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TWO DOLL Alts PElt ANNUM. } GOD J^JSTT) OWR COUNTRY. _ ?_?_$ _ VOLUME 11. SATURDAY MORNINGf JULY 21, 1877. NUMBER22 DeTreville & He1 ward ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Oranecbiire C. ir? 8. C. JPS5"' Will practice in the various Courts of the State W. J. DeTreville, Jimies S- Ileywnrd juno 23 tf. Knowlton & Wannamaker, " ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, OruiigcburgC II., S. <J. Aug. B. Knowlton, F. M. Wannaninkur, Orange-bur-; C. IT. St. Matthews, may 5 1S77 tf ABlAIi IvATBI ATTORNEY AT LAW, O revnt>u v jr, S- O. flta?" Ollicc in rear of Masonic Hall. March 3 lv HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS. /ill oaro or prevent Disease. Tfo ITorsk will dlo of Colto. Potts or Luna Fn Tzn, if Foutz'b Powders oro used lit time, k Foutz'sPowdcrs will care nnd prevent lloo Cnor.Ei?A. 0 Foutz'b Powders wUl prevent Uaiuiu lit Fowl, es pecially Turkeys. Foutz'b l'owdcro will IncrcnFC tho rmnntlty of milk tul cream twenty per ccuu, und make tho butter firm pdsweot. Foutz'b Powders will euro or prevent almost BYBiry Dipkahk tlint HorscB und Cattle uro liclr to. FOtTTZ'B POWDEBBWULOIYE & A.T 1BF ACTION. Sold ovcrywlicro. SAVED E.FOTJTZ. Proprietor/ UAI/HMUEK, Md.* Sohl by Dr. A. C DU K103. mav 10 1S77 NO MISTAKE! TAKE TJie Great Cure (or Dyspepsia and I.i.er Disease. TAKE FIEP ATME Hie Grunt Cure for Indigestion and Liver Disease. TAKE HEPATINE The Great Cure for Constipation and Liver Disease. TAKE HEPATINE The Great Cure for Siek Headache it Liver Disease. TAKE The Great Remedy for all Diseases of the Liver. TAKE The Great Cure for Chills, Fevers and Liver Disease. TAKE HEPATINE The Great Cure for Pilious Attacksand Liver Disease. TAKE HEPATINE For Sour Stomach, Headache and Liver Disease. TAKE HEPATINE For Female Weakness, General Debility and Liver DYSPEPSIA? A state of the Stomach in which its functions arc disturbed, often without the presence of other diseases, attended with loss of appetite, nausea, heartburn, sour stomach, rising of food after eating, sense of fullness or weight in the stomach, acrid or fetid eructations, a fluttering or sinking at the pit of the stomach, palpitations, illusion of the senses, morbid feelings and uneasiness of vari ous kinds, and which is permanently cured if you take IE! IE PATIITE Constipation or Costivene&s ? A state of the bowels in which the evacuations do not take place as designed by nature and arc inordinately hard and ?expelled with difficulty, caused by a low state of the system, which diminishes the action of the muscular coat of the stomach. This disease is easily cured if you will take ZE3I IE -FJLTDX ISTIE INDIGESTION A condition of the Stomach pro dttced by inactivity of the Liver, when the food is not properly digested, and in which condi tion the sufferer is liable to become the victim of nearly every disease that human flesh is heir to? chill*, fevers and general prostration. It is positively cured if you take ZE3I IE PATI ILSriE Sick & Nervous HEADACHE? ? B? It was at one time supposed that the seal of the brain was in the stomach. Certain it is a wonderful sympathy exists between the two. and what effects one lias an imme diate effect on the other. So it is that a disordered stomach invariably is followed by a sympathetic ac tion of the brain, and headaches all arise from this cause. Headaches arc easily cured if you will take ZE3I IE PATI ZLSTIE Sour Stomach? Heartburn ? 1 The former is the primary cause of the latter. A sour stomach creates the heat and burning sensation. The con tents of the stomach ferment and turn sour. Sick stomach, followed by griping, colic and diurrhoia, often occur. When the skin is yellow, TAKE When the tongue is coated, TAKE DEATH TO DISEASE! For bitter, bad taste in the mouth, TAHE ?tJ-A tcaspoonful in a wineglass full of water, as directed on bottle, nnd you never will be sick. This Is saying a great deal, but wc 1SAKE NO MISTAKE! TAKE HEPATINE <> FIFTY DOSES IN EACH BOTTLE. * FOR S?LE PY A. C. Dl'KKS, Drnggisl. may 10 1S77 Jy Chamberlain on Hayes. Washington, July 5.?The follow ing phrases are from Chamberlain's speech : A Presidential policy, if the term is descriptive, is an anomaly and offense; it savors of bad faith; it has a native and historical order of treachery and intrigue. But fellow citizens, what is the President's South ern policy ? In point of physical or external fact, it consists in withdraw ing the military forces of the United States from the points in South Caro lina and Louisiana where they had been stationed for the protection and support of the "lawful governments of those States. In point of immediate, foreseen and intended consequence, it consists in the overthrow and de struction of those Stale governments and the substitution in their stead of certain other organizations called State governments. Iii point of actual I present results, it consists in the abandonment of Southern Republi cans, and especially the colored race, to the control and ride not only of tliO Democratic parly, but of that class at the South which regarded j slavery as a divine institution, which waged four years oi destructive war for its perpetuation, which steadily opposed citizenship and suffrage for tho negro?in a word, a class whose traditions, principles and history are opposed to every step and feature of what Republicans call our national progress since 1806 In point of gen .crai political and moral insignifi cance, it consists in the proclamation to the country ami the world that, the will of the majority of tho voters of a S ate lawfully ami regularly express ed is no longer the ruling power in our Slates, and that the constitution al guarantee to every Stato in this Ui iou of a republican form of govern ment and of protection against domes tic violence is henceforth inell'eetual and worthless. 1 could frame an ex cuse for James Buchanan. He was the decaying fruit of half a century nf Northern subservience to Southern dictation?the poor dregs of a worn out politician, whose life had been spent in cowering submission to the will of those whom he was now called to confront; but what shall be sffid of this President, educated by the events of the last seventeen years, the long and perilous struggle to save the ua lion to freedom and justice, the re presentative of a party whoso life and inspiration in every hour of its ex istence has been political justice and freedom for all American citizens, a President who had literally climbed to his high seat over the dead bodies of hundreds of loyal men in Louisi ana who had met death in forms far more trying than any battle field in order that the liberty of which they 1 ad tasted might he kept for their children? James Buchanan could say ho negotiated with those who were in arms against tho United States in order that he might by peaceful agencies preserve the integ rity of the Union and avert a fratri cidal war. This President enters up on his negotiations with those who are in arms against tho lawful govern - mcnt of Louisiana, in order that he might the more surely betray the friends who had trusted him and the cause he was sworn to uphold. "N" ow, fellow-citizens, I exercise the right of an American citizen?no more?when I say that a review of this chapter of our history leaves mo in no doubt that tho real purpose of the Louisi ana commission and of tho whole conduct of the Louisiana case by the President was to accomplish tho over throw- of Governor Packard and his authority. Called upon under tho constitution and laws of the country, as ils Chief Executive, to discharge a gravo public duty?a duty essential to the maintenance of tho life of a great State, a duty equally essential to tho maintenance of human rights and tho principles of the pnlitiea*! party which had olectod him?tho President not only declines the duty, but he stabs the State that sought his aid, and betrays tho principles and I men whom he was bound to uphold j und protect. - ..I IT-- ? * ? A Gambler's Sermou. lli.s clothes were good, of the latest pate in und most fashionable cut." His watch chain was the heaviest of the heavy, and as fine as the gold of ?phir. Jt surpassed in richness the gold chain that the King hung about tho neck of the young prophet Dau icl. His boots wore highly polished, und shono like the exterior of fine black walnut coffins. His diamond pin twinkled like the evening star in a .summer sky. His shirt bosom was as while us an infant's soul, but Iiis eyes were sad and his voice was as sorrowful und sorrowing us the wail ing of the winds in the drooping brunches of the weeping willow. He tupped his boot with his nutty ivory headed cane, slipped down in his chair, to give the base of his spinal column a rest, pulled his hat over his eyes, and languidly said?which pain fully indicated tout the gambler had struck a loser, had coppered in tho wrong place : "Faro is a fascinating game ! In nil the games for gamb ling it has no equal. A man's a fool to play it, but it cutches the oldest of 'cm. The chancss, on the closest calculations arc three to one on each play at the outset against the player; occasionally wc striked winner, but we only win to lose. The most pros perous of us die in the gutter?un known, forgotten and deserted. Luck only smiles on us for a brief season, and when fickle fortune deserts us, ?she never roosts above our doors again ! Few of us are wise enough to save in luck, in order to live in a rainy day. But while wc live, wc live, und after all, that is all there is of life! The hereafter" is" a ch?iTce;* und die old man tuts put up the cards so well that nobody has ever called the turn. It's a 'cat hop' at the best. We arc not utterly heartless. It makes my heart ache to see how many young men arc drawn into the vortex and down to ruin. They be gin on a game of base-ball. They lose on a horse race, get caught at a fiiendly game of draw; and in an evil hour try to get UvQU on faro. They often win on the first venture, but it is a terrible success. They always pay 1,000 per cent, on the first win ning and often they play life and blood on the investment. The first winning opens the fascinating road to hell; builds up a barrier behind them which few ever climb to refor mation. A little sentimental, ain't 1 ? Have something ? You don't drink? Good. Barkeeper, give me a whiskey punch light! I'm blue to day. Gambling and its attending excitements burn all the stamina out of a man, but, thank God! it can not, does not, blot out his sympathies. I wish I had never touched a card, but I am a born gambler. It's in me; it always wns; and I'm in for it until the deal is out. I hate to see young men of promise at a gaming table. They have mothers and sister? who love them; they have good situations and employers who trust them; but tho day they set foot inside a gambling room their fate is sealed. I have a case in mind now. A fine fellow, who a short time since was agent for a New York varnish house and com manded a salary of $5,000 a year, in traveling got lonely. He gambled for amusement when his business was over. Ho fooled with the tiger, put his hands through tho bars, petted the beast, and suddenly found himself torn to pieces. To-day he is an out cast?drunken, broken, deserted. I would adviso every young man who has a business never to cross the threshold of a gambling-house. I have made big winnings and I have mado big losings. I lost $6,000 in Chicago trying to make ton. I wns broke and down and stayed down for a long while. I'm up again. If I had a business you would novor catch me gambling again. Guess I'll go and buy a couple of stacks of icds and sco how luck runs to-day. Good afternoon."? Cincinnati Enquirer. Recipes. Boof Ilnsh?TJso stale bread soak ed ijj milk or water; season with but ter, popper aud aalt and a little onion chopped fine. Muko into cakes and fry ? light brown. Brief Tea?-Cut up nine lean beef in small pieces, put in a small sauce pan or pjiil with tight fitting cover. Set this- into a pan of boiling.wr.tor and jit till the juice of the meat is all 2teil; then season to the taste. isse3?Beat three fresh eggs to a ti(I) froth and stir in five spoonfuls llv.Mt, powdered sugar; flavor with lernen. 13utter a pan and lay in white paper; drop the mixture on it in cakes of p teaspoonful each. Sift sugar over, and bake in a slow oven for half hour. ^luffins?Beat two eggs with one half cup of sugar, one generous table spoonful of butter and a little salt; add one and a half cups of sweot milk, anjr: three cups of flour in which 13 5-ifled three tablespoonfuls of good baking powder. Beat well and bake in>b\\ittercd muffin tins. potato Cakes?Boil some white po tatoes, mash them very fine, adding salt, butter and milk as if used as a vegetable; then mold them in suffi cient sifted flour to make them into a son dough; roll them out on the. paste board about an inch thick; cut in small square cakes and fry on a gftddlo with equal parts of lard and butter; cook slowly turning but once. They are uico for breakfast, or an ordinary lunch. |? piece of alum the size of a wnl nuc, finely pulvorizod and stirred in a barrel of water, will make it pure. A; piece the tize of a hazel nut will pujrify a large pai'ful of water, whon 'tfWixsjdr.iwfe>,.itJ.-..aiid allowed a short time to settle. This is effected by all impurities combining with the alum, ] and settling with it to the bottom; and I with this very small quantity the water will not only be purified, but will have n more pleasant taste. Tomato Catsup?Boil one bushel of tomatoes until soft; squeeze them through a sieve; add halt' a gal lon of vinegar, one pint of salt, two ounces ol'cloves, quarter ounce of all spice, two ounces of cayenne pepper, three tnblospooufuls black pepper mix these together, and boil not less than three hours; pour in ajar or keg till cool, then bottle; it will keep well; the clove.? ami allspice put in whole; when boiled strain through a colau der. John Bryant, a prisoner for three year s and a half at the Richmond penitentiary, has made with a shoe knife an English castle of feudal times, with towers, battlements, gate way, &c., of 3(15,000 pieces of wood, each about two inches long and of the width and thickness of a small knife blade. The wood is from twenty-five different kinds of trees, and to fash ion each splinter or ''jaek" it had to he handled eight times. No nail, screw, wedge, glue or other things of the kind are used in holding the ma terial together. A QiuiiKici, Between Tilton and ^loui/roN.?The Tribune says it is reported that Thcodoro Til ton and Francis D. Moulton have had a quar rel, buttlioir friends uro uncoinmuni caiivc on the subject. Moulton is reported to have anathematized him self forever having turned his back upon so good a friend as Beechcr for such a scoundrel as Tiltou. Nothing tangible concerning the falling out is obtainable. Tiltou sails for Europe, taking with him his two daughters, who will remain abroad a year or two. A Louisville woman was promised ten dollars by nsinglo woman of her acquaintance, if she would induce a certain young man tolnarry her. She praised the young lady so much in his presence that ho sought her hand in marriage, and a wedding followed. The woman sued for her pay, but tho court would uot allow it. So much for Kentucky justice American Riflemen for Russia. Beudan's Sharpshooters Recrui ted for tiie Muscovite Forces ?A Number op them Now on Danube. Although it has bceu generally sus pected for 8omo weeks past that American soldier were entering the Russian service, nothing definite was learned until Saturday last, when it becarao known that a number (prob ably twenty) of Berdan's corps of sharpshooters sailed for Russia four weeks ago to take part in the Europe can struggle. The Berda. sharp shooters were formed in June, 1861, of the best riflemen in the United States, and furnished with heavy French muzzle loading rifles with telescope sight attached. As an in stance of the ability of the men, Joe Ketch, the Texau rifleman, tho lead-, er of tho party which sailed for Russia, made fifteen consecutive bull's eye3 at 800 yards. Colonel Berdan is now in the Russian servico, and the negotiation were carried on at first between him and Ketch. When the Russian fleet came hero Ketch, with several others, saw tho Grand Duke, both on board the fleet aud at their hotel. The arrangements were satisfacto rily made and the men left by the Cuuard line aud are now on the Danube. Ketch wanted Detective Hagau, of the first precinct, who was one of the best of the Berdan sharp shooters, to accompany him, but Hag au declined, stating that he could not afford to throw up his position. The following sharpshooters, among others, went with Ketch : Ilenrj Reddy, of New Y -vk city; William Weeds, Bos ton; Jack Sodinc, Racine,. Wis.; llowell Robinson, Pittsburg, Pa.; Manny Wilson, Lowell, Mass.; J. Carter Robinson, Montreal Canada; Wi'liam Dwycr, Boston, and John and Willi.im Taylor, of Buffalo, N, Y. William Taylor was captured by the rebels and narrowly escaped be ing shot in Richmond duri ng the war. All the men have taken their old rifles with them. 'May it please the Court," said a Yankee lawyer before a Dutch judge in New York State, *'this is a case of the greatest importance; while the American eagle, whoie-sleepless eye watches the welfare of this mighty republic, and whose wings extend from the Allcghauies to the Rocky chain of the West, rejoicing in lib pride of place?" "Shtop dare! shtop, I I say ! Vot has dis suit to do mit eagles '! It hos uotting to do mit de wild bird; it ish von sheep." "That is true, your Honor; but my client has rights?" "Your glient has no right to dc b?gle." "Of course not; but the laws of lan guage?" "Vot care I forde laws of langu age, eh '{ I understand de laws of de State, and dat ish enough for me. Talk to de case."j "Well, then, my client, the defen 1 ant, is charged with stealing a sheep, and?" "Dat vill do! Your glient is charg ed mit stealinga sheep. Dat is shust nine shillins. De court vill adjourn." "Come, doctor, it's near midnight; I think we'd bette/ bo going- It's time honest folks were at home." "Well, yes, I must bo going, but there's no need of your hurrying," was the rcspqnsc. "No," said a butcher, "I shan't go to the concert, although I have a free ticket, because if I should go I should see so many pcoplo there who owo me for meat it would spoil all my fun.'' 'There is n man in Colorado who signs himself "T. Pot." It is said that tho least thing makes him boil over. "I feel that I have outlived my use fulness," was what the mosquito said when the frost nippod him. His Idea of "Nigger Luck"? They wero discussing the hardships of freedom, when ouo? young negro said : "Now, gen'lmcn," yer kin. talk jess as yer please, hut dis nigger's got er solid place, an' he's gwine"to stick dar?frceor bond." "Ef 3'ou's solid, carry out dat plat form, kase you'so iu free higher luck^ said old Si. "I is; kase my boss don't 'low no foolin' when dar's work'ter do, but when dat's done he's done. When his clo's 'gin ter git frazzild 'bout do edges an' slick 'roun' do elbows air j do knee3, I'so sartin to fall air todoni soon?an' I eats vittles right offen do white fokes' table." "You'se walkin'on broadcloff kar-r pit, nigger, an' don't yer let yer foot slip now. kaso I sc talkin' when I pcs dat white fokes like dat mo3' all 'em died in do wah Dat's de trufe, if it ain't writ in no book,'' said Si. "Oh' I so ankcrcd dar, you kin bet ter bclccbe!'' "Right! Kaso, lemnie tell yer, when er nigger axes favors fum fokes now, do Democrats tiuks dat gibhitor! yer rncanj s'portin' de Radikil x>arty, au' der Radikil dat yer ortcrlih com j futablo on do intrust ob your frca dom, an' twixt de two de nigger gin-' I orally falls whar do sand aro moughty thiii, do rocks moughty hard, an'do apples clene outon reach.'1' Ten Hulk's for Farmers.?Tuko good papors and read them. Keep the accouut of farm opera tions. Do nof leave implements scattered over the farm exposed to snow, raiii nud heat. . Repair tools'and buildings at a pro per time, and do uot sufler a subse quent thro fold expeudituro of timo. _ rtnd money.- - Use t your money judiciously, and do not attend auction sales to pur chase all kinds of trumpery because it is cheap. Sec tliat fencei arc well repaired, and cattle not grazing iu the mead ows, grain Holds or orchards. Do not refuse correct experiments, iu a small way, of many now things. Plant fruit trees well, care for them and get good crops. Practice economy* by giving stock shelter during winter, also good food, taking nil out that is unsound half rotten or mouldy. Do not keep tribes of dogs and cats around the premises, who cat more in a month than they aro worth in all their life imc. The lollowing notice appeared on the end of a country meeting house : "Anybody sticking bills against this church will be prosecuted according to law or any other nuisance." The man who gave as an excuse for kissing a farmer's wife; the injunction to love his neighbor as himself, turn ed up in Arizona with three bullets where his brains ought to be. _. ^- * A young lady recently sa" i ( > her lover. "You may be too-late for the cars, but you can lake a "bus," and tlie stupid fellow went to look for a "bus." "Are angels playiu croquet, mam ma ?' aske.i a little four year old tili other evening, when she saw the me teors shoot. The man who sits by tho stovo through November and abuses tho weather, will be stealing rails for firo wood before Cliris tin as. "Wake up here, and pay for your lodging," said a deacon; as he nudged a sleeping stranger with a contribu tion box. What di tic mice is there between a l oaf?. r in a printing ollico and a baru door ? One is a barn door, and tho other a darn bore. The name of a dentist firm in n cer tain city is Pilling & Pulling, aud it is said that they fill and pull vory weil!