!'; WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1875 Circulation LARGER than any other Paper in the Juniata Valley. • REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. (10VERNOR : MAJ. GEN. JOHN F. HARTRANFT. • PROTEWNOTARY TIOM.A.B W. MYTON, of Huntingdon ataCSTIEL AND RECORD ER : WILLIAM E. LIGIITNEII, of West • -- STATE TREASURER HENRY RAWLE, of Erie. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET, ASSOCIATE JIiDO E : HENRY R. SHEARER, o-►' shade Gap. TREASURER : H. CLAY WEAVER, of Huntingdon DISTRICT ATTORNEY: GEORGE B. ORLADY, of Petersburg. COUNTY COMMISWONERS : BARTON GREEN, of Oneida, ANDREW G. NEFF, of Porter DIRECTOR OF THE POOR: CHAS K. HORTON, of Broad Top City, AUDITORS : JOHN W. MATTERN, of Huntingdon, WILLIAM H. REX, of Mapleton. REPUBLICAN MEETINGS WILL BE HELD AT THE FOLLOWING NAMED PLACES : WEDNESDAY, Oct. 20. MoAlovy's Fort, Marklesburg and Green's School House. THURSDAY, Oct. 21. Mooresville, Coffee Run and Shirleysburg. FRIDAY, Oct. 22. Dudley and Unity School House. SATURDAY, Oct. 23. Mount Union (at night) Mass Meeting, Frank iinville, (afternoon.) MONDAY, Oct. 25. SEMcConnellstown, Donation, Cassville, Shade Gap, (evening,) Cree's School House, (afternoon) TUESDAY, Oct. 26. Hawn's School House, Calvin, Tea Lane School House, and Unity School House, (evening.) WEDNESDAY, Oct. 27. Orbisonia, (afternoon and night) Mass fleeting, Warriorsmark. a THURSDAY, Oct. 28. Shafersville, Madden's School House and Saltille. FRIDAY, Oct. 29. Huntingdon, Grand Mass Meeting. SATURDAY, Oct 30. Spruce Creek, Mass Meeting. At the Mass Meeting to be held in Huntingdon, on the 29th kat., a fine silk flag, will be presented to the township bringing in the largest delegation in proportion to its vote. J. G. ISENBERG, Chairman. J. HALL MUSSER, Secretary. MONEY WANTED ! Within the last two weeks we have sent out in the neighborhood of five hundred duns. To these about thirty or forty have responded, but the great mass have not yet paid any attention to them. We need the money badly or we would not have sent out the request to pay up. Since the first of July we have set whole weeks in our office and did not take in more than $lO, while we were having an actual ex pense of $6O per week. This has been extremely mortifying and annoying to us. We incurred expenses that were unavoid able, and when the time for payment has been reached we found ourselves without money, while thousands are due us. The sums generally due us are so small that the great majority of those who owe us could pay if .they made a little exertion. We urge all who are indebted to us to make an effort to pay up and help us out of the drag. We have an excellent paying list; there is no better, and we appreciate their trouble in raisin(' money, but our necessi ties compel us to urge them to pay a little sooner than they may have contemplated. We are making some fine improvements— some that are a credit to the printing bu siness in Huntingdon and a lasting credit to the town—and they must now, with oth r indebtedness, be paid for. Come, help us. Don't get mad when you read this, but say, "Well, I feel proud of my paper, and I feel like helping the men who have ihe enterprise and spirit to keep up with the times. I will pay up the old score and a year in advance." That is the way t•) say it ! if I Organize ! Organize ! Republicana, : r u are not working half hard enough.— Go to work with a will. ' ;,., g Republicans, are each of you doing your duty ? If not, go to work, And work with a will ! The Monitor tries to insult the ftionds of Senator Scott by asking them t , vote for the Guss-Speer Fusion. A wore deliberate insult was never penned. Out upon the man who oonld be guilty of the like ! . us. The weak-kneed Democrats are threatened frightfully in the last Monitor. Speer means to CRUSH them, if they don't swallow Guss. Democrats, where is your manliness ? Ram his threats down his blatant throat wt. The last JOURNAL made the Pro. fessor scratch like a ben on a hot griddle. We are sorry to worry the poor man in this way, but if he will continue to lend himself to Speer we will have to hold him and that worthy up to the public. Com- pose your "narves." Die' We often wondered why it was that the Globe was eternally charging us with being the creature or tool of some one else. But since his "confession" and his servility to Speer we comprehend it all. He was simply measuring us with his own half bushel. SCOTT has gone, but his servile organ, the Jour nal, will continue to assail respectable Democrats, with as much perverted zeal, as though the chief were in our midst. Of course we will hear less about the "great gateman," than we were wont to hear, in the days when the Aid:administered the government pap to his organ.—Monitor. Speer ! In ten minutes we could pluck the plu mage from these respectable Democrats ,and they would not present a more attrac tivo and respectable appearance than other plucked roosters. ,ingdon Journal. ,OW, - EDITOR PENN'A WORDS OF COUNSEL. To the Republicans of Huntingdon county, and especially to that portion of them who are disposed to identify them selves with the Fusion movement and fol low the fortunes of A. L. Guss into the ranks of the Democratic party, we would, I on the eve of one of the most important contests in the history of the party, address a few words of counsel and of warning, by way of an appeal to your better judgment. Recognizing you as Republicans, and be lieving that you still have at heart the interests of the party, and a due regard for its time-honored principles and glorious ' record, we would ask of you, in all candor, what you expect to accomplish or to gain by dividing and disrupting the party, and electing the Democratic ticket? You say you are with us in supporting the State ticket, and on the great and important issues which enter into the contest, then why not support the local ticket nomina ted by your own party? What have you ever gained by filling the county offices Ivith Democrats? What did you gain by it last fall, when the unfortunate division in our ranks culminated in filling the coun• I ty offices with the opposition ? Was it 1 any advantage to you or to the party with 1 which you claim to be identified ? A De -1 mocratic member of the Legislature was I elected, by Republican votes, and what I has been his record ? His vote on the Local Option question, and his conduct before and since his election have been I such as to bring disgrace to himself and to those who assisted in placing him in this position. You also elected a so-called Rc ' pnblican member, who is now actively en gaged in trying to defeat the ticket nom inated by the party to which he claimed to belong, and elect the entire Democratic ticket. You elected a Democratic sheriff, and a man who is to-day, and has been ever since be came to the years of account ability, laboring with all the energy, and with what little ability he possesses, against your interests and those of your party; who, during the war, was a blatant and loud-mouthed Copperhead, and whose boast has been that he never polled a Re publican vote, and that, too, over a man who, in the hour of our esuntry's danger, fearlessly bared his own bosom to whatev er there was of danger and death on the battle-field, in defence of the glorious prin ciples which you now profess to cherish. And what have you gained by it, or what possible or imaginable advantage has it ever been to you? Have you ever receiv ed, at the hands of any of these men, a single favor, or any recognition of the ser vices of yourselves or your friends to jus tify you in pursuing so reckless and sui cidal a course? Truly, as has been re marked by many of our number, "this was a bitter draught to swallow ;" and now you arc asked to . repeat the loathsome dose. You are asked now to elect a Democratic Prothonotary, Register, County Treasurer, District Attorney and Commissioner, and for what reason ? You all profess to be Republicans; last year you lamented the unfortunate difficulty which disorganized , the party; there is not a man of you but was anxious to see the party again re- I united and all former difficulties re moved ; we met together in con vention for that purpose, and that union and reconciliation was affected ON YOUR OWN TERMS, why now desert your party 1 and prove recreant to your trust? We can only answer, simply because A. L. 1 Guss did not receive the nomination for some county office. No one disputes this ' fact. Had the party been willing to as sume the fearful load and go into the cam paign with Guss on its sholders for Reg- ' ister, Prothonotary. or Treasurer—for he was ready to accept of either—there would 1 to-day have been no Fusion ticket in the j county. Now we appeal to the sober 1 second thought of the people, to the honest i convictions of honest men, Republicans„ men who have hitherto stood shoulder to i shoulder with us in defence of the party, and its glorious principles and patriotic ' record, have you not seen enough and heard enough of A. L. Guss, to thoroughly 1 disgust every honest man and true Repub lican, sufficiently at least to induce you to abandon his failing fortunes, and ;allow him to fight his own battles and settle his own personal difficulties, without farther embroiling you, or injuring the party to which you belong ? A reckless adventurer, from another county, who has accumulated all that he ever possessed in this county, and who, but for his own vices or follies, might now be living in the enjoyment of affluence, what claims has he on the Re publican party, or on you, that he should ask you to assist him in accomplishing its defeat ? By his own recklessness and folly, like Arnold of old, caught on the horns of poverty, he falls now into the hands of R. M. Speer, an unprincipled demagogue, already discarded and de spised by the honest portion of his own party, for his salary grabbing propensities, becomes a tool in his hands, for the pur pose of filling the county offices with his favorites, and asks you to assist him in the nefarious work. Will you do it ? We ask you to ponder well the question.— Consider the important issues to be de cided, the disaster that would inevitably follow a defeat of our ticket this fall ; the question now to be decided as to whether we shall have a Republican party in the future in this county, remembering that on You rests the responsibility of deciding this question, and we have no hesitation in saying that the response from every true and honest Republican will be a decided and emphatic NO, and that you will ratify this decision at the polls. e., The Monitor, fearfully alarmed at the number of Democrats who swear they will not vote Fusion, last wick, gets off a lengthy address to its readers urging them, by all that is sacred to swallow the Cass ville stink, Guss, Speer and everything else that it may be necessary to get out of the way of their votes. They are asked to stand up to the rack fodder or no fod der. n. The Monitor claims that the Sher iff is only "serving the party which has honored him." Well, then, when he is told of his misrepresentations and bold faced lies ho aught to have the manliness to stand it, but there is not much manli ness or anything else about the fellow. What Adam Heeter Knows About Farming---the Poor House. Adam fleeter, with very modeente Iclaims or abilities, has : , erved three years try Poor Director, in an era of noequalleil extravagance in Poor House expenditures, receiving a salary of som? 5200.00 a year for three years, and what other perquisites he could pick up. On an average the paupers cost more, during his term of ser vice, for support, than people outside of the Poor House had to live on ; and the advice of the Monitor, in last week's issue, that Shearer should go to the Poor House, seems as if it might have been based on the success of Adam Ileeter in living, ns he has done, largely, for years, at the ex pense of this institution. It is well known,' by citizens of Shirleysburg, that even now, and ever since he was a Director, that he receiving favors therefrom. It is his usual stopping place. Ha is privileged in selling produce to them at his own prices. He has such little outside jobs given him as lie desires. Indeed this whole Poor House business needs reform; the alarm ing increase of county taxes, the wholesale swindling and waste going on there, cry loudly for a change. The present regime must go out—Adam 'Teeter with it. ris. There are four or five districts in which we fear our Republican friends are not doing as effective work as they should do. How about Shiriey,Mt. ITnion listrict, Henderson and Barre° ? From every other district iu the county we are satis fied that our friends are alive but from the districts named we can hear very little if anything. You have two weeks yet. Go to work and work every hour from this until the!polls close. Republicans,remember that nothing can be accomplished without work,and if we want in the future,lto have a majority party in Huntingdon county it must be accomplished by hard work this Im, Messrs. Conrad and Stonerod have been worries and bedeviled into sign ing cards giving in their adhesion to the "Fusion ticket." Conrad was extremely violent on the action of the Ring in his case and requested us to write the thing up, and ho would stand by it, but he had not the manliness to stand up to the work in the face of Speer. We thought he was made of better timber. But, how about Isenberg ? mi„ The Chairman of the Democratic Committee of Allegheny county, when the name of R. M. Speer was recently sug gested as one of the speakers, replied "no, we don't want him. We don't want a man that we will have to apologize for.— We want some man with a clean record.— Speer is a good talker, but he won't take with the people. His past record is a mill stone about his neck." ne., The Monitor assails Mr. Shearer's private business relations with a reckless ness worthy of a better cause. We are astonished at this breach of propriety. Men's political actions and opinions, when they are candidates, are open to criticism, but private business relations should be held sacred. The Munitor's howl should satisfy Republicans that they should double the efforts to elect Shearer. :a_ The Globe and Monitor are up— all bristles—at the mere mention of the fact that Wright and Weaver are cutting each other's throats. Now, we happen to know that the Monitor wants Weaver elected while the Globe wants Wright, and each has determined to carry his man. Well, it is none of our funeral. Cut each other to your hearts' content. tg,.. The Professor has another chapter on "what I know about farming" in the last Globe. It cost him $l.B ! He is very sore about it. He wanted to arrange to cheat his lawyers out of their legitimate fees, and it didn't work. Consequently he is mad. Since then he is down on snap judgments. um, It takes a fourth of a column, in the last Globe, to say that Speer did not write the communication signed "A Scott Republican" in that paper. If it did not emenate from him why is it necessary to go to so much trouble to prove a negative ? SPEER WROTE IT, we know he did ! and you need not lie about it. ter Speer has two communications in this week's Globe. One, if we are not mistaken, is an address to the Republicans, signed, we suppose, by "A Scott Re publican." He goes for us mildly in one of them. Speer is doing the business fully as effectually as ever Guss credited Mr. Woods with doing. Speer is doing all his heavy work on the Globe now. lie finds the Profes sor a.very willing tool and without a mas ter he would soon run things into the ground. Speer is now the responsible head of the concern except in the matter of paying. is. The Bellefonte Watchman claims a gain of 45,000 in Ohio. This is a mistake, friend, Meek. If we remember correctly Vallandigham was beaten 100,000. This would be a gain of about 90,000. Friend Meek thou shouldst be more careful in thy figures. sir Have the Vigilance Committees done their duty in every instance ? Have sub school district committees been prompt ly appointed and have they performed their duties ? We must have the heaviest vote ever polled in Huntingdon county. No faltering now Guss says the Globe will contain, this week, the biggest editorial he ever wrote for the paper. It will be about six columns in length and contain at least three ideas and the balance will all he words, words, words. Pshaw ! DA.. The first torch light procession of the season knocked the Democrats off their pins, They have been making ugly faces ever since. They felt that the Republi cans were alive and that Fusion was a de lusion and a snare. tar In London occasionally a sign is to be seen, thus : "Letters written here." A sign similar to this one, on Mr. Spcer's door, would be very appropriate. " NO RELATION." ['rider thi2: •, , .T.lli. with eitar:w± , .ristir• :t an,l tl,Tr!vity, t•I Ifni' Trca-ittrer, by st: ; , ing that "1). B. \Vc:tv,•i•, ri,;•(!;;ilis anni..yel by i%quirif-• • wh:.!ther they are in any way r , .:1;0ci."--- From what w 3 know or ver, t. 13 a mari or will undertake to sftv that he tievi• any such Pssntion, and 11:1t. story is a fabrieu;.io9 0 1' desperate straits to which order to find SOLltet)i Ing t:) \Veaver. ft wil), b. Cie c:unpaign upcned, i:: vented nrid published floc mean Li! kl . :er another in regard to that geutlelnatt, as often Fneaked out of it when re!uti...6.--- This seems to fl^ tht. L:perate and, like tie rest, wW aboftive H C. Weaver, our candidate for TreasurLr is a gentleman against whcse character co word of reproach cau truthfully I.:c ut:er ed, and the returns cf ill; ! t ;how what kind of :in in his travels tbrourh the county.ll N name or relation ship will injure no man, and it would be well F o r A. L. Gass, and those who are connected w i t h him, if he could, in point of (diaractor, morality and virtue, show a:; fai: Lion. Samuel Calvin, an old gc-e -tleman, born a rew years after the flood, who has been so very badly afflicted with the financial disease that he has talked every Republican to death who Las ap proached him fir the last five years, and when he could not induce any Republi cans to listen to him any longer, sought pastures new by going over to the Demo crats. went to Ohio and now Ohio has re sponded ! If he and Curtin had been there ten days slancr, the Republ:: cans would have had at least 20,000 ma jority. HURRAH FOR MO! SALTILLO, Oct. 16, 1875 MR. EDITOR :—Good for oido and Iowa! We are doing a glorious work. We mean to beat the Fusion ticket out of sight. Are our friends in the upper end working ? Tell them we are at it to a man. We insist upon everybody doing his all. The man who stands idly by may hang up his fiddle tr the faturc for Ohio and Iowa: c~3 It has been reported, by persons desiring to aid the enemy, that David Hare, esq., of Porter township, intends to vote for Adam lieeter. We are authori zed by Mr. Hare to say that it is a mali cious falsehood ; that he is for the entire ticket, and that the Republicans of Porter township are for the ticket to a man. are informed, and prepared to prove, that Adam Hector, the (4uss-Speer candidate for Associate ,Tudgf), rfils an fin Pair ground, during the laf,t county Fair, baying tickets in the "Lucky Wheel." Are you going to elect a GAMBLE 11 to the Bench ? How is this for hwic z ,t .Adain ? Honest Johnny Griffith, who knows how to manipulate the election of assessors to keep down his taxes, is pronounced by the Globe to be be a model man. Maybe he is. His neighbors, however, will an swer the matter at the polls. ilu• The success of "Old Barrec Demo crat" last campaign has moved Mr. Speer to imitate him this fall under the nom, de plume of "A Scott Republican." There is not much originality in the Democratic shop. 12*,_ Andy Curtin went to Ohio, and now he is reported sick in Cinciuuati. Poor fellow ! Them Buckeyes was sot ! and Andy is now down with the melan cholies. McClure fooled him again. os. : . Vigilance men, we hear that in a few districts the canvass is not complete yet. Why is this thus ? Cime, pull up Put in every day from now until the elec tion. Samuel E. E. Dimmick. Telegraphic announcement of the death of this public officer was made on Tuesday last. The sad event occurred at the State Capitol Hotel in Harrisburg, near mid night on Monday, the 11th inst., after a brief illness. The birthplace of Mr. Ditn rnick was Orange County, New York ; the date of his birth, 1822. After reeeivinf , a liberal education he studied law. and having been admitted to the bar lie a:- moved to Honesdale, in this State. Here he practiced his profession and resided up to the period of his death. For a number of years he was the law partner of Hon. William H. Dimmick, who held a seat in Congress from 1831 to 1555. Being a studious, thoughtful, and industrious man, the rise of Mr. Dimmick was rapid in his profession, while the high moral standard of his conduct soon enabled him to enjoy the respect, confidence, and esteem of the public. Being in a portion of the State intersected by numerous heavy railroad and canal companies, his legal services were often called into retuisition either on one siga or the other of important and in tricate issues of facts and law. The Dela ware and Hudson Canal Companies, the Pennsylvania Coal Company and the Dela ware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, clients of Mr. Dimmick during his career at the bar, all bear te , timony to his great legal ability and spotless integri ty. While he had strong political convic tions lie did not often hold public positions. In 1872 he was a delegate to the Repub lican State Convention. In the Conven tion that revised the Constitution of the State, Mr. Dimmick was a most useful member during the time he remained in that body, which was limited by his ap pointment to succeed lion. F. Carroll Brewster, as Attorney General of the State, on the 22d of January, 1873. In this of fice he was a sound legal adviser of the Governor, and attended to all matters coin witted to his charge with the utmost care and painstaking fidelity. In May, 1874, Governor Hartranft selected Mr. Dimmick as one of the seven members of a commis sion to propose amendments to the new Constitution, as authorized at the preced ing session of the Legislature. This was the last post he filled outside his regular official duties. At the time of his death he was in Harrisburg on business connect ed with the Board of Pardons, and left that place to only lie down upon abed of death. Mr. Dimmick was in all respects an honest, useful citzen and an irreproachable public officer, i* --1 7 _ I. -..„.....,__, .-...Li- 1 ...::,--.. , : , :.-i r. , -,........ Pr 4 , 4:41.*; \ ti ...;.-- „ . „,, .. p.,;.,, 4 ; , .. ,0 4- ,— , j.—._ ~,,. - - --- 7. - 7 .---- .. -- _-_, ii ... 4„. i ,e a -i:. '..,.....,.,........„-_---. -.../. .4 Iye x-1 --, . ',2.,,.:11;:•13e . ~..,7-,-, , 7-,-, ~-.. .- ~ . „1_ 47 ,..y. 1 o.rt..' - If firl.l! . r. ... :'''.' •••• sli . — l ' ... L.v .„ . - ~. 'l ': 7 l -,:.11`• ---L7 '.—:- - - ' ''., ' At , -.},/' ' A t li Nk2 ''' l a - d--- - _ - 7 - ': - "# 4 '4-•:_. - ,' - 3.,*. ''' -- _ '' al V4 ‘..,_ _:122:4-;-, if - . ,-.-1,_,77,-.-":.•-•-,._ •4,// v;; in .s-,,.-,,,-;*Nr, '-',.'''-i'i .. , 11.vi11,.!.: -.... ol y i .t f ) ij.. ; - .. i . f i Jr i i; • Bq it - ill ill RIK I e glj - OHIO is..Ni) i,„,.„ rivania RF . ..1 I. 6I_ I :CANS ; TO YOtiß Pi:::liTS Ems ill Oithi--Epiiragi ill FEmylvillia! Forward! Lot the Band Play! Republicans, from Luke Erie to the Delaware, rejoice! The battle has been fought and the victory won ! Ohio, lowa arid Nebraska have spoken and the triumph is complete. in Ohio, after one of the hottest c!ites!ed I:norm to our political history, the J.. ad vice:4 Kane up the nt;ult. at 4,753 of a n4ority for llaye4 and a ma jority in 'both branches of the Lc lature. lowa givo3 a majority of 83,000 and Nebraska 9,000. This is a splendid result for the 1-7tcond Tuesday of October ! Pennsylvania! The Democrat; are dismaye'l and terror-f trieken ! liar tranft*:; nuklority not he 1e:53 than 2.5,000, and TILly n'ach twice this amount. Work ! Work _.car • Dyspepsia, Dyapopsia, Dyspepsia :!, taro:: perFle::iiig ,t!! t ; •iynip•ori.4 aro airiewt in their variety, and the forlorn IL! ' •: n,s it elf, of ten fancy thweseiv•-, t,.:11 vi knew, malady. This ti , Itie, is r • L. ;.• the ciiipe-Inipiat;iy which iwtwcen the iitontai•i! ..!:,! , al.l in part *lbw tife titct that o of unction twees.eitily ti, ivy,. ttir I.es:ols nmi 1... F. K t ;t ;1•••• 1.1 at.i - , . . : . f yness of ih 111“.iiii,11,1,0 11 . .•• tn,. 10111 buweb, . les.ttems and low it, Try ' , II. • ..t tt!:•I convinsed of its murit, Get Of. 'Pak.. Kunkel's, which is ptt only in $l ITatles. Dim, lir'', North Ninth St., Philadelphia. For sa:r. 1 . ,,r all druggists and ilealers eve•rywlier TAP} WORM Entirely removed with purely vegetable medicine, ing from the system alive. NU fee until the 11,:c1 passes. Como and refer to patients treate..l. Pr. IL F. HUNKEL No. 231. North Ninth St., Philadelphia. Advice free.— Seat, Pin and Etomach Worms also n'itioved. The medi cine fo • removing all others but Tape Worm, can be had of your druggist, ask for Ktnanees hoax Stare. Price, $l. E. F. Kunkel, Philadelphia, Pa. New To-Day ITUNTINGDON LIVERY STABLE, MIFFLIF STREET, loween flit ,t• 7th The uniersignedrespectfnlly annqunee that they have porchaeed the Livery Stable formerly owned by George Long, located on Mifflin street, betwt•en Sixth and Sev enth, where HORSES, CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, etc., can be hired at reasonable rates. The stock is complete and in good cunditiun, and we respectfully ask a share of patronage. oct2o-3m] WM. LONG do SON. FOR SALE- A farm of 75 Aerce, in Barren township, one and a half miles above Conpropst's Mill. good, and have applied 2000 bushels of lime du ring the last year; yields 40 tons of hay. It is handy to school, church and mill. Price, $3,000, in payments, or $2,500 cash. CHARLES A. ESTES. oct2o-3m] Huntingdon, Pa. ORPHANS' COURT SALE OF VALUABLE nsAL ESTATE. The unlereigned, Administrator of Aeaph Price, lato of Cromwell township, tired.. will offer at public safe, on the premiers, in Cromwd i , .1711- ship, Huntingdon county, Pa., ~n 7 1 .111 TR SD A 4//e, .7:7, at 1 o'clock, P. m., hii that cirt.tin I rAct of land, bounded on tbo north by lava of .Jacob F;!sller and Jacob Kyler, no Ilia clot by lands of Jacob Rainter, on the south by laLits of Jacob Rainter, and on the west by lands of Thomas Hooper and Jobn Beers, containing about Two Hundred and Thirty-four Acres, having thereon erected a LOU HOUSE, LOU BARN, Frame Tbre.hing-floor, At! , about 100 Acres bleared and the balance well titul.ered. TERMS.—Oue-third .he purchase money to be paid on confirmation of the sale; one-third in oue year, with interest ; the remaining third will remain in the premises until the death of the wid ow, the interest to be paid annually to the widow during her life; blth payments to be soured by the judgment bonds of the purchaser. JOAN F. PRICE, oet2ll-ts] A Itu'r. f A saph Price, cited. MISS MARY BIi3IBAUGII, DRESS MAKER, No. 736, Washington street, Iluntingdon, Pa„ would inform her numerous patrons and friends that she has opened a dre.,: making establishment at her residence where al; desiring to avail them selves of her experience and skill are requested to apply. toct2o-3m. HIJNTINGDON Academy and Seminary. The undersigned, in tak;ng e!:ar.;e of this In stitution, will endeavor to turniA g•,,,,t Ac,utem ic training to all pupi:. , n!RT:din:; i!te course of instruction. The second half Of the i:rst teria the FCht)ia 4 . tic year 1875-G begins nn M9:l(tay, tmolier I Ift The department; and terms oi be as follotcs, viz : Department 1, Primary, Tuition 2, Academie, •• jlO 00 to 12 50 5, Collegiate, " Music, Painting, Drawing, Modern lingliages, Etc., EXTRA. TERMS ARE TEN WEEKS LACII, and no deductions will he made for absence ex cept iu cases of profracteti sickness. A small contingent fee will grub: 'oly be found necessary to defray contingent expenses. Tuition fees are payable ONE-lIALF IN ADVANCE, the remainder at the middle or end of each term. It will he the aim of the Instructors in this In stitution to prepare }pupils t., enter our best c,l leges with credit. For further particulars :WO Circii:an , . or apt;: to :he undersiened, Rr. IV. W. l'a. REFERENCES :—Prof. A. ritephonl, and the Board of Trustees, Huntingdon, Pa. 0et.13,1575-tf. -- ._ „if _A %I 74 ;,' ;: /çfl rn:11, 1.,i.i',...- - . Oii. l- 1,-.3 I Now for t. 01.11,1,1:c " i • Every Department will 7:n tiI?1,1 with tile own Interetting Invention!, Ind A r t. o f th, A zr .__ Marie, by tirst-elal+ Cjnd.. will he in it! ten,l3 nee from 10 A. M., ',mil 2 P. M.. ‘lttriog the ...rite Exhibition. Unparalleled Attractions in Every De partment. Magnificent Buildings. Great Crowds in Attendance. ALL KINDS OF FARMERS* .t LIVE FOr upward! , of twenty :.earl thr lea.?in4 C.ilege of the I'r::•. , l:itates, arorl+ nnr. ! nl;- let] advantages for the thoron;;11, prartieal r.tarz_ tion of young and tnid.iie a%coi admitted at Any time. 543-Yor sr•..:•i- J. C. SMITH. .1. M.. The "IRON CITY COLLEGE if the inAtituti ,- >n of the kind, in tbis city, that we t...• commend to the pubiie Banner, Pirlihurjh, Pg. - MEW GROCERY. CONFECTioN -A- ERY AND ICE CREAM SAI.O6N. C. LOS': has _last .pened. at hi, re.i. , ,eaee, West Huntingdon, a new iiroc—ry„ ar-y and lee Cream sal..m, whete ever)thinA , rrain ing to these hr..nehes of tra,:e h. ', A .', 1,, Cream fitenielle.l, at Ilion t•• ramie?. r...c.11, are ,nre, r any "'ben. in tuna. ;•:c, • I: • t.• r ..!•••••rfq:!r F0567e.i. ['OIL ALL ;;;SI=S I GO TO THE ••• • - • _... i t ~,; ~, _ ~'l i . : : t.-i .kr.:./ '.4 t*.; 11l Id •!: ,- ri - t; .i :,: ::.;:_, -' .. - - i:iV.. 1 _..- - —......_ . . iJORNEII L .Gffl i - 1 .... __ _ .~ *.' A'. V 7. • 7: T- •-• Mdel, FOR RENT r A . • strent, bety.-rr. further pa,t:rvi4r. in/r. NOTICE TO F.klt3lEli;' • - ••• - • • 4 vil•—•=ing nor a... - F. 1.:.: -A- 1 Thr. 'urr;hlst markut prig.," w..: 1.. 1..,,i.1 (.31. \''• . ; t - .•• • . , ... . Chickens, Te.rkeys, ti,eige an-I I)•.tet:, 4t /....igee j i bell, ••;, i'' :* -,- .. - t t 7. - ..!. IN ...-4. ••‘:..rri n .: Store, tw9 tio , ,r3 emat. (~ : iii.tr.' NiE. •_,,,!.1'.••-ti. of olr niait; -:-.-'1•1= • 344 In , li'i: 4. will •. ,n177* , - IVFf'. ..T.lf i). blvc a.,.. rcr,..,, .. •-• . st.c , - - A - - * 7 1— rr,.: rot Laicf.!:.,l - ' -, . % ;,:5t t . 0.; a: 1....-Ace. , r'! ,i- - -. ':•w• •. • •:. ',SO: ,A 3 for r'n,lf t, •::-:. 7. - .. :11171• - , :v.• ,f,,m rs in... 94 • o: Firlir•ne MU' :1!i kit, 1, , '.. ! ,, 1:::: • '..• .7 . olii •:t 4, ~...-: ... , , .9 . . •, .. - .. O.:: bight r.:.-7: • :.-, 'sr. •:...: .• •• .• , t ~ .rt• I .' - IVA ...'i . T ..:::i:.‘ i • , ..r , n • •• i": ; .• • ; OC. i Y- ~ t'l TIZ Y ~r(~,;;? Vb'eit Whae t•- • ! a half old. El;e..wLer 14 :• •• perty, awl it 3 war .tr it will be 50Mae....0p1i1y7 r:. Oat. 1:;-30 FOR HEALTH. CO) fl EcoNomv. CORK SHAVINGS are !urea,:: we as ^ride for heading. Only e:ght cents per: i—un I F..rty p oun ds will Et! Ma!treAv. Pers....vis iting the wii! pies.- as see vamping. nt Aii.W6TRONG, an, ; .1 • -• octl3-4t; 1~. F . ~,,. 1 ". 4' r 1 i . ,••r f :1., ..~ . •, • : •1.! n'luz Cr , . 1 t!., i..; 3Cturty • . •. 0 tilt toter I tb,.r , :auss or be debar:fa .0 a r 4,jel k:, Oe.. 3-3 i k 171)11 . 011'S NOTir I.A. . I il lli. . i The undersigned Auditor. .1 i.y Orphans' Con r; of IlltitinzOn r-nn'y. T. , make distribution of the halanee in the hands of Samuel P. Smith, Administrator 0r mith. late of Union township, deroasei:, will a?ten4 :n the du ties of hie appointment. en Tharg,l4y, the 4:h .lay of Novemlier, 157.5. at ens p. in !he office of Simpson k Armitz.le. in Ilantingd-n. when and where all pergne, h:tvirig . ,lairnagatrai , ••• said fund will present them, ;e- barred from a ,oar, !horrof. .;. :;1:111'5.)7.5 0ct.13-3t MM. M. MOOR E. 325 PENN AVENUE, Ilea ju.F.t . an elegant 3., , , rnii , nt t r.tr SUITS, ILIT . CO:7;T I")!KS. FRENCH DRESSES, CLOAKS, SEAL JArKETS. ,'fir All of whioh are of :he latest importsei , ,,. An d embrace the most fashionable and hamlsonie pat terns in Europe. AO- Cut this out an.! !:e.p it for refeeenee un til you visit iiitisiiurgh. when yin are invite.' : o call. [octl3-2* - - - Zia - • . 341 --- - . - - T RADESMEN'S INDrSTRIAL INSTITUTE, PITTSBITG OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. 0(7 (.; 2cOvEMBEE 1' , 7.7. PREMIU NIS VALUED AT i. 550,009. NOTHING EXCLUDED. Retinee , l Fare , Al a:I 1, , ept!M197:.-I=l. 6 1 / 7 . PITTSBURG] 1. PA. "JOURNAL" BUILDING' 1. • ! I I " ; ':.D C E-• p.j.71 k 1)E - r rT EP r rß r i P ij q. ryPA A T THE . OES ;; - N t f . • •••• r••• 14P,NS' Pso7B w fOUTES : . ;, , t ,- ~ -- r 1,. j ,r. , r~ .5 .. _ _~ J ... ~ _ in•*. a tn , l . • ‘. • • _ • • -I A' • • a 7". 41111 t-itr 10. k• 1.: AND P 1 + ' ~~ ~~ . .". a r , ;4:11 119 - .r•t : •,, ?:15 LOPety Stmt. nod WS limu Arrow.. • : . •.s j "ip r !s• - F If"irf:0;;) , )3 ENr., - • A • .‘, : war a = R. L=t ....II .4 . • wit; firvi gro-sti, • • _ . .••••:• lips.", ppm', a.• •••••••poi • ••', •proefin. 199 5n9;9.49.4 " 9. • .141 ". -11 . 1 Ape- .1 • 4.1.90...• f ire* .44••• p•••••ii.••••• 19 " . • 9-9'a9 ..9 -9°9999-91. 4 " IP I • ...It I+7. r :•••. Pist!,r VA - ELL It 'gratin', I,...nwilsa. 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