The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, March 31, 1875, Image 2

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    J R. DURBORROW,
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31. 1875
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
REPUBLICAN STATE CONVEN
TION.
- Call - or the State Committee.
r ff
TIA - TlepeSedins of the State of Pennsylva
iATALetiLliPiteAgassetuble by their,
de in tate Convention at noon on,
Wednesday; the 26th day of May, 1816; in, the
t,t,l,tt)A Opera Reuse,. at the c it-T( of Lanc a ster;
for the purpose of sonsiuntb3g candidates for
Ooveinor and State Treasurer. Eacii Repro
sentatlve.and Senatorial District will be en
titled to the same representation as it has
under the present appori.iontnent.for Senators
and,Representatives, in the Legislature.
11.13835 LL EaaeTr,
A. WILSON NORRIS; nal! man.
Seeretaii.
COMMITTEE- MEETING.
.:a:::
now% Will be a meeting of •the Republican
County, Committee, in Yenter'a Hall, in Hun
tingdon, on. TITESDAY 4 the 13th day - of April,
at 2 &deck; P. Sr. Business of importance to
be tradeacted, and a full atteridanceis'diaired.
A. B. Raciors, • L. 8. GEIBBINGER,
See'y.
"OPENED OUT AGAIN."
This is the caption of an article in
the last Globe, tinder which the action of
L. S. Greissinger;esii.; in calling the Re
publican County Committee together, to
select delegates to the Republican State
Convention, is severely reflected upon, and
the men who have ,kept up a separate or
ganization for the purpose of filling all of
fires of honor and profit in this county, and
the district of which it forms a fractional
part, with Democrats, are lauded for their
Reptiblicanism. We regard this article
as the moat deliberate piece of Jesuitical
sophistry that we bare read for many
months. It could only have eminated from
a sinister mind; in fact, it could only have
originated with a mind devoid of any of
the nobler impulses that characterize hon
orable men. It is a pity that the nobility
which characterizes man should, now and
then, be outraged, by some soulless and
sinister monstrosity, who belies all the
good of our nature, elbowing himself to
the front. There is hardly any account
ing for this strange phenomenon, unless it
should be on the hypothesis that he who
has control of those spirits that existed be
fore man received his nobler attributes,
permits some of ,the most Malicious and
debased of them to assume the form of
man, and go about the world as mere ape
eimena of the baseness that exists in the
regions that man most dreads. We are
sorry to entertain so poor an opinion of
some men who come in our way; but, for
the lire of us, we cannot account for the
conduct which characterizes them in any
other way. This is our deliberate opinion
of the individual who wrote the article
under the above caption, and it is with
this sort of an individual the Republican
party of Huntingdon county is expected
to enter into an affiliation.
Having expressed our contempt for the
author of this article, we desir3 to state
some facts to those who bare heretofore
been led by him!
Immediately after the election last fall
we were spoken to, by quite a number of
anti-Scott men, in regard to the settlement
of the differences existing between the
two wings of the party upon some fair and
honorable basis. In every instance we
encouraged such a settlement, and ex
pressed onr willingness to do anything
honorable to bring about a union of the
hitherto divided house. We appeal to every
individual who approached us upon the sub
ject to say whether this is not so ? In ac
cordance with the views here expressed,
we shaped the course of the JOURNAL so
as not to irritate the old sores, or, in short,
not to widen the breach in any way; and
we refer to our files, with pleasure, for a
vsrifioation of the fact here expressed.
Emini the election to the present, there
has not been a single allusion inten
ed to irritate.thase people in these columns.
But, white' we 'have been doing this—act
ing in good 'faith with those who ap
proached us upon the subject—what has
been the Conduct of the Globe f While
we hare been willing to leave by-gones be
by-Bones, and to settle our difficulties on
any fair basis, it has kept up an incessant
warfare upon every leading man in the
Republican :party not of its following.
Week after week, while the men who
~have heretotiore. supported it, were assuring
ns that-therwere in favor of returning to
the fold, and in ,the future intended to vote
a straight Republican ticket, it was pour
ing broadside after broadside, of mud, at
those who are the active leaders of the
party. We appeal to those people to say
whether this is not true ? And now we ask,
in all candor, is this the way to settle our
difficulties? A man would have to be a
saint before he could make concessions
under such circumstances. No sensible
man can come to any other conclusion. In
our estimation there are only two ways of
looking it this matter : either the people
who, hall repeatedly spoken to us, and
urged reconciliation, were acting in good
or bad faith. We are not willing to be.
lieve that ttey wes yr saJ acting in bad faith;
nossassOsOitlr, vfe j ao,led to the Con
clusion that the Globs , does not represent
them. In fact, a few have said as mach
• tc? n iq baso—and we are led to
~hglieve Alt ia- 1 -tlien they should repudiate
yjriloatmuatt : Especially. "since the last issue
Pt it-es theigroutidithitt there can be no re 7
conciliation unless the Republican party
,nenucetles:,certain damages . to , .its editor.
-1 1 1sisk'dgetit . mark you, isitabeillie key-note
far aid &tee What kitS theitepabliean
party to" - do with wan . 4a wa
ges, pray ? j if he
, has any, is
an imAiNi4Ual to,t4el l ,,ao,no,,seusible man
will vote against tite ; g4Publioan party be
cause an individtmLivauts• the State to pay
him a Thilrbeing the position the
Globe holds to the party, how can any Re
pobliCarilicutetv uOtwislcivte a moment
'lon Its the tileite•nionthpiFoe of A.
acoiiiiplish his purpose,
t atverymortbli religious And political princi
ple will be sacrificed. It must be plain,
from, the above state
_ef,,,facts, that every
irepodiiinst to eke eetslenient I of our. di ffi
• lintiteS &Ai &km 'fret& Oki! G 104 .1, if eo
settlement ii It ilitisetto' there,-
sponsibility. It, alone, will be responsible,
Permit us, now, in a few short sentences,
to place Mr. Geissinger right on the re
cord. Immediately after the Republi‘.stn
State Central Committee fixed upon the
26th of May as the time for holding the
State Convention, we called attention to
the fact, and suggested that the Republic
an County Committee should be called to
gether for the purpose of selecting dele
gates. We supposed that if the anti Scott
men desired to affiliate with us that they
would make sonic advances, or they would
wait until a County Convention would be to
elect. The only course fur them to pur
sue, if they desired to affiliate, would be
to call their County Committee to meet at
the same time as that fixed for the meeting
of Mr. Geissinger's Committee, and leave
the committees, by subcommittee, arrxngo
some plan of operation for the adoption of
the respective Committees for joint actin
for the future • and the selection of dele
gates. The Chairmen of the respective
Committees could do nothing but call
their. Committees together. Mr. G eissinger
took this view of it, and it was the only
sensible view. If the Committees are in
favor of a united action, then they have
only to unite on delegates to the State
Convention, and authorize their respect
ive Chairmen to issue a joint call, on some
satisfactory basis, for a Convention.
Neither Mr. Geissinger nor Mr. Lewis has
a right to place his Committee in a false.
position. Any other course than the one
adopted by Mr. Geissinger would have
been usurpation. Hoping that the two
Committees will find no difficulty in fixing
a basis satisfactory to both parties, we turn
the matter over to them, anticipating the
best results from their_prospective action.
- - EDITOR
ear- The Pittsburgh Evening Telegraph
has adopted the quarto form and made its
appearance in a new dress. It is an ex
cellent news paper, and we are glad to
know that it is prospering. We refer, for
terms, to the prespectus in our advertising
columns.
[From Our New York Correspondent.]
Our New York Letter.
A Great Hotel—What It Costs and flow
It is Run—Beecher—Business.
NEW YORK, M_kRCH 29, 1875.
A GREAT HOTEL.
Very few people, even those who live in
them, have any idea of the construction,
cost or methods of conducting the great
hotels of the great cities. Would it be of
any interest to your readers to know about
these things ? I think so, and shall devote
the most of this letter to a statement of
them. I shall take the finest hotel in New
York for my subject, which is to say the
finest hotel in the United States, except
four in Chicago.
To begin with, the hotel must, to make
it what it should be, cover an entire block,
or the greater part of it. This is necessary
to get ventilation and light. And even the
four streets are not sufficient, for in addi
tion it has to have a court in the center.
Such a hotel will have from six hundred
to one thousand rooms in it, the number
depending upon the patronage desired. If
transient custom is what is sought, the
rooms are smaller, for you can tack a sing
le man away anywhere, but if families and
permanent boarders are wanted, the rooms
must be large and airy, and have bath
rooms, etc., connected with them.
Steam is always used for beating the
halls and public rooms, and all the rooms
must have grates in them. A boiler
that generates 200-horse power is none
too large, for in addition to the heat re
quired, power is necessary to run an eleva
tor and to do the work in the kitchen and
laundry.
The means of communication between
the rooms and the office is the telegraph.
Wires run from each room to the office and
all the guest has to do is 'to touch a little
knob and a hall boy will be at his door in
two minutes to execute his orders. Some
hotels have a code of signals for the most
common wants, so that the order is given
by telegraph. Thus, one short pressure
means ice -water; two, fire; three, chamber
maid; one long and two short, breakfast;
and so on.
Now about the cost of all these conveni
ences : The breakfast, dinner and tea ser
vice cost $24,000; the chairs in the din
ing-room alone, cost 84,200 ; the morocco
lambrequins in the parlors, cost $3,000 ;
each cornice and each window in the din
ing-room, cost $100; the mirrors alone in
the dining-room hall, cost $6,000 ; the
fresco-work. in the dining-hall cost nearly
$lO,OOO, ac. _ _ _
F These area few of the most unimportant
items—mere beginners as it were to intro
duce you to the gorgeous figures of the
things that cost. When you want to build
e. hotel . in New York you want $BOO,OOO
to pay for the ground on which it stands,
$1,000,000 to put into the building, and
nearly as much more to furnish it. Think
of the acres of carpets at $2 to SC per
yard; think of the thousands of chairs,
bedsteads, sofas; think of the mountains of
mattresses, bed linen and toweling; think
of the great mass of' crockery and glass
ware, and the cost of furnishing a great
hotel mounts up tremendously. The de
preciation in value of the furniture of one
of these establishments amounts to $75,000
per year, the one item of broken glasses
footing up $1,500.
A most perfect system necessarily ob
tains. The steward by long practice knows
exactly how much to buy, and what, and
the proportions. The room clerks inform
him in the morning how many people are
in the house and h knows the number of
oysters that number will require, the num
ber of potatoes, theaniount of each kind
of meat- and all about it. The head cook
takes his order and the breakfast is accord
.ingly
,prepared. So ; accurate is this law
of averages that very little is wasted. Out
of one hundred people they know that so
many will want baked potatoes, so many
boiled, so many stewed, and so many fried,
and they are never out of the way. One
bill of fare taken at random, announces,
11 separate divisions or classes of edibles,
i. c., soups, fish, boiled, roast, cold dishes,
removes, entrees, game, vegetables, pastry
:And confectionery, Laiits and desserts
There are 69 separate articles, embracing
3 soups, 3 kinds of fish, 5 of boiled, 5 of
roast, 7 varieties of shad, pate de foie Bras
with tales, &e., 2 removes, 6 entrees,
grouse and widgeon duck, 14 kinds of veg
etables, 7 varieties of pastry, &c., 11 arti
cles under the head of dessert. And all
this based upon the steward's calculation.
It was all consumed and there was just
enough.
The wine cellar of one of the leadino.
New York hotels holds at present 18 brand s '
of champagne, 5 kinds of American wine,
12 varieties of sherry, 4 of port, 9 of Bur.
gaudy, 16 of claret, 14 of bock, 7 of Sau
terne, and .3 of Moselle, while'the stipplits
of brandy, whisky, rum s ale, cider liquors,
cordials, dm, would fit ont,severir'sainple
rooms."
The force necessary to rim ono of these
Hotels, may be , stated as follows : Four
book-keepers, three room clerks, three
packae and key clerks, eight bar-keepers,
the engitieer,' thirteen firemen; one head
cook, 12 ' mists-tit cooks, 70 waiters, 35
chambermaids, 45 laundry-women, 35
scrub-women, 30 hall-men, 13 porters, two
earrenters, one locksmith, and so on. In
all 220 men and 150 women are employed
in the house, the pay-roll footing up from
$lO,OOO to $12,000 per month.
Of course the discipline is rigid. Every
person must be ou duty exactly on time,
and every one of them is bound to do his
or her duty silently. They wear noiseless
shoes, and never speak unless they are
spoken to. A complaint from a guest is
equiv3lent to a discharge.
The cost of provisions for one of these
hotels amounts in round numbers to $l,OOO
per day. One hotel in New YOrk uses up
$5O per day in pumpkin pies alone in the
sea.sou.
Of course the hotel proprietors in good
times make money, for while the expenses
are enormous, the receipts are correspond
ingly large. If the house is full, the re
ceipts ought to run very close to $4,500
per day for board alone, but it does not
stop there. You pay f_ir your own fire at
the rate of $1 per fire, and then there are
the innumerable extras. If you have a
meal brought to your room it is $1 extra,
and if you are bibulously inclined it costs
to indulge. The whisky you get around
the corner for ten cents, you pay twenty
five cents for at the bar of your hotel, and
so on . or all other drinks, and the same
may be said of cigars.
A big source of revenue is "privileges."
The man who blacks your boots pay round
ly-for the room he occupies, and so does
the umbrella stand and the barber shop .
All these things are necessary to the house,
but they arc extras, and the proprietors
don't give men the privilege of fleecing
the public for nothing.
Take it all in all, the hotel proprietor has
a very soft thing ofit. I should like to own
a large hotel myself.
BEECIIERIANA
The Brooklyn trial pours out over the
country its regular quantity of awash each
day, but what it is all about Heaven only
knows. At the beginning Beecher was on
trial for the seduction of Mrs. Tilton, and
the alienation of that lady from her hus
band. But somehow all this has changed.
It would seem now that the tables are
turned, and that Tilton is on trial for any
number of offences. They brought the
President of a Lecture Committee from
AVinsted, Conn., to prove that he was too
familiar with a young lady he had taken
with him, and another man from Bloom
ington, Ald., to swear that he uttered
rather too liberal sentiments in a lecture
there, and they have dragged in almost ev
erybody to show that somewhere he has
done almost everything that is foolish and
bad. Now, what all this has to do with
the question at issue at the beginning of
the struggle, is more than I can see.—
Suppose Tilton is a gay Lothario ! Sup.
pose the Winsted accusation is well found
ed, and all the other accusations as well
—suppose he is to day the wickedest man
in New York, or anywhere else, what has
all to do with what be has charged Beecher
with ? Is Beecher on trial, or Tilton ?
That's the question.
Nothing new against Tilton has been
developed this week. The court room has
been crowded as usual, and the public in
terest does not seem to diminish, but the
trial has, fur all that, become fearfully
stale, and everybody wishes it well over.—
Both Beecher and Tilton show the effects
of it. Beecher is fueling haggard, and the
younger man shows wear and care about
the same. Old Mrs. Beecher bears up un
der it better than any of them. She has
not got on "the ragged edge of despair"
quite as much as her husband.
BUSINESS
is improving rapidly. I took a turn among
the jobbers to-day, and found them much
more chirpy than they were a month ago.
The retailers from the country are in, in
three, and they are buying with considera
ble freedom. The old stocks are consumed,
the country is bare of goods, the people
have worn out and eaten up what they had
on hand, and they are compelled to lay in
fresh supplies. Consequently the wheels
are gzinding again, and the merchants re•
joice. Everybody anticipates a big spring
trade, a good summer trade, and a very
large fall trade.
And I see no reason why these cheerful
anticipations should not be realized.
PIETRO. •
THE ICE GORGE
Latest from Williamsport.
WILLIAMSPORT, March 29.—There was
no change in the situation here until about
11 o'clock yesterday when a hail storm
commenced. The hail speedily turned to
sleet, and in an hour or so to a drizzling
rain, which fell steadily all day and is still
coming down. The surface of the ice in the
vicinity of the town became very soft.—
There was a slight rise in the river, but
not sufficient to move the ice. Among
the inhabitants of the town the feeling of
anxiety is increasing. Those residing in
the lower part near the river, are prepared
to move to high ground at a moment's no
tice.
The force of men engaged in cutting the
ice was increased to nearly 400 yesterday
at the point now reached, which is three
and a half miles from the dam. The ice
is much weaker ; and the progress made is
therefore slower. One man was seriously
injured yesterday by the sudden falling of
the huge poles used as levers to pry out
the ice after it is cut by the saws.
A meeting of the Board of Trade of this
city was held yesterday, at which the
members resolved to aid the lumbermen in
cutting out the ice. Before the adjourn
ment of the Board $4OO was subscribed.
This money will be used to increase the
force at present working on the river.
The ica cut above the dam is still col
lecting in large quantities at the Philadel
phia and Erie Railroad bridge, just below
the town. In order to avert the danger
threatened to the bridge and town by that
gorge, a number of men will be set to
work to day blowing up the ice two miles
below the bridge. Should the present
rain result in a considerable rise of the
river, the Lock haven ice will probably
be down here to-morrow.
A special dispatch received last night
by the Gazette and Bull:tin, announces
that the large railroad bridge at Lewis
burg, four miles below Milton, has been
cut in sections. The bridge is so con
structed that if the ice from Milton should
carry away any of these sections, the oth
ers would not uecessarily be destroyed. The
bridge is heavily loaded with coal cars.
At Milton the gorge has not moved.
~.....-2 . -_
WASHINGTON
Important Revenue Decision—Stamps for
Tobacco must be Affixed to the Packages
—The Mere Perchasing of Them Will
Not Answer—Sheridan Ordered to Pre-
ventTifiTaitt6iii to" thi" Bruck Hills.
WASHINGTON, March 27, 1875.—The
Internal Revenue office has ruled that the
mere act of purchasing stamps is not a
payment.of tax upon :any given lot of to
bacco, though purchase of such stamps,
.tiny have been with special ieferenee to
payment
The tax cannot be said to have been
paid upon any given lot of tobacco uutil
suitable stamp have been affixed to the
packages containing it, and the
,stamps
cancelled, so that the stamps have become
part and parcel of the package and have no
value in themselves, apart from the pack.
age to which they cro affixed•
Instructions have been sent to Sheridan
that he must not only prevent unauthor
ized persons going to the 141ack Hills
country, but he must also drive out all
who are now there without authority.—
General Cook, as soon as he assumes com
nand of the department of the Platte, will
give personal attention to the execution of
these instructions. He will visit the Black
hills with the necessary force as soon as
the weather and roads will permit.
POTTSVILLE, PA
St-ikers Destroying Property—They Burn
a Railroad and Telegraph Office—Police
Sent to Keep the Peace. .
POTTSVILLE, March 27, 1875.—The
laborers and miners on a strike dumped a
number of cars loaded with cgal, and rea
dy for shipment at Locust Gap, daring the
night., and burned the depot and telegraph
office of the Reading Railroad at the same
place. A number of special police, froia
Philadelphia and Reading, has been sent
to Mahoney Plain, to protect the prop
erty, and assist in operating the road if
necessary.
Miscellareous News Items.
Chicago is flocking to the Mayor's office
to look at a three pound toad.
White, which is not a color, will be the
fashionable color next summer.
The South Carolinians call Chamberlain
their Cato. He is a Republican.
Canada is jealous of our new Cardinal
ship. A red hat makes little Bull mad.
John Mitchel breath,9l his last in the
same room his father and mother died in.
The new license law is more severe in
its penalties than the late local option law.
Advertising is to the business man what
breath is to the b)dy. You must breathe or die.
Godlove S Orth, the newly appointed
minister to Austria, talks German like a native.
If gold goes up much further the "called
bonds" will come in. That's about the situation.
The business of exporting flour from St.
Louis to Liverpool is largely upon the increase.
Miss Fannie Smith, a native of Colum
bus, Ohio, is making her mark in opera in London.
Colorado steps into the Union with more
than one hundred mountain peaks over 13,000 feet
high.
Champaign county, Ohio, is a hollow
mockery. It had a representative on the prohibition
ticket.
Pere Hyacinthe is lecturing at Lausan
no, Switzerland, on the Deoalogue, alld is in feeble
health.
Musk inguni county, Ohio, produced last
year 701,635 pounds of butter and 512,703 pounds
of wool.
Four Pittsburgh girls are training for a
public foot-race, to come off at Cape May this
summer.
Matchett is the significant name of a
Missouri preacher, who does many good jobs of
marrying.
The son of a former Governor of Iceland,
named Bjornson, is teaching a country school in
Michigan.
"Virtue is its own reward." Monday's
New York Herald had sixty seven columns of ad
vertisements.
Seventy-six inches of snow have fallen
in the northern part of Michigan since the begin
ning of the year.
Counterfeit scrip, to the nominal amount
of $lO, was recently found in a church collection
at Woonsocket, R. I.
The war on the New York Cangl Ring
may be sharp and decisive, but it certainly does
not promise to be short.
The balmy breath of spring would be
very buoyant and beautiful, if it hadn't such a
strong flavor of icicles.
"An experimental concentration of
troops" is the French for getting a good ready to
strike back at Germany.
The civil rights bill, says the New York
Journal of Commerce, is proving very disastrous
to the hotels of the south.
Liverpool. England, ha.s a surplus fund
of $19,000 left from the sum collected for the suf
ferers by the Chicago fire.
The lecture season is closing. It has
unquestionably left a great many lecture commit
tees handsomely out of pocket.
It is estimated that over 10,000 pe - Tle
attended the funeral of John Mitchel, at Newry,
Ireland, on Tuesday of last week.
Tennessee has a legislator named Rag
land, who wants to turn that State into a rag
land by issuing $3,000,000 in scrip.
If the fool killer wants to start a good
sized cemetery, he should tako his station in the
neighborhood of the Black H ills.
The Bea Wade movement in Ohio is
gathering such momentum from day to day, that
it pro:nises to become irresistible.
As a consequence of poor houses, Donald
McKay and his Warm Spring Indians have finally
landed in a Ma Ssaohusetts poor house.
The Democrats say they are sure of
means enough to warrant them in starting that
proposed national organ at Washington this
spring.
Cheering. The exports from Boston
since the beginning of the year have been nine
teen per cent. larger than for the same period last
year.
Says the Leavenworth Timis : 'Let us
stop begging, complaining and swearing." This
is good advice, and the sooner Kansas heeds it the
better.
Some Assam bandits have been massa
creing an English surveying party, and now the
British lion is going to show them Assample of
its teeth.
Industrial Notes.
Fifty-seven manufacturing establish
ments wore erected in Louisville, Ky., last year.
The Phcenix Iron Company have made
and are making quite a lot of Centential iron,
principally round iron.
Part coke mid anthracite coal are used
at the Lochiel and McCormick furnaces in Harris
burg. In the steel works furnaces ono-fourth coko
is used.
The journeyman carpenters in Easton,
Pa., are to have from $2.50 to $2.75 per day du
ring the cowing season; painters, $2.25; hrick
layers, $2.75 to $3.00.
The Brookville, Pa„ Jeffersonian says
the Wilcox Lumber Company have completed u.
contract for furniehing the Centennial buildings
with five million feet of lumber.
The painters' strike in New York City
continues, with very feint prospects of success for
the strikers. The unemployed in that city of this
craft willingly work at the wages and hours offered.
The Newark, 0., Anu rican says the
Baltimore and Ohio shops are doing a rushing
business, and are compolied to increase their al
ready large force, this spring, about one thousand
hands.
The operators in the disaffected districtr
of the Lehigh region are paying men at the rate
of S 5 per day to take the place of the engineer.,
firemen and watchmen. A number of Hazleton
bo' are on duty.
The Wheeling Steel works, located at
Martin's Ferry, has a weekly capacity of 6 tons.
The capital invested is $55,000, and the number of
hands employed 14. This is a new enterprise, and
the steel is manufactured by a new process.
The Boston Bulletin says : "A good deal
of interest has been taken in the reported contract
Of the National Tube Conipany with a loading New
England mill for 1,000 tons of plates. This new
business results from the Pennsylvania strike."
The project of building a rolling mill
at some point near Fairport, Lake county, Ohio,
is being pushed forward by those interested, and
at present it seems to be certain that the enter
prise will be successfully established during the
coming season.
A general strike of the journeymen in
the boot and shoe trade in the East, it ie said, will
he ordered, in oonsequenco of the intention of the
manufacturers to lower their salaries. The man
- ufacturers say they Can get all the non-soe;ety men
they want.
The only manufactory of wooden skew
ers in the world, it is supposed, exists at Toledo,
Ohio, whence millions of tkem are shipped to
England. They ,ar,e made by machinery from
hickory bloclti. Between "eighty and ninety
thousand are turned out every dap ;
Ewing & Boyd, of Cove Run Coke
Works, Lemont station, four miles from Union
town, Fayette sounty, are shipping two cars of
coke per day to Lancaster furnace, West Va., also
one CAC to Sharon, Pa.. as sample, and, if it proves
satisfactory, will secure to that company a very
largo contract.
The pudlers' helpers employed in the
rolling will of the Messrs. Brooke, at Birdsboro:,
who were out on a strike for some weeks, have ac
cepted the terms offered by the proprietors and
guno to work. The mill and factory are now in
full operation, and all the hands are Again at
work.
The Pennsylvania Steel Co., Harris
burg, is reported to be in good condition. They
intend to erect two additional furnaces during the
coining summer. A semi-annual dividend of fuur
per cent. has just been declared, and it is reported
that the company has sufficient funds on hand to
pay the dividends for two years to come.
The partnership union between the
firms.of Griswold & Co. and Corning ,t Co., of
Corning, N. Y., is a notable event in the iron
trade. The works to be operated by the new
company will include the Rensselaer Iron Works,
the Be,senter Steel Works, and the Albany Iron
Works at Troy, and the blast furnaces at Hudson
and Fort Edward.
We find the following in an exchange:
"A circular saw requires one horee power for
every seventy feet of lumber cut per hour. Pe
riphery of the saw should run six thousand feet
per minute. A thirty horse power driving a saw
of tour feet diameter five hundred revolutions a
minute will cut two thousand feet of boards in un
hour, when in good order."
The Otis Iron and Steel Company, of
Cleveland, are making steel boiler plate which will
stand the extraordinary tensile strain of 160,000
pounds to the square inch, without fracture. It
can be double-fold..d and hammered without
breaking the fibrin on the angle, and will yet re
tain the firmness of a mass of cast metal under
any broad face test.
That strikes are disastrous to the work
ing classes has been fully exemplified at Fall
River. The employes have lost $90,000 in wages.
and $lO,OOO have been contributed to their sup
port by Trades Unions. The suspension of work
has not proved to the disadvantage of the mill
owners, and there would have been no strike if a
little practical common sense bad prevailed.
Died Suddenly of Heart Disease.
How common is the announcement. Thousands are
suddenly swept into eternity by this fatal malady. This
disease generally has its origin in impure blood filled with
irritating, poisonous materials, which, circulating through
the heart, irritate its delicate tissues. Though the irri
tation may at first be only slight, producing a little pal
pitation of irregular action, or dull, heavy, or sharp
darting pains, yet by and by the disease becomes firmly
seated, and inflamation, or hypertrophy, or thickening of
the lining membrane or of the valves, is produced. How
wise to give early attention to a case of this kind. Un
natural throbbing or pain in the region of the heart should
admonish one that all is not right, and if yon wonid pre
serve it from further disease, you must help it to beat
rightly by the use ofeuch a remedy as will remove the
cause of the trouble. Use Dr. Pierces Golden Medical
Discovery before the disease has become too seated, and it
will, by its great blood purifying and wonderful regulating
properties, effect a perfect cure. It contains medicinal
properties which act specifically upon the tissues of the
heart, bringing about a healthy action. Sold by all first
class Druggists.
HEART DISEASE SET UNIFOR.V.
ROCKPORT, Spencer Co., Ind., February let, P;74.
Dr. R. V. Planes, Buffalo, N. Y.:
About two years ago I was afflicted with a disease of th•
heart, which at times created a pressure around it, almost
causing suffocation. I saw an advertisement of your
Golden Medical Discovery, recommending the same as a
cure for disease of the heart. I then bought half a dozen
bottles of it, and after using three bottles I was entirely
relieved and am now enjoying good health.
Gratefully yours, YITII:d KILLIAN.
E. F. Kunkel's Bitte? Wine of Iron.
This truly valuable tonic has been so thoroughly treated
by all classes of the community that it is now deemed in
dispensable as a Tonic medicine. It costs but little, puri
fies the blood and gives tone to the stomach, rennovates
the system and prolongs life, Everbody should have it.
For the cure of Weak Stomachs, General Debility, Indi
gestion, Diseases of the Stomach,aud for all eases requiring
a tonic.
This wine includes the most agreeable and efficient
Salt of Iron we possess—Citrate of Magnetic Oxide, com
bined with the most energetic of vegetable tonics—Yellow
Peruvian Bark.
Do you want something to strengthen you?
Do you want a good appetite?
Do you want to get rid of nervousness . ?
Do you want energy?
Do ycu wan to sleep well?
Do you want to build up your constan:ion ?
Do you want to feel well?
Do you want a brisk and vigorous feeling ?
If you do, try KUNKEL'S BITTER WINE OF IRON.
I only ask a trial of this valuable tonic!
Beware of counterfeits, as Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron
is the only sure and effectual remedy in the known world
for the permanent cure of Dyspepsia and Debility, and as
there is a number of imitations offered to thepublic,l would
caution the community to purchase none but the genuine
article, manufactured by E. F. Kunkel, and having kis
stamp on the cork of every bottle. The very fact that
others are attempting to imitate this valuable remedy,
proves its worth and speaks volumes in its favor. Get the
genuine.
Sold only in 1.1 tattles. Sold by Druggists and dealers
everywhere.
259 Tape Worm Removed Alive 259
Head and all complete in two hours. No fee t,ll head
paooee. Seat, Pin and Stomach Worms removed by Dr.
KUNIEL, 2i.".9 North Ninth St. Send for circular, or ask
your druggist fora bottle of t AIRL'S WOllll STaur. It
never fails. Price, S. mchlT4t.
New To-Day.
MR. CHARLES ESPICH,
IMPORTER OF
BIRDS AND ANIMALS,
has just received from Germany, France, Italy,
dro., a large and magnificent assortment of all the
choice and rare BIRDS of the world. Also, Squir
rels, Rabbits. Pig'ous, kc., of all varieties. Large
assortment of Cages of all kinds, Bird Seeds, ic.
Prepared and celebrated Mockimg Bird Food.—
Taught Bullfinches.
SIXTH AVENUE, PITTSBURG, I'A.,
Just above Trinity Chureb, and near Smithfield
Street.
PITTSBURGH
EVENIMO TELEGRAPH.
NEW FORM--EIGHT PAGES.
Cut, _Folded and United Ly a New
rat!nt
AS EASILY READ AS A BOOK
The publishers of the PITTSBURGH EVENING TELE
GRAPH are now isruing the paper in an IMPROVEDand
MORE CONVENIENT FORM. We have now placed in
our office one of Messrs. Chambers Bros. It Co.'s (of Phila
delphia) newly patented FOLDING and PASTING MA
CHINES, by moans of which we present the EVENING
TELEGRAPH to its patrons is the eight-page fo with
the leaves cut and securely pasted together, so that it may
be read as easily as a book.
By meant of this machine, every one of the eight pages
may be referred to without waste of time, and the inside
pages will have just as much importance as those on the
outside. The old objection of newspaper patrons to the
eight-page form is thus obviated, and the paper will really
be more acceptable to readers generally. We are enabled
by the change of form to make a more convenient ar
rangement of the reading matter in the paper, as well as
classify the favors of our advertising patrons.
The TMEGRAPII will aim to promote the established
principles of the Republican party, and wilt in the future,
as in the past, oppose the election to office of MPn not fully
qualified, or who shalt by trickery, or any unfair means,
manage to secure a place on the ticket. Honesty and ca
pacity will only receive our support.
The TELEGRAPH will continue to publish ALL TIIE
NEWS OF THE DAY at the earliest moment, and in such
a shape as to be acceptable to the meet critical reader.
The TELEGRAPH will eon done to riflect the sentiments
of the people on all public questions touching their wel
fare.
The TELEGRAPH will upheld zealously the hands of
all men honest and earnest in reform, and It will , as in
the past, give all sides a hearing on the topic. of the
times.
The TELECIIAPIT will labor with renewed P.M for the
prosperity of the city and State and the advancement of
the material interests of our citizens.
The EVENING TELEGRAPH, in all its departments,
will be, during the year 1875, superior to the past, excel
lent as ft has been by general admission. No expense will
be spared to keep the paper abreast with the times, and
its manager. will exert every effort that experience may
suggeet to make it, if possible, more attractive to the gen
eral reader.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE
By mail, including postage. Nine Dollars per annum.
Delivered by Carriers, in any part of Pittsburgh and
Allegheny, for Fifteen Cents a week.
ADVERTISING RATES furnished on application.
THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH
8 PAGES-48 COLUMNS.
On or about the 10th of April we will commence the
publication of a WEEKLY EDITION of the TELEGRAPH,
in obedience to numerous and repeated requests of oar
friends In various parts of the County and State. The
WEEKLY TELEGRAPH will contain a colopiete and
comprehensive summary of the NEWS OP THE WEEK
preceding the date of lb issue. It will also have a care
fully and reliably prepared report of the PITTSBURGH
GENERAL MARKETS.
It is oar purpose to make the WULLT TlLacillaPti a
complete newspaper In all its departments, so that it will
deserve and receive the support of intelligent readers e••
erywhere.
TERMS :—One Copy one year, postage prepaid. $1.50;
Ten Copia one year, postage prepaid, $il.00; Twenty
Copies one year, postage prepaid, $20.00; Fifty Copies one
year, postage prepaid, $48.00; One Handred Copies one
year, poetage prepaid, $.10,0.+.
Send for sample ropy. Aildirren
TEIE EVENING TIM! GRAPII,
Mat:3l-3 t. PITTSBURGH, PA.
CIO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE
A..-A oral' kinds of printing.
New To-Day.
TAVERN LICENSES .
The following persons bare filed, in !lie of
fice of the Clark of the Court •.f quarter °.aei..n•
of Huntingdon county. their petitions for license
to keep inns or taverns in said county. and which
will be presented to the Judges of said Court on
the around Monday in April n,•xt, for aliowanee,
to wit:
George Thomas, Borouel► of Huntingdon
Samuel Dickson,
Henry Leister, do
Jacob do
James H. Clover, to
E. L. Richter & A. Raymond do
James C. Swoope, fits
John S. Miler, to
Zeigler & Long.
James Matins, Unrough of Mt. Union.
Henry Z. Metcalf, Village of Mill Creek.
Bob. F. Haslett. Spruce Creek.
Henry Chamberlain, Water street,
Henry Smith, dt'Connelstowa.
PETITIONS FOR SECOND WEEK.
John J. Martin. Broad Top City.
Peter Burket, Shirleys'ourg.
Felix Toole, Bernattstown.
Henry Wilt, Orbisouia.
Julia Ryan, Dudley.
William Brown, Dudley.
William McGowan, Shade Gap.
George Lagle, (brewer), Walker to
David F. Horton, Dudley.
Jacob Isenberg, ShirleyAburg.
Henry Hess, Petersburg.
Thomas 31.Bender,;eating bouse),Spruce Creek.
T. W. 311"Tf1N',
PR•THONOTART • I Outer., P (leek.
March 23, 17.5.
arzE ,
„Fur tn, %l ilt we
S GI-100L 1,3 rh T (.11 OwnAors le
';ETZE S
MIL
on
P A L on ^1 Par
pri ic e r Orgai,
37AL11.3,P6iloir'
Ikfarch 31,19;5—.'.m
New Advertisements.
JURY LIST—APRIL TERM. 1875.
unAND ./ CROW?...
Jackson Afiira. car invert., liuntin;gcto,
Michael Baker, painter, Alexamlria.
Anthony Heaver, rarp.titer. Akxsiintlt
Ephraim Chileiett, farmer, Union.
Ahralmm lintMns, inlayer. W....L.
Jacob Kyle, farmer, Morris.
Silas Mulch:twin. farmer, Barre*.
Wm. B. Lem, gent., Slirleystm re.
Samuel Peiglital, farmer, Jatuata.
David Rnesell, farmer, Hopewell.
Elliott Ramsey, farmer, Sprinil,fiel.l
Jame* G. Stewart, miller, West.
Wm. Speck, farmer. Walker.
A. D. Stitt, farmer, Dahlia.
John B. Sheeefelt, fernier, Cromwell.
Saninel Sechriet, merchant, Brady.
Alexander Stitt, gentleman, Alexandria.
Andrew Smith, farmer. Fusion.
Peter Shaver. farmer, Shine .
Wm. Taylor, farmer, i •
Martin WeFlum, care/niter, Warring mark.
Wm. Weaver, tanner, Hopewell.
David B Weaver, farmer. Hopewe.l.
Dared Waldemith, farmer, Oneida.
TRAVERSE JURORS—MAT wirra
Thomas Aehman, farmer. Shirley.
j..h. (1 Adams. manufacta Frank';n.
Win. B. A.l.lleman, farmer Warriormi...k.
Samuel Adams, farmer. t'r• ,eiwell.
Allison Black, laborer, ('action.
A.G. Briggs, farmer, Tell.
Eli P. Brumbaugh, farmer. Lincoln.
John Barrack, bricktuaker, Hunt in.
A. C. Blair. farmer, Tell
T. Willey Black, jell'eler. Einntiegilon.
Samuel Bickel, carnier,
Joe. R. Carmon, merchant, Huntingdon.
Alexander Denny, merchant, Huntingdon.
Geo. B. Goshorn, teacher, Tell.
E. J. Greene,
David Grazier, farmer, Viferriornnutrk.
Wm. !highs, farmer, (Mena.
R. S. Henderson, teacher. Mapleton.
Ephraim A. Hudson, firmer. Three Sprit' 4.4.
Jeme Henry (of Henry) farmer, lieedersoe.
Wm. Houck,. farmer, Tod.
Samuel Huyett, gentlemae, Porter.
Rubt. Jones, clerk, Franklin.
John M. Jiihnstun, termer, Barree.
Eli Keith, farmer, Ted.
George Mountain, farmer, Juniata.
John Magnire, merchant, Huntingdon.
Lewis Meredith, shoemaker. Hantingibes.
David Mingle, wagonmaker, Huntingdon .
Nathan G. McDivitt, farmer, Oneida.
David Miller, farmer. Toil.
Samuel McClain, farmer, Car t.
James Orr, farmer, Tell.
Samuel Porter, farmer, West.
Abraham Piper, farmer, Porter.
David Reeder, farmer, Tell.
Solomon Rough, miller, Alexandria.
John Shope, farmer, Union.
A. W. Swope, merchant, Mapleton.
Wm. Stone, farmer, Hopewell.
Wm. I. Steel, paddler. Huntinvnin.
George Thomas, Innkeeper, linotined. n.
Wm. Thompson, farmer, Warriormardt.
Wm. Walker. tntner, Alexandria.
Wm. H. Wallace, farmer, Franklin.
Isaac Wienner. miller, Franklin.
John C. Wilson, farmer, Went.
John Yocum, farmer, Walker.
TRAVERSE Jr Rofts—sErosto w
)(orrice Barren, miner, Carbon.
James C. Brewster, [merchant, Springfield .
Henry Books, farmer, Tell.
James Davis, teacher, Morrie.
Wm. Ewing, fanner, Juniata.
• Alfred Entire, merchant, Shirley.
Daniel Tetterboof, fanner, Morris.
B. R. Foust, merchant, Brady.
Philip Garner, gent, Warriorsmark.
Jacob S. Grove, teacher, Peas.
Win. Gilliland. farmer, Cromwell.
Edwanl Gould. teacher, Carton.
Mord. Osbagan, blacksmith, iluntinplo,
Charles Green, farmer, Oneida.
George Gifford, testier, Shirley
It. M. Mayen, boner, West.
John flalßey, limner, Carbon.
0.. Kough, fanner. Clay.
George W. Kough, farmer. Clay.
John A. Kellerman, carpenter, Lincoln.
Daniel Kinch. clerk, Waniorsmark.
G. Ash Miller, clerk, Huntington.
Wiiliaat McCie,, fanner, West.
David McA levy, carpenter, Jacks. n.
Join Mirely, farmer, Union.
Livingston Robb, farmer, Walker.
Abraham Renner. carpenter, W
George J. Renderer, taller, Coslmiin,
George Sprankle. fanner, Porte , .
Harrison Speck, farmer, Juniata
Taylor Snyder, laborer, Porter.
Amos Smucker, fanner, Brady.
L. D. Tate, weaver, Jackson.
Thomas Wagoner, laborer, B. T. . 'it v.
Joha Whit-wide, merchant, Orbisouie.
Simeon Wright, farmer, Union.
GREAT OFFER.
Ni'll3l.',lt FOUR.
FATED TO BE FREE, Jean Ingeloar's great
Story, price in book form. 31.75.
TWENTY SHORT STORIES. a rieh variety of
miscellaneous reading; over sixty paps 'pies.
didly illustrated.
TEN STEEL PRODUCTIONS, far-similes at fa
mous pictores ; original engravings worthsls.oo.
All the shove sent post-paid with AHAIRTM
AND HOME, the great illustrated weekly maga
nine, T MONTHS on trial, for isaly CENTI4.
Object : to introduce the paper to new srabscrilsers.
Prise reduced to only SS.SO per year. liagte mem
ber, six cents—none free. At news suisda or by
mash. Great inducements to emu sad glebe.
TflE \MC CONIPANV, Publishers. 39-41 'ark
Plare, New York. Please state in what paper ye.
saw this advertisenirnt. Marsb24.
NOTICE.
[mh3l-3m
U. S. INTERNAL. RETESUE
SPEC lAL TAXES
MAY 1, 1'7.;, TO APRIL le, 1574.
The Revised Atatutes of the F. A. Aeeticas 3"32.
3237, 323 A cad 323 V, require every peeves engage!
in any business. mastics, or erapioy►aeas h,eh
renders him liable to a Special Tax, to procure aid
place conspieloosly It Isis es'ablisltmeat or plies
of business a stamp denoting the payment of row
Special Tax for the Special-Tax Year beirianiaz
Hay 1, 1t,75, before commenein er eoutineiag
business after April .1:),
THE TAXES EMBILV. wITII(N THE PRO
VISIONS OF TII ELAW x ctrnigi,
ARE THE FuLLOWINti, VIZ .
Rectifiers.
Dealers, ',tail liquor .. 7$ 00
Dealers, wholesale liquor-- ...... ... ..... —. Inio n•
Dealers in malt liquors, wholesale '• H
Dealers in malt liquors, retail 2* MI
Dosing in leaf t.,baceo
Retail dealerA is leaf tobacco L,Ott 00
.
And on Wen of over 'IOW, arty eerie
for every dollar in excess of $1.0“
Dealers in manufactured tobacco b Ote
Manufacturers of stills. ..... be
And for each still manufactareel 2O N
And for each worm atanufasturad 2IP N
Manufacturers of tobacco
Manufacturers of cigars --. N
Peddlers of tooaseo, first elem. (moss thaw
two home or other anisette)
Peddlers of tobacco, ..snood *haft, ( taw*
horses or °the/ animals)
Peddlers of tot ACC., third class, (ON horse
or other animal) l3 so
Peddlers of tobseso, forth slaw, bow root
or public conveyance) ..............»..... 111 1 N
Brewers of leas than 500 barrels.... ........ . 50 M
Brewers of AO barrels or m0re...............N
Aay person, so liable, who shall fail to comply
with the foregoing requirements will be .abject to
severe penalties.
Perilous or Firms liable to pay say of the Special
Taxes named shove must apply to FRANK W.
STEWART, Deputy Culleetoroffstersal Review,
at Iluntiagdon, sod pay for sod proems the Spec
vial-Tax Stamp or Scampish.? seed. prior to
MAY 1, 1875, and without further noti.e.
.r. W. DOrtn. Sssl.
faftecial
Orin 's Jr Isrvass..s. ft
WASIIINUM I I, D. C.. February lit. 137:,
PLAIN PRINTING.
FANCY PRINTING,
GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE
Bi tusit /10/-sE pr
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41.111 Immidbir agit war or proworoo o o
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.10.1Poit, &00-i Amy LIMPS M. mint D.
weir 14th T .11 441 4 .wrrii a
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1875. Wiser* Now ? Mt
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ONE MILLION ACRBO
• f F riei lasmis 1.• NV 1.62/
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Mari I n , or I rm. ?b. frame 4 .44iPiiiimille
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huslwr awl beltdibegg simftriala. leer- from Ht•• pea pv,
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Simalelhrtismr• .4 PsOrwt Vl•oileary
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