The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, September 08, 1875, Image 2
The Huntingdon Journal. J R. DURBORROW, HUNTINGDON, PENN'A WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER s; 1875 Circulation LARGER than any other Paper in the Juniata Valley. REPUBLIgAN STATE TICKET, MM. GEN. JUN E..HARTRANFT. STATE TRI:A.SUREIt HENRY RAWLE, of Erie. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET ASSOCIATE JUDGE HENRY R. SHEARER, of Shade Gap, PROTHONOTARY : THOMAS W. MYTON, of Huntingdon RIGHTER, AND RECORDIR : WILLIAM E.. LIGHTNER, of 'West. TREASUMA : H. CLAY WEAVER, of iluntingdon. DISTRICT ATTORNEY : GEORGE B. ORLADY ; of Petersburg. COUNTY COMMISSIONERS : BARTON GREEN, of Oneida, ANDREW G. NEFF, of Porter DIRECTOR OF THZ POOR: CHAS K. HORTON, of Broad Top City 4.u.prrous JOHN E. SMUCKER, of Huntingdon, WILLIAM H. REX, of Mapleton. ReOLIOAN COUNTY 0010117ZEE The following named persons have been selected, for the various districts, to serve on the Republican County Committee for the year 1875': Alexandria—David 8. Henderson, Stephen Hamer. Barroe—Job Black, A. B. Miller. Dirndls/haat—John R. Thompson, Joseph Madden. Brood op Pity—Ephraim Mos" William J. Ammerman. Brady—J. G. A11i50a,4‘..2. Burnham. Carbon—Jahn S. Hilly,, IL 11. Brerientan. a le - 1-4 11 1:AN.Vitor?, 8 Dr. fr Thompson. L. ShusgoorOltiohard Hudson. ria, i r bi erarte n 'l 4 l . 3ee Cr ra un . t r rilllhimffllymanik Stank S tit Thompaon, D. R. Miller. ersia.-LGoeuli7.H. *Wok, Isaac Long. HopowelL—David H. YeLel , Rotiert Edward, Huntingdon, lot Ward—R. A. Orbtoon, J. W. Mattern. " Id Ward—John M. Maguire Jean C, Miller . Ward—James Port, Sr , A. J. Africa. " 4thWard—Liaac R. Hittlld, Chas. Kershaw. Ackson—.Tohn Z. Smith, Jackson Harmon. Juniata—Salida Park, J. P.Baryder. Lingola—John IL; Don skim*, John Fulton. Mapletaa:—H. Swoolo, J. P. Mtdonabv. 11Addemburg—A. t Criam, Georg. B. Briunbaugb. Morria,-Illam'aol H.Bork, Edward W. Graffl us. Mt. Onion Itorougt-4'. A. Appleby, P. H. Harrison. Mi. Union Ilistrict--Wm. X. Myora, W. Stayer. Oneida-1)&41g Kyper, jamas Foster. OrbiasniiSwAda , Madtß. Widow, Thomas Pejla-41101 a.,liott, Maga Cense. potersbitrg,--Theiod6re Renner, Thomas Brini tine, PormOsiorili,hanbarg,llobert Speer. Saltil . R. MoCarthey, Calvin Greene. Strtfß 3 P. LW C. Zeirklar. erfliiihtin, Smerer: • A.; Kerr, 4bango lees. • gill.44l4l lll— Ctrus 4 . Brolvn,,Ngron Masyen. ivao-folut A. Mir. Levi $ll.OO RlPoult4Mutlen j/r, -Croteley, David P. Pheasant. Rabb, Janseli:Warti. rtrarki—Saaanel 110.1494 Oi a ) ; s pper)—HeAry HiltzaoPle, Ri , sry Davis, jr. -Weft, Mower)—J. lt.l3noWdeo, Caesium H. MoOlure. Jou:PikQ t I.SAII I BERG Chairman. 3: - trALL .707193E8, seey% • ' '- • REPUBEW AN .'! 11145 . 441E , E TING. A Mass Meeting -will be held in the Court' Hoaie on Irlinrsdayi`(to•ino . rrow) evening. Gov: will be present. Messrs. Farr, of Reading and Van Note, of Pittsburgh will address the meeting.— Turn out ! turn out ! ifirW e hope the Moittffor boys have cooled down—and then Speer is off to Erie !. Stir-Speer slaughtered Conrad, Isen berg and Stoneroad with one swift blow of his little hatchet, and now he has gone off to Erie to snub Wallace and his friends. • Globe is patronizingly patting our friend McDivitt on the back. We assnre it that " Mac " is too old a fox to be eßught with chaff. as_ Democrats, you who condemn Speer for his conduct towards Stenger last fall, and his course towards Wallace now, why don't yon strike back manfully and be somebody ? Don't be a set of shotes, grnnting around, and then leavc it all end in grunting. itirThe " Scots who hac wi' Wallace bled " in this county can take Mr. Speer's red right hand when he returns -from Erie, and kiss it. They are nc , t made of the same material as the Scots of " auld lang sync." They want another Bruce— not the one they have—one that Speer can't carry in his breeches pocket. iWhat a philanthropist Mr. Speer is! lie has invested the entire salary swag in newspapers—Monitor and Globe. Will ft pay 1 He envied us when we, accord ing to his repeated assertions, run the JonaNAL and Monitor, and he determined not to be outdone. He now ruus the Monitor and Glebe, but it costs like the mischief. ag..lt is said, sub rosa, that the _Von itor chaps lend the professor types, and the Professor in roturn furnishes the for mer with editorials, and this accounts for the sameness of laws-which pervades both papers. We are end to be able to make this statement, because the impression was fast gaining ground that Mr. Speer was responsible. lerlsenherg, Conrad, and a host of other leaders of the Democratic party have been bound band and foot by Speer, and he is now thinking about casting them into the sea because they dared to raise their voices against him. And they stand idly by and allow themselves to be smote first upon one cheek and then upon the other. Lamb-like Democrats, very. /t 'Having settled things to his entire satisfaction at the late Democratic County Convention—having smote Isenberg, Con rad, Stonetoad,• Sim*:and the rest- of the strong men hip aid thigh, he has gone up to Erie to smash Wallace. Good ; let him run against a good sized circumstance up there ! 11. '41 1 ? - pay Come home, as he did fromy4ll4#4,inquying meekly who amok", Dify.l Patterson ipirtpoor.4,Randalll are striking n.t the vitals of - Senator Wallace, who is loved aid napeetadjay nine out of every ten Democrats in Huttingdon county, Traficor Borne one to lead off &Wait is allowed to pro ceed withent• inareely a gentle, reminder that he.is outraging the wishes of u.large number of the Democratic party. This is certainly very humiliating. OUR COUNTY TICKET The Republican Convention, which as sembled in Wharton & Maguire's Hall, on the 24th ult., pl*d a .,, flicket in the field. that does honor Otlie4tolc Republltut party. It wata Mr ' EgMare Cunike tion of the best representatives of the peo ple, and they had resolved. and lived up to the resolution, to do the best for the Republican party. There is not a name on the ticket that would suggest trickery or ring doinination. The personoi of the Convention is a guarantee that the nom inations were fairly and honorably made, and the names of the candidates are proof positive of square dealing. They were all before the public and can alone attribute their preferment to the fact that a inajeri ty of the voters, at the delegate elections, preferred them. Made up of the material of which it was, no one man, or two men, or a dozen of' men, could have nominated an individual . , so that the cry of "Ring! Ringl..! and "Woods-Orfady !" are the merest .chaff, put iu circulation by the Speer Ring to irritate those who may feel sore. We will proceed to present the candidates in the order of their nomina tion, commencing with HENRY R. SHEARER, our candidate for Associate Judge. Mr. Shearer came to the Convention as a dele gate from Shade Gap. He was not a can didate nor did he expect a nomination.— In general conversation among Republi cans the office of Associate Judge was con ceded to Mr. Woods' friends. Judge Bea ver, .who has acted with that wing of the party, was about to 'retire, and in Judge Clarksen the other wing had a firm . and Consistent member of the Court. By eon ,ceding the nomination to that wing it was only giving them what they were about to loose in the person of Judge Beaver, and the other wing lost nothing by doing so, and thereby conciliated:them to this ex tent. It was a fair and honorable action for the purpose of producing har mony. The only question was in regard as to who the man should be. At first Wm. B. Gilliland was proposed, but he refused to take the nomination. Some one, looking around for a candidate, sug gested the name of Mr. Shearer, and he _was acceptable to a larger number of del egates in• the lower end than any other candidate, and he was made the nominee. We are assured that Mr. Shearer is eu ex cellent Man. Thatt4e Onlything that can be said against him is that he is poor and 'that he failed in busipess. This is no dis grace. He is fully competent and will make an excellent officer. THOMAS W. ,MYTON, our candidate for Prothonotary, has so well discharged the duties of his office, for the last three years, that it was not until a feW chys before the', Convention that he Lad 'a competitor. The other wing pre sented no candidate, and Mr. Myton's pop ularity gave him an easy nomination. He is a man of ripe experience, well qualified and an earnest Republican. His nomina tion is a high tribute to real worth. The 'I people prefer men of experience whom they can trust, and Mr. 3lyteri is their man, . EDITOR WILLIAM E. LIGHTNER, the nominee for Register and Recorder, is a most capital nomination. No one.has ever thought of' questioning Mr. Light ner's qualifications or his integrity. The affairs of his office, for the last three years, have been conducted with marked success, and the public highly appreciate a faith ful public servant who has the ability, the stability and . the character to look alter their interests. They do not mean to ex change a tried public servant, in whom they have-every confidence, for an untried one. What has been said about Mr. My ton can, with equal propriety, be said of Mr. Lightner. This nomination was not chimed by the other•wing. There was a spirited contest for the nomination between Wm. J. Geissinger and Mr. Lightner, but the usage has been to give the Register and Recorder a second term, and this de cided the contest in favor of the latter. If Mr. Geissinger had received the nomina tion we should have supported him cheer ' fully as we now support Mr. Lightner. 11, CLAY WEAVER, nominated for Treasurer, is well known to the voters of the entire county. He is an excellent, thorough-going citizen. Ile has an abundance of push; is full of energy and never says die. There is more go aheadativeness in him than a dozen of or dinary men. This nomination was conce ded to the other wing as an off-set for Register and Recorder, and was mado be cause a majority of the delegates believed Mr. Weaver would make a more thorough canvass than any other candidate named by that side. GEORGE B. ORLADY, the nominee for District Attorney, is a son of Dr. Henry Orlady, of Petersburg, and has just entered upon the practice of the law. He studied law with Hon. S. S. Blair, of Nollidaysburg, and though his experience at the bar has been brief, yet brief as it has been, he has given such evidence of ability and thorough compre hension of his newly adopted profession, that people universally regard him as a man eminently fitted for the place. He is popular everybody, and his election is universally conceded. The other side presented no candidate for this position. BARTON GREEN and ANDREW G. NEFF, our nominees for County Commissioners, are excellent business men. They are well qualified and will discharge the duties that will devolve upon them with fidelity. No better men could have been selected. This is a fair divide between the respective wings_ CHARLES - K. HORTON, the candidate for Director of the Poor, is a young man of excellent business habits, fully understanding the wishes of the pub lic in regard to the Alms House. This nomination vlas made to satisfy the section wjich he represents—Broad Top region. His rote among his neighbors will show how ho is appreciated at home. 301 4N E. SMUCKER and WILLIAM 11. REX, nominee for Auditors, are two of the best men Jo the county for the place. They are excellent accountants and well versed in the affairs of the county. They should be elected without opposition. Of such is our ticket. It is strong in every part. It is composed of the best men. It was fairly and squarely noinina• ted. It conies up directly from the people, and the people will ratify the nominations at thei4olls. We bespeak for the whole of it airiutnphant election. -!,_ osa,,, "Ring!" "Ring !" '•Woods-Or lady," are the cries of the Pemocratic or gans in concert. Bosh ! Nine-tenths of the men who composed the Republican Convention arc known to the entire courr ty for their honesty and integrity, and they give _the lie to this little political trick. • They came to Huntingdon to do the best fbr the party and they conscien tiously discharged their duty. They may have made some mistakes but they were mere errors of judgment. Woods and Or lady's interest did not cause them to hesi tate for a moment. We are proud of the personcl of the late Convention. Such men give. character to any party. They were as far above the rascally tricks, which are practiced by politicians of the Speer stamp, as the summit of Mt. Lincoln is above the summit of Pine Ridge. 0:23 - • The "Woods-Orlady tickets" is in almost every line of the Democratic or gans. We have no special objection •to their calling it the Woods-Orlady ticket. As far as we are concerned they can do so to their hearts' content. But it is an insult to the independent, self-reliant and able men, who composed that Convention, to insinuate that they were the creatures of any . person. We point with pride to such men as Jas. A. McPherran, A. B. Miller, J. R. Thompson, J. B. Wakefield, George Ilawn, C. K. Horton, A. W. Houck, A: S. Brooks, M. B. Brenneman, J. F. Thompson, Hon. D. Clarkson, Capt. Joseph Parks, K. L. Greene, Richard lludson, I'. P. Dowees, W. B. Gilliland, J. W. Hamilton, F. W. Stewart, J. E. Smueker,ll, G. Fisher, Thomas S. Johns ton, Peru Moore, Barton, : Greene, Jacob 11. Isett, -George Walhea.ter,, II- R. Shear er, Robert Blitham, 'John A. Kerr, R. Colegate, Cyrus Brown, Newton Mad den, Eli Plummer, Richard Ashman and many others whose names do not now oc cur to us. These names compose many of the best men in the county. In fact never, perhaps, in the history of the party, were there so many representative men of the party, assembled in Conventon, and to say that these men allowed any man or set of men to dictate to them is,simply absurd in the extreme. and an insult to their in telligence. res : , The editor of the Globe did not get quite as mad as the ..:Ifonitoi• boys at our allusion to Speor's control of both pa pers, nevertheless, ho shows his teeth just the least Lit. Now we do not care a "baubee" who owns the Globe or any oth er paper. In fact we believe partizan papers should belong to the party, and that no 0u.2 man should he asked to invest a large sum of money to keep up a party organ. It is simply an imposition to do so, but we do care who controls them. An editor ought to be able to run a paper without some one standing behind him and pulling the lines constantly for the put— pose of directing his political course. The sameness of the M'niior and Globe proves that this is done. Having thrown off the "Old man of the sea," the editor of the Globe has tied up the Roc with the ex pectation of making his escape. It will only be a feast of serpents at the end of the line. Owing to pressing business we did not see the lbnitor or the Globe until late last week, and in reply to a friend, who had asked us whether we had seen both or either, we stated that we had not. "Oh, well," said he, "if you see the one you see the other. The inspiration comes from the same source. They are one and the same thing. They are as much alike as two peas." The same ideas, clothed in different words, are to be found in both.— It is a little burdensome on the Democra cy to carry so much small ordnance when one respectable gun might do, SEW - The Globe thinks it very amusing to hear some people say that it is trying to drag off a number of Republicans into the Democratic party. What other object has it It can have none other. It has not a shadow of excuse, in the wide world, for the course it is pursuing. It refused to join the regular Republicans on any con ditions whatever, and without the sem blance of a pretext, at the bidding of Mr. Speer, went over to help out the Demo crats, and for forty-six votes, got half the Democratic ticket. This is the milk in the cocoa-nut. kir' "Half the ticket for a handful of votes;" so says the Monitor. This head ing was no doubt suggested by smne dis satisfied Democrat who failed to see the propriety of giving Gass' squad half the ticket, but the editors did the thing over and put the head on a different article.— It is a splendid heading from our stand point. Gtiss, with scarcely an average of one vote to every election district in the county, gets half oPthe a ticket.— Truly they have given "half' the ticket for a handful of votes." ,-The Globe wants us to tell it where the money went that was sent into this county last campaign to defeat our candi dates for Legislature. All we have to say in reply is that the editor who was stupid enough to run a paper, after the style of the Globe, with that amount of money ly ing around loose, without getting pay for his scribbling, ought to have, at least, pru dence enough to keep his mouth shut. But then the Professor is not remarkable for political sagacity. ,-Speer bought. tbo _Monitor with the salary swag, to get rid of Cornmau, whom he always, charged with being controlled by us. In Fact, he went so far as to say, repeatedly, that we run both the JOURNAL and Monitor : 2 This was great injustice to Mr. Cornwall,. Last week he set up his boys to " go for us," but fortunately there are several who can play at that game. We have sharpened a score of pencils, and mean to sail in. So, g'lang ! m„, We submit that the weather is rather warm for such exhibitions as the Monitor and Globe made this week.— Gentlemen, just think of rabies ! "DURBORROW'S IMPUDENCE." The boys who preside over the columns of the Monitor manifest considerable in dignation, in the last issue of that paper, because a week previously we had alluded to their personal actions in a couple of po ,litical Conventions. We had a perfect right to criticise their political actions, and we will do so just as often as they throw themselves open to criticism. But political action is one thing and private individual action quite another. When they intimate that we devoted any of our space to personal abuse they simply know not what they say. We challenge any ono to point to a single sentence in the JOUR NAL complained of that in any way allu ded to these thin-skinned young gentlemen in any other than a political connection. We did allude to Mr. Speer's controlling the Monitor, and they know this to be the fact. They know that Mr. Speer's check paid Mr. Cornman for the Monitor, and that Mr. Speer bought it to subserve his own interests, and that he is not stupid enough to dispose of it to any person that he cannot control and if he has induced them to invest the amount of money which he invested in it he has found a pair of the most silly geese known to this age.— No, no, gentlemen, we are not stupid oncngh to believe that you would invest thousands of' dollars simply to further the political fortunes of Mr. Speer, nor would Mr. Speer have the cheek to ask as much. When men want their ends subserved they hardly ever expect it to be done at the expense of their friends. But whether Mr. Speer owns it or not makes no differ• once to us, lie controls it, and. this was the only idea that wo desired specially to convey. As for our own relationship to the JouuNAL we have three actual hard earn• ed dollars invested in it fbr every one in vested by these young gentlemen in the Memtor, and we control our own business, and especially the columns of our paper, and while we have strength to wield a pen and reason to dictate words we will con tinue to do so. The man who undertakes to control us will find that he has the lar gest kind of an elephant on his hands.— We only follow where the interests of th c party and uur better judgment indicate that it is policy to so do, and on all othe r occasions we mean to lead. We permit no man to tell us that a certain thing mast be done against our better judgment, and to further individual interests. We pay our debts, run our own business, control our own newspaper, and are our own man from head to heels. This much for "Du r borrow's impudence." Would that you could say as much, and this is all we have to say. So drive slow, and cease yelping before you are hurt. Things have come to a pretty pass, when a man, like Dnrborrow, talks about the propr ie• tors of papers not owning them. A man who is himself editing a paper in which he has not, and does not dare to have, a single dollar's interest. Shame on such impudence.—Moni tor. Indeed I We pity the novice who is so extremely sensitive that when his political actions aro alluded to, must fly off at a tangent and endeavor to injure his neigh bors' credit, by resorting to the most vil lainous and malicious lying. No gentle man would do the like, and any respectable lawyer would have more discretion. The editor of this paper is both able and will ing to pay every penny of honest debt he ever incurred for himself or any one else. He has paid every demand that has ever been made of him as promptly as any oth er business man in the county. though a few years ago he was obliged to permit much that was valuable to him to be sac rificed to pay debts that were not paid be cause a banking institution, in which he had confidence, suspended, locking up a large sum of his money. These debts have been paid, manfully, and while he is not entirely out of debt he claims to be worth a sufficient sum, over and above all his in debtedness, to buy either one or all the edi tors of that paper put together, at any fair price any three honest, unbiassed men, in the community, m ay place upon them. The assertion that we dare not have a single dollars' interest in the pa per we control is a lie and the man who utters it is a liar and a scoundrel and the truth is not in him. z The "Woods•Orlady coalition," appears to annoy the Democratic papers, of this place, very much. They are constant ly chattering about it. It is the most ab surd bugaboo imaginable ! The two - winos of the Republican party had determined to settle their differences and unite their efforts against the Democrats. Messrs. Woods and Orlady, as individuals, favored a united party and lent their countenance to the movement. The members of the respective County Committees agreed to unite upon a basis satisfactory to both, and the thing was done. What had Woods and Orlady jointly to do with it? No& anything more than any ot'aer good Re publican or either of the Committees. Slir The Monitor and the Globe lament sorely that Thomas Fisher, esq., was not placed in nomination for Associate Judge. These great crocodile tears are well under stood! Had Mr. Fisher been nominated, a thousand different pretexts would have been conjured up to bring about his de feat, but Mr. Fisher was not nominated, and now they are outraged. Out upon the vile political hypocrites! Mr. Fisher and his friends knew that the Associate Judgship was conceded to the friends of Mr. Woods. The JOURNAL made this concession months ago and the Convention, composed of the best, independent, self reliant thinkers in the county, endorsed its course. stir The Democratic Ring determined to and did " Cleave the Douglass head," and B. F. had to stand a3ide and make room for W. F. Cunningham. And then " Billy " went a-fishing and got " pi. sened," and now he can't run a bit.. So far Lightner has two chances to his one. Such a man as Durburrow." Well, indeed I What is wrong with the man ? Has he ever murdered anybody ? Or is he only a political hypothennse ? May be he is only an acute angle or rhoui• boid ? WHAT A DEMAGOGUE DID AT CAMP MEETING. On Suva y last a week a g o. Hon. R. Milt o n Speer, of Salary Grab notoriety, paid a vihit, to the Newton Hamilton Camp Meeting. The. little demagogue was ex trethay busy. He went up and down seeking whom he could mislead. To a Republican office holder lie said, in sub stance : "Do you know that if the Woods• Orlady ticket is elected you will loose your head inside of a week after the clectiou .(How Could that affect me ?" 'said the office holder. "Oh, you know Scott and Cameron are bad frien•ls. Scott had you appointed and be is out of politics; Cam eron controls all those appointments now. Woods is very intimate and friendly with Cameron. I am surprised at your being indifferent. The only chalice for you is to help defeat the Republican ticket. That will satisfy Cameron that Woods does not amount to anything in politics. This is the only thing that will savc.you. G LOS is doing a glorious work in this direction. Go in, like a man, and save your neck." The officer couldn't see it. It was too thin. The little grabber next turned his at tention to a friend of Col. J. Hall Musser and repeated the story of Woods and Cam eron's cordial relations, and insisted that the only way to prevent Col. Musser from being turned out of the post office was to defeat the Woods-Orlady ticket. He then wound himself into a confiden tial chat with W. J. Geissinger. Said he, "do you know th .t Lightner': friends had determined to defeat your election if you had been nominated ?" This was news to Geissinger. "Yes, sir," said he, "William Stryker and others were vowing vengeance against you publicly on the street. They threatened to burst up the Convention if Lightner failed to get the nomination.—_ You cannot stand by the action of such a Convention. I know you too well fur that." He then sauntered up to a couple of ministers. After a very cordial greeting he spoke of the very good meeting, and how largely he had been benefitted by his attendance. "The fact is," said he, "we Presbyterians arc getting to be as much in favor of camp meetings as the Metho dists. I expect to see our church take the lead at these meetings before many years." Not being able to find any other object upon which to cast the rays of his beaming eon n_l. enance, he retired to a sal. emn place and said his prayers. m.The Monitor, with its usual balder dash, makes a great ado over the idea of electing Henry It. Shearer, a " Woods man," to the bench. It appears to regard such a contingency as a calamity, and throws up its hands and rolls up its eyes in well feigned horror. It has forgotten that Adam Heater, the great and good Adam, has also been a " Woods man," and has also been and is now an ardent " Speer man." Just think of it ! A " Speer man " for Judge and that, too, in the latter halt' of the nineteenth cen tury ! Great Governor and little fishes What is this world coming to ? .Henry R. Shearer run on a mule ticket" long enough ago to plead a political limitation, and now when he is running on the regular ticket, the Democratic or gans, the ilkiie'tor and its tender, the Glob( , try to nauseate Republicans with this little freak of Henry's—almost for gotten ; but it don't nauseate worth a cent. Shearer is a poor man, it is true, and this is what's the matter. These ar istocratic gentlemen are shocked at the idea of filling the bench with a man who can't wear silk stockings and carry a gold headed cane. Honest poor men, remember henry R. Shearer when you come to make up your ticket. tel. Hon. B. Milton Speer has gone otT to Erie to belp to put his worthy Salary Grabbing colleague through, and to use all his little influence to crush Wallace and his friends, and yet nine Democrats out of ten, in Huntingdon county, are warm friends of Wallace ; but they have no leader. If the anti-Speer men—the Stenger men—had had the courage of a good.sized louse, in the late Democratic Conventicn, Speer would bnce been licked out of his hoots. wk. The Globe says : "You want hon est and capable men," and says that its nominees have these qualities in'a pre eminent degree. The best evidence in the world that its nominees should not be elected is the fact that fur the mere sake of securing a nomination and a prospect ive election, they were willing to sell their party and principles to the Democrats.— Men who will act so unprincipled out of office, should not be trusted in office. Ac tions speak louder than words. to,The Professor, up to this time, ap pears to ba happy in his change of cen sors. Ile hasn't done anything to pro- voke Speer's ire yet, and all goes " merry as a marriage bell," but wait until Speer's hand is brought down upon him, and then, good gracious: what a smell of sul pintr will pervade the region of the depot. We will then realize the real import of the phrase " h-11 broke loose." ..Republicans of Huntingdon county, if you think for a single moment, that the late Republican Convention was controlled by anybody, ask your delegates. If the substantial men you sent to the late Con vention could not and did not act for themselves, then in the name of all that is sacred, who can you trust ? Republicans, the names of these men arc a sufficient guarantee of good faith. n.We refer specially to the manly card of Wm. J. Geissinger, Esq., in ano ther column. There is •no discount on William. He is a true blue Republican. Would that there were more such men. sar The last globe had more than its usual amount of silly twaddle. If Speer wants the work better done he must do it himself. There is too much slush in the Professor's lucubrations. Stuff! . _ tel. The pismires in the 11,:iitor sand hmp have swelled themselves up to the size of buzzing beetles. They are regular cock-'o-the-walk chaps. Whew ! Mad was no name for it. nes. The htc Republic 111 County ( 'at - i ¶ e' tpik, sp._ vention transferred the duties of Chair- -- = 1 man of the Itepublitan County Comm ittec. 11" 1:11 . 1.:1)--- which for the Inst_ ear had been impi:sed v 4 0 , ..!., fist , F•rse cis. : • raaerab. , • ..••=1 ,2 upon L. S. Geis:. cr, es ti., to Joseph 41. iy. nerkiiiv_, kr 'h. .rfrow e !Air •.f 111 *Ars , illimilet4. Rah 5...1, tr. vs 1....ral sr Isenberg, csq. . Gciminger wa- , an 80 . 0 .„„ f e win ;.,, efficient aud,uerilltic Chairman and under rY A,""0!" r'f"' - Nt. t. ..tintETT. i ....: ~.wh F...ertis 4,.. ri.i.b.iphi•. any ordinary rircum.tanees wvuld !;ave brought the party nut of the sght with flying colors, as it was. it way no fault of 1119. Ile performed the duties that der:A Vol upon him with curry and zeal arid - the party ow him ► debt n! gratitnde.— llis 14 all active *llll earnest Re publient, sod will in i';.• tlikeie.nt chair man. rkaLThe eft,rts ,•t* rew 0 , :,:r zealous ministers to eunim4 Church to the fort woe-. of it .k holey Browne, pro hibition eandidito ior Governor, was sig. pally rebuiicti by the Directorship of the Juniata Va;l(7 Camp Meeting Avsoeii tion. Nor was it the Directorship sl-ne that felt indignant at this effort to dinar whom their people snonld supp:at. but a large majority of the laity. The Metho dist Church is made rp of as intellip!nt 3 body of Christian gentlemen as is to be found anywhere, and they claim to be able to decide for themselves in all politi cal matters. ittl 4- An audacious fabrication is pub lished siatultanclusly in the Glolke and Abnit,r to the effect that Rah Fisher has spoken disparagingly of the doings of the recent Republican ('.invention. 03 the contrary. Mr. Fisher voted,iii the Conven_ tion fur :lino“ every candidate on the ticket, awl cspr...!sses himself publicly on all occasions, that the ticket is a good one, and will he elected by a handsome major ity. Mr. Speer had better try again ge,The G hi& talks glibly about the way in which the Republican Convention was i•et up, awl yet :t cannot giv2 positive fact to prove what it amerts. Mere presumption and painting to this and that, the result of circumstances, are no evidence. Sensible people want al.*, lute facts. Nothing is art of tileS3 will answer. ~The Republie.ins in Convention to sernnlcd, raid they preferred true and tried men—persons whotu they knew to be uieu of experiezia and integrity—for the Attu of Pr , ,thonotary and Register and Recorder, :,ti this iA chi) reason why Messrs. Myton and Lightner are candi dates fur re-election. Fursthay OY' T e editor of tho who has been buzzing around Cameron. Mackey apd others, and only getting snubbed for his pains, makes wry faces. It i' a little rough on a fellow who has eaten dirt by the shovelful, to be obliged to submit to being spit upon besides. E ti r Thrt Monitor and Globe, to enrer up their uwu ring operations, try to ertare the impre?sinn that the Republican nomi nations were the rzsult of a combination, but the character of the men who made them is a pledge that they were made in good faith. sm. "If Darborrow ig a good jadffc of Durborrow don't cunt ranch on Mn le•, but then he 13 death on Jacks. Let the Moniti,r and Globe take due notice and govern themselves accordingly. Monitor. L t week. opens up a personal assault upon u 3, without a per sonal provocation. Now, all we desire to know is : Is thing to be continued y If it is we will put a little brimstone to soak. Hon. Arehy McAllister went to Newton Hamilton to engineer the temper ance resolutions through, but ho ram.• away with a significant flea in hi:4 ear . A CARD. To 311, - FRIEND* :--Ovrinz to the fact that, Democrats have circulated the story that because of my disappointment in not securing the nomination for Register and Recorder. in the late Republican Conven tion, I intended to use my infinenee to defeat the ticket placed in nomination by raid Convention, I deem it my dirty to publicly deny the truth of it, and at the same time thank my friends for the favor able notice they gave me in said Conven tion, and I hereby arsine them that T will (as has been my habit in the past) work zealously for the election of the whop ticket, and urge all who voted for me in Convention, or who voted for delegates known to he favorable to me at the pri mary election, to do the same, and prove thereby that we arc &publicans in frith Respectfully, Wm. J. GEIAS' rFR E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron. Ciee t.•ne t.. the gtetnaich, insp, ay..) the ap p ease and a. gist digs4tiou ; ^tieite4 ele bn , C , to 7... Miry vrth•e. expelling .‘ll the f , nl humors the , onto the bis.. 4 ornipt the sect...flans eel offen.l 11.. l•reallt. It exclas• the liver to n healthy actssn amt •treactb•s• the aerv , e. imparting that ;hew to life that from p.rfe.-t health. 11 ,, asands in at wilt,. of life, testify t t the •ir tn.s of this excellent ni•-iicine in currorting Ike ~ensalrt nent of th.,ligestiro organs. Get the genic, iu $1 tputtirs. Ask for Z. F. Knuket'. Ritter W;us • f and !=ke ne ether. DYSPEPSIA. DI i;PEPSI.t. I)ISPEPAA. E. F !conker§ Bitter Wierrof Iron. s sure rum Our We disease. It LAS been preeeribsst doily for many porn he the practice of emisent physicians with usrorrielisi ceer. symptoms are 10. of 4pp...tit. rind and riglitt• fund, dryness in mouth, heasbachs.,•..liraioses, and low spirits. Get ,;.mine. N.A:void in boar-- only $1 bout,. Po you wax. fona•thing to •rt.tongthen r , u, or a go.ai onetite ! Do you want to Set rid of ner,14.11.41. • De you want eneru, sleep well, or he curl ••f 4yerwrieiew kidney or liver Jl.onse Try Z. T. X k r Wisp of Iron. Ivory Lottl• goorooteAl to do so roomisoodol Sold ouly in St bottle. Depot and oak.. No-th Ninth zit. Pbil3.lelptii. P. fret the genuine. S.A.! 67 all druggists. Ark for Nonliers Bat, Win- or 1-.. n. take no other. TAPE WORM REMOVE!) ALIVE. &moved alive with head complete, :a from two M fMr Lunn. No fee till removed, S. v. , N. Ninth St., Phllmielphis. Seat, Pio aal Stomarh Rose aim removed. Call and two ; wince free, sr gen.l for cir cular. A,k pair,iruggtot Kufeart's W. It Intt. Price, $1 per bottle. joettlil New To-Day. WAN TED-AG E NTS. -M EN AND WOMRN, in every city, tows and evroaty, to canvass for Wm. Re.lbeffer's PATENT LIGHT NINO RECIPROC %TIN*/ IMPROVEDCIII.7 RN AND Dili BEATER. :lens at eight en.l pay., Large Profit.. Send for eircular to manufieetorer, W. 11. CHICK ,t CO., 111 N. Se , - , nd St., Saint Loni per:- LIVERY STABLE FOR SALE A RARE (11.1NCE Having gone into other bnsinews,i will ..:1 m LIVERY STOCK, at iihargtin, if 14-,irocl the half -interest in the real estate. It in the old 'tan.' where Henry Yclllssi ai built ebe emaessateisn stable, and is centrally located. Only a small eaub payment desired, and the remainder to suit pur chaser. _ _ _ For farther infuratatioa call at the Jark«,n itowe. WEI/ROE 1.0.N1i Sort. 3t Sey7.- I en T WENTY THIRD 14NI - Al. KIM LITtW: rt!~r_trr ST.ITE ‘1.1:111"1.T1 J. win be W 4 a tANCASTER, PA., SEPTEMBER 27, 1875, 4 •nti!t Fro- Sob, 1.14.,,es of tate). *it, oar 400oteei,er f. No Et:7r in,. fee -iparx-••I .4%; C' ,, SPet Id r• Ir•:y lb. 7 misted St ,ter. on•I the ettit.t• .r •h • .."4 ,, -ral ~tates ere I , orttialir tns Iteti f 4 eorte? , ,o, 41? Fes ireurnimef Meg aet4 Mittleenreatew so* to either •,f 'be tandler.,,cm.4. t;?,:oft,,;F: :••'-, TT. l'fryt•,,! I). W. '?tLI?. Lupe:Dell MCo• IC it T. l . .rr,r•••.ii•: -.lie hwy. ,?•-pt 1-7 31 ()RION. BLI: 4 : 4 A cl) NANZEILe !ILIAD OT . T , •iff-sior Seq.% inivaill=4llo-.. b .:Ii !v., Tv ave.... en part. of !kw- 1.-vcll4. 14 'sot AS, Ditiri tireitANNl most mot . - - - $3 SA • ma.f. b„:7..7 . N I)IEASANT t• PHI WI - T.1131.n h.... ' • •• th., t ' :Sorb ea. ~rx. -lowa pr. 41...: by lb- p...r 11 1. all non.. too P.blbui. a .1; C» Tb.y sit prri4el vs. L.l art So riNA tIN tomptaik. ••• bay a 6.0 SW! ...ea Carivirovr.. •ripts, lead fir,ti..-usea vet •.t ..mphvisest, v la.l W. boss vipouve-r, wee v e..,4 Milan•y. i.n fali; perrvellalltei, Ind .O•ap evallillootiva or. , ti.. %Alms, Lame. a • , T33lridabilorb , n Uwe $5O TO $lO.OOO as ND , . Privalpir awe 'NM 900 C P F E N h T PROFIT'. ►t•,. r.. ill, It." s 11104 i .r+ Wig .4‘ vs TI - NRIM GC • el. owl 111,,alowe T Q 77.% week zuarwitee , l :4) and "" .‘ , • • • A r us 1.--ontv neer. NI/TIIIIIrti • tr• .1 . •thr• r Iw - sou a TEA....M. char.-4t4.714 : l it urip.rewe stapg• ertu-1.--; ow. ryt..#s Triner •-•41110111.11,11 is cremaier w.a.66.1 lartvw.map.a. yrulPs Pt. wine IVIOT xi rosey altrort, :I . r a.. Ng' gis.lttLys4; BonsA(;171-: Cr Vric, I. :4.41 loy ~r 3 Id.. fyvo ItF:w UtT , IF ft !W.. , Te) critz_ IPL C. /1. ROVE. a Into." T.' IV/OST 1 1 :171L.11111T) TVA KT - .I.lv,rt i«,‘ l at, .4.nd i•r t. r. . fliko• Aloe+ ,f PENNSTLVANIA .4 pore so/ ert.mtat.• .4 -Mira .4461r.0 01111. P. 41%, a114311111/11111111.11bilirk am 41 Pi,l Omsk Woe AO. Zoysia to losies or TwO ruts. ...., . 4., ,_. . 4„ , - 5 i.,4 Iv pir t; , i Ire A. , ... ... _. Tr. .., i ~..:.: x« '.l = i • l".• '...• i:-, 0,, In • ;.. „. „-- :-:. 7.7 Z W . 01111. 7; ' 1 li 1 - 4 n Z -- !.. ': 2 g ti ::- - 3 0 pi _. °CI 0 - , • - • .. • . _, . , loft p$ -ft .... --... ....., 7. - 4 !gir l :7 4 1 " 4 4 allir _ ~.. . ... , .. A . F . z it :.. _. ›ti 1 , ...„ fl 4 . . . _ sr • 1 ... X 7- ... .... 111311111111:11 MRS 'Pr VI INF)1":4TI:1 ‘i. EXIIIIIITIoN c.) r 11,11: IPOILII. 111111% retie. 85.00 !,tty a vrar.r. F. • ,•lr.l,4enoriva 1iv4,;14- ti..* N.ls , Tort. , peartyr portioirinea an r•cor allmounar. aver, Trite. mettle it if The Pressman shear slog any II•v.1 nay rer.ive. • yearlhor lwtl 6.646141 , Ir ., r •4 tbe 461... arans...4 proaerall• ft T .6 JI LT. • I.r. , nsiusa 4.. . ..... I p..minne .4. . • I pr. niant . . .11.* I pr.,ntrin; . 1000 1.0 r•:......ivat• rnmisia4 o( 'SA 0111•11.. ? pr.mtnne• .1 2.4 . .L:01 t• pr.m,no• .r • -art.. pr.n.r.stn• , f -orb. • I.tat. APRIL I; 1 . 1 . - T02 , 11!R. C. 1 p ?smile's 4 I : Min= 4 141).•••1 1 p r•imi ins, st .... ............ . . ... " 7: ". 1 11 0 11 1... I promise', .1 SIAM, werk . ... _ ',IMO Ti. prrisasoo• .4 .44 ~,,,; WOO . ... . . It, pr••11111111E •.4 zoo ....-h ~.. ..101 77 pinoiton• of 1.11.1.* .. ...... . line 11 prviaiime. .f .i• ....A . . ! ., •w1 13. , .1 proolinno. • 4 21 oosS . • I _Jae : TS. r...rtay is 04 sisr.emel•ie is orjr ottetti tent. •s -.pt it • . sob,. llyst, ,i re , p yuh rn tiro wart 4 Alt followrytar riltmitittits Circulars mot 'in I , l•lnitt„ ISD7' 4 TRI PARTIII77 , OI •'.1., IT Lase Iltb tilvere. Airt. SZI *7 - 1,11 City. New le r Tibor "Lied tool spriatr4 ;Istifitinw irr apLezi•ing a Kalisear Lisestios. F.w elven:aro rtirre. P. rrr, • oljus Piss.honglb. g•opt..l-0••-31/... ESTABLISIIED IN fgfilo• :n th• past Tem oror PITS Toll+ PM MONTI'. is plieltoors of 12 •-wres orb - RETAIL t.r : P 1 7oelte ni• .0.7.421•LK p.AI Pt 111 - ' ice. poriv-ol s mew prelentive sh.l s -tits,a nor , rt., Chicken Oboists or Oar& I hal, rwrinvotil. seinitettoht sat swomet , 4 v.* .lenevt fr,s FA Rlllllll4 *64 4thrre, eta empill it ,ad thereby eev.i tivit P , Peftry •br lisunt•• *ad lesea %II I soll R. my, St.ek. awl bar "was rime. 4 'are t.tir- My P ha. savvy. vvira 'ail aatiatoatio• aq a raiial4e Iwo so rt..itaits. , 7 . 4 T-n, E . 11.1,,i4 swo : 4 0gEr. it •1:1 *sato thrifty .104 himitisy . this I.viU y>.4.1 Dss esst. 1111. re bettor sod nab . Cattle sod Nov will Reis is !messing dot some peeporebes. Ask f.r this Per st 'oar rosiest 41serr eft s.4.irem os , for • pourphast, irith Nell 01011hreaws. PAIRD'g. A. MILLER. litsysiseur. 12IP lkilb rum* tit. MOIL W.l NTET It trgelt. 1111211411. seal so rsoseps ?sissy. T.'s... is. isi 4.10.1 as. `• •". 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IMISII3/10 AwieS„ tqf'S-a.. A 11111170111 - 3 SOVICIL lms.. I Al= sews Thr asilhialiesi Akin grim/ IF 0. Caere 4 eaammse Pier 4 imam% a. 4irtrilbees tie prorsio di* allimilpt ink. 4Op tuna wiser ~/ . *etc. as 104 .11hok andlollot, sis 16. 714 •- Ay...6w, tin, as 1111 41.11.6116, M., whoa awi Irlinir all posaile Ilsweste .rt.. .pests .rd Nue4 vow requirell loarenwi '4... 117 w namore. /1111.).. .:11 AIM 166.11116 w t M FRU . N W .t.qn max. r iirmistiltryp wed 11111.....awii • r briPT Mrs et •11111111 err, - 1114.45. V.m.mpli. 1r I Our Irma Or :* - 11$ , la !Imr et at ad& mainimm aaaliws vawnwer s. ir sal IbrsA teir MVP 11111111/61, aw grameet 4 sir plharisig maw M 41011.111111111 gam paw for ellammalas, 1 1 / 4 11 SIP ie p•POIMP. ...iproglinte Ow Ammer are Aft. Vont* modh. P., mom. %Jr v.... apialla. failialp• itom MAW Ire 111 4111111 PAIL 4 war emir , 4 0 9. -Iser.l sm4 %ow. gole.. 7: lir Amy, A. i•orse P. T 4117; • 1111 . 74i1T 110414 a. FIEDF• PS P 1 •• • 5...1 ••....ro 'law bar meson" bmi• bro•• by tem 4.4. 0 .11.111.4 ammo bed Ilbpispow• a* I , somairr 4 owe easposs • gline...•••• OW* alsrposailkw aldbiPtiP riewaxgp 48 Air .41 LP 'afoot% ..mallpe‘ .Itrrsalpasser, ip.lll %iv, veep Sy AMA pws.... Virr w erre, sit sill %rare. ri-vr•rwry if SO prr Asp. 7 ' die vine. 0~6 r.p or' MST .1 II Trria. WEppin.; rates' ‘IIP 4 IF. lior• Aser roper, - i • 'ye m/5... SP• II tAr•IV•I 111164...• Awe *saw 4 fre... polialee ewer. __ •- i~ •166 e ira lhollso row& rot yr IP. *we 'WWII, V, Or 1114 mil A. sea 40. ver •••/0 Arspor lbws ore. •I.i 1. 2 11,1111/11/.6. 710 1411. STE 111 It:VAIN IMP WIUrTI. t• is IL TINPLSIP!III .11•111.11 i S.- Mt. adliegt-s *. . ~ls,N• ; f. Lar ""4.11".. 111.........--,-. .tea twinkle* lispbison 4.• al +weals ~0. Asysti., ono s *mug •• 4 Iliaskassary. asawers mmai Al.r.w4 semi 1140 m, asSioloomr, adroves.... ".• 111.611mey fitre Pisibrim /b. wrilikage essevi. wait wvarsit. an ow ffid *TV.- 401011m1 swum two ..1. ii soy pro 41. ostssary. Alves 4.. tosikr.ll Ilk. 711/1/111/0/41.• salt Ilihreieweiv t altr al = l lll.4oll,llllllloranimprio ma. .4 wormy Mot eft EIIIIIIOIO . !bowel!) r vaairessai lli = ll llllli alielll~, Imo% WI diligur bripiallimult I lard frills Laub. lir map Es • .....? -..• Ow Aplllllll4l ‘-d MINK 11.1 Ifittall itiry per PNiirr. eery paw Orr row Mob asslerb I. firtoslnrralt PM, 411111111119010PY low re Ir. 10 , shireenr. 4 .100 , 41 galialialr. 11.46. Aw• - ladwis. .ionwr Or 01111111Pw. ISsims• Iftesdk PaiMo• *ma Ow i.e.. Alma ma &Am r4risillp -.o' Ars Maw At ?r - axis sees a Jr. rrsilliirt from s WAGS LOS - Name tome Is ammo faspope liessilogn. Spumy e nd ID w t • **T.•ll. •. sa• sallaminig ma II 1 v. a IL L 1 011 SAUL s amp. Emi 1 1 1 . 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