v.. 'MY POLICY." HAMXKVS xkw on . . ...... .-.., via: A SKETCH OF HIS ACTION IX I.Ol lsI-j' AX A, IX ISM THE kiih.tlovs i.om-v,i-Tiin it Kinnvi-n i ivn. C.M'A'ITY Oil S'il"ND POUT! !'KIN II LI-n In lsct'i, Andrew Johnson hal 1h eoine President, by the death of President Lincoln, and had enteral ujon his ':oliey" of giving up to the South, in the process of Ilecon rtruction, all it had lt by the war. On August 10th, of that year, he as sisncd rent ral Y. S. Hancock to the command of thr Department of the Missouri, with headouartcrs at St. Iiuis. General Hancock had lx-cn a Derujcrat from his youth up. He was oimosed to the m-onstrue- tioii laws of Congress, in their letter ; and spirit, and it was iiorfoctlv nat- ural that President Johnson should sock a man of his sentiment to exe cute the laws the operation of which he was anxious to frustrate. When reconsirueinui wa ih-"uu 111 inc South, Gen. Phil Sheridan was com- ,...1., ,.r t .n ! OM Ali'itfirv 1 lie- uiaii'i' i " i'"' " . ...j tnct. which comprised Iuisiana 1 j,;lst twentv-hve years. I he j use it lor your great needs: and Texas, two of the most vicious j stitcmont that ' the pVople of this plause. And yet almost 2,CXK,UI0 of the reU'llious States. President ! organization are very clannish, is j men made that answer, applause, Johnson removed Gen. Sheridan, ' j,r7,Ven in their fidelity to their own and a monument stands yonder to notwithstanding the earnest protest n this case as in others of the past, i commemorate their answer. That of Gen. Grant. Au-rust .J, 1M.17, and ! jn tliis jiarticular case the clannish- j is one of its meanings. Put, niy ordered (ion. Hancock to take com- j noss js manifested in like manner by J friends, let me try vou a. little lur mand of the Fifth District. The or- j tj10 uiiole Church, as the love ami 1 ther. To give up life is much, for d r was obeyed and Gen Haiieo k ! ad'ctioiiale devotion, sanctified by ! it is to give up wife and home, and assumed charge November 1S7. UJusjm I purity might bo cxpnscd : child, and ambition. Put let me He Hgaalized his advent into power jfor ., n,enilMr of a largo family that test you this way further. Suppose by a general order which at once ! j,.i m. ivod the highest honors that ' this awfully majestic form should made him the idol of every unrc- L.,,,1,1 i. Wtoued as the reward of call out to vou and say: "I ask -onstructei rcoci in nisuisiru 't. and , wa 'my son. ana a pei'lect emooilllilent Oi tne , 1 Mil icy view : of Andrew John-! citizens f loiiisi whi'e they were 1 He t.ildthe and Texas, still unrepresented in Congress, that 1 their courts and legislatures should ' be allowed to govern thorn in their own way, ana mat m no case woiuu the military interfere with them un-; h'ss an actual broach of peace occur-1 rod. While not stating it in so many j words, his order meant, and was un derstood to mean, that the reliellious States wore on the same footing as ; they had been before si-cession, and that the traitors who were all pow- : crfnl niigM continue to rule them I as before the war. In plain words, j this general order meant that Gen. j Hancock intended to enforce '"my i jtoliey," instead of the reconstruction ! laws of Congress. ; A change for the worse was mani-, festod at once. Tiie slumlioring cm- j hers of rebellion again broke forth j spasmodically, and Ixuiisiana and Texas onoe more became unsafe for i . t It loyal men. (Jen. Sheridan had is sued an order on August 'Jlth ro hibiting anv-ierson not a duly reg istered voter from serving on juries. The order was manifestly proper and m-cessarv to protect the right of loc al citizens of the district in the ' courts. A previous order by Sheri-j dan hud prohibits! the registration) of any person who had Ik true anus I against the Government, so that traitors, by the order of August 'J4, wen disqualified for acting as jurors. ( hi 1 )oeenibor (Jen. Hancock issued .1. !. .1... i. Mi: .in I'i'iii in. v i.iiiiii; in it l in 'luauii- , : c .. , ,l i i ii.iiiii' in iijuioi in Miri inr i.m i ;i proiHT subject for the lecision of iiiiiki Mio cot ior ine iieeisioii oi . Ji 1 , , .i , the courts. ' and that the command- -,s ' i i i i r .i mg General in the discharge of the ii i ' trust reposed in him will maintain I'll U.-l jn-nn V'l HI VUUl Ml l, is unwilling to permit the civil an-! thorities and the laws to lie embar - rassed bv military interference." ti. ..,..1', ti... ;,.....i. fi ,i Sheridan's order in regard to jurors, ! and leaves the question of thcirqual-1 1, r winewnai " cnuren g.ncnimem. ification entirely in the hands of the !Tll('.v celebrate the Wds Slipper courts. The rebels were jubilant, :'vor.v hrrit (!;,.v.nf thc lho-v and the name of Hancock became a i hoM to immersion as theon y senpt household word all over thc South, i ural mol0 of haptism, winch is only lint Gen. Hancock did more than this to gain the gratitude of traitors and endear himself to thc Democrat it party. He followed up his jury order on January 11, ISOS, with another declaring the order of Gen. Sheridan, which excluded rebels from registration as voters, null and void, ami commanding "the regis ters to be guided by their own in teqiretation of the" laws, and the fourteenth constitutional amend ment." This tinier placed the ballot lxixes again in the control of the dis- lovnl clement of Ixmisinrei .'liirf Texas, and Hancock stock wont " li",nfln !, " " c n :u r-' '"1-j lips w ill go out a call that the chil stca.lily up with the traitors of the i kr and Garfield twelve Congress- j drm q Ijiike unty will hear after South, while it went as steaililv nen, and a moderately well-to-do j tjo covori us an an(l our down with thc loval men of thc North. The term of his power as Military Governor, however, fortuuatolv for the success of reconstruction, was very brief. On Fi b. o, Gen. Han cock issued an order removing from office William Paker, State Com 1. :... ..e v - 1 ....;.... ...1 ... " u. e. i ii uii, ii.uut Hiiuiu v:ilill"l-?i 01 lllju- feasance in office had been preferred, and Arthur GastincI, Recorder for the Second District, who had boon 1 iroiioniieod ini liiril.1,1 i., lir nll'w bv the Snnreiiio ilmi-t ..f I i,isin, Two davs later the Citv Council f New Orleans passed" a resolution providing for the immediate election .f a Recorder to fill the place of Mr. I rnonstrated lus fidelity to tins almost i WPre tWo crossed swords. One was GastincI. and for doing this Han-j unheard-of church by some of our :tbc FWorj carried by the grandfath er k removed from office the nine j V(T.V intelligent city editors, by at- i (.r of its owner onthe field of Bunker members who voted for the resolu- tending religious services m the little ; HjH( and the other was the sword lion, two white, and seven colored j wooden church across the green in carried by the English grandsire of men. (Jen. Grant, to whom the j Columbus, where he c;mld Ik- seen the wife on thc saine field, and on matter was referred, revoked this passing with his wife as oitcn as t!ie , the other side of thc conflict. Under ordtr of Hancock, and reinstated ; lj0rtl 6Hlav returned. those crossed swords, in the restored the nine Councihnen, whereupon Cincinnati is the home of five j harmony of domestic peace, lived a Gen. Hancock at once asked to be 'Disciple churches, one of which ; happy and contented and free family, relieved. In this he was gratified, , might contain a fair congregation under the light of our Republican md on March 2S he was transferred to the Division of the Atlantic, with! headquarters 111 New 1 ork. Forthus truckling to the rebels of the South and the State sovereignty Democrats of the North, (Jen. Han cock was rewarded bv having his name brought forward as a candidate for the 1 "residency in the Democrat ic Convention held in New York July 4-10, In W. He was supported this time by very nearly the Solid Smth. who judged bv his nvord in Louisiana that he would continue the iKilicy of Johnson, and prevent the nation from reaping the fruits of ; the war. Tennessee clung to John- ( son until thc eighteenth ballot, when, finding that her favorite had no! t nance, sne swung over to Hancock as nor socona cnoiee. tin this hal - lot he received 144 votes, leading all the other candidates, and the Southern States which marched un der his banner were Alebama, Ixiu isiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Mis souri. North Carolina, South Can linTe n the twenty-third ballot a break ! was made and Seymour gained thc I nomination. Mark Twain, lecturing on the Sandwich Islands, offered to show how the cannibals eat their food ii any lady would lend him a babv. AVbai About Garfk'Id'aKoltgfOtt? i .Sum f the st-nii-nlijrious editors ' I i ... w....,. otlrt. Ml'Ill l"l 111II1IV it HU VrUI IV MlVi'r , pzp ir tiarncm Having own a I j dead nr. Some kiv his religion tle j parted whtu l:o tKk up polities. A I Kcpulihcan editor ana prolessing (0 ,nL. iKTmallv that it was sim- ilv ininoHiblc for a man to hold i:.irf;.i.iv i,;t;..n im.l riiiiiriif .a ! . v IH HA 1" I-V..HJHI1 ...... . ........ ' A,'Vr.,,-5,,ntwm:rbrK-t;r.n ! j My only reply to tin..- .en-rlcr:-; untruth was: that' if the religion that Christ taught would not stand : tin? test of every human proeess, if : a man cannot hold any position in j politics anil prove the truth of his j ! life in his profession, then the reli-; gion is not worth aiming to live by, I for those in the humblest w alks of j life. If the peripturc promise, "My ! rrr-u-,. is snfiioent for thee.'' is not sufii- I ,.;,. f(,r the statesman and ooliti-' Ician, there is no dependence ujk.ui j - - - 4 , anv senpture promise tor vou or j fur me. ! Some of the New York dailies I gni,i the religious organization to l,i, b Mr. Garricld belong?, and in i which he was a sort of itinerant Supiose your country, in tlie awtul prcachcr, had no system of ordina-1 ly embodied form of majestic law, tioii for its clergy. " This statement i should stand above you and say. w imci-ii- r" i"I want vour life, come up here and IthaslK'en our nrivihsc to have ! ia,j i(n (.xtended acquaintance with -I- 1. . r i 1l . i.fj ,-. ! I m ri twr 1 . Tins ir;iin u tl iinruim""' v.i..., this branch f..;ttnl industry and glorious deeds j f,,r ,lr eoiintrv : good. This din-: sion of the grand army ot Christen-1 dom numbers, in the Tutted States, j ::s hi-'h scIkmiIs .'! o! wnich are col-! r.rV, situated in Colorado, Missouri, ; ivogon, Iowa, Illinois Indiana Ohio, j ic. tltiieL-v Georsria. Virginia and ! Alabama. The h ading religious j but hundreds of thousands of you papers published by the denomina- soldiers did that. That is Avhat the tionare: j monument means also. Hut let me The Chrlsti'in Sttuohwl, published ! ask you to go one stop further. Su and edited by Isaac Krrett. of Cin-j p'se your country phould say: cinnati. with a circulation of 2.).KO; the LWinr, V'.W, Kcmojr!, V (KKt; Christian. 7.-rllt; and o or G lesser lir'bts. which liosslblv from ti.;,.i:...ni i,inr nifiv s ie.1 some l ...... i;,ri. r,.,r-ir,l 1., the urn-! gross of the denomination upon the Kastcrn cites. Garfield holds an interest in the heart of every member of this de nomination which cannot be satis factorily explained by themselves or anyone else. Every Republican of this membership will of course i use an i ii iiiiiiniiivi im i i .nt wiuii I ' i . . . .. ' to boar for his election. .Many con I scient ions Democrats in the South Urn States who an; members of this i fraternity will vote for him on the ground they know him to bo a faith-1 i fal'hi istian gentleman and brother j j in their Church. Many Southern! . , - i i.i. i mem'K'rs oi this cnuren w no nave loudlv assailed any and every Re-1 ....i.i: i;.io,. M-wii lmsli. ! OU '111.111 .lllillil. Ill mil, "mi .... f i i ,a..,....i .;..i.i.i i en Muee aim i.iur'i ii rj wn"v i their opposition for the sake of the ; church. Garfield is no representa tive of a High-Chim'h-OamplK'llite. ..l Put there is no doubt alwmt the abundance of them to lie found ... i ,:.: ...i,. ..l., among thisdcnomination who da , 4n , o nn; and teach thev are simplv a uni - ri ,i- i i,w oi evangelical believers, disciples , . . . - . .. laini union of t 11 1 i I The' designate their churdies as the ! Church of Christ in such and such a jplaty or town. J hesc popple istromrly resemble the rroe ill or l'n vA.mniumon Baptists, but dif- I administered on profession oi iaun in Christ as the Redeemer. The 'state of Indiana which is doubtful I for the Republican vote, numbers more for this denomination than for any other. The Disciple Church ranks as third numerically in the States of Missouri, Illinois, Mississip pi, and Texas. The State University m Kentucky In longs to this denom ination, w hich is second if not first for members in thc State. This L. 1 III!1) division of Christians numbers j over naii-a-niuiioii in uie t . h.m , It . 1 llltil ! States, rhev arc represented m i mn . 1" ur v "r ,Tl JUS ignore all designation is a religious I sect and profess to have but the Pible. As an no creed example, many of their leading and talented clergymen would not endorse the OUUUlllll 111 llir i.fl'rifl t liiwi, lliin.-n ; we would advocate church union on ; the basis of a burial with Christ in 1 water baptism tor every soul born . ... into His Church. lucre are nut low 01 mis nan million Discij.los found in the East - i.rii Sit-itiic 'iu Wirt- ('ilv nd 1 Prooklvn have but one church each .... . .... . . ..v., .... ....... I Discijiles are most numerous West ! 311,1 South. Ex-Governor Pishop, ot ('lno' ,,,r ,tl(' l,:lst two .vt'ars "" ! for some denominations, iseoniiKised only of the Governor's family, in- eluding children, grand children. , an1 Crat grand-children j We trust we may not lw misunder- stood bv anv of onr excbincros or friends as ln-ing susjiectod of know-! harmony under the Union of our ing too much of this denomination j flaK of "10 Stars and StrijK-s. Aj w ith w hich Mr. Garfield is connect- j plause ed. The writer of this article was ! . Inim and raised under the droppings ; of the sanctuaries of Drs. Hans and ; Pushnel, in Hartford, Conn., and; ' never saw or heard of this strange. ' unknown ix-ople, till the individual religious character was supposed to be jiennanentlv established. ' ly1)IA .;. Pixkasi's Veokt.vble ; CojirorxD doubtless ranks first as a ! ,.r,iir ont ,'r. ll ,i;,!0n.-!fit,,,i-nianl,., - (-V 1. MV tW 1111 MiiTV C fl lilt i procreative system, degeneration 01 ; the kidneys, irritation of the blad-1 . dor. unnarv calculi. yc. Arc. Send to .Mrs. Lydia K l'ink ham, 233 ForsalebyC.N.yd,:lforea fow of the last harrowings : I .. . .V ....i.-.., ."i;in..iiuui ni niiwiun; ui rain mm ; . It is easier to hit the nail on the - head now that the price has been re- new F-3 WU soon make its appear-1 moral courage, republican adminis duced to $3.10 per kc. a"ce' tlie manure preventing the bad j tration, supreme toleration and un- I The carriage-maker never tires, j Tlw. 1 Uri- ,;.i i i f i- ine blacksmith does that for him.i blacksmith does that for -Dcxton Transcrijtf. mm .i. A SPEIXH BY CE.V. GA1UIELD. an elovhkxt TKIBITE TOTIIK PLAIN i iiv Tin.- n iv it tiiv rvvvii nr. ok vc "' ..." . , ........ A MOM'MKXT. P.mnesville. Ouio, July 4. The following is the fpeech, in full, of (ion. Garfield at the dedication of the Soldiers' Monument yesterday: Fki.i.o'.- itizexs : I cannot fail to roaimnd to sucli an occasion, mi . . - . j , sibt of such a monument toeuchal i raue. f-u: t.uina w sum men. Ap-j plause and cluers.j tnlo 1 liave listened to what mv friend has said, two questions have leen sweeping through my heart. One was, hat does the monument mean ?" and the other, "What will the monument teach ?"' Ix-t ni? trv, and ask you for a moment to help me, to answer, What does the monument mean? Oh. the monument means a world of memories and a world of deeds, . . and a world ot tears, and a woriu 01 glories, lou Know,inouanuMio, what it is to offer up your life to the country, and that is no small thing, as every soldier knows. Lot mc put the question to you for a moment. oiler it, -'how many would walk up before that majestic presence and 'sav. Here 1 am; taKc.inis me una vou to give up health and drag vourscH not dead, but half alive through a miserable existence lor long years, until you jierish and die in vour crippled and helpless condition. I ask you to volunteer to do do that." It calls for a higher roach of patriotism and self-sacrifice, "lome Hereon tins juauorm, aim in mv name and lor mv sake consent to' bo idiots. A voice Hoar! Hoar! Consent that vour verv la 1 . 1 I , 1 11 1 Mirain and intellect snau ie broken down into boneless idim-v for A mv ike." How many could be found to make that venture? And yet thous ands, and that with their eyes wide open to the horrible consequences, obeyed that call; and let me tell how p K K) of our soldiers were prison ers of the war, and many of them, when death was stalking near, when famine was onioning up into tneir i . .... a i ilie.'irts .ind ldiocv was threatonniL' all that was left of their intellects. The gates of their prison stood open every day if they would quit, desert their flag, and enlist under the flag of the enemy, and out of 1S0,(KR) not two per cent, ever received the liberation from death, starvation, idiocy, all that might come to them ; but thev took all these horrors and IV ' all these sufferings m preference to going back ujKm the flag of their country and the glory of its truth. Applause. Great God, was ever such measure of patriotism reached by any men on this earth before. Applause. That is what your monument means. Py the subtle chemistry that no man knows, all the blood that was shed by our brethren, all the lives that were de voted, all the grief that was felt, at last crystalized itself into granite, rendering immortal the great truth for which thev died, Applause, aml ;t inds there to-dav, and that is what your monument means. Now, what does it teach? What will it teach ? Why, I remember the story of one of the old conquerors of Greece who had traveled, in his boy hood, over the battle-fields where j Miltiades had won victories and set i up trophies. Returning, he said; i "These trophies of Miltiades will never let me sleep." Why ? Some thing had taught him from the chis : tied stone a lesson that he could never forget: and fellow-citizens, jthat silent sentinel, that crowned granite column, will look down ujKin ' the boys that will walk these streets rrniwititwna sirtivtn on1 ivill , . ihnm .in th- ,t. '-f lll 11A I 1 V. V ' 1411& lOl.ll .-J Ulltl ... L . . J t, fAnnlanse l More than 4,, ,,,, i1,,.Iflij r' ,1.,1 i immediate children. That is the i 1 All 1 1 IV I ill IV VII 11 IX V 1 1 A. IKlll J."T , ,,r ,.,., ti,., ; jg -ts iesgon an,j jt js tj)e lewgon (,f f.n(lnranH f. ,r -h:if ;ivi liolievo find it is the lesson of sacrifices for w hat it'll tlitnl. 4liA lf.cjj.n tC 4 t .- for whatwc mean to sustain, and that lesson cannot be lost to a oeo- : pie like this. It is not a lesson of j revenge ; it is not a lesson of wrath ; .1.. 1 1. , 1 it in uie grand, sweci. nroau lesson ; the lmnmrt.'i itv of tho truth tlmt 1 ; wc hope w ill soon cover as with the i. ..1...1.: l. . r i i wi.iiiii Mii'Kiiiaii 01 jii'iii, :oio ini irv . 1 lakes to the Gulf. Applause. I once entered a house in old Mas- ' sachusetts where, over its doors. i liberties, f Applause.! I trust the time is not far distmt when, under the crossed swords and the locked shields of Americans, North and South, our iieople shall sleep in lcace and rise in liberty, love and The freauent inquiries we receive j how to make a goixl lawn, induce us to repeat at the present time a few of the directions given on former occasions. The quickest way ; for a limited area is to procure turf from an old, even, closely ground pasture, cut accurately square, and soraied of even thickness. Seeding MWIMl 1 lliVdlVI, CI 11 1 iidantcd to larger grounds, it the soil is weedy, summer fallow it by repeated plow- i incr and harrowinn-. starting and kill- i j ing all foul weeds. Make the surf , ; sow, early in spring, at least a bushel ! oiinu oi any one grass jut acre, brush or roll m, and a dense mat of eneeis 01 urouui. VI linout the ZZZJfT further trouble. Use thc lawn mower .1 ....-i . 1 1 vt-ijf me oays unin mia-summcr, and gradually less often afteTO'ards. i.ii. - en i iv r H irornev, in which, alter nrieny re (all parts of this Republic, from the ' , f1l trv ft - Kx - , - nm u liiTTi Another Bourbon Oaliao,e. WASHINGTON, July Pari ioulairi have been m-eived hero oi the neo !ml instane'o of the hVeakiuji up of a : ll.mtl.1ie.in niiilication ineetin" that was attempted lo be held in Mont-i goinerv, Alabama. The meeting was referred to in to-day's Time, but a mistake was made in the day. which was Saturday last instead of Monday. ... f 1 , The Republicans of Montgomery endeavored to hold a meeting about two weeks ago. when their a.eni bhtse was broken up by Democratic rouirhs, who pelted the speakers with rotten eggs and interrupted their speeches with torrents of oaths against the Radicals, alternated with cheers for Hancock. A poor pretense was made by some ot the Democrats that they regretted the proceedings, and would endeavor to prevent a repetition of them. A meeting was called for last Saturday evening, June 2l; and as objection had lieon made to holding it in front of a bank on the public square, a stand was erected opposite Artesian Basin, a!)ut 15 yards removed from the sjM)t originally chosen. The stand was decorated with lanterns and Hags, and speakers from out of the city had Wen invited to make addresses. When the speaking be gan there were about o,0(0 persons present, most of whom were Repub licans. Soon the crowd was increas ed by a mob of noisy Democrats, who hooted at the speakers, pelted them with missilesof different kinds, and finally broke the mooting up with throats of violence to those who participated it it. The main cause of the disturbance, and the leader of the Pourbon roughs, was Census Supervisor Kirtland, a ward jKiliti eian of low degree. Some of ''the boys" who had been instructed ap peared before Kirtland, and woa sionally interrupted the speakers by hurrahs for Hancock and by the use of filthy remarks. Kirtland was not satisfied to confine himself to these mean capers. When he aj lM'ared in the crowd he cried out. "Don't let the Radicals speak." This choice sentiment was reieated by manv of the Democrats in the i crowd, and several cries of "Shoot ; them ''own" wore heard. Such an uproar followed that the speakers did not dare to face it, seeing that it was not only useless but danger ous to do so. It was now about 10 or 10..50 o'clock. Sonic Democrats made a feint of repressing the dis turbance, and one man harangued the crowd, declaring that Kirtland was wrong, and that the meeting might just as well be permitted to go on. No injury could le done by such meetings, or the votes of the Republicans, for the Democrats could outeount the Republican even if the latter outvoted the Dom-! oerats. This sort of talk pleased the j crowd. 1 lie Ueninoratie Nientl, Charlie T. Pollard, took the plat form, and, with argument substan tially to the same effect made an ef fectual attempt to quiet his turbu lent friends. In the disturbance one arrest was made. Charley Forte, a "chicken pcdlor," who threw one rotten egg at a speaker, was hustled off to the police station. It was un derstood by everybody that this oor wretch was made a scapegoat plied with drink and then suppli ed with the rotten egg and instruet tions, and made an exponent of the sincerity of Democratic assertions about "free speech." He was fined, and the Democrats will propably pay his fine out of the campaign fund. There would have been no disturbance if Kirtland, the Census Supervisor had not furnished back bone and muscle to the crowd who helped him to commit the outrage. Py Republicans in Montgomer' the affair is regarded as showing conclusively that if the Democrats once get complete control the vcr' worst elements of the party will rule it, and that without exercising thc restraint which they now do. Men who have been regarded as "liberal" Democrats have no control over their brethren. Should they suc ceed, they will make the South hot for every jnan of any tolerance in politics. Men who have lived in thefcity and tried to make their homes there will abandon the idea, and every Republican who cannot and has not refrained from express ing his political opinions will have to leave Alabama and seek a liveli hood where thc guarantee of lilx-rty is no mere empty phrase. Stale History. At a meeting of gentlemen, recent ly in the office of l'rogrr, the For ney's Philadelphia paper, thePicen tennial Association of Pennsylvania was permanently organized by the el tion for the ensuing year of the following officers : President, Col. J. W. Forney ; Vice Presidents, Hon. II. D. Moore, Dr. Frank Taylor, and Prof. 11 V. (.'ope ; Secretary, Charics W. Alexander ; Co rrcsponding Secre tary, Prof. J. . Purns ; Treasurer, T. J. Stavelv. The meeting was well j : attended. i An address was read by Colonel . ... ... , - n viewing thc history of the country up to the time of the first Centenni al of the foundation of Philadelphia in 17i2, he refers to the second an niversary of that occasion, which oc curs in" September, 18S2, as the proper period in which to restore and commemorate the events of the last two hundred years. The organi zation we projjose, said he is intend ed as a simple preparation for such a recognition of these events, as will gratefully emphasize past develoii ment, and make a practice and a guide for the future. In this pleas ing duty all interested can partici pate; happily much - has been done already by patriotic sagacity, benev olence and generosity, anil our prov ince may be rendered eomparitivelv j easy by the fact, that only a single j work will be entrusted to us. Yet j this single, work will include many j various considerations : First of these j will be the classification of general i history, including the annals of all the various counties which entered into the first proprietary adminis tration. Many incidental duties will conic into the general plan. Among the rest, to revive the interesting story of William Penn in England, his eompaartivcly brief residence in this vicinity, and the romantic events ttf jhapy wife, "I have the best husband his career before he died. Around; in the world. He is so crMl iml his career before his character, so peaceful, so excm- j plary and so fruitful, more than one asnersion b;w lux.n aspersion has been iiernntted to i settle, and it will be our pleasant j iarh. not oinv to ciear awav these I inisrcprescnMions but to present him and his examnle to future m-n cranons as the h nest exhibition of individual nuritv and nerxpvemnep Mi"" magiiauiiuiiy 01 ancient or modern times. In this undertaking we cheerfully invoke the hearty co operation of all classes and parties in this Commonwealth. ..1C .1. 'A-- "Jnit Liktf a Woman." . fl is now ovof one hundred years liioe an American philosopher pro- ea me ouerv ill . "Whv is a woman afraid of a coV ?" And vet no one has ever succeed ed in giving a satisfactory answer. There Ls once ii; a whil.: a woman who doesn't seem to have the slight est fear, even when passing a cow with one horn all twisted out of shape; but follow that woman home and you will find that she kicks the dog, "cuds thechildren, jaws her hus band and knows how to sharjK'n a butcher-knife and use an ax. The real woman has a mortal terror of cows, and the real cow seems to have an antipathy for her. Recently a lady was walking down Cass avenue, Detroit, when she suddenly came upon a cow. The animal was feeding on the other side of the street and the boy sent out to watch her sat under a shade tree and played on a mouth-organ. The lady halted. The cow looked up. "Lost anything ma'am?" asked the boy as he removed the music from his mouth. "I I'm afraid of that cow !" she nplied. "What fur? Cows don't bite .r kick, same as a horse. All they kin do is to run their horns through you and pin you to the ground "Oh! my she's coming i" "No, she hain't. She's just making you believe that she wants to git at ve and lunik ye over the fence." "Oh! hut f dare not pass!" "Yes, you dare. Cows know when a woman is afraid just as quick as anybody. The minute you give cows to understand that you are able to catch 'em by the heels and mop the ground with 'cm they goto hunting fur clover." "Dear me, but I guess I will go b:vtk !'' "I wouldn't. If you only spit on vcr hands and shake ver fist at her ! she'll wilt right down. Cows knows w ho's boss just as well as men do. Now. then. I'll hold yer parasol while vou spit on ver hands . . . .f "Oh! I can't I'm going rht home !' "Will, my little brother swears at em instead ot spitting on his hands. See if voll can do that." "No no -no ! I am going right now." "If I was a woman and I couldn't swear or spit on my hands, I should carry a sword-cane to stab cows with," observed the boy as he looked across the way "My soul! but there's another cow up there !" exclaimed the lady as she looked up the street. "Yes, lots of cows around these days, but I never hoard of two cows attacking a woman at once. I guess one generally hooks 'cm all to piec es ursi, a.Kl llieu iiieouiei nnuw uji and paws at the mangled remains. If you " the lady uttered a first-class scream and made a jump for the nearest gate. It opened hard, and after one pull she went over the fence and up the front steps of a strange house, there to remain until her husband could be summoned by telephone to come and act as a body guard. "I'd just like to be a woman," mused the boy as he sat down to punish his mouth-organ some more. "I'd carry a bowie-knife down the back of my neck, and the first cow that tried to hook me would feel that ere knife playing mumblety peg around her vicious heart-strings. AVhat Fhysicians Think. New Yoke, DecemluT 21. is; I Dr. M. M. Kkxxeb, Freiloma, X,. Y.: Dkab Sir: I have no hesita tion in sayinstliat thecflkwy of your Blood ami liver Remedy anil Nerve Tonic in re lievin ami oariiiR the various chronic ili.i eases you mention in connection with it, f;ir Miiqcissen anything I have ever met with or known, during a twenty year's extensive jiracticc of medicine. It is successfully ad ministered in so large a number of diseases liecuuse it o)crates. by way of removing the causes of disease, hence they yield of neces sity. Yours truly, A. F. JEXXIXiii, M. U. Dr. Fcnner's Blood and Liver Rem edy and Nerve Tonic mav well lo called "The conquering hero" of the times. It is the medical triumph of the age. Whoever has "thc blues' should take it, for it reijv.late and re- mm the disordered system that gives rise to them. It always cures Piliousness anil Liver Complaint, jaundice, JJvspepsia, Constipation Headaches, r evkk and AgieSi'Leex, Enlargement, Scrofula, Erysipelas, i mipies, jjiotches and all rKi.- Ekiitions and Plood Disorders; Swelled Limbs and Dropsy; Sleep lessness, Impaired Nerves and Ner vous Debility; Restores flesh and strength when the system Ls running down or going into decline; cures Female Weakness and Chronic Rheu matism, and relieves Chronic Bron chitis, and all Lung and Throat dif ficulties. It does those thinr bv striking at the root of disease and re moving its causes. Dr. Fcnner's Improved Cough Honey will relieve any cough in one hour. Try a sample bottle at 10 cents. Dr. Fcnner's Golden Relief cures any pain, as Tooth-ache, Neuralgia, Colic or Headache in 5 to 30 minutes, and readily relieves Rheumatism, Kidney Complaint, Diarrhea, etc. Try a sample bottle at 10 cents. Dr. Fcnner's St. Vitus Dance Ppe cific. One Inittle always cures. For sale by C. N. Bovd. A Good HuHband. "Nothing," said a sweet, smiling, joyful woman ina domestic circle , "adds so much to my happiness as a kind word, a kind look, or a kind act from my husband. Oh. how charming, after a hard day's toil at the wash-tub, or in cooking over a hot fire for the harvest hands, or in discharge of my other domestic du ty, or after a sleepless night with a sick babe, is a kind word, or 0 smile even, from the husband and fath er." Husbands, if you see defects, or things which you wish were not so, in your wives, try kindness and see if that don't do them more good than all the unkind words and cross looks you ever gave them. 1 often think" continued t.hw kind to me in sickness and in health, in joy and in sorrow. We are hap- pier than when we were married nearly twenty years a-o. He never scolds me. nor hrinira n innir cntn. logtie of complaints gainst me, but : comes from his daily labor in a hu mor, with a smile on his hps, and says: "Now, Susanna, you have done enough to-day ; put up your work." "Then he seizes little" Nancy, and we sit down side by side, and chat in the cool evening breeze." What woman in the world would not make such a husband a good wife? a; r ii 1, mi, 1 .iMMffiuMi,. ,mmi mww .KV.it m Mr. Bee Cher at Ftfrt Sumter. "Revelation," said Mr. Eeecher,; ' was not intended to stop twothous-! and veans ago; it is God's spirit' workni'' in us that has lx-en Komg j on from the time of thc,rcdcmption ; to this hour, but this cannot be ex- j pressed in language, it must be felt. J 1 remember at the close of the war' when I was requested bv the Gov ernment to go down to Fort Sumter to deliver an oratian on the occasion j of the rebooting of the lhg w hich had been first lowered there. I sat there by the Hag-staff" waiting for j mv turn to speak, and I saw them ; knotiuig the corners of the flag, but I did not think of anything but whether the knots would hold oj! whether thev would raise it by this ! line or by that ; but when they be gan to hoist it and I saw the old flag Hoat grandly out in the air a wild wave of emotion swept over me, and it seemed as though I should be raised from of the platform, I burss into tears. The whole audience wept and sobbed and thrilled with emotion. Put who could tell what he felt ? I could not, but God can, fpr these soul secrets are all open to Him. It is said that this doctrine of the inspiration of the individual will lead to fanaticism. Good heav en! I wish it would! the best thing that can happen to a man in this world is to be a little crazy just a little. It is the soul that is the throne of God and not the educated reason ; the latter is the servant of tae soul, and like all servants, good in its place, but impudent w hen it eets out of it. We need educated know ledge for all phgsical life of the body, for the eye, the ear, the appetite, for sleeping, etc., but not for the emotions of the soul. In proportion as men are great in this world they are liable to be small in the other." The Vole l'vr Presidents. We give below the electoral votes for Presidents of the United States, from Alpha to Omega : In 17'J; John Adams got 71, and Thomas Jefferson bS. In 1S00 Thomas Jefferson got 73, and John Adams (54. In Thomas Jefferson 1C2, C. C. Pincknev 14, In 1S0S James Madison 122, C. C. Pincknev 4-i. In 1S12 James Madison 12H, De Witt Clinton .S'J. In 1SP James Monroe IS:, Rufus Ling .4. In 1S20 James Monroe 218, the entire vote except one. There was no opposition. In 1824 Andrew Jackson 99, John Quincy Adams S4, W. H. Crawford 41, Henry Clay .;(. In 1S2S Andrew Jackson J. (J. Adams 83. In 18.J2 Andrew Jackson Henry Clay 4'J, scattering 18. In 18.'M Martin Van Puren 178, 219, ! 170, i W. H. Harrison 7, scattering oO. In 1840 W. H. Harrison 234, Mar tin v an Puren (. In 184 1 Jame K. Polk 170, Henry Clay 104. Ig 1848 Zaehary Taylor 163, Lewis Cass 127. In 1-S-V2 Franklin Pierce 253, Win field Scott 43. In 18"() James Buchanan 174, J. C. Fremont 114, Millard Fillmore 8. In 1800 Abraham Lincoln ISO, J. C. Preekenridge 72, Stephen A. Douglass 12, John Bell 39. Iii 18t'4 Abraham Lincoln 216, G. P. McClellan 21, eleven states not voting. In 1868 U. S. Grant 214, Horatio Sevmour SO. In 1872 U. S. Grant 300, Horace Greclv 66. In 1876 Rutherford B. Hayes I80, j S. J. Tilden 184. 'Defensive War." When the American army entered Philadelphia in June, 1778, upon the evacuation of the English troops, there was a want of paper fitted for the construction of cartridges. It was advertised for, but only a small quantity procured. An order was then issued demanding its instant production by all the people of tlie city who had "it. This still produced but little, probably on account of its scarcity. A file of soldiers was then ordered to make search for it in every place where any was likely to le found. Among other places visited in July, 1778, wasa garret in n house f v':..i. i..:..w. ir,..l-i; 1.0.1 l 111 niueii .ii;iij.iiiiiii 1- luu&iiu uni previously hail his printing office. Here was discovered about twenty five hundred copies of a sermon which the Rev. Gilbert Tennent had written (printed by Franklin) ujxm " Defensive War," to rouse the colo nists during the French troubles. They were all taken and used as cases for musket cartridges, and at once sent to the army ; and most of them were used at the battle of Mon mouth. The requisites in cartridge- paper were, ot course, thinness, ) strength, pliability, and inflamma- j bility, and such paper was ncccssari- j ly scarce then. j This is a story Philadelphians al- i ways tell as a set-off to that of the j Sons of Liberty upsetting George the j Third, in the Bowling Green, New j York, and making bullets of him to! feed his lobster backs on. ' Barbed Penecs. R. Noyes, of Coles county, Illinois, writes: " I have no direct or Indirect interest in any fence, except that I want to use the cheapest and best. Six pears ago I put up 40 rods of j barbed wire fence, and each yeari have added to it, and like it so well j that this year Iain selling off (good) j and burning up (decayed) lioth rails and board fence, because I think it j better anil cheaper to build wire! fence than to repair the old, although I am making and selling new wooded 1 rails on the place. As to posts,. I j find that a few good posts answer, ; with young trees set in the rows 80 j that when the posts are gone it leaves your fence an ornament instead of an eyesore. Then it is so cheap. Two wires will turn the worst large stock; three for calves and. sheep, j and hve tor hogs. 1 he railroads nse nothing else here; and as a man and a lxy can put up half a mile in a day, after the posts are set, it saves labor. ' Travelers ' do not stesd it for kindling or seat-boards, or travel across your land. As to its being barbarous, 1 have never known an animal really hurt with it, and iff they are scratched they will not try i it again. The onl' place I havefouml I it would not do was around small lots, where numbers of cattle are kept; thev will hook each other through it"." Ex. Bisuiark is entitled to wear four hundred and sixty-six decorations. When he is dressed for ceremony he looks like a speckled hen. One or more western railroads are reported to le now using none other than apercar wheels on their moun-1 tain grades. j THE Herald von 1880 ! PREPARE FOR THE GREAT PRESIDENTIAL STRUGGLE ! THAT OCCTJES THIS YEAR, BY SUBSCRIBING FOB SOME GOOD PAPER IK TIME ! ZEE? YOUESELF POSTED ON THE STENTS OF THE COUNT! ! ! GET THE COUNTY NEWS. READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS AND LEARN WHERE TO BTJ"Z" CHEAP KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE EDITORIAL COLUMNS! I AND SEE THE BOOS IP YOU WANT POLITICS, The Herald -is- RED-HOT REPUBLICAN!!! -AND A- STAL WAR TofS TA L lfA It 1'S ! IE OU WANT GENERAL NEWS! The Somerset Herald cojtt ainji as much news as any COUNTY PAPER -iisr- PENNSYLYANIA! IF YOU WANT THE LOCAL NEWS, THE BIEiLD IS THE PLACE TO F15D H We Aim made arrangement by which this department eill not only be EQ UA L. but MUCH BETTER ttan the PAST! SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 IStO CHBOMOS! ADDRESS, THE HERALD. SOMERSET. PA MRS. LYDIA E. FiNXHAM. OF LYNN. MASS. sicorEnm "J" LYDIA E. PIN KHAKI'S VSGSTASL2 CKSP0TJ2HX For all Female Complaints. This preparation, tnti ns-ja riprniftpa. consist of Ycfjotablo FroiKM that mm barak (a tlie most del ctttolnralid. L';K.n one trial tiw KieiiU of this Cam poand will bo rertrmi-Hl, a ; rvUrf 1 Immediate; ami when its usufaeout.u'ii 1, in n;ufty-nineesniiii moan, drod, spprmaactiteurrNi fTc tifl .as thousands l& t Kfy. On aococnC ct It-- princa merits, it is to-day rs aoBsmraded aod prtcn:. 1 tUo be: physicians la the country. It will euro m-.tirv'.y i': o: form of fvlUnjf of the uterus, X,;icorThn-a, lrn -tikir and painful Xenstraatiun alI(rT3rianTnjur4cs, lsiUairaaOon and Ocention, FkKxIiats, all L" ..wufm-nts end the con arinBt spiral woA;nei. att cicUily adapcedi to rte Chance of Lif-A. It v:U ai: :lr end espel tumors from the a terrain an carfy ri;ro of development. The tendcttcy to c-merouj tu:jior tlu:re U caocke4 very speedily by rt3 ck la fact it 1... t r I t 1 th rm4 est and bent tv nw iy Wii I..; cvif been diMcoTer ed. It permcaiCTt ry pj. ti' u of tha system, and giTe nfW life and t:ot. I; rvr.tn. . .j foir.tnnc .flatulccry, de stroysallcraviajf i''C ti:-uia ixli.vcj wcakim Of the atomar h ItctxrrsBloatlrj?, IT.-.-i-!a'-ir, NTTn. FroKtrttk General Pebility. -it rVrr'n lo SsUon. That fvelintfof bca. itif dta, cmaring pain, weight and backache, to alwt; TTr.aitntiy enred bf Us oea. It will at all t!-r.t;:. rnd under-ll rirenmstan ees, set In harbor. y wi. j t..j i..w t!al governs the female system. for Kidney Coia;'-i.i.i - rx titis cwinponnd ta ansnrpasaii. Lydta E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound Is prepared at 2T3 awl Wi-t- rn Arrnn, Lynn, Xan. Price $1.0. S bi.ttl efor.W. Sent by mail In the form of pilh, aL in ti form f Loaeniros, no retps of price, $1.00, per bot, fr ci'lior. Mrs. nXXIIAst freely answers all " net inir!-j. &-nd for pam phJetk Address as ciiovo X nt -m thi paper. Xo family should be vltho: 1 L'-'lUA K. PINKIlAX LIVEI: PIIXS. Tbty cu.tj l jr-:rs.tln, J.uu(:e, and Torpidity of thc LiTtr. i ilau pr Lox. COPIES OF THE Rules & Regulations (iOVKUXINd REPUBLICAN 'PRIMARY ELECTIONS- OF .SOMERSET rol'STY. i A t-opy of tht-rc rult f hoiilil In- in i cv,n-n,Iul.H.-:lnvut,r2rjgll fm rl ,-. Tiu-v will Ik- iunn.l I - the hands of in the count v jKirtit-ularlv intcristin; just :it thi-'J time-, when the first I'lcctiun undi r i the new rules is ahout to he helt. j Single copies Kk ts or lhre.-eoj.iis fort JxLs. Save Your ChUdren. For expelltna worms from the ivstem. Seller.' Yrrmiloic hmnoe'juitl in this or xnj otber eoantry. "One thoitul irtveii to a eiill ot Mr. Bni'lbury's, expellml 'Ot w.irmi in Ivor houMkller tnkinv the mliine. Ben). Lytle. I ninn Tuwn blp, ra. A) "xpIlel -tou worm turn my child wo yera olil." VV m. Stirrer, St. Lnuif. Mo. Sol.l by ilrarzixra. Price - cts. K. E. StLJ.EKS CO., Pmp'rn, eiiuhurun, &, Sen-I turciruularl. Jui-3 LIFE IN3DBAHCE AGENTS. WANTED ! A first-lt Life Inl'lmnre Compnnj In ?Sew York wjutK NHMl.tL. .E..ltl. BBi l.4Ml. AUK.vrit, in onureupied territory in the State of fenn.'vlvKnU. Aiirei Jt.A urn OF A:'l'IE. H 100, York !( Uflice. The English Draft Horse BONNIE PRINCE ! Out oi Oil ficanis Priia. Ununited Iroa Enslanl Will serve mare for the season or 1S, vli t The nnt three itays uftha week at the staMi oi Alexander Jountrymao. in Lnransville. Stimeriet coanty. Pa., and the next three diiys rloe to Weimer.s shop. In Somerset tvroub. ehngin alternately thnUKhout the season. BATES: $3.00 to Issue a Fcol. Payments to be m.-vlo when the mare Is knowa to be with lual. Any person partinxor notattend tnc with an injured mare, will he held n-pontrle k.rihe insuraiu. Iue rare will tie taken, but no accountability lor accidents. DESCEIPTION : BOX X IK PRIXCElsabraaUfuldark roan. six years old, stands eighteen hands blub, and weixh 2 0 pounds. He has powerful Nne and sinue, nirumrlnn 13 Inches solid lne around the smallest plaee on lore leu, and i Inches around the smallest place on hind leir : is well proportion ed, with superior action. Was sirl hy -H'.n-nie Prince, Sr., who stood in Westmoreland county lor sevrrctl years, and weilis ponmls. He was imported from England by Washington Beales. Uonnle Prince's dam is a large well formed black mare, half Mood, she was sired hy "Wax Work, Sr.," imported from F.ngUnd at a heavy expense hy the Pennsylrsnia Stock Import ing Company. (Oeo. Johnson, agent), was owned hy the Westmoreland and Fayette Morse Com pany, and ased to stand at XVI t, I'leasant. Bonnie Prince Is nearly full blond and Is nn doul.te.ily the largest hor-w you ever saw. He will weigh whea in good condition pounds, rlon Uie Prioea has proven himself a sure foal getter. Farmers and stock-raisers of Somerset county pat or let to Bonnie Prince. iMv bay horse "WAX WORK, Jr.." will stand at win. Saders, Ilerlin and Frledens. this sea.-. W.M. SlliLK, Keeper. For farther partlcnUrs address AprllU ALEXANDER COUNTRYMAN. CUM Kl KT ( "OI" NT Y FA liM KUS K3 KEAITHIS! I have pun-hase.1 for the season, at a large price, the Kraft Stallioa Clyesilale, well known throughoat W estmoreland ( knuity as AMSO.N'' or the -Holt horse." and will stand hiin hr ser vice at the stable of ltuvtd Lavan. in Lavansvllle, Somerset County, during the tall seaim. SeaTi to commence about the sin of July. Hiti.cn dol lars to insure a mare with f.l. Ukhcrhtiox. " SAMSON " is a handsome chestnut bay, about fifteen hands high, and weighs ahoat sixteen hundred pounds, with tine limbs, heavy boned awl beautttul In symmetry. He is a sure colt-getter, as can he shown. Farm ers should see this horse, as he is certain to please W. H. TAYMAN. Lavaasrille, June 5, 1S8 June 9. MENTOR. I hereby civ notice that 1 wilt stand my fine black Stallioa ME-VroK. full three quarter blood, at the stable o.' Joslah Brant, In Soiueriaet Borough during theday tbroogboot the season. Morning and evening ol each day his services can ne nauoa my farm one and a hall miles northeast uf Somer set. . Imorte.l Euglish Kraft Horse -NIOUEK." He Is a horse at hoe style, with immense) strength ol bona, and will welirh lsno to ImOO Dounds. There NCxTOI Is a black horse sired fy Heraeys are a number of bis oats In this neighbdrhoul for which 7i were otlered while they were stlU class- ad as sucking colts. March 2 UEKlKtlSt ttv. OLD Hues EAS I 0 A SPECIALTY ! FANCY and STAft AM, RARE and CHOIC COFFEES. I:. .IKNKi I'i'r-',;,,-,;,. . ! OLD TEA HD3SS SPECIALS TlEC&Sn&I GIT!3!! GOT T:2! iluarantec.l ali.IutIy pure. Taerzcrrrssa nasKca.' Berth, the Wrl.i. Tk V.nt MtMal f , E.xrnlt.,n T&! fclM sasw B:rl f::! F ur eitreme White Biva-l an .' 1'j.try u?e. Jakla" Brai F:::r! In 3 an l 9 b. pickaei. nrly ir Ut.Lif. Til C;!:!:n::i el'::::3 Cf ThiJ llUdous Cffe Is VcrivalM !,.r Uj ful Anuu. Tie Fi!:7 Fu"i A aiiK niistursof cam Clfee. Kvtry Varktj F..nry t'hetw. TU Fi V:r22t 32313 Sfn: Ti2 UrVns'yonzJKlcS., r E A j THE CNLY HOUSE L THE CITY THAT EE FULL LINE OF THE CELEBRATED PRICE OF TEA. HE litW CIOI YOUNC HYSON. "1 ! CUN POWDER. (. P""T"I. w ( ooLftJcJ' ) "m3' ' ' i J A P A H ?t . 5 m y cn:.-. an.! i ENGLISH BREAKFAST, Per f- AJ, 0J, so ueui?, Si."V(, UM 3 ..V. -A re-tuctkin of FIVE CENTS per p..uo.: le allowed on all or-hrs of Fivs Put' .ins or Tea. J-In sending a written onler for Tea. dra t to mention the quality yku desire, and pru -All the Teas nuoted ah.e at 1.' p-r and upwa-iisaretheOARi.K!i Oaowi Tsi If to deiirtd. will pack any of Ac hecc in. 10 lb. botft without extra thnrqr. Have ji st hs sivkdai livoirgorrxRV F' CTW 1379. FCRX3SA OOL0N3 TEA! SlOj:: (i(M)D TEAS AT LOW PRICES !- UVNPOWBEK IMPEKIAlr-YOr.N'l : SON JAPAN Of jLONd ES iLISli BREAKFAST, 25 CETS PKU lOl.I) N3 EEDDCTiON BY ANY QUANTT COFFEE RARE ANDCHOIC THE CELEBRATED DELMCNICO COFFEE ThlS'lelicloust;nlfeel!iunririiled for Its- 1 1 tul Aroma. It all other '..tlees bare Us- JJ please yuu, g!ve this a trial. ( ,3 TI IK FANCY nr" FRENCH COFFEE V pi. PRICE PER rOl .ND - 2S CE'' Vi twine Mitrhft Coffee, tt'ff. MttMMibot' .,' , I -. eti.'i tnf, U .fir rit Coffee. I lt.n,ra Coffee, Afrienn Lfi ia Kim t offer. I'm Kerry j fee, Golilen Kio Coffee. ' A PARTIAL LIST OF GOODS r Cnnstnntlv Arrivins F. Schumacher's I it Meal, .it J n!. ' 1 Wheat and iVraham rlnor. Mackerel. Extra No. 1 Shore Mess, V. 1 No. 1 Hay, No. N . 3 ljrge. No. i .det..si Vu l- kits. Krt "' KcBne.1 L ni In Palls. 20 lb. 10 lb. i lb. , Fresh Uub-ters, S.lmo. Shrimps an.1 All looked Con.e.1 Beef and Presscl T K t(ft, PICKELS and TABLE SAUCE Sugar? the best i)U:illty (.Teach ara.lt- J ) SYRUPS AND M0LAS5E NEW YOKK GOSH A.D OHIO CREAM CHEEi Til EI. A KiHr ASSORTMENT ('F - LAUNDRY AND TOILET SOA' PURE SPICK? COLMAM'S ENGLISH MUSTAf Sd r..a Catalooce a.m Pk J R. J No. 2S Fiftri Ave PITTSCURGU, I mm G Y ii c.in