BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1870. VOL 16.-KO. 45. 10WAS EAMSEY. l.owan IUnit-y. she h plain Plain, as you would plainness call ; Just her girlish golden hair Iiound bar brow and bosom fair Fur adornment, that is all ! P.otvan liumsey. she is Tain Of her girlish golden hair Acl her feet, if she but stir, pirnce about in spit of her, Ju-'t to show how small they are ! Rowan Ramsoy, she is neat S locking, petticoat of snew, And her hair, like veil o( lace, Slippcth fitly to the place Of her sleeve so looe and low. r. jTan Ramsey, she is sweet Nature's chiM, as you will see ; y.trer any bramble bud Born a mile deep in the wood (JreT tc blossom pure as she. Kowau Ramsey's smiles do flow O'er tr chaste religious frown ; And no little saintly nun At her 'broidery in the sun, Proppeth eyelids lowlier down. ?.owan Ramsey, she is low Ili-h in goodness is her part; Wttn we stand up to be wed Tea shall s;e her golden head Shining level with my heart. Rowan Ramsey, she is small Sever smaller maid appeared -!u;s;cie of a fairy bower ; I could hide her like a Sower, I'nderneatu her grizzly beard. Rowan Rainfey, she is all .Fast as I would hare her be ; (' ."ien hair and gowa so simple, 1'row asd bosom, smile and dimple S iree: as crer street can be THE GOOD TEAPPES. A STORY Or" COLORADO. !I tv strange it all seemed to little Wini Tf't1 (int. rMr n t.- r,r- CV m im-r .r, I , ! i tcuff time and one flower time ago, shj v:' liting in liuslon, and now she wa3 in -r.-ido. It. was a great change this go ifi.' ir-Mii comfort and luxury to a place where comfu.-t was hard to find, and luxury ! .; to be thought of ; where they had a log i:i:t iu-tead of a house and a pig in place of i...il!e. But, on the whole she enjoyed it. !I?r father was better, and that was what they came for, because the doctor had t-vA Colurado air would cure him. And tV-Mgh mother often looked troubled, she ( : rii:!y never ueed to break forth into hap- y ; it oj on. wlieu father was sick in bod. ;i.s -tie J'.i now that he was aLlj to help cut !''.v;i trees in the t jr.st. Yes, on the whole, Vr:ni;'red liked Colorado and so did her lit -Toilier Xat ; though, if you had told him IVwton was just around the corner he ' .! I have started to run there without to put on his cip. r-.i -h a liuie mite of a fellow Nat wa. and so full of KUtihinc. Only one thing cui 1 trouble htm and that was to be away ;.Vuj tujther even for half an Lour. .See these two children now trudging to tt, iittle stream near by, quite resolved up ki !iavin a Cue rocking in father's canoe. ';.;. i::eer boat, made of bark, and sharp at both ends was tied to a stake. .Now that tiie stream was swollen and flowing on so !'i-t. it was line fun to sir, one in each end a:id set "louueed about," as Winnifred aA. " uu ppt in first, bacuse you're the Ht-i:e-i," .-aid Winnie holding her dress tightly away from the splashing water with one l aud, and pulling the boat cloac to the shore R i;h the other. ".No you get in first, 'cause you'm a nirl," Mtid Nat. '! don't want no hclpin. I iu going to take off my toos and tockies 3r.-t, 'cause iiuiiiuiy saij I might." Nat could say shoos and stockings quite plainly when he chose, but everybody said "t . .i and tockies" to him ; so he looked hi "ii ilvse words, and many other crooked "ii'--, as a Krt of language of Nat, which a'i tli world would ?pcak if tbcv only knew I.--. In at lu-t b-jth eftheru and a fineroek ii.; they hii l. The buhes and trees threw c 1 1 iwj over the canoe, and the birds -siik-, aiid the sky peeped, doivn at them tiir"ii.'!i little opening! overhead, and alto-f.''b-r. with the plashin water and the lir U aul p!e:Lant murmur of insects, it a:x...-t like mother's racking and sing- itij. fi.'s wa early in the morning. Mother wis v-.-ry buy in the cabin, clearing away ttc breakfast dishes, sweeping the room, tiiak::' beds, mixing bread, beating the "V'.n. .ml doing a dozen other things. At t he took a plate of crumbs and scraps, a'i! w-.-iit out to feed the chickens. "Winnie! Natl" she called, as die step I -! out upon the rough door stone. "Come l t":.e chickens !" Then added, in a sur 1 way, to herself: "Why, where in ok-world can those children be? They i'in i.rtvc stopped at the new clearing to s-e their father." At dinner time she blew the big tin horn bat hung by the door, and soon her hus tat.J came home, alone, hungry and tired. "O. you little witches 1" laughed the i'! other, without looking up froai her task of bread cutting. "How could you ?tay away so long from niamnra ? Tired c rant ' Yes, very. But what do you mean? herewr the youngsters?" be looked up now, and instantly exclaim el in a frightened Toicc, as'she ran out past her husband : "0, Frank ! I've not seen them for two or three hours ! 1 thought to be sure they tre with you. They surely wouldn't have stayed all this time in the boat ?" He followed her, and they both ran to the stream. Ia an instant, the mother, hast ing on ahead through the bushes, screamed back : "O, Frank 1 Frank ! Ihe loot is goner All that day, and the next, and the next they searched. They followed the stream, and at last found the boat but it was emp ty ! In vain the father and mother and their only neighbor wandered through the forest in eTery direction calling: "Winnie! Winnie ! Nat 1 Nat!" In vaiu the neigh bor took the boat and explored the stream for miles and miles no trace could be found of the poor little creatures, who, full of life and joy, bad so lately jumped into their father's canoe to "have a rock." Where were they? Alas thy did not themselves know. They only knew that they had been awakened suddenly by a great thump, and when they jumped out of Jtlie canoe and started to go home everything was different. There vai no footpath, no clearing where trees had been cut down, no sound of father's axe nearby, nor of moth er s song and the stream was rushing on very angrily over its rocky bed. The canoe which had broken loose, and bore on by the current, floated away with them miles and miles from the stake, was wedged between two great stones when they jumped out of it ; but now it was gone the waters had taken it away. After a while in their dis tracted wanderings, they could not even find the etrcam, though it seemed to be Daring in all directions around them. Now they were in the depths or the for est, wandering about tired, hungry and frishtened. For two nights they had cried themselves to sleep in each other's amis under the black trees ; and as the wind moaned through the branches, Winnie had prayed God to save them from the wolves and the Indians, and little Nat had scream ed. "Papa! Mamma!" sobbing as if his heart would break. All they had to cat was a few sweet red berries that grew close to the ground. Every hour the poor children grew fainter and fainter, and at last, Nat couldn't walk at all. "I'm too tired an t sick," he! said, "and my feet's all tut. My toos and tockies is in the beat. 0, Winnie! Winnie!" lie would cry with a great sob, "why don't ruatiima 'n' papa come? O! if mamma'd only come and bring uie some bread !" "Don't cry, dear, don't cry," Winnie would sas over and over nraiu. '"I'll find ome more red berries soon ; and God will show us the way home. I Avioto be will. Only don't cry, Nat, because it take3 away all my courage." "All your what?" asked Nat, looking wildiy at her, as if he thought courage was something they could eat. - 'All my courage, Nat." And then, after searching in vain lor more red berries, sb would throw herself upon her knees and moan : 'Dear Father in Heaven. I can't find anything more for Nat to eat. OU ! jAram show us the wav home !" What was that quick sound coming to ward them? The underbrush was so thick Winnie could not see what caused it, but she held her breath in terror, thinking of wolves and Indian, for there were plenty of both, she knew, lurking about in those great forests. The sound ceased for a moment. Seizing Nat in her arms, she made one more frantic elFort to find her way to the stream, then seeing a strange look in the poor little face when she put him down to take a better hold, she sercamed : "Nat! Nat! Don't look so! Kiss Win nie 'Hello, there!" shouted a voice through the underbrush, and in another instant a great stout man came stamping and break ing his way through the bushe3. "Hello, there! What on airth'a up now? Kf old Joe ha' n't come upon queer game this time. Two sick youngsters starving too, by Josh ! Here, you youngsters, eat some uv this 'ere, and give an account uv yoursjives. With these words, he drew from some where among the heavy folds of his hunting dress a couple of biscuit. The children grasp at them frantically. "Holdup! Not so smart!" he said; 'You must have a little at a time for an hour yet. Here, sis, give me the baby, I'll feed hi iu ; and as for you, jest sec that you don't worn'n niUJe." "Oh ! give me a drink !" cried .Winnie, swallowing the cracker in two bites, and for an instant forgetting Nat. The man pulled a canteen or flat tin flask from bis belt and gave her a swallow of water ; then he hastened to moisten Nat s lips and feed him crumb after crumb of the broken biscuit. "Another hour," he muttered to himself, as be gently fed the boy and smoothed back the tangled yellow hair from the pale little face, "another hour and he'd bin past men. din." Winnie looked up quickly. "Is he going to die?" she asked. "Not he," said the man; 'he'll come through right end up yet. Hi's got a fever on him, but we'll soon knock that under. How'd you get here, little gal?" Winnie told her story, all the while feel ing a glad certainty at her heart that their troubles were over. The strange man car ried a gun and he had a big pistol and an axe and a knife in his belt. He looked very fierce, too, yet she knew be would not harm her. She had seen many a trapper before since she came to the West, and though this man looked very errand and wore a won derful hunting dress all embroidered and fringed, and a big hat and yellow leggins, she felt sure he was the very trapper who had been at her father's cabin a few weeks before and taken supper, and warmed him self before the fire, while he told wonderful stories about Indians, and furs, and about having many a time had 'fifty mile o' traps out on one stretch.' She remembered, too, that her father had told her the next day that trappers lived by catching with traps all sorts of wild animals, and stlliug their furs to the traders, and that this particular trapper bad been very successful and had great influence among the Indians one of the big men of Colora do, as be said. These thoughts running through her mind now as she told bow they had been lost for three whole days and two nights, and at gigbt of Nat falling peacefully asleep on the trapper's shoulder, made her feel so happy that she suddenly broke forth with "O Mr. Trapper ! lean run now. Let's go right home." The stars came out one by one that night. and winked and blinked at a strange figure stalking through the forest. He had a sleeping child on each arm, and yet carried bis gun ready to fire at an instant's notice. "Well, old Joe, you've bagged all sort o' game in this 'ere forest, and trapped "most everything agoin," but you ain't never had such a rare bit o' luck as this. No wonder I stood there on the edge of the timber land, listening to I didn't know what. Rec- on here's a couple o' skins now'll be putty popular at one market 'tany rate fetch most any price you could name but I'll let 'em go cheap ; all the pay I want for these 'ere critters is just to hear the kisses of them poor frightened Hello ! there a light! What, ahoy! Neighbor, hello I hello!" "Got 'em both !" he shouted, as three figures, twe men and a woman, came in sight through the starlight. "All right, got 'cm oth." The children are awake now. What sobs, what laughter, what broken words of love and joy fall upon the midnight air! And through all, W innie, wondering and thrilled with strange happiness, is saying to herself: "I knew God would show us the way home!" A Pneumatic Tuba 400 Miles Long1. Few persons in this country were aware, we are sure, that a pneumatic tube is work ing betwevn Glasgow and London, but the following letter from Glasgow to a Boston gentleman shows that there is one : "I had occasion to send a telegram t ) Lon don the other day, and in a few minutes re ceived a reply which led me to suppose that a serious error had been committed , by my agents, involving many thousand pounds. I immediately wen,t to the telegraph office and asked to see my message. The clerk said, 'We can't sb-jw it to you, as we have sent it to London.' 'But,' I replied, 'you must have my original paper here; I wish to see that.' He again said, 'No, we have not got it, it is in the post oflice at London.' 'What do you mean?' I asked. 'Pray let mo see the paper I left here half an hour ago.' 'Well,' said he, 'if you must see it we will get it back in a few minutes, but it is now in London.' lie rang a bell, and in five min utes or so produced my message rolled up in pasteboard. It seems that for some months thre has existed a pneumatic telegraph be twixt Glasgow and London and betwixt Lon don and other principal cities of the king dom, which consists of an iron tube, into which the messages are thrown and sent to their destination. I inquired if I might see a message sent. 'Oh yes ; come around here.' He slipped a number of messages into the pasteboard scroll, popped it into the tube and made a signal. I put my ear to the tube and heard a slight rumbling noise for seventeen seconds, when a bell rang be side me, indicating that the scroll had arri ved at the general post ofllce, four hundred miles off! It almost took my breath away to think of it. If I could only go to Boston with the same relative speed, you might count on my passing an evening every week I at No. 124 Beacon street, and returning home to sleep. Who knows but we may be conveyed in this marvelous manner before many years? Perhaps you are aware that there has been a large tube between the general post ofllce in London and the station in Euston square in operation for a number of years. The mail bags for the north are all sent by this conveyance, so that the post office receives letters up to a few minutes before the train leaves, three miles off. The transit takes less than two seconds. Surely thisis an age of wonders." Ct'Rlors Tmxos to Know. Besides the fact that ice is lighter than water, there is another curious thing about it which per sons do not know, perhaps namely, its purity. A lump of ice, melted, will always become purely distilled water. When the early navigators of the Arctic seas got out of water they melted fragments of those vast mountains of ice called icebergs, and were astonished to find that they only yield ed fresh water. Tbey thought that they were frozen salt water, not knowing that they were formed on the land, and in some way launched into the sea. But if they bad been right, the result would have been all the same. The fact is, the water, in freezintr, turns out of it all that is not water salt, air. coloring matter, and all impurities. Frozen sea water makes fresh water ice. If you freeze a basin of indigo water, it will make it as pure as that made of pure rain water. hen the cold is very sudden, these foreign matters bave no time to es cape, either by rising or sinking, and are thus entangled with, the ice, but do not form any part of it. A California paper gives the following as a regular bill of fare at a Chinese restaurant in that city: cat cutlet, 25 cents; griddled rats, 6 cents ; dog soup, 12 cents ; roast dog, 18 cents ; dog pie, 6 cents. The Walls of China. All the cities of China are surrounded by high, strong walls, whose massive propor tions a stranger has no idea of until be sees them. The walls surrounding the city of Pekin are from twenty-two to twenty-five miles in length, and on an average fifty feet high. This wall is sixty feet thick at the bottom, and fifty-four at the top, and on,ce in a few yards there are immense buttresses to give it still greater strength. At every fifth buttress the wall for the space of oue hundred and twenty six feet in length, is two hundred and fifty six feet in thickness. In several places the foundation of this wall is of marble, and when the ground is uneven, immense quantities of cement, as durable nearly as granite, and about as hard, has been used to level up the ground. The main body of this wall is made of bricks each twenty inches Ions, ten inches wi le, and five inches thick. These bricks are burned very hard, and bave precisely the appearance of stone. On the inside of this wall, as well as on others in other cities,are esplanades, or star ways, with gates to them for ascending them. And over all the gateways there are immense towers, as large as preat churches, aud veiy much higher, constructed of these great burnt bricks. On the top of this immense wall there is a railing both on the outside and inside, coming up to a man's waist, which railing itself is a wall, thus giving a sense of security to a person walking on the top. The outside railing is made into tur rets, for the use of cannon, in case of attack. The entire top of the wall is covered with strong burned brick, twenty inches square, resembling the flagging of our sidewnlkffin large cities, only, as I have said, these walls are fifty-four feet wide. There is no way of getting into the city, only to go through this immense wall. And wherever there is a gate for the purpose of getting through, there is another wa!l built incloi-ing a square space, compelling all per sons who go into the city to go through two walls, by passages at right angles to each other. The wails are so immensely thick that these passages through them, arched j over cut stone, remind one exactly of our railroad tunnels in the United States. At each of these great archways there is an enormous gate made of strong timbers, eve rywhere as much a ten inches thick, and covered on both sides with plates of iron; like "the sides of cur war sliipa These gates are shut early in the cvcning.generally before sundown, and are not allowed to be opened during the night for nny purpose. They ars fastened on the inside by means of strong beams of timber. . The town of Muncy has a poet. And the particular difficulty with him at (his moment is that he is dreadfully in love with a red haired girl who lives down near the depot, and who was baptized Henrietta. A short time ago be thought he would show how ar dent bis affection for her was. So he sent to the village paper a poem supposed to have been written at tie tomb of Henrietta, who was presumed to be dead. This poem was entitled "Thoughts by the grave of II." The last line read this way: 'We will hallow her lore with our tears.'' The author went to bed that night absolute ly certain that Henrietta was his own. If this poem didn't wilt I'er.proud heart, then the young man intended to blow out his brains with a horse-pistol. He made a rush for the newspaper just after day break the next morning. The poem read smooth enough until the last line was reached, which had assumed this horrible shape: 'We will barrow bcr grare with our stecrs.:' Mad! Why, he.weut "raring" around that houc like a concentrated lunatic asylum; and, what was worse, Henrietta's brother called right after breakfast with a club, and. learning that the poet had left in the early train for the far west, he sent a dispatch to meet him at Omaha, stating that he would burst him into vulgar fractions if he ver came back to Muncy. There's nothing half so steep in life as love's young dream. No cards. A good story is told concerning a visit made several years ago by a party of promi nent Itcpublicans of Delaware to President Lincoln. Our Delaware friends, with a proper apprecir tion of their position as rep resentative gentlemen of the party, inform ed the President that they were all influen tial citizens, and among the heavy men of the upper end of Delaware. "So you be long to the 'upper end' of the State?" re flected Mr. Lincoln, with a roguish twinkle in bis eye, and then with a look of earnest solicitude inquired, "Is there no danger of the State tilting while you are away?" The party had a good laugh over this joke at their expense, but nevertheless resolved that it should not be suffered to leak out at home. It was too good to be kept, however, and the surest way to rile one of these "heavy men" is to ask him, when about departing from home, if he is not afraid the State will tut. ., A short time ago in Delaware county a Quaker lady, a maiden who had reached the age of sixty, accepted the offer of a man who belonged to the "world's people" and the Presbyterian church, and began to prepare for her wedding. As usual, a delegation of friends from her meeting waited on her and remonstrated with her for marrying out of meeting. The bride elect heard the visitors patiently,and then said : "Look here ! I've been waiting just sixty years for the meeting to marry me ; and if the meeting don't like me to marry out of it, why don't the meet ing trot along its boys?" The delegation replied "'Farewell!" and vanished. A Mother's Sorrow. A company of ladies, assembled in a par lor, were one day talking about their differ ent troubles. Each oue had something to say about her own trials. But there was one in the company, pale and sad looking, who for awhile said nothing. Suddenly rousing herself at last, she said : "My friends, you don't any of yon know what trouble is." "Will you please, Mrs. Gray," said the kind voice of one who knew her story, "tell the ladies what you call trouble?" "I will if you desire it; for, in the words of the prophet, 'I am the one who hath seen aflliction.' " "My parents were very well off and my girl hood was surrounded by all the comforts of life. Every wish of my heart was gratified and I was cheerful and happy. "At the age of nineteen, I married one whom I loved more than all the world beside. Our home was retired ; but the sun never shone upon a lovelier spot or a happier household. Years rolled on peacefully, live lovely children sat around our table, and a little curly head still nestled in my bosom. One night, about sundown, a fierce black storm came on. For many hours the rain poured down incessantly. Morning dawned. But all the elements raged. The country around us was overflowed. The little streams near our dwelling became a foaming torrent. Before we were aware of it, our house was surrounded by water. I managed, with my babe.to reach a little ele vate I spot, where the thick foliage of a few wide-spreading trees afforded some protec tion, while my husband and sons strove to save whatn hey could of our proporty. At last a fearful surge swept away my husband and he never rose again. Ladies, no one ever loved a husband more ; but that was not trouble. "Presently my sons saw their danger' and the struggle for life became the only con sideration. They were as brave, loving boys as ever blessed a mother's heart, and I watched their efforts to escape, with such agony as only mothers can feel. They were so far off that I could not speak to them ; but I could see them closing nearer and nearer to each other, as their little island grew smaller and smaller. "The swollen river raged fearfully around the huge trees. Dead, branches,, upturned trunks, wrecks of houses, drowning cattle, and masses of rubbish, all went floating past us. My boys waved their hands to me and then pointed upward. I knew it was their farewell sigual, and you, mothers, can imag ine my anguish. I saw them perish all perish I Yet that Was not trouble. "I hugged my babe close to my heart ; and when the water rose to my feet, I clim bed into the low branches of the tree, and so kept retiring before it, till the hand of God stayed the waters that they should rise no further. I was saved. All my worldly pos sessions were swept away, all my earthly hopes blighted. Yet that was not trouble. "My babe was all that I had left on earth. I labored day and night to support him and myself, and sought to train him in the right way ; but as he grew older, evil companions won him away from me. He ceased to care for his mother's counsels. He would sneer at her kind entreaties and agonizing prayers. He became fond of drinking. He left my bumble roof, that he might be unrestrained in his evil ways. And at last, one night, when heated by wine, he took the life of a fellow creature. He ended his days upon the galbws ! God had filled my cup of sor row before; now it ran over. That was trouble, my friends, such as I hope the Lord in mercy may spare you from every know ing." Boys, girls, can you bear to think that you might bring sorrow on your dear father or mother ! If you would not, be on your guard against the Giant Intemperance. Let! wine and intoxicating liquors alone. Never touch them. Adam's Wedding. An English Journal, the Brittannia has an amusing article under the head of "Ad am's Wedding." The editrr says he likes short courtships, and in this Adam acted like a sensible man he fell asleep, a bachel or, and awoke to find himself a married man. He appears to have "popped the question" immediately after meeeing Ma'mselle Eve ; and she without any flirtation or shyness, gave him a kiss and herself. Of that first kiss in the world we had, however our own thoughts, and sometimes in poetical mood have wUhed we were the man that did it! But the deed is or was done; the chance was Adam's and he improved it. We like the notion of getting married in a garden it is in good taste. We like it private. No beaux were there, no croaking old maids, no chat tering aunts, and grumbling grandmothers. The birds of heaven were minstrels,and the glad sky shed its light upon th scene. One thing about the first wedding brings queer things into our heads, in spite of Scriptural truth. Adam and his wife were rather young to be married some two or three years old according to the sagest specula tions of ' theologists mere babies larger, but not older without a house, a pot or Settle nothing but love and Eden. A poor fellow begins to go down hill, and as usual in such cases, he keeps on until he retches the bottom. Then people begin to say, "God's hand is very hevy on so and so," when in fact God has no hand upon him at all. It is only the feet of hard hearted rascals who ought to be his friends, that have been kicking him from step to step dewnward. guineas gtwtont. WALTERS. ATTonxtr at Law, Office in the Court House. 1 tr ALTER BARRETT, Attorney at Law. Clear field, Pa. . May 13. IS63. JB.GRAUA.M 4 SONS, Dealers iu Dry-Goods . Groceries, Hardware, Queensware. Wooden ware. Provisions, etc, Market 6t. Clearfield. Pa, HF. BIGLER k CO., Dealers in Hardware . and manufacturers of Tin and heet-iron tare. Second Street. Clearfield, Pa. Slar'TO. IT F. If AUGLE. Watch and Clock Maker, and 11. dealer in W atches, Jewelry, Ac. Room in Ciraham's row, Market street. Nov. 18. HBUCHER SWOOPE, Attorneyat Law. Clear . field, Pa. Offic in Graham's Row, fourdoo s west of Graham 4 Boynton's store. Kov.lO. r1UO'S J MoCULLODGH. Attobxets-at-Law, JL Clearfield, Pa. All legal busineM prompt ly attended to. Oct. 27. 1SC. "TM. REED. Market Street Clearfield. Pa.. V Fancy Dry Embroideries, Li Goods, White Goods. Notions. adies and Gents' Furniihine Good. etc. June 14, 70 A I. SUAW,Ptilr in Drug. Patent Medininrs Fancy Articles, etc.. and Proprietor of Dr. lloyer's West Branch Bi'.ters, Market Street, Clarfild, Pa June 15,'70. 1 B READ, M. D., Puvsiciax and Stnoros. . Kylertown. Pa., respectfully olTers his pro fessional services to the citizscsof that plxce and surrounding country. Apr. 20-5m. CKRATZER, Denier in Dry-Goods. Clothing, . Hardware, Queensware, Groceries. Provi sions, etc.. Market Street, nearly opposite the Court House, Clearfield, Pa. June, ISfii. JB M'EX ALLY, Attorneyat Law. Clearfield . Pa. Practices in Clearfield and adjoin'r.g bounties. Office in new brick building of J.Boyn t n, 2d street, one door south of Lanich'a Hotel. I TEST, Attorney at Law, Clearfield. Ta., will . attend promptly to all Leeal business entrust ed to his care in Clearfield and adjoining coun ties. Office on Market stroet. July 17, 1867. rilUO-MAS II. FORCEY, Dealer In Square and J Sawed Lumber, Dry-Goods, Queensware. Gro ceries, Flour. Grain, Feed, Bacon, Ac lie, Gra Oct 10. namton, viearneid county, i'a HARTSWrCK A IRWIN, Dealers in Drntjs. Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary, Perfume ry. Fancy Goods, Notions, etc., etc., Marketstreet, viearneia, ra Uec. 6. 18S4. KRATZER A SON, dealers in Dry Goods. V J. Clothing. Hardware. Queensware. Groce ries, Provisions. Ac, Second Street Cleaifield, f. Deo 27.1S65. J' OlIN GTJELICH, Manufacturer of all kinds o Cabinet-ware, Market street. Clearfield. Pa Ha nlsomakes to order Coffins, on short notice. and attends funerals with a hearse. Aprl0,'59. RICHARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do mestie Dry Goods, Groceries, Flcnr. Bacon. Liquors, Ac. Room, on Market street, a few doors westot JoitrnulOffice, Clgarficld, Pa. Apr27. "VVTALLACR FIELDING. Attori et at Law Clearfield, Pa. Office in res.denee of W. A. Wall ice Legal tonsiness'of all Kinds attended to with promptness and fidelity. (Jan.5.'70-yp WM, A. WAL'.ACE. mASX riELOISS V. SMITH. Attorney at Law. Clearfield Pa., will attend promptly to husine-s en trusted to bis care. Office on second floor of new building adjoining County National BanK.and nearly opposite the Court House. .Tune 30. '69 T FREDERICK LEITZINGER, Manufacturer of ; all kinds of eitone-were. Clearfield. Pa. Or tie tolieited wholesale or retail He also keeps on hand and for sale an assortment of earthen ware, of his own manufacture. Jan. 1. 18S3 MANSION HOUSE, cWfield. Pa This well known hotel, near the t ourt House, is worthy the patronage of the public. The table" will be supplied with the best in the market. The best of liquors kept. JOHN DOUGHERTY. J OlIN U. FULFORD, Attorney at Law. Clear HarUwick A Irwin's Drug Store. Prompt attention given to the securingofBounty claims. Ac. .and to all legal business. March 27, !Sti7. A I T II O II N , M. D., Physician and Surgeon, having located at Kylcrtown. Pa., offers hi professional services to the citi zens ol that place and vicinity. Sep.29-ly Vf ALBERT, A BRO'S. Dealers In Dry floods, V .Groceries, Hardware. Queensware. Flour Ba con, etc., Woodland. Clearfield county. Pa. Also extensive dealers in all kindsof sawed lumber shingles, and square timber. Orders solicited. Woodland, Pa., Aug. 19th. ISfiS DR J. P. EURCHFIELD Late Surgeon of the 83d Reg t Penn'a Vols., having returned from the army, offers his professional services to the citizens of Clearfield and vicinity. Profes sional calls promptly attended to. Office on South-East corner of 3d and Market Streets. Oct. 4. I85S fimp. PURVEYOR. The undersigned offers his services to the public, as a Surveyor. He may be found at his residence in Lawienee township, when not engaged ; or addressed by letter at Clearfield, Ponn a. March 6th. 13G7.-tf. J AMES MITCHELL. JEFFERSON L I T Z, M. D., " Physician and Surgeon, Having located at Osceola. Pa., offers his profes sional services to the people of that place and sur rounding country. All calls promptly attended to. Ofllce and residence on Curtin Street, former ly occupied by Dr. Kline. May 19. '69. GEORGE C. KIRK, Justice of the Peace, Sur veyor and Conveyancer. Lulhersburg. Pa. All business entrusted to him will be promptly at tended to. Persons wishing to employ a Survey or will do well to give him a call, as he flatters hiraselt that be can render satisfaction. Deeds of conveyance, articles of agreement, and all legal papers promptly and neatly executed jeS'7j-yp AIT A L LACS W A L T Z it 8, V Rial Estatb Ascxts ad Cohvitakors, Clearfield, Pa Real etate bought and sold, . titles examined taxes paid, conveyances prepared, and insuran ces tasen Office in new building, nearly opposite Court House. HI. A. Ja ID IB70. 1. ai.ll I WALTNltS C OLDIERS' BOUNTIES. A recent bill has passed both nouses of Congress. and signed by the President, giving soldiers who en listed prior to 2 2d July. 1861. served oneyear or more and were honorably discharged, bounty of SI no. tyBoonties and Pensions collected by me rer thoseentitled to them. WALTER BARRETT, Atfy at Law. Aug. 15th, 1866 Clearfield, Pa J. K. B O T T O R F' 8 PIIO TOGRAPH GA LtER T, MARKET STREET, CLEARFIELD, riSS'A Negatives made in cloudy as well as in clear weather. Constantly en hand a good assortment of Frames. Stereoscopes and Stereoscopio Views. Frames, from any style of moulding, made to order. CHROMOS A SPECIALITY. Dee. 2,'6s-jy. 14-69-tf. BANKING & COLLECTION OFFICE McGirk perks, E assessors to Foster. Perks, Wright A Ce., Philipsbcbs. Cektrb Co., Pa. Where all the business of a Baniing House will be transacted promptly and wpoo the anest favorable terms. J.D M'eiRK. March 20. -tf wn.rtRES. THE KIDNEYS. The Kidneys are two in number, situated at the upper part ot the loin, surrounded by fat, and eonuaticg of three parts, viz : the Anterior, the Interior, and the Exterior.- The anterior absorbs. Interior consists of tis sues or veins, which serve a a deposit for the urine and convey it to the exterier. The exte rior is i conductor also, terminating In single tube, and called the Ureter. The ureters are con nected with the bladder. The bladder ia composed of varloes coverings or tissues, divided into parts, viz: the TJpeer, the Lower, the Nervous, and the Mueous. The apzer expels, the lower retains. Many have desire to urinate without the ability, others urinate with out the ability to retain. Thii fre-jaently oeenrs in children. To cure these affections, we must bring into" ac tion the mescles, which are engaged in their va f ieus functions. If they ere neglected, Gravel or Dropsy may ensue. The reader must also be made aware, that how ever slight may be the attack, it ii rare to affect the bodily health and mental powers, as our fleas: and blood are supported from these soaroes. Goer, or RnEi MATiSH. Pain occurring In the loins ia indicative of the above diseases. They occur in persons disposed to acid stomach ar chalky concretion Tin Gravel. The gravel ensues from neglect or improper treatment of the kidneys. These or gans being weak, the water ia not expelled froia the bledder, but allowed to remain; it beoomea feverish, and sediment forms. It is from this de posit that the atone is formed", and gravel ensues. Diiorsr is a collection of water in some parte of the body, and bearsjdifferent names, aooording to the parte affected, vi? when generally diffused over the body, it is called Anasarca ; when of the Abdomen, Ascites; when of (h chest, Hydrotho-' rax.- Treatwest. Helm hold's highly concentrated compound Extract Bnchd Is decidedly one of the beet remedies fer diseases ef the bladder, kidneys, gravel, dropsical swellings, rheumatism ,and goaty affections. Under this head we have arranged Dysnrie, or difficulty and pain in passing water', Scanty Secretion, or small and frequent disehsr gesof water; Strangury, or stopping of water; Hematuria, or bloody mine ; Gout and Rhenas tism of the kidneys, without any change ls quan tity, bat increase in color, or dark water. It wee always highly recommended by the Isrto Dr. Phyaick, in these affections. This medicine increases the power of digestion and excites the absorbents into healthy exereies by which the watery or calcareous depositions and all unnatural enlargements, as well as pais and inflammation are reduced, and it is takes by men, women and children. Directions for see and diet accompany; Philadelphia, Pa., leb. M, 186?. H. T, Helmbold, Druggist: Dear Sir : I nave been a sufferer, for upward of twenty years, with gravel, bladder sod kidney affections, during which time I have seed various medicinal preparations, and been under the treat ment ef the most eminent Physicians, experien cing bat little relief. Having seen your preparations extensively ad vertised, I eonsnlted with my family physician in regard to using your Extract Buchu. I did this because I had nsed all kinds ef ad vertised remedies, and had found them worthless, and seme quite injurious; in fact, I despaired ef ever getting well, and determined to use do rem edies hereafter unless I knew of the ingredients. It wss this that prompted me to see jour remedy. As you advertised that it was composed ef buohu, lubebs and juniper berries, it occurred to me and my physician as an excellent combination, and, ith his advice, after an examination of the arti cle, and consulting again with the druggist, I eoneluded to try it. I commenced its use about eight months ago, at which time I was confined to my room From the first bottle I was astonish ed and gratified at the beneficial effect and after nsing it three weeks was able to walkout t felt much like writing you a full statement of my case at that time, but thought my improvement might only be temporary, and therefore eoneluded to defer and see if it would effect a perfect euro, knowing then it would be of greater value to yon, and more satisfactory to me. I am now able to report that a core is effected after using the remedy for Sre months. I have not used any now for three months, sad feel as well ia all respects as t ever did. Your Buchu being devoid of any unpleasant taste and odor, a nice tenisand invigormtorof the system, I do not mean to be without it whenever occasion may require its Use in such affections. m Mccormick. Should any donbt Mr. MeCoraick't statement, he refers to the following gentlemen : lion. Wm. Bigler, ex Governor Perm's. Hon Thomas B Florenae, Philadelphia, Hon. J. C. Knox, Judge, Philadelphia. Hon. J. 8. Black, Judge, Philadelphia, lion. V. R. Porter, ex-Governor, Penn's. Hon. Ellis Levis, Judge, Philadelphia, lion. R. C. Urier, Judge V. S Court. Hon. G. W. Woodward, judge. Philadelphia Hon. W. A. Porter, City Solicitor, Phil s. Hon. John Bigler, ex Governor. California; lion. E. Banks, Auditor Gen. Washington', D.C. And many others, if necessary. Sold by Druggists and Dealers everywhere, Be ware of counterfeits. Ask for Helmbold's. Take no other. Price SI.2S per bottle. or bottles for $6 50. Delivered to any address. Describe symp toms In all communications. Address II. T. HELM BOLD, Drug snd Chemi cal Warehouse, bit Broadway, N T. NONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS DO!E UP IS steel-engraved wrapper, with fse-simiio of my Chemical Warehoe.se and signed Juno IS.TO-ly H T. HELH0U. i it i' -. ,1 . i 'J. .' ;t it m . i II
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers