The globe. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1856-1877, February 08, 1865, Image 1

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    - :.l' . 'lrg,. ill - 4
OF tO Ylio:l3:,k
INE
t -
Six mouths
three months
=3
1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do,
One square, (10 lines,)or lees.s 75 1125 $1 50
's Two , Kneres 1 00 2' 00 7 CO
Threisquares, 2 25 300 4 50
-- :,-: 3 menthe. 6 months. 12 months.
Jneoftititire, or teas $1 00 $0 00 .10 00
fro squares, 6 00 0,00 15 00
rhreeSquarts, S 00 12 00 "0 00
Baur vinare. 10 00 15 00 "5 00
Half a 001ninn„...... 16 00 20 . 00 . 1 -30 00
. Ono column, ' ."0 oo - -.6 00... - ...... .. 80 00
Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines
ItOos sear $5 OU
atdmlnistrators' and Executors' Notices, $2 50
Auditors' Notices • - • • , -' - - • ' '2 00
.stray,.Or 01,r-short Notices' '' ' - -1 60
oar-Ten Hues of nonpareil make a square. About
eight words constitute a line, so that any person can ea
sily calculate square in manuscript.
Advertisements not marked with the number of inser
tions desired, willOs continued till .forbid and 'Charged ac
e ording to these terms.
Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Ilandbille, etc.,
ere also increased. . ,
ECEIPTS And EXPENDITURES
Or:thellabtingiloci County Aline • llMise,.liorri De
tember .t1;18t$3; to December Btb, 1864, inclusirr ;- • •
.MCBOYS
DR
To amount drawn from CO. Treasurer on orders, CM 80.
43, G. Tate, (Steward,) for sundries detailed in his
.account
EXPENDITURES
KO
•
. .
By expenaltures for use of farm, tunrked,Bile F.
:Sundry persons for stnlthing,. N0..1 to 3, • 71
for lost posts, rails, lumber, 4 &
_5, 66
-• ' manure, planter, &e.; •0& 7, 17
- _gator on farm, ~ 8& 9, 27
'roily Barris,: for ono farm sled, 10, 33
C.lll3nnyer, for 10 bushels rye. _ 11, • ..13
, - . 11111-I[l - 3feGarveY, for scbot tax, (1663,)' 'l2, 11
:Wm. Piper, for farm labor, (in part,) . .13, 271
$.510 81
_ expenditures for provisions, marheil Vito P.
26 : Und,Verieons.'for 10,29 ' tbs. beef, - $439 C. 2
2,8 - 54 g The. pork, 282 23
D. 41aueberger, for 5% bus. vviteat, 8 40
T. IL -fluting, for 2 beef cattle, 38 00 788 07
Equal persona for 10 bus wheat, $l5 001 28 to
400 lbs. flour 14 62l 31 in 29 02
bus. corn, 32533, 109 92
s $928 61
....
'
By exphditures for merchandise, marked Fib Si.
A. B. Cunningham .t. Co., ;for men, No. Ito 4, 6.10 Si
Wm. A. Fraker, " " 5 to 7, 51 01
Etnier, Foust k. Co., Bto 10 26 40
n w
P. M. Bare, 11 & 12, 184 26
W. 11. Brewster, " " 13 .t: 14, 59 07
Sundry persons, " • " 15 to 20, 111 GO
$1073 81
By.osperalituna for opt door pattperC7Ffie U. D.
Relief afforded to 9 Cases, continuous throtiklf
out the entire year. No.l to 9, 018 00
Iteltof afforded in ld cases, constant and pace-
Mona!, nor. ab.lo w. to cods co e, 10 to 23, 310 24
James Fleming, keeping 1 part. 62 days, 5 , 77 50
costs in above...a, 2 50 50 00
Temporary relict afforded iu numerous cases,
without regard . to time, 26 to 49,, . 282 28
FutiorprempeinfeS; caffins,ehrpinls; attendance, -
In unmet - ens cases, ~•- • • 50 to 79, , 121 07
Sand physicians for medicines and attendanea
upon out door-pea. in sun. mace, 71 to 70,
Sued. physicians for medicines and attendance
- • --'-
per certain toiinships by Rgreetuent, viz :
Porter, Henderson, Shirley, Carbon, and West,
to 88, 110 23
Mifflin co alms boos, fur bonrding W nays, S 2, ',43 50
7• - expenditures for ItOmovals. Filo
• ISy sand justices of the posse for issuing orders
• 'of relief, ,te.,l - Ito 7.
Sundry constables, and others, fur removing
paupers to nous° and elsewhere, Bto 13, 28 30
3.liEMl:throng rind Incidental. Filo I
By.sun persons for pub annual reports, 1 to 3, 90 00
" " 22 tons coal, 4to 5, 89 12
Adana Bryan, shoemaking, repairing, Gto 10, 33 57
Iphraim Doyle, colfms. . • • 11 & 12, 26 90
Directors for sundry out door services, 13 to 20, 129 75
'Columbia Insurance Co. for insurance, 21 & 22, 20 40
.Asher Drake, wood and cutting, .23 & 24, •49 40
James Speer, three coal stores, ,25, 31 00
Lacy liicUarrey, house labor (in part) 26, 40 00
Sundry persons, miscellaneous, 27 to 30, 99 70
ME
.13i _ . .
S. J. - 17ackecloiv fo:..eferv. asllirector.a.tnos : 28 20
Jetmea llcnderooo, I'2 • B4 GO
MEM
John Logan,
Henry Lev is,
Henry .1. Mark, " 2 " 11 20
Hr. Robert La ird, as attending . byrician 1 year .100 , 0
Henry Brewster. as clerk, 1 •• 10 00
. • / " _ 20 00
$578 'SO
By G. G. Tote, steward. fur suudtios detailed la
7 • . lily 11C6JtIllt,
Tohl
-- -PRODUCTS OF TIU FARM
bushels 50 busbels rye, 1000 btr,hols corn ;
(ears,) 200 bushels oats, 600 bushels potatoes, 25 bushels
onions, 4 bushels sombeans, 12 bushels beets, 25 bushels
turnips, 10 bushels parsnips. 3 bushels eloverseeil, 10 toff s
hay, 10 loads costs fodder, (4 Loren,) about 2,000 heads
cabbage, ouLufArbich, its part, Avits uncle 7,000 lbs. sour
.krom, 2,00 e lbs. pork, lisouni ecru sufficient to make 55
browns. 150 chickens.
ARTICLES M.A.NUFACTURED IN HOUSE
10 sheets, 72 shirts, 40 pairs pantaloons, 44 dresses, 43
chemise, :Waitrons, 34 pairs st,Jekiutcs and socks. 25 coins
forts, 20 towebt,lo Fag drawei s, 22 sacks, 10 sun bonnets,
10 vests, 12 pillow cases. 8 bolster d0.,14 caps, 5 pairs
boy's pants, ti boy's rUtbadabont,i,B quilled skirts.
STOCK ON ELAND
4 Stock horses, 8 milch cows, 1 bull, 10 stock bogs,
small, 2 plantation wagons, 1 spring two horse do., 1 bug
gy, 1 Adantation cart, 1 hand do., 5 sets horse gears and
harness, 4 plows. 2 double shovel do., 1 single shovel do.,
1 three hors 9 cultivator, 1 hay rake,' thrashing machine,
and fixtures. I wind milk 1 not patent hay ladders, =SW
'bushels.wheat, 25 bnshels rye, 1600 bushels corn; (ears)
' 100 bushels oats, 000 bushels potatoes, 10 bushels onions,
4 bushels soup beans. 10 bushes boas, 25 bushefu turnips,
, 10 bushels parsnips, 11 bushels cloyereced, 10 tons bay, 10
loads corn fodder,looo hcadicabhoge, 16.4saurcrout,
'4OOO Ile pork, IWO the bacon, nit) km beef, broom cora
1 on head, 450 lbs hog's lard, 100 chickens.
2.IONTELLY TABLE
NO TOE. ADMISSION9 . ,DIFICITARGES, DURING TUG TEAR
c~a a~~a.v~~.-e...~
Y' < ~'~ T .~ o`s ~. y o 0 3 ' i
3 ~~ ' y ~~ `SGt
a cM ~ ,~' • 'e 'o
=ILS=rI
m:.+c:: mc~.+cm Nr~S
ERIE
-*-“,v4-.7.,a-a . 1.22t41i,v..
'z.•.'t,r‘v, , g , j . .iigi
~ati~o~Na,~~~o~
/1•13
S - ; - R E ti tt;
We, the undersigned, Auditors of the county of Hunt
ingdon, do hereby certify that ,we have examined the or
ders, Touchers, accounts, &c., of tho Directors of the Poor
of said county, and find the same to bo correct as above
elated; and coo do textiles find that on examining the Trea
surer'. account ho has paid on Poor Holum ordeys since
last statement. the sum of p,9•20 20, of which amount
the sum of $129 94 WAS expended on accounts of the year
1863, making total expenditures of 1804, (so far as paid,)
amount to the sum Or $5,710 32--Tearing ,balance out-
Mending for year 1804, to wit. $290.48. ' 7 •
witness our hands at 411tufingdoni Chia 11th day of Jou
tansy, A. D.. 1865,
' • 11. L. McCARTHY,
_ABM FURNISH, }Auditors.
LIVINGSTON ROBB,
TEWAILD'S STATEMENT. ,
40: G.-TATE, Steward, in nefOount with iloutiiigEion
.county Aline Dame, froM Dezember 2,1863, to December
6th, 1864, aplogra . • .
•
,111ift. • • " •
• `• • •
RV Mitt. drawn from: co. treasury at sundry times $612. 61
Nell 'received for one horse sold, 160 00
from J SWBII for keeping 3 children '26 00
" " " send persons fur potatoes sold, 18 25
butter " T 80
stone coal . 4 13 00
" " • hauling, " 6 25
bides " 6DO
um
sundry per'Sonsi w.•-• _
-
Dal of order retained in Jno Morris small pox case 11) Wo
By sundry expenditures for use of House, as per mouth
1 atatemeute,'numlered frdm 1 to 1:1,
Statement No. i. December 1263
By cash paid expenses to Lewistown,
Travelling expenses seeing after paupsrse
Beliofaff•rded to wayfaring pauper,
Postage, stamp,
Cash paid miscellaneous,
statomont No t 2. J.mtry
. . .. ..
Ity railroad fare, &c., removing sundry paupers, 8 00
Traveling oipentes seeing rifterTatxpere . 8 00
Relief to way faring paupers, . ..- 2 12
- Miscellaneous; 88
Statement No. 3.' February; 1104.
By cash raid A. Carothers, for one horse : , 3.00 00
Travelling expaitees, 465
‘ 6 Postage stamps, 1 50
Bxpear.co laQicing atter the ituesell BdP.SY, 75
gelpf. torw.y faring innitnr, ••• • • T 5
AriSeellaneous, 3 07
Staten:trait No. 4. March.
py (raveling expenses seeing niter paupers.
:Expenses Ong t Warriorsninek. Moan pox case,
Helier etrordrciito.wastiringpaupccF,
Cnnh paid iroight on Co tl,
tilisnellanpons, . . ...
Statenprrl , N 0.5. April..
lsyAy
trovelliug, expOucta seeing after pauper.
Cash paid sheriff of Mifflin coutrt,y, •
P.oliefofforded soudry faring Touren+,
2 (0
..100
WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor.
VOl,. XX.
Postage stamps front P. ]lyore,
Cash paid. Ilisceltaneorm,
_. • $2O 09
, . .. ~
. .
S triton. t N 0.6. 11'4.
fly cash paid relict for .t. Morris with small pox,- PO 01)
Travelling ospens,s on hushicsa for Ilouse, - , 605
Freight and Tickets for gunners, k., 6 25
Relief for wayfareing paupers, • /15
Miscollaneo us, . 3 83
238 go
V,310 CO
Ili travelling expend. to Tyrone, Petersburg, &c., 6 50
Cash paid postage stamps, . .. . :3 OJ
do • P. It. Road for freight, - 340
do For two days snowing, . - 1 25. 250
do To Levi Myers for.carp9n ter work., 300
. •do • - Pending off . paupers, • - - 40
, .
$lB 80
. ,
Statelrrnt. No. 8. July.
By cash paid gundry per,ons for harvesting, 95 25
do • Trundling axpenceß, , •3 00
./)0' • )itllif to wayfaring . pilnpers, 100
do . I.l.3.cellnuconu,
Statement •No. S. August,
Sty travelling menace seeing after paupers, 6 25
do Relief afforded sun. wayfaring pan., 175
do Miscellaneous, 3 87
Llatement No.lo. September.
lly cash paid travelling expcnces and horse hire, 11 65
do 11.01ef to wnyfrtring paupers, 1 00
00 J. C. Sechler for freight, 75
do bliscollancouv, 50
Statement No. 11. October
, .
.. .
By cash paid sundry travelling exrencee, 6 05
do J. C, Sechtor for frright, . 10 03
,lo Sundry wayfaring paupers, 2 25
do . - Postage stamps, 100
so 3.l)scellaneotts, 2 35
$2l 6S
Statement No. 12, for November. "
It) cosh paid 1 pair pantaloons for pauper, 3 T 5
do Travelling eApences eveing off pail- 19 10
do Relief sundry wayfaring' paupers, .1 50
- do . .51ieellaneous, 135
$lO :0
By salary as Stewart $4OO 00
Allowance to Mrs. Tate as 'Matron, 00 00 450 00
84 00
$B2l. 41
Note. Relief seas afforded iii sundry out door cases, by
meat, near, clothing, given out of the house' by the
Steward. which OH not appear in the above general
statement, as follows, vlz:
Clothing for the Gray flintily, 12 50
Clothing and minds, for James Gamble and family, 12 60
Calico, medicine, Ac.f for Itebeckah Chaney, 5 00
Sundry articles for use of Andrew Rogers family, 814
Also. about 125 meals were supplied to suntlry wander
ing and wayfaring paupet during the year.
In testimony to the correctness of the above account
and statement, we do-hereby set our hand; this sixth day
of December, A. D., .1864. -
$1,15 92
DM
ME
ECEIPTS and EXPENDITURES
./..t. ) of Dun tlngdon minty, froth the—of January,ls6l,
up to the—day of January 1863, including both days :
% RECEIPTS.
1550. Solomon) Hamer, Jackson , $23 16
ISEB. Samuel Steilf,y, 25 00
1800. Isaac Wolverton, Brady . , 156 00
, William K. Rabin, Iluntang ion, 40 9
52
1 00 •
1 1 :,02. William Clyinanz, 1) amn, 7
" George 'pas, Shirleysburg, 400
1SC:1. Alexander Stitt, Alexandria, 204 16
" John Logan, Barrer, - 1
___ -,9, 3 0 . 0 4 1
Ca1eb,....._.„........,
Wakefield, Brady, .
, Josopl, Park, Ca.., 182 57
4 Isaae Asbtou, Canaille, 67 1 0
4 4 Jesso Cook, Car bon, • 1420 00
a David Ileek, Clay, 301 73
- - •
ERII
ati
LEI
141 '51.1
1i 0U
' Michael Myers, Cromwell, 633 1.2 ,
" 11 C Robinson, Dublin, 5t91 00
1 henry Crain, Franklin. . 1050 00 •
" Levi Decker, Benders., 251 00 ~
" George Wfiliont9. Hollowell, ' 318 51 ."
o James Port, Iluntingden, • 328 71
" Jackson Darman, Jackson,
.082 45 .
" Henry .-Marl:, Juniata, ' 240 7 7
ii Benjamin I BrOWn, Mir:rie.
" John P Stewart, Oneida, . 106 41
" George Long, Penn; 475 83
" usury W swoop., Porter, 1451 14 -
Benedict Stevens, Springfield, 247, 53
" Samuel It Douglas Shirley, 100 00
" George Lens, Shldeysburg,. 105 Slit, .
,
• .John Carl, Tell, 200 00"
" Abraham Elias, Tod, 231 20
" 01 Cbilco a Union. - - - 200 54
, Edward Yocum. Walker, . 561 52
.l , Henry Krider, Wurricremark, • 627 30
" Robert W Davis, IVest • . 1546 24 .
Mt. Alexander Stitt, Alexandria, 210 00
" Samuel 313 , t0n, Darren,_2oo 00
" OIL Schaffner, Brady, 6 1 ,5 00
• Isaac Ashton 45 00 ,
" Joseph Park:Ca s s, . , 230 00
Sauel Downer, Clay, 800 00
Dan m iel lineman, Barre°, . 500 00
" William C 1313.119, Dublin. • 40 00
i . Washington Reynolds, Franklin .2378 84
. " John Donaldson, Hopewell, - , .75 00
. John W. Decker, Henderson, l7O 00
i•, James Port, Huntingdon, 3525 00
" Elias Musser, Jackson, 700 00
" Atlin 11. Dean, Juniata, 212 00 '
" Michael Sprinkle, Morris, 400 GO
• Daniel Hyper, Oneida, 360 00
", George Long, Penn, 400 00
'.' Robert A. Laird, Urter, 1100 00
" Jacob H. Lutz, S' y, 400 00
" George Len, Shlrleysburg, 170 00
" Deckers Locke, Springfield, . 150 00
" ValentinoSmlttle, Tell, . .300 00
Abraham Elias, Tod, ' 530 80
• Levi Pheasant, Union, 200 00
• Samuel Peightal, Walker, 300 00 ,
" John Byer, IVarriormuark, . /700 00
" James Maguire, West, lBOO 00 33275 13
Received of Jolt, A. Nash, former Treasurer,
by the hands of IL T. IVitite's administra
tor, $2701 13 in part of the sum of $4OOO 31.
which last sum was due to the county nt
the Auditors' settlement in 1864, • 2761 13
Rent for Court House, $ 40 00
From Wm. Madden, Esq , collected for
profane swearing . , 2 01
Tax received from soldiers, 5 55
From Jno Love, Esq., proceeds of sale of
effects of Wm. MoMurtrio, dec'd.,
found dead, 4 87
From Jun Thompson, lisq., of West tp.,
proceeds of an °stray, 11 62 63 55
Fines and Jury foes, received from Sher
' itTJolinst..n, 68 00
9:/o. from W. D. Wagoner,' 212 74 200 74
Redemption money received, ' 157 01
Amount received on militia fines, • GIG 51
County- tax on unseated lands, 844 :SI
School " " " ". 359 68
Road • 4, 'a 173 54 1958 04
ENE
$631, GO
IMMEI
.pa9ienlosra
1132=113
ECM
LEM
.ptnioa nalpiltio
toicr nfl
uotuo r;
F
=EI
MS
uv6riatay
•••u9loaog '
•
Attorney General, Sheriff and witness
men Coannonl,altilProsecutiong, 677 10
Constables for making 'Mims and
challou fees. 720 74
Grand ,t Trarcrso Jurors, Constables,
Coors Crier and Tip Staves. 2127 95
Judges. Inseectera & Clerics of Elec
tions, ' 2070 12
Inquisitions ou dead bodies," 122 20
Fox scalps, 307 35
Road and bridge views, 257 50
44 Damages, D Stablinan, 105 00
• " Parsons, n 00 403 50
Running line between Wnrriorsmark
and Franklin townships, 50 00 433 60
Plank books and stationery fur public
Mikes, 220 40
•
Fuel for court house and jail 2 years, o°l 92
Repairs for jail end court bonne, 514 54
Sheriff Johnston hoarding prisoners,
convoying convicts to tho pennon
riaryotc., 485 05
John Dean hoarding jurors rind cousin-
Ides in the case of Commonwealth
vs Peter Kinney, ' 42 00
Wiuldng for prisoners in jail, - - -25 00
Cleaning court house, 57.00
Gas for court house in 18n3 & 1604, 97 73
Postage in 1864, ''sB 54 108 27
Safe fur !treasurer's office,. • 480 00
3 alines for Court Maud, freight, 4c, 77 00 257 83
Penna. lunatic Hospital for the mainfe
name of D Brofhertirie, C. !lower,
-
and N. Long, 420 23
Western Penitentiary, 131 55
Printing for the county i
Nash ,ti Whittaker,_ 205 00
William Lewis, 170 00.
.
John Lute, 21 00 300 00
Win. C. Wagoner, fees as Prothonotary,
Clerk of Sessions, fie., 347 78
D. W. Wonielodorf, for indexing reset- _
gage docket, entering s.atistliotion - • -
thereon, dip , 64 50
•
County Auditor's pay, ' - ' . . 82 50
Colllllll.iollCed pay: John Cummins, - 604
EOM
5 75
540
1 00
2 40
4 00
EMI
John S. Icett, 184 60
Peter M. Bare, 130 60
jobs Householder, 10 00 370 04
Commissionerc' clerk, in full for last yr, 65 50
•on account for '64, 510 00 555 00
Bonds and Jgdgments paid Off: _ •
D. 51cig0rtrie i 1055 50
Mrs. Jane Crewit, 592 65
Bell, Garretison it Co., 2331 32
11. T. Whito's administrator, 530 00
Miss 11. M. MeCasliii, 288 13
hiss Ellen Carragan, , 248 . 13 4783 73
Iritermi.t.o county bonds:
Melltirtrie, 68.90
Enoch Eleatic. 39 00
ThOIIIELY Fieher, oo
Marehall Yocum, ,12.00
11modure 11. Cromer, 60 50
'Mrs. M. 1% Riad, 40 OD
William P. Orliison, Esq., ISO 00
MoMurtt le, 60 00
It. Brenneman, 60 00 617 90
Road ta.gon ,caseated [atlas:
Uniontownship, Sarni U, Pheasant. 12 29-
91od .. David Miller, 23 31
Oneida Janits MeCmcken, 20
.65 71 18
Panel 600 on unseated lands;
Franklin township, Rol. N,cphel rah, 919
ILrreo " /On Le) e, 9
XlO 00
MEI
6 50
5 IT
1 5
‘6 lo
5 80
DE
•
:itatem , mt No. 7. 'Dino
BM
IBM
ENE
MIN LOGAN,
nENRY DAVIS, Directors of
HENRY A. MARKS. thu tour.
$.18525 60
EXPENDITURES
IN
101
,~~...: ~...,,~.I:.
HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1805.
Jackson -• " R. V. Stewart, 46 61 ••,
Juniata 11. Tho,iipaon, 27 30
Walke' •' ." A. ' , railer, • • 113 30 • "
Oneida . " Jelin I'. Stewart, 207 •
Tod • • ; . John Griffith, .42 68 107 21
Refunding orders, 18 82
D. Black, advertising unseated lands or- '
tiered not to bu sold by Comers.. 10 00
Gronnd rent on lot sold tot; 0 Sununers, 9 00
Commissioners and Clerk attending to
military affairs,
Bounty to volunteers,
Redemption money paid out,.
Paid for the relief of families depen
. dent on volunteera in the service
of the 11. S., .
Paid Treasurer of Huntingdon Coun
ty Poor Hume,
Treasurers Commission on $72,109 14
at 134 per cent,
Balance in the Lands of the Treasurer,
In testimony,whereof pro Ithionn to subgcribe nut
M. N. CAMPIS
, .
3. 110118ETIO
the undersigned Auditors of Huntingdon
Pennsylvania, elected and sworn according to la ,
that we met, did audit, Ratio and adjust, ocean
law, the accounts of David Mud:, Esq., Treasure]
county. and the orders of I ho Commissioners and I
for the same ft.r and during the past year; and On
nice remaining in the hands of D. Black, Esq.,'„To
of three thousand eight hundred and sixty dolh
forty..throo emits: .
. _ .
Given under our hands at tho Counnardonors'
the borough of Huntingdon, thol9lh of January
11. b. McCARTIIV,
AIGH/I. !IA /tNIS/1, A
LIVINGSTON It 0111 1:
• •
OUTSTAN.D
ME
AL ..
EOIC T
C 0 1 2119 XAM}S. TAT.
1553. T. Voorhees, Ileti
LW. J. Smith, Barrie
lbSif. S. limner, Jak'n
1557. N. Johns, Cron,
1655. S. titulfey ,
$ 10;1
EMI
V 159.
A S Harrison, Ilunt'n
David Pareon3, Ta I,
Isaac Cullman, Tod,
EMI
18011.
I. Wolverton,
Jesse Cook, Carbon,
J J Wearer, llopowell
55 5G
327 '5
540 20
9 i 3
129 59
31 30
1861.
Jacob Musser, Britay,
II 8.31111er, lieuilorson
Win.
IS White, Juniata
David Lindsey, West
26 07
118 11
1.e82.
Christian liller, Cass,
Isaac Ashton, Cacsvitie
W. it }leaner, Horan
G. Leas, ShirloyziAirg,
L•antl. Brook,, Carbon,
1). P. Stevens, C:ay, '
Joint Ilendensan,
ERE
11.611.
Jeaso Cook, Carbon,
Mich Myers, Cromwell
11. C Rubinson. Dublin
Ilenry Crain, Franklin
fl, Docket', Elendereoll,
R. Douglas, Shirley,
John Carl, Tell,
kobt. W. Davis, West,
..9 12
143 81
269 30
15 00
32 50
43 00
9 00
48 18
22 02
23 03
655 t.,3
65 29
5 13
EEC
-7 . 1064. .
'.ll. Stitt, Alexandria : 157 93 50 321 200
tSaml.Mytoir, Bari ee, 1402 751 443 60 90 50
-31. L Sltailiier, Bradyi 597 09. 1-17 02 - 70 13
-I. Agltton . , C4ssvillo, 74 70; 22 941 815
-303eph l'ork, Cass, i 364 55' 100 OS 29 S 7
- ..sainuel BoW.-icr, Clay, 857 76 80 011 IS 61
-ri lineman, Cromwell 701 GO 03 70 20 +2
.--- ......,,,...,,,,t.....,.. rqo'A 'l4 '
-i-Wm.Clymans, Wnt' ` , ..11 . 03- ...... - . ~ P. 3 -` 1 ,,., 9 , 7S ,
.W Itoyuolds, Frailleo . 790 SS 31 9 - 72 -- ., ‘ .i 03 - 4... 44.
Ilime'lll 823 25 42 50 300 00 63 :75
i.J. Doualdem,
J. W. Decker, Ilend'n 367 49 11 09, 179 03 24 2 , .,
:!Jas Port. Huntingdon • 20 001 70 52 OS 15
Elias Musser, Jarlimou 1163 91 00 50' 420 071 39 33
Ad. 10. Dean, Juniata, 171 48 650 113 40 -7 b 7
M. Sprankle, Morrie, 1015 53 35 50 330 45 77 09
/
tnattl. Kypor, Oneida,, ItS 43 SOO 42 25 .12 77
tieurge Long, Penn, 31;3 34 43 00 224 721 54 11
11. A. Laird, Porter, 1230 55 42 00 525 11l 04 IS
}Jacob Lutz. Sl,lr l ey. 1730 36 69 301 545 Oi l 111 02
fa. Le., Siiiileyelourg, 175.79 15 05 45 371 ' 4OD
't L. Deckers, Springli A, 292 63 2O 50 SI 07 17 54
' , V. Sraittle,Tell, 162 55 04 50 33 55 11 03
"Abraham Mai Tod. 121 IS 14 59 07 14 .• 18 57
17 (0
JS 00
50
1 00
13 (0
0 50
11 50
10 7 50
Abra..._
L. rhoasaut, Union, . 382 09 55 00 107 2a 28 72
V. l'elglltal, IVallcer, 711 IA '2O 00 189 78 40 55
*J. Uyor, IVurriors'ii, 1735 77 10.00 179 01) 59 151
f . J. Maguire, West, 17730 05 65 5 0 577 . 35 51 15
$2353t3 Uollfoll
. 901 . 1977 96;1311 52
paid in full.
fSlueu paid in part.
In testimony whereof we have ber:unlo set our• hands
this 31st day ufJanuary 1565.
V. 1 , ..0 t MI , ISELL,
11',11.5.A1 , )1,1M11t,
• JACOB MI 61,En,
If. W. MILLER, Clerk. Commiseiout7r,
NEW CLOTHING
•
AT LO PEIO S. •
M. GUTMAN
HAS JUST OrIiNEH A FINB . STOCK . OV NEW
PALL AND 'WINTER 'CLOTHING,.
Which he offers to all who scant to be
'CLOTHED,. •
AT PRICES TO SUIT TUE TIMES.
in. Stock consists of Ready-ma4a Clothing for
MEN AND BOYS,
•
Al-so,
•
•
BOOTS AND 911059, HATS AND CADS,
Should gentlemen do,lro any particular hind or cut.,
clothing not found in the stock on hand, by leaving tied
measure they can be accommodated at elnlrt notice.
Call at the cast corner of the Diamond, over Long,
Grocery.
MANUAL GUTMAN.
Huntingdon Nov. NI,
. .
. •
NEW STOCK OF GOODS.
EVERYBODY IS INVITED TO CALL AT
S. S. ,SIVIITH'S STORE,
ON LULL STREET, HUNTINGDON, DES NA
TUE BEST
SIJOAR and MOLASSES, -
COFFEE. TEA and CIIOCOLATE.
FLOUR, FISH; SALT Slid 'VINEGAR,
CONFECTIONERIES. CIGARS and TOBACCO,
SPICES OF TDB BEST, AND ALL KINDS, • .
And every other article usually found in a Grocery Store
ALSO— Drugs, Chemicals, Dye Stuffs,
Paints, Varnishes, Oils and Spts. Turpentine,
Fluid, Alcohol, Oboe and Putty,
BEST WINE and BRANDY for mclical purpom
ALL TIIE BEST PATENT MEDICINES, •
BOOTS AND SHOES,
and a largo number of articles too warner°us to mention
The public generally bill plods° call and examine for
lima:mires and learn toy pri.
S. S. S3IITII.
Huntingdon, N0v.23 te4.
NEW• GOODS! NEW GOODS ! !
25 PER CENT. CHEAPER THAN
THE CHEAPEST !
SINION CONN,
AT COFFEE RUN STATION,
Would respectfully call 1110 attention of Ills old pntrotei
specially, and the public:. to general, to his extensive
stock of well selected now Goods, Just received from the
Eastern cities, consisting, in part, of
Dry' Goods,
• • •• Clothing, Wool
' en .Ware, ,Notions,
Hats'and' Caps, Boots and -
Shoes, Bonnets, Shawls, Circa- •
•
lars, Hardware gneensware, Gro
ceries, Wood and WilloW-ware, Tobacco,
SegarBp Nails, Glass; Provisions,
Oil, Fish, Salt, Tinware, Cop
. per - Ware, .Drugs and •
• ,
Medicines,: Clocks,
Wattihei • - -
and oil other articles kept in a blest class country store;
all selected with the greatest care and which were pur
chased for cash only, and 'affords him to sell them at n
very low figure. The public will Saul it to their advan
tage to tall unit ettautinu our ousurpossed stock, before
purchnsing,elsewhere. No pains will be spared fo show
ing our Goode. Ladles are specially invited to examine
our large stock of fashionable dress goods; Shawls, Cir.
culrita,Ture, and s great variety of Wooloa.Gotale,
Honio
ry
All klude.of produce taken to exelatiate at the highest
market prices- , -Casli not refused., fly strict attention to
the 'wants of Cuetomerso7o hope torso:Ns a continuation
of she - liberal patronoto filth which we Wire been heretO
fordlaVorod; Como one RIO all, and Tar' - •,
rkw New , Goods received daily. • '
Nov. 1 8 .81: SIMON COHN.
FIN . VELOPES, who and retail,
_4 fur le LEWIS' BOOK STORE.
Eljt 03101)t,
HUNTINGDON, PA
0 00
77 82
4GO 00
0 - 51
Life is What We Make it.
It may not be our lot to liyo
In lexury'sgay halls of pleasure,
It may not he oar lot to find
In secret mines a hidden treasure.
Perchance the path that we most treed
Is not our choice—rate bids us take it ;
Ah, well! we'll bow to Fate, for still
Our lifo is what we ehopse to rortkeit.
90#9 00
lEir
lOSI 03
.?%0 43
32113
1.1.111109
SELL,
I D6ll,
Llt.
. .
---Tinrcravin
It wastes itself in vain repirduZ; „
It watches fur the cloud of care,
Although the sun islirightly shining.
Bet the truthful, brave, Vold, trusting soul,
Knows Grief's tempest cannotshake it ;
Though Very oft it sears aloft,
And feels that life is what it makes it..
REIM!
County,
port
ding to
0 of the
reuipt
id a b e!-
'OI
I
Mr • 111
We only not always glide along,
With songs of joy and notes of gladness;
The happiest traveler on life's path
Must feel sometimes the touch: of sadness,
Stern Doty alleys uti.bernisl ;
Pats nut her stair—ah let us take it;
Her path is always well defined,. .'
And life is what we choose .tu make it.
WM
NOE'
ILL YL
MED
SI ECIEL
$
STATE.
j 77 OS
I_b 69
166 81
17 62
66 11
818
REBEL ATROCITIES.
73t 10
E. OU
The Prison-pen at Salisbury.
Testimony of the Escaped Tribune Cor
respondents
I_'9 06
15 r 9S
245 81
GB 57
2 8
21 .5
Fiendish ("racily of the Rebel .Authori
ties—Wholesale Starl'ation and _Mur
der of Uniod Prisoners=-The Hor
rors of the Hospitals.
66
36 72
WASIIINGTONi Jan. 30. 7 —Th0 follow
ing testimony- wus . given to day before
the Committee on the. Conduct of the
War by Albert D. Itiehards,on
55 87
21 23
20 00
105 57
13.09
S 33
12 07
1911
TESTIMONY OF ALBERT D. RICHA RDSON
33 72
12 53
17 15
3 32
13 71
I am a Tribune correspondent; was
by the rebels May 3d, 1803, at Mid-•
night, on a hay bale in the Mississippi
river, opposite Vieksburg.. After eon
finement in six different prisons was
sent to Salisbury, N. C.; Febrthiry 3d,
1864, and kept there until' December
18, 1864,•when I escaped, 'For sever
al months Salisbury. was the most en-
Iltrrable-rcbe-4-psison—L4, •7 • •
six hundred inmates, exercised in the
open air, were cothparatively Nell fed
and kindly treated. But early in Oc
tober ten thousand regular!priSoners
of war arrive* there, and ,it imMedi,
ately,Changed int,R a scene-of
. cruelty
and horrors. tVtiff (IZ:.fiSely - e'reAvited;
rations were cut dti‘Vn and issued very
irregularly; friends outside could not
even send in a plate. of toed; the pris
oners suffered constantly 'and often in--
tensely for want.of Water, bread and
shelter.
The rebel authorities placed all the
PrISOn 'hespilalS under charge of my
two journalistic celuratluSaed
Our . position enabled us to Obtain ex
act and miiittte. information. Those
who' had to live or die on the prison
rations always suffered from hunger,—
Very frequently one or more divisions
of a thousand men would receive no
rations for twenty-four . hours; some
times they went without a morsel of
food for forty-eight hours. The fellow
who had money would pay from five
to twenty dollars rebel currency for a
little loaf of bread. Best prisoners
traded the buttons from their blouses
for food. Many, though the weather
was very inclement told snows fre•
fluent, sold coats froin their backs and
Babes from their feet. Yet I was as
sured, on authority entirely trustwor
thy, that the great commissary ware
house, near the prison, was, filled with
provisions ; that the commissariat
fonnd it difficult to obtain storage for
his flour and meal; that when a sub•
ordinate asked the post commandant,
Major John 11. Gee, "Shall I give the
prisoners full vations ?" he replied,-"No,
God damn them;' give them quarter
rations" I know; from personal ob
servation, that corn and pork are very
abundant in the region about Salis
bury.
For several weeks the prisoners had
no shelter whatever. ' They were all
thinly clad. Thousands were barefoot
ed. Not .one ih twenty had either
overcoat or blanket. Many hundreds
wore without shirts, and hundreds
more without . blouses. At last one
Sibley tent lied one "A" tent were
furnished to each squad of one hun
dred. With the closest erw,vding these
sheltered about one half of the prison
ers. The rest burrowed in the ground,
crept under buildings, or shivered
through the night'in the open air, up
on the frozen, muddy, or snowy soil.
If the rebels, at the time of their cap
ture, bad not stolen their shelter -tents,
blankets, clothing, and money,
„they
would have suffered little from cold.—
If the prison antboritieS . had permit
ted a few' hundred of them, either up
on parole or under guard, to
.cut logs
within two mileS of the-garrison, the
prisoners would haVe gladly built Com
fortable and ample barrackS in one
-week, But the commandant would
never, in a densely wooded region,
with the cars which brought in pas•
sing by the walls of the prison, .oven
furnish half ' the fuel whiell was
needed. . • •'
The hospitals were in horrible..con
dition. By crowding , the patients as
thick as they could bo upon the floor
they would contain 'Six hundred in.
mates. They word always full to over
flowing, with thousands seeking :td-
mission in vain. In the two largest
wards, containing jointly 'about two
hundred and fifty patients,' there was
no fireWhateve.r s the others had sthatl
fire-places, but worn .always
One ward, which held forty pationtti,,
was comparatively ,well furnished: 7 —
In the othoi.' eight thhsielCiina dying
Mon lay uPon the cold "and usually
naked floor, for the ocAnty straw fur
-PERSEVERE.-
'.' •-,• ; ,:4,% . 7 '• .
..r4 y
'. " :;‘,. -,:..
,R 5
t • ra
1 -...". ;1,,,f; • r&E ; ' , ~ :
v. ~,
- ik
' • .4.`t•
. .
nisi:M(l us soon became toe filth} and
full of vermin for use. The autheri
tie§ never supplied a Single, blanket, or
quilt, or pillow, or-bed, for those :eight
wards; we could not procure even .
brOoms to keep them clean, or cold
water "to wash the hides Of the inmates:
Pneumonia, catarrh, and diarrhea .
were the prevailing diseases; hut, they
were directly the result of hunger and
exposure. More than half who enter
ed the hospitals died in a' very - few
days. The disceased, always without
coffins were loaded into a dead cart,
piled upon each other like_ logs of
wood, and So driven out, to be thrown
into a trench and covered with earth.
• ' The rebel' surgeons- , were—gerrerally
:humane and attentive ; they endeavor:
ed to improve the shocking condition.
of the hospitals, but the Salisbury and
'Richmond authorities both - disregarded
their complaints and protests.
On November 25th, Many of the
prisoners had been without food for
forty-eight hours. Desperate from
hunger, without any matured plan, a
few of them said : "We maras well
die one . way as another; let us break
out,of this horrible place." -Some.of
them wrested the guns from a• relief
guard_ of fifteen rebel soldiers just
en
tering the yard, killing two who resis•
ted,and wounding five or six. Others
attempted to open the fence, but they.
had neither adequate tools nor con•
eez - t of action. Before they could ef
fect a breach every gun in the n•arrison•
was turned upon them ; the field pion-
Ca opened with grape and canister,
and they dispersed to their quarters.
Five minutes from the time of the'
beginning the attempt was quelled,
and hardly a prisoner to be seen in the.
yard. My own quarters Were a -hun
dred and fifty yards from the scene of
the insurrection; in our vicinity there
had been no partieipation at all imit,
and yet, for twenty minutes after it
was ended, the guard upon the fence
on each Side of us, with deliberate
aim, fired into the tents upon helpless
and innocent men." They killed in all
fifteen and wounded sixty, not ,one
of whom had Laken part in the
attempt; many of whom were igno
rant of it until they heard the guns.
Deliberate cold blooded murders of
peaceable men, where there was no
.•••••, I Lai ~i,zl.4:re:ettittlll7",
prison regulations, were very frequent.
On October 10th, Lieutenant Davis,
of the . 158th New- York Infantry, was
thus shot dead by the guard who, the
.day before, had been openly swearing
he, would "kill softie dam ned,Yankee
yet." November oth, Luther Conrad;
of the 45th Pe.nnsylVaniti. Infantry,
a Clarions patient froni one of the
hospitals, was similarly inurderod:
November 3a, a chimney in one of the
hospitals fell down, crushing several
men under it. .
Orders were immediately given 'to
the guard to let no One approach the
building, on the pretext that there
might be another insurrection. The
patients from that hospital,,had not
heard the order, and \!:'oro returning
to their quarters, when I saw a senti
nel on the'fence within twenty feet of
them, without challenging them, raise
his piece and fire, killing one and wpm
ding the other. Major Gee, at the
time, was standing immediately beside
the sentinel, who must have acted un
dor. his direct Orders. December 16th,
Moses Smith, of .7th Maryland (color
ed) infantry, while standing beside
my quarters, searching for scraps of
food from the sweepingS of the cook•
house, was shot through the boad.-- 7
There was very many similar mur
ders' I never knew-any- pretence
oven made of investigating or punish
ing them. Our lives were never safe
one Mornent. Any sentinel, at any
hoUr of day or night, could deliber
ately
into
anyshoot down any prisoner, or
any group of prisoners, black or white,
and ho would not even bo taken off
his post fbr it.
Nearly every' week an oft - leer came
into the prison to recruit for the rebel
army. Sometimes lie offered hounties;.
always ho promised good clothing and
abundant food. Between twelve hun
dred mid eighteen hundred of our
men enlisted in two montbS: I was
repeatedly asked by prisoners,.some
times with tears in their eyoYs.--- - -
"What shall I do? I don't wsnt to
starve to death. I am growing weak
er daily; if I Stay bore I shall follow
my .- comrades to the hospital and
dead.house. If I enlist Inlay live
til I can escape."
I had charge of the clothing left
by the dead, and re issued it to the
living. I distributed articles of cloth
ing to more than two thousand pris:
oners, but when I escaped there was
fully five hundred without a shoe or
stacking, and more yet with no gar,
meats above the waist except one
blouse or one shirt. Men came to me
frequently upon whom the rebels,
when they captured. them,.
had: left. l
nothing whatever except a light cot
ton shirt and a pair of light ragged
cotton pantaloons,
The books of all the hospitals wore
kept and the daily consolidated reports
made tip under my supervision. ; Dur-.
ing the: two months between October
18 andDecemher 18 the average
tier of prisoners was about 7,500: ' The
deaths for that period wornfully 1,500,
or twenty per cent. of the whole. '
breught away the names of more than
twelve hundred of the . dead; some of
the remainder Were 'never reported;
the others could not, procure on the
day of my incline' Without exciting, sus
picion. AS' the monziew more . and
more dchilitated the 'percentage of
deaths inereased.' I left about 10;500
remaining in thp rsariisdn'DeenruherlS;
and they Werci irißn dying at the aver-
ago rate of . twenty eight a day, or
thirteen per cent. a Mouth! '
The simple truth 'W'f,hat the robot
authorities' are'inurdering' our soltliOrfi
aSapst:
bury by cold and hunger, while
TERNS, '52,00 a year in advance.
they might •easily supply-there with
ample food. and.fuel.: .They are doing
this systematically and I ,believe are
killing intentjenally,.for the purpose of
either forcing our Government to an
exchange or Curbing our prisbuers into
the rebel army. • -
TESTIMONY OF MR. JUNIUS 11. BROViNE
The following is the testimony•be
fore the corn rnittee. :of Jtinius Henri
I am a journalist by profession; have
been since the breaking out of tke irar
an army cOrrespondent 'of'the New
York Tribune; seas captured , in •that
capacity in the middle . of- - the Missis
sippi river, While running past the.hat
teries-of Vickalstryg, - nrr `t re night of
-
May '3, 1863, our. expedition having
been deStroyed by the rebel siege guns;
I was - held" priSoffer 'some twenty,
months; having in. thatitimo been an
occupant of-seven southern prisons,
:the :last being= the Salisbury, North
Carolina, penitentiary; where 1 I was
kept with my co-laborer, Albert D.
Richardson for almost eleven months,
making my escape therefrom -in his
company, on the night of December
18, 1864. •
The, treatment of our prisoners. Was
bad enough everywhere, but it was so
barbarous and inhuman at Salisbury
for two months previous to-my escape
that I regard the eXposure thereof a
duty 11 owe to the thoilsands'who stiil
remain there. •
Early in October froM nine to ton
thousand
.of our enlisted men were . sent
to Salisbury from Richmond and other
points, and as they had been robbed of
their elothes and blankets, and,receiv—
ed very little food or shelter, the mor
tality among them became almost im,
•mediately widespread and alarming.
Every tenement within the prison
limits was converted into a hospital,
and I 'offered my services as medical
dispenser and as assistant to the rebel
surgeons. I soon made daily visits to
the sick who could not obtain admis
sion to the over crowded hospitals—
, lying intents on the ground; without
' covering and witlavery scant raiment,
where they bad crept for protection
from the cold rains, the snow, and the
biting wind S—and performed sr.eh posy
service as hty in my limited power.
eir condition was distressing in the
extreme. They'had no means of keep
ing warn except by fires of very green
wood that filled the rude 'shelters with
hitter tuoke; and which added to the
carbonic acidized - a tinosphore from so
many breaths; and the emanations flom
unwholesome and unwashed bodies,
packed together like figs, entirely poi
' tioned.the tit, and destroyed the health
of alMoStau who inhaled it.
. . •
The sickness and mortality in those
outside quarters, as well as.elsewhere,
centinuallyinereased, and.the marvel
Was that any one survived. Stafired
and freezing, withhardlY water onotigh
to driek,.. much less to wash their per or the scant clothes they wore,
the poor fellows naturally and noces
sarily despaired and.net 'a few of them
were noxious to die to escape from the
slow torture of their situation.
.1 had the best- means of knowing,
and it is my firmest belief that out of
eight nine thousand .prisOners 'at
Salisbury there were not - at any time
five hundred of them iia'sound . health
—an opinion in Which all the rebel sol
diers to whom I:expressed it fully coin
cided. The deaths, during the last two
months I passed at Salisbury, - ranged
from twenty:five to forty-five per day
diarrbcea, dysentery, catarrh, prieutho,
nia, and typhoid fever, all engendered
by scarcity . Mood, sheitm,and raiment
--being the principal diseases. I haVe
no` doubt if the prisoners had been
properly .treated--a prisoners of war
in the North: are to the best of my
knowledge and information treated--
the mortality at Salisbury would not
have been more than an eighth of what
it was.
The capacity of the so called hospi
tals—nine in number—Which were
without any of the comforts or concom
itants of those institutions ' were not, to
the fullest over five or six hundred pa
tients; and the number of prisoners
who ought to have_ been inmates there=
of was at least, as many thousands.
The hospitals merely afforded some
protection from the cold and rain, and
tarnished rather better rations than
Were given to the men who were sup•
posed by a transparent' fiction, to lid
in good health, 'Hardly any ono would
go to the hosPitale so long as he could
help' himself; or indtice any ono to help
him; the daily spectacle of ghastly and
hideous corpses going therefrom, to the
dead-hOuse filling all beholders with
horror, and inducing tho soldiers to be
lieve that all who entered these filthy
and pestiferous tenements were doomed.
The prisOn limtte. at Salisbury -re
vealed a sense of .wretchedness, squal
or, despair, and suffering, such as l—
accustomed as I ant to army life and
the horrors of military hospitals and
battlefields bad never before witness
ed. The prison ; authorities—especially
aftor tho MiSseere lattending the at
tempted outbreak of November'26th—
appeared not only indifferent to the
miserable condition of the men, but,to
be actuated by a brutality and malig
nity towards them that I. could not
recunoildwith my ideas of human na
ture. •
They permitted
: the gurt . rde - to plioot
prisoners, whenever they pleased, with
out the least pretex(q. explanation;
and no man's life was safe for a day or
an both.. The air was full- of pain tynd .
pestilence, and all - the horrors of imag
ined bells Aeeraed realized in'Aat'niogl ,
wretched place, of which I shah-never
think without a_ shuddor, - and t lessen
, ed faith in the possibilities of humanity.
What's the difro.rondo botweini . 'the'
top of a wountain and , a •peitso,n afltid
tod•with any disordel;?--7Qn . .e'T. a sum
mit of a kill, and tho otlmPaill of a
"summit!" ' ""
=
•
•
=NM
NO. 82,
THE
• -
- jOB PRINTING
_O.FFICE..
"GLOBEI-J.013= OFFICE" -
• 7 ihtnost complete of any. in the iionutrs , iiiitid pos'
sends the'me - st sniplefarintiss for pinzaptlY executing
Jim best style, every varlety or Joh7:rintinurench-41
I,
P.RoGIAMINIES - •
POSTERS,;
811,1. HEADS,.
CA It I)S,
CIRCULARS,
BAhl,
LABELS; &a, &c. &a
CALL V.:13 EXANILVE 9PECIYSNB. OP -
WORE,
- - •
- -
AT LEWIS , 11001C,',. STATIONERY -.t. MUSIC STORft
THE GOOD OLD WINTERS;,
In 401 the Bl , tok Sea. was.frozin en,
timely over. Iu 763 net only the,
Black. Sea, bat the Straits of Dard
anells,'were frozen over; the snow in
some places rose fifty foot high. ,
822 the •great rivers of - Europe, the,
Datfubo, the Elbe, gtc.,' were saltard
frozen as to bear heavy wagons. for n„
month. In 860 the Adriatic was fro
zen. In 991 everything,was frozen,
the crops, totally failed,- and famine,
and pestilence closed the year. lii
1067 most of the - travellers in Germa
ny were. frozen to death on'the.kbads.
In 1134 the Po was frozen - from Cre
mona to the sea; the wino sacks,wero,,
larswitmllthe-trees split by the- itc•
don of the frost; -with tnYnionse noise,,
In 1237 the Danube :was frozen td
bottom, and remained. long 'in' that
state. In 1317 the crops wholly_fail;
od in Germany; wheat, which, some
years before sold in England at 64. the
quarter, rose to £2. In 1308 thil erdps
failed in Scotland and • 811611-'ll' 'fittriine
ensued that the poor:were ,redubect
to feed on „grass, ttpd, many ; perish-.
ed miserably in the fields'. The
,suc
cessive winters of 1432 34' Were 'tine.
commonly .
commonly severe. 1368' -the-Wine
distributed to the sOldiers was cet l ,
with hatchets. In 1683 - it was extes-,
sively cold. Moat of the hollies w.ere,
killed. °Coaches drove along tfie
Thatnes, the ice of which wile eleven
inches thick. Tn. 1709. ••occurred
cold -winter; the frost ;penetrated . the
earth three yards into the ground._;in,
11717 booths were erected on , the
Thames. In 174445 the
` str'otigen~
ale in England, exposed to the air,.
was covered iffless than fifteen Min
utes with ice an eighth of an inch
thick. In 1809, and again in 3.812,.
die winters - were," remarkably
In 1844 there was a fair on the frozen.
Thames. ' "
MAXIMS OF SHEEP FARMaS.
. . .
Sheep do better in small flocks
than in largo ones. By inthel'',l7.alcs
we mean fi , oM thirty *-to ray; 'and
even if a firmer.: keeps this , • riumb6r,
they should be separated—t,he..lumbs.
and deerepid sheep being yarded by
therni3elves that they may receive
It is better to keep sheep :'confi'ned
in yards, at this season of, .the year
than to allow thorn to range at
over field and pasture. ',
. .
Separate yards should . always be
provided for sheep and cattle, whore
practicable; bat if not SO they should
never be turned into the yards togeth
er, as 'accident sncl:lOss,oktesre,sttit
therefrom.
Convenient and suitably arranged
houses or sheds, are indispensialeein
successfully wintering even:.:it; small
flock of shepp. Shelter beingprovided,
the sheep ought, never to be: allowed
out in a storm of rain or snoW, 'ter nA
chimp weather.
Al houses or sheds for alreep
should he properly ventilated and welh
lighted. Attention to the first:
these is of great impOrtanne.
Yards Should . be prOcrided with inif,p
water, in order that . - the - Sheep may
not be c.ompolled to Seek :it • at: a dis
tance from the buildings, nor obliged
to cat snow to obtain moisture., .They
will eat snow if they cant:K . 4.ga"
ter, but it is injuriou'S-to them.
Racks in sheep houses • are of great,
importance, as the sheep can be .fed,
therein in stormy weather Witbo : l4
wasting the forage. Yards, should:all.
so be...provided with them, AiLA - Also
with grain- troughs. But in clear,,
bold weather, when the snow iwthe
yard is clean, sheep will pat: .thpir
fodder betier and waste lesa
upon the SEIOW than in any rack ever
made.
Givo some kind of roots twice'
week to the entire flock.:-.-•-fp.oding th 4:
lambs and weak sheep harpy, .corp,
orsomelsind of provender, every.,oth:
or day.
Feed 'with rogularitY,. and tipit
your flock with gontlonoss and „king;
Rarinet.
WWI( IT OF PEOPLE. — The'averagl,
returns show that a citizen- of-the
world, on the first appearance iin.ipub,
lip, weighs about six pounds and, a
half; a'boY bahy a little more,,, girl.
baby a little less: 'Stme: • very synod-'
est babies hardly- turn the Basle with
two pounds and a half, While other
pretentious youngsters beast'', of •ten
and eleven, pounds. , When ShylOck
asked for his "pound of lieSh;'-' he as,
ked for an equivalent to a little leas
than one sixth of a baby.' How the
tiny ones, grow during childhood
nerd not trace herei . but it mayiliq
interesting .to know that girls and
boys of twelve years of 'age . are near !
ly equal in , weight; -after which lithit;
males are heavier than females thi#
same age. Young men offtwenty
crag,e a hundred and forty.-three
pounds each, while the,youngwornen
a ,
of twenty average hundred , and.
twenty Pounds.
Men reach' their heaviest bulk at
about thirty•five, when their 'average
weight, is about, a hundred and fifty.-e
two pounds; hat the women Hslo*bs
fatten until fifty, when their averart,
is a hundred and twenty-nine
Men and women together,- "their
weight at ftill growth :average abo4
twenty times, as heavy_ as ,they.,wer§
on the first day of existence.
course, averages are here only meant.
The averages were: formed fropimen,
ranging from a hundred- itnd.i V) -
two hundred and twenty..: pound's:!
and a women from eighty-eight , toy
two hundred and seven pouckds,
actual, weight, of hrt maw nature,,,t4l4g .
all:ages and. conditions, nobles, tdergy,
tinkers; tailors, wives
girls And"babies,"all
exactly; Ode ,
hundred English pounds avoirdupois
for each human being; a quantity easy
to remember at any rmy, "