The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, October 14, 1886, Image 1

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llo that will not reason is a bigot ; lio that cannot Is a fool ; ho that dare not is a slave.
EDITOR AM) l'KOPKIETOIt
VOL. XXIII
M1DDLEBURGH, SNYDER CO., PENN'A, OCTOBER 14, 1886.
NO 41
:rOETKY:
THE FUNERAL.
I Wa walklnff In Savnnnh, past a
Church decayed and dim,
When there slowly through the wl n
dow cam a plalntlre funeral hymn:
Aud a sympathy awsksnerf, and a
wonder quickly arew,
Till I found inysslf environed In a lit
lie1 negro pew.
Out at front a colored couple eat in
orrow, nearly wild;
On the altar waa the coffin, In the
cofQn was a child,
I could picture hlro when llvlnncur-
ly hair, protruding Up
And had seen perhaps a thousand in
my hurried southern trip.
But no baby ever rented in the sooth
ing arms of Death
That had fanned more flames of sor
v row with his little fluttering breoth;
And no funeral ever glistened with
more sympathy profound
Than was in the chain of tear drops
that enclasped those mourners
round.
Rose a sad and old colored preacher
at the little wooden desk
With a mauner grandly awkward,
with a countenance grotesque; .
With simplicity and shrnwdiit'ss on
his Ethiopian face;
With the Ignorance and wisdom of a
crushed, undying race.
And he said: "Xow don't bo weepin'
for dis pretty bit o' clay,
For.de little boy wha lived dere he
done gone an' run a ay;
He was doin' very finely, and ho 'pre
date your love.
Hut his ure 'null Father want him in
de large heuse up abovo.
Tow he didn't give you dt baby by
a hundred thoasuti' mile!
He just think you need home gun
shine, and lie lend it for a while;
Aix1 he let you keep an' love it till
your hearts was bigger grown,
An' deae silver tears you're sheddiu's
jut de interebt on de loan.
"HereVyer oder pretty chilrun don't
be uiakiu' it appear
Dat your love got sort o' 'nop'llzed by
dis little fellow hero; .
Don' pile up too much your sorrow on
der little mental sholves
HnV it Llml n cut. Vlll W- ' -H1. J "
M-- yes
. A-v're iio aocount deiv., j
lust yoi. 4in, jou poor.uuun mon-
,anahs, creepin' 'long o'er sorrow's
way,
What a bleifxed little pleulo dis yere
baby's got to-day;
Your good (rulers unci good modern
crowd de little follow round
In de angel tended gurdeu by de Hig
Plantation Ground.
"Au' dey ask hlitr 'Was your feet
sore?' an' take olT his little shoes,
An' dey wash him, and dey kins him,
an' dey say: lSo what's de
news!'
Au' de La wd done cut his tongue
loose; den de little fellow say:
Mil our folks down iu de valley tries
to keep de hebbonly way.'
"Aa1 his eyes dey brightly spsrkle at
de pretty things he view;
Den a tear oume, au' he whisper: 'But
I want my parents, too.'
Hut de angel ehief musician teaoh dat
boy a little song;
Says: 'If only dty be fait'ful dey will
oon be comln' 'long.
"An' he'll get an educatlu' dat will
proberly be worth
8eberal times as much as any you
oould buy for hitu on earth;
He'll be In de Lawd'sblg school-house
w Idout no contempt or fear;
3, While dere's no end tode bad tings
" might have happened to hitu here.
Ho my pooah dejected mounahs, let
1 1 your hearts wid Jesus rest.
In' don' go to crlterciHin' dat ar one
w'at knows de best I
lie have sent us many comforts He
hare right to take away
To do Lawd bo praise au' glory, now
and ever! Let us pray.
Will. CVtrJoit, in Jurpcr'i WuJcly.
AFTE2 MANY DAYS- '
When I wss a young follow I liv
ed on father's farm down there in
Connecticut You're aeen the placo.
The chared was near the tavern,
and behind tbe church was the par
eonago ; and r there lived Dominie
Whoeler aud his ? daughter Dolly.
Oo Saturdays, aftor I had my sup
per, I need to drees myself and tell
my mother that I moaut to call ou
Dominio Wheeler's folks. Mother
generally answered that I cooldu'l
de btttor, that tbe dominie's conver
sation was sure to be improving,
ud that Dolly was not bitytity,
liko somo gal she could mention.''
Father would add "And o pretty
little crittor, tW" Aud armed with
parcutul authority I would go to Iho
parsonage.
It was a good time to go, for Iho
eennou had to bttfiaisbed, ns a gou
tal thing on tint Avoning.aud Polly
nud I hud delightful' long tul'g iu
11 .
iuobo eulituiv
Sulltuiv mnmniilB an.I mm
evening I , proposed to Polly 'and!1"! 1 ttf 8ot if' . BotW lo di-
Hccepi, too . Tho dominio
Kav, uv Hi l)h u, (b'r nU(j
lei! .... i ' . . i
chosen a doagbterdn-lAW to tuil
them better, and all (bey asked was
tbat we sboold wait a tittle while.
"aUj danghter Is not 17 years
yet," said tbo"dotninie- "Yon most
not be in a harry to take ber from
me.
"Wait two yonrs and yon will be
tbroe-aod-twenty, and I'll give yon
tbe river farm and bnild yon a
house," said father.
Onr course of true love scorned
to be running very smooth indeed,
and I would have etnkod ray life and
soul, a pretty heavy; elake. on tny
oonstancy, but somehow,' I think
salan thonght jwe were too happy,
and laid a trap for me.
Dr. Robins' widow, a managing
woman with a big house, was in tbe
habit of taking snmmcr boarders,
and ovcry yiar a lot of oily strang
ers wandered about the placo from
June to September.
When Dolly and I had been en
gaged about a year and a half, the
widow tad thirty boarders in her
house, and Ike and Edwin and all
tbo mnlo help slept in the barn.
There wss one young lady there,
a Mies Sally Oroy, so pretty that
nvcry one who saw her was talking
about her. .ndl was introduced
to her. Sorao wemcn have a way of
innking a man act against his belter
judgment. Sho wns ono of them 1
did not mean to flirt with her, bnt
I did. I did not menu to meet her
iu shady lanes, nud tbo quiet wood
paths, but we met. SIjo knew (I
snppoce Ike Kotlas had told hot)
about my engactnent, and she tensed
mo about being afraid of my sweet
heart, "Such a good, piim l-'ltle thing,"
she would say. 'Is she dreadfully
shocked at me T Does nho think 1
Hiu fliit t".ss ubo prny for roe iu
meeting f"
I felt anr;ry, bnt yet I was piquod
into proving niv" fe 'o dr on J
Hied. At a little evening naitv. to
WM J ' "
which we were asked, I danced five
dances with her, aud wheu, at lBt
my ceuscienoo emote we, and I went
to look for Dolly, I found she bad
gone homo. 1
"bbo said her pa wanted hor,
1 Its ...
sain ous. uouiiis "but l tell jou
plaiuly, James Gardner, I don't be
hevo it ; aud for my part. I don't
fee what people ctin find to admiro
in mat impudent Now York (irl
If my 1 illy behaved like her, I'd
hnt her np on bread and water nn
til she reformed. "
I hurried away, but tbo pi'son
ago was shnt np when I got there
and I spent on hour walking pp am'
down beforo the boose, staring at
the dark windows
The time seemed very long nntil
II. - l w
ma nasi evening, sua i. went over
to tbo parsouago very early ; but
Didl'y was not thero.
"She's gone to speud the evening
somewhere, ' said the dominie, kind
ly. "I suppose she forgot to leave
word for yon to come for hor. She
Isn't very well, either; a cold, I snp
poso. I know 1 gouerally caught
cold at a party when I was young
and atteudod such entertainments
iuujj tuoii uocareiui. iisr poor
t I -l . Ml t - 1
mother diod of consumption."
My heart gavo a great leap.
I thought of Dolly ill, dying, even
dead, and I went out into the kitch
en to ask the solvent if Dolly left
any moBsnge for me.
"hue said she wouldn't be borne
to-night," answered Nora V "at least,
this evening, I mean, and bo did
not leave word where sho'was gone.'
Norn nndorstood, I saw, I felt
terribly injured, and I made np my
mind to revenge myself by spending
the evening with Sally Gray.
She was oi home, the servant girl
said, and I fonnd ber woitiog in (be
parlor for roe. We had it to onr
solves. Mrs. Ilobins never came in,
no (pny of the other boarders ; iu
deed, it was now growing late in tho
season, and they were almost all
gone away. If I never knew how to
A rt before, Sally Qray tangbt me
bow that night, and .when I took
eave of her I was imprudent enough
to toll hor I should like to kiss her.
"Do it, if yoa desire, ' said she.
And then 1 Yes, I kissed her i
and as I did it the door opened, and
o started apart, aud there stood
Dolly, She bad seen it all.
'1 It ft my b.)ouet here," she said
Mr. I.auo is going- home with,, too,
' " '"u" , a i
bho was cool and contemptnous.
he tied hor bonnet on at .ti glass
shoulders, and went ont. Next day
she broke our engagement and sent
me back my ring.
The neit week I left Lome and
went away to sea. Somo one bad
told me that Dolly was going to
marry Ike Ilobins.
Mother wrote to mo often and
never mentioned Dolly and I never
asked about ber. I lived with meo,
generally on tho 8?a, and had no
thought of liking or caring for any
woman. I always iuteoded to go
home and see the old folks, but they
died of a fever within tno days cf
each other, aud a btiaeger sent me
the news.
Lawyer Dredgers saw to tho es
tate, and did what I asked him to do
with the monoy. 1 did not need it
then, but it would keep mo from be
ing a beggar in my old nge.a and still
I nailed tho sea, until when forty
years old nn accident bappeoedto me
which came near being my death. It
did not kill mo nor nipple me, but
I wns no longer fit for a sailor's life,
and there was nothing left for mo
bnt to settle down on land and live
on my money; and so I went home at
last to talk to Lawyer Dredgers, And
get his ftthico.
I fell very sad as I walked throngh
the village. My parents werodead.no
ono remembered me; 1 had not a
friend in tho place.
Tho lawyer had dono his best lo
mnko my money profitable to me,
an! I was richer thau I dreamed
When all tbe business was over 1
took a moonlight stroll through tlio
street. It wns twenty years since the
night I kinsod Sally ray, Bnd lost
my love by it ; bnt nothing had n
lored in tho ontwnrd aspect of tin
place.
lVnple wee aiding on their porch
es an of yore; the snmo flowem
scemod to bloom in tho gardens;
the same lonngers to star j pbout
.(.! .9 .!? cJuf : the same vounu
men aud girls to hang upon tbo
gnrdon patos. It was odd to think
that the girls might be the dangh
ters of tboso I knew.-
Thero stood tho ohnrch; there tbe
parsonage. I walked toward it. Tbe
"1 .i . ...
wimiows m me silting room were
open I diow softly near and peep
ed in.
Tbo old clock licked in thecornor.
Tho edd rag carpet was tither the
same or another just liko it. There
was only one bine vaso on tho man
tel. 1 suppose tho other had boon
broken; but there wore tho profiles
of (irandpa and tSrandma Wheeler
over tho escritoire
There was Domino Wheelor, look
ing very mnoh older, sitting exactly
as used to sit beside the table, bis
red handkerchief over his kueos, a
enp of tea in his hands.
"Dolly," he said.
And from an inner room came a
woman, large, handsome and high
colored, who said :
"Well, father r
Gould it be my slim young Dolly f
Yes, it was. She was very fine
ookiug now and she looked so ma
tronly that 1 immediately concluded
that rhe was Mrs, lsaao It ubins.
8 1 ill 1 could not leave the wiudow
"It was my one glimpso of her,"
1 said to myself, "for years past aud
years to come."
"Well, futher!" she said.
And turned smiling toward him.
"l'vo been thinking it over.Dolly,"
be said, "1 think it would be best
for you to marry, 1 am eighty. 1
ennuot live long. You had better
marry Mr. Hraham. lie is very fond
of you. l ou like bim, 1 am sure
s it for my sake you say no ?"
bhe bent over him and put ber
hands on her shoulders.
"Father," she said, "1 am going lo
tell you tho truth, a thing a woman
seldom does i these matters. 1
should not bare to leave yoa ; so it
is not for yonr sake, much as 1 love
you. Hut 1 do not care for Mr.
lirsham. 1 have only cared for one
man in my life my first love, James
Gardner, 1 hid eeut him away from
mo, and he had done very wrong
but 1 think now tbat we both lovod
euch other. 1 know that, even now.
cannot forget him while 1 live.''
There wero tears in her oyes; she
brushed them away, lo another
moment 1 was at the door; she
opened it. 1 bold out both my
hands- Those were . Dolly's girlish
eyes tbat looked at me, and 1 caught
ber in my arms.
"I have come back to be forgiven,
Dolly," 1 said, and I saw that 1 fcid
Great Things to bo Scon in America.
A leading joornal strikes a troe
chord when it asks the qnestion :
"Is it in order to see walled towns
that they (the intending traveler)
wmld have gone to Europe t Where
will they come across one more to
their mind than in the Gibraltar of
America, where Quebec sits on her
rock overlooking ber mighty river
with a view that bas few rivals in
the world, with her ramparts and
citndel, her raodiroval streets and
dwellings, her cathedrali and con
vents, and strange schools nud fors
cign torgncs and immmortal histor
ies f Is it only ancient cities they
dofciiot Then there is St. Augustine
among its palmettoos beside the sen,
almost at tho extremity of tho con
tinent and almost as old as tho dis
covery of tbo continent. Is it semi
tropical beauty of landscape and
weather they wonld have f Not all
tho soft-vapored cities by the Medi
terranean will offer thorn more than
Savannah and the Sea Inlands.
"Is it foreign life they want
Where will anything more alien to
all our northern and enstorn experi
ence be seen or heard than iu tbe
lluo ltoyalo and tho Rue 'Dourbon,
at tho French market or at tho Span
ish Fort of New Oilcans, with its
mocking-birds and magnolias.whero,
as la'o as the middle of June, gar
dens full of jasmine and oleanders,
capo myrtles and palms, with moou
light Hint might be the northern sun
filtered t t rough domes of cryhtuln,
make oiiu doubt if it be plaiu. mit-ter-of
fact, progressive America?
Or whore will moro quaiotness and
d light be seen than, iu the Texas
town rf S.io Antonia, where the
rones lie on tho rod roofs of tho long
and low dwellings, whero the jalou
sies are latticed with tbe vioo of the
night-blooming eaten, where tbe
strong, sweet sonUenst gales, and
tho lanes are linod itb fig and
apricots, and one walk nuder ave
nues of statoly pecans, wb re forests,
draped in melancholy mo:, swaying
heavily, make tbe lundtuMpo all un
real j where grapevincH inrhtco the
thickets with stoma tho s eof forest
trees themsclvos , where tbo prients
go about with flock of li.tlo child
ren dinging to their uUrts, and
whero the ruins of tbo ol 1 minions
rival in sculptured wonder many
rnins of old Spain 1 Oris it abso
lute Jpain itself that our friends
wonld travel over T 1-"L tbcui erosf
the ltio Grond by rail, nud in Ohi-
hnahuo and Sooora aud the heart ot
Mexico they have reached roach thai
makes old Spain ; they have found
the old Spain of 400 years ago, aud
have gone I bore drysbod.
"Do our travelers want deserts
and thirt for their snmmer experi
ence f They will find deserts in Ar
izona rivaling all Afrioa, with colors
and mirages that even tbe Sabol
does not give. Do they pant for
mountain climbing T If the White
Mountains and the Alleghauies do
not offer difficulties enough, are
there not Mount St. Ivlias, with il
17,001) feet of altitude, Shasta aud
Wbitnoy, the terribly ohstiucted
heights of Sogris and of Snow Mano
l'oak, alHhe wild summits of tbo
Sierras, tho fearful beauty of the
lellowstone park, and tho wild gran
dour, too lovely to bo terrible, of tbe
Youomite? And do the Ihioube.tbe
Rhine, the Nile allure? Then shall
not the waters of the llndson, with
its picturesque reaches, of the Mis
sissippi, with its breadth of volume,
of the Columbia, with its gorges aod
oatarnots, wash out all memory of
lessor and less beautiful streams.
"Where, for more beauty, for tbe
dolight of the eye, cau all Europe
show as anything like a blosseming
prairie through which we tuay tide
all day and never come to tho end of
the blossoming And what hoary
antiquity to charm the thought back
to the sourae of races has Europe to
offer tbat shall outdo theaiioieutoess
of the rains of onr prehiitorio peo
ple ia the heart of the continent!
In fact, America is so full of historic
interest and picturesque loveliness
that it is woudeiful anybody should
wish to visit Europe at all before ex
hausting it aod if anything happens
to doter people from crossing tho
ocean and incites them to become
acquainted with their own territory,
tuey can Dot be the losers by it."
Vhusago Western World.
Catholic have invaded
a .
oiorrn tn i
I v'.'A erfd a oollent f 't
. CATT. 033'S IKICS
Captain Hoggs, a Virginian, who
held a Captain's license on the Mis
sissippi River before be was of age.
and who for fourteen years bad the
contract to sopply the military posts
in Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and
Arizona with fuel, tells the following
story t
"I was down in tbe Tie." reserva
tion in Colorado and had strolled
down to tbe shores rf a small lake,
whilo my mnlen and teamsters were
eating dinner, when I cime across n
pnrty of about a dozen ludians.
They wore armod with rifles, and
were shooting at a snug which stuck
out of tbe water about 200 yards
distnut Tbo stakes for which they
were shooting were ccmposed of a
quai tor of a dollar from each man, I
stood watching them for situo tune,
and then decided to enter tho com
petition. Kach mm bad threo shots
and tho man who hit tho snag the
most limes wou the pot Tho miss
es were told by the splashes in the
walor; tho hits by the absenco of
the splash.
After some parley with tho red
skins 1 got thorn to allow mn to en
ter the match, though they compoll
ed mo to deposit half n dollar, while
they put in but a quarter, I bad a
llenay reveater with mn tbat, fortu
nately for my purpose, was then un
loaded 1 was accoauted one of tho
host shots in that country, bnt know
that tho Indians wero by do means
slow. 1 slipped threo cartridges into
my liflo, and as 1 did so 1 broke tho
hall off, thus leaving a blunk cart
ridge. Of course no splash followed
any of my shots, and tho Indians
I thought, 1 hnd hit tho snag every timo
1 won that pot, but tho next time 1
intentionally lost by not breaking
tho balls off aud by taking indifferent
V'tii.-- -- n""i.. .
1 then broke all tho halls off nn
til I had won $18. Then tbe Indians
who began to look at me with sus
picion or nwe, refused to shoot any
moro 1 invited them up to tbo store,
and spent the money on knick knacks
which 1 divided among them. 1 then
took them baok to the lukoand show
ed them the trick. They wore much
surprised, but took it in good part.
'On returning that way a few days
after 1 found the 'time. Indiana on
tho hike shorn, -hooting a big match
game with u neighboring trbe, w hom
they whero rapidly bleaning out of
everything. I learned that they 'skin
nud' every Indian in thoconntry thnt
I hoy ciiuldget to shnot against I hem.
1 f-iii'i iii)(hiiii, hut mused on tbe
readinesh of tbo savage to adopt the
w bite man's trie!;.-' "
Gscd Kcsults ia Every Cax.
D. A. Bradford, wholesale paper
dealer of Chattanooga, Tonti , writes:
that ho be was seriously afllictcd
with a severe cold tbat settled on
bis lungs, bad tried many remedies
without benefit. Being induced to
try Dr. King'u New Discovery for
Consumption, did so and was entire
ly cured by use of a fow bottles.
Since which timo he has nsed it in
bia family for all Coughs and Colds
with best results. Thia U the ex-
ftnricnco of thousands whoso lives
iave been saved by this Wondorful
Discovery. Trial bottles freo at O.
M. Bhindel's Drug Storo.
Drinking wator soils from ten
fifteen cents per barrel at Surdonis
Texan.
Mrs. (ieneml Custer is now devot
ing hersolf to writing tho hit kI'Im
of bur ,'ullant hnshnnd.
In a oorvict camp ia Georgia then
oro fiO negro oouviots, of whom 35
sro proaohers,
A San Jose, Cl , wifo recontly
avs hor husband $500 on oondiliou
that he woold leave the Stato,
A pifteon owned in Dro klvn. N.
Y., inude (be flight from Montgom
ery, AU, 875 miles, in tea dtys,
bealiugall previous records."
Tho population of New York oily
douhlod itself every 17 years be
tween 1820 and 1880. and is now in
creasing at tho rule of 73,00!) nei
year.
In one yoar tho people of this
oonntry use aboot l.'jO.OOO 000 steel
pens. If placed in line , the pens
woold reach from New York to Liv
erpool.
They have a rog at CotUge City,
N. J.. mnda in IIia vnar f.OI a. II R
TSari SCO Ik la a nr. II. l.l
, .ww.j WIU ivnu, i
tr?M obtained from the MpsqoeM
IJT - I e-, v-M
"
fpr Infants
tracomiiiaoilltaanipulortoanr pruKTinliuo
kaowa to mo." IL A. Aacina, M. D..
ui bo. uuora bw, viwujrn, N. T.
D
H MARAND KOTnROCK
Fremont, Snyder county, Pa.
OM1ntitof lialMmoro !nlleirn of PhviMrUnl
nl Surniin. Wtnr din (rili.t.nnl nrlc
to lb imhlle. Sin k Knitllxli ami oeruint). I
AUrch.lT, 181. tl.
D"
K. W. TOOL.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Frecbmrg, I'd.
OfTtrl hi prnfoMlnnill 'Trcl to lb- (lUlilto
la curivi.r-ii t In lalh KiihIIkIi tml (li'iunn
o no oo Mln .treot.
J K. VAN BU3KIKK.
"UKOICAL MECHANICAL' DENT1S t
Sclinagrove, l'enn
D"
J. W. 8EII'
Krcamcr. Snyder County Pa.
Orrti-i rint-HH : To 9 A. M., fmrn VI tn 'i P. M
tn.l vrtersi'. M.
SI'EtKS ItOTH KNOMSH AN II O KRM AN'.
Mn; 1, !1il.
AUKSKKY.
HI
F.VC. W. WALTER. Sa1omno
fur C'li. IV 'Stewart t'o'n.. Ntimerr
NowarU. Ni.w York, will ba ploiml to farurn
rilom for llil iinpular Hun, (or unytlilnx In
tkn Nurfery lino. Clioloe i il Now Vnrlotlea
le.'aHr. I'oi-itlvrly 011H..II any wtlien In
i.rlra utiil quality. Kalinin.' tlnn yuaranteml.
lia will cull on nil .artlaa that a.Urvii liltu
at retina t r-ek, Sny.ler Uou Dty, l'a,
Jan. UI.'nS.
POSltiVE PROOFS.
Ill otliur no'vertitomt.MiU welinv nnii tliat it
7Mri n Hhumntimm C'Mt wiu (critit Jur
1 "muuttm. nti'i all tin uttttintnut svli- and
jirowiit boiuq l'siUli rroufi
CihiIiI ono astc nnvttifnir in on- tothopolntthan
tliis I'ruin Mil. fl. Lmancki., n Hmmiiifiit invr
cluviuof ltrtM.k!l(.'la, Ma, v. ho vnt' Yvb. 'Jtit'Ni:
Wlwn In FiirotM. two yoarn turn, I triiil hn! to
tmv tut rtN tft nf Dim v riii;tlv I sImi tnltl ful.
sli.il1 til H t It lot' IHO flt ftlMHWt UlT t-filf
lH-UlMTcf UK mHVil il. tl.
, rim
tilu UMiMltm Inr vi':ki utxl .w tit huiiili dn f tlol.
i, niysK'ii, Hiircrvwi wuii
l.irn, lint ii-v-r rot any Tiniif)it m.irf until I
ii Us t )). HtiifH tlii-ti, (nir two )vark) uowt J hro
lint wilt! -tttl t!u-t"VHt. t anow It t s) ifxsii tltltisf.
it hi uke lilt" wiMiiru. .Now 1 waul thv asrutw:
f r Uvo huU "
Heu iiM!htT Iroin m nrcr homo. M. J. IK
Win rK inn I'M'tuts' IhiIiii'm man ui HlsMnituri
I'ii. Him irraiKliallii-r, i ui (' J t'Ara ul.l, litut Ui n
a ri'fitMiir.'n r (nn:. KliLUluutUlu. .Nov. 'J, lr,
I It. Will IK nun 1 1 H
llnv H'imI y'MU'tMtvtilrtr Thppourtrr IsmrfnU
nf t'Ati'iit tin ml tu it In t. i tii tm in'- ixMii Iw lievii
a,Tik ri'in-ily hi' mm fit in tit tt ih triM l kri uitt.
fatUT 1 Hiii'h a Mil'-i-nr Omt hfttxiilil tfl;i.tly
fi.r a '-' ' f't'f, ti n t-iHSB iir yru-v f'r
i-utt. H ' will trv tt fni yv i , i- utisc In- ifnii'i Hunk
Jour h"M wn'ilil k'-i'i n WiuiK willioiit iiKjil."
l)r.f. 21, hi " My trruutUlht'r iti'IU'Iiit
tin1 ;iimi(ih KlMMmmtiMiii Cun- u in nt rlnw siin'rw,
lli' m nut r licvi! iimii ilny in!y, hut ait-yhft .'
If (! ilmilit rithrr nf lhi't tnh'UM'litt, v rito
th (.a Kiev tln-r'il Iml y nmurr any iu'iiry.
(nr st-uu i h'h ti it jM-rintt I'irtlicr iv?tiintiiy.
t Imvu iluii(y of it. h"VM Vcr. U nmkiHitiitL'
a httU hunk. Wo tvcixl It Jttr (it all who uk.
A yrt it la it to fnu;i1 at th Hnn. fmt run
tinl) Im liuil hy i iirltMiliii: tlin i1it, and itUtribl!V
tint Alii rli-au I'Mcru-tun.
PFAI-LZEF? DROS. & CO.
Rl!).i'l .tiitrUi l Strrcl, l'lit!n1nlilia.
Prlco SS.OO.i
IIM K ltt IMK Till: 1!IMM.
I RURDGCK BLOOD RITTERS,
WlfAT IO ITJ
A strictly vegetans prepa-
and skillful combination of
Nature s best remedies. The
discoverer does not claim it a
cure for all the Ills, but boldly
warrants It cures every form
of disease arising: from a tor
pid liver, impure blood, dis
ordered kidneys, and where
there is a broke down condi
tion of tho System, requiring a
prompt and permanent tonic,
it never falls to restore the
sufferer. Such Is BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS. Sold bv all
drug-gists, who are authorized
by the manufacturers to re
fund the price to any pur
chaser who is not benefited by
their use.
raica, l.oo.
FOSTER, MLLOT & CO., Props.,
BUFFALO, NEW YORK.
wi near susainiR'
SEWINQMAOHI!lB
HAS HO EQUAL.
PlFECrSATISfACTIOM
totoSssEZlMiiioCa.
-ORAMQC, MA80.-
30 1 Union SvssjkV.Y. ChlctfH Cl.Uh.IV
Ai!i.rv rirjkjTrt. j.r-..j.lf.i..
F
mm
and Children.
I Pmlr Ktnmob, lirrta, KructeHua,
I KiU Worm. 'y ivrVi 1 wntM
Wuboul usurious mUtcsHa.
"tea Cbmcicb Couri.iv, tHS fuiton Btn-rt, II. T.
SZ2SS33EZ3SKS
I
Alfomcifs-At-Law.
J M. STKIJSE,
AITORNEY-AT-LAW,!! -
Miihlli hurtili, iVwita.,
tinnrt lil. profmloml frloe to lkiil.i
)uii.iili-.iloti In KnxIKh or iivrnu. ( ull
rmitr Mtt-n.leU m. Oltlc low diMi mi
ol lli I'l'M ottlc.
A MKS (J. CHOUSE,
ATTOIlNEY-AT-LAir, J
MIIlLKHL"JXr3B, 1'A
All kitiili.cn tnlrmteil to, bli cur fllr
o. Ivo .roai't tutuiloD. l oDiltila Ib r
nun nil Kunii.h.
JACOB OILUKRT,
Attorney nml Conitlar at um
MiniM.i-.nriKiii, pa,
DollectlotiK tad nil ntl.fr kbln.nu4ni
V tionlcl to.
Coi.nilUll. B Ib luglnh til
!!.
y.M. i:. HOrsWEItTH,
ATTORNEY-AT LAW,
Nkmashuovr, Pa .
Jiollertlnm and all other Irani boiln.t. mohpI
ly attanilail to. Donrultatlom In Laallrk biki
Uermaa.
Jans l,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW.,
All l.u.ln-i anlriikt".! t.i I.I. car Will I c
ITninplly uttguili'il 1).
Mt. 3i),'u.
JJ 0. DKlTIlfciI,"
'.IT I OR N RT-tr.1,4 W.
QC U m MirkrtSt., AWfnsi.
All proBsaalnnal latinan proraatlv atwirf..f
to. UdtoittltatloDl la to.ll.h .S5;,!,...-N
lak.(l.'r.
E. BOWKK,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
AND DISTRICT ATTOR! BY,
Muhttelttrg, t'tt.
ColtefitloBf tnadt.
and Ocruian.
t'nniallatU. la Vrvir
Jaa S,'7a.tf.
QIIAS Jf tiLRICHj
Attorney 4 OonngeIIer-ii.t
omealn A.p'a HailJln ona deal Ifarrh lo
KotlnsKrove, Peaa'a,
Hollsntlona and BlIjotbTrprolian Mai
Beat la aollellad Bad will rao.l.aa ratal l0J
prnint Bttanlloo. ABr.ll.'Il!"
TV J. 8MITI1;
ATTORlflT ATLAmT.
Mil) DLKRUKO, SKTCDR OO., A
Offarrhla Prnr.,onBl Marvlaaa la Ika i
Uoaiultatlona la liuall.k ad OatBias.
A. V. TOTTER,
AnoiLXhY AT I, Alt,
SolinsgroTo, Pv,
orr. rtlialr prnfe.rloiiBlaervlcaa la Ika aWI
Allloiialoualiieraenlruatad le tkalratra il
ui vV'-Ta?'1' ,t"tl ' loB' um,,ou
; M "IMM,
; tt rrny-nt-t,atr.
j;-iM,i)urgh, V.
ronmiltatlun Iu (V'"'
n(liia aadtrwaajaa
Oal., lia
JOHN If. AKNOLv.
AttHll-v lit aT-'r,r
" MIl.ni.Burdr'l'
I fi ei..i,l n, ,Dlr., UJ k r. ;
T'ompiii Bttraaa l to.
CAMUKL II. ORWIO,
A TTORXEY-A T LA 7T,V
lwlBbiirv, I'bUs csi.. rtj;
irr ZV Btr"1'
Han.-.'o, "sTT.tf.J
Jiint k. iirniirss,
JUSTICE CF THE PEAC
Kuutj. A.viir (VH Sf,
SWi!ol.cth,i,a t.ronii tly uad,
Physiciant, tfe.
JOHN V. FISIIER, U. Dl
Wrdcllwlmrt'li. PvauV
i nraii.au of ti. U.,vari,r of raaafilm.
nlu. mlor. hla rrol.Ml.al aarvioca a ih. .iSt
I.mhII.Ii ami (tlorui.i. ttm. i- i i Vff"
OHUf la Mi. o. i iftag
ni'l'UUI.., u Willi.
J J J. SMITH, "
Physician &Sur9ee:"MJra,
iter Springs, Snyder CtWry,
1 1 Hun an prolaiiloDal Mrvlaaa la ika
Offlea on MalBatraal.XMa Joaaistf '
J W. SAMrSKU
I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
CwntrevilU, hebnW.
()(TM hla f rofttalel (arrtraa .la ika alutaaa
fOaotrarllla BnU Tlolaltj. Ai 2;
I.
GRIEtt BARBER,
PHYSICIAN & SURCtON,
MlddUhsrjfh, PetiSja
0.,i,.,.!,,Tf,'', ssrvltas Ik Ika tlrV ,
OlMld.lUburHBBllTlolult. mtVb"-V, ,