The Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1876-1878, May 24, 1876, Image 5

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CENTENNIAL HYMN,
Below will be round ,the words o 1 pie cell.
t e nnial , •hymn, written by ' the Atifingtitshed
Quaker yoet,,Jobn Vlbittier, tßouin th e
Q u akerti,iti , at , the , opening thelCentennial
on Wednesday, May 10th
Our l ather's ..Ood.l. from „ont .whose and
The centeries fall like - grains - of Sand. :
We meet to day;•united, free; -*".
And loyal to our land and-Thee, ' . -.-
To thank Thee for the era done,
To 'trust Thee for the opening,one. ' • .
~. .
liera w,heresof old, by Thydesigi;, -.-: .'•-•,.:•: -:.'•
Thefathers spalin that * t ir e Thine ''' ' •'
Whose echo is the glad refrain ... . '
Of rendered bolt•and fatting chain,' . •
,
To grace our festal time, from'all
The zones of . f3artlc. Out &Cala to' call. , •
Be with us Whtla:the - I.lo.W.World greets - '
. The Old. World, thronging' all its streets, ,
Unveiling all the triumphs won
By art or toil beneath the sun ;
And unto commOn good ordain ~,_,., ii, l.
~
. This riValship of hand and Ur in. '• l'
Thou 'who halt here, In otteo l d_furled .-.,„,.-: -
The War' flags of a' gathered' wOrld, .
• Beneath nor western skies, fulfill. ~
.;'•
„14ft Orient's rniasiOn 'of 'good .Will,".
And, freighted with Love s golden fleece,.
Send back the Argonauts of peace,. , i .
For art and labor.. ietlitirutte,‘. ..• .- 1 - -,..,, ,
For beauty made the bride of use, ,
~!,
We thank Thee o while withal wocrayo , 4 •• .
The au tere;iiitites strong to save, . ':.'13; , ,
The honOr prOof to•phice Or gold, t.,
The manhood never botight-orsold 1, '...'::-:
0 !' make: Thou 'us,. throng I.oenturie.s.lniag,'
In beige secure,, Ili - jUstiee:StrOtig ; -
Around our gift of freedom draW ~. ..
~ , •
The safeguards of Thy riahteous . :aw-; : • - ' -
• And, cast in some!divitie4 ITI011ik• .. '- -
- Let the new cycle shame
.the old I .* . -
AMUSE ME I N TS
It fistonishln g - lo see - mUch many peo
ple will endure the „pursuit ot, pleasure—the,
crowding, jostling; tedloUa. belated
onmihnses constant I:1 pprebensign of danger On'
board overladen steamers,long . delay in getting
home at night, children tired . attd_ileePy;And.
crying, so often experienced! in :what are called
"excursions; . ' and 3.' et this is al . ..SPecies.6f ainnse
ment that scents' to grow.'ntre . and-friOre *Tu.
ular every Year.: 4 -large t r iOionable &ening
party illusttrates in a Striking' inanner the pow :
ers of human endurance. • - •:\ '' .
We will not dwell upon the Weary and'elati:- ,
mate mysteries of the prelimi arY !toilet i for,
when it is considered • that 'tit ,main objects of
these social 'gatherings is, the exhibition' ISI . the
marvelous results., of that toilet to au adipirine
crowd, perhaps the . labor and time expplded
*Tits preparation are not excessive,, j —ff.
. ,
. We wonder how it strikes i'detif and dinilb
Person, as he 'stands. by.; vtatching , the surging
crtwd sinning at each -'o,her.with amiablevac
uity—abundred lips prying :together, a hun, i
tired fans fluttering in air% score..or two of
weary people starting tor, the first vaeantOliair
end then, of a sudden, to sqe a' apace cleared;
and comPany of men' and i women enter the
enelostre bowing , and gesttculating,and: whirl-
lag atoitt,;,elAsp . ed in each other's arruSo'keep
ing time to 'music, which l i , alas ! is inaudible to
him.
.And so the time rolls b until near the.
solemn hour of midnight, when; at a mute Big!,
nal given, the; auxiCoug
,hosteSs by a waiter, i the
doorsOf roorri . are thrown open, and
the business of the evening begins. Quickly
and steAlthily a given number of experienced
I,,Ques plant themselves at the table,.where
they .can most readily reach' the viands and
wines ,w ith which it .is laden, and.there remain
fixed and immovable 4ilt4 th3ir appetite is
prged. Meanwhile, unselfish \.gentlemen, sibo
lelain some sense. of
,deeeney\ si4 propriety,
struggle, amid . marlitold diffictilties, to provide
for the watts of famishing , - women; who must
co unfed unless some man 'cares for,
At last, atiild a swarm of carriages blocking
the gateway, the victims of the ;night manage
I:I reach their Own particulavcOnveyances,. and
at an absurdly late,'or rather early . houK,Vind
themselves once more at home, and lie 'down
on an easy couch, to wake in the morning,
unrefreshed and unfitted ifor the dUties of the
day. • ,
„ .
At the tithe when the Sidtan of Turkey, and
tbe . Viceroy of Egypt :vislted,the•.Cryt4Pal
.
ace in London, we,savi,'3o,ooo people disCharg
edthrough a single door, late, at night, and irk
the midst of a pouringrains The line of ctir
nages in waiting exteridedlor miles, and the,
contusion of Babel could not have exceeded the .
uproar to be heard thet(i. By walking hall a
mile in the rain, our party were sueeessfulin
riuding their conveyance and struck off ipto ta
by-road ; but we were told that some of the
grand folk were obliged to remain at the Pal
ace door until near. the b'reak of day. Is there
no leader of society who. will' begity the work
of reform, and show thl4 human beings may be
brought together and =enterltaiuedl, and duly ,ied
without all thil toil-and suffering?
People differ very much in their capacity for
.amusement It is -a national trait
Germans, and Frenchmen,..to be easily amused.
Ve were once invited to a grandentertainment
given in Munich to the leading plats, and
statesmen of the country, who had assembled
in that city on some. publt business. Of course
we' ent with great exPectations, and present
ing a card of admissioncnft Six inches iquare
we entered a large roo ms i
with a very low, ceil
ing, lighted' by a hundred 'or more ChineSe lan
terns—several of which .t i oOk fire during Ale
evening—and filled with long, narrow tables,
about which 'sat and stood' the assembled ma. g-
Late of Bavaria, eating beef and
. potatoes,drinv
ingbeer, and smoking pipes, to the s t otuul of
most excellent music, to wh ch, howeer, few
set/ fled to give heed. &Ai drinking, sidok
jug, and a perpetual clatter cif strange tongTs
11110 up the entire evening; all Were in high
tPirits, and seemed to enjoy ilhernselves to the
extent Of their capacity, and 4ve presume they
went to bed that night' feeling thtit, twit the
whole, they had bad .ftimut as pleasanta:tinie
as (mild reasonably be ie l ,xpec i te,d thlollle of
tears. - • 4 .1
Amusement In it me kiln lis'detitindifd y the
i llstirtets and , necesititikiral ;:itnylrfu,,t APOIrt,
tains, indeed, to all claws oranitnated things.
insects do little but amuse thinisolvei:i :birds
turn existehce into sport ; the . young of all int
.
imals spend nearly' the *bole Alme, when they
are not asleep, at play. Let a number of old
honies lonse in the-field, and they at once tieiin
to revive the memories of their colthood ; and
even the fishes 'dart' about: and - gambol, after
their scalp fashion, in' the - very depths of the
ee!t. Oil! and oxen are the exception ; their
,gravity, never seente.to, be disturbed. CAldien
IgetAtiir fits' trelning - , &Allot body arid m - ind,
through ple IndilliA , ol4lsPorts ; and i - the very
first symptoms of intelligence in the infant is
seen in its smile. And some ot the best Chris
tians that' we know effervesce with mirth.—
Goodness is notldentical with gravity.
• Occasionally you meet with a man who does
notearetO be • amused.;butothia,, is :becati
thiailthanme*fititAffhis aariire
1)le of joys The most . exquisite droppings o
humor roll off fron-Trim Zilike z obules of oitot
vitriol ; .his face -never relaxes ; he appreciates
a good dinner, hut nothing that is said to make
things cheerful, and - congratulates himself that
under no e r irennistanchas heever l been known
to lose his dignitY." , BuCh'it periOu ought to be
an ()New, bf ouri4nder•compassien,,: !'.
There is a wtde•distinCtiOn• between perca-.
tion and dissapation,.as is indicated in thnety
mology of the words.
,The one. recreates the
exhausted; power:A i :and' the
.other dissipates,
scatters Wholesome timuSement IS An
antidote tOlvice. Bad, Men, are. not generally
Cheerful. iTl.tcy laugh' when. they are tipsy, but
• . •
it is the hollow laughter ot. fools; A contented
mind is a Pet - Patna feaSt.
• , - .. •
j PESTS -OF SOCIETY:
Of these social nilisanccs, Cully embodied, the
first we mean': Siteak of: are envious people.
The moment a man adhieves: brilliant success
there's always .somebody at 'hand to tell how
poor, bowl obscOre, how "no account" he used
to be, and Ito exOress:w . dodet and astonishment
That he should.. ever" .have "amounted. to' any
_thing." The fact' that keliasattounted to
• some
thing, that be . has proved himself 'a success,.
seems - to make Some offliis ;acquaintance's feel
.
that they have 'been robbed in a manner, and
thai by so' niuch he • has risen abolve them in
position or intinence s _lik- s& much they are
divarfed. Alen who have groped blindly_to find
a fitting place for the - . exercise of. their - talents
,find it,and with-it come naturally appreciation,
money, influence, proSperity.,. Can their; good.
fortune catise.anYthine; • but rejoicing 414 rriag . ,
nanimous and nOble mind ? Doubtless . there's
Many and many diamond that is rawer
polished and set, but lies 'buried in Mountain
:gulches coyere,d • with:: mud ; many . a "mute, irk
gloriona Miltoti"lsleepa in quiet country church
yards ; but , the ;World - is -flashing with .-light
from diamOnds that are set, ringing with melo
dy from Xliltons i that . are mute. One
_thing is
;certain t, the man or
,the woman..who - i4 Occu-.
'pied in picking to pieceS the crown lawfully:
won by a 7.decesifu) neighbor' is not likely ever_
to *ear One ; tor the time thuS spent is worse
.than wasted, and the dispoSition that, can i find
pleasure in' emplOynaent that is so igninniniont
and , degrading ten never fled those aspirations,
labors, and . toila-congemal . which bringdeserv
ed reputation, and honor, and Shetess". .
. Nest tdithis 'sort of people' are the egotists.
"Great I'.' is the divinity of some men and wo
men, ansl nothing surprises :theinpersonkinpre
than to shovc ...them -yoi are ignoiatit, of 'What
May have ',befallen them, and,that you have not
turned - over and Ilearned by heart the last unin
teresting little chapter of their small lives.
ThotritlinginCidentsof their. household Ont.:.
prise eVeiything,. which, , js _worth
. knowing—
IP them ;: and Our, Ignorance of : said accidents
is looked upon . 4s a persorlal . .affront and the
.sign of ahnost Criminal . indifference.. If these'
worshippers of •tGreat have any'specialty--
say they, are artists., musicians, authors; actors,
and what.ilot—they assure you •thereyasnev-.
er such aNtrininPli.-known, as that
,which they
have just ,now aChieired : To hear - them one
would believe that the sun had stood still while
they fought their fight and gained their victo
ry ;..and Ilia crowds have bound themselyes-as
'slaves to- the wheel of'-their triumphant car
--;o\iid of thc
the noblest among" tliern protL .eir posi
tions as Followers and adinirers. Even the
cha:ities of these people are doperout Of their
snpreme selfhood. helped him ;I= was his
salvation in the' day of need ; he came to me
for advice; and 1. pulled him through." How
often we hear these phrases' from 'the snowy;
Eelf-complaeent folks' who think their stnallest
deeds 4re Worthy of being trumpeted forth to
mankind its the 'finest heroisms of the noblest,
men ! Where the soul is poc?rest for humanity
there is it the richest for egotism. The roots
of the "Great I", are in us all, more or less; but:
we.preter thele4a to the More, and, if 'we muse
have excess, would rather by far it was an ex
cess of thoughtj for 'others than orthofight for
ourself.
.'hen Ncre have the scandaltnonger. They
seem to care niathinglorr_char4teijiiit seek ..to
trample eYerybOdy down, expecting / thereby to
raise up himself lor herself in the estimation of
-the world. They 'always fail to see that they
are lowtring therm:lies-instead.
No person of Sense can be expected to' be
lieve one Wit* makes it a. point to deliberately
lie for the sqe :parpose of defaming one Oionl
he dislikes'. - And, for the very reason that -no
one who knows . them does believe them, it is
that v so little harm is done: Yet it is well'
enodgh that our laws make those persons re
sponsit)lefloc. their sayings; and - w'e' eau - heartily I
concur when a court of justice sees fit to pun-
ish the sOndalmonger . for peddling wares
-without , The heathen Chmee speakal
sense when he says, "Hold fast to your tongue,
lest; It speaks evil of your. neighbor."
Pinally, l we have the Mercenary man, who is
generally s regular fortune hunter, When some
rich women marry Poor , ffien; they little imag.
ine the misery they are creating forthetins,elveS,;
lA. min wbo woos - a .woman with !mercenary
\lnd** iqt,tillo: 4 l4*
Pito' tier for:being tior,
thy, of appitm, , f4.l,p,,aa she undoubtedly is, gei
„her genecaS;licart would not EATUiI away with
Tr 'TV/ T
la
9
E 'DEMO
• 1: •
hirjudgmot. The man who marries a woman
for money `; bads better kill her outright;and take
it. Indeed, that it what's creature whti inakei
a match
W ith suet- a motive would'really like
te do.; Be wants .. the bard `gold, not , the shit`.; •
woman-who owns it, and he hates her because
146 has to take 1 ht.r-also. 'Poor little beiressie.
with such delightful . fortunes ; 'poor little•*id-
OWs, with a snug little settled;onlyouti
the husband that had your comfort, at heart,
bow much: better that.you should be' penniless
women sewing for your 'living 1. Then.; some
strong, loVing hand might gatheryOu up to a '
tender heart, and you might be very sure it' was'
all for yourself—all every .bit of it 'Bit now,
nothing , isileft you but a_ hlveleas e'esterice—a
broken liter..: it's a dangerous. eitieiltantii.
to: endow , some men with your•enktbly goods*
Once of being so .endowed by them.'
.STEORT - AS ,AN ADVEItITSER
Orie_of 4lr. Ste Wart's last business acts ;
. was.
the, personal - supervision of an adyertieetnec4,
fOr the neWipapers.
,He - never found. be was:
doing as'much as he cared to do, and never
•-•
committed tha folly of throwing away nionpy.
on circultgs and Cheap job work t ,reaching a
f4wlnndreds of persons who neyer read theak, ,
He believed in _newspa,per advertiiing, 'and
readers byithe thousand ; and stranieli'ertongh
never reached the ' point of iniagining hiraself
apd his great establishthents so well-known
that advertising was unnecessary. 'Perhaps he
,4as mistaken, but 'it was a life-long mistake,
and he never abandoned it. If he Was right,
many_ leskir merchants are wrong in neglecting
t reach the people,and invite trade in the only
Waya the great merchant
,approved or:tound
value. H/ left to quackery the raultiforhi nuts=
thatiannoy. the public and 'make business
announcentents offensive. His advertiseme nt
was always worth reading, it was always reall,'
and he followed the , syaem because he'fpund it
profitable In these days of dettloral4e.d views
anifmistaken modes of reaChing the puhlic, the
gat merchant's testimony anti life Practice
should be v4luable in their suggestions to the
mercantile community.
• •
The familiar . house-fly is apt to lie considered
ad uniniti4ated pest. It is time therefore- to
c4llattentilon to some recent inVesiigatiOns,of a
cl i kernist, wiich go to bear out the pioui axiom
that eveqthing has use. This observer, no
ticed the imOvemenis of flies after alighting,
robbing their hind feet together, their hind feet,
and wings) and their fore-feet, was led to ex- .
pore_ the 6use ; and he, found that the fly's
mlings andllegs, during
T his gyrationsin, the air,
bfcame'coited with extremely minute animal-,
c9lte,-whicb he. sUbsequently devours.: ;These
rnicroscopi l c creatures are poisonous,and abound
in impure i air ; so! that flies perform a; useful
s •
l ork in renloving 'the seeds of disease. Ixan
ness in a fly is pripla Ade evidence' ot pure air'
iq the bouSe, while corpulency indicates foul
ness and pad 'ventilation. If these observa
tions are vdeil foundekthe hortsekeeper,instead
1
of killing 9ff - the flies with poisonduS
4ions, should make her premises as SwLet • and
clean as possible, and then, having prolected
food with wire or . other co'vers, tesi•e• tbt, busy
flies to actias airy scavengers.
•
I
SAND SHOWERS. • '
- -
In Clung, every year witness#s - curious sand
s lowers, when there is neither cloud nth. fog In:
tie sky ; but the sun is scarcely-visible, looking
very much like as when, seen through smoked,
, The air is Idled with a fine dust, en
tering eyes, nostrils, and mouth, anti often
causing diSeases . of the eye. 'This dust, or sand
als the people call it, penetrates, }Muses; reach
ii3g even apartments which seemed" - securely.
dosed. Itk is supposed to come from the Desert
of Gold, ' the sand of Sahara is taken up by
vi'llirlwind.a and carried hundteds - of Miles
away. The, Cbinese,while sensitive to the per
s'tnal,discOmfort arising from these showers are
resigned to them from a conviction that they
•
are a grea, help to agriculture. They, say that
a l year of - numerous sand showers is .always a
`ear of latige fertility. The sand im
parts semi enriching elements to the soil, and
it also tends to loOsca the compact alluvial mat
ter of the Chinese *alleys. It is ltappasible,ihat
these shoWers may be composed . of mieroscop
i insects,like similar showers winch have been
noticed in ithe Atlantic Ocean. This would ex-
Wain their fertilizing power.
I PLODDING FIDELITY,
Success la life, in a trade, or aprolession, or
businees, comes.by long and , hard work: It
iS not wont by luckinor by 'flights Of genius,but
by faithful` plodding work. Dr. Holland; inor
`aliaes on elevators In - Stores 'and 'hotels. '-He
skYs nobody can rise in -life on an elevator" by
shirking erOuble.:.
.What then , is the true secret of sueceid in
life ? It i$ to do, without flinching. and with
litter faithfulness, the duty that stands ,nest to
One. WLtn a man bas mastered the duties
around pin), he is ready far : those of ti - higher
grade, and; takes naturally one step upward.-L-••
When he has mastered: the duties of the new
grade he gPes on' climbing. There':is 'no Sup ,
prise to :the man who arrives at eminence legit
imately. iaentirely natural that be should
tie there, aild he Is as much at home tbere and
as little elated as. when be was working patient
:4 at the fOot of the stairs. There' are heights
above him i l and be remains bumble and simple.
The mot important lesson Of life is to know
hhw to be appY with ourselves when home is
comfo i t, and all in it, eveufa thedog and
tt, share Our affectibn. Do not refine away
.bkppiness by thinking . that which is goo rat.y
; be better. • -
•
Tbe past is diielesed, the future c oncealed , in
dhubt. Ahd yet human - nathrels lieedlesa of
tke pan, nhd fearful 3 4 the future 7 ,rgard;nnt,
the sciened and experfence that past ages. have
":iinieiled. II-
MiitleitY aiiitte
I -itiit:::iicivsE-Ftt.;:..„-';'::.
0-r=
eteastilk,tirw •
- . 4 11 3 1 A ck . o.;
• • ~•
• 'S."•
•
" • ' • , it' ..I, ) ^i 4‘ :=•• , »;•,.19it
tioi`Retall Business foOmerly mindtsetedtbe ikat t af, 1 14,4144040 Sit* •
• ;;:l • Bhighlkillttiii r ailli t le
• 1 . 4! ) •.•'SI )It '11•1it 4
••••
MIES
=Mill
_, ' 1' : = t. AC . 1 t •• , t .`
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~.,...,m -r 1 It • t I .1 'II
44 , Va r ie ty. -
.Special : cite o% it' galliid'io4lB . ` iliFli if ~.. ~ .
d' S o J.;
ills - , ; 7 ' ; ss . • -.
~.,
' ~.; ILt iesort EfrJivolt
...•.-, ~, . • . i .:,.':!!..- _. i 1
QOPPES, XIAR BILE- OTO P -TABLES' ' VATTRE I SSI{4I
AX D .' SPRLNG' ' 'REDS'
JO HAMBEI,
,• -:`
in great `
variety. Buyers will find this the place, to. purcbise, as gooun bought for CASBeattbesoldobemo '..l
cash , Please: remember the number. •
Bingheintpu, April 19, 1878. ••
16 Chenamg . o St ''BittglialittOp,
• t'a.
t.=`
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T--4
H. &
..so 3p. E L i ir G - r . :5 „::..,:., c ,„,„ c*4:20 , 1:5 - 0 ,:
Just` ;. , .._.....-.
• Jus Rece i ved. from N 7 k'oll *-
--,• ;.—•:' .. , ,,c5....,.•q 61 P ,or y.:13,1,1 -,,, ~17
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1 . 1.0' - -..-' A .•. 1 ' '''' . 4ke'n'el(l ll [NISI. FORNISIIIK DODS
..,.
• ~.- S. ~... . ~.. ..,, St il
9L - * 3 1 " Co Mt
WE MAKE . SPECIALTY, . % , .1
Which will 'be aoldas CHEAP, aa'any fai'pana honorable cotniietition4ill:viafraid
S 0 C.
uentl
bdttse
,
OrPlease call and Me ins, and decide' for yonrmlvea himud to ClOode and ...Prices. • •Wo• ali° h/Prititttan%l
. •
agency M RERAAELE PATTERNS. -
, • I• : • •• IL T,--PiCXERMAL - '
•-1 • t:.l/2i'd
.T . eiir Milicird, May fo; .iiirti--ti•
:GREAT' EXCITEMENP,►
WEEKS,
DRY
.
gates a....23.4 - cll,' Chririsso 33coicotis
at prlces lower than ever known before in gnininehan
na County. Not wepting prices before the war.
NO itittIIENENTS !
Everything New ;and Fresh at Popular
Wileest . I
,
3600 yards of best Printei in . market, sold duringthe past
two weeks, at ,6 p . Lee per yard, and still there is more
o follow.
Don't be deceived by others in tra de w o represen
our geode In inferior quality but come and examine
for yourselves. Prices greatly reduced but, quality
maintained.. , • Montrose, April 26,1876,
~II~r~rr~BE.
At W.-.W.,'Binitb,,kaicee.
flitensiverurnitureWo3room you villand Wagged
. stock of •
FIRST CLASS AND COMMON
To be found in,this section of the country, of Me ova niann facture, ad at prices that cannot tail to girt Half!
faction, They.make tho er-y beat
EXTENSION TABLES .
In the Conntqr, and IfARRANTthets.
1 - aio te• 3i! 3' • VP
Of all lenda done in the neataxt molter.
lla. I *CA' 13 1 3 1 : 10 111
OP VARIOUS KINDS. ' . •
PURE NO.I IiCATRASSES,
AND COMMON MATRASSES
. .
• 14 .
The subscriber will hereafter Mahe tEn, ~*odeneff' * ling •
ApeOudtp in . bis,b2sluesi. • ' Having
_Pitt completed
NEW and the , men ;avant ozassis: 1# the . fiteteeca.:
needing his' serviceis will be attended to Proinptlyafid
refftciors4lnrgol4.- , . Y;
; • '
s Wit W. SMITH I; SONV
Montrose.Pa.. Jan. 81,11k7S.—nob—tf.
t •
•••
igatePut .firee •
keg ,A
A 4
rt , l7 "Nfi
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HAY A Fira ASSORTMENT OF
1,! •
=arid 4 b a i mu i` .-=
we;h.
ave no' bad . deljts. to make 11-pi.for,ilirthe7il
extra
ercentar.. Our ex
Our ItfOtio CHEAP .CILEAP i•
- 1
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‘l4ew'
Store and New
MEL HUI SH
;GOODS,
v ; 0 ,•,,„,. •
,f 7, ;Z
lISMEI
1, .."1,14 - 1 ,11,'! - ..... 7i41:,i',_;:: . ,t
,•-,:,,);,,,.;.' 4-....,::1'1,:i.: -:'g
•}.> .~.
e- -", , •
,; tz.„s orjjirev,:t 4,1 llff,7P-,li
~~ :i:~r;pi ~
•
11 ' 1, 4
enses. - are lit; and.\'
-; 'l,l- ; AT THIiS
SILVER WAR.E.
WATCHES
Kept in Northern l'ennsylvania,
TABLE
POCKET. KNIVES; 14)CKETBOOKI3,
VIOLINS, STRl`iiol3, &c .
, WI.
Piactical Watchmaker, bOd Jeweler, enecessoitolenere
da Melatkiell. ,We have ;;large' Meek. itiatertat, Nov
parts; dro.,whilch enabler us to de work more perfect , ,
and promptly than ever. • • •
myTit,ciSE
OATS FOP, BALE „Tyr LOAD,,
at, till!:9TE d MIF !
•; - •
POSH GROW t GRAHAM VLO'Olt •
ibr stile at the STEAM. MILL
-
Any quantity of MEAL FEED , of the
beet quality, at 'the STEAM' MIS
„
FINE WHEAT 131.IDDLINGS at the
STEAM MILL.
, r
WHEAT BEAN for sale at the
STEAM:Mibri,"`.
WHEAT FLOUR; FRESH 'GEO .
at' the STEAM MILL."'
• 4. L
OLD , ' WESTERN CO PR' s sow ) nt
On account of the poor qUality of . new •
corn it is necessary, to ieetire 06a otitoofros''
for seed 200 , bvt; of the STEAM
1) ;
• t.l;'"`.,'. - 4 , 1 . t.,
r.O ;;i 1 ,13 - oitZ
Ito Vititigi yeti can think of; ym,mil t p4".,
rtit' the STEAK
igoutrose, April IS,
tiY s2d ; 'II ..
' • ' .
1-,u14,11 .
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IL ; ttit<ti%
,ii , 7i,..V6 t ...f r.•.! , .t . 4 4. - 1:;'.1 . .12. - YC:!;))1 if,'i
• - J
BEI=
, (t
INA I ONT4OSRI'! 4
• ••
~: .~:, ,~
Firm
The Largest Ste& of '
AND JEWELRY,
And at the Lowest Priem
Cy74ERy;
Watches', .lwelry, ica:;
• ' - •• `.'i
' .
STEAM M • otl
~' `
.0
I I p
i 4.1
Ii?,~A1~f
~ t /I-, n'r
, , ,°4
kg ••••,• • • • +II ' I
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y~adl~ i U~.
j S ~ ~ t ~
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