iftr r fi A.l vert lie lfij: IXnten. Oa ooMmn on Ver. . irtO.OO One-half, column, on vear, 8O.)0 One-fourth column, one year, 16.00 One square (10 linen) 1 insertion 76 Every additional insertion, 10 jTroCrMional and Buiinew card of not more than 5 linen, per year, 6.00 Auditor, Executor, Aritumitflrator nal Assignee Nolicoa, 2.60 Editorial notice jwr line, IS All transcient advortiaing less loan t months 10 cents a line. AU advertisements for a shorter pe riod then one year it re payable at tin lira they are ordored, and II not paid tee person ordering them will ue neld; vSeooneible far the monev. U ! I'oetryi Sweet Country Coutini. Mow deer to the heart are the sweet country coimlna, XVhen dog days of summer betfln to draw near, When brink hare frrown hot and when sunntrokp by doxen Fill body with anguish and bosotu with fearT The green waving Held and the sweet mellng breeze, The 'scaping from turmoil toqulet and calm, The rloh, creamy milk which the ready hand aolr.ee, Aod e'en the brown couhIiis who live on the farm; The plain oountry cousins, the uncul tured oouaina. The sweet country cousin who live on the farm. The weet country ooulnt oh, aro'nt they a tri'ujture? How handy to have at the vaeatlou tltuet And paying one' board In too costly a pleasure, When all oan be had without Hpending a dime. How irieaaaat to live on rich cream and rlie berries, Freifh, gxjdon-huetl buttor and oake light and warm, free una of the horeee, the cart and the wherrie Of sweet, country couhIu who live on the furm! The plain oountry oouhIiik, the uueul- tured oouhIiim, The sweet country couhIim who live on the farm! How dear are the sweet country cous ins in summer! How fragrant the meadow, romantic the down! But straightway your faros begin to grow glummer At thought of their visit next winter to tOWIK The theatre, tho concert, the leoture, the money Expended lit tickets? tho thought give a (Minim; The sequel of summer I not quite so funny .Why don't the sweet cousins remain on their farm? The brown-vlsoged cousin, the great awkward oousins, Tire clodhopper cousin should stay on their farm. A Rhyme for the Time. What shall w do with the horrible Hie The club-footed, claunuy, stick to you flics? Wna there u'vr mioli a pest Come on earth to molest, Egypt or any whero under the skies? luto our oars, if we lie down or rise, Into our none, ubiquitous (lies, And never we slap one. Hut lot there ooiuo flap one, Just where the other chap met hi surprise. Into the butter, and Into the plea, Provoking profanity, large in site; And though, in each inllk-plate, Thousand may meet their fate, Tlau't a troumotance unto the flies. We sit down to write, and try to de spise Their mean circumvention, when someone spies A spot unprotected TUquiokty selected, And "claim" made out by the villain ous flies. Fain would we sleep, but 'tlsfolly that tries; Borne part of our picture i counted a prize. Then they come in relays, With a pluck that dismays, And we talk In Sanscrit, which don't hurt the flies. Come thou calm night, with thy coo I lug supplies. Shut us from torture, and pity our erloa Give u kind soothing dreams, For, as far as It seems, Vo other refuge I safe from the Alio. Wm. Lyle in Rochetter EsprrM. ' K . i On tho day of victory no weariness Melt. Talk is cheap bat ft good example cost something. ' Tree politaaeaa is a tender thought fulpeaa of bUiers. . The beat throw with the dice, is to throw them away. Oeniaa begins great works j labor eJoce finish) sham. . Love Is fever critic ! Hate can paidoo more than lore. ' Opportunity, sooner or later, nomas jo all work and wish. , To win, work end wait bat work good deal mors than yoa wait. - Cor;: "meats art often nothing rse-i p:t2uejdfclsshoods. r '- ' rir-"J mnetbe III VOL. 20. for Tb Posr. REBEL PRISONS. nr pr. it. RoTimocK. Tho more the prisoners ware abased, the more fondly did their thonghts turn to the old flag, under whioh they had fought, and whioh was the symbol of bnppiooss and pleuty at home, "Wo bare coofi dence in our gorernmeut," was a re- mark oflon made in reply to accuse tiona by tho rebels that oar govern- meet did not care whether we starr ed or not. Wbon I consider that this was tbo common laocruago of men suffering nndor miseries raroly, if ever, parallolod in history i can not be astonished that the Union ex ists to day. I foel a oonsciona joy that tbore was no act of mine, daring a bitter impiiuoniuoot, to diagraco that dear old flag. In reforing to the North, as diutiuguishod from the Soatb, it was often spoken of as ''God's conn try," aod the old flag as "Clod's flag." Such was the halo of glory with which all its associations seem ed surrounded. Incidents wero of snoh frequent occurrence patriotically illustrative of the prisoners' devotion to the glorious Stars and Stripoa, that I will here relate one expression made by a color-Sergeant of ouo of the regiments captured at Lookout Mountain, who died some time in August. While bis companions wore ron-. deriog tho last sorrioos to him that rode preparation for tho graro al ready described, they discovered his regimental flag, whioh he had eo oftoa boruo in battle, wrapped about his person, lie had piacod it sooretly thore to shield it from traitor bands, lie could not bear that his lorod symbol of his country's glory should bo dos- ecrated by tbo bauds of traitors. Rererontly bis comrades gazed npoa its folds, and siloutly, with tearful eyes, agaiu restored it, as a fit cov ering for his noble breast, to be bariod with him, boro was guanine patriotism. And was a glorious wiudlcg sheet for a patriot ! Dying moo clung to little metnontooa, such as a miniuture tlug, or the badge of their army corps. But it was tbo gooeral constancy with which mon ever dung through all thuir .misery, with love to their oountry and its cause, whioh spoko mora eloquently than any mere iooidoot of their de votion, and the triumph of princi ple over cirouraatauoes of misery. Hero as in othor prisons, a fear ful epidemic roigned, termod by old prisoners " Exchange on the brain." r reqaent rumors of exchange were circulated designedly by the rebols, for the purpose of quiottng desporate men, and preventing the formation of dangerous plots for release and escape. Cftea these ramors seemed to hare some foundation.' Unco t priest who bad charge of the spirit ual derelepmeat of the prison com mander, Wirze, came into prison, and read to a large concoarso of prisoners, gathored to bear, extracts from a paper purporting to giro news of an exchange about to take place at Savannah. Prisoners oom ing in from Sherman's army brought news of a raid under Stoneman and McCook. The next news we hoard was, that Stoneman's caralry was fighting around Macon i and then again it was annonnoed that Stonoman and hiswholo army was captured and made prisoners of war. This was partially confirmed by men belong ing to nis loroe, coming in as cap tires. They informed ns of the siege of Atlanta, and reitorated the former newe of an exchange agreed upon i bat when and where it was to take plaoe, they bod no informa tion. When Stoneman was raiding to wards ns, with evident inteutions of releasing the prisoners i when ra mors came of bis baring arms for the prisoners, whioh I hare ainoe ascertained was true. oar hearts beat high with a glorioas hope. Those who bad previously had tendeneies of exchange on the brain, weat fearfully wild with tbo dee of release in the same plaoe, A few, who bad learned by bitter experi ence bow naeertaiu every thing In Dixie was, while cheered by bright prospects, put bnt little tool ooofl denoe n thjsm. Some, pinned their faith and hope MIDDLEBURG, SNYDER COUNTY, they were nn willing to wait eron a day, and whin at last they found at their hopes and faith disappointed, sank into donpondoncy from whioh ootbiog conld aroaso thorn, and died. Rumors and statements of ex change wore eo froqoontly mado and backod by eridenco which looked plausible, that the prisoners wore oxpoctant and dospoodont by turns during July aod August. Tbose two months wero tho most terrible of aoy experienced by the general prisoners. Nino thousand wero said to Imro died during that epace of timo, wonderful mortality. I ono day in August, no loss than ono hundred and sixty prisoners diod, and tbo avorngo was orer a hundred daily. From the 1st of Feb. to the 16th of September, twelre thousand Federal Soldiors, prisoners of war, wore carried from tbo prison to tbo dead man's trench and tbo felon's burial. Many of tbo deaths woro hasten ed by despondency. Aftornn usual excitement about exchange fol lowed by diRsppointment, deaths were tho most frequent. Extreme boat, during July and August, was often followed by days dark with intermittent showers On one occasion, during such a pe riod, the ground was rondorod so hot by tho intense rsys of the san as to blistor my foot by mere contact. This poriod of heat was followed by tain in snob quantities as in a few boars to causo a freshet, which swept away tho stockade where the brook entered, and loft tho prison t and also swept away portions on the nortb-wost Bido, by tbo flowing of the water down the bill-eide. Wrotohed oroaturos all over the prison were crawling out of bolos in the ground, in which they had bur rowed, half drowued with tbo water which had suddenly filled them can teens, plates, bits of wood, blankets, spoons, pails, and hats, wero swept away down tbo billaido, tho prison ers frantically rushing after thoirde eorticg good and habitations. The only washing sorao poor fol lows got was on such an oooasion. It was curious to observe the differ- out maunor in whioh various indivi duals accepted of suoh a diuponsa tion. Some laughod, others sworo, and abused futo, many scroamod, and criod as if mad, wbilo still othor orouubod in the rian, or fuw tho whole soeno unmored, as if gazing on a panorama with which thoy had no conoorn. I sat at such tunos crouching in the rain, my body bent up in a man ner to bring pry kneos, stomach, and bead in close proximity, betwoon which were folded and placed my jacket and ragged blanket, my back exposed to tho rain, forming a kind of roof to Loop tboso ralaables from the wet Bat all in rain each an effort. Tho force of tbo rain, raaniog down the bill-eiuu, oontinaally upsot me, by undormining tUb sand benoath my feet, until at last losing my blankot and philosophy, misorob'a and grotesque as others, 1 went rushing and pitching after my tin pail and blunkot, caught up, and carried away by tbo torrent. Large forces were thrown oat to protect the portions of stookado swept away by tbo flood, and keep the prisoners from dosperate at tempts at eBoapo. All night nndor arms these forces woro kept in fight ing position until tho rain stop ped, and the stockade was repair ed. Night and day artillery was man ned, whioh commanded the broken portions of the stockade, and erery precaution taken against the eeoape of prisoners. One great good re sulted from this freshet. On the hill side where the stookado bad been broken away, a spring was dis covered, whioh supplied an abund ance of pare water to ns poor wretches, greatly in contrast with the filthy stream which bad been oor only supply daring tbo sam oier. , Shortly after the foregoing event i became engaged in a tunneling operation whioh name near proring fatal to its projector. Tunnels did not usually oave in, for these rea sons the top of the earth, after the tanned passed under the dead-line, was Interlaced by roots, , aod fibers, whioh formed euflcUnt adhesive power, In most parts of the stockade, to keep the earth from fsrlng lu,- ' i a 1 ' - a! thing hard and clayey. In this osso, howovor, after we got boyond t - 1 a l a iue siocKaae, on ttio ontsnlo, wc ran into sandy soil, where our tnw fortunos began. Two of as wore digging in the daytime, wbea, low, and behold, the tunnel caved in, in our roar, and ef fectually cut off our rolroat into the stookado. Gradually it cotumencinl falling upon us, fillingour oars, eyos, and months with dirt. Thero soemoJ to bo no rolonse from our critical condition, except by digging apward, whioh wo com menced to do with foar and tromb- ling, as that operation was always attended with dtngor of being buriod alive. Suddonly, down camo a mass of earth above us, which did not as wo anticipated, bury us so deop, but, that wo scrambled out of it, sbriok ing with torror. Tho rebel guard at that timo, coming around with the relief, roscnod us from our awful couditiou tbo only timo I was over glad to soo a rebel, or have his as sistance. During the last of August, rude barracks were in process of con struction in tbo nppor portion of tbo now stookado. This looked like preparations for a wintor sojourn, and gave ns but little comfort, as tbose buildings consisted of roof only, on upright posts, and tbore was no prospect of moro than a few being accommodated by tboso frail shanties. On the weary, woary, dreadful days dragged slowly along, amid suffering and doath in prison. . Sep tember came Ovor fifty of my oomrados bad died since the term of their imprisoumont began, which was not so large in proportion to thoir number, as occurred in otbor companion capturod at tbo same time with ourselves. The majority of our mass or aqnad wero veieraos strong mon, inurod to hardships and exposure by pre vious experience in camp and the field. Scarcely any of my company died until after the middle of July i The month of August, swept thorn away by tho hundreds. In that mooth an epidemic of dysontory broko out m camp, and could not bo oon trolled by tbo crude medioiuos the rebels bad iu store to trout sick. Tbo only astriugout wo bit I wu j nvicoratod while-oak bark. Ouo pomid of thi wo would add to a oamp-kuttluful of water, boil it for ten minutes, thou when cool, wo would givo about a tables spoonful evory two hours. This was all the modicino wo had at our command to allay tho dreadful scourge that disoaso makes wbon it appears in the form of an .epidumio roor boys I Aoble follows I As 1 recall their names, memory brings each face, pale with prison suffering, before me. I cannot have but groat er faith in human nature from hav ing known thorn. Dear oomrados 1 endoared to me by many sufferings I guilty of no orimos i theirs was a death of lingering torture, to which. in comparison., tho devices of the in qaistton would have beon mercy. Victims of a relentless hatred which has not ceased with tbo war, your nameless, crowded graves dot the prison burial ground, and point a solemn moral to tbo barbari ties enacted at Andorsonvill the boll holes of rebeldom. To-day, when the men of Georgia ask the rights tbey formerly exercis ed, aod among them the right of ex oldding the negro from the ballot box. I wonder, wether tbose patriot bones do not start from their crowd ed, shallow graves to bear teatimony that, while living, every publio op inion, and erery white man of that locality banded with blood-hounds to prevent their escape, forming a net work of vigilance through which it was almost an impossibility to break, and their only dependanoe was in the blscks, the unionists alone of that section, who harbor ed them when it was a peril to their lives, and gave them of their food when they bad bnt a bar subsist ten oe for themselves. Ton who tit by the quiet firesides and read these reoords of snfferinn-. reflect, when yon hear the olsmor ingsof those who era trying tore gala lost power, that tbey are those who, all over that southern land, by their silence consented, or by action endorsed, the barbarous treatment ander wbioh anion men lingered, suffered and died amid tbo tortures M7i 'n m of starvation. . ..' . . J ! 1L 0 m i PA., SEPTEMBER Don't Know hit History One ot the ofllco kids loft the door open and bo managed to blow in. He had boon skirmishing on tbo out sido for some timo, aud improvod tho first favorable opportunity to make his preonco felt. "Lend tno a quarter, boss," he nnid. "I'm looking for wouoy from tho east, but tho draft don't Boom to get around as soou aa I expoclud. I will bo " "That don't wash. Tako it to the Cbinose opium dcu. Aro you a journalist f" Well, no. I'vo been pretty low down iu thia world lmve seen what yon might coll northwest sido ol the sling back hickory, but, honesty. I never was a journalist, fvo work- . . . a 1 1.. oa iu a niftugiitur iioiiNO, nun uun ditches in tbo swamp lands of 1 11 i uois. and blackened boots and ten- led a Turkish hath room bat I never was a Journalist. No, I ' ''We've nothing to-day for yon." "Boss, I just bcliovo if you know my past history yon would feel im pelled to negotinto this loan of a quarter. Ouly a qunrter of a dollar, I'vo had an evontful career, boss, Bure as you aro a foot high. My mother" "Havou't time to liston to your biography." "No f That's what I thought. Well, you soo my mother diod whou I was only a two-year old t and whoa I was tLrco my father was knocked off aa oyster sloop by the main boom wheu she was a jibliug in C'bosapeako bay. That juuibod me out onto tho woods all alono at a very tendor age, and since then I re bad to rustle like a dead Cottonwood iu a blizzard. Well ' Now eay, if you don't go out wo'llgot tbo foreman to flro you through tbo roof." Yes ; wo. I got in with nn Ital ian organ griudiug family iu Now York, and being sumll of my ago and small featured, tbey dyed my faoo and hands, sowod a tail on to cue, rigged mo out in a rod dress skirt and bluo polonaiso, and passed ino off for a monkey. You wouldn't tuiuk that to look at mo now, would you !" "If you don't "Well, of oourso I outgrow all such nonsense as that, aud got to go to school for a couplo of mouths, aud plnyod with the very kids who used to put pennies in my cap wheu I was a monkey. When I got some big gerl shipped as a slush oook on i whaling brig, aud was gono throe years, taking in a mighty sight more ocoan travol and exporlouo than we did wbulos. Wbon came to sottle up with the captain ho figured the account, "An ought's an ought, aud two's two t thoro ain't any oil comiug to yoa j so I was landed in Baltimore without a son markoe in ia my jeans. What did I do then ? " "Now if " "Why, you see thoro was a circus in towu with a gorgeous old inansg- etio, and tbo mauager of the oou corn had lost bis ekpl'au', trainer- ran off with the clown's wife and as I bad eeoa some elephant training in Calcutta wbord we laid iu for re pairs for a oonplo of months, I slruok him for a job, and old Bom bostio the boat trick elephant whioh ever appeared before tbo crownod beads of Kurope Was tamed ovor to me. The old hide-bound cuss aud mo got along firstsate and we show ed all over the north wost. One of bis star triaks was for me to lie down and he'd walk over me. Well, ono day some sneak of a canvass man gave him a quart of whiakoy tnixod iu about two pounds of sugar, and when the afternoon performance came on Bombastio was so blind, crazy drank that ho stepped on that band and mashed it thinner than greonbaok newspaper. Looks bad, don't It 1 Tbers is a whole temper- anoe lecture and a prohibition amend' ment to the constitution in that paw. Sines then I've never touched a drop of liquor, and never . will."" Oome, m. sway, bot if you'd had tbe sMy-f A flaolo Out, clergyman sipelas for three yeara and a balf,jl? , fog f9nat w straight beat, your noee would sag- geet a bad break at some time of your life or other, , Lend "ay, a quarter, and 111 make t all right. The Cluck scribe, for a variety of reasons whioh epaos f jrbid rebeare iug just now, threw hi-n a two bit nieoe with the bolo uluacaclpiitaJr'lln.''v i"" ..o1.j 14, 1882. NC orfloger, snnppod it np to tho ceil ing, rnught it iu his tno nth and on J denly shook it out of bis sleeve. "That' one of tuy littlo Irgerdp maingngs. Always like to givo value received. Good dnr. See yon sub sequently." lie mutt hnvo worked Bomebod elso for nnuthnr, quarter, for rvhei the tVicc mnn wearily clonol biV labors for the d.iy, and sought hi summer villn, ho stumbled ovor the elephant trniner lying dead drunk' oi. tho sido walk, and smnihml tho oth er band. Spirit woro bovorini! not r but they wero not the spirit of jusi mou made wrfict. Vlmlc W to Words. Half tbo ill wo bentd in ooi hearts nro ills bemuse wo liosnl tbetu. Wounds of the hrnrt nre tho od1 ones that nro benlcd by opening Grnnt mou and geniuses find their truo plaeea iu titues of great ovonts- Troubles borrowed and stolen ont-numbor by far all others in tbi woi Id. The moans to promoto any ond are as necessary ns tho end to be promotod. It is ensy look down on ourselves Is tho difficulty. On tho neck of tho young mnu sparkles no gem so gracious as en terprise. Tho rcpronclies of enemies should quicken us to duty, and not keep ns from it. Ho who liros only to booofit him self confers on tho world a benefit when bo dies. It is ouster to got a mnn fighting ngniiiBt all tbo world thin to make him fight with himsolf. Muko no more rows to perform tbi or Hint i it slows no groat Btronght, and makos theo ride bo bind thyself. Wheat Maxims in Small Compass. The following information about wheat growing has beon condonsed and is growing tbe rounds iu vari ous journals: 1. Tbe boBt soil for wheut is rich clay loam. 2. Whoat likes n good, big. soft bod. X ('lover taruod uuder makes just such a led, 1. Tbo bunt Bood ia oily, heavy, plump and clean, 5. About two incbos is tho host doptb for Bowing tbo seod. G, Tho drill puts in tbo sood bet tor and choaper than broadcasting. 7. From tbe middle of Septeml or to the lust of Outobor ia tbo best time for sowing, 8. 'rilled, ono bushel of sood per aero ; if sown broadcast, two bushels por aoro. 9. One hoayy rolling nftor sowing docs mnon good. 10. Por flour, cut wbon tbo grain begins to burden ; for seed, not un til it has hardonod. I When the ridor in the gniso of a drunken spectator etnggered into a oircas ring at Marquett Mich., and the ring master wont through with tbe usual foolery of ejecting Liur., incidentally remarking that no police men wero even present wlen order neoded to bo restored, a German of ficer hastilod tbe performer off to jail, in spite of all protests add ex planations, "A oboko is a oboke," he but von a mnn r.ay vero is do nolic, and vy don'd doy arrest dot drunk man, don do Marquette bolioo ia in dot violnidy, and don'd yoa forgot id, Mr. Circus, I bed you. "Vho are yon " asked tbe magis trate of tbo dirty faced little Waif who stood trembling ia the dock. "I'm a child of sorror." whimper ed tbe nrehin. What aro yoa sorrow about T" "Notbin mnob, only dad and moth er get mad, and fight six nights out of a week. Dot dad gets licked er. ery time and I'm sorry, 'cause It's so rough on dad." was woman rnbls chorea. fflomobody baa written a history of pies bat it is upt a pioos work. there is no too study that is not eapabl pt delisting M iffe. a jjtl application to ti . Dashfuloess 'rwr sometimaa at. PuMifthtot ewry TliurSda'. JEBEMIAU C&OtfaA, Pa Terms of Subscription, l'VO HOLLA Ttfl PEH ANMJST. ry. ' alils it)in six rwmlh-. or lllOifiMH paid within tht year. Kn paxr dis continued until all arrfnrHrn -e ' paid iinles st the uptiiBi of the putt lislir. tttibwrlpflrtn-. outside of thn cohntjf PAVAUt.B IN AllVANCB. M9lVri;n llftinir and usimr natte addressed other- heroine sufmeriber and re linhlp forllie price nfllie paper MALARIA Malarf.1 is an almost in describable malady which hot even the most talented physicians arc able to fath om. Its cause i most fre quently Ascribed to local surroundings, and there w very littlo question, but this opinion i substantiated by f icts. Malaria docs not ncr cssarily mean chills a fever while these v usually accompan1 often alTects their pcneral lassit panied by lo sleeplessno and a lv son afT1' cr an' .scs flesh day ; , , until ho be com inerc skeleton, a ilia. . of his former sdf. Mil.rin enr Katnc laid h hol.t iixm ih human I d-Hjr or th iy! lo nvrvoua ni v,lm U thrown von imMn. Tho nodv to-oak and tnfnhlcd aUorha -) nournhmoni. hut ttihaUitn noon liKlf, tho dignltr organ m lonfrr fjarfcrni their runrtlonaf lha llvar bvcnmaa torphl. ah orfana (allln to do thalr mitina ora.,ptrMy bacom.diiolfJ, and diMolutKm aod domth mn ays lo coaua. tn srMltioh to ticinc a certain cum for malaria tint chilli ami fever, Drown laoH llirrtas l highly recommended for all diieuei ftqula Ing certain and efficient tonic ea rciallyim!lgertlon,dyiperia,lntrr. fnittcnt fevers, want of appetite, lots of strength, lack of encray, etc. fcnrichei the blood, atrenctheaa the muscle, and give new lift to tbo ticrvc. Acts like a charm on th tligexiv orpins. It U for by all resiectabl dealer tn medicine, Jiricc, 1 1 jcr buttl Be sure end et th genuine feROWN'8 IRON B.ITTSM. Tk bo otbtr. PRIVATE SALE OF REAL ESTATE THE nndernigrjod offers at privato ale, tho fiillowliiK dnerltail Kaat Mlaia K "'! farm situate In Frank lla tw., Sntdor. Ci.., Fa. M mllo Wa,i ot MlUdleliUmr ooalala. . 10ft Acre orth hsat lima atotia land, jhron araarsct aO a Rood frame ilwdlllna hoaaa, barn, and oil. ar outhullclintt wall of wood watrf .' door, llnariDic water on th tartn-llirlnnu ToonKorrkard of oliolB Irnli tnu t-arik in 1 blub auta ofoultlrailon. jostf n wAi.rtn, laddlauari, Y4 m$ anav Arldraas; Fab. H,'tt. gfVMUEL 8CUUADKR. Ccntrcville, Snyder county. Pa. Ia Anent lor LANCK k YAlltttn'rt 1IAI!I5!J: WOKKN, lixatcil at MlKt Llftnfuil.ara, All rtaa wlrlilny to prooure M(.7 tl M f.MX, TllMH. STllSts, In fnnt anftblnn lolha MarbiaJIno1 rhould ot tall tn oall on Ur. Sohradar an1 aoaf atrlvs and loin rloa, Jan !, 'Sl.tl. AGood Salary ! and traveling ettnr:iis Is whattvarf sarsosa ' ful saloanian will rooalvo who ssaasas with ' Anv man of iluok,nriiv and rallai.UUr an unotad, Wa ottar aH'clal indurareanta IwyoBif anv otkar nrm. Ncra brluaa you renita. kt iKi'MiriiHT and unou (ir. rartl oulars furnllliacl on anulleatlo. Addraa (with itaoii') stating ax. Ii. r, ATTWtlODatlO.. MurMivraao, Uuv,NT Aof . I, lis. DI7CT"t ow k'.ro ika' Tou aaa saak una tar at work (of ' I ansth'no ofo. tlau. mi not nae-io.i. wa will atari, you, T J 4 ,v and upwards mala at bom by I La Iniiuiirleas, Man, woman, boya and altls wantxl avrrwkara to work for u,. Now I, thn lime. Yoa eaa work In spar time only r ylv your wul llmala Ik buluo. You san llvs at boino and do ilia work. Nonlhar buaiaaaS will par lu naarly as wall. No on can fall lo ml normoua pay by annexion at oaoa, Uosit tlutnt and torins free. Won.y tuad fail, sat Iy, and honorably. Address 1'av a Co Aueaata, ilaln. MAKBLE WOM LKWlbliUUd, tA. ITALIAN AND AMERICAN MAftfiLfi MONUMENTS, Tombntones. Btatuos, Urns, Vason LAM tin, for Children' U trs, Pott i, LiuteU, Tnlilclnpt, Marble ifui titttie MtintrU, it. All thoi who dalr tdpnrokai txashitoBM anytbln ala nauufartard at lbs anaveai lloaad trJarbl work,, akoald eonabll th tdf alKBaxI al, bfor pnrnhallnk alsSktr. . . SAMl'M. jKiVVKN. r Julylt'lS-tr Mlddlt.tafi.bay ta.f I'lillPLlvS. t wfll mall Iffwt tbi, feati.t f.r sfrapto Trelakl tinlan thai wllf rmt Twrr Krwoklos, Pi ia plan and tllniehaa, lvla lloaa for Drodaelaa a laxurlwai anait .1 k.ia on a. bald head or raoUi fan. Adra. IB- Oloalaa la. Siarju. BtN' VANUkXr h C If fcarelay m.. ttrj . ' TO COKSUMFTIVIIS. Tks advortlaar bavin kra swraaaaaatlv' IK!!.'! "NSSaMlsl tbSkBa, Vklrt "."' Aaahiaa, llrwikllKa,. Ha rtasa wlabla tbe rraaaiidt wall a .iww...,.K.,.iueii, bW wm 71 Wllllaaubargb, M.T. , ERKORS OF VOtTTH. raouaa av akiw ta.ai,rav, i. tra, bawasaura. waaavav wUkta 14 pvUt l5 lit) SlUVttrtlalSar sM. .. SaW .A. b.o J. a ui . 4rag H iwrfHMait.isac.. res ntXtrm -9v. car ot tkal dr-ad dUaa, Uoasaaabilo. ky a a. f."P'f U aaahw to lusak hk-w I, his Ullaw-watfaror ika niaaui af fa. To all bodralt, b lllMad p Jiu. , sorlntf Aaa. (fiaauf akarwa Iwflk ik. 1 J.. ' yaTbiastoiiwMaj,MriHS At WBtitii.iTT. rwti4Vtjs ST mW.,1H,ia,,,,"L,M"l talsavlVv. tk. will rarlb Mka f aaW.rswai aaseMr aaJ fro u aU uaatl it. imai axtaai Hlttuil turk fit '""-a1 11 J