0f J'liblicntion.! S-rsst Herald V.V in-' .y N -rniii - ,, ,ce: lhcrwi.-e .V , :v artel- continued uu;il all r- '" p.-lBUi!- arglcellns; Ui , ...H,.T;:'m do W take oat (heir " b M Hi- ' Ilu' ': 5rl',iion- trotn one Ifllf to an- ) . . .re ll' mme of Die former as printing Coirpany, ; rset .JOHN I. SCVLL, iiiiMacM Manager. UN. iT niRXEYS AT , ' ,Jl.rl. ' liii'-e iu real icnce ol aui(. lily, i ;.!.!: I'-'V' iansnl DcV-lai. Berlin prompt aueutl'ia " nil i-uri ,. ! ); i.m peruianuntly located V'r -r:i' proieion. r.M re at li u-"1 '. ' .' I ,.1.,-e a lew liiorri east eorreslioa.iclllS. v. t. .1. I i; 1 w t:i: rs his professional j . vi-cns ft Somerset and vicm ..nrd-T west "t the Hr jan. Zl, 'Tu. k(i"XrZ, ATTOKXEY ATI IX, w.il cie iT'Mji alien-1 .-U to n 1 mtre u n ; ,;,. tiu iu the Jail ' .lji-tl. i y .i,-s in ler H. V.lfnKh hn : i-e "I law in S..inerm-t uJ i" . i.n v lo it-e livor ivt t otlice. ! vrf'iUX KY ATLAW.SIIM- 1 ir -hi i'-i attend t. all I.UMln w .')" ' ,u" "adTunf-e"! on eoilvti..u "'1 'i-i .'! . ai MMia street. EHVY. ATTuRXKY AT LAW '.'mihUcjh, Sgui'iwl. l'a.. will tutruiea lo in? cur with :t .i.v. . 12-ly. ii. u l'A KU." ATTt KX tYS AT , .! I. a.. - .r.: counties. Ail oubiDi-m. ea- l'! tiv aitt-n Ktl w. l:lln.r. ri'iruiauuic. ex :dl t'r;a"l all kin-lft. and of : . r.i :. Ailojwraiione war- juuei. .u. j-;HM!:l. All"li.tl l' . attend to ail bu'inusa en . !! an J a ij'tnini; tuuii . S.jeiitv. Ill'w inf.iun lh. 1. "Tu-ljr. f ATTOUXEY AT LAW, 1 u' l 1 'eusion Aitttit. Somerset, li msc. Jan. 11-tl. :;ti rarL b. oatTUMu i..itITHKll. Attorneys at IjiW. f ats. Ail pr t-ssional Lu-inees j .?:! '. ' 2:e in -Milium :n Muck," ' ..; I. 11. Urr'iaii's !rui sl.Te. ;XKY AT LAW. -i -li:il 1-u-int'S. entrusre 1 : niLii jTi'Uii'tn'Saa-i hoei:ty w. n. Ki rrkL. I'i'PKL. ATTOKXEYS AT i."-. -4i:rUfte.l to their care a ill '.u.iiie a:t-ndod to. f. & uthem eul of JIara- . i- .'foui Hiin n. I . I -...m k tl.1.5 s ol e-wnnu lue pr.u-tnc 01 j Ka.'io r atid at a low orioea a the sauie I i -k ai, ! done anyLere in Hit Slmic. j Sin '- -r tr.'.ii i.-r e; a double set tor f li. AH) Housi ,it surriite -i; and t-viu ntmi"i iiii jun ; HiliVLY 4, tH), R ruii.UISSlOS MEHt HAS I S : ::av ;e place. altimhe. t advaates 7-at:i made. T: U.d aE.- 'i"i"nr.l ri ftlullv iiitormsthe illt ui l this weil known hotel in tne - Ni:,n-el. Ins bis intention to k"ep - :.;-h lie h"p'-s wtliyive e.iti!aj.lion to jr In i Inui ith th-ir custom. :. - joii, H'LL. i t.u)!. SUJIGE0X, mmi:usi;t, " i "ii Main S'rcet, IA. 4'T2 A C MILLK1I, after twt-lve -i kv-Uvu prai-tiee to Sliaiiksvtlle, has livr.ti; 1 til at Somerset f.-r the jrac--x--.'hi.-i tenders his profoi-aioXiaf ser .? c.i-iiS id hotaesKBt B'l Ticlulty. - ' Ijiuj h:re, oi j-slte the liAnict re te -an tie eoneuited at ailtiui-.s ' '.'i.m, i-uifiie-L vroriipiij answered. A WALKER, ; 4t-.c Sjin-Tih-t tVunty, Ia.. Hn V--'.-i f'..., A iff nt. nl (u ami m-ii rvatl . tu.ikf cti.e-f ltif, ivifcte .HlMaS iu I ikMVcr an. I Nu-k"tU aountwa. ' tUiA. ,A'ili-w, Hft.ru4i, I haver .?ta. april 2. HOIJlSAI.i: (.KOd HS, (i. HASSETT, lirauhtsmjiu &nl liuiltb r. ; tUt bejt UK liner kuwn te tkt I iu i rn arvie. Ejilding made a Specialty.. raironaze Solicited. I'k.. May S. rAl INM CEMEXTS. HI. KEMP, !!.r.M;isviLLE, 5 C'-rstt County, Pa. -" La;-, of l.:ai at lower rntej than of Feb. "-; TinciAi. TEETH n J. V. Y1ITZ Y. i; x i s t -t ary. Soit.trttt Co., l'a.. 'sea. i "."tud iiat Ume. arraartsd t I ,4 ibe wry liest 1 u ",""r mi l t. the pre.- J la-.i WITH L. Ki'tlor Sr. Co., ""'''Tl JI31S or CIGARS, b ltLBm l I'llUt A Market Ht v"Mark.t St..) ''HlLiliELPHIA. r''N"H.UI -a JUSP. T QTJTD"DCJ i !u,ranteed by .,,J " UiAj.lLJlO, f Ssed at I M..... ClGARS. bKL.Ft.l:u.i,A x lie VOL. XXII. r.a.ilt. t. at. 01.I5UU. LIVENGOOD&OLlNflER, I BANKERS, j JJain Street, opposite the lot j oUiee, Dale City, la. I We sell Drafts nes-otiaWe East ,n J West. IlrafU snd ( 'hecks on ot hvr Imtik. ,...1,.1 .i I lion paid to collections. Muni., received n H- ' I"'t- puyanle on demand: Interest paiiiun tlmede- ......j! j;l ,-.ntiiiur Ui rarti- i I"':. Everything In the Hanking line will rs- K ,",Yicr tin i'r.ili"il nen-1-j ir pr.init r. -nal attention: we shall do alii'1 " " , ..! s.rciiuloill-.r ' VBr UtmoSl to rive Salialactioa In iurHm. ma ; r.ruiou a. i i.i:ijx.i. Cambria County BANK, -. Mi MAIX MKr.ET, JOHNSTOWN.PA., Inllonry S-hnal.le"i Ilil-k Itui'.aing. .'. r- t. 'a- rr.ii.i'ii 1 A (.oinTaT liauLine Iu-iiies Transacted. . ,i n '. uuctulijr utieuJ- j i j ' ' Irnf utiJ CJ..1J nil Silver h-uirlit tvl K)M. ' C "llr'ti.uf uiJe in all jtrt il tlie Tinted Mutei , aiiiK 'atiaua. interest n.iwrd at the rate olaix ""ji'KXEY AT I-A V . -r (x-nt. iier annum, if lest ix m. Hit In or l.itir. S.'tuvrKet. IViu.a. ; Spei-I:!! arrHiirrnienis tn !e with (tuimiiaiK au.l tHner ln hold tiM,r in trutt. I ai-ril It 73. J'H DIBr.KT. join n KOREKT. CO., I OHX HIIIKUT- t OHX HIIIKUT Xf. 240 MAIN STREET. J O II X S T O V X , i i: X X A j We Iraff mjr'tijihle in all .r: ol tho T"ni tel StHte and fuiialap. and fa r'orriirn eouutriea. - Huy ..d. uin and iovrnment litnd at ( nLLlNS. ll.Xi. S-.inrrwt. I hii-hrf : market jri.-e. Inn money un approred , i :r -tit i'jr; of jail. "! ;air. , e, uri.v. lirailj and L'Ii-il on other tank e(ib- .iui.j i"iiuj irrlu ! !. .iinney revi eu ou iteiuit . vahleon demand r at the mtr of Six ji-r rent. L-1--i Annum jiai-l o,i Time IroiU. Errrythinr In the Hnukiiic Line receives our j prompt attentiin. i Tlianktul to our friends and eustotners for their past parronajre, we solicit a continuance of the s:imc. and imite others who hare tuiness in our line to rive w a trial. a.-urinz all. that we shall at ; all tiin do all we can to rive entire satisfaction. ' FehilTe JfiHX MUKltTkCU ' AN ACT ('(lift rriiisr Additional Privi'lm s on the JOHNSTOWN ! 1. He it er; acted hy ttie Senate and t Kci-r', ntativ,-s d the t Vtuinmwalt h ,d I'cnoj'v Ivaiaa. in tjciicral AiH'iiildv met, and it it hTclv enactivl lv the aiithorttv ol tlie samr: That the JOHNSTOWN SAVINGS BANK i is h, rely authorized Ut rtiriiv tlejmetts In-m nil- iiorsaud'marrM-,1 wiincn. aud shall have power to j y. on application, the ehii k. projT r.cei. or i4"-icr ,d ui,y nitiHT. or tnarrtcd woman, such money, '. or any part thervof. as he or site may have dojios j ltei to his or h.-r crciit. r any intt rest nt islvi- MS BAI wn coueirutaeuu and j tend aecruinr tUcroun, without the assent or ap. jiroial tt the paiant or truardian erf such minor, or . . ; lira uip:ani ui nTiii"o on uurowuo m ruiu , : loarriori woinaa. to attach or In any manner iiKer-; litre with any deposit. Interest, or dioJend due j .lo re. to such ndiHT or marrl-d woman. i Str. 2. That all aets au I rtsot acts innmWst- i cut witb le ns vt tois act an- hrel T re- ' WM. ELLIOITI ' Sneaker (f the II. use of Rei rr-statives. . Hhii. H. ANDERSON. i Speaker or the Seuate. j AM r-.iv.-d the tenth lav of March. Anno 1 oml-! ni. oik- tle'Uaiitl enrht tiiii'lre'l and sereniT-three JOHN F. IIAACTIiANFT, ! I i ikkii k or the ) i S. uli Aur r the i oksoxulaltii. : II akiiisri ko, Man-b i t, A. D. lTS. PENNSYLVANIA, s: I do licrei.v ecnivy that I lie foopdnir an-! an nexed is a lalL true and correct ipy ol Mie onsl nal ai t of the ticiieral Asseml-ly. entltleil: All A-t eonfcrriiitr a.t.iitioiial privileges on the John town S:n Uif Hank, as the wiuie remains on file in this olhce. In testimony whereof. I liave bereunU set my huii-l and caio-'c 1 the seal of the Sc-reUiry's otnt-e ti lie affixed, the day aud vear alve written. A. C. KE1NOEHU Deputy Secretary of the t.'oiniu-ealtb. J-.mc 1WM.BOOSE&C0 ; FOUNDERS & fflCHINIS'IS, SALISBURY, : : PEWA Manui-tun-itf ol all kin! of CASTINGS & MACHINERY Or Jcrs I'y mail pnmptly atten-t I to. Address W1. HihisE k CO.. Salii-fmry. Elklick P. t . S-sierset Co., Fa. , Vt. 16. IIS TA li L I HI I Eli IX 1 S3S. li :-;' TA It L lSIIED IX i ;;. C. G. Hammer & Sons . Manu'B'-turers of Fine .and Medium Fl'RNI- 1 TI'KE.of every descriptf-tn an.1 price. haml-male and kUw-rior In style aud ouality Own found in most or any other Furniture House tills i-ide of the , monntaiiis'. : Vines 1'b-itoirraphs arel Price Lists s nt on npplieatho. or when in the citv t-i't forsrel tlic j laoe Sia of 1 U.c Lirc i..l.liu C hair, ! 4t. Vi and M SEVENTH AVKXI'E DiarJS riUrt urvh, l a. Garret Lumber Co., I EARNEST & DELP, ! I'litiTiiiEttins!. W -e -ewisto Eirnea:, lw-lp. Camp a Co.. ! Whito Pine, Yellow Pine, Oak and i nemlock Lumber I "Cut to a Mil" at short notice. Sen1 Tor Price ; IJet. tiarri t Si mers-t Pa. Se;it. S4. Inr- rted in the I . - o,auoi. foinp. , u o 1 1 1 U a l a v iioiiw. Tilt UiiJersi:ne I art prepan d to lurni-h Prim: Buildin? Lm iRv thft Car Load. H2!iIi6Ctel WECCO,' O.dcrs Eccpcctfully Solicited. ic. j. I!Atzi:r a t o. Lrriua, June If. Initant llrlirf for tltf Afthmit. It acts lastanUv. r.Klviii; Ums paruama laune- . ilialely, awl eueWins; tbe tlnat lo lie down and ! sleep. I suflcred Iron this disease twelve years, I botsuDvr nosaore. aad work aad sleep a well a , I aayoae. if to retterw In tbe w-irsi ease. I , S- at by mail oa rc-dpt of pfV-e, one dslar per box; 1 - , i I H A S. H. 11 CRST, BocbeMer, ttearcr f.. Pa. t aea v4r uruiryist lor it. Boots und Shoet. Boots ttnd. Slioes, HATS AND CAPS. Leather and Shoe Findings. J. IT. Ziiiiitiormmi i i j Take, plearare la ralllntr the attention of the elu I i,rn of Smu.raet anl vlrinitT to the fact that ho j huopeneUaatorumthoXurtb taat eonjrr of the I IHaurad. wbero Umt will always l kept oa ; hauit a cumi-loto assortment of Boots and Shoes, : 'f Iim and home mannfarture, a I re and t ! well anurtoii mux of HATS CA S, And a Krrat variety of Iemlier and Shoe Finding f all kinds. There la ulu attached to the Ftrc a CTSTOM-MADE BOOT & SHOE DEPAHTMEXT. WHk K. B. SX YDER aa eutter and fitter, whleh alone i a aufnrtont ruaramee that all work made op in in nop wni not only nt the feel of euftem- er hot that euly the bet material will oe a wd I and tli ISest Workmen W ill le enitdore.1. The puMIe are riictrul!y lnvlte.1 to eall and examine his stock. I -p., 7i. ; J. 1I0KXER, Buggy, Carriage AND LIGHT WAGON MANUFACTURER, j Is now prepare I to mnl.ut ictnre to order every de-! I scrition ol J IcARRIAOK-S. ) BCCiOIF-S. I S('LKII3, , i spkixo wAfioxs, ! ! HACKS. j SLEIOHS. j j it, ite.. i ; In the ltet an 1 niost apnred styles. anJ at the Isweiat IONilIe Irlee. SLI. IX l ilt or A Kirst 4las.s Carriao.i i Or mv tVr VfhW-.t ttre Tt'twrtfullv Invited tt i call ami nomine hif vork. None hut th? xvrj , I material vUl be Br d in the tnaaufuc'turv of lila ; w.-rk, an,, none t ut the I ; ' Are employed la his establishment, someol whom . "ai an exrien-e ot over twenty years mine p owainei. ne is. men-lore, enanie, i mm out a , first class vehicle, both In point of material and ; workmanijiip. All wtk warranted to I as repre- j setel when, lea vinit the shop, and satisfaction ! sruarantet - .l. Allkiielsol 1 J lU-l'AiniNf; AND PAINTING Done in a neat an I sul-staatial manner, and at the suortest notice. He Is dotennfnnl to do all bis work In such a manner, and at such prices as to make it to the interest of evcryl-edy to patmnise him. Call and examine his work before porehas- ; Ins: elsewhere. jan D.J.HORNER. JV TDK FARMERS.. Thankful for past favors, forever. we ner for is7a,.n.ij THE SUPERIOR -'Eeaper & Mower.WC8S LESS thai aBJ Otter Hi IX WESTERX TEXXA. Motive Power, ' StuiW-, axkiairl. pmftfu, durable, no eg irear. t inr. irum m-tal worm whrU and cart tnm arrr , dirM-niji: wlhcif Kratxl all unorrt-Haanr tru4L, .MOTIVE SCREW POWER, Warranted the most j-erfcrt, simple. omct ami ' daralde power ia ase: easily ban-1 I'd and lightest : dratt. Our itearins: will be'ia sriaid condithrfi wbea Uie machine Is worn out: no mines siient. nn ex i fiensive express charfres an.1 delays, a nnovanee, au-.. about brokra aad worn out cofts It you buy THE "SUPERIOR." Every machine fully warranted tu Jo its work right I or no sale. w.lKmt bar a Harvester ansil yo have seen the Sui-erKC.'' j For sale by BoGER k FORNEY, Bt-tlln, Pa P. S. If you have woml horses or stock to trade. or if It Is more neirenient l--r voa. call on C. A. RHOADS. maj'14 SmeTet, l'a. TEW ARPETSi. A very large Stock IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC ICABP'ETS ! Oil CIotliH, & LOW PRICED CARPETS, or every kind,. Wholesale and Retail. Henry McCallum, 51 Fifth Aremie, (Near Wow! Street,) , PITTSBURGH, PA. apr3 We Ask for Quarters. We have been almost irli Ivtfc tsar tbe "CR If !K " (3 months ranscrlpttocis ETON THE HEARTH." I for li cents j and It has paid aa, for nine -tenths re i new lor a year. We therefore repeat that we will I send It TO ALL I MONTHS FOR CENTS. 1 This t-ives ow osrer 30 splendid stories, also nor I elertes, sketches of history, aad other Interesting: ladtraeonal to a larre a of J"" a-4 be hoUKRt In any other way lor (3. M.SII B CENTS AT ONCE for tbe new Illustrated Mory and Family Paper. mJy 1 a year an.1 a oU ehTomo ire. MtiertDe Ksr a year w " - nr UTKRat once and trr It three Dkoeu. Uood aarents can have cask salary or liberal enmialsal'iaa. Jooee k. Hadley, IMIdtsbera, 17 Bnaulway. New York. urtlT omer K S SOMEI.SET, PA., Hardware This space is reserved for J. F. Blymycr, who lias removed his stock into the most magni ficent hardware room in this place. He can be found in Room io. 3, liacr's Block. ESTABLISHED -M TEAKS. FRANK W. HAY, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TIN, COPPER AND SHEET-IKON WARE MANUFACTORY, TJn 280 Washington Street, ; JOHNSTOWN, PA. I AM PR EPA R ED TO OFFER ALL STOVES AND House Fu mishiiii; Goods IN GENERAL, AT WILL SELL Nu. I N IVELTY CLOTHES WHINGERS at 7. No. 3 WUINUERS at k- KNIVES ana FORKS from TS cents per set to 30 ler dotea. ' STEP LADDERS. SLAW CXTTERS, BRASS LAMPS, with Burners an-l Wk-k,eents, U cents: M cents. OLASS LAMPS, complete, with Burner and Chltnnev, from SO cents te COOKING STOVES, all kinds. SOLE AGENT FOR NOBLE COOK, JOHNSON COOK, SPEARS' ANTI-DUST COOK, ENAMELED WARE OF ALL KINDS. SPOI T1NO. ROOFING and all Job Work promptly attended to at low prices. SCOAR KETTLES, SUGAR PANS. TOI LET SETS. COFFEE M ILLS from 40 cents to 1 SO. CASTORS from 0 cents to. PLATED TEA AND TABLE SPOONS, KNIVES AND FORKS, warranted good. BRITANNIA COFFEE an4 TEAPOTS, BDEand TEASPtKiNS. TA- Please eall, examine (roods, al frt rWsbera purrhasias; elsewhere, as Iamaailshed I eat sell a belter article for less money than any other ar ty la western Pennsylvania, Parties sell ins; Tinware, etc., are miuestei to semi for Catalogue and Price List. Addn-se FRANK W. HAT, Johnstown, Cambria Co. julp30. gOLUHL, WITH A. H. Francisctis & Co., laroarrxaa awd dkalkrs iw COTTON YA RNS, BATT8, WICK, Twine and Ropes, LOOKING GLAMfM, CLOCK. FANCT BAIKKTfl Wooden and Willow Ware, &C.,' xc acttxm a a Mauu or CARPETING, OIL CLOTII3. MATTING, RUGS, &c, MS Market Street aad M0 Commerce Street Philadelphia. Jane ltt-tf. A LL KINDS OF JUSTICE'S BLANKS, NOTES, DEEDS, &c. Kept constantly on haul at the IIEatALDofflce. set T A H LTSIIED, 1 B ',! WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2G. 1873. I I iliecellanemtB. This unrivam Southern Reme.lT Is warranted ' nut to cm tain a f inrle partWe of Mercury, or any ; Injurious mineral substance, DUl is PURELY VEGETABLE, i eotitalnlnr those Southern Roots and Herbs whieh ! an all-wise ProTldeae has placed In countries I where Uver Diseases most prerail. It will cure ! all diseases eaaaed hr Ieranrement of the Liver. The Symptoms of Lircr t'omplaint ate a hitter i orlad taste in the mouth; fain in llie Bark, sides i or Joints often mistaken for Rheumatism; Soor Stomaeb: I1 or Appetite: Rowels alternately costive and lax; Headache: Loss of Memory, with I a aluful sensation of bavin if failed to do some i thinif whleh onrht to hare been done; Iiebllity, j Low Spirits, a thick yellow appearance of the Skin ! and eyes, a dry I'ourb often mistaken forl'on : rumtit'ion. Smetuue8 many of these smintoms 1 attend the disease, at others very few: hut the ; Liver, the larsrest oriran in the body. Is renerally the seat or the disease, and it But reantateo in time, (rreat suffering, wretchedness and 1LATH will ensue. This Great Unfailing SPECIFIC will not b found the Least Unpleasant. For PYSPErSIA. CONSTIPATION Jaun dice. Hillons attacks. SICK HKAIAl'H E, Colic. DepiesMoo of Spirits, StJt R STOMACH, Heart Hurn, tc, ax. Si mniaiix Hut Eeplalsr, cr MkUqbs, 1 Is the cheapest, Purest and best Family Medk-ine (la the world. ' HAStTACTrkKD OXLT bt 1 J. H. ZEILIN & CO., MACON, OA., and PHILADELPHIA. I Price 1. Sold by all Draf I For sale y O. W. Benforl. Somerset, Pa. ! july2 I ALMXallEXY CITY ;STAIR-BUIIiDINGr WOOD - TURNINFSHOP. Stwrtlt, baluttrrt. UfU Kalis, wtthallotlr ' ana toiitc. ready to nunrrurnisnea nn soon nouoe, j WILLIAM PEOPLES, : apr. 30. 73, Cor. Weheier St. k. Graham alley. , E. B. OWEXfl. i OWENS & SCOTT, ! Uutter Commission House, 153W. Pratt St., BALTIMORE. aep4 LLEIHENY TRUNK STOKE. JOEL S.G0E&P0., Mann , adorers and wholesale and retail dealer In SADDLES, IIAKXESS, TRUNKS. VALISES k. TRAVELING B AOS, K j. 60 Federal St., Allegheny City, Pa. .AH orders pruniptlv filled and work war ranted. aurW IMMUNS k CO., HAXi:rTrRER AD PEAtXRS 1W FINE CIG ARS and the best brawls or Savy and Bright Tobaccos, 408 Market Streft, lboie Fenrth, PHILADELPHIA. sc-pM Geo. It. Coftroth V Co. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Ml AID IMS. 330 Baltimore St, Seeoml Door West of Howard, BALTIMORE, IY1D. BUTTER COMMISSION HODS! D. T. Buzby & Co., No. 6 Exchange Place" BALTI3HORE. iieei BITTER, oil 9 TO "THE TRADEW 0LY! (1K.8.) "WATCHES, DIAMONDS, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Watch and ("lock Material, Ac, Ac, Ac S3 OU Go&is. ET3Ttlila2 Ksw ni Eresi NEW YORK BILLS DUPLICATED. .Onlers promptly attended to. WHOLESALE, Exclusively. G. B. BARRETT & CO 60 FIFTH AVENUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. octl OLATE ROOFS. Those who are bow tmildinsT houses should know that it is cheaper ia the luns; rua to pat oa Slate Rools than tin or shinnies. Slate wUl last forever, and no rc,airs are required. State (rives the par est water for cisterns. Slate is fire proof. Every pood house should have a slate roof. The ttnder itned is hicatcd in Cumberland, where he has a rood supply of Peachbottom & Buckingham SL A. T E for roofflns; the very best article. He will under take toiui Slate Roofs on Houses, public and pri vate, spires, ke., either In town or country at the lowest prices, and to warrant them, tall and see him or address him at No. 24 Bedford St., Cum berland, Md. Orders may be left with John A. Walter, A rent, Somerset. Pa. oct WM. II. SHIPLEY. Knabe & Co.'s Pianos, HAINES BROS.' PIANOS, and , GEO. A. PRINCE Jt CO.'S ORGANS. The three best and nvt popular Instruments now la tbe market. Ctaioroe aad Price List contain ing; full particulars, mailed to any address. CHARLOTTE BLIME, I Slrth Avenue, Plttsbnrrh. Pa.. oris SOLE. AGENT. AGENT WANTED! to sell an aTtlcle that every family Bscs. Proftts are larre, and extra induoeuaenLa offered to affeau who are willina; to work. Apply er scad lor cir- cuiar and terms to I DW ARDS BROTHERS, Arizona Diamond Storm, r Sixth St., Pittsburgh, Ps, Workers Wanted ! Far Wssd'l Ilaaackolcl MatraalBe, which, with Its Premiums, is one of the most at tractive ia the euantrr. Price of Maraiine One Dollar a year. Cmm salons liberal. ofTerinr a lu crative and arreeahie l-astness to thdsewllikis; to five it pnyer attention. Vol. XIII berlas with July, 1S7J. Examlae oar dubbins; and Prrphim List. Two first elass pe riod teats for the prie of one. Fur siiecimea u(. asiae ami farther Infonaatioa address Wood s Household Magaxioe. Newburv. N. Y. aureola 8. E. SH L TES, Publisher. $72 00 Each Week. A reals wanted everywhere. Knsinees strictly le- Ultimate. Particulars free. Aduress j. WORTH a CO., St. Lesjui. Mo. may 14 i I it Rlorkaxle lf;al. Differences existed in tie Cabinet and the country in 18CI on some of the measures and tbe course of policj which the Government should pur sue toward the secessionists. The questions presented were in some re spects novel and without precedent, as was the insurrection iuelf. Hos tilities were precipitated within forty days of the inauguration, before the Administration was fully established in place, or had time to develop its policy. The assault on the flag at Churleftoii compelled immediate ac tion. The proclamation promptly is sued fur suveuty-five thousand volun teers ulso declared n blockade of the Southern ports. There was entire unanimity iu the Cabinet on all points in the proclamation except that of a blockade, which was questioned as a doubtful and irregular proceeding ; for the conflict, whether an insurrection or rebellion, was purely domestic 1 civil war and not a foreign war; and it was thought the internal dissen sions in our own territory should be confined within our own borders. A majority of the Cabinet, therefore, preferred an embargo or r-uspension of intercourse with that part of the country to a blockade, and maintain ed it to be the true policy of the Gov ernment to close the ports and inter dict commerce with the insurgents until the rebellion was suppressed. It was claimed that a blockade was not a domestic but an international ques tion legitimate and proper as be tweeu two disiinct nations, but that wa pnntfl nnt nrnwiple 1,T.,VA,?A own nnrt thnno-h ,;!. them up, prohibit traffic fron, abroad : : I..? inal offence- that the very fact of i blockade of the whole rebel territory would raise them to the lercl of bel ligerents a concession to the Confed crate organization virtually admitting it to be a quasi government giving tnat organization a position among nations that we would not and could not recognize or sanction, and which would inevitably lead to embarrass ments. Rut the pubject was in some of its aspects novel, and the Secre tary of State, though sometimes rash, had not the bold and vigorous mind to assert and maintain a right princi pal if fraught with doubt and difficul ty, provided there was an easier path. The blockade, he thought, opened up a way. The questions of blockade were well settled and clearly defined, tbe authority and precedents explicit, aud he therefore preferred to adopt that caurse, shelter himself under those precedents, and apply interna tional law to a strictly national and domestic controversy;" rather than as sert a measure and vindicate an im portant principal affecting national rights. Less was said in the confu sion and proceedings which came like au avalanche at that critical moment upon the Admisistration, than at a later period. Two members of the Cabinet said they had bestowed very slight examination upon th subject, and as it related to foreign intercourse tley deferred to the Secretary of State, who had given it special attention, and also cited authorities justifying an exclusion of commerce from" na tional ports in the equitable form of blockade. President Lincoln inclined to that view, and when Mr. Seward asserted that one great object of the blockade, instead of a closure of the ports was to avoid complications which would le likely to involve us in a foreign war, the question was de cided. The President said we could not afford to have two wars on onr hands at once, and a blockade was or dered. Hon. Gideon HWVn in The Galaxy for December. Kawlna; yf annre and Labor. Almost anyone has it in his power to keep np the fertility of his soil, if he does not lay out too much work, and undertake to do more than his time or money will permit him to do well. It is because a man is poor that his farm runs down, and there is no surer way to get poor and to keep poor than to occupy more land than one can work well. When one has so much land that he cannot work it well, and has not money enough to employ oth ers to work it for him, hundreds of things which could be done to a profit are not done; and thus one-half often of what the land might yield does not come from ii. Then he has but half manure enough to raise crops for so much ground properly, and so but half a crop results. I bus he loses at both ends, and gets poorer and poorer each year. Xothing helps a farmer so much as to have a full relief from being ' driv en" at this season of the year. If the ditches are all cleaned out the surface water which injures crop so much in the spring will have a better chance to drain away. So also will it help his roads. The water passing off, tbe frost win not penetrate as deep, and thus there will not be so much cutting up iu spring. Rut best of all the ditch-cleanings are about the best top- dressings lor grass-lands and orchard trees that one can possibly have. Then there is always about an im mense amount of waste vegetable natter in odd corners where the plow cannot get at, that it woald pay well to get together and put in the stock yard to rot np and make manure, which dries np and goes to waste when one has no time to attend to it at this season. Where there is any wood land, leave in profusion lie around loose which would serve the double purpose of warm litter for stock and subsequent manure as. well. All this the man who lets bis work drive him instead of leading it along has to lose ; and no one can calculate the great loss every year from all these little things added together. We do not know thai we could suggest a better subject for a farm winter study than how to avoid be ing "driven" with work or "pinched' for money. Whenever one gets to thi? condition there is assuredly something wrong which need right ing ; aad which must be righted be fore much money can be made. The lazy man never makes money; but the one who "never has any time," or who is "always behiud with his work," is about in as bad a fix, if not worse, for very often be is uo bet ter off than tbe lazy fellow, with tbe sad reflection including, that his la bor baa been spent in vain. eralo Eaearalar Neweppr. The following incident illustrates pretty forcibly tbe idaa that some people appear to Lave of encouraging newspapers : The editor and proprietor of a pa per of one of our inland cities, bad, a few years ago, among his subscribers quite a prominent individual of tbe place who had been a constant reader of the paper since the commencement of its publication, but who had never paid a penny for subscription. The collector of bills having re turned that against the delinquent to his employer as one impossible to convert into cash, the editor resolved to give the party in question a broad hint as to Lis remissness the first time an opportunity should occur in public He did not have to wait Ing, for in a few days, he discovered kis neg ligent patron seated in the office of tbe principal hotel, surrounded bv quite a group of friends, and dispos ing of cigars and other little luxuries sufficient to have liquidated at least one vear's subscription. W hen the laugh at the last joke had subsided, the editor approached the group, and, after the usual salu tation to bis subscriber, remarked: Colonel, vou have had mr paper now for five years, and never paid for it, although the bill has frequently been sent. I should like my pay for it." Pry!" ejaculated the colonel, w:ib genuine or well feigned aston - ishment "Did vou ay par ?'' 'Certainly." was the replv, "vou have had the paper, and I want thc Wr ; . . . , , . "Pav.said the colonel airain : ! "w CJ "n't be that you expect me to pav anything for that paper, Whylonlyt'toLthe blamed thint to enrourag yon!'1 The langh from the circle of listen-; era came in here like the burning ofj a bomb-shell. . A Teaaafa Obllfatlaaa. It is an ordinary custom in leases to have a covenant that the tenant shall keep the premises in good order and repair. As to just wnat tuiscovenant mav mean, However, there is consid erable difference of opinion, sometimes the intervention of a judge and jury arc necessary to sttle the question. A case or this kind has been on trial m the Superior Court of Baltimore, in which tbe judge in charging the jury, cescribea tne lejral aspect or the matter. The word "keep, he said, implied an obligation to put the premises in repair when received. and to keep them so, for it would be idle to stipulate to keep in repair what is not in repair, and the covenant was therefore; equivalent to "put and keep and deliver np, in good order and repair. The real difficulty, how ever, was in the words "good order and repair.'' The.-e words, he said, meant such a reasonable condition of things as belong to housea of their age, class and condition, as good re pair for one might not be for another. It was not necessary that an outgo ing tenant should repaint and repa per, but only keep the paint and pa per in such condition as 13 consistent with the use ; not allow the bouse to be defaced ; use it with proper and reasonable care, and deliver it op as it mar be left after such care. The judge remarked that there was no custom or rule by which an outgo ing tenant was obliged to repair and repaper, unless under a distinct and well-defined agreement to that effect. On tbe other hand, there is no im plication that the tenant shall keep the premises as received. The ob ligation to keep in good order and re pair does not mean to keep the house in the condition in which it is receiv ed, but in a condition that is reasona ble. Experlmenta with Oat aural. We see bv an article in La France iledicale That M. Dujardin Beaum itz has been experimenting with oat meal as a food for young children. He made use of a jellv prepared bv soaking a tablespoon full of the meal in a glass of water for twelve hours, then straining through a sieve, boil ing till tbe wnoie assumes tne con sistency of jelly, and adding sugar or salt to taste. According to analysis. 100 grammes of the meal containg 8.7 7 grammes of water, 7.5 of fatty mat ters, 62.5 of starch, 12.2 of nitrogen ous matters, 1.5 of mineral substances and 7.C of cellulose, dextrine and losa. Its nutritious value, therefore, is good for children, ia regard to ni trogenous or plastic elements, as such as aro respiratory, is analogous to that of human milk or cow's milk. Resides these, it contains more iron than do most of tbe articles of food. For newly-born infants were fed with tbe preparation just described, and in every case with satisfactory results. In addition to its qualities as food, it acts efficiently against col ic and diarrhra. It enters into the composition of the syrop of Luther, which Is said to be much used in Germany. M. Gillette, surgeon of tbe hospital ot Melun, hag also given oatmeal combined with cow's milk to six children, and finds it to be a valuable food in eases where the nat ural eopply of milk is deficient. Faacy sueel Meallly. In the morning of life we paint, with the brush of fancy, our beauti ful ideal of the future lying out before us a picture of cloudless skies aud brilliant sunshine, of flower-strewn paths and tropic blooms a picture where joy and love, and friendship and fame staud holding out their beautiful offering, and we the central figure of the whole. But how differ ent the pictures. painted each day of life by the brush of pitiless reality. Xot oue picture ; but many, for the scenes are ever shifting. The skies are clouded, and tbe sunshine faded. Tbe flowers are withered, and hide tbe thorns no longer. Sorrow steps in where joy had stood ; hatred takes the place of lore ; friendship, that we bad planted witb a beautiful face. takes on the hideous look of treach ery. At the eventide of life we gaze ; at the pictures in tbe gallery of memo ry, and comparing tbe ones that fancy painted with those stamped upon our hearts by tbe stern realities of life, we wonder where fancy got its beau tiful false colorings. NO. 24. The Aaglo-Sas.a) Cheer. What a serviceable cry and Word of-all work is provided for us by our!r familiar hurrah I 1'rofcauiy no otn er tongue, ancient or modern, 'er'wi j0 "Stop, voa Sir ! Ton have poflaea.-'eu a cueer au vuriuusij u.-ciui. Certainly the Greek and Iloraan had no cry of wider application, and we may surmise tnat tne "no3annaD, whence, as philogists say, huzza may have come, as well as the Gothic word of hurry and agitation whence our "hurriah" and the Swedish hurra are derived, were also far more limited in employment. We dischargeourcheers in volleys of three or volleys of nine, or we load and Gre them at will ; we hurrah at an oration, a procession, an after dinner toast, an extra holiday at school, a show of fireworks, a yatch race, the announcement of election returns, the ninth innincr of a base ball match, or the storming of a re - doubt. Compared with this the ex - ultant cries of the modern Latin race are vcrv contracted iu application. They must be directed at some specif - ! ic person or thing I'tre el rey, Garibaldi, I ire le I resident, or else w now arm manage me estate unui Vice V Empire, or Vive V Ai.iembleee claims of the rival-widows could and thev are not Dure expressions be determined. The American wid- oi a general jovous excitement. Let us concede that our "hurrah" is rath- !r a barbarous shout, well worthr of its barbarous origin. It certainly has J not the refinement of rice-, eira, riro; j and as it lacks their delicacy of sound, : so does it also lack their definiteness 'of signification. Xevertheless, the i piping sound of fire can hardly give the full-lunged satisfaction of the yell "hurrah," and hence natives of other countries who come to our own, take ! Kin.,,1-V t0 0ur P"1" 'T1' .lna 'f" 1 ouire no more than we Americans do j what the word really means. The j uala.r' tor Iferrmb'-r. . erre ass the rair Some onc who &- L;rusel n: u. . Some one who siL'ns binisel "A : Cynic," has been writing to the Graphic a series of short letters, de- nunciatorv of all thines feminine, j One seldom sees-anything severer ' than the following extract from one ! of his letters: i perceive tnat 1 nave urawn down upon myself the wratb of several of your correspondents, who are or ought to be fair. I he dear creatures express themselves with much vio lence, and with that noble disregard of grammar which is characteristic of the sex. That I am not a married man is due, not to the blighted condition of my affections, but to mv inability to support a wife, I should like to own a wife, a horse, and a yacht, but they are, one and all, too expensive. It is true that I might oc able to buy a worn-out cab-horse, or a leaky oyster boat, or a cheap and ugly wife, but I don't care for cheap commodities of that sort. "My conception of a wife is a plump and pretty fool, whose face one is not ashamed to show to his friends, and who, never anny3 one with the expression of -earnest views." As to marrying a wife in order to have a sympathizing friend is the worst of nonsense. I have friends now men on whose fidelity and hon or I can depend. Why in the world ' should I seek another friend in the person ot a woman, knowing, as all men do, that a woman is ignorant of honor, and that'her fidelity is de pendent upon her whim! "Having thus explained my posi tion in regard to matrimony to the satisfactien, aa I trust, to your cor respondents, I need only add that their letters furnish a new argument in behalf of the Turkish system, which prevents women from making themselves ridiculous by forbidding them to learn to write.'' sirHets far Serine-. Jonathan Talcott gives a state ment in the Boston Cultivator for an experiment performed oa a Suffolk pig where sugar beets were largely employed for fattening- The ani mal was about a year old, and the feeding on boiled sugar beets, tops and root, began on tbe 16th of Au gust, and was continued three times a day until the 1st of October, aftei which ground feed was given, con sisting of two parts of corn and one of oats, three times a day, till the animal was slaughtered, the meal being mixed with cold water. The result was, on the lGth of August, when the sugar beet feeding was be gun, that the weight was 3G0 lbs. ; September 1st, 300 lbs. ; October 1st, 450 lbs,; Xovember 1st 520 lbs. This is the substance of the state ment given, bv which we perceive that the increase the last of Angnst, wnen red on boiled sugar beets, was at the rate of two pounds per day ; the same rate of increase on the same j food continued through September. When fed on ground corn and oats, made into cold slop, the gain for the - next fifty days was less than a pound and a half per day. Borax far Cleaalaa. The Boston Journal of Chemistry gives the following method of cleans ing blankets; Put two large teaspeons- ful of borax and a pint bowl of soft i soap into a tub of cold water When disolved, put in a pair of blank ets, and let them remain over night Xext day rub and drain them out. and rinse thoroughly in two waters, and hang them to drv. Do not wringj them. But this is not the only use to which borax may be puL Says the same journal: Borax is the best cockroach exterminator yet discover ed. This troublesome insect has a peculiar aversion to it, and will nev er return where it has once been scat tered. As the salt is perfectly harm less to human beings, it is much to be preferred for this purpose to the poisonous substances commonly used. Borax is valuable for the laundry : use 1 lb. to about ten gallons of boil ing water, and you need only one half the ordinary allowance of soap. For laces, cambrics, ic, use an ex tra quality of this powder. It will not injure the texture of the cloth in the least. For cleansing the hair, nothing is better than a solution of borax water Wash afterwards with pure water if it leaves the hair too stiff. - Borax dissolved in water is also an excellent dentifrice, or tooth wash. j "-lK I.lhwa ABlsr. i . ' 'I ii.f s-ilit.ir ,f VYctrru parir '"i"" rave a notice of a ball, and hap. , j ; ,i ! iwideiitly to nientiou that th l i.-.c. j of Major Heeler' better half v! like the envoi ting of a fly bittfo. cow in fiold . f mcumbcr-t." The fi" i K it the nllt.ir had not been ii vitt l to tin- ball may Home what lc jtrac t from the value of the similf, j while at the same time it accounts I for his establishing the figure. The t Major, accompanied by his better half i and a six-shooter, called on the edi j tor to complain of the poetical nature cf the image. On learning that the I lad v was the one described, the ed itor besought her to raise br veil, .he did so, saying, "Xow, sir I ex pect you to apologize." l "Apologize ' 1 should rather ttiinlt I nr,n!il " area ths ntwrsr a 4 hm - L ... I. ' t., ,! ,.;,!! l.ff r, ' r1Z I . 1 1417 e ia vs w u v XiM. The astonished Mrjor rushed to the noj apologized! .An ri,'t. -al griDg t0 in m mia. .t. j - ' What do you mean shouted the Major, accentuating the note of inter rogation with a pistol-shot The answer was wafted back from around the next corner "Can't you sfp I'm looking tor that cow?" 4 P I ne k y Wweauta la CsMsrt. A most remarkable sconce occurred a f-w days ago in the Probate Court in Washington, 1. C. For some time there has been a controversy over the late estate of Thomas Price, a woman l'" Ireland claiming to have been his 1 Wlfe at the ume he was married in j ibis country to another woman. The I American wife had possession of his ,' eff-ct. and a collector was appointed : 'y th I rooate Court some timesince ow ua, however, declined to surren der tne enecis in ner possession, ana appeared in the Probate Court ia an swer to a monition. Judge Oiin told her she must obey the order of the court, which she firmly refused to do, making quite an effective address to the court in behalf of her riirht At last Judge Oiin said: "I am sorrr, but I'll have to H-cd you to iail,' where upon shere- sp-',nuei1 tuat s"e would as leave stay in ja:I as anywnere else, ir ail she had was to be taken from her. Judze j Oiin offered her much advice, but she steadily persisteJ in her purpose, and k-ft the court -room, not for the jail,but e r her own home. ! it Pay ta fcraw BjsT" So a friend asked ns the other day. Wc replied, yes when the straw, af- ttr the grain is out or it, wnl bnnsr ;$IS to $25 per ton for manufacturing i purposes. It does bring this in many j localities and is grown for no other purpose, lysines, me grain itsen is growing in lavor as material ror j bread. The consumption of rye bread annually increases. Uermans use it extensively ; its sweetness and na- ! triti.m as served in tbe German res taurants and beer saloons is attract ing the attention of Americans. It makes a delicious bread ; and our ' people should know how to utilize the grain and tbe straw, and remem ber that it is not only an excellent late fall, winter and early spring for age crop, but an excellent summer soiling crop, as well as a good green crop to plow under. Bat the profit to be realized from rye as a crop will differ in different localities and un der different circumstances hence when we recommend rve as a paving j crop, we do not recommend every - man to make it one of his crops until he has found out what its straw, i grain, or it, a3 a forage, soiling or green manure crop is to him. itus can only be done by a knowledge of the farts and Genres. A Xexleaa Trmgeay . A young officer in the Mexican army fell ia love with a lady in Pae bla. She promised him her hand in case he would resign his commission. He did so, bought a hacienda, and then returned to claim the pledge. She in the meantime, had been woo ed and won by another. Upon the first visit of her lover she informed him that her heart had undergone a change. The passionate lover be came frantic, and upon leaving t old her that he would call the next day, if she persisted he would kill himself in her presence. He called the next day, was persistently refused in the presence of her mother, whereupon Le drew a revolver, and exclaiming that the love which was not for him should not be enjoyed by another, fired at ber heart, but she rose and received the ball in her abdomen. He then shot himself. The insane assassin died tbe same afternoon, and . his victim closed her existence cnthe third day. C arlaaitl. af Caal. An average Atlantic steamer con sumes fifty tons of coal in twenty four hours. Therefore, if five tons of coal are sufficient to feed an ordinary grate in our dwellings during the en tire year, the coal consumed on board a steamer in one day would last a small family, burning one fire ted years. If a ton of coal is leftont of doors, exposed to the weather, until it is burned np in one grate, say a month, it looses one-third of its heat in? quality. If a load of coal is dump ed on the jTonnd and left there, and alhi'T " under Vhed' tb" ,at" ler loses about twenty-five per cent. ! of ' LeatinS P0?. trnier forty . si v a. nn Srhr II am Ask it U . nn fl seven per cenL Hence it is a great saving or coal to have it in a dry place, covered over, and on all sides. The softer tbe coal the more it loses, because the most volatile and valua ble constituents undergoe slow com bustion. Horse Pan lac la I ha Stable. I have tried a variety of means, among others tbe strap and chain, bat all failed. Recently I devised a plan which has succeeded to my entire satisfaction. I made a frame four feet long and of sufficient width to reach nearly to the top of the man ger, from which I suspended it, al lowing it to reach to within about ten inches of the floor. I boarded np the sash, or frame, in order that he could not get his feet over the lower bar, which was a round stick two in ches in diameter. Tbe act of pawing sets the swing in motion, causing it te strike against the shins, which so disgusted my animal that he ycry soon gave it up. Cor. Rural. Oyslsr Shells far hleheaa. FowU that are confined in coops or yards require some active lime ali ment If permitted to run over a farm or large garden they will gen erally obtain sufficient in the way of shale, limestone, decayed snail shells, etc. ; but if kept in confine ment one of the best assistants to ward their health and tbe formation of egg shells is that of finely broken orster or clam shells. saaa I"""
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers