The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, November 03, 1875, Image 2
The Hunting.ilori J - 117J>i1ItnoR1iOW. IIUNTL'•W DOY, N N' WEDNESDAY, NOVI:MI:Mt 3, 1875. Circulation LARGER than any other Paper in the Juniata Valley. Thsnkegiving Proolamstion In acnordn.n wi:11 a pruzice OIE:f: r lonatiful, tta 1 ,0,en a , ::::u4 1 ,9:n4,1, !.: drawing to & eloAll. to ileVuto un butrelle txpr,.0, , ,71 th t i.A b.+ /towr•A tiiron M• awl rrritection .1,;;45 .•, Heil 4114 (ref All Ullld 1111 1,,%.11.! ~,,, derll/1,1, ti!..! ~f ' 'it , 1 ,1; gn.C ,, • t., itatfic , Of 1111 ova, I. 1',113 , now our thauirs to Aluttc,!;ty t. rt .or cur,: e slowed upon us ,I:iring the p' et ye:tr. Ify I! continutd surrey, ei*ll and religious liberty have been maintained, peace has reigned w;thin borders, labor bad enterprise have produced thei , titeritAid rewards. and to ilia watchful provideuee we are indebted for scour:ll front pest:fence blot other national enlarnity. Apr: from untionif blessings, est& individual among us has ()cession to thoughtfully recall and devoutly recognize the favor and protection which. he has enjoyed. Now, therefore I, Ulysses S. Grant, President of the United States, do recommend that on TRURIDAY, the 2rnit day ft/ Noremher, the people of the United States, abstaining front all ti-enhir pursuit,: and frorr their accustomed ev ocations, do assemble in their respective planes of worship, and in such form as ma.) , seem most ap propriate in their own hearts oTer to Almighty God their aeknowiede,mente and thanks for ail Ilis !aerates, and their humble prayers fur a con tinuance of the divine favor. In witness where of I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be allixed. Done - tit the oity of Washington, this twenty-seventh day of October, in the year of our Lord one theusan._ eight hundred and seventy-five, and of the Inde pendence of the United fitatus the one hundredth. (Signed] U. S. ORAFT. By the President, 'lmams Pisli, Secretary of State. MONEY WANTED ! Within the last two weeks we have pent out i❑ the neighborhood of five hundred duns. To these :lout thirty or forty have responded, but the great nates 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 core than $lO, while we were having an actual ez- pense of $6O per week. This has Lccn extremely mortifying and annoying to us, We incurred expenses that were unavoid able, and when the time for payment has beea reached we !build oureives without motley, while thousands are due uE. 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 inlebtei to us to make an effort to pay up o.ad help us out of the drag. We have an cac3llent paying list; there is no better, and we appreciate their trouble in raising 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 013 printing hu siness in Huntingdon awl a lasting cred - it to the town—and they must now, with oth er 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 the 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 to say it ! tf THE NEW SECRETARY IN THE INTERIOR. The President since his return from the West, his appointed Hon. Zacharia Chan dler, of Michigan, to be Secretary of the Ulterior in the place of Hon. Columbus Delano. The Ex-Senator it pronounced the right man for the place by those who know him intimately. We take pleas in copying from a letter of D. R. Locte, (Petroleum V. Nasby) who speaks from the book. He says : "The attitude of the New York press in the matter of appointment of Ex-Senator Chandler, of Michigan, Secretary of the Interior, is not only unfair, but brutal. They denounce the appointment as one en tirely unfit to be made, intimating, if they Jo not assert, that the new Secretary is a hlatherer, a ninny, and drunkard. Possi bly the gentlemen who aru discharging these little ink-squirts at Chandler know hint and possible they do not. I do, and I predict that he will make the best officer th it department has had since Cox left it. llc was for years the most prominent busi ness man in the West, and handled great r interests than any other. He was a merchant, a manufacturer, a shipper; he pur(;hased and developed immense tracts ~t' iand in Michigan, and for forty years b has been known as a man not only of absolute integrity, but one of great enter p;•so, foresight, method, and shrewdness; and he is anything but a drunkard. It strikes me that these qualifications are ago a what the country wants in such places- They are, precisely those tftitt Jewell brought up to the Post Office Department, :1;1.1 we all know what he has done in that place. Mark my words, Chandler will ad minister the duties of his office honestly, vigorously and intelligently. True, he is ,:i.rtisan, but let it he remembered that those howling at Grant's heels on that ac e loot howled just as loud seven years ago b.,!: Luse he did not put partisans in posi t;:: Time will confound them." State News. The price of oil at the wells in Clarion county is $1.40 and at the railroad at $1.65. dig thousand bushels of corn were rais ed on the Lehigh county almshouse farm this year. Mrs Daniel Cobeo, of Lehigh county, died on Friday while on her way to a fu neral. Matthias Smith, of Kattanning, hanged himself recently while his wife was at church. He was seventy-two years old and bad been Irinking. A new oil well has been struck near Creswell city, Butler county, l'a. The well is a flowing one and has been running at the rate of about 400 barrels per day. New Englanders are much exercised over the exhuming of a newspaper turned t 9 stone. This is certainly' strange. A few years ago, however, it was quite a common occurrence for newspapers to turn to Clay.—N Y. Commercial. . , I Fr% B .". /-spOnTr , 7 :7.7 . 114 T }f; i'llit BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! (--,,,, ei...•, , - . ?_k. - N / ,'.,,. 1 siL • i lk`Zd. A ''.'' J. 107 I t w. ! if. ~. I•~"~ r a,(.. AO AA. A GEE roma FIELD DAY! PENNSYLVaiL. VITONSIN, MASSA CHUSETTS' 6D THE EACI,,E SCREAMS! PENNSYLVANIA SENDS WONG WITH 30,0801 The Demwratie Chicken is Squeamish 1 w. ACl§A i litta :,; , tWAWC , . I 44 , :eO A 4, „2 ' I IN . • ' -if An Avalußlig 'if Eopublicau Triumphs! THE CURT(A)IN DROPPED ! Euntingdon County Mixed I The yesterd::y. in this c.innty, would in:liyr.ki the (1.31 at ef the hrger portion of din At the time we go to press the io , iieations are that out caudidat. Judge, District Attorney and Purr Diroctor have been defeated, arid the remainder of the ticket elected. What has occasioned this result we will not stop at this time to con.' jecture. Every man on our ticket should have been triumphantly elec:efl. Pennsylvania has covered herself with. glory, and again takes her stand as one of the reliable States in the Republican column. Massachusetts, Wisconsin anti Minne sota have gone Republican by increased majorities, while New Jersey and Mississ ippi show heary Republi , nn gains. In New York the Tsu n nanyitcs were badly beaten. In the result of yesterday's elec tions the Ropublicau party has much to cheer it, and its banner &rats in triumph over a routed and diseomfitted foe. Miscellaneous News Items. Fifteen cents a bushel is the price of apples on some parts of Pennsylvania. There are sixty stores on Broadway, Boston, that has given np gas and taken to kerosene. That's one way of dealing with a monopoly. The Germans, who are great on cente naries, will celebrate on the 7th of No vember, 1875, the one hundreth anni versary of Goethe's entry into Weimar. The Oil City Greys decided not to turn out to receive Governor Hartran ft yester day, on the ground that he was visiting the city, not as governor, but as a cam paigner. A man named Klengcnsmith, of Clar ion county, died from the effects of too much lifting. Ile attending the fair, and tested his strength at a lifting machine, pulling 450 pounds. At Pittsburgh on Friday a boy who had been standing on a stone wall while attempting to jump through the doorway of a car as it passed, fell to the side and was instantly killed. The Missouri Sheriffs now allow the condemned prisoners to lie down in their coffins and see if they will et, and permit them other privileges, such as seeing the scaffold built, feeling the rope, &c. Samuel and Raphael Shoeneman, two Hebrew clothing dealers in Easton, have received notice that by the death of an aunt in England they, with annther broth er, inherit property worth $2,000,000. It is estimated that the total cost of the new buildings put up in Chicago sit,ce the great fire, numbering between eighteen hundred and nineteen hundred, has been between $16,000,000 and $18,000,000. A snake was killed in. Arkansas recently which measured twenty feet long, twenty four inches around the girth, three or four inches between the eyes, and which made a track of eight and three-fourth inches. Seven acres of land arc covered by the Allentown Iron company and kept in stock at the company's works in that city. This is the largest stock, numbering thou sands of tons, ever collected at one time by any furnace company in the Lehigh valley. The Massachnsetts shoe manufacturers do not make much out of the Ah Sins and Wah Chungs who come to work as shoe makers. The Chinaman works two or three years, in which time he has laid up eight or ten hundred dollars—quite an in dependent fortune in the Celestial King; dom—and then he goes home to enjoy it, leaving generally a fresh recruit in his place. ..~.a_lfi<F' :; nT:Lic:ous MOVEIrENI The rivival movement in Brooklyn hat; been inaugurated by Moody and Sunkey, and it gives every indication of a, great mreeeas The series of the mertingit corn. uteneed Sunday morning last, in the great 1101 i, i;t Brooklyn, which ha' ~, ~ . , •• ; ' ~t :1:, , ! 0-• •.,, t. ill Fee ienree,, sf les : .- there o(:re tsi :ee• `Se see people awaitirg the opening of the tallith They enine ie (erten oars, le ear • slate's% ie wernme, WI hersehaelt, in Ilr , ! ort everythitig that tveuld carry, and on Erie:, awl they wsited waited o long houre PinePy, the 4140/161mlled and flu? first 7,000 fvund it'als. 2,000 more stood in the aisles, and the cloyed outside. eitg. toeuting every tilittute, stood on their fees, waiting and waiting, as though they ee nested the roof would fly off, er that hi hem miraculous wtly they would he tea bled te and bear Mewl.; Finally, of conee, they dispersed. What did tliee wile got neat ! hear mid eee? Simply two (lament, hoe eat men, each with a gift, pleading le their fellow wen to be better won. Dwight L. Moody, a robust, strong, earnest man, who believes that Jesus of Nazareth came into the woe .: to save eineers—a uneducated nein—begging and entreatiug his fellow to put there trust in Him as he has done—a man without grace, without polish, without oven good grammar—but a man whose soul is permeated and filled with the ono idea that without Jesus a man must be loft, and who loves his fel low Dien to the degree that he is willing to forego all the ambitions of life so that he can rescue them--that is Moody. His co-laborer is just like him in purpose, though different in method. Ira D. San key is a handsome man, with a soul full of love for his fellows, and a voice like an angel. What Moody does in speech he does in song. Ile sings only such songs as hold up to their gaze Christ on the cross dying for sinners—he singsonly of that love deep enough to take in the vilest and broad enough for a world of trees gressors. This is their only theme—this ail they say or sing. It is the old story, the beauty and sweetness of which even the infidel never could make head against —of He who so loved the world that he gave His own life to save it. This Moody talks and this Sankey tingS. It is love, love, love. Moody holds his audiences by tolling the story of Jesus, who would suf fer death for one sineer ; Sankey, with his wondrous voice, sings of that Saviour who, having ninety and nine want out through the night and storm, through the tangled brake of the one! And the effect they produce is wonderful. They say and sing nothing new—but they are in dead earn vt themselves, and though their story be old, they impress everybody. They inject into their hearers their own earnestness —they compel them to recieve it, because they believe it. And that they arein earnest, there can be no doubt. They might of made thousand in England facs, they were offered thousands— but they took nothing but the bread they ate, the beds they slept in, and the clothes they wore. And here they refuse to take anything else. Neither of them have a dollar in the world, and they work more hours than any day laborer on the streets. Startine. ° with these two workers, the churches have commenced a movement along the whole line. The crowd that could not get into the Rink, last Sunday, surged into the churches in the neighbor hood, filling them to overflowing. Not withstanding the crowd in the Rink the churches of Brooklyn were never so full and never was so much interest manifect ed. There is revival in the air, and ad vantage will be taken of it. All the church es are arranging for revivals and there will be such an awakening in this city, this winter, as was never heard of. One word or two about the audiences that Moody and Sankey have. They are the best people in the two cities. Wealthy men, the best merchants and bankers in the city, came forward to remodel the Rink, and to provide for the cost of the meetings without solicitation. I should like to give the names of some of them, but as they. did it just as Moody and San key labor, without hope or expectation of reward, I will allow them the luxury of doing a good action in secret. Revivals commence in all the churches next week. All denominations will en gage in them, from the most orthodox Presbyterian to the most liberal Unitarian. The best people have united to elevate the standard of morality, and to do something toward lifting the great city out of the selfish, money-making, money-getting spirit that has so long crowded out everything else. It is time. The meetings at the Rink have been crowded the same way every day since Sunday, and there is no sign of abateness. From 10,000 to 20,000 people are unable to obtain admittance, and go away from each meeting. The churches in the neigh borhood take the overflow, and the two evangelists go to them for a brief period each day. It is a wonderful work they are doing, and they are doing it in a won derful way. IN BROOKLYN the fight is even warmer than in New York, for Brooklyn has a worse ring, if any difference. An Irishman McLaugh lin, owns and controls Brooklyn as entire ly as Tweed did New York five years ago. lie is the head centre of the Democracy in that city, and has, of course amassed an immense fortune from the plunder of the +ax•payers. Re dictates the nominations —he elects the ticket nominated and then controls every appointment, and through them every dollar of expenditure. But "Boss" McLaughlin is going through his sea of trouble. He became so dictatorial that the Democratic leaders are opposing him, and it is possible that the Reform movement may be strong enough to swamp him. The Republicans have nominated an excellent ticket, and thousands of hon est Democrats will vote for it. Gen. Slo cum, Democratic member of Congress from the Brooklyn district for two terms, is on the stump for the Reform ticket, and he puts in the most damaging blows. It is shown that for four years McLaugh lin has had absolute control of the city— that he owned every office of trust and pro fit—that not an appointment could be made, or a dollar spent without his con sent. Gen. Slocum was placed by the Mayor on tho Water Board, on the dem%nd of citizens. McLaughlin wanted a friend of his in that place, but the Mayor refused to change the appointment. Tl.e Boss met Gen. S. in the ante-room of the Board of Aldermen, who have the power to con firm or reject the Mayor's appointment, and taking out his watch said, "I will give yon just twenty minutes to withdraw your name. Of course, Slocum refused to withdraw his name, and of course it was rejected, and a tool of the ring sent in in its place. McLaughlin made a speech in answer to Gen. Slocum the other night in which he complained bitterly of his (Slocum's) ' • " -(61 Iv 3 (maid ip! )I , _!imbnean aletAimt, nounced for thrit vvening, could be broken up I Fent three hundred men and broke up the mectille , ' at a cost of $6OO, and he lug; never pad it back to me." Think of being under control of it man who can stand up in a public usund)lng, and in:the Puel: rt .I. , !ment withcla r. Bit of Ellen . 1.1 the )::arrwracy pf New York and I hf• ;.. f.: p;.;:+ ;1 ;. ; 10,11:01 /Yr ..! ~ 11 g,r money spun he • 7crips.rti ; ..olt ;J:gi 1,„ g, po. I):ink followed l,i• 011::.. !.,. of I:;,ir,et, 3 1,0 0 r mistress, after i' • e: . ::.•,. !,:o; ::: , :pped fle Ittit tO Fpcud upon Ler a:::1 hit, fair her ;lit iiiiecy "didn't pay." The per lureitie fillowoi her shout all this tutu,, and occasionally "just fir the fan it." phi! would tf,lerate hini fa. a day or two. L :Mt Thareday ho saw her at the Jerome raeei tied joined her. In company with ainitliee man and woman of the sante class they retaril to the city sod speot time oi t ;lit in the wildest, exec:l3l4- v.., gettiog tl her house in the morning et five o'cleeL. Then Revere begged her to bcr!oine reconeiled to him. to again live with him, which she very contemptimarly refused to do. Maddened by her heart he threw what valuateks he had about him up.,n the floor, Fri . Isek her with the butt of his revolver, and finished his work by shooting himself through the head. It is the old, old story. Revere bought this woman a house, which ho fur nio:hed in magnificent style—he supported her like a princess—expending upon her in two years not less than $60,000. Had he hail $60,000 more to spend that she could have got hold of she would hare held to him ; but the moment the supply of cash run out, the fountain of her love dried up, and then death. His death affected her no more than if her parrot had died— indeed. her beating at the inquest was such as to show that she felt it was a relief. She will have another rich lover in a mnnt . ...t. and they will mal;o merry over the death of Revere, till his time comes. "It is a mad world my masters." Vice don't pay. has ken a little more brisk this week than last., though it is still bad. Failures are as common as blackberries. There is the. regular list every morning of lime ducks, and nobody know; who is safe. "Who next?" is the • question most frequently asked. IVA, there most come an end some time. after the elections are all over and the people get down to living again there wll be a revival of trade and the wheels will get in motion agaia. Let us hope so. The National Library of France now has 1,700,000 volnmes,Bo,ooo manuscripts and 1,000,000 engravings and maps. Dyspepsia, Dyspepsia,-Dyspepsia. DyFpOithlti is the most perplexing of all human ail ments. Its eympteins are alus,t infinite in their variety, and the iliriern and de,poutl , mit vietims of the disease of ten foney themselves and pray, in turn of every known milady. This is tine, in fart, to the closesynipathywh;cli exists l,tween the stounwh and the bral», and in port also to the fact that any dibturbanee of the digestive unction necessarily disorders the aver, the boWels and the nervous system, and effects to some extent the quality of the blood. E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron a sure curs. This s not a new preparation, to Le trieu and found wanting it has been prescribed daily fur many years in the prac tice of eminent physicians with unparalleled success; it is not expected or intended to cure al the diseases to which the human family is subject, but it is warranted to cure dyspepsia in the most obstinate form. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron never falls to cure. Symtoms of dys— pepsia are loss of appetite, wind and rising of the food, dryness of the mouth, heartburn, distension of the stom ach and bowels, constipation, headache, dizziness, sleep lessness and low spirits. Try the great remedy and be convinced of its merits. Get the genuine. Tate only Kunkel's, which is put only in tl. bottles. Depot, 259 North Ninth St., Philadelphia. For sale for all druggists and dealers everywhere, TAPE WORM Entirely removed with purely vegetable medicine, pass ing from the system alive. No fee until the lisad passer. Come and refer to patients treated. Dr. a. F. KUNKEL No. 239 North Ninth St., Philadelphia. Advice free.— Seat, Pin and Stomach Worms also removed. The medi cine for removing all others but Tape Worm, can be had of your druggist, ask for Kum :Vs WOBM SYRUP. Price, $l. E. F. Kunkel, Philadelphia, Pa. New To-Dity. VEGETINE PURIFIES THE BLOOD, RENO VATES AND INVIGORATES THE WHOLE SYSTEM. ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE ALTERNATIVE, TONIC, SOLVENT AND DIURETIC. WWI= is wade eictusively fro" the julossol waged lreelected larks, roots and herbs, outlaw strothily concen trated that it ',Me /Actually eradiate from the system *Tory taint of SCROFULA, SCROFULOUS RUMOR, TU MORS, CANCER, CANCEROUS HUMOR, ERYSIPELAS, SALT RHEUM, SYPHILITIC DISEASES, CANKER, FAINTNESS at the STOMACH, and all diseases that ar rises from impure blood. SCIATICA, INFLAMATORY and CHRONIC RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, GOUT and SPINAL COMPLAINTS, can only be effectually cured thronCh the blood. For ULCERS and ERUPTIVE DISEASES of the SKIN, PFSTULES, PIMPLES, BLOTCHES, BOILS, TETTER, SCALDHEAD and RIN&tWORM, Vegetine has never failed to effect a permanent cure. For PAINS IN THE BACK, KIDNEY COMPLAINTS, DROPSY, FEMALE WEAKNESS, LEIJOARMEA, aris ing from internal nlceraticn, and uterine dise and GEN ERAL DEBILITY. Vegetiene acts directly upon the causes of these complaints. It invigorates and strength ens the whole system, acts upon the secretive organs, al lays inflammation, cures ulceration and regulates the bowels. For CATARRH, DYSPEPSIA, HABITUAL COSTIVE NESS, PALPITATION OF THE HEART. HEADACHE, PILES,NERVOUSNESS ANDGENERAL PROSTRATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM, no medicine has ever given each perfect satisfaction as the Vegetine. It purifies the blood, cleanses all of the organs, and possesses a control ling power over the nervous system. The remarkable cures effected by Vegetine bays induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we know to pre scribe and use it In their own families. In fact, Vegetine is the best remedy yet discovered for the above diseases, and is the only reliable BLOOD PtiRI PIER yet placed before the public. H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. WHAT to VZGITINE Y It is a cortirtintud, extracted from barks, roots end herbs. It is Nature's Itemeily. It ie perfectly harmlees from any had effect upon the system. It is nourishing and strengthening. It a‘ is dirertly upon the blood. It quiets the nervous system. It gives you good, sweet rlcep at night. It is is albeut t panacea for our aged fathers and nintherf ; for it R i ve . S h eet strengt h , quiets their nerves, and gives them Natnre'a sweet sleep —as has bees I,roveci by missy an tined person. It IA the great Blood Partner. It is a soothing remedy for chil dren. It has relieved and cured thousands. It is very pleasant to take ; every child likes it. It relieves and cures all diseases originating from impure blood. Try the Tegetine. Give it a fair trial fur your complaints; then you will say to your friend, neighbor and acquaintance, "Try it; it has cured me." VI/omits, for the complaints for which It is recom mended. is having a larger sale throughout the United States than any other medicine. Why 1 Vegetine will cure these Complaints. REPORT FROM A PRACFICAL CIIEWST AND APOTM- Barini, Jan. 1, 1874. Dim 701—This Is to cattily that I have sold et retail, 1641.3 doom (1882 bottles) of year Vegettue dace April 12, 1878, sad oan truly may fiat it his given the beet sat isfaction of an, remedy for the comp /Mute for which it Is recommended that I ever sold. Fiercely e day passes without some of tay customers testifyinn to its merits on themselves or their friends. lem perfectly cognisant of several cases ofScrofnlons Tumors being cared by Vege. tine alone in this vicinity. Very respectfully yours, AI OILMAN, 464 Broadway. To 11. R. SrivzBs, Eeq. WOULD NOT DI WITHOUT VEGETINE FOR TIN TIMIS ITS COST. The great benefit I have received from the use of VEGE TINE induces me to give my testimony in its favor. I believe it to be not only of groat value for teetering the health, but a preventive of diseases peculiar to the spring and summer seasons. I would not be without it for ten times its cost. EDWARD TILDEN. Attorney and General Agent fin* Massachusetts of the Craftsmen's Lite Asmiunce Cohupany, No. 49 dears building, Beekm, Mass. YDOETINE IS SOLD DY ALL DIWOOISTII. fa~ '. fi { {f BUSINESS PINTRO. PREPARED BY ~~ ~ :~~ iIV .s . s. ;I. 27, ttif,. , l, :!! at ,1 the aenoontr of the frill or, :.4 the LAI) :1! S. 11. Decker A Co. for Pett.lnlett. FOIL rLcrirvA. EAtTif!,,ol-,;“ c•• ( 1: i I i'„ =~ r:r . ;'• • . ' , I •, ,; I•ed In t• 1..• ..fl. • ' .•, 1,1 1 '; • I , nt Of II:, MO nt r $l2 . r . ,.. da:, iit y 1 .,, , : qi . f.. ~/ . . 1 : :4 1 , 0 ...:40:,•,.2. r.. ' ; t ...,,i f .,,,, C E IT 'l' ..-::.: ..'i ....: 1 , ....... ;.., HISTORY or 4,..L U, ,c...,. o•.In11, 14,( In :3:. ••••• • • r . try :•t : : r. 4 tf.• filet r, • • , ; ,;: It roui. . ina ar , •r 4.)., fr.", id , s;;rolts, 'Aro pag,, with a C rl fl.o I't "I „::and rfi••• eniel,re ;f. r •i: t • , ! i• • tom% to 'wont,. ,!. I • 'tfi f"• • r.t't..liMi Y. P7IIL3DELPIIIA. 63nn a month t• , .uvrgvtic co.n aysl Bu7ii <-. )„.., CO, id MfrlApat Avo J. ESC ( )N i', . _ for the lipeo•ly cure of epeeist f roubhie common to the young and tol.l4l*.eced. N , irrod., merle' de ;ii Ices ..ftnetoory and ' , nervy, ;4 , 888 , d 'h. .8 •cli, self-diatruat, 44,1 n t, ii,nneer wgid,cB,dtv•ion of Ideas and other disorders of the nervous opium consognent on vsrione habits that lover the alluitty of flan ',item. Any imuceBt hoe tbo lov-of:fent,. DR, rijj, TON, Clocinnatt, 0. $ 7 7 E it WE (1-TJARAN TEED • to k gent!. ' , Male 11 nd Telltale, In thr , ir own locality. Terme end OUTFIT IrkiZ E. a4lr. P. O. VICKI= k 00, Augusta, Maine. _ . YOU CAN MAKE 5,000 In 90 days In A1160(1,1. ey!t•m to ,sfe.:ltonoratl , nod rampll,t Snut Al lir W. ii. WEi:1::.•. Stuck., botizilt 31:4 the )7:. Sfor:t . " 6 7 2 Ap.r t•,r ti - . 11. 17,Prirt. Packs=. fir the Wo;141. str-iits peril . , 1:i en,* rapes, Gold, I'e r. l'c , a 13,4.1,r, Feller!, Poi9ot Yard Ms. , - me, arid a piece of Jewelry. Sin;:ir packaise, with ~.. ezzo? prize, poet-paid. tenor. Circulitrie fres. IiBIDE & CO., 760, Broadway, ritiw Pork. p. IJ per day et hfttne i;nrapl•es Ivo: .1, S 1 hoc. 9r O Srixsom a Co., Portland, Maine. MIND READING, PSYCHOWANCY, FASC!NAT]W, 8o i 1 Charmiog, Mesmerism. and liar•lap showing how cithr iiem may fascinate and gain the lave and affvetion of any person tit^y cbc.me th , tant , y. M.@ Ey mail 50 teats. 11UNT & CO..:;* st . :43v.3-4t. New .71a,7;74.1, Tlir " i ikILVITLE YOUNG MEN, CHARLES' R. WELLS, Presiekni. HENRY L. LULL, Secretary. Established in 1864 The most extensive, thorough and complete in stitution of the kind in the world. Eight thousand graduates of this college now in FUCCCSSfUI bu3i nese in the principal cities ond towns of the United States. Tho rigVt Lid of ililllCßiioli tOr YomiE MOIL Magnificent granite building, with elegantly fitted and furnished apartments for the application of and carrying out of our novel and systernutie methods of BUSINESS TRAINING. Young men, who contemplate a business life, and parents having sons to edu.tte, are particu larly requested to send for documents relating to the college, which give till information as t, terms, conditions of enhance, etc. Address CitARLES I. WELLS, President, nor3,l6—y) New Haven, Conn. New Advertisements. 'WANTED. Wanted to exchange a New can Knitting Machine, which cost $25, for a gcnd Mulch Cow. Inquire at the .Jouaxat 0ct.13 4t. NOTICE TO FARMERS. Th highest market price wiii be paid for Chickens, Turkeys, Geese and Duck::, at Decker's Store, two doors cast of Fishers' Mill. Oct.l3•tf. iiv-ANTED. Wanted at Decker's Store, two doors east of Fishers' Mill, all kinds of Poultry, for which the highest market prkvs will ho paid. 0ct.13-tf WANTED. Wanted Chickens, Turkeys, tiee.e, and Ducks, at Decker's Store, two doors east of Fishers' Mill, for which the hest market price will be paid. 0et.13-tf. ESTABLISHED IN 1850. Sales in the past year over FIVE TONS PER MONT ET, in packages of 12 ounces each ! RETAIL for 25 cents ; FIVE packs for SI. This "CATTLE POWDER" has proved a sure preqentive and a certain cure for Chicken Cholera or Gaps. I have received, unsolicited, any amount of evi dence from FARMERS and others, who used it and thereby saved their Poultry Stock from the disease and death. All I ask is, TRY IT, save your Stock, and be convinced; costs bat little. My Powder has always given fall satisfaetion as a most reliable care in all diseases of HORSES, CATTLE, HOGS and SHEEP. It will keep them thrifty and healthy; the Cow will yield 25 per cent. more butter and milk ; Cattle and Hogs will gain in fattenitg in the same proportion. Ask for this Powder at your nearest Store, or address me for a pamphlet. with full particulars. FRED'Ii. A. MILLER, Proprietor, 129 North Front St., Phila. WANTE, AT ONCE, HERBS, !nett as Catnep, Tansy, Boneset, Pennyroyal, Yd.rriv, &c., in large lots. :.•ept.l.firoo:; FOR PLAIN PRINTING, FANCY PRINTING. GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE COLORED PRINTING DONN AT the Journal Office at Plalladelpbia prices. 6 t TIPRSII.I ..‘•••• -;;:•• at 1 A' , +.nk, I'. N.. nit 'Flit nrtta!a traet of ' hou,)^. l •", halt. ,1 ;..r. An .hA rant 1.• landla of JenaA Rainter. n tor Anu :,y shoo!, Raintor. F. If. I,i;CKER ;:t Two Modred r.nil Thirty-four Lcres. -;r• '''-- . •.-' .- ' i I" . 4.. : i fr .... U. -, ? ~... , ~; .• ' 1.1411....,...4 ,: . _... ‘. - • • £ CI ['EA 7 !,;) ~;+•ice. fr.,l ; .! Unpartalelpft A. in Every D 4. fArtment. Man, I Melt Blthitr.ga, wd Groat Cr o 3 In Attendance. .; ; ,. .!::DF fir 1% , 11:•6CT3 a 11V9 ST 94,1 t. Fuel OS au 1.4.0•41.. - 11 z p• 211,1175-16.] DECIDED BARGAINS I 7 LADIES' i.:O, I tTS French Dress izibricS, I r j rr ; topoig Es7T..rg, ... /.: ~. Ali wooi, Eir:, A;: Atoc;. All vim!, P:r!re-4 Ooth 9(11;f1.: , 5.1 Ca.: :Lair , add . T: in itc one tail. rtoni, 50 1.1,-, Ali i: 0(, T. LI,: .:-.; All W')(T. poplirrz, 51) Of. ! Cam(.l Ilair Cloth t :2 hack , 50 ets. , :._.•.;:e:' Some of the above are ape :._.•.;:e:' ca. 4 .7 ,;.‘i,.:. i cialties, and can be obtained i: at not Iv --. !I'''::' ;ItiA4.t..". r..i .".* - .! S i - ISe r, i'mr e rirt ars 4t . - 4 vitni, ;Jks . : :DWI& other house.i land it; t earl-Niigata ;.r:.. =. it 'at 11l in. If rser. ',wait; 4c, iroil - ,0 iamb. Samples cheerfelly forwarded on pric , , , .4 an to Frs. - .e the ;0 r t v. - mow eir R• , I application. : 71.1 :Exicns' HOTEL, Vf f,y),ite City I ft. If it:, New NEW YORK. All Modern Improvement., ineludin4 Elerator. rt,oms :31 per .by and upwarl, T. J. FRENCH .t BROS, ?r , prietorP. July2B-Iyr QTEAM ENGINE AID AGRICUL 'URAL IMPLEMENT FArTORI. N 9. 1A4)4, Wz! , hingt. , n 1 1 .antir.04)r. Ps., Manufacture! an•l furniAhce !taehiaery f•ir till kin of taa..q.:ine Special attentien given to fitting tip a cheap elan of Machinery, designed fir .man manufacturers. Second-hand Engines and Machinery at low prices. Drawings for Machinery and Patterns for Awnings ENGINES and MACHINERY set 14.09e1 CYL INDERS bored out without movipg fedi bed, in any part of the eosatry. Agent for Kreider, Zindgraif t Co. Millwrights and Machinests, who build and completely furnish mills of every kind. Employing ineeltsiugs wAn thoroughly understand their '.rsele, satitlietory work will always be prodneed. A Blanchard Spoke Lathe for *ale at a very low prime. April 22 tf. gep-i I'A. tivwarels of tweley year, tql.i ne College of the rnite.i:itates. .virantagee f.)r the thorough, practical rtiea tion of young uni widile li,Te,l attn. E•.a.lenr• acitnititd at any tini, rertienT.l-1. ad .l: C. SMITH, A. M., The “liti•S CITY COLLE:E the ow/j, institution of tho kind, in this ei:y, that we r•- commen,l to the pu'ol:e Bonier, Pittsbwryk. Sept.ls-::m CARD! KIRK, BATT & BERWIND. Wholesale Grocery AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 130 'SOUTH 3D 9111131:17, Offer for solo • lame •ad well reerteel steels of tiroceries, TEAS, SPICES, •a.,la. We make a Fp.cielty of COFFEZ aa.i 512CP. Oar Finest DRIPS are heft" sobT, TISK 11141114111. LICIT COLOR AND rasa rain Acme. Ws ilpfteieni MAIL. ORDERS evil them win as seek eon alit at a, bier prier• At if parties sere, p rem .: I. make their flan seleetions. we solicit CONS;ItiNMENTS of I . :IOW/CZ, our facilities fur disposing of which enables as to obtain the very highest market prices. Dane:W-Iyr. FOR HEALTH, COMFORT AND ECONOMY. CORE SHAVINGS are surpassed as as artiek for be.i,ling. Only eight eents per pound. Forty pounds will 611 the largest Mattress. Persoasvis itiug the "Exposition" will please mill sa•l as. samples at ARMSTRONG, BRO. A CO., 44 sad 46 First Assess, ootl3-41 Pittsburgh, Ps. AGENTS Make from 310 to $2O per ,lay in sedliag our fine new oil ehromo of Washinirt.n Mae tha. send for term!. EXCELSIOR PriILISIIINO CO., octi3.lml nzo3 Market St., Phi;s. EW GROCERY, CONFECTION 11 ERY AND ICE ('REAM SALOON. C. LO ti has juet opened, st l.is ra.ii4enes, i n West Iluntingiinn, a new Gro , ery. Confectionery and fee Cream Saioon, where everything remain ing to these branches of trade rail he I. I. Cream furniehed, at shoot t, families or parties. Hill r , ,111, 1 Are !superior to any others in town. The patronage of the public is reepeetfially De 2-7 VOR FIN EA ND FANCY PRINTING -a.: Go to the JOURNAL 0600. nf 1.C. , -pt.r :24 4,1 whowt .i •If' ! • i 1 L r J; LJr r' h? A• Vill.‘ft;.Lkt•-; /• -4; f. • .t -t4.}M t•. 11 , • t•-, --v. 3 ~~'^iC f;) r 1,3, A_ - .L.1 6/J- L.? "T - F p I-7 ( z sec. N 4 ._ • :is ._• . • - I New :\rivertiemente n• 711 r. IC; r:Oi•E4N J. A. POLLOCK, Pr.pprittor. madstu order. New Advertisements. (II; , ~~; f 7 I;#: . ...• .7.• • :;AI • a.* c ,:. :~ .:l•. . ,1 )61p. Id: f..r.z eip:tt 1t!:...1e 13 - it. THE TO FAT PENNE FN t3O<TI3 et SHOES HUSTON E. CRUM, No- :130 RAi. i Lrio_An 4TB FE'T, e tce! ja4titied in pr..;:..i.tr./. oar nelv IFALLan.i Vi) ECTF R isorkswil believe it iA w.,ethy of al; !he -'hloveins - Ire cr.n five it. .‘n inipetion, of our many . tylei and finalitie4., 0111 e.pnvisev an ems dot wip oinitaialy hare a.. 4 eo:apiete a =tack dr. roe.* 0n.4 .soindel wild' tr. ft-ie , et As for I'RICES, We have 04 fiens-Tquiat se War so We eaa died to sell at. and hone#tly th• sa wrr• ander all ,-..rnp•lfire. GIVE US A. TRAT-T= mos BOY'S & YOUTh SEN HAND-ADE and W, 1111111EIPS I MEV, Ale COLIMBPS BUTTON AND LACED SUMS OF ALL STTLEg Bors i Intll l TM, Mi l ad MOM RUBBERS ()F ALL rnE LE.:DING The t`ni! plat'e L.W.I yelol 'an zet owl BURT SHOE.S. I:eal Estate. s. et.i.se tom*. svesier Boom AU, ITENTINGDON LAND .kinitNeT roma, Swift Seel Bows se iion.eserellso thee* who wish to resists, win Sisil their sir estop is feeduß Use es•iereiisei she. sl" 72/.5 41.1"1rr ,Sr -"Vr•;1.'711- rrrta— is remsootion with their so A•sofusys-st Law. is the eottlostest Itstatteo. it.. aro eSte Watt moray owl estisfeete , y perellsess sal ogee of farm.. tows propirrtive. Maw Isemils. LalrlitL • lermne. if ertt:orioo. iseella mem). ifIEAP! MCA' P ft!IlEAv • PI ) It RS. %.1 ?trips- 8. 314 ef fNIFIESSIK" Of A VICTIM. Bey ...sr Paper. R;y y.,or 14 . mit I: r. •T • - 3 ; Thiblisir4 s s ~weir NM Sir I& 111 M: sins Stgaimb•-y. 4 1110.1 stetiont.n.y_ loot og lam mot fliers ob. 06011 P 914,11 Rooli , :issio• for Cbildrink flialbafty. Law 4 SRI. ws. /pogo ter 410, it!arsee. Torlfrt loot. Pew Saab, 41 (PK —r.. IPArrirame ipiw• mew m•• mot Alegi an bufwas Variety .1 -Vire = 6.4 Imikd himme l""ll M ise v l l ir l dr iT a A 7 r ff ir rayii loot• . tsjmgr.r PITO. P. * lowe Ist romisms. S. i aim iie • ham winpr shipurs it 10141 k f/ r _ t: 7 .: in•or fl„:3"41Ple. 11 . - • ")., HUNTINGDON, PA. A FELL LINE OF A COMPLETE ►rx - K OF 3 . 1 U ill 4 - 77 ZVI awes.. Itsages. Gnaw Onto hews. Fender& ft.. Moak awe - PEERLESS" SNAIUNG GRAM SUS •sty !MP PM if Street, awl INN /Wm .Iremee. PITTSB L ItG I T.! PA. Rvr Housefurnishine ico& -nor Da, At: r ;Za• - D* - oi. , r) anis ..1 i ry BISSEL & CO.. t I'D , ILs L Intl VW .~ y. .~....` NeW I; A inT t .1) WIEMPOPC. SEP.+ DIV MD WM* fle roureso. • r--• ••••••11, tie • rimoimilkto 'rum. WO 11.1 P. See VOMPIPir • pane 0,110.1110 sets C.S7 air!. 2. 4. sas4 - —wriwp• it? 4:2:11.. 1r; AVIIP, Tyr