Imam XITI.;-NUMBER 35 THE POTTER JOURNAL - - PUBLISHED BY 1111: •MicAlarney, Proprietor. V. 50 PR YEAH, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. ***Devoted to the cause of Repnblicanisg, the interests of Agriculture, the adVancement of 'Education, and the best good of Potter bounty. Owning no guide except that of Prindiple, it will endeaver to aid in the work of more tally Freedomizing our Country. ' 'ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at the following Rates, except where special bargains are made. 1 .Square [lO lines] 1 insertion, -- - .50 I IL ,41 . 3 " -.-$1 50 Trachvisobsequent insertion less than 13, 25 1: Square three months, 2 50 I " six " 400 •." nine •" , 550 . " one year, 600 20 00 Column six months, u " IL 6..5 ," ' 10 00 U lg i ti T r t' 7 00 1 u rear. 40 00 u per year, 4- 14 4 20 00 ,Administrator's or Executor's Notice, 2oq ißusiness - Cards, 8 lines or less, per year 5 00 special and Editorial Notices er line, 10 * * *All transtilulverti meats must be paid in advance .anl\po n ice will be taken of advertisements fro ' istance, unless they arc accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference: * * *Blanks, and Job Work of all kinds, tended to promptly and faithfully. BUSINESS • CARDS. Free and Acceptid Ancient York Masons. EULALLA LODGE, No.-343, F. A, M. STATED Meetings on the 2nd.and 4th Wedne sdays of each month. Also Masonic gather ings on every Wednesday Evening, for work and practice, at C. H theirWA HaII RRDIER; in Coud W. M. ersport. . A. SIDNEY LYunv, Sec'y. JOHN S. MANN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in 'Potter and M'Kean Counties. ;All business entrusted in his care will reC'eive prompt attention. Once - corner of West and Third streets. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, : ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to his care, with prcaiptnes and Eie!ity. Office on Soth 7 west corner of 'Main .and Fourth streets. ISAAC BENSON. a.TTORISTY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with .care'aud promptness. Office on Second st., near the Allegheny Bridge. S. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport. Pa., is ill regularly attend Courts ill Potter and the adjoining atmties. O. IT. ELLISON, FRA.CTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., iespectfullrinforms the citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls for professional services. 'Office on Main st., in 'building formerly oc cupied by C.V. Ellis; Esq. C. S. & E. A. JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS Oils, Fancy Articles, Stationery, Dry Good: • .Groceries, kc., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. D. E. OLMSTED, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, READY:.ILADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, &c., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. COLLINS SMITH, 'DEALER in Dry Goods,Groceries, Provisions, Hardware', Queensware, Cutlery, and all Goods usually found in a country Store.— Voudersport, licf. 27, 061. COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F. GLASKIIRE, PrOptietor, Corner % Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter co., Pa. A Livery Stable is also kept in connect tion with this Hotel. - • EL J. OLMSTED, DEALER TN STOVE.% TM & SHEET IRON WARE, Main st., neJnrly.opposite the Court Rouse, CondersporWa. Tin and. Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on : short notice. vrn. U. 'invert J C M'ALARNEY. DUELLER & McALAIR.NEY, ATTORNEYSLAT - LAW, HARRISBURG , GENTS fOr the Collection of Chili es against the United States and State Gov ernments, such as Pension, Bounty, Arreao of Pay &c. Address Box 05, Harrisburg, Pa, . - , . linty • Agency. 105ENSIONS procured for soldiers of the JL - presett war who are disabled by reason of wounds received or disease contractracted while bathe service of the United States.; and pensions, bounty, and arrears of pay obtained , for widows or heirs of those who have cited 'of been killed while in service. All lette: rof inquiry promtly answered, and on receipt i)y snail of a statement of the case of claimant, I will - forward the necessary papers for their Fees in Pension cases as fixed by law—. ItisiEnExcz.g.-.-11on. Maio PESSON ' 'Hon. A. 'll'On:taiga, J. 8:11Lmi Esq.,F. W. KNOX, „ESQ. DAN SAER, " Claim, Agent Couderport Pa.; June 8, '64.,1y. . HOWARD ASSOCIATION; P.II,ILADELPHLA, PA. . . the ISEASES thNervous, Seminal, Urina- Dry and sexuallustems—new and reliable treatment,--in reports of, the 110 WARD AS SOCIA.TION—pent by, mail in sealed let et enveloims, - free .ot . .ehatge: Address, Dr. • L ESICIALIN HOUGHTPN,;HowarollAssociatim., NO. a South Nintli Street, Philidelphia; j 7131864. 4 .. „,. ...... AD O 9 • .. * / IP, / .. .. .: , : '• , ---- ft4: ' . P al t , NOTHING IS LOST. Nothing is lost, the drop of dew That trembles on the leaf or flower, Is but exhumed to fall anew In summer's thunder shower; Perchance to shine within the bow That fronts the sun at full of day—t Perchance to sparkle in the flow, Of fountains far away. Naught lost, for even the finestseed, By wild birds borne, on breezes blown, Finds something stated to its need, -- Wherein 'tis sown and grown; Perchance finds sustenance and soil In some remote abd desert place, Or 'mid the crowde(l homes of toil Sheds usefulnests and gra6e. The little drift. of common dust, • By the March winds diiturbed and tossed, Though scattered by the fitful gust, Is changed, but never lost; It yet may bear some sturdy stem ; Some proud oak battling with the blast, Or crown rich verduous diadem Some ruin of the past. The furnace quenched, the flame put out, Still cling to earth or soar in air, Transformed, diffused, and blown about, To bunt again elsewhere, Haply to make the beacon blaze That gleams athwart the briny waste, Or light the social lamp, whose rays Illnme the home of taste. The touching tones of minstrel art, The breathing of some mournful flute, Which we have heard with list'ning heart, Are not extinct when mute; The language of some household song; The perfume of,some cherished, flower, Though gone from outward sense, belong To memory's after-hour. So with our -worth, or harsh, or kind, Uttered : they are not all forgot, But leave some tr3ce upon the mind, Pass on, but perish not; As they are,spoken, so they fall . Upon the spirit spoken to; Scorch it like drops of burning gall Or soothe like honey dew. SO with our . deeds, for good or ill They have their power,scarce understood, Then let us use our better will To make them rife with good ; Like circles on a lake they go, Ring within ring, and never stay; Oh ! that our deeds were fashioned so That they might bless alway! Then, since these lesser things ne'er die; But work beyond our poor control„. Say, shall that suppliant for the sky— The greater human SUM ? Ah, no! it still will spurn the past, And search the future for its rest, Joyful! if it he found at last, Wong the redeemed and blest. ,FOR FATHER'S HONOR. "So much gone l I might have known how it would be said Mr. Sterling, looking up from ti'morning paper, with a most unpleasant expression on his face. "What has gone ?" asked his wife.. "My money is gone," answered Mr. Sterling, .fretfully. "What Money ?" "That money I was foolish enough to lend Mr. Granger."' "Why do you say that 7" "He's dead," replied Mr. Sterling, "Dead The wife's voice was full of surprise and pain. Sorrow overshadowed her face. "Yes, gnne, and my money with him. Here's a notice of his death. I was sure when I saw him go away that he'd never, come back eicept is his coffin. Why will doctors send their patients from home to die ?" "Poor Mrs. Granger I Poor little or phans !" sighed Mrs. Sterling. "What will they do ?" "As well without him as with biM," was the unfeeling answer of her husband, who was only thinking , of the three bun dred dollars be had been over persuaded to loan the sick clergyman, in order that he,might go South during the Winter. "He's been more of a burden than a sup port to them these two years." "Oh, Harvey I How can you speak so.?" remanstrated Mrs. Sterling. "A kinder man in his family was never seen. Poor Mrs. Granger! She will be heart broken:" "Kindness is cheap and easily dis pensed,' coldly replied. Mr. Sterling.— "He would have been of more use• to his. family if he had fed' and clothed them better._ I-reckon they' can do without him. If I had my three hundred dollars, I wouldn't—" • But he checked for shame—not for any better feeling—the 'almost brutal words his heart sent up to his tongue. ; Not many hundred yards away from Mr. Sterling's handsome residence stood a small, plain cottage, with a garden in front neatly laid out in box-boarded ' walks and filled with shrubbery. A hon ey-Suckle, twined with a. running rose bush, covered _the latticed portico, and looked in at the chamber windows giving beauty and sweetness. The hand of taste was Bien every Where — 7 -not lavish, but diScriminate taste. Two years before there was not a happier home than this in all the, pleasant town of - No* The - ahadcini of death was Upon it. Debotets of Ptio Qatooohocg, and .tli DisioNilmtioq /..itoiltqi-o aqd VOWS UDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, Poor Mrs. Granger I Poor little or phans ! 'Well might Mrs. Sterling p e tty them. While her mereenarY husband. was sighing over the loss ot• three hun: dred dollars, the young widow lay sense less with' her two little children weepeng over her in childish terror. The news of deith found her unprepared. ' Only a week before she bad received a letter from Mr. Granger, in which he talked hopefully of his recovery. "I am strong er," he.naid.s "I have gained Eve pounds in flesh since I left home." Three days after writing this letter there came a sud den change of temperature; he took cold, which was folloWed by congestion of the lungs ; and no medical skill was sufficient for the case. His.body was not sent home for interment. When the husband and father went away two or three months before, his loved ones looked upon his face for the last time in this'world. Love and honor make the heart strong, Mrs. Granger was a gentle, retiring wo man. She had leaned upon her husband very heavily; she Had citing to him as a vine. Those who knew her best felt most anxious about her. "She cannot stand Alone." But they were mistaken. As we have just said, love and honor make the heart strong. Only a week after Mr. Sterling read the news of the -young minister's death, he received a note from the widow. "ily husband," she said, "was enabled to go South in hopes of regaining his health, through your kindness. If he had lived, the money you loaned him, would have been faithfully returned, for he was' a man of honor. Dying, he left that honor in my keeping, v..nd. I will see that the debt is paid. But yoli willhave to be a little patient with me." !' "All very fine," muttered Mr. &Idly'', with a slightly curling lip. "I've heard of such things before. They sound well. People will say of Mrs. Granger, 'isliat_a noble woman ! what a fine sense of honor she has ! but 1 shall never see the three hundred dollars I was foolish enough to lend her husband." Very much to Mr. Sterling's surprise and not a little to his pleasure, he discov. ered about three months afterwards that he was mistaken in his estimate of Mrs. Gra,nger. The pale, sad, fragile little woman brought him the sum of twepty five dollars. He did not see the tears in her eyes as ,he displayed her husband's' note, with hid dear familiar writing, and made thereon,with considerable formality, an endorsement of the sum paid. She would have given many drops of her heart's blood to have been able to clutch that document from Mr. Sterling's bands. It seemed like a blot on the dear lost one's memory. "Katie Granger is the queerest little girl I ever knew," said - Flora Temple to her mother, on the evening of the very day the first payment was made. Mr. Sterling heard the remark, and letting his eyes drop from the newspaper he was reading, turned his ears to listen. "I ink her a very nice little girl," replied the mother. "So she is nice, re• turned the child, but then she is so queer." "What do you mean by queer ?" "Oh ; she isn't like the rest of the girls. She said the'oddest thing to-day. I al most laughed out; but I'm glad I .idn't. Three of us, Katie, Lillie Bonfield, and I, were walking round the square at recess' time, tvhen Uncle Hiram tame along, and taking out three bright ten cent pieces, he said, 'Here's a dime for each of you girls, to buy sugar plums.' Lillie and I scream• ed out, and started away for the candy shops in an instant; but Kate stood still with her share of the money in her hand. 'Come along 1' I crml. She dial% move, bvt looked strange and serious. 'Aren't you going to buy some candy with it ?' I asked. Then she shook her head gravely an put theldime in her pocket, saying (I don't think she meant me to hear the words)—'lt's for father's honor;' and leaving us, went back to the school-. room. What did she mean by that, mother ? Oh, she is so strange !" "Her mother is very poor you know," replied Mrs. Sterling, laying up Kittie's singular remark to be pondered ever. "She must be strange," said Flora, "for she's worn thatsame frock to school every day for 'moit three mouths." Mr. Sterling, who did not let a single word of this conversation escape him, was far from feeling as comfortable under the prospect of getting back the money he had loaned 111 r. Granger , as he had felt an hour before. He understood tkie meaning of Katie's remark, "It's for father's honor ;" the truth flashing at once through his mind. There was another period of three months, and then Mrs. Granger called again on Mr. Sterling, and gave him twenty-five dollars more. The.pale, thin face made. a stronger •impression on him. It troubled him to lift the money in her small fingers, in which , the blue ,veins shone 'through -the- transparent • skin,, as she counted it out. Eletiisbed *di skin,, had ant the money instead of calling. PA., WEDNESDAY, atIVENBER It was - on his lips to - remark, "De not trouble or pinch yourself to pay faster than is convenient,' Mrs. Granger," but cupidity whispered that 'she might take advantage of his considerate kindness, and so he kept Silent. "No, dear, it's • for father's honor; I cannot,spend the Money." Mr. Sterling'Was passing a fruit shop, where two children were lo oking in at the windovi, when this sentence struck upon his ears. - "An apple won't cost but a penny; Katie.; and I want one ho badly,' ans. were. tne younger of the two children, a little girl not five years of age. "Come away; Maggie," said the other, drawing her sister back from the window, "Don't look at them any more—don't think about them." "But ,I can't help thinking about them, sister Katie," pleaned the child: It was more than Mr. Sterling could stand. Every _want of his own children was supplied. He bought fruit by the barrel. And here was a little child pleading for an apple, which cost only a cent: bat the apple was denied, because the penny must be saved to make good the dead father's honor: Who held the I honor in pledge? Who took the sum total of these pennies, saved in the self. detiial of little ohlidten and added them to his already brimming coffers? A feeling of shame burnt the cheeks of Mr. Sterling. "Here, little ones I" he called, as the 'two children went slowly away from the fruit shop window. He was touched with the sober look on their sweet young faces as they turned at his invitation. "Come in, and I will get you some apples," he said." Katie held back, but Maggie drew her forward, eager to accept the offer, for she was longing for the fruit. "Come," repeated Mr. Sterling, speak ing very kindly. The children then followed him into the shop, and he filled their aprons with ap ples and oranges. Their thankful - eyes and happy faces were in his memory all day. This was his reward, and it was sweet. Three months more, and again Mr. Sterling,had. a visit from the pale.young widow. This - time she bad only twenty dollars. It was all she bad been able to save, she said; :but she made no excuse, and uttered no complaint. Mr. Sterling took the money and counted it over in a hesitating way. The touch thereof was pleasant to his fingers, for he loved mon ey. But the vision of sober child-faces was before his eyes, and the sound of pleading child-voices in his ears. Through over taxing toil, and the de nial of herself s and little ones, the poor widow had.gathered this small sum, and was now paying it, into his bands—to make good the honerable contract of her dead husband. He hesitated, ruffling in a half absent way the edges of the little pile of bills that lay under his fingers.— One thing was clear to him; he would never take anything more from the wid ow. The balance of the debt must be forniven. People would get to under stand the widow's case; they.would hear of her self-denial and that of her children in order to pay the husband's and father's debt, in order to keep pure his honor; and they would ask naturally, who was the. exacting ,creditor? This ", thought affected him unpleasantly. Slowly, as one in whose mind debate still went on, Mr. Sterling took from his desk a large pocket-book, _and 'selected from one of the compartments a note on which Mrs. Granger had now made three payments., For some moment's he held it loins hands, looking at the face there of. 'He saw written down in clear figures, the sum of e. 300. Seventy of this had been paid. It" he gave up or destroyed the slip of paper, he would lose two bun 'tired, and thirty dollars. It was some thing of a trial for one who loved money so well, to come squarely up to this issue. Something fell in between his eyes and the note of hand, He did not see the writing and figures of the obligation, bat a sad, pleading little face, and with the vision of this face came to his' ears the sentence : dear, it's for father's honor." , The debate in Mr. Sterling's mind, Was ober. Taking:up a pen he wrote aoross the ,face of Mr.' Granger's note the word "cancelled," and handed it to the widow. "What does this mean ?" she asked, looking bewildered. "It meane," said Mr. Sterling, othatl hold :no obligations against your bus .band;" . • Some. moments Went by: ere Mrs. Granger's thiMghts beam° clear enough to comprehend it all. Then she; replied as she reached back the note : "I thank you for yonr genercius kind. nese, hut he left his honor in myikeeping, and I must maintain it spotless!? gnat you have already done;! answer ed )11-r-.-4Sterling, speaking• through erro r tioii that were now W. hid a. C-"it is as white as snow." 30 1 1864 • Then ho thrust back upon her, the twenty dollars she bad just paid him. "No Mr. Sterling," the widow said. "It shall be as I will!" "Was the: re sponse. "I would rather touch fire than your money. Every dollar would burn upon my conscience like living coals." "But keep the last payment," urged the widow, "I shall feel better." "No-, Madame I Would you throw fire upon my =science ? Your husband's honor never had a stain. All men knew him to be pure and upright. When God took hirri, Ile-assumed his earthly debts, and did not leave upon you the heavy burden of their payment. But ho left upon you another and most sacred obliga tion which you have overlooked in part." "What asked the widow, in an al most startled voice. "To minister to the wants of your chil dren; whom you have pinched and de nied in their tender years—giving their meat to cancel an obligation which - death paid. And you have made) me a party in the wrong to them. Ah, Madam I" Mr. Sterling's voice softened, "if Nske could all see the right at the right time, and do right at the right time, bow much , of wrong and suffering might be saved I honor your true hearted self-devotion ; but I shall be no party to its continuance. As it is, I am, your - debtor in the sum of fifty dollars, and will repay it in my, own way and time." Under Providence, this circumstance. was the means of breaking the bard crust of selfishness and cupidity which had formed around his heart. Re was not only generous to the widow in after yeare, but a, doer of many deeds of kindness and humanity to which he had been in other times a stranger. Preservation at the Teeth. Use a little bit of alum twice or thrice a week, no bigger than half yonr nail, till it has all desolved in your mouth, and then spit it out. This has fortified my teeth so that they are as strollg as the pen of Junius. I learned it of Itfrs. Grosve- I nor, who had not a speck in her teeth till her death. Do not let your brushes bej too hard, as they are likely to irritate the gums and injure'the enamel. • Avoid too frequent use of tooth - powder, and be vary cautious what kind you buy, as many are ,prepared with destructive acids. Those who brush their teeth thoroufhiv% and carefully with tepid'water and a soft brush (cold water should never be used, for it chills end injures the nerves) have no occasion to use powders. Should any little incrustation •(tartar) . appear on 'the; side or at the back of the teeth, which j illness, and very often the constant eating pf sweetmeats fruits, and made dishes, , containing acids will cause, put a little! magnesia on your brush, and after two or three applications, it will remove it.— while treating on the 'care of the teeth, which is a subject of the highest import- I ance to those who have your , families and in fact every one who wishes to pre serve them, I beg to remind my readers that the the period generaly occupied% by sleep is calculated to be about (at least) six hours out of the twenty-foin, it would greatly promote the healthful mainten ance of the princeless pearls whose less or decay so greatly influents our appear ance and our comfort, if we were to estab lish a habit of carefully cleaning them with a soft brush' before going to bed.— The small particles of food clogging the gums impede circulation, generate tartar and carries, and affect the breath: Think of an amalgamation of cheese, flesh,sweet meats, fruit, -&c., in a state of decompo sition, rematoing wedged between our teeth six or seven hours -; yet how few ever take the trouble to attend to this most certain cause of toothache, discolora tion, and decay, entailing the miseries of scaling, plugging, extraction, and the crowning horror—false teeth.—Horace Walpole. • A Hackettstown correspondent (says the Belvidere Intelligences,) sends us "the following, which he thinks too good to be lost, and we think so too : "A young lawyer was on the stump, blowing his horn for Gen. McClellan. Getting on in his eloquence, he spread himself and said : "I would that on the Bth day of 'next November, I might have the wings ..of a bird, and I would fly to every city and every village, and to every town and to every hamlet, to every mansion and every hut, and proclaim' to every mane woman amt . , child, George 8. - McClellan is Pres ident of - tl3etie United - States. - At . this point a-youngster in the crowd sang ont : 'Dry up, you old fool,ryou'd de shot for a Slaitepoki before you flew a mile.' " 'ttnch - sensation is now caused in San ranciseo on account of the Chinese:tem ples there. This is the only christian city in the world-where dolatrons worship is openly carried on. • Ilesides a thousand barrels •of -apples the New yorkers forwarded to Grant's army 50;000 turkeys for Thanksgiving. TEREES.--$1.50 - PER ANN . . _ . AK IbaIUMMIINARY QASE ! .-14,101• dier in Sherman's army, with.throal,cut from ear to ear, was thought to be moktal. lv, wounded, bpi council of surgeons; but the one under whose immediate care he was' thought he was justified la tnaling an experiment for the good of otliers, at the same time having great ' _ tom : of saving the man. He first eornmenerct,hls task by cutting through 'where. the, two upper ribs meet the sternum, and . tbreagh this orifice, for forty days, he has beenled five gallons of milk per week s and some• times his apetite requires five per dap tie is fat and hearty, and the surgeon thinks, in two weeks, he , will ht ye him able, and the inside f his throat so near , ly healed, as to allow him to stvallovr:,by the natural passage. He first introduced a stomach pump, and thus fed his patiebt, and after a 'few hours would,. clear his stomach in theme° manner, thus produc ing artificial digestion, till it was no fone er necessary: A silver tube is now use7d to feed hiro.—Louisville Journal. Two thirds of the produep' of tht4il wells of America is shipped abroad. The American residents of Buenos Ayres have raised 56,000 in gold for the Sanita. ry Commission of the United States. If the storm of advershy whistles around you, whistle as bravely yourself; perhaps the two whistles may make some wela4y. The recent elections have placed nitro , thirds Union majority in the' next Con= Ares, beyond questions 140 Union t0:44 Democrats. • Capt.Wipslow of the IKersage landed in Boston Tuesday, and immediatily we n 1 to the - polls of his district and voted the Union ticket. A boy sixteen years of age, was senten ced by the magistrates of Tentlerdcm) England, a few days ago,,to six roptqlos imprisonment with hard labor, for steal= ink six walnuts. . Two of the trees in the mammoth grove in Californai ' each measuring thirty feet in diameter, have been named respective ly "John Bright" and "Richard Cobden," and tablets with their names plaCed upon them. New counterfeits have appeared on Agawiak Bank of Springfield,ll.iass., and our citizens should look out for died' they are new and very finely excel:it - co:1 7 -- none but the best judges lieinff ale to tell them. .„, The National Sailors' Fair at-Boston has proved a great success. .Lip-to-ti present the receips-amannt to $130,000, The Fair will remain open some days long- , er. Ephraim Blair, who died recently at Salt Lake City, leaves dine widowi. They have not ranch to mourn for, sitinetki4 , have lost each hut the ninth part of a husband. - A p-destrian in Maine has lreenitrying the feat cf walking four days and tights continually. He is now delirions.. - Want of rort and sleep did the businea for him. • Jef;f. Davis declares that "two-thirds'oi the confederate army are absentees" Are we to yield the defence of the Union to an authority two-thirds of whose supper; ters are abandoning it? Scientific explorations in South Ohio indicate that the coal oil regeion extends through that State into Sonthren Indiaua, forming a district of which Cincinnati is the geological center. A. Wife in San Francisco" lately plat n petition for a divorce in the Court on tie ground thatler husband was a "'confound: ed fool." The Court wo'd'ut admit the plea, because almost ev t ery married man would be liable to the same imputation: Did you everl - A drover in Cincinnati dropped a roll of money containing $4OO, in grcenbacks,a few days ago, which a cow in .his drove picked up and swallowed. The unitililo ,was killed the mas of bills taken from het stomach and cleaned, but only 5188 nut of the $4OO were recovered in a lit amp dition to use. The Harrisburg Te •aph states thltt in the guard house at Camp Curtain thet:e were fifty : two votes for McC!e lan and ten for Lincoln. The Telegraph adds that "the guard house is filled with boun ty-jumpers. A man in Vermont set a trap for bears that troribeled his sheefa, and gping'l.piia early one morning found a "Varwriit'' Caught. He rushed fqr his gni 'aeld - kalel a blaak sheep of his 16ill flock• The Major-Generalship in'tee t fegnl r. army made vacant by ,the resigriati4l tpn. McClellan, is filly filled bv-thi'aii pointment of .Gen. Sheridan: ilk CCM missiondates frona„.the battle of Cedir Creek. • The whole country will "rejoice., oot , onlyin thts merited- honor- , t Tn l the ensi, , nia oratuajCl-GetieraTiqwbiitts.. on no unworthy shoulders • Li NM El
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