--- - VOL. 49. The Huntingdon Journal. J. It. DURBORROW, - - J. A. NASH, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. office in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street. TIIR HUNTINGDON JeURNAL is published every Wednesde.y, by J. R. DURBORROW and J. A. NASH, under the firm name of J. R. DURBORROW ti Co., at $2.00 per annum, is ADVANCE, or $2.50 if not paid for in six months from date of subscription, and $3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, r nless at the option of the publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELVI AND A-HALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, sever AND A-HALF CENTS for the second, and rive cemvs per line for all subsequent inser tions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertise ments will be inserted at the following rates : llneh 3 3. 50 1 6 4 m 5O 9 5 m 5C 11 6 ) 00 . li jVcol 3 :00 1 6 3 ' 00 8 9 27 m1 $ 1 36 2 " 500 £OOlOOO 12 00! "240036 tO CO 65 3 " 7001000 14 0118 00 4 "3400 60 00 65 80 4 " 800140020 00 21 00 1 1 sol 3400 60 00 80 100 Local notices will be inserted at FIFTERN CENTS per line for each and every insertion. All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party an nouncements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will be charged vex CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission outside of these figures. .411 advertising accounts are due and colleetable when the advertiscment is once inserted. JOB PRINTING of every kind, in Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch.— Hand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, he., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and every thing in the Printing line will be execu ted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. . _ Professional Cards. --=---- --- A P. W. JOHNSTON, Surveyor and ...i-X-• Civil Engineer, Huntingdon, Pa. OFFICE : No. 113 Third Street. aug21,1872. S. T. BROWS. J. If. BAILEY. BROWN & BAILEY, Attorneys-at- Law, Office 2d door east of First National Bank. Prompt personal attention will be given to all legal business entrusted to their care, and to the collection and remittance of claims. Jan. 7,71. 1)R. H. W. BUCHANAN, DENTIST, No. 228 Hill Street, HUNTINGDON, PA. July 3,'72. CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, D•No. 111, 3d street. Office forinerly occupied by Messrs. Woods lc Williamson. [apl2,'7l. DR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the community. Office, No. 523 Washington street. one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. [jan.4,'7l. EJ. GREEN E, Dentist. Office re • moved to Leister's new building, Hill street Ireatingdon. (jan.4,'7l. LAW NOTICE.—R. E. Fleming, Esq.. has (his day vol untarily withdrawn from our law firm. SPEER & MIIIIRTRIE. Attorneys-at-Law. Huntingdon, July 15, 1874. cl E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, kJ. Huntingdon, Pa., office 319 Penn street, nearly opposite First National Bank. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. Aug.5;74-limos. GEORGE D. BALLANTYNE, M. D., of Pittsburg, graduate of Bellevue Hospi tal Medical College, offers his professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity. Office 927 Washington street, West Huntingdou. Ju1y22,1874-3mos. GL. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. • Bmwn's new building, No. 520, Hill St., Iluntingdon, Pa. [apl2,'7l. HC. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law • Office, No. —, Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap.19,'71. JFRANKLIN SCIIOCK, Attorney • at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal business. Office 229 Hill street, corner of Court House Square. [dec.4,'72 JSYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, hree doors west of Smith. [jan.4'7l. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at- J• Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will pretties in the several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular attention given to the settlement of estates of deco dents. Office in ho JOURNAL Building. [feb.l,'7l. W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law J • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Soldiers' claims against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed to with great care and promptness. Office on Hill street. [jan.4,'7l. - S. GEISSINGER, Attorney-at- L• Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office one dour East of R. M. Speer's office. [Feb.s-ly K. ALLEN Lovett. J. HALL MUSSER. L ovELL & MUSSER, Attorneys-at-Law, HUNTINGDON, PA. Specie] attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds ; to the settlement of ESTATES, die. ; and all other legal business prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. inov6,'72 RA. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, • Office, 321 11111 street, Huntingdon, Pa. [may3l/71. -lATILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Hill street. [apl9,ll. Hotels JACKSON HOUSE, FOUR DOORS EAST OF THE UNION DEPOT, HUNTINGDON, PA. A. B. ZEIGLER, Prop N0v12,'73-6sa MORRISON HOUSE, OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA It. It. DEPOT HUNTINGDON, PA. J. H. CLOVER, Prop► April 5, 1871-Iy. Miscellaneous TT ROBLEY, Merchant Tailor, in • Leister's Building (second floor,) Hunting don, Pa., respectfully solicits a share of public patronage frem town and country. [0ct16,72. RID A. BECK, Fashionable Barber • and Hairdresser, Hill street, opposite the Franklin House. All kinds of Tonics and Pomades kept on handand for sale. [apl9,'7l-6m WM. WILLIAMS, MANUFACTURER OF MARBLE MANTLES, MONUMENTS. HEADSTONES, &C., HUNTINGDOF, PA. PLASTER PARIS CORNiCES, MOULDINGS. ALSO SLATE MANTLES FURNISHED TO ORDER. Jan. 4, '7l. fll . O TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE LA or cl kinds of printing. The Huntingdon Journal. Printing TO ADVERTISERS: THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING J. R. DURBORROW & J. A. NASH Office in new JOURNAL building Fifth St HUNTINGDON, l'A THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA CIRCULATION 1800 HOME AND FOREIGN ADVERTISE MENTS INSERTED ON REA- SONABLE TERMS A FIRST CLASS NEWSPAPER TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : $2.00 per annum in advance. $2 50 within six months. $3.00 if not. paid within the year, JOB PRINTING : ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK DONE WITII NEATNESS AND DISPATCH, AND IN THE LATEST AND MOST IMPROVED STYLE, SUCH AS POSTERS OF ANY SIZE, CIRCULARS, BUSINESS CARDS, WEDDING AND VISITING CARDS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, CONCERT TICKETS, ORDER BOOKS, SUGAR LABELS, RECEIPTS, LEGAL BLANKS :PHOTOGRAPHER'S CARDS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, PAPER BOOKS, ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., Our facilities for doing all kinds of Job Printing superior to any other establish ment in the county. Orders by mail promptly filled. All letters shcrukl be ad- dressed, J. R.DURBORIVOW CO , ah tione Towtr. No Time Like the Old Time , There is no time like the old tine, When you and I were young, When the buds of April blossomed, And the birds of spring-time sung, The garden's brightest glories By summer suns arc nursed, But oh, the sweet, meet violets, The flowers that open first! There is no place like the old place, Where you and I were born, Where we lifted first our eye lids On the splendors of the morn, From the milk-white breast that warmed us, From the clinging arms that bore, Where the dear eyes glistened o'er us, That will look on us no more ! There is no friend like the old friend That has shared our morning days, No greeting like his welcome, No homage like his praise; Fame is the scentless sunflower, With gaudy crown of gold ; But friendship is the breathing rose, With sweets in every fold. There is no love like the old love That we courted in our pride ; Though our leaves are falling, falling, And we're fading side by side, There are blossoms all around us, With the colors of our dawn, And we live in borrowed sunshine, When the !ight of day is gone. There are no times like the old times— They shall never be forgot! There is no place like the old place— Keep green the dear old spot ! Their are no friends like our old friends— May heaven prolong their lives! There are no loves like our old loves— God bless our loving wives THE FELON'S RETURN. "Will you ask whether Mr. Graham will see a stranger ?" The clerk spoken to nodded, arose, and went into an inner office. The stranger remained, leaning against the walnut rail ings of the desk, his hand trifling with the little door that shut outsiders from the sanctum within. He was a tall, fair man. of thirty, with close-cropped hair and beard. His shoulders were broad, his fea tures aristocratic, but there was an odd air about him that puzzled the clerk, and would have puzzled any one. It was some thing that could not be defined, but it per vaded the whole man ; a suppressed look, as of one forced in some way to hide his feelings ; a manner of standing and hold ing his hat which had something apologetic in it. "Mr. Graham will see you, sir," said the clerk, returning and opening the little rail ed door. "In there—the office to the right." The stranger passed into the room indi cated, and closed the door behind him ; then standing with his back against it, he fumbled with his hat in the same odd man ner in which lie had handled it in the out er office, and instead of speaking,. looked at the gentleman behind the desk with eyes that bad a measureless appeal in them. The other did not ri,:e from his chair, nor hold out his hand, nor even speak for some moments ; each looked at the other, that was all. But it was the elder who broke the spell at last. "So," he said, "is it you James ?" "Yes, it is I," said the other. "Haven't you a• word for me, William ?" "I have a good many words that you might not like to hear," said William Gra ham. "I really can't say I'm glad to see you, delighted, honored, :and all that you, know." "I don't expect any one to be glad," said the other. "I know I've disgraced the family, but I've been punished for it. Fifteen years, William—think of that!— fifteen years of prison life and prison fare and prison friends! I'd have given my soul to undo what I did, even before it was found out ; and I never meant to keep the money." "We know the story," said the mer chant. "You were in a position of confi dence ; you betrayed it. It's the old af fair. I've had it happen in my own office. I can't feel any sentimental pity for a fel low like you. What brings you here, James ?" Shifting his hat from hand to hand, look ing from under his eyebrows in an abject fashion, pitiable to contemplate when one saw in what a gentlemanly mould he had been cast, James Graham answered : "I was twenty when I went to prison. I'm five-and-thirty now. The outside world has been blank to me for all these years. I want work. I want you to g ive it to me—any honest work, William. I'm a good bookkeeper, but I'll be a porter, an errand man, anything." "Oh, no, not anything here," said the elder. "You've reckoned without your host, James. You are no brother of mine. I cast you off when you became a felon.— For the sake of the poor woman who called you 'son,' I'll give you some money, enough to live on for a week or two. I will never give you another cent—don't expect it.— I will have you sent away if you come again." The prison-taint was so strong upon the other man that his pride was not aroused yet ; he fumbled with his hat, ground him self against the door, looked abjectly from under his eyebrows again, and asked : "How is sister Jessie ?" "Well," said the merchant. "Can you tell me where she lice ?" as.ked his brother. "No," said the mercl►ant. "Jessie is married, and has tried to forget the terri ble grief you gave her. You are the last person a respectable brother-in-law would care to see." "I'll ask you one more question," said James, in a faltering voice. Ada Mus grove—what has become of her ? Is she still living ? Is she married ?" "I have no information for you," said the merchant, harshly. "Here is fifty dollars. If you are careful, you will get work before it is gone. Remember, you'll have not another cent from my hands. Take it and go, and don't come back ,again." He flung the money down upon the ta• ble, but there was a spark of manhood in his brother, even yet; he could not take a gift so proffered. Tall as he was, lie seemed to grow a head taller as he drew his shoulders back, and glaring at his brother, threw the notes that lay before him into his face. PAMPTILETC "Curse you, keep your money !" he said. "I don't want it. I don't want .anything from you or any one. I came fcr help, it is true; for help to be an hon est man. I've been among the outcasts of tile world so long that I've lost kinship with decent folk, but I thought a brother m ight hold out a hand to draw me back. You rel'used it. Money ! Why, look at Zht cflorg-Ztlier. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1874. these hands, these shoulders—look at me ! I can earn money somehow. And, by Heaven ! if this is all your respectability and Christianity amount to, I don't care if I see no more of it. There are plenty to welcome me, and you have driven me to them. Remember that, son of toy mother ! You 1" He thrust his hat upon his head and dashed out of the room, striding through the outer office with no heed of any one there, and clanging the door behind him as he departed. One Clark night a. few weeks later, James Graham, in full fellowship with a gang of burglars, was receiving instruc tions from a companion how to enter and conceal himself in a house that had been marked fur robbery. The lesson was given in front of the doomed house itself', and after his companion had left him, Graham muttered : "Yes, I belong to the fraternity, now I am here to rob this house. I have the mask and the pistol in my pocket. I have my little dark lantern. I am a burglar, and burglars were the only men who wel comed me back from prison. My brother turned his back on me. My brother—l wonder what my poor mother would say if she could see me now. If she knew—" He stopped himself with an oath—seemed, with a motion of his hand, to cast away the thoughts that were upon him—and in a moment more had mounted to the window indicated by his comrade ; and finding that it opened easily, clambered in. His shoes were noiseless. He made no sound as he moved; and guiding himself by the lantern's light, looked for a place of con cealment. It soon presented itself. A long wardrobe, with a door at either end. In this, behind a very curtain of suspended garments, he hid himself. He heard, after a while, a baby cry, and in a minute more a step ran across the entry, and a ray of light glanced through the keyhole at one end of the wardrobe. "Ada," cried a lady's voice. "come here. Baby is wide awake, and I can't leave him." Then another rustle, another step, and there were two women very near him—so near that he could hear them breathe. "I'm so glad you came to-day, Ada," said the other, "when I am all alone. Charles was called away unexpectedly this morning! I declare the thought of that accident makes me ill, and I am nervous all alone in the house at night, dear. Be sides being always glad to see you, I am so thankful to have you to-night !" 'And I am nevernerrous, — Jessie," said the other. "I'm as good as a man abJut the house, mamma says. I've hunted imaginary burglars with a poker many a night. Mamma is always imagining bur glars, dear soul I" "Don't speak of them," said the matron, who was evidently quieting her child, as only a mother can. "This house would be more of a temptation to them to-night than it has ever been before since we lived here. There are ten thousand dollars in that safe, Ada, Charlie hadn't time to de posit it. They telegraphed that Mr. Bird might be dying." As she wade this confession, the man concealed so near her, listened with his• very heart in his ears; but it was not to the statement so well calculated to rejoice a burglar's heart. That was forgotten. He heard only the voices and the names these two women called each other by. Ada ! That had been the name of the girl he loved. Jessie ! That was his sister's name. After all, what was it to him ? Like his brother, the latter had cast him off, of course, and no doubt Ada only re membered him with horror. Still, how like the voices were. Could it be ? lie stole forward, and knelt down with his eyes to the keyhole, but he could only see part of a woman's figure swaying to and fro, as she rocked her infant on her bosom. "Dear little fellow," said the voice of the other woman. "How sweet babies are." She came forward and knelt down and I saw her profile. It was Ada Musgrove —older, for he had left her a girl of six teen, and found her a woman of thirty, but handsomer than ever. "You love children so, I wonder you don't marry," said the matron ; and now James Graham knew that it was bis sister who spoke. "I know that William wants you to have him. lie always loved you. And, Ada, he can give you all that makes life happy." James Graham's cheeks flushed in the darkness. He hated the world more than ever now. Ile bated his kinsfolk—the cruel brother and sister of his most of all. "Ile cannot give me the one thing ne cessary for wedded happiness : love hint," said Adda. "No, Jessie; I have never said this to you before, but I must say it new. I loved poor James too well ever to love any other wan while I know he lives." "Ah, Ada," cried Jessie, stooping over her, "it is a comfort to we to know you still remember my poor brother. I thought I was the only living being who still loved him." And then James Graham, listening on the other side of the dour, heard these women weeping, together and for him. "Yes, Ada," said his sister, '-and though poor James is so sadly disgraced, still when he returns I will be glad to see him, and this shall be his home if he will, and my good husband will help him to win back the place among men that he lost so long ago. William is cruel to him ; but then we women are softer. When he is free again I trust he will come straight to us. I fear William would hurt him by some reproachful speech. lie will be free very soon, Ada." The wan who had stolen into that house to rob it—the man of whom they spoke— could bear no more, his heart was softened as it had not been since he was a little child. It was as if the angels had spoke', to him. Then he remembered why he was there, and kneeling and kissing the door that lay between him and those dear women who had saved him from desperation, he crept away, and finding his way to the window which he had entered, he departed as he had come, vowing to lead an honest life, and some time, perhaps when he was dy ing, to see these two dear creatures once again ; at leak, always the memory of their looks and words would keep his heart tender and his life pure, lonely as might be his lot. With these thoughts in his mind he stood on the ground, and remembered witl► a pang who would arrive soon and what their errand would be ; and that while he scorned to betray them, he must stand be tween them and their purpose, and save his sister's- home, perhaps her life, from their hands. He felt in his bosom for his pistol ; he would not use it until the last ; but he must stand between those women and all harm. He knew well enough the unforgiving ferocity of those with whom he had to deal, and he muttered a little prayer for aid— the first he had breathed for many a year —as Lie heard soft footsteps approaching. "lie is opening his eyes," said a voice. James Graham heard it, and wondered what had happened, and why he could not turn himself, and who spoke. Then came a remembranc3 of a quarrel, a conflict, and the report of a pistol. lie knew all now. his fellow burglars had shot him,left him for dead. But where was he now ? "Ada, dear," said the voice again, "I think he is opening his eyes." Then they did open, and James Graham saw two women betiding over him. ' James," said one, "do you know sister Jessie ?" The other only burst into tears. "Yes, I know you both," said lie, faintly. "How did I come up here ? I am so full of wonder. How did you know Die ?" "We found you wounded—dead. we thought, at our gate," said Jessie. -It was Ada knew you first." "Pear Jessie !" he said ; "dear Ada!" "We don't know how it happened," fie said. "When you are better you must tell us. Only we have you back, and you shall never go back again ; never." He knew he never should. lie knew it did not matter whether he told them how he had come to them now. Ile knew that in a halo while he should neither see them nor know their voices, but be was very hap py. A furetaAe of heaven was given to him. "They have been terrible years," he said ; "terrible years. All that while I have never heard from you, but I have now. Come closer ; I can't see you very well. There's a mist before my eyed. I want Jessie to kiss me." The sister flung her arms about his neck, and kissed him over and over again. Then he turned to Ada Musgrove. "If I were going to live I should not ask it," he said ; "but you used to kiss me long ago, Ada. Will you kiss me now, my dear, just once more ?" She took him in her arms. "God is very merciful," he said ; "more merciful than man. Perhaps we shall meet again, darling." _ _ These were thelast words he ever said N,eading for ill* Mrs. Skinner's Lecture. Now dear Mrs. Skinner on women's rights. She is too good to be lost, and it being the latest out, we have borrowed a copy of the lecture from "Brick." We "fixed" it up a little, and added a few wcrds in parenthesis, where we thought the original Greek was ton obscure. Truly Mrs. Skinner is 'some," and, well let's invite Mrs. S— to lecture in Huntingdon but she wusn't bring that man Skinner along with her: Miss President, feller wimmin. and wale trash generally—l am here to-day fir the purpose of discussing woman's rights, re cussing her wrongs, and cussing the men. I believe sexes were created perfectly equal, with the woman a little more equal than the man. I also believe that the world would to day be happier if man had never existed. As a success, man is a failure, and I bless my stars that my mother was a woman. [Applause.] I not only maintain myself but a shift less husband. They say man was created first. Sposin' he was ? Ain't first experiments always failures ? If I was a betting man, I would bet two dollars and a half that they are. The only decent thing about him was a rib, and that went to making something better. [Applause.] And then they throw it into our face about Eve taking an apple. I'll bet five dollars that Adam boosted her up the tree, and only gave her the core. And what did he do when he was found out? True to his masculine instincts, he sneaked behind Eve's Grecian bend and said: "Twan't me—'twas her!" And woman has had to father every thing since—and mother it too !" What we want is the ballot ; and the ballot we're bouad to have, if we let down our back hair and swim in a sea of san guinary gore. [Sensation.] Bring up your little daughters to love and caress the ballot, and when they are old and scrawny, they will not dep:u•t from it. Teach them that man occupies no posi• tion that woman cannot fin—even to a pair of pants. Teach them that without the ballot wo man is simply a cooking and washing ma chine ; and that with it she can just rule her little roost(er.) Given them little ballots to r pray with. We have plenty of ballet-girls; but what we want is ballot women. The male creature now sitting on his platl'orm, whom the law compels me to call my husband. says I have got ballot on the brain. Ile says I sleep with a ballot under my pillow, and dream that I am commander in-chief of a large army of ballots, and cleaning out everything that looks like male sex, while the band plap, "See the conquering shero cometh!" (for a man.) Ste') remarks show that man was created lower than the beasts of the sea. the carrion of the air. or the rhinoceros of the prairies. Arid what can bo expected of this man Skinner, wio intellect is lower that) that of a common quahang ? [Applause.] My soul is filled with poetry and senti• ment ; and his vulgar remarks grate on my ear ; and when I hear persons use ex. pressions that are not refind and genteel. I want to go through 'em like croton oil and molasses. (Bear, hear.) (Clear through.) I ain astonished that there ain't more interest manifested in this absorbing topic. This hall ought to be packed from dome to ceiling and a conple hundred climbing up the lightning rod outside. A short time ago I addressed an im mense throng on Boston Common—at least thirty-seTen persons, including men and women of both sexes—who stood packed together at least for fifteen minutes. hanging on my words, the enthusiasm finally reaching such a pitch that they in sisted on burning my effigy to slow music (dead march.) And we are bound to succeed. Our speakers don't. lack brains nor in fluence ; but there is one thing I wished they did lack, and that is their desire for a husband. No matter how rabid a woman is on this question, or how much she talks against the men on the platform, she'll grab the first man that offers himself, and turn right straight round; and there is where we are weak! Most women seem to think that we were made but for ono purpose, and that was to have "Mrs." on our tombstone From the creation of the world we hare had all the great men on our side. There's Pharaoh. What did Pharaoh do? Recognizing the fact that women must inevitably rule, he issues an order to strangle all the male children. If this thing hadn't slipped up. 'twould be money in our pockets. Mr. Pharaoh is dead now, and hadn't forethought enough to leave the business to some good man. Among those who escaped justice at this time was a youth called Moms, of bullrush fame; and since then every Mose has been a wart upon the face of nature. including the wretched object whose rear name I am encumbered with. (Skin'er.) (Cries of "That's 29:" and "Put him out.") No ! you shall not put him out: Neither shall he go out of his own ac cord ! when we get borne I will show him what one solitary woman can accompli.h fif this great cause with her good right arm, (App!aus, - .?.) and number 'ii bro gans.) Herod was also awoulan's-rightman Ilerod ordered all the nta:e children to be slain and what sweeter proof could we have that Herod's head was level? My dear sisters. we can't all be Herod's, but we can wear his tintytype next to oar hearts, and press onward to the goal. Cowing down to the present day where do we find woman. We don't find her. In ten cases out or nine she finds her self'. Come with me to the wort portion of our great city. After ascending thirty one flights of rickety stairs. whit .1 wo find ? ( The top.) A miserable basement: In one corner sits a wretched woman. once the belle of the city. She makes vests—thirty-four Testa for a cent : (and two thrown in for even dos Not a morsel of food has passed her lips since last fall. Around her are fourteen children cry ing for bread. But, alas! she ain't got no bread, and with tears in her eyes she mournfully divides among them the last half of a tallow candle. Have I overdrawn the picture? No, sir! And if any mat: dares to say I have, I'll guarantee to eend him homo on 3 shutter in less than ten minutes! (Emo tion in the audienoe. But, my dear eisters, I am not here simply to touch your hearts, put to touch your pockets also. A thing of this kind can't go on with out money ; and I hereby call upon four of the most able bodied sieter4, who feel 'tie sweet to be on their muscle, to pass around the hat. Think of the greatn , _.ss of our cause and its effect on thousands of aneestors still unborn. Think of our altered firesides, where widowed mothers with dissipated hu.,bands do press their orphan children to their bosoms. Think, oh : think ut George Washington at Mr. Valley's forge, bare footed and (This appeal was :PI moving that a ma jority of the audience moved toward the door. About seven dollars and a half collected, however, which went C,r Mrs. Skinner's new set of cork screw ends. After putting it in her retieule,and plant ing her foot firmly upon it, she pro ceeded :) My dear friends, I must now bid vou adieu; but I will be with you again when times are better, for I intend to agitate this question till we get our rights, and whatever we can sponge besides. I will :4:itate it till my breath gives out and my wig turns gray The Hotel ef the Futuna. The following is the translation of au article in a Berlin paper which will con vey an idea or the German estimates of the coming American hotel ; "The latest American progress in builditr , ' will be the Mammoth hotel 500 7 .1 to be ereetel in Chicago. The enormous hotel is t have a frontage of three English miles long ar' a depth or six miles ; the heigth of seventy seven stories, will measure 3.480 feet from the ground floor to the roof. The hotel will have no stairs, but 500 balloons will always be ready to take visitors np to their room o room waiters :ire to be employed, but visitors will be serve , ' by a o newly automatic, put up in every bed room, who will do all shaving, sham pooning, etc., to the guests by a very simple and ingenious mechanism. Sop poling the guest requires hot water. the automatic will he able to call down staire: 'A bucket water up to room number one million three thousand one hundred an d seven.' and the water will be np in seen seconds by a patented elevator. Half an hour bel;ire table d'hote, instcvl of the ringng of bells, a gun (twenty•four pounder) will be fire,' on each fair to call the guests to get ready for their meals. The tables in the dining nouis will be measured four miles each. atten.linre to be performed by twelve waiters on horse back, on either side of the table Morrie during the table d'hote will he played-- gratis—by eight bands of seventy seven men each. Fur the convenience of , tors a railway will be built on each float as well as telegraph offices. The price of t . bed room will be from one dollar to ten dollars. The cost of this building is es timated to be 3680,000,000. The Billiard room. will contain nine hundred Anseriraw, nincf,y-nine French and one English table. and most of the visitor.. expected to he Americans, the billiard rooms will be *e ted out with a spittoon of one hon.lrel feet in circumference Big /1.0: _ No Time for Swearing. '•Catch me using a profane or in :he prestrnce of ladies," said a talkative piing with a shade of down open his upper lip. "There's a time for all things." No. sir, there isn't a time for all things. No law, human or divine, ever :iiet apart a time for swearing. A profane expression is a sin and an abomination. utter it when arid where you will. As for ladies, it iv well to be and act our best in their pre* ence. We cannot he too true, too pare. too honorable, if we want to stand upright before a good woman, or a good girl—yes. while I'm about it, I'll add, or before a little mite of a girl baby, with her soul fresh from heaven. only know of one other before whom we ought to be just 23 particular if not more so. When He is not around. my boys, you can safely do just about as you please. But when you're in his presence —and to my thinking, we're all there, or thereabouts pretty much all the time— have a care ! Don't offend the deepest love, the whitest purity, the grandest honor of ail A Tee Defier Wife. P.ark.n .111 en. .! h . waa quire swag and 3 peculiarly iatereetiag preacher 0. W 29 often called upon to pri4wm lb* mar riage ceremony. and his peculiarities ea such nor -aq into n Ite afu i Abed a *wryly 44 merriment long alter the part bad re tired from eh.. parinaair.. I)n nne occaeton after the nmarvimpe knct hat been tied. the brides:wen. met poain4 that the parson was entitled by lass to a certain fro, and ir mid therefore re tarn the change. heeded the minister a ten dollar Sill. which was carefully slid and placed in hie pocket. The mid panne having noticed the X in the ee ri e r a to m old State bank sate. kept up a lively cuss v-.!rsation on the nps and down.. of life till the groom became somewhat Dermas ever the delay in relation to hi. champ. mod he ventured to say : 4•PArskin Allen. that VIA 3 tee +ln a s bill I gave yn 3." •'ti ey , PI I perceive. are v.ry ernuA. It t 1 n . ,t often I receive an Larte 3 fee. .A e ,, tnfortahlo thins it te to have a bank-note in nne . 4 pocket. - mod Oben he gave iota., stowing illa,stratitvas e( sag& 3114 anoth.-r tea astnetea preeioaa time Agin the Tro..m r•-ntore.l re-Ansi the proton gnat he had not r..tarn...l the change he had expecte'. 1.4.1 h.• bream ingly suz;:c.ted: "Perhaps yon 4.1 not think that the hill handed you was a ten. di." ;on. Par lon Allen' • -Oh. yes, I notie,l that it was. las sure you that I hay. n t been +n arXree ablj gurprired for a lonz time. I tnirsys think An !in .+ Are.ision, that the henitemed has an apir , eistirr rezard for Air lengthy partner. and I preennte that yon rirari your wife that now is worth at least ten dollars. and I doubt if y would bare the knot untied for 'trio, that sunk would pot. Mr. N said the win pltmeel hri k grnotn. -Hitt i. th , re not s revtiar. f.nt which the minister anew , ' to LAM 1 , 4 marrying people?' • -Sot that nr. • re...ramie-1 the plron. We 3iwaye leave the fee to he fixed by the partien glen get married And •' the brioletrrnnes rra4,4 se ail pinta. pre np th elf.prt %., yet hoeit an♦ change Moral Cam. Have the eviorage!wham!, t deist wh.n you hay., Ike money is your pnehot. Have the eonro,:e t.► yeah your toted when it i. nerroary that you should 4o ot, ani h.)1.1 your bingue when it io pru dent to 44) Have the cot:raze t, Omni that Jae UV po.r, anki tha4 , li!etrm ?n , erty ..tr its timer Have the enarage t.► telt a tn3n wiry you Rill not kJ hiss lan•eY. Hue the emscrze to tell s gum why y.,nrefwe hirn erPdit. !lave the etare to ewe the woo* 'tree able aequaint.-snew yon kaT4 whew pion sre ennriweefi that he lark* prieeiphr:* frtittwi should bear w itis a friend . * ialirmat bet n..t with biAt Rare the couraze to %hoer your r--pert Co honesty. is whatever gore it appear.. and your contempt Cu- dishosewr 4e plicitx, by wit4usisvver it u. • shibiteJ. Hare the couru;re wear your clothe,* until you ran pat for mew owe. flare the eosrase to prefer cumfert propriety to fashion. is all agar . liave the morisre t.. acknowhalre row igonranee, rather than volt for knoll/hip under Mle preten.se dire the enor.i:ze. in peotiaiog 'stew taininent Nir ynnr frreodin. one to swoon. your means. Hare .h o.lllrAge a. niorf poor 111:siter at the ri.4k of !Pin% rid:4-0W by man A Story if UNA. .1n 3mn.in story i. related Lirstei taa regiment daring the late civil war . AnintlX the Confederate remerve. at the battle of Shiloh wav a regimens. fr,ait Newt (Meanq compered. rash anal ale. .4 the wealthie.4 ynunr men in the eity—there Was :teareely 3 private in the east'. wbn not repre4eut a pr-perry ..r thonioan.L... hiring the hotte.t ,if the haul... one ~f the fiercest .if the war. Goaeral Want,- guard ',and his girre +rinse!, involve! by a battery that be was , unable to •siloneete. Azain and again has' he siireeted ha. amosek spinAt it only t., hie sr„o r reel knelt tanagle4 from the atarieroas owathe of the well It:milled gnu. it !apt. theaszli with painful relnetanee, he touted to the CM•a cent rep:intent an.' el:iseinx Co , * atelawnit orer easter faces. nearly ail of whoa* were personally known 6. kin,. flew in a -:oire low. bat dietinet:y heard tip the forams* es 4 of the line. Iv! +imply said . s rale nae that battery ** The lave..? of New Pr 1.3:v• fashi,,n an l x •alth r 'rev' she-lt their heuisi arnl gravely reptieil - 71 , 4 meek. Geber.il Well hey yaw a better battery than that is !Sew thleame --•400*411i... Will Yes Mad NW lbws 7 ••FithPr. whvt 4.4r+ s printer five cwt r •• Live nit the *me se , •ther fivilbn 4 e.,orve. Why re ask 1 , 4 "*" -Reeanve yon vai4 jos hadn't peni soy thin!! rer yrnir pnper awl the putter st,n it to jnq •• .Wite Ts nit tint I 1401110 R if •• Why lent. - ••Re.-anee there 14 an reams in 4. •• N. mons Tes. these is Arai how I tell y.n. awl yes lme to here * '• I .ban's fie, any awl, thief I! hit the w.cl4 4s yea watt hits Tlialte4 fnfr •• lie Ni ton lowan • Well that enstot4pair swerrynez nor • What 4n yns swam 1- I wean jn - ct thin. that the b., 4coart cr thy* his father. wi r•le raw 't bey It tic k noire erintrali toner that s anst. print er or tin printer. emir& live no noehitra. and I shnoki think jos wool.' be ecii.ine4 4 Intir,elf not to know so neoch !low aitieh loom we riehe anise mf syr family life...f feleeshitsife. d evcry eret thought .f lose bliessomini ilea *lei We .re net wow dpeabiez , mersfy et pre movil eare.oso. aroy, or Boy am be, the best hiermee of slisstime. Oft Mow are wards sod leaks and hss ellisertsons. thoughtfeleeot watehlei Foals steamiest which make it manifest. awl dive is peareely a family that sight sot be rietor in heart wealth far were et them. it ig a rniatalic I. repro, dot Mosinee mom ream Irre 'mar Wier beam. they are rekatiarre Lave mem he eelaies► ted, awl ears he 4re-reseed by juireimar re& tare, ss wild fruits. way doable their beer lag antler the bawl of 2 ordain and lave eau dw *die said die ^es l• eirsliace, we choice llower..eed4 plasted is peer oad dwindle and grow .inrle —Admoie Ti!-fibs I -Sib Tam es Ille /if_ D. taw it eistems. G.iiimuntli Moil iv simpases Alumpurs' Mt' iime is tairepliwp W e .* Vitt boo tines buftlira4 1116,- time 4terr4s P s said Is ire/ brae eoirt.r.i is Lyeaseise asessy. Pa .1 "'r" r 7 Air ebe silhesseemese edits noise is C-siteelly imps Arsout 11-srii Timis emir tins r utti— imi w; ip Ilse Kagrisio s basssolos I. s lest S.tiewee s eat sod se law tor Now Orksar. teermAnuir viseiriesk Timis is s trey is Illerian. Lao Sar no. whieb • =A re pail 7 Wie 'aressas annucali7 It N.* Memory !be waripsoo b.. . a It; paned Meow from ilk, web 4 a 1 T -vim. iraimalle apromis 4 Igoe we at geport owl 4isenv•r.4 as Aiming Illionsie, anir rift. rams. N T Rpfiesi I,s toe port 4' s L. .bre bowl se - s leek-smswe we Alseifs 11. mei 4r,ssi it s ikons lissregieseg has Awes fray silimsehow n. Illedemoise ere is dm bed is she ems her 4 ieseseip semi somesesii, le a.J thus twelve are emit* are be bugs is Plidisedglis ass :ftg 1 1 1 the 31177 0 11916 a • ngle 10.0.6.0 .11 farmer is riga ea y. *Ot it is sad, Aar pow swiss 1.1111111,11110 +r o.ws 'tem 4se Grid 4 2111. w MIMS I....yrsorer*. .art 4 lbw Ivo arise that cm bore 4 sewqr L Lis now it- *whim its Fosses some I sosewprors. Lax& .1 bay saily - se ~....k gm fessi lifter* slim brio, riellift Apr dir M. iiimmer thve. loin It. aoseib it daimmemos ./rrsii +lMi'4 pieuerit& semining ewer now thipsworl. mime 4 irissoib owe 4rsire •s -presely ter bin Antos re-. 4 Iltarbrearr, s way Is andred sod gyms yams 411. awl mow maid Mir. 111111 w bssisr, loss is se is. Terms* ismober Irogigies Ardor awl osierree 4 oh. Thasitplis limn burrs boos 414.11impt mod it is nommeed thew oil %raw Pair eines will he nit All thee elle teeresi 4 Ile her Illommiel Commas ewe hes i. ear 4 ilhe !mot 4 the Amoeba tor Ihnei crypt *brew Few the intik 4 fasesel The city 4 liriodebil, Um, UP * ereseepree. Nevi Maly is& fie. 1810.6.111111 A it. moa that to semmes efoomer Moro • Pro. •IP lbw zr.stwat fravirre Our ime!.i. Agne-C4noviral if der Itepoime army. DO MI. - 11, Air dismory R. %-ar norm Ass 4110 P i PP. WOO rsnal &Mr wMy Ism yaws 411, psi mensorytot Air minim" sW s sysidsed pir dins so ISM 1111 4111161 1111111.11 110 *twit hew paw smil smoilbils 5. raids Te. Lr. rt. Ighelleb anew. es II asettry the time porelhear Air lieginsag el boo efmtroneree as WhilleriVe. _Urn@ t: ihieb tripe T.. reries. rims ishirress in Ibis aohnetrt kir 4 lbw *re 4 tbr turilrbmese imummi isioudirml lowebe vac w ralllbrais iisiasst If imam for rib eineco, :bye% mot be psi %iv .16“.• Itr Attisiorr bur isialled mew lip imuseiemerisig limiiimme 0. Wrap !Gm sof booplimmor beam be Mi. serevillo sill lie aim 4hirm sad somomil I hilTs• . • seetimer Tbe rainweims 4 Wassurseer. wets. ire Se. LWOW MI 1111111 1 111111111 P 4 soar iv Ts.. spiaime 4411••• .itimm. sip ism rakes time ems tab , * s pow mint rat* visatios ; it 40 !! gaol !kw lisrame LIM ellfrowillrer. 44.11 r.. VI" 11/01.19 fink d ell !mt . ' tousplon.ii :ofer bin SIAM go 41111 orbit...! s bow mor obi* 111.4.112 qabio. Taw rombh owl U. "Fie sim dher eninspowasta. raesarsime ash limar. W wren w. sin of/bib/sift ibalorloo. qtynalb .14/1/ry. boing astiossevi4 appear is Ilraime Air INNS Joop.o. if Irmo/mom mod on boo ajan•-• !tie I ime bur kro4 ono, inesiss boy elbirta 1.0 -304 ?s• orviriffr. 111 b/ lob& ibuftivis M... 4 4 bow nil se es Am* Eva At it ourie avow wise for MOP Amon, Newrill, 4 Voine. twit *we lap lot.••• is a few istro Ist APutemia. saw. 1'.. , , , zr0.i5501 roma!~ %my i'"W !Cyr tie Slistrirs rahreibin.". 4 shirt s h zip riliwreara ••••# sow 11', esimileaksie irsoir bow GINN, amerinsl64 si 'ipew lb. 4 Isiihted - nem *I eh. -vrwpwr IMP sr befog Ina" re 441 4 elesi mmustry show !met,. irikiliary .11,14 pus v. visa bevy b NM--a. r... 1 rpr rir Ilairia IV A& II .S sows bad ow". swim. bank. sr s ow s #lB6. If. ins/ rovosody I 1111111/V bad s ermeirie mom.. siimi f emr#4 trAt Mom inievoto. • die yrs. -$4 Ar Comm. sisdr.r • Garvoinimr ate lk vote. 4 comerr awl 3,ine ;7=l Wl' ;henry megay. owl 1.4.• G1 • • -Irsori.e. twain...Ns 0.41 minor 410+r mai to, pert their maiiieffe be fee was hogirie. Milad•Orlbla no to willopt *win lbw t.p.s. %or ammr. apispy pay_ gibe ina. ar“remo 4 anteary OWIP illeeP 41114111001 V trfor.ii Amor is itikveligi fat 4 .4.- en.? Pew*, sad fillP Raw Pia Op we emir me Asir ory rw arrar raw ewe and eailantinno ray Wes46ol. 4 Neagh 11•11.1144. IN paw ha Poemlir. isp hail ppm my. broil a swab soliaulian. ivy !apt s. warm • smillosist Sirs limo imply moo lA. mud astifitimphive :sass 4 Mo. vow WI.. se all dr ens ge. Thar *inert doe tams • pea limo raw ea she genet nee emeNee ea 111,111116.- 4.. sla a Worse a eirrereev, 41.• Tam is. fjarave. m. elbr balms prim awe anty thaw cola Imporiama toga Aria so ea nisswrisiiimahr dim , .0 oievaaar amaipaeitmo NO. 31.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers