The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, September 02, 1874, Image 2

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    The Huntingdon Journal. 'THREE won FOR REPUBLICANS.
i 4l :AIR, BEATH, GUYER.
i R. DURBORROW,
HUNTINGDON, aNN'A.
Wednesday Morning, Sept. 2, 1171,,
Circulation LARGER than air, other
Paper in the Juniata v.
REPUBLICAN NOYANATIONS.
Supreir.e Judge,
Edward I Pauon, of Philadelphia .
Lieutenant Governor,
Arthur G. Olmstead, of Potter.
Secretary of Internal Affairs,
Robert B. Beath, of Schuylkill
Auditor General,
Harrison Allen, of Warren.
Senate,
IL Clay Marshall, of Orbisonia.
[Sebjeet to the decision of the District Conference.]
Assembly,
George Gayer, of Warriorsmark,
Henry 0• Robinson, of Dublin.
Sheriff,
Huston E. Orum, or Huntingdon .
County Copatnissioner,
Willi!Uß R. Corbin, of Juniata
Director of the Poor,
Jaeob H. Isett, of Penn. •
Comity Surveyor,
William H. Booth, of Springfield
Auditor,
Henry H. svoope, of Mapleton.
0 II
Pditßeira!
Read the Provisions of the New
Constitution on Corruption !
Officers Must Swear that they Have
Not Used Corrupt Means to
Secure a Nomivation or an
Election !
If they Have, to be Forever Disqual
ified for Holding Office in this
State
Any Person Convicted of Violating
the Election Laws Shall be De
prived of the Right of Suf
frage for Four Years !
We copy the provisions of the New Con
stitution upun corruption so that no one
will be able to say that he had not timely
notice :
MOP= vu. SIMON 1. 111111 00711111T4TION.
ilsOrseit 1. &Won mid 'Representatives and all Judi
eisl. Nub iiiiKbasti mss, ;ball before entering on the
duties if floir milpesilve ens , take and subscribe the fol
lowirigbilfterallhartits
I öftesisly swear (sr aim) that I will support,
obey wed &Iliad the Oswiltirstiee of the United States and
the Ehleilireiest of We theriworwealth, and that I will
dhallseqp !riches Kay Aloe with fidelity ; rear I
HATS NW WI Or 0011111211117511, ON HAMM To PAT OS
reietitreis, sitierty or ntiMUCCTit, ANT mossy
0( OVUM Vislit i Euro, TO PllOOOllll NOMINA
TION IL E TION (or egepoisitreset), wept for mou
s," ailaproPlir espersas etyma, authorised by lair ;
THAT I , Los NOT YXOTINOLT VIOLATIGD ANT ILSOTIOX LAW
OP !MP Oslinseirersatti, or Fromm IT TO az DONS IT
°T.. 51 ;° 8 II Piill4Z Met I will sot knowinfly receive,
salmi Or sioguredif , may asoney Or valuable thing for the
perforwesses or isew-perferiscrace of any act of duty per
lataibirey to sisy tae , e, annoy than the compensation allowed by
w."
Aid obs:
Swim b.. Aseg perms who shall, while a candidate for
giesotallitUrt or imorin, FOAM OR rioaArzon or ANY
Widenli m a ri ALAM SI. lOW= DISQUALIFIED
IRON 'AN OtflC OF TRUST OIL PROFTT
It TREFOOILIKRIWIALTII; AND ANT 'limos Menet ,
ID aro lIIILIRIOI. TIVLATIOSOI . Iip mon= Lotto, lima., IN
ammo,* TO AST tax:amen FROM= Ft LAW El DIPEIYID,
OF TWA "Natelit Off SIIPTILLOX LOOOLOTILY TOW a TUX In , POUR
TZARS.
merlon P. Any person who shall give, or promise, or
ger to five to an elector, any *nosey, reward or. other
valuable consideration for Jul . *ate at an election or for
orgahao%w the sow; or who shall gift or proud:etc vire
ruck c ivet Moss to"trent or partyfor such elector's
te
vett i rrfor the thereof, AND LOT ILICTOR WOO
MOLL CL AMIN IND ISM vs, roa IMAMS ea roa
emorina, LIT NOXIT,BZWAILD, OL OTIITZ VALUABL• CONno-
SUTTON MR 111 Toil AT IN T.LekTION, or for withdrawing
14 • 01 ' 11 0VAPUllircbl I I forfeit Wright to vote at each elec
tion, end amp doctor whom right to vote shall be ehaltenged
for smelswirodirefore Ac election officer: shall be required
to anwer orw i ffirot that the challenge is untrue before his
vote shall bs recorded.
Republica* County Committee.
By $ resolution passed at the late Coenty Convention,
the pass= authorised therein,have selected the follow
ing aimed pergolas for the lirious election districts, to
ssrvs on the Republican County Committee for the year
1154
ileisadrie borough—Stephan Hamm David Moore.
Ilarrei.—A. Fardhiand Corbin.
•
`h— 1. R. Thompson.
Brady—A. P. Rarnham, J. B. Wakefield.
Booed 'figs =obis Imola.
&r!ralti
/Issuer, B. Sha Juba
re.
Ousseille A. W. Chilcott.
n o ' n olestay , C. R. McCarthy.
iseilongla—Roulben Cram.
e t' W, LuielhOlemtiol J. Cloyd.
litheriff_ carter Ire% Dorris Stitt. -
FrommuitWlrvfl, Jain Q. Adams, T. W. Ham-
Ham. ' ,
Menflerson—George Hetrick.
Meyerseal.-Bervid 'M. Helsel.
H lit st. Fleming, C. H. Gluier.
25 Ward—Thos. G. Strickler, Joh.i C. Miller,
Ilies=Sfed.
gun 3d WardL.Thomes 8. Johnston, Richard
Musitingiims ath Ward--Charles Kershaw.
Jarboe—Jackson Harman, Win. S. Smith, Elias Messer.
te=tesirs K. Esistifinan.
H. Donaldson, Alexander Parks.
Mapletom-11. L. Max.
Markleiggritloseaagb—Monroe W. Heaton.
•
Morris--Peny.Moore, H. C. Beck.
bermegh—T. A. Appleby, John G. Stewart
Mt. Union Distriet-11. C. Shaver.
Oneld wi t—a.V. Miller.
.111: Ruder.
Pese—Jiha to tA. K. Treater.
==em .-John T, Dopp.
, home Alien, Benj. Iseoberg.
Shade Gap C. Zeigler.
Shirley—Robert Henry B. Dell.
A.
1 1 1.2iewton Geddes, Karr.
Cyrus Brown.
Te seers •Speer.
Ted—W. K. Ronson, Nicholas Cram.
Three Sprinp borough—Loraine Ashman.
Union—John Gayton, Simeon Wright.
Walker John P. Watson, E. J. McCoy.
Warrieremerk—Levi Claybaugh, Richard Wills , Benj.
Wink/einem.
Upper West—Adam Lightner, James F. Thompson.
Lower West—base IN. Neff.
L. 8. GEISSINGER,
Chaim's( Retnibllein County Committee.
Huatieoloe, August .20, 1124.
mminonomemea
The Beecher Conisiiitee has coin
*Leg lillabOra and white-wash is abun
dant and correspondingly Cheap.
sgb., Thursday negtis the last day for
mooning. The iessespors! wilLbe at the
Own of holding elections, this day, (Tues.
day,) to correct the lists. See' to it NOW.
. NA. Prof. A. L. (lugs, of the Hunting
don Globe, and a whole batch of other
Democrats, passed through the city last
evening en route home bound from the
Democrat State convention.—Altoona Tri
bune.
am: The Democrats can elect a Judge
and there wss as mach of a squable fbr
the place as usually characterises a pack
of coyotes When' struggling for the carcass
of a *dope. How hungry those 41-
lows
as. The Demecrats nominated Hon,
Warren J. Woodward, of Berke, for Judge
of the Supreme .court; John Latta, of
Pi r estniorehiriti;,oo.;iiiitenant GoTernor ;
Justin F. Teroe„ 9 lfA r e e ne, for Auditor
General 11111(1.4w. McCandless, of Phila.
fPr 4PeretaFY ofinterael affairs.
1110 1 ,7*?, 1 9 7 1 4q, Pu?lishea a letter of f 3;
T. }helm, wad s eirouloir of J. Hall Mns•
ser, in regard to ON •laic .Repbtiean county
convention aull aanilidates proposed
for uoutinathiciffith: sago obanaasite raf
its lastisiiiqlek , fitii , ftixdis of them goo.i
- dew* tiOdn ialipo i sOnie fun out q t
than at the idea of their becoming correj,
to
'...-4(ltirlf 1J
AtiMiecl!ta la ,Aob
cii47,4gOniottiawif pier& is itself, from
their respective standlointi, but abou t
thc
,pnjy / depsnt,tiforatatre in last week's .
brae that pip* ai
- - EDITOR
"The audacity of the Globe knows no
bounds and no shame. It claims even yet to
be a Republican paper, and addresses its
vapid stuff to Rep+leans. We bave put
three names at tta lea* Qf this article,
which, when connected with past events
and the present attitude of that paper and
the few malcontents who believe in it,
should satisfy every Republican in the
county that it is even a worse foe to the
party than if it were openly to espouse
the Democratic cause.
Hon. S. S. Blair, of Hollidaysburg, i■
well known to the Republicans of Hun
tingdon county. He served them faith
fully and with ability in Congress. No
man in the interior of Pennsylvania has a
better Republican record than be. He is
now again a candidate for nomination in
his district with the endorsement of Blair
county, and was recently spoken of with
favor for the Supreme Court, a position
for which his abilities and character emi
nently fit him. But some months ago Mr.
Blair was retained to prosecute an indict
ment for libel, instituted by a private citi
zen of this place against the editor of the
Globe; a daty which he discharged with
fidelity and yet with the dignity and cour
tesy of a gentleman. Because he did
this the editor, a few weeks since, express
ed the hope that Mr. Blair might be nom
inated for Supreme Judge, so that he
could "go fez." him. The editor's Repub
licanism is of that stamp that personal
resentment would outweigh his allegiance
to the State ticket with well a candidate
as Hon. S. S. Blair upon it.
The State Convention met and Mr.
Blair was not nominated. There were
contestants for Supreme Judge, Lieut.
Governor and Auditor General. The only
office for which there was rio contest was
that of Secretary of Internal Affairs. For
that office General Robert B. Beath, of
Schuylkill county, was nominated by ac
clamation. He was a gallant soldier in
the field. He had so well administered
the Surveyor General's office, to which the
people elected him, that all other aspirants
gave way and the Convention of Republi
can representatives, without dissent, re•
cognized the claims of the brave soldier
and the faithful public servant. But this
Republican, whom all the State endorses,
the Globe refuses to support. Gen. Beath
has the nerve to do his duty, and as he
did it on the field of battle so also he did
it when his comrades asked him to stand
by the orphans of their dead associates.—
In doing that he incurred the resentment
of A. L. Guss, and such is the character
of Guss' Republicanism that he sets up
his personal resentment against the voice
of the whole party in the State, and has
the effrontery to ask Republicans to follow
AIM in opposition to Gen. Beath-.
Last year Guss had a convention of his
own, and tried hard to get the consent of
George Guyer to give character to his bolt
by permitting the use of his name for the
Legislature. Mr. Guyer refused. He is
as good a Republican to-day as when the
bolters asked him to take their nomina
tion. He is the Republican nominee now,
and Guss is already even sneering at him
because he is a minister of the Gospel,
and asking the same men to vote against
him whom last year be would have exhort
ed to vote for him. These three names
should lead Republicans to reflect that
they have as good a Republican ticket
nominated, from top to bottom, as ever
was presented in the county, and that it
should receive every Republican vote, for
no higher feeling than personal malice is
invoked against it by the Globe.
OUR LEGISLATIVE NOMINEES.
Never had the Republicans of Hunting
don county an opportunity of voting for
two better men for the Legislature than
those presented to them this year, and
never has there , been presented so little
reason for voting against good candidates.
George Guyer is a native of this county,
was born and reared on a farm in War
riorsmark township. With only the edu
cation afforded by the common schools, he
became a student and made his way into
the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal
Church. He was for many years a labo
rious and successful preacher, filling with
acceptance the office of Presiding Elder,
and he continued his labors until his
health required him to relinquish the
pulpit. He is a man much above average
ability and general intelligence, is sagacious
and practical in tle,business affairs of life,
and a 4eeided Republican. He has never
sought political office, although his friends
have, upon several occasions, knowing his
worth, endeavored to mate him a candi
date. He is widely known, and has the
confidence of every man who knows him.
Henry. C. Robinson is.a native of Ire-,
land, and came to this country when some
years under his majority. Unaided and
alone he sought. employment and settled'
in Dubltn township, wherete has. liv t ed,"
and has been suceefsfmliia, business for
over thirty years. Heins been engaged
in merchandizing, and tanning, and is now
farming, and in all that region 'in which
he has done business, no mad, hash higher
reputation for honesty and fair dealing.
He is weld .acquainted with, the people and
with their buSiaess4ants. From the-time
that he first voted le acted•with the Whig
party, and since ile!urginization • of the
Republican party, laas been an active and
energetic member of Instead of seek
leg Office lie -wished to decline it and .to
haielfthenprivilege Jot! working' for the
electioi of Mr.Dewees;'but yielded to the
demand of the I,ottretition. •
It is hardly necessary to invoke the
active support of for such camli
de*: It would *et for the public
,Anterasts if, vg.cottlit,o4l4..s., Legislature
composed of such:mon. 1 , - .lLosest i i
gent and ?radical, they*euMil.J4iotetiletil
setvea to the interests of their constituents,
for they have interests in common with
hem.
1 .4P4. 11 44na :will , hardly wanderoff from
alackaaiclidatia tOietofor a mongrel tieke4
• ' ,up of a tkfltifg Republican and a
liargaiiiiiiiiPernoti l / 4 4 ad4tberc are a giCat
wyopiemoCiats 714 p 741, :conclude,. that
rtbf 841riptaial ioinakotioa id a good quo,toi
applyiaarlitif this leir v 4 "lhote !Oitil
net tlit'irritiio
iia aniti
fic toget4el
,
WHITE LEAGUES and DEMOCRACY
The recently organized "White Leagues"
of the South and the Democracy of Indi
ana are identical. The one proposes to
ostracize the colored voters, while the
other arraigns Senators Morton and Pratt
for "voting in favor of civil rights for the
colored race," as provided for in the Con
stitution of the United States. They each
recognize the fact that the only avenue to
the control of the Federal patronage is
through the ballot•box, and if the colored
citizens cannot be induced to vote the
Democratic ticket they must be deprived
of the exercise of their franchise. A pro
minent Louisville journal, the People's
Vindicator, published at Natchitoches,
July 18, in an editorial of two columns in
length, addressed "To Our Colored Citi
zens," says :
"The white people intend to carry the State
election this fall; thin intention is deliberate and
unalterable."
Again, in the same paragraph, we read :
"Let it be distinctly understood that you
have fair warning, that we intend to carry
the State of Louisiana in November next, or she
will be a Military Territory."
The italics are the writer's, not ours, and
in a couple of sentences we have the de
liberate announcement that in Louisiana
the colored citizen shall no longer be al
lowed to exercise his constitutionally guar
anteed prerogative of casting his vote
for his State and Federal representatives.
This is the solemn declaration and sworn
purpose of the White League or re-organ
ized Ku-Klux Democratic Clubs of the
State, as is shown by their own declara
tions, copied from the White League plat
form, published in the New Orleans Pica
yune, as follows :
"We submit the platform of the Crescent
City White League, believing that it can and
will be made the platform of the white race in
Louisiana.
"The Crescent City Democratic Club having
changed its name to that of "Crescent City
White League," has thought that an explana
tion was due alike to its retired members and
to the people of New Orleans of the motives
of a change so seriously and so sadly sugges
tive."
And here is the explanation, or a fair
sample of it :
"The negro has proved himself as destitute
of common gratitude as of common sense. In
stead of improving in his capacity to make an
intelligent and patriotic use of the ballot, u e
do not hesitate to affirm that he is to-day less
qualified for the duties of self-government
than be was seven years ago."
Is it not strange to sea the very men
who have resisted the education of the
colored race, and who have driven their
teachers from the State, now denouncing
them for their ignorance, and making that
a reason for depriving them of their right
to approach the ballot!
A similar spirit pervades the State of
Texas. On the night of June 22, a band
of fifteen armed men in Gaudaloupe coun
ty, Texas, took Mr. C. W. Washburn, one
of the teachers of a public school in a col
ored settlement, from his bed, and tied
him, and when one of their number inter
ceded for his life they finally inflicted one
hundred lashes with a bull whip, and al
lowed him six days to leave the country.
Mr. Washburn has been one of the teach
ers from the American Missionary Associ
ation for several years. But the Demo
cratic legislature has broken up all the
public schools of the State and closed the
school houses, and as their emissaries this
armed banditti informed Mr. Washburn
that "they would kill or drive off every
white teacher of a day-school, or Sunday
school, who taught the negro; that this
was a white man's country, that no negro
should be taught, and that they meant to
have him back in his old condition."
On the following night a band of eight
men, all masked with black muslin, and
armed with six-shooters, went to the house
of Mr. J. F. Gesner, near Seguin, Texas,
and demanded admittance. Finding that
resistance was useless, Mr. Gesner opened
the door, when he was seized and dragged
into the yard and an attempt was made to
put a rope about his neck. Upon shouting
"murder" he was struck on the head with
a six-shooter. The cry aroused the neigh
bors and the men fled. The only offense
of which he was guilty, in the eyes of this
gang of desperadoes, was that of teaching
a class in the Sunday school connected
with the colored church. He was com
pelled to leave thatpart of the State, where
he had hitherto resided and where his
crop had been planted.
These are the legitimate fruits of De
mocracy in its hatred of the party that
established free schools throughout Texas,
and that has labored for thirteen years to
establish schools in the South, and educate
and elevate the communities, without res
pect to race or color, and lead them to
harmony and prosperity.
Now, instead of all this opposition and
consummate !self ' . tui n folly let us sup
pose that •
,the **open, phut sex, mer
chants. and . vatehaains of ;the but had .
consulted their own interests, forgotten
the past, recognized and accepted the
changed condition, aided in the education
e,nd elevation of all Classes alike ; suppose
that, in the further pursuit of their own
'interests they had aecepted 'the Republi
ean policy and recogniied the status of the
colored race, guaranteed under the Consti
tution.'of the United States, and treated
them as citizens, making them feel that
their political -*flinty - was an accepted
fact and fully recognized, what would have
been the aspect of affairs in those States
to•day ?
In the first place statesmen "to the
manor born", who had given evidence by
their deeds of lan earnest desire to aid in
harmonizing the 40CordAnt, Opments and
in building up the material lam:eats of
their State, would have c,onnanded the
respect and confidence .and received tate
votes of their colored fellovi citizens. This
would at once have placed them in power,
and given them the full control of State
affairs, together with a full representation
in the Halls of Congress.
" 1 4 die second place it would have guar
ted p e ace and, harmony in all the. now
disaffected States,; the schoola 9rvoim4
by Northern men and Northern women
would have been retained, and increased
in' numbers and efficiency; the sable son'
of the South,, by increased intelligefice,
would have'becOme better and more pro
fitable servants; the way would have.he*
open,ed fpr ; the, intod.uatinn, ' of_ 'capital;
with Out being insulted, &eel the North
awl from' Europe, iithieh would undo*.
have flowed in by mliliotxg pr
to purchase land, erect cotton' factories,
build machine shops and manufacturing
establishments. Railways would have
been pushed into the interior, increasing
the facilities of transportation and remo
val of the cotton and other crops; doubling
the value of plantations; attracting h uni i.
gration ; and opening up new avenue s o f
industry, with an abundance of employ
ment and liberal remuneration for all.
And, in the third place, the former
prosperity of a very large proportion of
the people would have been restored, and
like the afflicted but patient man of old it
could be said of them that "the Lord
blessed their latter end more than the be
ginning." It is never too late to do w e ll.
Burke was right when he said : "The
stock of materials by which any country
is rendered flourishing and prosperou s is
its industry, its knowledge or skill, its
morals, its execution of justice, its courage,
and the national union in directing those
powers to one point, and making them all
centre in the public benefit."
THE GLOBE AND GEN. BEATH.
We regret that the editor of the Globe
should attempt to injure the State Ticket
by placing three of their names at the
head of his columns, and congratulate
Gen. Beath that he h_s been singled out
as worthy the vituperation and abuse of
A. L. Guss, whose career as a principal
of a soldiers' orphans' school and a minis
ter of the gospel. is so well known. .
When Gen. Beath entered into the work
of exposing a man who had betrayed a
sacred trust, it was by the commsnd of
the Grand Army of the Republic, which
organization he represented; and at their
last department meeting, in Bethlehem.
they passed a unanimous vote of thanks to
Gen. Beath and the committee, for their
actions.
It would be impossible to take the time
or give the space to meeting the state
ments that the envenomed spite of a con
victed villain may conjure up, and but two
or three points may now be mentioned.
General Beath never received a line
from, nor spoke a word to Senator Scott
in reference to the charges against A. L .
Guss. On the contrary, the charges were
first brought out and presented to the
Grand Army by the Post at Bethlehem,
in the fall of 1871, before Guss ever men
tioned himself for Congress; the full de
tails of which we published on the 15th
of April last.
It was manifest to all unprejudiced per
sons that Gen. Beath was putting forward
every effort to prevent injary to the repu
tation of any pupil, and it was a piece of
DIABOLICAL SCOUNDRELISM FOR A. L.
GCBS TO PUT THOSE GIRLS IN THE PO
SITION OF HAVING TO DEFEND HIM.
We know that any controversy with
this man will be distasteful to Gen. Beath,
who, conscious of the rectitude of his ac
tions, can afford to treat with contempt
such ebullitions, but we call attention to
two short extracts to show how General
Beath stands in his own home.
The Miner's Journal, published at
Pottsville, says :
"Colonel R. B. Beath, of this county,
who was nominated by acclamation to fill
the new office of Secretary of Internal Af
fairs, has so frequently received favorable
mention in these columns that we deem it
needless to dilate upon his multifarious at
tributes at this present time. Let it suf
fice that he is one of the truest and staunch
est gentlemen that ever was elected to fill
a position of grave respansibility."
The Schuylkill Republican, published
at Minersville, Schuylkill county, has the
following :
"For Secretary of Internal Affairs, in
the nomination of Col. R. B. Beath, of
Schuylkill county, the convention but re•
garded the wishes of the people of Penn
sylvania, and in making the nomination
by acclamation they paid but a just tribute
to a meritorious official. The official, as
well as personal and military reoord of
Col, Beath recommends him to the admi
ration and support of every Pennsylvanian,
without regard to politics, who desire to
see the public offices filled by men of
honor and sagacity—men who are above
resorting to political trickery to secure
preferment. Schuylkill county will show
her appreciation of the distinguished con
sideration shown her by the Republican
State Convention in the handsome in
creased vote she will give in November
for the Republican State ticket."
"The Office Seeks the Man."
While the politicians have been busy
nominating Lieutenant Governors and Su
preme Judges, the people have quietly
chosen a United States Senator. It must
be extremely gratifying to Senator Scott,
as his first term ()totes, to see with what
honest enthusiasm the whole Common
wealth unites in a warm "Well done, good
and faithful servant." Very rarely in the
history of •our State has such a general
expression of -insolicited commendation
.ever been vouchsafed by any of represen
tatives as has greeted Senator John Scott,
and very rarely has any such honor been so
well deserved.
The unanimity with which the press of
the State has spoken at this early hour on
not merely the desirability, but the duty,
of returning Senator Scott to the seat he
has dignified and honored for the past six
years, is something thardeserves mention.
Such leading county journals as the Frank
lin Repositary, the Scranten Republican,
the Bucks-county Intelliencer, , the Johns
town Tribune, and others have led off with
strong articles, and their judgment has
beer endersed and confirmed by the
large dailies of Pittsburgh and Philadel
phia.
This direct
. response of the peopl e t o
faithful and l sOlid, service is Que or: the
signs that give hepe to the Republie.i---
Senator Scott, who has done 8Q 111)J ;for
our Ceutennial,,tor the industrial-develop
ment of his_State: and the - materialin
terests of all the 4 0, 44Ary, has beau most
1 4 10 4/04 la l 4 ,TeATeit i 4 , 'his appearance be
fore. the ,pulgiO, ,The notoriety and eon
spienousness which the conventional states.
man of our day eraves.is painful and un
pleasant to a gentleman of his character
and training. No systematic advertising,
no pre-arranged serenades, no blackmail
presentations; ~.a s. penny-a-line editorials
have marrect tOe record of his political life.
It is therefore iminently srtisfactory to
know that the people our solid. Coon
wealth see and recognize the. labors of
a gentleman at a time when . "the gentle-
IPA in Polities" 4 voy meleonlar ele-
UQI t.
, Besides a strong mood and:high pahlie
; character, there is another: fact that: gives
i,oll*.°l*sePtt a powerful Itold on)the best
bpd most snbstantiel element of the COM
FOUPitI.., In the progress of reform and
the advance of moral soniment the people
have ware in these times to demand, in
addition to ability andahrewdee,sa, some
thing which is & bettor' pledge of 'Adel'
fidelity and loyalty—and that is, private
character. Senator Scott's unblemished
private life, his known purity in all trans
actions between man and man, his high
reputation for personal integrity, and
honor, are an element of strength which
cannot be overated in the coming cam
paign.
In fact, the character and dignity which
Senator Scott has given to his high office
is the secret of the good will of the people
which flows out so spontaneously towards
him. He has raised the tone of office
holding in Pennsylvania, and we cannot
afford to give him up, even did not custom
and usage claim his return, and political
economy in its most direct sense demand
that the training and experience of six
years of good Senatorial labor should not
be thrown away. _ _
With Senator Cameron the man of affairs,
and Senator Scott, the trained lawyer, and
both of them gentleman of wide legislative
experience, Pennsylvania is very strongly
represented to-day in the upper chamber of
the National Legislature. The people evi•
dently satisfied that no change should be
made at this juncture, feeling, with all due
regard to any gentleman who may present
their names, that change in itself is a loss.
Therefore, looking considerably over the
political field, we agree with the German
town Telegraph in the very temperate
language of its conclusion, that Senator
Scott "has a very good chrnce of success"
when the people's large Legislature meet
next winter.—Philadelphia Press Aug. 19.
Our New York Letter.
A Rev. Scoundrel—Crime—Cheap Hotels
—Training Schools for Women.
NEW Yonx, August 31, 1874.
CLERICAL SCANDALS.
One of the worst has recently come to light in
Jersey City, a very popular clergyman named
Glendenning being the alleged cause. A beautiful
girl named Mary Pomeroy, an orphan, residing
with her cousin, was engaged to be married to Glen
donning, who was her pastor. Some weeks ago
she confessed to her aunt that she was about to be
come a mother, and after long entreaty she named
Glendenning as the author of her shame. She
stated that when her condition became known to
her she entreated Glendenning to fulfill his prom
ise, but he put her off. Finally he came to her
one night and told her that exposure was ruin to
him, and that she must give him a paper relieving
him of any connection with the matter. lie threat
ened her with a pistol, and she acceded. Getting
this paper he refused to marry her. Last week the
child was born, and on Monday poor Mary Pom
eroy, ruined and heart-broken, died. On her
death-bed she made the statement she had made
before. The funeral was one of the largest ever
known in Jersey City. The beauty and sweetness
of the girl, and the peculiar circumstances of her
death, created a terrible excitement. IfMr. Glen
denning is cot lynched, it will be because the wiser
and cooler men, who would have law take its prop
er course, aro in such majority as to be able to
control the more excitable. But what punishment
can the law inflict upon such a man ? lie is a•
truly the murderer of Mary Pomer,,y as though he
bad shot her.
And when one thinks of such occurrences. and
thinks of the inadequacy of the laws, grave doubts
arise as to whether double-barreled shot guns are
not rather good institutions after all. All that can
he done with the Rev. Glendenning is to compel
him to support the child.
CIIMAP MOTELS
were full. They ought to be, for of all the sublime
frauds on the Continent, the first-class hotel is the
most sublime. And the people are finding it out.
There are thousands of nice, neat, comfortable ho
tels in the city at which a man may live nicely on
$2.50 to $3 per day—better, in fact, than he does
at the fashionable ones at $8 to $lO. And then it
is such a comfort to have a landlord who really is
pleased at your patronage, to be in the hands of
clerks and waiters who recognize the fact that guests
have some rights, and where, after you have paid
for your accommodations, you are not expected to
pay over again for having them brought to you.—
Avoid ye the big hotels! It is not disreputable
now to pay $2.50 per day for board, as it was du
ring the war. The wealthiest and best men may
be found at these cheap but good caravansaries.
FREE TRAINING SCHOOL FOR WOMEN.
The vexed "servant-gal" question is in a fair
way of being settled in our large cities, in the only
way possible, by the natural working of self-in
terest on the part of employers and employed.
Several women of education and experience in af
fairs, finding themselves in want of an assured po
sition in the world, and the world very much in
want of clean collars and decent dinners, deter
mined to exert their skill in this direction for the
good of the public, and to reap the benefit. Instead
of haunting the Congressman of their district for
a clerkship at Washington, or piling vile manu
scripts on the hands of a patient editor, without a
thought even of giving readings in public, which
the world very well knows any graduate of a
grammar school is competent to do, at $5O a night
for five nights in a week, these ladies in question,
whose abilities in other and more eligible direc
tions were well proved, in the quietest way opened
a training school, for girls who wanted work in
good families.
When it started a year and a half ago, it was
only to teach sewing in the nicest way, and occu
pied rooms over Wheeler and Wilson's Sewing Ma
chine depot. Inaceordanoe with Unoriginal idea,
the scheme was extended, and last Spring the school
was removed to a large house on Tenth street.
where various departments are now in full opera
tion. There is nothing about the place but the
brightly lettered signs to distinguish it from the
old residences in Brevoort Place, as the dwallers
like to call the long block from University Place
'to Broadway. The hall door stands open into
• suite of large parlors scrupulously kept, where a
smiling lady at a light desk receives lady visitors
looking for help and applicants for training, as
well as orders for work in various branches filled
by the house. Instead of wearing the air of an
intelligence office, it is a place acceptable for ladies
to enter. A large piano, pictures, and a well-filled
book-case are its resources for evening, when it is
opened as a free reading—room for women, so that
working girls of any class may feel that they have
a place to spend their evenings with as good right
as men have in club-rooms or saloons.
The basement has the large gilt sign, "Women's
Tea Room," and the welt-kept entrance, the cool,
spotless, shady interior, the polished plate windows
carefully screened with muslin shades, the excel
lent order of the bronze burners and globes in the
windows, give it precisely the inviting air of the
best private restaurants. Here the visitor finds
snowy table, with clear glasses, an accurately
cooked chop, and cups of faultless coffee or charm
ing tea. Here, every morning from half-past six
to half-past seven, working girls find a generous
nap of coffee and. bread enough for their breakfast
at a charge of five cents. This food, of nice quality,
is a very grateful provision for a class of shop
girls who find lodgings in tenement houses at the
rate of fifteen cents per night, and have no other
way of finding meals, unless they poison them
selves with the nauseous compounds of low eating
saloons, where the influences are of the worst de
.icriPtion. With the building is connected a laun
dry, where nice work is done at the lowest prices
in the city. This is made a success by the very
reasonable step of charging according to the work
done, at thereto offifly mints a dozen for small
pieces and a dollar forlarge ones. The establish
went is well patronized, and both laundry and
restaurant are designed from the start to be self
supporting. There is no reason why a business
plan so much needed should not be successful, and
I have mentioned this somewhat in detail, as
similar establfshments are sure to be opened in all
towns of any size. The free reading-room receives
the support of a dozen or more wealthy and be
nevolent women, among whom Mrs. Sheridan
fihooit's name is prominent, as it is sure to be in
such kindly enterprises. Very quietly this train
ing school is taking its place among the valued
institutions of New York, and will solve the ser
vant girl question by putting a class of intelli
r. goat and respectful attendants' in the market,
when the disorderly ,ones will find themselves no
longer in demand, and have to submit to decent
•regiilations. PIETRO.
• •
l ir The railroad traveler will find a
remedy that is pleasant and perfectly harm
less, and a sure preventive of the evil of
feats from the Constipation • or change of
waterand diet, by usiug SI•MMONS' LIV
ER REcRILATOR. •••
Cholera .Morbus, Infantuna and
Dysintery cured by Johnson's Anodyne
Linime*.used internally.
Rew To-Day.
- -
AttDITOR'S NOTICE.
All persons interested are hereby notified
that the undersigned 'Auditor, appointed by the
CoOrt . of Common Pleas of Huntingdon county, to
distribtita the fund arising from the Sheriff's ax's
of the real estate of Oliver Seibert, Cloyd Seibert
and Geo. Uollabaugh, will attend to the duties of
his appointment, en Tuesday, the 224 day Of Scip
umber next, at 10 o'clock, a. m., at his Wiles in
Huntingdon r when and where all persons having
crai u le on the said fund are reqired to make known
tbe -same, or be debarred from coming in for any
share of said fund.
K. ALLEN LOVELL,
• Auditor.
--
AVPITOR'S Noucg.
The undersigned Audi lor, atpeinted by the
Court of Common Plane, of Huntingdon oounty,
to distribute this fund arising front the Sheriff's
sale of the real estate of John L. letter, hereby
gives notice that he will attend to the antic , ' of
lie app ' ointment, at his °flee, in litUlting4QU, oA
Thursday the 17th day of September', 1874, at
10 o'clock, a. w, at Which thne.and pleas all par,
,ties intiernstecl are required to present their claims
or Ue debarred from vowing in on said fund.
R. A, OUBTSON,
Sept.i-3t, Auditor.
New To-Day
LOST.
On the 12th ult., between the Brethren
Camp ground and my re s idence in Huntingdon, a
Pase Book, containing meat aceounte. Any one
returning it to se will receive a reward of Three
Dollar'.
: 4 .‘311 - El. HEAL.
_ASSIGNEE'S `ALE.
The untlersigne,l Assigne, J. r. Walk
er, will expose to public sale, in the I , . , roush of
Petersburg, on
THURSIMY, St,'PTE.WBEI:
at 10 o'clock, 2. in., the following real estate :
1. Three and-a-half acres of land adjoining the
borough of Petersburg and lanliA of Jacob Neff
and Hunter & Co.
2. .1 double brick house 6.5150 feet on lot N.
12S in the borough of Petersburg.
3. A brick dwelling houge and part of lut No.
117 in said borouq.h.
4. A frame dwelling house awl part oc lot No.
117.
5. A pl:►nk warehouse and ground appurtenant.
6. A double brick house, including a store room,
two dwelling houses and a stable on part of lot
No. 115 and pert of lot No. 1115 in Paid borough.
7. A frame dwelling house and half lot No. I
now occupied by Mrs. Glenn.
S. A double log and frame dwelling h.inse
lot No. 114, and part of lot No. 11.;, the. W,ng...rd
Mansion property.
9. A frame dwelling house and lot No. 43 in
said borough now occupied by James Myers.
.
JO. A frame house and lot No. in said
borough, now occupied by Joseph Darkhammer.
11. One-half lot No. lIG in said borsugh, used
as a thoroughfare near the storeroom aforesaid.
TERMS—One-third of the purchase stoney to
be paid in hand and the balance in two
equal annual payments, with interest, to he secur
ed by the bonds and mortgage of the purchaser.
H. ORLADY,
Petersburg, St pt. 2, '74.3t,
C ALDWE LL'S
WINE AND IRON BITTERS
FOR THE CURE OF
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Kidsey Diane"
LIVZII COMPLAINT.
BLANKET& e. 4 41111,11.4.
Jr.salo, llsN.b soil Seraklieg sad edger %raft
an.i yryrbieg seasesfastere4 is • row.
try Factory, whit% bc irOf irsollmoor 6K Wergi ar
CAA, at fair 'tiara
s 4. Aft 11PMFIFF.
AS A )101:NING APPETIZER, M
_Ang.l9:7l-1".
NERVOUS AFFECTIONS,
li ENER -1L PROSTR ATION
THEY HAVE NO RIVAL.
It absolutely purifies the blood. It speedily eir
'Tett all morbid eh-mg., in the blood. It perfecto
digestion, rendering it natural and easy. It ban
ishes those clogs upon pleasure iebieh pmts.,
gloom. It improve, the appetite, and ressores all
disagreeable feeling after eating.
PRICY, ONE DOLLAR PER BOTTLE,
CALDWELL'S COVOII CURE,
For Coughs, Colds, Creep, ke.
CALDWELL'S MAGNETIC CHLOROLOID.
An internal sad external malady.
CALDWELL'S
LILY BALM
For beautifying the
COMPLEXION.
REMOVING
FRECKLES, ERUPTIONS,
SUNBURN,
ROUGHNESS, TAN, &c.
The Lily Balm will speedily remove the blem
ish, and impart softness, transparaney, a roseate
tinge and a pearl like lustre to the eemplexion.—
It contains no ;.,,iron. It is the best aad ebespest
Toilet article ever peered to the public. Fall di
rections on the libel of each bottle. Prise, .;$
cents per bottle.
W. C. CALDWELL,
Proprietor and Mrnmfartrrrer.
5ept.2,1874. MEDINA, N. V.
New Advertisements.
MIL NWOOD ACADEMY
Will resume work uo &pleats.- 2d, 1474.
Students are prepared for College. Business or
Teaching. Winter term opens on Monday, Jan
uary stb, 1875.
For particulars Write to
R. S. KUHN,
Ju1y29,187,r1yr.) Sim& asp. la.
A UDITOR'S NOTICE.
All persons interested are hereby notified
that the undesigned Auditor, appointed by the
Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon minty,
to distribute the fund arising from the sale •f the
real estate of Enoch Isenberg, will attend to the
duties of his appointment, en Saturday, the Iftfa
of September nest, at 10 o'clock, a. m., at his
oifice in Huntingdon, when and where all person.
having claims on the said fowl are required to
present the same or be debarred from seining in
for any share of said fund.
THEO. 11. CREMER,
Aug.2s-3t. Auditor.
A UDITOR'S NOTICE.
The undersigned, appointed Auditor by
the Court of !Common Pleas of Ilestiairdes
county, to distribute the fund arrising frees the
Sheriff's mile ef the real estate of Gideon Iftee
land, hereby gives notice that he will attend tease
duties of his appointment at his *See, in Hem
tingdon, on Saturday, the 12th day of September
next, at le o'clock, a. m., when and when isX per
sons haring claims against the said fund see re
quired to present the same or be debarred from
coming in for any share of said fund.
THEO. 11. CRIIMER,
Auditor.
Aug.26-3t.
A kIJDITOWS NOTICE.
All persons are hereby notified that the
undersigned, appointed Auditor by the Covet of
Common Pleas of Huntingdon eemaiy, to dis
tribute the fund arising from the Sheriff's sale of
the real estate of Alexander Rainey, will attend I.
the duties of his appointment on Saturday, tbe
i2th day of September neat, at I o'clock. p. ■
at his offiesin liountingdon, when and where all
persons hiding claims on said fund are required
to present the same or be debarred free easing
in for any share of said fund.
THEO. H. CREMIN,
Auditor.
Aug.26-3t.
AUDITOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the isadersign
ed, appointed Auditor b r the Court of Comma
Pleas of Huntingdon county, Co distribute the
proceeds of the sale of the' real eyes., of lisnoteel
Lewis, will attend to the dulling of his uppaistasurat
at bit °Mee in Huntingdon, Da Friday, the 11th
day of September next, al if o'clock, a. a.. when
and where all parlous having elsims os said Road
are required to pretest the saws or be debarred
from coming in for any ',bare of said fend.
THEO. H. CREMER,
Ang.26-31. A udder.
AMERICAN LINE.
MAIL STEAMSHIPS.
ONLY LINE CARRTING THE AMERICAN
PLAN.
Sailing every TharWO from PHILADELPHIA
FOR QUEENS/OWN LIVIRPOOL.
CABIN, INTIIRMIDIATII & RTSZILIGI
ACCOMODATIONS UNSURPASSED.
Rates as low as by any other Pint-Clan Lisa.
PETER WRIGHT k SONS, General Avast,
PHILADELPHIA.
J. CHALMERS BLA IR, 414. Penn At., Agent,
Huntingdon, Pa.
45.26;734yr.
PUBLIC SALE.
The undersigned Assignees Si Oeuvre IL
Martin, of Jackson township, Perry covey, Pe.,
will sell, by outcry, on the renting, es
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1874
at IQ o'clock, A. D., folloeing described reel
estate, to-wit :
A TRACT OF LAND.
situate in Dublin towaship, linatiogikwa mown , y,
bounded by lands of Kelley, Cree. Spanogle awd
Cleans, eontaintal 2119 acres, sore or koo, of
limostose flint load, o( wbiols 136 woo aro Now
ad sad Is a high Hato of traltivation. The Wow,
of the land is heavily timbered with rook oak,
white oak, pine and chestnat. The improvements
aro a large double
FRAME DWELLING HOMO:,
Bank Barn, wagon shed and note crib, aid ether
outbuildings. There is a stress sad aale► Whig
spring of g oal water near the door. There is a
Log Tenant House on the farm and a good
APPLE ORCHARD,
togethor with a large lot of other fruit. trees.
This property is finely located is a riab neigh
borhood, and is only two miles frown Ike 'MM aga sof
Burnt Cabins, and within half a mile of a isalloirl
house. This farm is within 8 miles of the Rich
mond railroad station, in Franklin eounty, and 12
miles from Orbisonia, on the Penasylvaai• rail
read.
Terms made known on day of obi..
WM. E. STAMBAL;OIL
A. IL OROSH,
Assignees.
'OR
PLAIN PRINTING,
FANCY PRINTING,
GO TO TIM JOURNAL OFFICZ
I
=_--
T. IL R.
1•
txct:Rsi4)N WK ET:
TO SEIPP MID.
e; i v) r 4 01 P,
Aug. I-71 trn
Ili - N . llNi; DON %pygmy
L St - Hoof. F rnig 4111- .
Tula inatitetiwo Tiff epee 31 , ..w/gay..taigno
1 4 74, is fear ai''niaeniaa. ylosigs.”ll.•
finele APpIWW to Callow Illosignir
—1 eaawpi.r arlbaoll at twrt. Twioti•e—gg. IT.
310. SI 11$ pow tons 41' fru farefliv.
Thorough t.aettiat i. pwiminsaml in linglinb
atoi nor•riwr wirsibrogro ore afferlie4
Latin. fireek, .3erumus. ion 4 Franalb Loormllleitr.
Drawing i. sanght throe. tba *lmam isibs e i as
$ rowing), brunch by sn ortriviegand Artin.
Boil.fing new. forapitiwir oww, rases liwnwriegl
and attriactivir. an , . towline
.1
1ng.19 St. Prinwi,
t 1)M IN IST KAT YTIrIL
,g .TAIL. IL SIOSILISSIII,dr.I
Lotter.. Aslinionitrotiwe bowing ISM
to the smieroireed ow Oka eakerna at mow/
Shoemaker.
Isle et the beam. et ihmillogiale.
tieeegoeil. sit perinea, kamerimi tbeeraphirto
to ea i.I mate, sad therm havtag AMMO apisal tie
time gin preeest !hem 4aly mallhohileakol Ow
settletneat.
Asx.i J.
MARBLEHEAD WOOL= IN
TORT.
A .sigsee.
NEM irttr.vr4 i.►tT.
littwilevina ....Ray. Ps.
Th• teh.eriher tab.. pies/my is ieeleresess fir
4e4 the pehier irseesai dist 1r sessillis.
tons
Pr BLit' SALE )F A t.l - %RUC
SMALL 'ALM.
h.? ert.lerelised will ..t1 apes the primmer's'.
Jaeits.et twos:hip. as
MT/"RDA r . XOI7.WHER 74 074.1
at I Weleets, p. a.. the valeshir Yana Sselee as
the -Massie. Preperty lamb Aram haw
1.14 tetrooltip. 4eireiewel. Me ems meeliee
sea* sod atlegasues abase isslidtaf
dewed, aeal Ole ballseva is podreeksi
The ispeoveameats see a owed Wasllleveaaviad
nesse aged Leg Sirs asil .s 1 eseleSMIN/6 sift
sekaireil ewer is tie pan& neve iv as iseellos
apple a- posh evelbard ea rib* eveueiree. es*
abseils's* el Agnes.
TlMXP.—flowbolf he bawl soil below. is toe
year', mews." hy ...♦posses.
Ans.!, &one
Milt: ANNUAL EXAMINATION
-A.
Of Umbers for Myst eimpays ...ewe/ well by
kml4 se
Three Springy, Tleerrisy awl frubsy. Seems
aed 21, Three Sprits..
Brady. Thirrinhey. Sweet 17. MR Cowie.
Mapleton. Yridoy. Assort 2s.
Mount l'aine. Seinenlop. A.g..t ri. Csisa
Cromwell. Resksealry. teerpositsber egiallida
Shirley. tlioesday. Sepostober 2, fithreirpilinto.
Walter. Teeedoy, September it. XeCeonnerinoah
P.rter, Wedneeds.. September S. Nossidak.
Morris. Thersolny, Ileptirenber PO.
Werrioreinart, frehay. Sept. 11. Watelsonnote.
ra Ii a. !/eterday. lit ewerser 12. Trieshihrisian.
West. Monday. Sept. I I. Marrero "reel 5,.1,
Ranee. Teessiag, Sept. Li. Analehers.
Jneksen. Weaseolay. Sept. Is. liSeAlevey • F
fireti46ll. Tberolay. Sept_ Denatine.
nesdlerotes. Fridley. Sept. 13 . tnien A. R.
Union, Ntrairr. Sept. SI, Pine Herr.
rsse sod eneevalle. Tuesday nod We•lsse.issy,
rlept. 22 awl 23, Coterwille
Te 44. Treosity. Sept. Si b Nowise*
Juniats. Tneoley. Sept. 25. Sell Crews.
Peas. Wedoesilesy. Sap& 3s. Misehlyenert.
Lineols noralley. th-t. I. ..Ese
Res.
Carling • Oet. Dudley.
_ _
TO. Tempoisy.Get. 4. 1111•14e;tvws.
Diana. Watinsoisy, Oat. Z. Sbediestsp.
Spriegilled. Irklay. OK. 1, Nriesaffnale.
Clay. jatsrJsy, OK. IL Twee Pplitar.
Sposial fossassastiese at es Oider.
day. ON. 17. awl ill Three Ihstissirg.
0.4.91
All appliraat. wili pleader ewes, penviele.ll widlo
paper, pea awl :nk , br peweil-- pea arml nab pro
ferret!.
Essasia.t.a. will hog. et 4 .10 a. a. Soap.
plicastd admitted a ner the e Amnesties beep eaMe.
menerii.
To So 'Wu ittvi isto s chars at yogis: •saseisme
tins, tb.y neat promo a wrist.* rriaaat from tile
tattoot hoard of ells itiatriet sof able* they aro an
animal
Dirottorf aro rolowatod to bay, tabool bosom in
prapat eeerlifies fee beisflefeeseenimeleekindbeeeL
A peers! ;suited's* le be rearot at Him
'miens it eerdinllpesteaaisd.
Z. X iteNIAL.
Three Springs, Aeg. 19.141711-3 e. Iwo.
VXECEUTIMIII Y,TW.
[saw. LyINA NOM. I
"s".l
Letters teoesmoesetie, bowleg boss /awed Ili;
tho awlereigatoil ail tie 44 lOU .1. assek,
late of Crow*,ilf analliael. all popiese
knowing lbw's/alive iadeilled la amid aaltelle 01111
wake imemeliat• miaow, sad Mow bawkie
elaise against the same will pigment ilarealkiky as.
t heat ieated for vet t teaseete.
orhiloata, soropert s.
X
fi7 ECUTORS' NOTICE.
JA [ tows QIOINI 1. 'SI& Jorewitj
Utters tostoomottory bowies loos rosSote leer
ouclorsigood, ravioli's mow Alwry'• V.ll. es *to
estate a Goonio XI. M. MOB of Josiltoso owe.
'hip. decamp& all potrosso brreisig dboloooloso
indebted to avid auto* will maw istarsilkile
nest sag sag Moos bowies Alm to promos imp
duly
Jr 1719 fit.
EXECUTORS' i07117K.
I two. PSTER SPILIONLS AWL I
Latino trammilloy bonne. Ups groord
lb. sioitirrisme. 'ivies rose Potmoberg pars or
Goo. es the mato Of row lirseltim, Immo/ Porter
towsibip. ,114,11.164, M porsam Itamorimg time- '
vette+ is.lebte.i to mid oast* will mist immode
st* mimosa mistil tbassissoMpolmisse irilipmomst
dim adelismdsa bur isitbmittd.
wear. sra.l s I Li.
JAN 1.4 L 11131.
A 46.5,7441. ' Or verehrro.
LEWIS SICIMIL
BOOT AND !NOR MA KR&
is sia Jorssrse l ISd. TIM
dos. Pa. tioaci its gsswessed is an afro.
Avis.l2-17r.
'IA SD. ROOK AV POLITICS mos 111
wv
HON. EDWARD 3lc PIZRSON.
Chrrk .1" Ifewor of r ,f.
ni• Geese-at, sad isprortial ea« fee
la Maki 41 lbw "iassosar of Apiary Agt" sad
its repeal. as Trasayerlatiffe. Civil 111411110. sa4
flasstioasi, issimiliag H. re sI ;fit
mating "1.4.1 isosalassr MA oda teIIIMPOW de
Road'. said Ms vsrisfas tat__ dlei sof Caw/a&
M E acts rises. Presides* Wirers
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