ml i-i Li P:J L .j U & lJ '4 BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1870. VOL. 17.-NO. lC THE OLD MAN'S DEEAM. Oh, f crone hour of youthful joy, Give b:ck try twentieth spring ; I'd rather lauh a bright haired boy, Than reign a bearded king. One moment let my life-blood stream From boyhood's fount of flame ! Give nie one giddy reeling dream Of life, all love and fame. My listening angel heard the prayer, And ealuiiy smiling, said : 'If I but touch thy silver'd hair Thy hasty wish hath sped." ' But is there nothing in thy track. To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wish'd for day ?" Ah. truest soul of womankind I Vi:hout thee what wore life! Oiie bliss I caunot leave lehind ; I'll tale uiy precious - wile! The anjel took a sapphire pen And wrote in rainbow dew, ' The man would be a boy again And be a husband too !" "And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears? Remember, all their gifts have fled With those dissolving years." Why yes : for memory would recall My fond paternal joys, I c u'd not bear to leave them all I li take my girls and bojs! The smiling an?el dropped his pen ; "Why, this will never do ; Tup u:an would be a boy again, Aad Le a fuller too !" An l so I Iauhed my laughter woke 'I lie household with its noise And wrote uiy dream when morning Lroku To please the gray hair'd boys. A THSILLING ADVENTUEE ! The adventure which I am aliout to nar rve, occurred in the spring of 162. I had iit parsed uiy majority, and with a sn.all capital, the lesult of a studied economy du rir.i my apprenticeship, bid adieu to the i shep and its varied associations, and stupjied out into the world, tuy own mat-ter, sr.! to be the architect of my own fortune. I ha ) applied myself to my chosen pro- f?-!-bn, with all the assiduity that a love, j fc.'nojnung to almost a pas?i':n, f'r it, siiin-! ti'atcd, and I felt, therefore, a consciousness cf suj eiiority. Among my thopmstes was one NeJ Wil an, a pattern of that class of mechanics who apply themselves only when being over loaded, and are never particular how their work is done. lie had conceived a deep I sealed dislike to me, lecause of my raplJ ! progress in the mysteries of my art, and I tting consequently often the recipient ofj c-'ui:nen Jations from our employer. Often times have I caught him gazing intently on n:e. Lii face wearing a malicious smile, and lit up by a vindictiveness hardly to be sup pel capable of. considering the usual mf an-ine!..-s expres.-.ion it bore. Although ha? iw fear of him physically, yet I must c r.r'e-s that when at such times I have de t?'?;el him thus eyeing me, 1 would feel an tin 1 'fined dtead, as I could see below the siriire.anl had there a resolve to do nie an hyary. assassin-like, if ever an opportunity warred. Such were my feeling when I i-ft th s'r.o;i,and I was glad to be f'r;ed from L. c-J:i:panionship. T.a? wre on, ami by a judicious invest-ai-p.t of my little capital, I had become po--of a little shop and the necessary sur Danitns peculiar to my business. Gradu al, but surely, I was winning my way to sr.? fror.t rank of my profession. ' lue Jay about four years after I had bid l:-u t'i the old shop, I was caMed up'nn to L'.ste ai; cstiu.ate for paiuting the church ar.-i to'wer situated at Ii street. As I iv that to st-cure this job would tea fore runner of a profitable line of similar work. I te?ame quite anxious to be the successful tiili'r. aii J to such an extent had the con-'eoi-'i:i.n of my securing it worked upon Jr.y ncrvoai system, that I became quite fe vt -'". ani seated in my cosy parlor, my wife ". 1 ' horub long since retired, I gave myself ta tiH--v-"5 sway, an d many the airy cas ! :!ut wt-re built, to be speedily da-hed to s'ini-. I realized that through the kind "rrention of friends I had secured the c 1 cmtract, and without unnecessary '5' '.TitereJ upon its coc'plefion. Em ' -'s vcre scarce, and as the agreenif nt ! i ' " 1 'i to have all completed within a " m time. I leijaa now to experience anew : -i" 'hi'., by an inability to secure the re r,- s'.'.; help. I niiht bla-t all iny cDntingent ' r- Ly a failure to comply with my con t:a r. I had i ,rp otten Wilson ; in fact, since my e' huiect on my own account, I had - "v.-n him; anl x-s turn effaces very '''" t ta8 inimo'u-es which, under the '-i.-nci of an hour, possess us, so. with - bad the recollection of the ill feeling 'io- 1 towards me by him, given place to 4 -v :.:r.; .,f eommir-seration fur, and lastly, "J: v-fulness of him. Ul-T. when almost in despair of com- the work in the required time for r.f w-rktnen, I was startled by the ap- l -anti ?e or a man whose face wore a fa ''ir fii'rejsion, and which I soon recalled ' ; ' LiLer than Wilson. A long, per "-"u Marse of dissipation bad told sadly 0:1 Liiii. and want spoke through the tatter ( giraients of its continuous presence. lie n nude known the object of his visit by a a,r -I'iication for work. Under any other -"ani-tances an indignant refusal would -lfs met this proposal ; but I saw in Lira --ins to acit me in the completion of the 'rch. and forgetful of his old malice, and t9 lte mward monitor that bade me hes ' I engaged him to commence work for oa the next day, taking occasion, howev er, to require strict abstinence from all in toxicating liquors, as a precedent to contin uation at work. At the usual hour on the morrow, Wilson was at the church, with brushes and kettles, prepared to commence work. My hands had given the first outside coat to the tower, and on that morning were to begin the application of the second. High up in the clouds raised the spire, and from its tip humanity below had assumed lilluptian proportions. The scaffolding had been placed in position the evening before, and nothing prevented my woikmen from pursuing their labors. . I half expected, or some unexp'ainei tu ition told me, that "Wilson had been indulg ing in liquor, though nothing in his manner indicated it. Yet the impulse was irresist ible, if .inch had been the fact, against Ids commencing to work at that altitude.. In stead of considering my kindly meant admo nition in the sene which I had intended, his face assumed the old. remembered ex pression, of deep, intense hatred. Then rushed to my recollection the old shop days and his threats of future revenge of fancied wrongs, rear tor the consequences of Lis wrath induced me to order him below, as signing a portion of the work in the chancel to his care. Sullenly he gathered up bis brushes, and muttering to himself, slowly descended. Necessity now compelled me to take his place upon the tower, and to a void tr e remaining workmen from observine how far I was annoyed at the occurrence, I placed a trestle from a window on the oppo site side of the tower from where they were at work. This trestle was so framed that by turning a screw it would widen .or clo.-e at will, by means of a groove, so as to apply it to any window ; and by entirely removing the screw, it could re taken apart. I had fitted it to a window, ai:d securing a short ladder to it, was at the top of the ladder, busily cngaced in my labors, my mind. how ever, creating disturbed fancies, tjie result of my encounter wiih Wil , on. How long a time had elapsed I do not know, but suddenly a feeling of insecurity possessed me. I essayed in vain to dispel it as an illusion produced from the excited st, 0 r?rvei , (norp I tried to believe it a whimsical fancy, the stronger I became impressed gf impending danger. No longer able to resist the warning of the in visible monitor which at times attends every one, and forewarning of coming evil, yet faiiing to indicate a moans of escape. I do scended the laddcr.intending to abandon my work until I kit sufficiently calm to resume it, when oh, horrors! upon the inside of the tower, b:fore me. with the malignity of 1 bell depicted upon his face, stood Wilson. The screw had been removed from the trcs tie, and with one hand he h;l i it over his head, while with the other he balanced the trestle. Never, so long a brent h remains in this body, v ill the memory or that face leave me. Like a demon's, lit up with a sardon ical grin, the acme of revenge was written on every lineament; an unnatural glare gleamed from the distended eyeballs: foain oozed from the corners of his ghastly mouth he seemed no longer a man. but a devil. "Ha! ha! ha !" he screatitel", "I've got you new's the lime to square old scores. By the God's, you've but a minute more to live : so if you've any prayers to say, you'd better be quick !" Itooted to tho spot, and with hair standing on end, I essayed to beg him for my life, but the words choked in niy throat and refused utterance. In vain I attempted to call to the workmen on the opposite side of the tower for help my lips refused their duty. With the desperation of despair I sprang forward hoping to reach the window, when the uplifted screw fell with crushing force upon my right shoulders, missing my head, at which it wjs leveled. At the same in sfant the trestle tipped, and with my footing gone, I wildly flung my arms about. Oh, the agony of that moment! Within the time between the stroke of the pendu lum, there passed in review before me every action of my w hole life. No single one, however trivial, failed to start up in exact rotation as they were enacted. Every tho't that ever passed through my brain stood before me in bold relief. A pleasure, heav enly in intensity, attended the recollection of every good deed done, and an agony as bitter succeeded each thought, word or deed which had not been in accordance with mo rali'y. At last, after an eternity of time crowded into one second, the latest actions of uiy life passed in review, and as thej passed away my consciousness returned. 'Twas but an instant of time, and who can measure the distance traversed by thought in that one instant? Slowly, like one awa kening from the influences of a powerful o piate, I began to think, uncertain if alive or dead. I soon heean to realize that I'hung suspended in mid air, and discovered that in my fall I hadeatiaht by the waistband of my panU to a spike, which had been left by my workmen. Still my lips refused to utter a sound of alarm. Above me but a few feet stood Wilson. No rsleDtiog look, but the same fiendish hatred beamed down on me. Hell gave him its attributes at that hour to exult over rue.with all its attendant horrors. Too tar below the casement to reach it, I hung suspended by the brittle thread. Pres ently the blood commenced rushing to my head, and then slowly the band commenced to rip, astiteh at first, then, as if gathering more strength, two and three at a lime. A few more breakirgs of the thread, and I knew that I would be dashed to the hard pave one hundred and fifty feet below. All this time, which occupied but a few seoonds, yet which appeared of endless du ration, I had been orfering to God uiy pray ers for the reception of my soul. Another break, and my life upon one single thread. Casting one more look above, my eyes burn ing with pain, and almost blinded by the rushing of blood, rested upon that same dreadful face. I once more prayed to God and closed my eyes. The last thread parted, and down down down until my brain whirled, and it seemed as if the revet Dera tions of ten thousand belching cannons were rolling through my head, and my eyes were startled from their sockets then a stillness the seraphic from heavenly choristers struck upon my cars, and then I was awa kened ! to find that I had been dreaming, and had fallen from my chair. Put the ev idence of my internal agony that night re mained with nie, for my hair. which was be fore a beautiful black, had in that short hour changed to white ; and for a long time there remained with me the impress of that face, as I saw it looking down on rue. Even at this late day, I never recur to the experi ence of that night without a shudder, and 1 often glance furtively about tore-assure my self that I am indeed alive and well. Oar Children. How can we give our children sound bod ies ? There is not much need to ask this ques tion about our bodies. The customs of so ciety allow them five use of their limbs.ample exercise in the open air, and suitable cloth ing. Girls who live on farms, and who are reared in the country, have all these also. The fanners' daughter makes a hasty toi let : runs lo the barn, climbs up the scaf folds Oiled with fragrant hay, to find the fresh laid et'gs then to the chicken-coop, where the ''dear, downy darlings" wait for the food her handy fingers have prepared; then bhe drivei the cows to pasture while the last star fades out of the sky, which glows with the ro-y morning. She is ready for breakfast, with an appetite that needs no coaxing, and which a queen might envy. Her share in the morning work over, she is out and away, over fences, up among the branches of the trees, to ste whether the four blue eggs of the old robin have become baby robins ; she knows the note of every bird, and the color of its eggs ; hhe knows the hole of the woodchuck, the Jiouse of the mukrat, and the nest of the squirrel. She watches the hatching of the tadpole, and his wonderful tran.-formation into a frog. She dabbles her small bare toes io the brook where the minnows play, and maybe breaks her childish heart when she first learns that the silvery fi.-h will die when taken from the great Master. In the summer she spreads the hay by the side of her father, and in the autumn lath ers the apples and the nuts. So h,-r days go on, '"with book and healthful play." Grown to a woman, she is strong to take up her du ties, and when three score years are gone, she is still fresh and rosy, with capacity for many years of work. The girls in the city cannot get this sim ple, natural, heahhy life, but if they are warmly dressed overthe arms and shoulders, and so simply as to allow the largest free dom for the wil iest sport ; if warm leggings covered the thin stockings, if substantial boots.with square hcels.could take the place of those now commonly worn, with heels so high and narrow that they furnish no ade quate support to the small ankle, which bends in and out till actual deformity results, it would go a great way toward supplying healthy conditions for girls whose city life excludes tl em from the natural, health giving influences of the country. Sunny Rooms. Every woman is wise enough an 1 careful enough to secure for her house plants every bit of available sunshine during tho cold winter months. Great care is taken to get southern exposure for them. Indeed, if one can secure no other than a north window for her plants, she has too much love lor these unconscious, inanimate things to keep them at all. She would rather leave them out in the cold to die outright, than linger out a ruartj-r existence in the shale. Folks neel sun.-hin3 quite as much as plants do. Men and woaien who have a fair degree of strength and the use of their legs can get out into the world, and get a glimpse of the sunshine now and then, anl if they choose to do so, let them live in rooms with only a northern exposure; but if it is pos sible, let us socute rooms into which every ray of sunshine that falls in winter may en ter, for the little babies who are shut up in the house, invalids who cannot leave Weir rooni.and aged people who are too inarm to iret out of doors. Lot us reflect for a moment that these classes of persons, if kept In rooms wiih only north windows, will suffer just as much from the absence of sun shine, as green, growing plants would do in the same rooms, and their suffering is of account in proportion as a human being is better than a geranium or a fuchsia. Every body knows how a bright, sunny day in win ter gladdens every one who is situated so as to enjoy it. Let us make some sacrifices, if need be.in order to give the feebleones their measure of sunshine. Dr. Wilson, an English authority, states tbit one persuQ iu eighteen has some defect of vision, occasioning an inability to distin guish colors. This peculiarity is known as "color blindness," He says one person in fiftv-five confounds red with green. As there is much to erjoy in the world, so there is much to endure; and wise are they that enioy gratefully, and endure pa tiently. The happiness of every one depends more on bis own mind, than upon any or all ex ternal circumstances. Tragic Incident of tfca War. A surgeon who was present at the burning of Bazeiiles tells of what he saw, as follows : I was one of the first to come upon the sceue after the full tide of the fight had ta ken the combatants up towards the further end of the village, leaving the lower part of it comparatively quiet. Here the dead, lay pillowed upon the wounded ; and there, the wounded upon the dead. Hundreds of fast glazing eyes were strained appealingly upon me qs I passed. I shivered all over, and moved forward, hardly knowing what I did, not knowing whom I ought first to sucl-or. Suddenly, from a houe on my right, a gun was fired, and the shot whizzed past me and struck a carrier of the wounded, who was bearing in his arms a dying man. He stag gered and fell into the dust with his helpless burden. Three or four Bavarian soldiers who chanced to pass just then broke open with the butts of their ri3es, the door of the hou.e from which the shot had been fired. As it fell they f and themselves fronted by a tall, handsome woman of about fifty, with noble, grief stricken features, and with her lovely grey hair falling about her face. In her hands she had a double-barrelled riSe, still smoking from the recent di.-charge,and as she met our gaze she broke into a horri ble laugh. As soon as I heard it I recogni zed in her a maniac. "Monster !" exclaimed one of the soldiers. Her laughter ceased as suddenly as it had begun, and she replied calmly and sadly, while the tears rolled over her cheeks : "No, Messieurs ! I am only an unfortu nate woman ! I was a wife and a mother but you have killed my husband and two sons. And now kill me, too!" she said in a choking voice, "or." and here all her for mer fury seemed to return, "I shall kill you!" And leveling her gun she was just about to fire the remaining barrel into the croup, but the soldiers who had uot whol ly understood her words, which were spoken in French were too quick for her, and two bullets entered her body almost instanta neously. ' Let her die in peace," I s-iid to them sally. "Poor thin, she hr-.s lost her hus band and two 50ns to-day. " The soldiers now comprehending the whole, turned si lently away. I remained and bent over her. The worn is were mortal. She stared wild ly armind. I took her hand in nvne, and lonking into hfr fast filming eye, I said in voluntarily, "I'oor woman !" The aceen'a of kindness nnl pity wers exatefu! to her even then. She grasped my hnnd convulsively, then a change passed over face an 1 her eyes became serene and full of peace, as the hut sigh struggled from her bleeding Losoru. As I arose from my knee,a wild unearth ly yell, like that of a horror stricken animal, burst upon my cars, and looking up I saw a French peasant dragging a wounded Bava rian soldier into a burning pile. In this he was assisted by a woman, probably his wife, who unrelentingly kicked the resisting vic tim with her sharp pointed wooden shoes. But the unearthly cries of the German at tracted the attention of the retreating tol dicrs, and a well directed bullet caused one persecutor to roll over into the fire which he ha J designed for his victim. The woman w.n also wounded, b;it she did not fall, and before the soldiers could prevent her, she had stamped with savage fury upon the face of the prostrate wounded man. "Into the fire with the wild beast!" cry the enraged soldiers for she had quite killed their poor comrade. He was a handsome young fel low but ah ! it was well that neither his mother nor his sweetheart could hear that awful cry of terror which broke from him as he was dragged into the fire. It will haunt me to my dying day. A capital joke, and all the more palatable because it i true, and can be vouched for, took place a few Sundays since at one of the prominent churches in New Jersey. It seam, that a very worthy deacon had been very industrious in selling a new book cost ing seventy fire cents. At the service in question the minister, just before dismissing the congregation, rose and spid, "All you who have children to baptize will please pre sent them next Sabbath." The deacon, who, by the way, was a little deaf, and hav ing an eye to selling the books, and suppos ing his pastor was referring to them, imme diately jumped up and shouted, "And all you who haven't any.can get as many as you want by calling on me, at seventy five cents each." The preacher looked cross-eyed at the brothers, brothers looked at the clergyman, the audience punched the audience iu the side, the bubble grew larger until it burst into a large guffaw ; ladies colored up,blush ed. and thanked the Lord for the low price of peopling the earth. There was no ben ediction that morning worth speaking of. The deacon, after he had found out the mistake, changed his pew f:om the front of the church to the third from the rear, and though he cannot hear the sermon, he is consoled with the thought that the young ludies can't snicker at him. A gentleman was passing through Hills borough. Mo., recently, when he came upon a youth of apparently seventeen summers, who was furiously scratching at the side of a gravelly hill. "What are you after, my friend," inquir ed the stranger. "After a ground hog I saw run in this hole." ''Why, you don't expect to get him iu that way?" "Git him ! Bound to git him!' "We're out of meat." Some rather reflect truth than practice it. Hearing the Otter Store. W hen, after the weary voyage that I first made across the ocean, sick and loathsome, I arose one morning and went upon the deck, holding on, crawling, I was but a worm, I smelt in the air some strange smell, and I said to the captain, ''what is that odor?" "It is the laud breeze from o!f Ireland." I smelt the turf, I smelt the grass, I smelt the leaves, and all my sickness departed from nie ; my eyes grew bright, my nausea was gone. The thought of the nearness of the land came to me. And when, afar off. I saw the thin line of laud, joy came and gave me health, and from that moment, I had neither sickness nor trouble : I was coming nearer to the land. Oh ! is there not for you old man, and for you weaTied mother, a land breeze blowing off from heaven, wafting to you some of its sweetness ? Behold, the' garden of the Lord is not far away ; I know from the air. Be hold, the joy of home ; do I not hear the children shout ? TL c air is full of music to our silent thoirght. Oh, how full of muie when our journey is almost done, and we stand upon the bound and pieeinct of that blessed land ! ft jldon to your faith. Believe more firmly. Take hold by prayer and faith. Away with trou ble and buffetuiis. Be happy; you are saved. In a few hours, visions of Goi and all the realities of the eternal world sTiali be yours, and you shall be saved with an ev erlasting salvation. The Grand Ju-y ignored a bill araint a negro charged with stealing. Before the judge discharged him from custody, he call ed up the accused and said to him : "You can go now, John ; let me warn you never to appear here agiin." John replied, with a broad grin, "I woulln't be here dis tiac, only de constable Torched me." "I thought I understood you to say that your father was a merchant only a week ozo," said a lady to a little girl who was so liciting alms, "and, if that is so, how eould your family have bocn reduced to beggary?' ' It is true, ma'am ; my father kept a pea: nut stand, and last week he took a bad two dollar bill and failed!" Self control is the best evidence of a cul tivated intellect and a clear conscience. It is a great pleasure to meet thost who wise ly listen and observe who review what is said without prejudice, and with or without advice, commit no errors. Nothing is so difficult to do, nothing so rarely done. The Treasury detectives have seized in New O. leans a very superior et of appa ratus for counterfeiting both coin and paper money. Two of tho men who were.it work escaped by leaping into the river and swim ming across, but the third, Philip Harris, was captured. The conductor of a down east railroad was recently tendered tho following instead of a ticket: "Mestcr Ilusbcud Please pay my brother free it you can pass him foruothiug. I'll be pay you when I'll be there. M. L." The conductor's name was O.-born. The advantage of living does not consist in the length of days, but in the right im provement of them. As many days as we pass without doing some good arc so many days entirely lo.it. "Digby, will you take some of this but ter?"' "Thank you, ma'am. I belongs to the temperance society can't take any tiling strong." A generous soul never loses the remem brance of the benefits it ha. received, but easily iorgets those its hand dispenses. Wrhat a difference there is in young men. It is as easy for some of them to pi p the question as it is for others to pop coin. Punch says that in some parts of England the water is so hard that skating ou it is kept up ail through tiiesuiumcr. The moie grand and noble a man is in his aciioi.s, the more simple he ought to te in his conversation and iiiannuis. A single hour in the day given to some interesting subject, brings unexpected accu mulation of knowledge. - "Drowned in dodiing a potato thrown by William Stubbs," was a verdict of a Toledo jury. Many a man's vl'cvs have at first been nothing worse than good qualities run wild. It is much safer to think what we say, than to say what we think. Happiness consists in being perfectly sat fied with what we have. The beauty of holiness, like the sun, is seen by its own liht. Experience keeps a dear school, bat fools will learn at no other. Do not meddle with any business you know uothing of. Idleness is the rust cf the mind, and the blight of genius. Every one's faults are not written on their foreheads. . He who blackens others does not whiten birusf If. Sickness of the body is often health of the soul. - Truth fears nothing but concealment. guouf$5 Jurcctcvu. i W. WVLTEitS. ATrop.sr.T lt Law. a 1 CloarSelJ. Pa. 03ce in tLe Court il o urf T ALTER BAXKETT, Attorney ntl.etr C!Rr field, Pa May 13.1;C:- I J B. GRAHAM A S'MCS. Pe-ilers in Ir-GooI. . Groseries. Hardware. (i:eenkare. S J en ware, Pr jfisk-rss. etc.. Murset t. Clearfield. Pa. HF. I5IGLEK A CO., Dealers in Hardware a and mai.afacturers of Tin and SI.cv(-iiol aie. Sieennd Street. ClcarCeld. Pn. Mar'Tn. HF.XALGLE, Watch and Clock Maker ard . dealer io VYatchca. Jewelry. Ac. Hocir in Urali.tni's row, Market iireet. Nov. 16 T T BCCHEK SWtKJPh". Attorney nt Law. Clear- A A uciu. r. -jct in .tra&as? t i3T. lourioo I west of Grabasi A Boy a ton's store. Xov.10. rrtiv't VrrfTm-"..-! "T rn.n J McCl LL'H I . ATfuK::v--ir-I.,iTr. X Clearfi-Id, Pa. All legal tuinc.-- frou.pt- '' "''"? ' :' ISfii). T M ItKEP. Market Street. Clenrfield. pa. t Kane 1'ry Gotds, Whi'e Gon.U. Nt;ons. Emhroilcrics, Ladies' and Gems." fcrr.ihir. ond. etc. il? j A I ?H AW.Ic:iler in Drug. Patent Midlines. Vary ArM''o, ere . flri Proprietor of Pr ISoyer's W-t liraLCh Ei'.terj, Iln'kel strtet, 3learSe!d, l'a. Jm.e la. "70. 7 n BEAU. M D. PnvMnts and Suroeom. . Kjlertown Pa., respectfully offer his fr ic j.-ional -crvice to the ciiii':rsof tb.it p!ce and .-urri'undin- country. pr Jo f,ui. o nuiv T. Nokle. Aoornev at Law. L.k Ha ven. C4. Will pr.ic;ioe in the -pvcril courts of Clearuel'l C'an; . i u-i i.e-a cr. tru.-trd t.j him will revive prompt attention .le '."J. "("-y. C-i KRAI ZE:t. IVaier in Dry-Goorls. Clothing. . Hirdware Qu;en5ware, G rocerir. l'rori iioiiS. etc . Market Street, neatly opposite the Court House. L'lcarGcld. Ha. June. IrTj. I B ME?f l.I,Y. A'tterticyat Law. C!earf.c1. J . Pa. Prticti-es in C!earf.!d and adjoin'nj: uutities. Ofccc :.xa new bri?k building of.l.lV.ya t m. 2d street, one door south -f LanicVs i'ote! TTK?r. Attorney at Law". CiearSeld . Pa . . atterd promptly to all f.al buine' entrust ed ta hicare hi Clearfield ai.d a.'iuic:ii coun ties Off.oe on Market street. .Itiiy I7.1.-;u7. rp lOMA II. I'OR-IEV Dealer in fqore and J 5 a wed Lumbar. Pry-GotN. Queen? w. -re. G ro oeries. Flour. Grarn. Peed, Hacon, Ac , Ac. Gra ha in ton. Clearfield county. Pa. Cct 10. ntRTSWICK A IKWIV. Jtealers in Prne. Medicines Paint. Oils. .Stationary. Perfume r Fancy ti .-ds, Notions, etc., elc . Mark el street, Cleai field, Fa Lcr: 1S65. f KR ATT2R PON, dealers in Pry Goods V . Clofhint-. Hardware. Quecnpware. tjroee rics, ProvisijiiJ, Ac , Seoul Strctt Cleat nid lire 27 !Si5. JOHN GFELICII. Manufacturer of nil kinds o Oabinot-ware. Market street- Clearfield. P lid nlsoinikes toorderCofSns onshort notice and ittcods funeral with a hearse Aprlfl.'.ri9. R1CURI VOSOP,Walar Ut Pcralsnand i. , roeptic Drv Goods, tlroreries. Flour. Piacor. Lienors. Ae. Room, on urfcrt reet. a few ioor. weit ol .hitrit'.l ( 'Fre. O'carf.eld. Pa. A-r27 T WAAOi A FIEt.MXG.ATrr-nvcvs at Law t Cluarflel 1. Pa Tiee in rw den-e of W. A Wallace I.f-il ht;rir." -t of -Jl Kir:,! attended to rith p-omntrie ani tide! :ty . lun a. '70 yp VII. A WALUri. Fil ASK FirLDl.lC f j w stv, frrt Um'.r-r at Law. rr.-irfi!J II. Pa . will altt-i..' i -rinuptSy to bo-ir.e s en tru.-tcd to hi c:'re. 'fiiee oa ?i'on l floor of re building a-l joining C.v.mtv National PanK.apd n,arly opposite the ''-mrr II .ue. ffune oLl. '69 IV:tE!ERICK LLll'ZINGER. Manufacturer cf ' all kinds of Stone-ware. C'earSeld. Pa. Or ders .'olicitcd holc.-ali- or rei&il II e also keep, on hand and for sale in avirtuieitt of earthen w:ire. of his own inannf ictnre. .Ian . 1 . I S.'i MAX PS IIOCSE. Clearfield. Pa This well known hotol. near the ourt House, i miritiy the patrorote of thenuM'.c The t:rMe wilt be nuoplie 1 with the le.-t in the nurkft. The best of liquors kept J..UIS D' l ii il KI'TY. JOHN" II r UI.F'UI. Attorney at Law Clear field. Pa rff.ee on Market i-ireet. ovei Hart wick A Irwin's Dm; Store. Prompt atter.tkii j-ivea to the seeurinofllountj clainis. Ac. .and te ail le;al husineKS. March 27. 2'jJ- I T II O II N . M. IV, F.:tskian- AM. Sl'Rgkox, htivi.ie located at Kylcrtown. Pa . offer hii prcfi s-iorv-tl services to the chi xens ot that place and vicinity. He;.l"? ly Uf I. CCiiLEV. Penler in Try 0r.d V .Grower in. Hardware. Cnern-.waro Floor Ha- con. e:c. Woodland. Clearfield cur.ty 1'. .lso ex'ensive dealers in al! ki'.:dsoi' san-ed lun: tier si.iri'Ie. nri'l square tii-tler. Orders solicited. Woo Hand. Pa.. Aug. l9th.ISt: PU .T P. nCKCHFIELP I ate Furseon of the lJ Sid r.es't Penn'a Vols., having returned from the army, offers his professional fervires to (he citizens of Clearfield rrd vicinity Proiei sional calls promptly nttendad to. Off.re on South-East corner of CJ and Market Streets. Oct. 4. IS:ij (imp. OUnVEYOIt. The undersigned offers his services to the puMic. as a Surveyor. II may be found at his residence in Lawieree township, when not engaged ; or addre&scd by letter at Cleartiel I . Penn a. March oth. H".-tf. -IAME5 MITCHELL. TEFFER SO N LIT ,, M. D., " l'hy.-ician and S'.iree.i:i. Having located at Osceola. Pa., offer. his profes sional service to the people of that place and sur rounding coun'ry. A A calls prompt t attrndrd to. tS.e and reidenre ua Curtin Street, former- j ly oceup'ed by Dr. Kline May GEORGE C. KIKK. Jus-ice of the Peace. Sur vejor and Cot.veyai.cer !.utuer-l":r;. l'a. AH byir.ets ontrut, il t him will he promptly at tended to. Pers-ons wi.-hin lo emplov a .-u Trev or will do well to give bim a cilt I e fl u:er bicieit that be can rei d.r satisfaction. Ieds nfo.BMtir. articles of a-'recu.ent. and all leeal i papers promptly and neatlyec-uied jcs'O-yp IfT ALLACE WALTERS. llEAL ESTAT A.F.-XT AMD Co.X V EY A C IHS , Clearfield, Pa Feal e?rata bought and e-dd- title? examined, taxos paid, CAtuvxyanets prepared, and insuran ces tasieit Office in new building, nearly opposite Court House i 1S.7U. WV. A. W A I LACE. J. CLAKK WALTrl.S. J) E M O V A L-G U N SHOP Tba nndarsigced begs Teat to infwrtu his old and new cn-ioicers. and the publio srenerally. that he has tilted np a new GIN I10P. on the lot on the corner of Fourth and Market streets. Clenrfiell. Pa. where be keeps constantly on band, and makes to order, all hinds ot Guns AUo. guns rebored and revarr.i.-hed- and rerairtd neatly on short notice Orders by mail will re ceive ptotnnt attention. June , 169. J0I1X MOORE. gM ALL PROFITS and QUICK SALES. IHTtTSWICK A IRWIN .i. i .t,.:. ... -v- r rimi-a. ilicurciuce. civ. l-wUvii ivuns siiu .-. i " ineluding the O.'good and National series of readers. Also Tobacco anl Ci gars, of the test quality, and the lowest prices Call and see. Clear 5e!d. Xor 19. XSCi D KT GOODS the cheapest in the county. May 2, '67. o-v. - m TT II T" T IA t ii -mr n i U L Jl 1 17 i L I 5. Tho IliJnayj arc loo in number, situated at tha epper Pr ot lh loin, surrounded br fat, and comL:ing of three ytrtj. r;t : ,h Anterior, tia raterior. anJ the Eller;cr' Tho anterior absorbs luterior consist of tisl ues or veius, which serve as a deposit for U unco ana couvejr it io the eiterior. Tb xt rier is c coi.doo9r aUo, terminating in a siagU tube, and called tho fieier. Tta ureters are oa tected wiih the bladder. The bladder is composed of various eoTeriag ft tissnes. divided into parte, vii : the Cpp-er, ti i r ., , Lower, the ferrous, an J the Mucous. Theupper pda- tb loner retains. Many have a desira to ! ., : utu-'i- nv.-.at tbo lmty, otuers urinate with- j out the ability to reiain. This frequency occur. I m cbiMrn. , To cure tbe-e aee!i0rs, we must brinr into ao- tioc th 0!o-cIs. n-aicfa are enraged in their ra- rioj? fur.ctiots. If the ere neglected, Gravel oi Lropy iiiaj ensue. The rea.'cr itu't also be made aware, that how ever slight raay bo tho attack, it is sura to affeo the bodily health and mental powers, as oar flesh aad blood are supported from these source. OofT. oit EaerxtTisa. Pin occurring in tho loins is indicative of the above diseases. They occur in persons disposed to acid stomach anl ctalky corcrations. Tae Gcavkl. The travel ensues from cegleet or improper treatment of the kidaeys Thereof guns being weak, the water is not expelled from the bladder, but allowed lo remain; it become feverish, and sediment furms. It is from this de posit that the atoue is formed, and gravel ensues'. LrotkT is a co'lcctioo of wter in some part of the body, and beardilferent namer, according; to th parts affected, vix : when generally diffused: overthehody.it is called Anasarca : when of the Abdomen. A -cite; nhea of the chest, llrdrotha rax. Treatuest Pe'nibeM's highly eonoasntratad coruf.ound Extract Luchu is decidedly one of tho, bert remedies for diseases of the bladder, kidneys, gravel, dropsical sweilingv, rheurnatisui,and gouty actiona. Under this head w have arranged Iysurie, or d'ltcul.y and pain in pairing water, Scanty Secr&tion, or strall and frequent dischar ge' of water; Strangury, or stopping of water; Jiiui&turta, or bloody oiine; Gont and Hbeama tim of the kidneys, without any change in quan tity, but iccrcuo in color, or dark water It was olwaji hi'hly recommended by tiio lata Or. Fhyiicit. in there ateetion. This medicine increa-as the power of digestion and exci'.es the absorbents into healthy exerciser by which tbo watery or calcareous depositions an 1 all unnatural enlargement, as weir as pain and infl animation are reduced, and it is taken by men, women and children. iJiiectiom for use and diet accompany. Philadelphia, Pa,., Feb. 25, 1667. XI. T, IIcLwaoi.n. Iiruggist: Dear Sib : I bare been a sufferer, far upward of tuenly years, wi'.h gravel, bladder and kidney affections, daring which timo I have ased various medicinal preparations, and been under the treat inent cf the root eminent Physicians, experiea cirg but little rcli-f Having seen yaur prejia-ation extensively ad vertised, I consulted with my family physician ia regard to Oaii g jcur Ksuac: Eucbu. I cid this because 1 bed used all kind of ad vertised remedies. ar.d had found them worthless, and ti'Ui qaiie injurious; in fait, I despaired of ever getting well, ar.d determined to use CO rem edies hereafter unless I krretr of the iugredieLU. It wa this that prompted roe to ue your remedy. Asyon advertised tLiit il wai Composed of bochu, .ubebs and juniper berries, it occurred to me and my physician aa an excellent combination, and, with his advice, after an examioatioo of the arti cle, atd conul;ing agata with the druggist, I concluded to try it. I commenced iu us about eight months ago, at which time I was confined to my room I'icm the Irst bottle I was astonish ed aad cratiEcd at the beG-ial effect, and after using it three weeks was able to walk out. I felt much like writingyou a lull et.;einent of nay caso at, that time, but thought my improvement saigbt only be temporary, and therefore eoncluded to defer and ice if it would effect a perfect cure, ii nowing then it would be cf greater value to you and more satisfactory to u.e I am now able to report that s care is effected after using the remedy for five mouths. I have cct used any cow for three icentis, aad feel as well in all respects as I ever did. Your Eucba being devoid of any rnpleasanl tas a atd edor. a nice toni.' acd invigorator of th system, I do not mean to be without it whenever occasion Eiy requite t:s use in such affections. M McCOtiMICK. bfie!d any doubt Mr. McCortcick'i statement, he refers to the following gantiemen : lion. Wm. E:ler, ex Governor Penn'a. lion Ihom.uli Flurenae, Philadelphia. Lion. J. C. Knox, Judge, Philadelphia, flan. J. S. Black. Judge Pfciladclnhia. Hon. 1. K. I-'orter. el-Governor, Penn'a. Hon. Ellis Levi. Judge, Philadelphia, lion. R. C. Grier, Judge I". S Court, lion. G. W. Woodward, Judge. Philadelphia. Hon. W. A. Porter, City Solicitor. Phil a. Hon. John lii j!.' Governor. California, lion. E. ALdiiorGen Wasbiagton, D C. And many others, if necessary. Sold by l'ruggists and Dealers everywhere. Bo ware of counteifeits. Afk for llelmbold a. Tako RO other. Trice SI ,2i per buttle. or 6 bottle for I S I'clivered to any address, ilescribe symp- Address If. T. HELMOLD, Drug and Chml cat Warehouse. 534 Eroadway, N Y. NONE AF.E GENUINE UNLESS DONE UP VS ateel-ecgraved wrapper, with fae-aimila of my Chemical Warehouse and signed Juc li.'70-ly T. HELMBOLD. II