The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, December 09, 1874, Image 2

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    The - Mrmidon Joftrnal.
.1
DURBORROIV,
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A
Wednesday Morning, Dec. 9, 1874
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
NOTICE TO DELINQUENT SUB-
SCRIBER.
nere are still a number of subscribers
upon our list who have not paid us any
thing since 1871. We have notified them,
time and again, that if they did not pay up
we would be compelled to add fifty per
cent. to their accounts, according to our
terms, and compel payment. We have
now concluded that we will allow no sub.
scriber to the JOURNAL to get indebted
to us for subscription for a longer period
than four years. And all indebted to us,
fur this period of time, who do not settle
with us before the first day of January
next, will find their accounts, with the
usual percentage added, in the hands of
Messrs. Lovell & Musser for collection.
There is BO use fooling with this matter
any longer. Newspapers cannot be run
upon the wind and we are determined that
each shall bear his share of the burden.—
Pay up and save costs I We have trusted
you long enough, and still there is no dis
position to come to time. If you pay a
big price it is not our fault. We expect
eventually to ask every subscriber to pay
within the year.
l et . Well, yes, we could, also, have
commenced our notice of the editor of the
Radical differently. We might have said :
The bird of the genus . Butes, (buzzard),
that presides over it, &c., and not haye
violated the Latin in the least, and every
body would have exclaimed "How appro
priate I" but we preferred a pun to ap
propriateness.
mg., A paragraph in the JOURNAL, of
a week or two ago, in reply to a small par
agraph in the Somerset Herald, of the
week previous, has drawn out our friend
Scull to the extent of half a column. We
are, however, not surprised at this. Som
erset, at this season of the year, has al
ways been a very windy place, and our
friend is especially "full of it." The mere
apparition of an old woman would be the
signal for a perfect gust, and, then, this is
all it amounts to. Wind and—nothing
morel We have no quarrel with the
editor of the Herald; and as fur Colonel
Youtzy, we believe him to be a pretty
gallant fellow, and having received a ma
jority of all the votes east we vote hie
habeas corpus in. So mote it be.
ter The Pittsburgh Gazette of a late
date furnishes editorially this political
on cut:
"There is a strong movement at the
East, and it is largely shared in and sym-
pathized with here, to bring oat Hon.
Jolla Scott, at present United States Sen
atoa, as a candidate for Governor of this
Commonwealth. Senator Seott has made
fur himself an enviable record in the Uni
ted States Senate, and has shown hinisr2lf,
in his home-life, a high•toued, honorable
gentleman. There will, no doubt, be a
struggle fur the nomination, and there are
few persons who could more strongly con
test for that nomination than Senator
Scott. Bnt from what we know of him
we are prepared to state that he will not
descend to the position of a manipulator
in politics for any office yhatever. If he
is nominated for Governor it will be be
cause his friends, desiring a person of his
qualities is that position, put forth an ef
fort in his behalf. This should be borne
in mind."
We fully agree with that journal in its
high appreciation of Senator Scott, and
feel assured that he would make a most
capable and excellent chief magistrate, of
s,hom the people of the State might well
be proud.—Somerset Herald.
OBITUARY.
John Meredith Read died in Philadel
phia,on Sunday, at his residence on Wal
nut street, from an attack of cholera
morbus, aged seventy-eight years. His
grandfather, George Read, of Delaware,
was one of the signers of the Declaration
of Independence. His father, John Read,
esq., was a Philadelphia lawyer, well es
teemed, who married a daughter of Samuel
Meredith, a family eqaally distinguished
in Pennsylvania annals. John Meredith
Read, was the eldest son, born in Philadel
phia, July 21, 1707. Ile was educated at
the Univhrsity of Pennsylvania, and in
1818, admitted to the bar. In 1823 Mr.
Read was elected to the Heruse of Repre
sentatives, and re elected in 1824. De
clining further service in the legislature
he was appointed City Solicitor. He was
appointed by Presideut Van Buren to the
office of U. S. District Attorney for the
eastern district of Pennsylvania, and re
signed the position in 1841. At this
time Mr. Read had acquired a confirmed
position as a lawyer of ability and was
nominated by President Polk as a judge
of the Supreme Court of the United States.
His confirmation by the Senate being in
doubt in consequence of his unpopular
opinions on the slavery question, the nom
ulatiou was withdrawn. In 1846 he was
appointed Attorney-General of Pennsyl
vania, holding the position six months.
For twelve years after his resignation of
the attorney-generalship, tr. Read being
under a cloud as to his politiCal aspirations
devoted himself assiduously to his profes
sion. In 1858 he was elected Judge of the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, and in
1872 by the expiration of the term of
Judge Thompson, became Chief Justice
for the remaining year of his own term.—
Judge Read was an active student and a
voluminous writer on topics connected
with his profession. His opinions on the
bench were marked by careful research.—
His reputation was un'ulemished. His
temperament, however, was of that impul
sive kind which fitted him rather for the
bar than the bench. Of his last hours, a
cotemporary says, the record is a simple
one. "For years his personal physique
indicated even to the most casual observer
that be might at any momeut give way,
and it was a surprise to every one that he
should have4ited so long. Shrivelled, lit
erally, to skin and,bou i and tottering in
step, he stAl kept faithfully to his duties,
and never lost his faculties as a learned
judgc."—Patriot, 4th inst.
Our New York Lettr,
The tjuliceuF;e:i Liquor B u si nc , F . , s _E x t ra y.
agance—The 'Longshoremen—Strikes
—Trouble :cud Suffering Servants—
High Buildings—Public Mlls—The
Poor—Reduction of Wages of Teachers
—Raid upon Houses of 111-Fa Inc. -
NEW YORK. Dec. 5, 1874.
EDIT , JR
UNLICENSED DEALERS.
The souls of. the liquor dealers of this city
are being agitated just now by the action of
the Excise Commissioners, who are hunting
down those who sell the ardent without proper
license. The Liquor Dealers' Protective
Union resisted the law ; but in the test case
the court went against them, and wide-spread
consternation ensued, as well it might, as not
one in five of the thousands of saloons in the
city ever took out a license. The decision of
the court makes every one of them liable to
heavy penalties, and the police are determined
to bring them to the score, no matter at
what cost: They hope to be able to close
about a thousand of them by this means.
EXTRAVAGSNCE IN DRESS
has always been charged_ to the feminine ac
count ; but this N: inter, it strikes me, the
sterner sex may fairly take their share of con
demnation. One rich young man recently pur
chased two seal-skin coats, costing severally
$5OO and $9OO, and two Ulster coats, the belt
buckles wrought in massive gold and equally
massive silver. What do you think of that?
One man paying $2,000 for overcoats with
thousands about him wanting bread ? True it
is that every rich young man in New York
does not buy such extravagant articles ; but
the mania for rich clothing, extravagantly
rich clothing, has taken possession of young
New York.
To pay $l5O for an overcoat is nothing
rare, and a suit, from bat to boots, including
overcoat, that does not go a long way into
$3OO is not much of a suit. Add to this the
diamond stndds, the ring, the watch, and the
other adsrnments, and Charles Augustus
manages to carry about him the best end of
$2OOO, which has to be renewed very fre
quently. Rut, nevertheless, they have cut
down the $650 salaries of the poor teachers
seven per cent., and arc standing out against
the 'longshoremen, who want enough wages
to keep soul and body together. Speaking of
the
'LONGSHOREMEN,
their strike is general, and embraces the
many thousands of men who find their daily
bread in loading and unloading ships. It
would seem the heighth of folly or any set of
laborers to strike at the beginning of a long
winter, but the 'longshoremen have, from the
nature of their employment, fair prospects of
success. Any man can roll a barrel, but ev
ery man cannot put a package properly in
the hold of a vessel, or take it out without
damage. It is a trade. And when a vessel
arrives, the demand for the services of the
'longshoremen is immediate and pressing.
The raw man cannot take his place. There
are 9,000 of these men. They have made the
demand for forty cents an hour for day work,
and sixty cents for night work, and they are
well organized to hold out. The steamship
companies are trying to get other men, but
the trouble is the skill. Novices make bad
work of it. The
are still holding out and are organizing co
operative shops, that enough employment may
be had to keep the strike from being a failure.
Other occupations are banding tegether, in
most cases, however, to prevent threaten
reduction in wages. There will be inevitably
a great deal of
TROUBLE AND BUFFERING
in the city this winter. Lab(); is very scarce
now, and as the cold weather puts its veto on
the little building that is going on, more men
will be thrown out of employment, and the
trouble will increase. The city is a cruel
place for a man out of work ; rent, food, fuel,
everything costs so much that when the daily
labor that supplies it stops, starvation or the
accepting of charity is only a few weeks
ahead. It costs a laborer all he can earn to
day to live to-day—he cannot provide for the
morrow when work stops. !leaven help the
poor this season !
One of the great troubles in the small towns
and cities of the country Is to get properly
trained and educated servants. This want
can now he supplied at a trifling cost. A
number of charitable ladies who have time
and money more than they know what to do
with, and some little heart, established, a year
or so ago, a training school, to fit girls for
service, on Tenth street. They take raw girls
and teach them to cook, wash, iron, sew, to
wait at a table, and to do everything that
comes under the general head of housework.
The work of preparation is done in no slovenly
way. Twice a week a French cook goes into
the kitchen with all the girls, and delivers to
them a lecture on the preparation of such
dishes as he selects, illustrating by actually
doing the work before them, and making them
do it. They run a laundry, a restaurant, and
a dressmaking establishment in the house, to
the end that it shall be, not only of use to the
girls by teaching them their duties by actual
practice, but that it shall be self-sustaining,
which it is. The school has taken thousands
of poor girls who were starving bacause they
did not know how to work, and has turned
them oat capable and intelligent and worthy
of good work and good wages anywhere. The
manageress of this sensible charity is Mrs.
JtiliaCorson, and it is located at 47 East
Tenth street. A girl from this school is al
most certain to be honest and capable.
Housekeepers in want of good, trained ser
vants will do well to make a note of it.
HIGH BUILDINGS.
The mania now running among those who
build at all is altitude. Some years ago the
Equitable'Life Insurance Company ran up a
building that loomed above anything else on
lower Broadway, and since that height has
run in the minds of everybody. The new
Tribune building is nine immense stories high,
with a tower almost touching the sky ; the
the new building of the Western Union Tele
graph Company is almost as high ; the Do
mestic Sewing Machine Company is eight; the
new post-office cannot be counted in stories,
but it is an enormous building, and so on.
The view of the city from the Jersey City
Ferry is-becoming peculiarly pleasant. These
buildings, with the scores of others, tower up
above their surroundings, relieving wonder
fully the monotonous uniformity which for
merly wearied the eye. Those tall buildings
do not pay—in fact, every one of them is a
dead loss abovd the fourth story ; but, never
theless, I hope the building of them will go
on. They beautify the city, and the public
get a benefit whether the proprietors do or
not. It is a fact that none of these buildings
pay three per cent. on the cost of construction
and present price of ground ; but the propri
etors all live in hope of the future. "Hope
springs eternal in the human breast."
PUBLIC BALLS,
Full of significance for next Winter, is the
falling off in the number of public balls to be
given. People have not the money to spend
on dress and entertainments. There used to
be a score of balls given by political clubs
every season, not one of .vhich is on record
for the coming winter. The great annual
masquerade of the Anion Society of rich Ger
mans, which used to count its guests by thous
ands, is withdrawn from the Academy of
Music, to a smaller hall, a significant triumph
of prudence over pride, for the rivalry has
been high between this club and the Lieder
kranz as to which should show the largest and
most brilliant house at their annual balls.—
Very few military balls will be given in com
parison with former seasons, and cheap balls
for the lower classes will be foregone indulg
ences. The thought in every one's mind will
be, not how to dance, but how to dine, and
there is such a prudent taking in of soil as
makes one of the most cheering indications
for the stormy season ahead. People are not
ashamed either to talk or practice economy.
The word is passed around that such and
such families do not entertain this season, and
no offence is taken, and no aspersion of close
n:,ss made.
WHAT TO DO WITH THE POOH,
Is a problem which wise heads are intensely
occupied in solving. Not a few of the rad
ically-disposed newspapers finish the question
in a sufficiently easy way to themselves by
denouncing all plans of relief, and all char
ities except the offer of work. The dread of
drawing paupers from outside of the city, by
the idea of soup-houses and free lodgings,
weighs heavily ou the minds of some respect
able gentleman, and not those who contribute
most to such charities, either. It is very well
to say, if any man will not work, neither let
him eat ; but what about the woman and
children, who are likely to starve when the
foundry door is closed, the factory turns off
its hands before work can be hunted up.—•
Josiah Bounderby, of Coketown, has a large
number of family connections, who are busily
crying down the idea of relief, in the newspa
pers. Every effort will be made by the be
umlaut to find work for those who want it
this season, but I,here must be piteous suffer
ing among the destitute, which only the free
ly-given loaf and pail of soup, and warm shel
ter, will prevent from staining oureivilization
with wholesale starvation, and deliberate mur
COOP ens
SERVANTS
der. There is not workenough for the thous •
ands who must have work whereby they may
earn their bread, and the bread must come
from somewhere.
The objection to soup houses and free cis •
tribution generally, which has position weight,
is the fact that within a week after the inang
uration of any free system of charity which
gives food and shelter to all who ask, every
lazy cur in the country makes his way some
how to the city, and lives here till the chari
ties close, in the luxurious idleness that such
men love. The number of great, stout, big
limbed, healthy men who haunt the soup
houses and the frce-lodging houses would
surprise you. They come by the thouutnds
the moment the cold weather prevents them
from sleeping in barns and living by beggary
and theft in the country. It is a discouraging
thing to have well-meant charity diverted
from its proper channels in this way : to have
relief intended to assist the deserving poor
made to foster professional beggary. But
what can be done ? Because the thieves get
the half of all that is given, the honest poor
cannot be allowed to starve. And so, I pre
sume, the soup-houses and free lodging hous
es will he opened again, and the just and the
unjust fed together.
REDUCTION OP WAGE.? OP TEACHERS
There is trouble among the teachers. The
instructors in the public schools of this city
have always been paid just enough to keep
soul and body together, that is, if the body
is strong enough and the soul sufficiently
subdued not to require much for to keep them
alive. The average wages of the teachers in
the primary schools was $650 per year, and in
the higher schools $750. Now nobody can
get decent board in this city for less than $lO
per week, or $530 per year, and the board
you get at that price would not come under
the head of luxurious by any means. Add to
this the cost of washing, of car-fare to and
from her school, and you can figure how much
the poor girl had left for clothes, to say noth
ing of an occasionial book, or a concert, or
anything in the way of diversion.
What do you suppose the Board of Appor
tionment of this great, rich city propose to do,
or rather have done ? They have deliberately
struck off 7 per cent. of these meagre salaries
Think of it! The teachers remonstrate, but
to no purpose. They are informed that thous
ands of qualified people stand ready to take
their places, at even a greater reduction, and
that the inevitable •'law of supply and de
mand" must come in here, as it does every
where else; that the Board is bound, by its
duty to the tax-payers, to get its work done
as cheaply as it can. And the Board, after
making this reply, probably aijoutned to a
supper Cult cost all it had wrenched from the
poor teachers which you may bo sure the tax
payers paid for.
How natural it is to pass from this state
ment of oppression to a picture that followed
it, namely,
THE RAID tPON ROUSES OF ILL BAKE
that took place Saturday night. This was a
curious scene. The police were put into plain
clothes, so as not to alarm their intended game,
and an indiscriminate raid was made upon
gambling dens, houses of prostitution, and
street-walkers. In one geasy den sixty-two
men and women were arrested, all of them
playing "policy." Thirty-one houses were
"pulled," the arrest numbering over a thous
and, then operations commenced on the street
walkers. Officers were instructed to gobble
every woman of bad repute on Broadway and
the streets leading to it, and in less than two
hours, three hundred were safely stowed away
in safety. It was a sad, sight those persons
on Sunday morning. I cared nothing for the
men, but my heart bled for the women. There
were among them hundreds of modest, inno
cent looking girls, who bore upon their faces
only the slightest traces of sin, who were un
mistakably the victims of circumstances.—
These wept bitterly at the exposure of their
degradation, many keeping their faces to the
waltz or hidden in their hands, that they
might not be seen. Possibly the next raid
will catch some of the very teachers whose
salaries a well-fed and comfortable board cut
down to below the starvation point. Who
knows? Necessity drove half the girls cap
tured last Saturday night to evil courses, and
every such action swcl;s the ranks of the
vicious. If a girl's love for life is stronger
than her power of endurance, when hunger
and cold and despair have conquered her
sense of shame, it is a very short step from
virtue to vice, and an easy one. The girls
who hid their faces Sunday morning from
shame will, after one or two morearresta, look
out squarely and brazenly in your face, and
laugh at your pitying looks. At this stage,
there comes about a yearof wild riot, and then
some morning the body is taken out of the
river ; and, without identification, buried in
Potter's Field. But the fat, sleek• Board, every
member living in good houses, and feeling,
well every day, with daughters carefully look
ed after, cuts of seven per cent. of the already
beggarly salaries of the poor girls who teach
:the youth of the city, and upon whose labors
their welfare depends. It's a curious world,
this.
-.-...4;.-• iiii.
Letter from California.
SAN JUSTO RANCHO,
NEAR. SOUTH SAN JUAN, CAL., }
November 21, 1874.
EDITOR JOURNAL : - While conternplating
coming to California, it was with some dilL
culty that precise and reliable information
could be obtained concerning it, so perhaps a
few items regarding this far off Common
wealth may not be uninteresting to our friends
in Huntingdon county and the readers of the
JOURNAL.
That it is different in many respects from
Eastern Commonwealths is beyond doubt.—
Whether or not it possesses advantages over
them, is a question which each can best de
cide for himself after a knowledge of the facts
constituting the points of difference is ob
tained. There is first the difference in cli
mate. The great Japan current sweeping
around the entire circle of the North Pacific
materially changes the climate of this State,
especially those portions lying outside of the
Sierra Nevadas, heightening the temperature
in winter and lowering it is summer, So that
the extremes of heat and cold arc so little re
moved as to surprise one accustomed to the
great climate extremes of the Eastern and
Middle latitudes. In my own experience I
remember being at Manch Chunk in the win
ters of 'l2—'73, when the mercury was 3:5°
below zero, while the 4th of July previous, in
the same region, I had enjoyed the delightful
warmth of 98° Farenheit. This would make
a difference in one year of 133°. While the
greatest heat of summer in this latitude is not
materially different from that of New York or
Philadelphia, the cold of winter is very much
less, and the heat of summer is modified and
alleviated by the sea breezes, so that in warm
weather one is always surprised to find the
thermometer as high as it Is.
I referred to the sea breezes. In the Summer
(and this term applies to fully two-thirds of
the year here,) the mornings are calm, but
about 11 a. m., with almost clock-like regular
ity, a gentle breeze springs up, increasing in
force until about 3 p. m., and dying away at
sunset, leaving the evenings and nights calm
and cool. The extremes of temperature here
between the coldest and warmest day is about
40°, while of course the -difference between
the average temperature of the coldest and
warmest month is fir less—seldom amounting
to more than 20°. In spite of the mildness of
the climate, warm and heavy clothing is as
much needed here as in Pennsylvania. This
seems paradoxical and is hard to understand
without experience. It may be explained by
saying that the climate is peculiar. It is oceanic
as distinguished from inland. Even in our
warmest days there is none of that sultriness
which makes tie days and especially the
nights so unpleasant in inland districts. A case
of sunstroke or hydrophobia has never been
known in this State. One is continually sur
prised at the variety of clothing worn—i. e,.
heavy and light clothing is worn indiacrimi
nately almost throughout the entire year.
On stopping in San Franciso on our way here,
we saw on the streets well-dressed women in
furs and women in light summer dresses,
gentlemen in linen dusters and gentlemen in
heavy clothes and overcoats, and that when
we went to church in the evening we wore
our heaviest clothing and were comfortable.
On the night of my arrival at Hollister, the
24th of August, I drove with a physician friend
to San Juan, returning after nightfall. It was
bright and pleasant when we started, but
being advised by the Doctor, I took my over
coat and found it very comfortable on our
homeward journey, which was through the
still, cool moonlight of one of the most de
lightful evenings I have ever enjoyed. So the
nights continue through August and Septem
ber, and so, I am assured, by old residents,
they are,, without exception, throughout the
warmest part of the year.
In my next I will try to give some facts
concerning the products of this State rendered
famous by Bret Ilartt and the "Heathen
Glance,"
The German government has relaxed
the rigor of Count von Arnim's imprison
ment. He is no longer under police our
veillance. •
The CooperW Union No. 2, of New
York, which has been the most active in
the late strikes, announces its intention of
opening a co operative shop.
A Walking Advertisominit.
LIMESTONE SPRINGS, S. C
Dr.. R. V. P:nr.c2, BurEdo, N. Y
Sra—l am a walking advertisement for your Gol
den 3lilical Discovery, Purgative Pellets and Dr. Sag e ' s
Catarrh Remedy, they having cured me of al:mil of nine
yelrs' standing, which was so hail that it disfigured my
nose, and, while curing it, your medicines also cured me
of Asthma in its worst and most aggravated Firm. Before
using your medicines I hal become reduced in flesh from
one hundred and fifty-flee to ono hnndred and fifteen
pounds, and now I weigh one hundred and sixty-two
pounds, and am in better health than I have enjoyed for
twenty years.
Y”urs, truly,
The above is but a fair simple of hundreds of letters
which are received by Dr. Pierce, and in the face °ranch
evidence who can longer doubt that the Doctor's medi—
cines cure the worst eases of Chronic Catarrh.
TILE GREAT FAVORITE WITH THE LADIES.
Wm Forsyth Bz. num & Son, druggists, of Live Oak, Fla.,
write, Sept. 16th, 184, as follows : "Dr. It. T. Planes,
Buffslo, _7.l.—Your Golden Medical Discovery and Pur
gative Pellets sell very largely and give complete satisfac
tion, as numbers of our customers and friends testify with
pleasure. Your favorite Prescription is indeed the great
Favorite with the ladies, and numbers can Pay with joy
that it has saved them from eking out a miserable life or
meeting with permaturo death, and restored them to
health and hsppiness."
Thsusands of women bless the day on which Dr. Pierces
Favorite Prescription was first made known to them. A
single bottle often gives delicate and suffering women
more relief than months of treatment front their family
physician. In all those derangements causing back-ache,
dragging down sensations, nervous and general debility,
it is a sovereign remedy. Its soothing and healing prop
erties render it of the utmost value to ladies suffering from
internal fever, congestion, inilamation or ulceration, and
its strengthening effects tend t o correct displacements of
internal parts, the ',cult of weakness of natural supports.
It is sold by all druggests.
Dr. PIERCE'S pamphlet on Diseases peculiar to Women
will be sent to any address on receipt of two stamps.
Address as above.
New To-Day.
AUDITOR'S NOTICE.
The undersigned appointed Auditor by the
Orphans' Court of Huntingdon county, to distrib
ute the balanee in the hands of Elizabeth M'Car
thy, Atiministratrix of Charles M'Carthy, late of
Brady township, deceased, will attend to said duty
at the office of Simpson & Armitage, in Hunting
don, on Tuesday, the sth day of January, 1875,
at one o'clock, p. m., when and where all persons
who hare claims ertion said fund are required to
present the same, or he debarred from coming in
for a share thereof.
J. It. SIMPSON,
Auditor,
Oet.o-3t,
N OTICE.
Notice is hereby given to all persons in
ierested, that on the lot of December, 1874, I
purchused at Sheriff's sale, all the property of
Thomas L. Uttley, and I have left in his posses
sion, and given him the use of the following, to
wit : Ail the goods, notions and fixtures, in and
belonging to the store, one cook stove and pipe,
fourteen chairs, three beds and bedding, one safe,
eno doughtray, one cradle, one barrel and flour,
one bran chest, and lot of carpet.
P. CLARKSON,
Camille, Pa.
Dec. 9,1874.3 t.
REGISTER'S NOTlCE.—Notice is
hereby given, to all persons interested, that
the following named persons have settled their ac
counts in the Register's Office, at Huntingdon, and
that the said aceounts will be presented for con
firmation and allowance, at an Orphans' Court, to
be held at Huntingdon, in and for the county of
Huntingdon, on Wednesday, the 14th day of
January, next, (1875.) to wit:
1. Account of Michael eresswell, Administrator
of the estate of George C. Bootie:, I.tte of the
boroul,h of Alexandria, dec'd.
2. Firat and final account of Adam }louse, Guar
dian of Amanda Krieger, one of the children and
heirs of Henry Kreiger, dee'l, who has arrived at
full age.
3. Final account of A. W. Swope, Administra
tor of the estate of John C. Weston, late of Ma—
pleton borough, Huntingdon county, deed., with
Distribution annexed.
4. Account of John A. Weir, Executor or the
hot Will and Testament of Dire. Salome Wiest
ling, late of Huntingdon county, dec'd.
5. Account of Robert Campbell, Guardian of
.Sanford D. Worley, minor child of James L. Wor
ley, late of Jackson township, dee'd.
6. First and final account of Lewis Snyder, Ad
ministrator of the estate of Sebastian Snyder, late
of West township, dec'd., with Distribution an
nexed.
7. First and partial account of David Hare, Ad
mini•trator of the estate of Jacob Baker, lato of
Alexandria borough, deed.
3. First and final account of V. B. Hirst, Ad
ministrator of the estate of Mary S. Hirst, late of
Jackson township,
. . .
9. Account of A. P. White, Adminiptrator, with
the Will annexed, of William McDivitt, lute of
,Oneids townehip, dee'd.
_ . .
.
10. Account of Jeiose D. Shore, Administrator of
the estate of Atiraham Sucre, late of Cass Weil,-
ship, deer!.
11. Final Admini , :tricion tteetiont of Andrew
Crownover and Van !toren Hirst„%dministraturs
of .John Hirst, late of liarree township, dee'd.
12. Account of John Gifford, jr., Administrator
of Juhn Giffin!, sr., lateof Shirley township, dee'd
1::. Guardianship Recount of Peter K. Ilarnieh,
Guardian of Mazy M. Oaks, a minor daughter of
lteubcn W. Oaks, late of Barree township, dee'd.
14. Final Achninistratitm account of Levi Det
wiler, Administrator of Christian Detwiler, late of
Bratty township, dee'd.
WM. E. LIGHTNER,
ItmarsTart's OFFICE, ltegister.
Huntingdon, Dee. t, '74.
NOTICE is hereby given to all persons
interested that the following Inventories of
the goods and chattels set apart to widows, under
the provisions of the Act of 14th of April, ♦. IL,
1851, have been filed in the office of the Clerk of
the Orphans' Court of Huntingdon county, and
will be presented for "approval by the Court," on
Wednesday, January 14, 1874 :
Inventory of the personal property of Thomas
Irwin, late of Union township, dec'd., as taken by
his widow, Mary Irwin.
Inventory of the personal property of George
W. Ross, late of Warriorsmark township, doe'd.,
as taken by his widow, Eliza J. Ross.
Inventory of the personal property of James
P. Ross, late of Warriursmark township, dee'd., as
taken by his - widow, Tabitha Ross.
IV. E. LIGHTNER,
Clerk of Orphans' Court.
Orphatte' Court Office, I
Doe. 9, 1874.
pROCLAMATION—Whereas,by a pre
cept to me directed, dated at Huntingdon, the
19th day of November, A.D., 1874, under the hands and seal
(Attie lion. John Dean, President Judge of the Court of
Common Pleas, Oyer and Terminer, and general jail deliv
ery of the 24th Judicial District of Pennsylvania, compo
sod of Huntingdon, Blair and Cambria counties; and the
lions. Anthony J. Beaver and David Clarkson, his associ
ates, Judges of the county of Huntingdon, justices assign
ed, appointed to bear, try and determine all and
every indictment made or taken for or concerning
all crimes, which by the laws of the State aro made
capital, or felonies of death mid ether offences,
crimes and misdemeanors, which have been or
shall hereafter be committed or perpetrated, for
crimes aforesaid—l am commanded to make public procla
mation throughout my whole bailiwick, that a Court of
Oyer and Terminer, of Common Pleas aril Quarter Sessions
will be held at the Court House, in the borough of Hunt
ingdon, on thesecond Monday (and 11th day) of January,
1875, and those who will prosecute Um said prisoners, be
then and there to prosecute them as it shall be just, and
that all Justices of the Peace , Coronerand Constables with
in said county, be then an there in their proper persons,
at 10 o'clock, a. m., of said day, with their records, inquisi
tions, examinations and remembrances, to do those thing
which to their offices respectively appertain.
Dated at Huntingdon, mho 9th day of December in the year
of our Lord one thousandeight hundred and • seventy-fonr
and the 98th year of American Independence.
AMON lIOUCK, SHIRIVP.
PROCLAMATION—Whereas, by a pre
oept to me directed by the Judges of the Com
mon Pleas of the county of Huntingdon, bearing test the
19th day of November, A. D.,1871, I am commanded to mak
public pmelaination throughout my whole bailiwick, that
a Court of Common Pleas will be held at the Court House,
in the borough of Huntingdon, ou the 3d Monday, (a,'
ISth day,) of January, A. D., 1875, for the trial of all iss,es
in said Court which remain undetermined before the cam
Judges, when and where all jurors, witnesses, and suit r ,
in the trials of all issuesarerequired.
. . _ .
Dated at Huntingdon, the 9th day of December ia the ye , .
of our Lord, ono thousand eight hundred and sereuty
four and the 9Sth year of American Independence.
AMON HOUCK, SHPAIFF.
$1 ONE PRICE TO ALL. $1
THE NEW YORK WORLD,
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A THOROUGU NEWSPAPER,
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Address, "THE WORLD,"
Doc.9-ot. 35 Park Row, New York.
NEW (14)(1)S POP. TUE HOLIDAYS
A NEW an , l ptGeli
WATCHE:7, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,
CHAINS. GUARDS, CHARMS,
RINGS, &C., &C., &C.,
J. L. LUMSDEN
GOLD and SILVER WATCHES, AMERICAN
and SWISS WATCHES. The ELGIN Watch
a SPECIALITY. Seth Thomas dock+ con
stantly on haw! and for sale at a small ad
vance on manufacturers' prices.
A full line of GOLD, SILVER aryl STEEL.
SPECTACLES and EVE GLASSES of the best
manufJetars are to he found inmy rooms.
WATCHES, CLOCKS, and JEWELRY neatly
and promptly repaired. Ai! work an 1 goods
WARRANTED. Sign of the BIG WATCH, 408 i
Pcnn street, Huntingdon. dee.9,'74.
1875 TILE 1875
PITTSBURG COMMERCIAL.
A Political, Literary, Commercial and General Newspaper,
Devot,l to the Best Interests of the People.
IN POLITICS, The COMMERCIAL will hereafter, as
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ITS NEWS DEPARTMENTS will always contain brief
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In the department devoted to the publication of Loral
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TIIE MARKETS will, as heretofore, receive careful at
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letters to TIIE COMMERCIAL,
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New Advertisements.
WANTED TO RENT
-1 guoi GriAt Mid.
dec2-4L]
"MILL," Lewistown, Pa.
D ISSOLUTION op PARTNERSHIP
HUNTINGDON, PA., NOV. 25, Int.
The partnership heretofore existing between 11.
S. Wharton and It. A. Miller, trading under the
name of Wharton do Miller, is this day dissolved
by mutual eons2tit.
All persons indebted to, or having claims against
Wharton dc Slillcr , are requested to call and set
tle with the undersigned without delay.
R. ALLISON MILLER,
dec.2-3t.] 2281} Penn Street.
AUDITOR'S NOTICE.
The undersigned Auditor, appointed by
the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon coun
ty, to distribute the proceeds of the .Sheriff's sale
of the personal property of James A. Mitchell, of
the borough of Huntingdon, will attend to said
duty at his office in Huntingdon, on Thursday,
the lith of December, 1874, at 10 o'clock, a.
when and where all persons who have claims upon
said fund are required to present the same or be
debarred from coming in for any share thereof.
THEO. H. CREMER,
Dec. 2,1374. Auditor.
THREE STRAY STEERS.
Came to the residence of the undersigned
in Tod township, Huntingdon county, Pa., Three
Steers, the one is a dark brindle with white along
the back and belly, both ears swallow fork ; one
red and white spotted ; and the other red with
white along the belly, all the same mark and sup
pored to be one, two, and three years old, the
owner is requested to come forward prose prop
erty, pay charges and take them away, otherwise
they till be disposed of according to law.
Dee.2-3t.
QHERIFF'S SALES.
K-1 By virtue of writs of Fi. Fa. Lev. Fs. and
Vend. Exp. to inn directed, I will expose to public
sale, at the Court House, in Huntingdon, on
TUESDAY, the 22d day of December, 1874, at
10 o'clock, A. 11, the following described real es
tate, to wit :
That certain half lot of ground, situate
in the borough of Huntingdon, being the southern
half of Lot No. 200 in the recorded plan of said
borough, fronting fifty feet on Mifflin street. ex
tending at right angles to the same one hundred
feet to the northern half of said lot, bounded on
the east hy Fifth Street ant on the west by lot of
Africa.
Seized, taken i execution and t• be sold RS the
property of John E. Smucker, owner or reputed
owner.
ALSO—AII of defendant's right, title
and interest in a certain tract of land, situate in
the township of Jackson, county of Huntingdon,
Pa., bounded and described as follows: On the
east by lands of James H. Wilson, on the we-t by
lands of Mrs. Hoffman, on the north by lands of
James 11. Wilson, on the south by lands of Mrs.
Hoffman, containing 7ti acres, more er lees, hav
ing thereon erected a two-story log house.
Also, all of defendant's right, title and interest
in a certain tract of land, situate in the township
of Jackson, Huntingdon county, Pa., bounded and
described as follows: On the east by lands of
Finley Strunk, on the south by land of Lee Sam
ple, on the west by lands of Samuel A. Steffey, on
the north by lands of Finley Strunk, containing
lt) acres, more or less, having thereon erected a
two-story frame house, fame barn, and other im
provements.
Also, all of defendant's right, title and interest
in a certain tract of land, situate in the township
of Jackson, Huntingdon county, Pa., bounded and
described as follows : On the east by lands of
Samuel Rudy, on the south by lands of Reuben
Duff; on the west by lands of Richard Cunning
ham. on the north by lands of 11. Dougherty, con
taining 11 acres, more or less.
Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the
property of Samuel Steffey.
ALSO—AII of defendants' right, title
and interest of, in, to, or out of all that certain lot
or piece of ground, situate in Broad Top City,
composed of four contiguous lots of ground, hound
ed by Broad street, Railroad Avenue, Laurel
street, and by lots No. 210 and 211 in the said
borough of Broad Top City, and fronting on said
Railroad Avenue one hundred and fifty feet, and
on the said Broad street sixty feet, being lots Nos.
212, 113, 214 and 215 i■ the plan of the said
Broad Top City, and having thereon erected a
large two-story stone house and other outbuild
ings. _
Also, all of defendants' right, title and interest
in all that lot of ground, situate in the said Broad
Top City, adjoining the above described premises,
and situate on saiu Broad street, at the distance
of sixty feet from the said Railroad Avenue, and
fronting on the said Broad street thirty feet, and
extending in depth ninety feet at right angles
from said street, being lot No. 211 in the plan of
said Broad Top City.
Scited, taken in execution and to bo sold as the
property of J. W. Aminprman & Co.
:70' Bidders will talto notice that 20 per cent.
of the purchase money must be paid when the pro
perty is knocked down, or it will he put up again
for sale. AMON HOUCK, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office,
Huntingdon, Dec. 2, 1974. j
New To-Day,
Just received at
T. W. BLACK'S,
4081 Pertn Street.
H. S. WHARTON,
R. A. MILLER.
A DILAIIAM ELIAS.
UNCLE MY CHRISTMAS GIFT! '
( 1 4
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