u u 4 BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1871. VOL. 17.-NO. 24. 1 . WJ M W M H Ml M U V J detect goctn?. WHAT IS EAETE ? What is earth, sexton? A place to dig graves. What is earth, rich man ? A place to work slaves. What is earth, graybeard ? A place to grow old. What is earth, miser? A place to dig gold. What is earth, school boy? A place for my play. What is earth, niaideu? A place to be gay. What is earth, seamstress? A place where I weep. What is earth, sluggard? " A good place to Bleep. What is earth, soldier? A place for a battle. What is earth, herdsman? A place to raise cattle. W hat is earth, widow ? A plact' of true sorrow. What is earth, tradesiuan? I'll tell you to morrow. What is earth, sick man ? 'Tis nothing to nie. What is earth, sailor ? My home is the sea. What is eatth, statesman ? A place to win fame. What is earth, author? I'll write there my name. What is earth, monarch ? For my realm it is given. What is earth, Christian? The passage o Heaven. THE DONATION PARTY. "Why, of all things when did you get home?" said the merry Mrs. Belles, as she entered her cheerful parlor at ten o'clock on Thanksgiving night, and found her husband fitting moodily alone, having just returned fr.im a trip to New York, and she ; hook him heartily by the hand, and left her kiss of true wifely affection upon his lip; ha still keeping his seal and looking as if he had run off the track or had his consignment of merchandise sunk to the bottom of Lake Erie. ''How long have you Len here?" she again asked, not heeding his silence. "An hour or two." "Come down on the Clipper?" I'tm gentlemen nodded. ''Been well?" she continued, drawing off h r gloves, unpinning her shawl, and laying off her hat. "iMiddling." "Oh!" she exclaimed, shaking back her curls, "how I wish you had got home before night, that you might have gone with me to the donation party; we had the niecst time I would have given anything if you hud been thre ; I have not ceen a merrier party this many a day. Oh, I wish you had come eoorxT. ' ' "Perhaps you had better save your re grets, for I am very Mire 1 should not have gone had I been at home, and peradventure you might nave staid at home with me ; so if you have been so highly delighted with Jour party, make the best of it. l'ou know am no friend to sut-L doings." "But, Edward, you could not have helped being pleased to-night Why my very heart is fluttered with joy jnn to think of it. He turning thanks to the Heavenly Father, by giving ct our t,ood gifts to the poor and needy." "The poor and necdr," he repeated with a sneer; "is it Parson Allen you call poor and needy, whose wife wears a better bonnet and tats better dinners than nine out of ev ery ten of his fhick !" "No, not Puisiiii Alleu pshaw, Edward, b you think I would talk about Par.-oti Al len as pni.r and needy?"' "Well, the Rev. (J. Minor, with ten thou sand at interest ?" N.., n.." "Well, 1 shan'f gr.es again, for this whole sy.-tum nf donation parties is a kind of fraud upon the public, and I am v.'ry sorry, in-d.-ed, that rou have LcCn induced (because J was absent.) to give your aid and counte nance to such things." All this was said with a surly tone. Mary, the light hearted, loving, true and gentle Mary, who had been at home four weeks as merry as a bird over her summer nest, ner, luting no duty, and tiring of no Cire. chok ed up a little ; tut though the tears swelled up her eyelids, the smile could not leave bur I row, and love whispered in her car, "he is wesry and s'eepy, and was disappointed that you wore not at home to welcome him when hi i-ame." So she looked straight into the lit tie doer of the parlor stove, upon the f lewiiig coals there, turned into dead ashes, in.'i thought how much liko thj warm ear:i pst love of her own heart they wer iist. that minute; a love that had been wanning a whole room full all evening ; a love that had been sparkling and radiating till all about hor was warmth and likely to be tun:- I I suddenly into ashes because the hu-dnnd y!o ,e to put it out instead of adding fresh t i"! to warm and cheer his cold soul. IJ'it M iry was a sensible little woman, so sh" looted straight into the stove door, pat tt ! the toe of her pretty gaiter on the solt r::?. turned her marriage ring round and round on her finger but never said a word. Edward Belles looked straight into the f' "V" door too, wishing i.i his heart that he h". 1 not been such a petulant fool as to bluff (a !,; beautiful, loving wile for no earthly rtivn, only that, he had eot home one day M..n-r than he had promised and found her ou: at a donation party. But "hang it all," th ; -light he to himself, "how shall I get out pt the scrape?" Thus thinking, thus f'eel--'. they Loth looked into the stove door for nr.iiutes. "fi'is won't do," though lie. "I must i "nid some how ;" and he drew his ""'-r 1 ' Is through his whiskers, and look- I u whole minute lonirer; then clearing his V' !.T ,l'-tn softened tone : "' Im't know but I am most too savage f-ti V'Hir donation parties, Mary ; but it has a.wiy.i seemed to me, that if people must "ave a minister they ought to pay him and pay well, without grudging or grumbling, n t levy a tax upon the whole com niiiiijtv t relieve them of their burdens, a' ' il they can't pay cheerfully owing to ihe:r poverty l,;t him go. May be 1 am r"S in my estimate; but I have guessed tnre times, suppose you tell rue now where ym have given your donation to night that bas set 'my heart to flutter so joyfully.' " And Edward, who after all was a very jond husband, drew her hand in bis and loo.e.l up with a clear brow for his answer. , "tou know, Edward, how many times we Mve talked about .the good Mrs. Brown. Alter raising a great family of her own, and struggling through all sorts of sorrow, sick-fi'-s.s and trial, to be left a widow.dependent upon her own hands would have seemed a M fi t t'ny ' ut la herod "Se to com PHod to raise a second family, to take the babes of her daughter and rear them in her arms, to become the second mother of all those orphans seemed a hard fate, and so we, a few of as you know, (I dou't know who hardly) said 'let us give the widow Brown a donation party, 'and ail said 'agreed. ' and to work we went. Every man and wo man we met said 'yes ; she nursed my wife when she was sick,' said Mr. Seott; 'she took care of my little Henry when he had his arm broken,' said Mr. Jones; 'Mother Brown, to be sure I'll help,' responded Judge Fry ; 'sha has put the first slip on my children, God bless her;' 'dear grandmother Brown, I'll do all I can,' said the fashionable Mrs. Grey ; 'she was wi. h my little Nettie, and laid her dear little form into the coffin ;' 'help her? yes by hokey,' said the rough butcher, Hopkins. 'She ought to be sup ported by the public, and never know want, for poor widow as she has been for fifteen years, she has never lut anybody want that she could help, and I've known her many a time, when she was earning bread with her needle, a quarter a day and board herself ' drop all and go and nurse two or three days at a lim, with those that were too poor to help her a mite, and now she has them chil dren to care for. By hokey, I'll give in my donation with a free band.' "And 30 it went ; everybody willing to help the widow in her need, and we got up the donation party for the widow for our Thanksgiving night, and oh 1 how glad our hearts have been made, in making the wid ow's cup to overflow with joy in returning thanks to our Heavenly Father by giving of our abundance to relieve tbe wants of the widow, grandmother aud orphaned little ones. Yes, Edward, my heart has fluttered with joy ; joy that there was-so much of the angelic in human heart ; joy that in this good land there is enough for all, and that so many great and good minds are pleading for the right of all to live and love ; joy that every day the work of charity and benevo lence goes on, and that woman is beginning to think and feel for woman and tor the op pressed, and to call upon her neighbors to lay their offering of sympathy upon the al tars of suffering hearts. Edward, dear as you are to me, dearer than life, even your frown and colder words at this moment of our meeting could not banish that heavenly guest fr jm my heart, that the aged widow's "(iod bless you," and her tear of gratitude had ushered in there. Would that every village and every town would use their Thanksgiving as we have done to-day ; then indeed, would it become a time of thanks giving and prayer, acceptable alike to man and God." Edward Belles bent his head low upon the hand of his lovely and loving wife, and a tear fell upen that wedding ring, and wash ed all remembrance of the troubled thought that but now had caused it to twirl upon that gentle finger, ard a deep earnest "God bless ycu, my Mary," inado them again as one. A Gentle Hint. Old Deacon Hopkins was a worthy soul and generally respected for his outward show of piety and religious zeal ; aud I have no doubt that he felt at heart most that he professed. But the Deacon bud his weaknesses. In a certain direction he was troubled with a morbid desire. His chief employment was the making of soap from ashes which he gathered in the neighborhood ; and in making his soa; be was obliged to keep two or three kettles of lye boiling to which end an abundance of fuel was neces sary. Now it eo happened that the Deacon's neighbor was Captain Jack Payson, whose calling kept, him upen salt water the greater part of the time. Captain Jack was a great hand to keep his family supplied with well-seasoned wood, and as he owned an extensive forest lot, he often had a vast pile of it cut and bauled to his house, and there worked Up and stacked. It further more chaneed that the rear door of the good Deacon's soap house opened directly upou the rear of Captain Jack's huge wood pile. The temptation was strong. Surely, there could be no harm in taking a few of the scattering sticks; the Captain would never miss them. But the disease grew upou the necessity of feeding the Gres, and he fancied, kind old soul ! that the Captain would never miss the abstracted fuel. But he was destined to rather an unlooked for and unpieasaut enlightenment, us we shall soon see. The question was up before the church of introducing instrumental music into the choir. One of the singers had a base viol, which he was willing to play if the breth ren would permit, and both he aud the chorister declared that it would he.'p the singing wonderfully. But this was before the days when fiddles were tolerated in sacred plaees, and several of the brethren objeclu i. Deacon Hopkins was enthusiastic and bitter in his opposition. At a full meeting of the church he expressed himself di-eidedly. Captain Jack, who chaneed to be on shore, was present, and favored the intro duction of the viol. "Bring it in." cried the Deacon, "and I wiil go out ! I won't be seen where that big fiddle is tolerated." "Will you stick to that pledge, Deacon ?" asked tha Captain. "les, sir!" replied the irate functionary- "Then," said Captain Jack, with a curi ous twinkle of the eye, "you shan't be troubled with the fiddle in the church. I wiil buy it and hangit upon my wood pile 1" The poor Deacon shrank away behind his enormous shirt collar, while tbe friends of the big nddle carried their point. One after another, tbe newspapers are giving their testimony against putting on biack as a sign of mourning. The Pitts burgh United j'reljyterian says: "A family will shroud itselt in black tor years, as an expression of sorrow for one of. its dead. That one mav be in heaven, rejoicing with joy unspeakable, while relatives on earth are moving about in heavy and somt.re gar ments, making their lives as gloomy as they can. There is no fitness in the thing. It is often a mere mockery of sorrow." It also objects to the practice oo the ground of ils expense to the poor. "I will forfeit my head if you are not wrong," exclaimed a vehement United States Senator to Presideut Lincoln, in an argument. "I accept," replied the Presi dent; "any trifle among friends has a value." The difference between a biby and a coat is this : The coat is what you wear, and the baby is what you were. A sweet girl is a sort of divinity to whom even the scriptures do not forbid us to ren der "lip-service." Bemaxka of GLENNI W. SCOFIELD, January 28th, 1871. HON. The House, under previous order, having met as in Committee of the Whole,. Mr. Scofield, on tbe Amnesty bill, said : "Mr. Speaker, this is a bill to authorize certain leaders of the late rebellion to told office. All the other leaders and all the rank aud file have that privilege already. A small number, understood to be the con trivers of as well as actors in the revolt, are excluded by tbe fourteenth amendment from places of trust. The exclusion covers only those who were guilty not only of the crime of treason, but of that meaner crime, false swearing and betrayal. They are not, how ever, by virtue of any Federal law, excluded f'om the franchise. The national Govern ment does not withhold the ballot from a single rebel, high or low. It permits them all to vote. In other countries such leaders would have been beheaded. Our fathers banished the Tories aud forfeited their estates. We all believe this rebellion was causeless ; we all know the precious lives it cost us ; we all know how much treasure it consumed; we all know how many hearts ache to day by its bereavements; yet the Government has not avenged itselt with the life of a single criminal. Noue are banished, none are under bonds. AH can vote, nearly all can hold office ; a few cannot ; a very few compared to the whole number. As near as 1 can make out it is about one in one hundred of those who participated in the war against the Government. Tbe. impression has gone out that some penalties are imposed, that some of these offenders are still in danger of death or im prisonment or loss of property, at least that some are not allowed to vote, and that none can hold office. All this is error. Neither the Constitution nor laws of the United States impose any penalties, disabilities, or restrictions of any kind whatever, upon the authors of our great national sorrows except to exclude a few of the worst from office. This bill proposes to remove that slight re striction. It proposes to put those who at, tempted to destroy the country upon an equal footing in all respects with those who risked their lives to save it. It proposes to put patriotism and treason on a, common level ; to make patriots and traitors equal before the law. The public judgment may make a difference, but the law is to furnish no censure for the one and no approval for the other. I am not now speaking against the proposed amnesty. I am only describ ing it. 1 do not want the House to forget, nor the country to forget, that all the actors in the rebellion already have all the privi leges of the Republic, except that a few leaders cannot hold office, and that this bill does away with that restriction. I do not think the advocates of amnesty, in Congress or out of it, have been very particular to let tbe people know how little there is left upon which it can act. They have not been particular to tell the people that its whole ai'd only purpose is to enable the leaders to hold nlhee. They are not particular now to tell them that this bill is an invitation to these leaders to come back to Congress and to the control of States. Now, before we remove this restriction, before we give, this invitation, wo ought to consider its original purpose. What .was that purpose? Not punishment, certainly. No new provision was necessary for th;.t. By pro-existing law, not only these leaders, but all their followers, were exposed to the gallows, or, by commutation, to imprison ment, banishment, and forfeiture. The purpose of the exclusion was safety, nothing else. We forgave the crime at once, and legislated only for the future safety of the Republic. There was a time in our history, not very remote, when the words "indem nity for the pas', and security for the fu ture" controlled the action of the then dom inant part-. We exacted from the confed erates no indemnity for the past, but made this slight restriction as security for. the future. Security against what? it is asked. Do you fear a second rebellion? No, sir, I do not. Security aeainst legislation in the interest of the confederacy and against the Republic. The confederacy had four years of nationality. Great interests and power ful passions grew up in the meanwhile. Their currency, their bonds, their obliga tions to maimed soldiery, orphanage, widow hood, their military history and personal fame, and their vast claims for damaees, were all autagonistical to the corresponding interests of the United S?t3tes. Had these leaders come immediately back to Congress and assumed control cJf the confederate States, the question would have been wheth er their debts or ours should be paid, whether their soldiers or ours should have pensions, whether their currency or ours should pay debts; whether their generals or ours should be honored, whether the colored people should be citizens or slaves. The result would have been a division of these interests and a compromise of princi ple. The future historian would have been puzzled to know which were the victors in the long struggle. To secure the Republic against such a result this restriction was adopted. What reasons are assigned for its abroga tion? I have listened to most of the de bate, and have hunted through all the rhetoric of the Globe for an answer. Only two reasons are given in all this eloquent talk. First, it irritates the rebel L-adcrs ; and second. Congress is peddling out this relief by the small. A word as to the first reason. Admitting that It Is a cruel thing to irritate these great offenders, I ask for the evidence that they irritated. " They have not so informed Congress ; they have asked for no relief; or if any of them have, the prayer has been promptly granted. If they are irritated let them inform us, and not leave it for their friends here to get at it bv a process of reasoning. I think their friends here are more united in their behalf than they are for themselves. At all events, we have no evidence beyond the assertion ot members that the rebel chiefs are irritated. It will be time enough to soothe them when that fact is authoritatively made known. But to the second reason, the charge of peddling. From time to time Congress has removed the restriction as to certain per sons. This is discrimination, a wise dis crimination, I think. But the advocates of universal amnesty call it "peddling ;." and having given it a belittling name, continually repeat it as an argument. When a Governor pardons an offender for exceptional reasons nobody call it peddling out clemency, and nobody scolds because he does not pardon everybody at once. We have already in this way removed the restriction from sev eral thousand persons. Not a single person who has asked it has been denied. These two reasons are too insignificant for serious consideration ; and yet it is all the argument given us. Mr. Speaker, I was one with you ana others still left in Congress who helped to erect this barrier against the domination of confederate interests iu the southern States" and at this carpitol. I am not yet prepared to tear it down. France laid the founda tion of another revolution when she recalled her Bourbon rnlers. I am not yet prepared to follow this unwise example. Gentlemen talV cf conciliation,, lorgiveness, magnan"' iinity, clemency ! Sir, we have exhausted all these sentiments in our treatment of the country's enemies. Weakness, folly, cow ardice, self-destruction, are more fitting words for the action proposed. The Professor in Shafts. In the fifth chapter of the Rev. Elijah Kellogg's college story, now in course of publication as a serial in Oliver Optic's Mag azine, appears the following droll narrative: A singular illustration of the extent to which theory often fails in practice was fur nished by a venerated professor a most dis tinguished mathematician, whose works are still used as text books in many of our in stitutions and occurred within the compass ot ny own experience. He went to Bethel; on his return he spent the Sabbath at Lewiston. Monday morning he was told the horse was sick. Neverthe less, he started. The horse went a few rods, fell down, and broke both thills. lie then scut his wife home, and also sent to Bruns wick for another horse and carriage to take him and the broken chaise home. When the driver came they lashed the two vehicles together and started. All went well till thev came to the first long steep lull between Iicw iston and Brunswick ; on its summit they held a consultation. The Professor had an exaggerated idea of his strength, aud said, "Mr. Chandler, h is too much forthehor.se to hold th jse two carriages on this steep de scent; take the horse out; I will get into the shafts." "Professor," replied Chandler, "the breeching is very strong, and so is the arm girth." "But the hors;, Mr. Chandler it is too much for the horse. Besides, being strong er, I know bow to takd advantage of the descent, and manage it much better than the horse." "If the horse can" t hold it, you can't." "Do you, sir, intend to jdace me, in point of intelligence and knowldcdpe of mechan ical forces below a horse ? I have made mathematics the stu ly of a lifetime." "I have no intention to he disrespectful, sir; but 1 know that a horse understands his own business which is handling a load on a hill better than all the professors in the United States. I was seiit up here by my employer, who coufides iu me, to take care of his property ; it you will take tho business out of my hands, and be horse yourself, you must be answerable for the consequences." The Prosfessor had a habit, when a little excited, of giving a nervous twitch at the lappel of his coat with his right hand. "I," he replied, with a most emphatic twitch, "assume all responsibility." The driver, in reality nothing loth to wit ness the operation, took out the horse and held him by the bridle; and the professor getting into the shafts, took hold of them at the ends. The forward carriage was just descending the hill, and the hinder one a little over the summit, when the Profressor trod upon a rolling stone, which caused hiin to plunge forward and increase the velocity of his load so much that he was forced to walk faster than he desired, and exchange the slanting position with his shoulders thrown well back and feet braced, which he had at first adopted for a perpendicular one. At length he was pushed into a run ; the carriages were going at a fearful rate. At the bottom of the bill was a brook ; on each side, precipitous banks. The Profes sor was between Scylla and Charybdis, going nine feet at a leap. In order to cramp the forward wheel, he turned suddenly to . the right. The shafts of the forward carriage went two feet into the bank, breaking both of them short off; the lashings of the hind er one slirped ; it ran into the forward one, breaking the fender and both vehicles turn ed over down hill with a tremendous crash, the learned gentleman describing a parabola one of his favorite figures and landing some rods away. He rose from the earth a dirtier and wiser man, knees skinned, pan taloons torn, a piece of skin knocked off his forehead, and his best hat flat as a pancake underneath the hind carriage, and looking round, he exclaimed, "Is it possible I could have been so much deceived as to the mo mentum? It was prodigious ?" "I don't know anything about momen tum," replied Chandler, "but I know some thing about horses. I know it makes a mighty difference about holding back a load on a steep hill, whether a horse has two legs or four, and whether he weighs a hundred and seventy-five or twelve hundred pounds." It cost the Professor thirty-seven dollars aud ntty cents to ascertain how much horse power he represented. Knights of Pythias. The Order of the "Knights of Pythias" is becoming so widely spread and prosperous that the pub lic have a reasonable curiosity to know some thing of its character and purposes. Tho ritual was first wtittcn and the Order worked durinir the war as a bond of union between army officers. After the war's close it was rewritten, inoJitied, and thrown open to the people, and has spread rapidly, particularly within the past two years and in the Eastern States. Its work and intent are very simi lar to those ot the Masonic Order. Founded on friendship, with the famous talc of Da mon and Pythias as their example, the members aim to relieve the suffering, suc cor the unfortunate, care for the sick, bury the dead, aud give their sympathy and ma terial aid to the widows and orphans of each other. There are now forty active lodges in this State. The complete regalia con sists of a military hat, with plumes, a scar let, velveteen sash, with silver fringe; an apron of black velvet, handsomely trimmed with silver with the emblem of the Order. a knight' stelmet with the visor down, the letters K. P., and the initials of the officer, if the wesrer be an officer; and a sword made to their order by the Ames Company of Chicopee, with eleganily wrought hilt and scarlet scabbard, the hilt and trimmings being gold for the officers and silver for the knights, and each blade bearing the name of the wearer. They have also complete suits of light armor, very curious to look upon in these days. noston I'aper. Never chew your words. Open the mouth and let the words out. A student once asked. "Can vircba, fortichude, grati chude or quiechude dwell with that man who is a stranger to recticnude l A man who read that dry copperas put in a bed of ants would cause them to leave, pat some in his utother-in-law's bed to see it she wouldn t go. tie said she was mere at last accounts. MILLWRIGHTING. II. T. Farnswortii, Would inform Mill owners, and those defiroas of havingMiUs built, that he id prepared to build and lepair either Ciroular or Mulcy Saw Mills, and Griat Mills after the latest improved patterns. He has also for sale an improved Water Wheel, which he guaranteesto give satisfaction in regari to power and speed. His motto is, to do work so as to give perfectsati?faction. Those wishing fur ther information will be promptly answered by addressing him at Clearfield. Clearfield county, Pa. Write your name and address pUin. April 20, 1870-ly. STUMPS! STUMPS!! The undersigned have purchased the right ot Clearfield county for Eno-! Farnsworth's Stunrp Extractor, patented June 7th, 1S7U. This is decidedly the most eonvenient. most durable, and best machine of the day. Wet weather wii. not effect it, the working part being all of ironl The machine is easily set up. and will work atiy place that can be plowed. We will sell machines at a small profit on cost, acd will try to make it to the advantage of farmers to buy them. We solicit orders from those wanting machines. H. T. FAKiNeWOItTH, Clearfield. Pa., J. B. GARRISON, GEO. H. II A IX. Agent. Curwensville, Pa. Clearfield, Pa. July I3,'70. JJOMK INDUSTRY! BOOTS AND SHOES Made to Order at the Lowest Rates. The undersigned would respectfully invite the attention of tbe citizens of Clearfiel J and vicini ty, to give him a call at his shop on Market .St., nearly opposite Hartswick & Irwin's drug store, where he is prepared to make or repairanjthiog in his line. Orders entrusted to him will be executed with promptness, strength and neatness, and all work warranted as represented. I have now on hand a stock of extra french calfskins, superb gaiter tops, Ac, that I will finish up at thelowest figures. June 13th, 18K6. DAMKli CONSELLY y OFFER. FOE SALE, AT PA It The New Masonic Temple Loan, Bearing 7 3-10 interest, Redeemable after five (5) and within twenty-one (21) years. Interest Pavable March and September. The bonds are rosistered and will be issued in sums to suit. DeHAVEN & BRO., 40 SOUTII 3n STREET, Philadelphia. Stocks bought and sold on commission. Gold and Governments bought ant sold. Accounts re ceived and interest allowod, subject to sight drafts. Maroh 2. 1370-Iy,-Jan 4.-71 M E s'' Y O U T II S' AND BOYS', CLOTHING. The undersigned having recently added READY-MADE CLOTHING to his former business, would respectfully solicit an examination oi his stock. Being practical Tailor he flatters himself that he is able to offer a better claw of ready-made work than has heretofore been brought to this mar ket. Anyone wishing to buy goods In this line - would save money by calling at his store, and making their selections. Also, a full supply of Gent3-furni?hing goods always on hand. Feeling thankful for past fayors. he would re spectfully solicit m continuance of the same. April28, 1S9. II. BRIDGE. C. KHATZER & SONS are receiving a splendid' stock of CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS, LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES', COUNTERPANES AND QUILTS. LINEN TABLE CLOTHS AND NAPKINS, LADIES SJLK COATS AND OVERSKIRTS, ELEGANT SHAWLS AND LACE POINTS, LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S TRIMMED HATS, DRESS GOODS AND TRIMMINGS, BEST KII)" GLOVES LADIES', GENTLE MEN'S AND CHILDREN'S, BLACK AND FANCY SILKS, FINE BLACK ALPACAS, UNEQUALLED STOCK LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES AND GAITERS, MEN'S CALF AND FRENCH KIP BOOTS, HEAVY CALF BOOTS, $5, MEN'S AND BOYS' FINE AND HEAVY SHOES, BEST STONE TEA SETTS, $5, CASSIMERES VERY CHEAP, GROCERIES, FLOUR AND PROVISIONS AT LOWEST RATES, LIBERAL REDUCTION TO TIIO"SE BUY ING IN QUANTITY, WOOL, MARKETING AND COUNTRY PRODUCE WANTED. Clearfield, Jane 30, 1309. XTAILS A SPIKES thecheapest intheerunty at MOSSOP'S. QufimtM Jircctont. A W W. WALTERS, Attorney at Law. . Clearfield, Pa. 0Jce in the Court House "ALTER BARRETT, Attorney atl.aw. Clear neia.ra. .May 13, 1SR3. J B. GRAHAM A SONS, Dealers in Dry-Goods . Groceries, Hardware. U.ueensware. Wooden ware, Provisions, etc., Marxet St. Clearfield. Pa, HF. BKJLER CO.. Dealers in Hardware . and manufacturers of Tin and Sheet-iron tare. Second Street, Clearfield, Pa. Mar "70. HF. NAUGLE, Watch and Clock Maker, and . dealer in Watches, Jewelry, Ac. Room in Graham'srow, Marketstreet. Not. IS. T" HO'S J McCULLOUGH. AttorseT j-at-Law. Clearfield, Pa. All legal business prompt ly attended to. cct. z.. irny. WM. REED. Market Street, Clearfield, Pa.. Fancy Dry Goods, WUi'e Goods. Notions. Embroideries, Ladies' aud Gents' Furnishing Jood. etc. June loiiK i. p. tuns- : : : : d. l.kbees 1RVIX A KREBS. (Successors to II. B. Swoop.). Law and Collection Office. Market Street. Clearfi.-ld. Pa. Nov. 3. 1S70. A I PHAW.Denler in Druzs. Patent Medicines . Fancy Articts. etc.. and Proprietor of Dr. cr's West Branch Bitters, Market Street, Bovcr Clearfield. Pa. June la, 0. FB. READ, M. D., Phtsicias and Srnor.os. Kylertown, Pa., respectfully offers his pro fessional services to the citii9nsof that place and surrounding country. Apr. 20-f-m. Or kin T. Noiile. Attorney at Law. Lock Ha ven. Pa. Will practico iu the several courts of Clearfield county. Business entrusted to him will receive prompt attention. Je. 2i), '70-y. CKRATZER, Dealer in Dry-Goods. Clothing. . Hardware. Quceusware, Groceries. Provi sions, etc., Market Street, nearly opposite the Court House, Clearfield, Pa. June. lSf.a JB M'EN ALLY. Attorney at Law. Clearfield . Pa. Practices in Clearfield and adjoin'ng wunties. Ofiice in new brick building of J .Eoyn t n, 2d strest, one door south of Lanich's Hotel. I TEST. AttcTneyat Law, Clearfield, Pa., will . attend promptly to all Lesal business entrust ed to his rare in Clearfield and adjoining coun ties. Office on Market street. July 17, 1SI.7. rilHOMAS II. FORCEY. Dealer In Square and oawea uumner. ury-nonus.v"":""'1. J ' Sawed Lumber. Dry-Goods.lu ceries. t lour. Grain, reed, liacon, hamton. Clearfield county, Pa. Ac , Ac. ?ra Oct 10. HAF.TSWICK A IRWIX. Dealers in Drujs. Medicines. Paints. Oils.Stationary. Perfume ry. Fancv Goods, Notions. etc., etc.. Marketstreet, Clearfield, Pa pec. C, 1865. KRATZER k RON, dealers in Dry Goods . Clothing. Hardware. Queenswnre. Groce ries, Provisions, Ac, Second Street Clea. field, Pa. Dec 27. 1S65. -J OHN (H ELICII, Manufacturer of all kinds o J Cabinet-ware. Market street. Clearfield, Pa lie alsouiakes to order Coffio3. onshort notice aud attends funerals with a hearse. Afrrl0,'59 RICHARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do mestio Dry GoodJ. Groceries. Flour. Bacon, Lii.uora. Ac Room, on Marketstreet, a few door west ot Journal Office. Clearfield. Pa. Apr27. TTTALLACK A FIELDING. Attoi;eys at Law Clearfield. Pa. Office in res denee of W. A. Wallace Lesal business of all Kinds attended to with promptness and fidelity. Jan.5.'70-yp TI, A. WALLACE. FRANK F1ELIMNC FT. W. SMITH. Attorxet at Law. Clearfield . Pa., will attend promptly to tnsme on- rrusind to his care. Office on second floor of new building adjoining County Natioual BanK.and nearly opposite the Court House. June 30. '6'J T FREDERICK LEITZINGER. Manufacturer of all kinds of Stone-ware. Clearfield. Pa. Or dors solicited wholesale or retail He also keeps on hand and for sale an assortment of earthen ware, of his own manufacture. Jan. 1. Iritis MANSION HOUSE. Clearfield. Pa This well known hotel, near the t ourt Hoare. is worthy the patronage of the public The fable will be supplied with the best in the market. The best of liquors kept. JOHN DOfGHEI'.TY. JOHN II.FLLFORD, Attorney at Law. Clear field. Pa, Office on Market Street, over Hartswick A Irwin's Drugstore. Prompt attti.tinp given to tho securingofUountv claims. Ac. ami to all legal business. March 27. ISrt7. I T II O ii X , M. !., Physician and - StTRGF.ON'. havinc located tit Kvlcrtown. Pa., offers his professional services to the ciri- lens ot that place aod vicinity. Sep.291y WI Cl'RLEY. Dealer in Dry Goods. )rn,f.rlM llanl.ar. Ilnrrc,r. Plnnrlla- extensive dealers in nil kiuJsof sawed lumber shingles, and square timber. Orders solicited. n ooatanu. ra., Aug I tn. io.t DR J. P. BURC II FIELD Late Surgeon of the 83d Rcz't Pcnn'a Vols., having retorfjed from the army, offers his professional services to tho citiiens of Clearfield and vicinity. Profes sional calls promptly attended to. Office on Bouth-East corner of 3d and Market Streets. - Oct. 4. 1S65 funp. QURVEVOlt. The undersigned offers his services to the t.uMic. as a Surveyor. Ho ma bo found at his residence in Lawicrce township, when not engaged; or addressed by letter at Clearfield, Penn a. March Oth. 18'.7.-tf. J AMES MITCHELL. T E F F K II SOX LITZ, M. " I ntsicmn and JMirpenn, 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. Offiee and residence on Curtin Street, former ly occupied by Dr. Kline May l9,'fi9 GEORGE C. KIKK. Justice of the Peace, Sur veyor rnd Conveyancer, Luthersburg. To. All business entrusted to him will be promptly at tended to. Persona wishing to employ a Survey or will do well to give him a call, as he flatters himself that he can render satisfaction. Deeds of eonvevauce, articles of agreement, and alljegal papers promptly and neatly executed Je3'70-yp T K. BOTTORF'S " PTIO TOGRAPU GA LLER T, MARKET STREET, CLKAP.FII LU, FENK'a. Nee-atives mada in cloudy as well as .in clear weather. Constantly en band a good assortment of Frames. Stereoscopes and Stereoscopic Views. Frames, from any style of moulding, made to order. CftROMOS A SPECIALITY. Dec 2,rfis-jy. 14-6S-tl. , J. B L A K K" WALTERS, HEAL ESTATE BROKER, ASI DEALER 1.1 Saw Los ami Lumber, CLEARFIELD, PA. Real estate bought and sold, titles examined, fazes paid, conveyances prepared. Office in Masonic building, on Second Street Room No. 1. Jan 2j, '71. gMALL PROFITS and QUICK SALES. HARTSWICK A IRWIN are constantly replenishing their stock of Drugs. Medicines. Ac. Scheol books and Stationery, including the Osgood and National series of readers. Also Tobacco and Ci gars, of tbe best quality, and at the lowest prices. Call and see. Clearfield, Nov 10, lo'S THE KIDNEYS. The Kidneys are two in number, sitnated at tho upper part ot the loin, surrounded by fat. and consisting of three parts, vis : tbe Anterior, th Interior, and the Eartcrior. The anterior absorbs Interior consists of tis sues or veins, which serve as a deposit for thn urine and convey it to tbe exterior. Tbw exte rior is a conductor al?o, terminating in a single tube, and called the Ureter. The aretersare con nected with the bladder. The bladder is composed of various covering or tissues, di-rided into parts, vii: the t'pper, th Lower, the .Nervous, and the Mucous. The upper' expels, the lower retains. Many have a desire to urin;e without the ability, others urinate with out the ability to retaid. This frequently occur! in children. To cure those affections, we must bring into ac tion the muscles, which are engaged in their va- riwud luiictiuus. if they ere neglected, Gravol or Dropsy may ensue'. The reader must also be made aware, that how- erer slight may bathe attack, it is sure to aJeo- the b-idily health and mental powers, as our flesh and blood are supportod from thee sources. Goct, on I'.nEi matisi! P.in occurring in the loins U indicative of the above diseases. They occur in persons disposed to acid stomach and chalk; concretions. Tbe Gravel. Th gravel ensues from neglect or improper treatment of tho kidneys These or gans being weak, the water is not expelled from the bladder, but allowed to remain; it becomes feverish, and sediment forma. It is from this de posit that the stone is formed, aod gravel ensues. Dropct is a collection of water in some parts of the body, and bears'different same;, according to" the ports affected, viz : when generally diffused over the body, it is called Anasarca ; when of thsj Abdomen, Aicite.; wen of the cbest, Uydrotho rax. Tbkatvkt. Helmbold's highly concentrated compound Extract Buchu is decidedly one of tho test remedies for diseases of the bladder, kidneys', gravel, dropsical swellings, rheumatism .and gouty affections. Under this head we have arranged Dysurie, or difBeulty and pain in passing water, Scanty Sccrttion. or small and frequent dischar ges of water; Strangury, or stopping of water; Hematuria, or bloody trrfne ; Gout and Rheuma tism of the kidneys, without any change in quan tity, but Increase in color, er dark water. It was alwey highly recommended by the late Dr. Physick, in the;e affcetions. This medicine increases the power of digestiori and excites the absorbents into healthy exercise by which tbe watery or calcareous depositions and all unnatural enlargements, as well as pain and inflammation are reduced, and it is taken by men, women and children. Directions for use aod diet accompany. Philadelphia, Pa.. Feb. 25, 1867. H T, Xelm bold, Druggist: Dear Sib : I have been a sufferer, for upward of twenty years, with gravel, bludder and kidney affections, during which time I have used various medicinal preparations, and been under the treat ment of the most eminent Physicians, experien cing but litile relief Having seen your preparation extensively ad vertised. I coiisulted with my family physician in regard to using your Extract Uuchn. I did this because I had used all kinds of ad vertised remedies, and had found them worthless, and eonie quite injurious; in fact, I despaired of ever getting kcII, and determined to use no rem edies hereafter unless I knew of the ingredients. It was this that prompted me to use your remedy. As you advertised that it was composed of buchu, mbebs and juniper berries, it occurred tome and my physician as an excellent combination, and, with his advice, after an examination of tbe arti cle, and consulting again with the druggist, I concluded to try it. 1 commenced its Use about eight months ago, at which time I wae confined to my room From tho Erst bt ttle I was astonish ed and gratified at the beneficial effect, and after using it three weeks was able to walk out. I felt much like wrilingyou a full statement of my case at that time, but thought my improvement might only be temporary, and therefore concluded to defer and see if it would effect a perfect cure, knowing then it would be of greater value to yon and core satisfactory to me I am now able to report that a cure is effected after using the remedy foffive mouths. I have sot Ufed any now for three rnuBlbs, and feel as in all respects as I ever did. Your Buobu being devoid ot any onpleasant taste and odor, a ni'-e tooie acd invigorator of the system. I do not mean to be without it whenever occasion may require its use in such affections. M McCOttMICK. Should any doubt Mr. McCormick't statement, be refers to the following gentlemen: Hon. Wm. Rigler, ex Governor Penn'a. Hun Thomas ii Florenae, Philadelphia. Hon. J. C. Knox, Judge, Philadelphia. Hon. J. S. PI nek.. lodge, Philadelphia. . Hon. D. R. Porter. ex-Governor, Penn'a. Hon. Ellis Levis. Judge, Philadelphia. Hon. R.C. Grier, Judge V. S Court. Hon. G. W. Woodward. Judge. Philadelphia. Hon. W. A. Porter, City Solicitor, Pbil'a. Hon. JohhBijler. ex-Ooveruor, 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. Trice $1 .25 r bl"" or 6 brttles for S3 50. Telivered to any address. Describe symp toms in all communications. Address II. T. HELMP.OLD, Drag and Chemi cal Warehouse, 54 Broadway, N Y. NOSE ARE GENUINE UNLESS DONE UP IS ateel-engraved wrapper, with fac simile of my Chemical Warehouse and signed Juueli '70-ly H. T. HELMBOLD-. -1. 1 1