 buui od himself for half nil hou. when the qui ot man looked in on him aim aHked : 'What is tho salary of a position Iiko this r "That's my busiuons," wh the prompt reply. "Whul's the iucomo, from thi.i bta- tion T "Ask tho bnggageman." "Your Dume is , isn't it 7" "Suppose it is f "Oh, nothing much only 1' u tin general manager of tbe liuo an I I V like to know how bnsiuess is." Nine Rules lor Writing. Tho attempt to decipher baud- writing rosemliliug tho hieroglyphic!1 on the oU libk in ouo of tho voxat one of busiuons men. Tho most ftg,'ra vating experience iu this liuu falls t tho lot of thoso cm ployed iu the government departments at Wusb iugtou, uud iu postuffioos, telegrup b, uuwspaper nnd bimilar public ostub lishmeiits whoro tuiscellaueoiiH mails are naturally larger thau iu private lines of bilbinesu. Tho Fenutau's Art Journal, com menting on "Had Writing," in au il- liibtratud nrticlo of that titlo, lays town tho following ru'es for uvoid- iug illegible poumanship. 1st. All unnecessary, Hiiperfluous or llouriuhed hues must bo omitted. 2d. No capital letters or word should bo joined together. 3d- C.ipitul letters should not bo joined to tho smaller letters. 1th. Tho capital T should never ho looped at the top. Mh. A cnpitul 11 shonld nover bo so rr.ado as to bo mistukuu for uu A or other combination. Glh. Cross all t B with a horizontal Hue nt the top. 7tb. The capital shonld always be made above the line; whilo the J should extend bolow. Otherwise, wbon asod as initial or in cipbor writiug thoy cannot bo distinguished with certainty. 8, The small 8 should novor bo made with tho loops below tho line, as it is liable to be mistukou for a p or an f. 9th. The letter Q should not be made the same as tbo figure 2. "Do I look wull ia this suit, darl ng T" he asked. Of conrso yoa d j, Qoorgo," she murmured, "you look well ia any thing." "Do yoa roaly moaa it t" he asko 1 in a charlotto rosso tone "Of coarse she does," eaid bor lit tle brother , 'I heard her say yoitordny that yoa woald look well ia anythiug She said that yoa would look well in the lanatio asylum." A Massachusetts woman 'was so jealous of bor husband's first wife that wbon he diod she refused to al low him to bo buried beside her. she remarked to tbe undertaker at tbe foueral t "I ain't going to have that woman a loaning ou Jim's arm at the resurrection day; if I klu help it, yon bet " "An Iowa man was charged forty dollars fine for squeezing a woman's -l." We didn't supposo tbore ' innorancu ubroid in istukes wo--t should d -risT PuMlshed every Thtirsdav Evrnms; JHHKMIAa OBOU8K, Prcpr Torms of Snbscnption, TWO DOLLARS PKB ANNUM. Psf sl ln viihiii six ninnlhs, or f 2K)if nof paiil within the year. No paper di continued until all srrcsrsges ae pnid iinrcxs at the Option of Uie pub lislipr. bulificripflons miisido ff the county PAVAIU.K IN AUVASCK. ft"PeiKons lifting snd iwinjf ptpvt tddiiMNod 'At otiirrn lieromentitwrrihirs ind re linhlo fori he price of tie pir MALARIA Malaria is an almost in dcscribablc malady which not even the most talented physicians arc able to fath om. Its cause ia most fre quently ascribed to local surroundings, and there ii very little question, but this opinion is substantiated by facts. Malaria docs not nec essarily mean chills and fever while these trouble usually accompany it It Often affects the sufferer with general lassitude, accom panied by loss of njipctite, sleeplessness, a tired feeling nnd a high fever, the per son afflicted growing weak er and weaker, loses flesh day after day, until he be comes a mere skeleton, a shadow of his former self. Malaria one hiving Uld n hold upon IIm human mima. tha) ir nf tha ayttam la ihrownonaar lu nervous diteatr. Th body ncak and etileabled ahaorha ua fwMjrl.hiiianl, but allhsleting aprxv Itfrclr, lh dinritiva organ, ntf lintfar ttrrform thalr furKlinna liver lcomaa tnrid , and oihr-r onrana fadina; to do their routine r(ife.akreililr become disordered, and diaaolutiou aiui death are eft to t naua. In mlilition to '"fine a certain cure fur malaria and chills and fever, Hkown's Iron lliTTEM is highly rcctinimcndcd fnr all diseases requir ing n certain ni cHicicnt Ionic; a feven, want of aipetile,losS of siremjlh, lack of enerp-y, etc. Enriches the blond, ttrengtlicns the Biuscles, and gives Dew life to the nerves. Acts like a charm on tho tliL'talivc organs. It is for sal by oil respectable dealers ia Bedlctucs, ricc, $l per bottld Be sura and get the fnuln BROWN'S IRON B1TTEX8. Take no ether. ! Tbe Carpenter Organs worn Aral mannfaoturcl aa early aa MHO at Brat. tlekxiru'. Vt. For a niuitber tf rara thDe.unatva ' ui'imttb Oa iAM Wvauw, and U . Uc nl Vlttia Lav iHKuiMcat.d at W'orcoator, Vass., XT. S. A., TTith liraucU Oilwaa au4 Wareruonia ra NCW York (No. 7 Watt Fourteenth Street), London, Madras SL Peterjburo, City ol Mexico, Berlin, Ovceioaa. Rweetnaas af Tens tn every rood, ParaatUI In every part. FufKUaa lu every di Uii ormannfaelare. Am t baractorUtla of thnCASIXURl OMASl Tverr lnatrnment W Afin ANTED for KIOHT YEARS. MOKT HRLIAni.E DEALICRI aeU tha Oaai'KNTKB t 'HiAjt, Ittit IfauyUorotbaveUiam to show yun. write dirtnst to tlie 1 tory for eCeta. itfiie aud luioruauuu aa to woere you eaa eee tuom. OVER IOO STYLES. Banging In price from tao.00 to f 1,300.00 and over. A boantlfill 100-rwn Oatajoenn. the flneet ever publlalaetl, btiai'l' VUKat U IsUauuV uig uuruueeera. Auaross or call npon I P. CiMNTEH, Worctster, Hiu. 1 LL MARBLE WORE LKWlbBUItO, PA ITALIAN AND AMERICA IffARCLE MONUMENTS, Tombfttunos, Stattvm, Urna, Vasoa LA.MIiS.ror Cliiltlron' aves, Pol, Lint i Lt, Tahletopi, Marble ani Slnlr aitmtftii, e. All those mho daatra topurelaee tonibstones ay tblnit elae maiiiilai'tureit at tbe above mea une1 marble wnrka. shitulu eoaault tbe under Uned aKaat, before i urrliailnu oleewhere. KSHi'Ki. bus r.ix, uar Julflt'Te-tf MIOdleuurg, bay CO.F 1 will mall' (Iraor the mmlm fnr a alnnla Vrrtaila Km I any lbt will reiueve Tnrr Kreclalee, Htm plea and blateaeav avinuj anil, vrvar aoti iwauuiui I aiao rn trve tloas Air produetu a luxuriant braith ol I. air n a naiu aeaa or mooin tare. Aitdre.a in-Inalne-le. etasip, liliN- V AM UklLa 4 OO.. Vi Barclay St, . V. TO CONSUMPTIVES. The artvertlaor kavlue; tn-ea reniiaaeal I red oltbet dread dlaeaae. Ooaianutlou. be a mnlr. reraedv. Is auilme La .make kauaate la leMow-enlierora the meaus ol tare. Vo a bo dnaire It, be will aead a copy of the pre. riptiuB uevd, irreaul i hariia.)Uh aae aae iias ftir nraparina ami aelna the aauau. abUki tbey will nnd a sure Ciare lor Oo a, state, I'avlua. oiia,in,ilot, AalKmat, Lsraa, kltle, a.e. rariteaaiahiua'lUel'reanltPiluB, win alaMay l.lf. aa. H- . K. A. WllbUNl latraaa al Wmnaaiat.orgb. Ji.V. ERKORS OF YOUTH. AHKNTLEM a. wh saffearxt for years Irevsj Nervous UEIH I.I ry, I'btM MVtt lB AY,ndall tbeellMits nl youtalal latk)cre lion, will for (tie sake of aanVrloa keaiasll. aad free to all who aeel II, ike reeipa aad ill reotloa tor making tlialuiile reaaedy by ehleti beaaaoured. Hu Harare ab-blng aa erotl by theadvenlaer' esierleuee eaa 4e ea ay auV dreaalag to peTlecteunn lenoe. jtiitn a. uitubH,nejajaay . nt i. Ftk It, ly. U?Ji ktep' uu tarnt all klni'toj htauki it-k at KoUi, u