The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, November 10, 1875, Image 2

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J R. DURBORROW,
_
The Huntingdon Journal.
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A
,
,
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1575
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
Thanksgiving Proclamation.
:• ••
,
In accordance with a practice at once wise and
beautiful, we have been accustomed, as the year
is drawing to a close, to devote an occasion to the
humble expression of our thanks to Almighty God
for the ceaseless and distinguished benefits be
stowed upon us as a nation, and for His mercies
and protection during the closing year. Amid the
rich and free enjoyment of all our advantages, we
should not forget the source from whence they are
derived, and the extent of our obligations to the
Father of all mercies. We have full reason to re
new our thanks to Almighty God for favors be
stowed upon us during the past year. By His
continued mercy, civil and religious liberty have
been maintained, peace has reigned within our
borders, labor aid enterprise have produced their
merited rewards, and to His watchful providence
we are indebted for security from pestilence and
other national calamity. Apart from national
blessings, each individual among us has occasion
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
THURSDAY, the 25th day of November, •
•
the people of the United States, abstaining from
all secular pursuits and from their accustomed av
ocations, do assemble in their respective places of
worship, and in such form as may seem most ap
propriate in their own hearts offer to Almighty
God their acknowledgments and thanks for all
His mercies, and their humble prayers for a con
tinuance of Ills divine favor. In witness where
of I have hereunto se;, my hand and caused the
seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at
the city of Washington, this twenty-seventh day of
October, in the year of our Lord one thousand
eight hundred and seventy-five, and of the Ind°-
. pendenee of the United States the ono hundredth.
[Signed] U. S. GRANT.
By the President,
•
HAMILTON FISH, Secretary of State.
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE 'JOURNAL.'
Next year will be one of the most
important in our Political History,
and the JOURNAL should go into ev
ery family. We will send it to new
subscribers from now until the first
of January, 1877, for TWO DOL—
LARS, cash in advance. Everybody
will be interested in the Presiden
tial campaign next year, and they
should avail themselves of this offer
at once. Address
J. R. DURBORROW & CO.,
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 Jiiii 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 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 er g o a credit to the printing bu
siness in Huntingdon and a Tasting credit
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 wbo 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
b siy it,
Tux Democrats carried the State officers
in New York, but the Republicans carried
both branches of the Legislature.
PORTER won the flag at the Mass Meet
ing, and she would have carried off all the
honors at the polls had not treachery—
st •althy, foul-mouthed treachery—invaded
I r borders.
Tin: partial official returns from the
State indicate the election of Gov. Har
tranft by 14,750. These figures may be
increased or diminished. Piollet leads
Pershing some, but how much we have
no means of knowing. It is a glorious tri•
umpli in the face of all the difficulties
w:iicit the Republican party had
. to sur
f!,
TILE Republicans had one of the best
organizations in this county that they have
bad for years, and the Chairman of the
Republican County Committee, JOSEPH
G. ISENBERG, Esq., is deserving of all
honor for his laborious efforts to secure a
triumph, and nothing but the basest
treachery could have robbed him of his
well-earned laurels.
WE would say to our earnest temper
ance men, after their experience in the
late election, to stick to the Republican
party and the party will respect their
wishes, and we will stand by them, bit if
they go off and leave us to fight the Re
publican battle alone, they cannot expect
anything at our hands. Stick to the Re
publicans and they must respect your
wishes; don't leave and thus relieve them
of any responsibilit y to you.
Tra election of Wm. E. Lightner, esq.,
'h been bailed with universal delight.—
How he escaped from the general time we
•can scarcely comprehend. The treachery
which caused the defeat of the balance of
the ticket w,as enough to carry down the
best and most popular man in the county,
the only way in which he could have es
caped was through the popularity of his
opponent among the Democrats. Well,
he is elected and that is glory enough.
Republicans of Huntingdon county,
again your banner is trailed in the dust.
The bright anticipations of a glorious tri
umph which stimulated Our active and
sincere nice u great exertions and mud) ,
efforts, have been swept away as chaff be
fire a whirlwind, and disastrous and dis.
graceful defeat has almost annihilated our
organization. It pains us to the very in
most recesses of our soul to write these
lines. - For five long years we have battled
the enemy with all the powers that God
and nature have given us, and wheel we
thought we were about to realize the acme
of our hopes to be stricken down by those
that we claimed to be our friends has mor
tified and chagrined us until language fails
to give utterance to our feelings. Defeat
we have experienced from our youth np,
and we have been led to look upon it as a
matter of course, but to be stricken down
i by treachery, the blackest and most vil
lainous known to modern civilization—yea,
such deep and damning treachery as would
call forth the destruction, by slow torture,
at the hands of his fellows, of a Hottentot
or Indian, has made us feel that Hunting
don county contains elements unequaled,
iu this respect, iu the heavens above, and
certainly upon the surface of the earth,
let the circumstances beneath it be what
they may. If Hades has any worse trai
tors we supremely pity the damned.
After repeated efforts to secure the suc
cess of the Republican party, and sustain
ing repeated defeats, it seemed to us that
it was worse than folly to continue to ig
nore a large body of men who also claimed
to be Republicans, and in obedience to a
universal demand made by the Republi
cans from Lake Erie to the Delaware, wo
used every honorable mesas to secure a
union of the party, in which we were hon
estly seconded by a numbc: of those who
had stood by us fur the previous four years,
and the result was achieved. We . felt
gratified at the union. We had never lost
sight of the fact that we were conducting
a paper in the interest of' Republicanism.
And we felt proud that after five years of
guerrilla warfare there was a prospect of
harmonious action for the future. 'We
wanted votes—a united Republican vote
—and we felt that Huntingdon county
would take her wonted place in the column
of Republican counties. But unfortunately
this action excited jealousies in our midst,
and Jealousy gave birth to Treason and
Treachery, and these, under the cover of
night and cloaks, having learned our un
protected and weak places, struck us, as.
sas.sin•like, to the heart : It was the basest
and most unmanly betrayal known to mod
ern politics. It was only equaled in cow
ardice by the cowardice of the traitors who
did it.
EDITOR
Huntingdon, Pa.
Our efforts to unite the party were open,
square, manly efforts. We resolved, as
far as we were concerned, that the interests
of the party should be protected. We dc
termined that the Convention should con
sist of representative men, and we called
upon the respective districts to select their
ablest and their best men to represent
them—men with minds of their own, who
could not be controlled by anybody—and
we point with pride to the Convention.—
Never, in the history of the county, did
the Republicans make choice, uniformly,
of better men. It was a body of self-will
ed, earnest men, men who meant and did
do the best for the party. If these men
could not satisfy the wants of the party—
could not nominate a satisfactory ticket—
where are the men who could ? No one
tried to control this body of able Republi
cans. Of our own personal knowledge we
know that Dr. Henry Orlady and Wm. 11.
Woods could no more have controlled this
body than those who accuse them of it.—
The delegates, we reiterate, were intelli
gent, earnest men, and they were influen
ced solely by a policy which promised the
best means of accomplishing the best ends.
Yet the nominees of this Convention
were stricken down as if' they were no more
binding upon the party than the decrees
of the Vatican are supposed to be binding
on protestants. Men who went to the del
egate elections and assisted, to the extent
of their influence, to elect those who sub
sequently represented them in the Conven
tion, struck down its nominees as if they
were so many ten-pins set up to be knock
ed down, and the party is defeated, de
moralized and disgraced ! Such, in brief,
is the condition of the party to-day ! Such
the circumstances which brought about its
overthrow. No party under the sun can
survive under such circumstances. The
party that will not respect the nomina
tions of its Conventions cannot live. And
it ought not to live—it might to die, and
the sooner the better.
We do not blame the Democrats for ma
king out the best case they possibly could
—for taking advantage ofour weak points—
but we do hold the Republicans, who were
silly enough to listen to their sophistry,
responsible. They could have informed
themselves and voted intelligently. There
was nothing in the way of this. We know
full well that the cry was raised that the
election of the ticket would cast reflections
upon our late distinguished fellow-citizen,
and that a lying and villainous circular
was issued, on the eve of the election, giv
ing currency to these foul slanders, but
they were not the utterances of the true
friends of this gentleman, friends who had
never swerved from him in the past and
who now highly respect and honor hint,
and who hoped that in a few short years
at most all the late bitter feeling, with
which his name was associated, would be
entirely forgotten, and henceforward no
one would be more highly revered and
applauded than he would be by the entire
population of' his native county, but by
the actions of these unwise and malicious
false friends, much of the bitterness has
been revived, and those who were faithful
and true heretofore arc much wounded
though their confidence is unshaken.—
These things could all have been counter
acted by the intelligent voter if he had
simply turned a deaf ear and stood by the
actions of the Convention. This was the
only safeguard. It is always the only
safeguard. Eleventh hourcards are inva
riably frauds. They are only intended to
entrap the unwary and the illiterate.
And, now, what is to be done ? The
Republican party, if remained true
• M I 7T-q 'f'ltrs72'WEKV
OUR HUMILIATING DEFEAT.
wnvvivr.: ,
to itself, would have elected the entire
ticket, but it has pleased a large number
of those who claim to be Republicans to
crush it, and it lies like a bleeding ele
phant at the feet of its conquerors. What
is to be done ? Shall we step to the rear
for all time to conic, and leave the !how,
eratic party take the lead ? Shall we not
make one more effort to assert its supre
►uacy ? We contbss that the pronvet is
anything but cheering, but while there is
life there is hope, and we call upon our
friends to commence reorganizing the par
ty at once. The Presidential election will
take place next year, and it is highly pro
bable that under the excitement attending
it the party can be thoroughly revolution
ized. It is our only hope.
TEMPERANCE.
The temperance men of Huntingdon
County, who so judiciously threw away
their votes at the late election, will read
and reflect upon the following words of
wisdom taken from Dr. Daniel Currys
New York Christian Advocate:
"It has been our opinion for twenty
years, and we see no reason to change it,
that the friends of temperance and of pro
hibition will win the day not by running
a separate ticket in opposition to the great
political parties, but by using the balane6
of power in their possession to elect the
best men which those parties put in nom
ination.— Western Christian .fidvocute.
We would go a little further. We
would hold the only one of "the great po
litical parties" from which any thing in
favor of "temperance or prohibition" can
be expected, and with which nine tenths
of the temperance men usually vote, to its
good behaviour in respect to these things,
by quietly allowing it to suffer defeat oc
casionally if it proves flagrantly faulty in
the matter. But from political tomper
ance parties may we ever be delivered.
TII E Temperance vote in this county
exceeded our expections. By referring
to the official vote in another column, it
will be seen that Brown had 498 votes.—
Much of this can be attributed to the fact
that a number of the Guss men, who could
not be induced to vote for Pershing, were
induced to vote for Brown. The intelli
gent citizens of Philadelphia, out of a vot
ing population of 116,000, gave Brown
near 700. They were not to be duped in
to voting for Pershing by casting their
votes for Browne. The Times says that
8,000 or 10,000 Prohibitionists just made
noise enough to cause 20,000 liquor men
to vote for Ilartranft. This is a little
strange but it is about as it usually re
sults.
TrrE Harrisburg Telegraph pays the
following highly merited compliment to
that distinguished representative of the
colored race, Prof. William Howard Day :
"Among the many Republican workers
who have striven nobly and successfully
to secure our lata glorious victory, Prot.
William Day, of this city, occupies a con
spicious place. He went on the stump,
at the invitation of the State Committee,
early in the fight, and canvassed the
Western, Middle and Northern counties,
and did good service also in the Southern
tier. His efforts were everywhere succes
ful, and his finished oratory won "golden
opinions from all sorts of people." As an
effective speaker Mr. Day ranks high ; and
his accomplishments are highly esteemed
and his labors greatly acknowledged by
those who join him now exulting over our
hard earned victory.
THE Tyrone Democrat gets off the fol
lowing wittining sarcasm :
"The Democracy and anti-Scott Repub
licans of Huntingdon county have achieved
a glorious victory, electing their whole
County ticket and giving the Democratic
State ticket a majority of about 250.
This result is a serious rebuke to W. H.
Woods, who betrayed and endeavored to
sell out the party that had sustained him
in his contests with ex-Senator Scott.—
Well done, Huntingdon !"
THE "Glory" meeting, on Friday night,
under the auspices of Prof. Gum, was a
wretched fizzle. The Democrats were
mad because said there should be no
more Fusions, but they need give them
selves no concern on that score. Next
Fall the Globe will be ready again.
WE have received a copy of the Iron
City College Cirenlar, issued by that
enterprising institution located at Pitts
burgh. Persons wishing any information
in regard to that famous establishment
can find it all in this circular which is
issued quarterly.
• Summary of tho News.
The Greeley daughters have returned
to New York from Europe.
Madge Robertson, sister of the play
wright, is coming to this country.
The Princess of Milan only paid 190,-
000 f. for her wedding trosseau—s3B,ooo.
The liquor house of Pueworth, Spence
liZoCo., at Cincinnati, was burned on Thurs
day. •
It is denied that Spain has ordered the
equipment of five men-of-war for Cuban
waters.
Charles Glass, of Birdsboro, Pu., aged
55 years. was found drownded on Wedncs•
day morning.
Hon. Carl Schurz has been ejected au
honorary member of the New York Chain
bar of Commerce.
The First National Bank of Pittston,
which was broken into recently, sustained
A loss of only MS.
Colonel William McMichael, United
States Attorne , y fbr the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania, has resigned.
The Herzegovinian insurgents have re
cently received a thousand breech-loading
rifles from Montenegro.
About sixty Mormon missionaries have
pissed through Omaha this week bound
for different portions of the country.
The annual muting of the Synod of the
Refbrmed Church of dm United States
commenced in Lancaster on Monday last.
John Ritter, who murdered his two
,children at Hackertstown, N. J., and then
attempted suicide, is slowly recovering.
The Spanis)..t (3overnment, it appears,
has had no intinilaticin of any elmge in
the policy of the United Dta,t,eg towards
Cuba.
Hon. Thomas L. Jewett, of Philadel,
phis . , uddenly of paralysis at the
Nicholas Hot* ATe7 York, on Wednesday
night.
The war on the St. Louis wlriaky ring
is behog pressed with vigor. Indictments
against several panties were returned on
Thursday.
)• '' •• ~- A ...1 , , ,,. _
i
4 -44-4 P 7 Q4' • sfr
4,4,7: .
,
• •
•--
Gen. 'Toe Hooker is plunging around
in the llot Silting', Arkansas, trying to
shako off the paralysis haunts
!ton. Timnix , A. j e r,el; c s, 1,
Civil
414,1 ;it how , ill l'uthirrland, It. 1., t7t4
The Poil Ad( is authorized to
:zt at u that he Admiralty
eular will be withdrawn and new instrlte
demi be issued.
A. large number or the Cnel witwys in
the Hocking Valley, Ohio, have sirticit
fGr ten cents For ton in adcliti9a 0 the
present rate or wages.
The United States direct cable was suc
cessfully repaired. The cable, after fif
teen months' submersion, is pronounced
in a perfect condition.
It is affirmed in Berlin that Russia is
not desirous of acting indepently in the
Herzegovinian matter. The three powers
continue in complete harmony.
The "Waywodes," military commanders
of Bosnia and Herzegovina', have convok
ed an assembly for the purpose of pro
claiming a national government.
The New Jersey State Board of educa.-
tion has arranged for a thorough repre
sentation of the educational interests of
that State at the Centennial Exposition.
The Hon. Agustus S. Gaylord, of Sagi
naw, Michigan, has been appointed Assis
tant Attorney General for the Interior De
partment, vice W. H. Smith, resigned.
Prussia has asked Austria to prevent
Bishop Foerster, while residing in the
Austrian portion of his diocese, from exei
cising any episcopal function touching the
Prussian portion.
Serious distress is anticipated among
the industrial working classes in Germary
during the coming winter, and apprehen
sions are also entertained of a crisis in
financial circles.
True bills have been found by the
grand jury of Washington, for alleged con
spiracy and presenting false claims against
Gen. J. S. Negley and ex-Congressman
Butler, of Tenn.
At a meeting of the New York Chamber
of Commerce, on Thursday last, a commit
tee was appointed to ascertain the effect
of the civil war in Cuba on the coma:ere°
of the United States.
The French Assembly convened at Ver
sailles last week, there being a large at
tendance of members and spectators. It
was immediately resolved to discuss the
electoral bill on last Mcnday.
Maryland Republicat.s assert that it is
susceptible of proof that Democrats perpe
trated most glaring frauds on Tuesday in
Baltimore in order to render the election
of their State ticket certain.
Three fishermen, named Pascal Demond,
James Short and John Hepburn, left Han.
risville, on Lake Huron, on Wednesday
morning, for their nets, and there is rea
son to believe that all were drowned.
Col. Gowen, of New York, who raised
the wrecks of the Russian fleet in the
harbor of Sebastopol, has been officially in
vited by the British Admirality to put in
proposals for raising the iron-clad Van
guard.
A fire occurred in an alley, between
Sixteenth and Seventeenth and L and M
streets, Washington, on Monday, destroy
ing two frame shanties and burning up
three children, aged 10, 12 and 15 years,
all colored.
The residence of Mr. Hatcher, near
Hooper, Dodge county, Neb., was burned
on Tuesday night. Miss Green, his sister
in-law, was arrested and acknowledged she
set fire to the house. This is the second
house of Hatcher's burned during the
present fall.
The President of the National Gold
Bank and Trust Company of San Francis
co states that no official action has been
taken, but without question the bank will
at once go into liquidation, paying de
positors and stockholders in full.
It is a mistake to say that the newly
elected New Jersey Legislature chooses a
United States Senator to succeed Senator
Frelinghuysen. His term does not expire
till ISY7, and his successor will be chosen
by the Legislature elected next year.
We had a little Granger once,
His name was Victor Piollet,
But now his tender form is laid
Away beneath the violet.
Gone to meet Pershing.
Maine has ten ea• Governors living, and
all residing in the State. Their names
are Crosby, Kent, A. P. Morrill, Hamlin,
Williams, L. M. Morrill, Washburn, Co
burn, Chamberlain, and Perham. Four
are over seventy years old.
Mrs. Lillian Edgarton says that one of
the shams of the day is making money the
equivalent of respectability. That accounts
fOr the inflated character of much of our
respectability. It ought to bc brought
down to a solid basis.
13ay ard Taylor will, on the 14th inst.,
deliver a lecture on "Schiller," at Wash
ington, under the auspices of the "Schiler
Bund," of that city, an organization of
which Postmaster-General .Jewell and
other high Government officers arc mem
bers.
Captain Micheal Cresap, the Maryland
pioneer, whose daughter married Luther
Martin, Burr's counsel, is buried in Trin
ity church yard, New York, opposite the
north transept door. He was buried there
just a century ago. Jefferson accused him
of mudering Logan, the Indian.
Mrs. Thomas Hicks, the reputed fiance
of General Robert C. Schenck, American
Minister to England, recently returned
from Europe, where she made a reputation
and became very conspicuous by the un
usual magnificence of her entertainments
in London and Paris. Mrs. Hicks, we
understld, returns to Europe hi a few
weeks.
The Hon. R.,l}crt
nNon, n ex-
United State! an.l ex•Confeder4te Senator
of Arkansas, the Hon. Jacob Thomp;on,
of Memphis, art eX Seerelary of the Inte
rior, of Buchan 11:11I ' S Cabinet, and Judge
R. W. Thompson. of Terre Haute, who
took the Northern chute during the war,
recently met by chance at the Southern
Hotel in St. Louis, and had a pleasant
chat of by-gone days.
E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron.
It has never been known to fail in the cure of weak .
ness attended with, indisposition to exertion, loss of mem_
ory, difficulty of breathing, weakness, horror of disease,
night sweats, cold feet, weakness, dimness of vision, lan
guor, universal lassitude of the muscular system, enor
mous appetite, with dyspeptic symptoms, hot hands, flush•
ing of the body, dryness of the skin, pallid countenance
and eruptions ou the tee, butifying the blood, pain in
the neck, heaviness of the eyelids, frequent black spots
flying before the eyes, with suffu3ion and loss of sight
want of attention etc. Sold only in $1 bottles. Get the
genuine. Depot and office, 259 North Ninth St., Philailel.
phia. Advice free. Ask for E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Whit;
..I bpi!, and take no other make. Genuine sold only in
hotties,
NERVOUS DEBILITY ! NERVOUS
DEBILI'T'Y -!
Debility, a depressed irritable state of mind, a we.tk,
nervons, exhausted feeling, no energy or animation, con-
Anted 1,e4, weak memory, the consequences of excesses,
mental overwork. This nervous debility finds a sovereign
pure in E. F. KiikoFe flitter Wine of Iron. It tones the
the system, dispels tile mental gloom and despondency ,
•
azarenovatee the entir, eyPteni. £Ol4 etily in $1 bottle:.
Got the genuine. 1.)11 , e. 2:07 11 , ,rili Ninth St., Philadel
phia Pa.. by at! •te. r. F. Kunktrt,
~~. i; l ~>
i _ !~ `ti ~i
11:11.,1,. , ur5. Na till Ku , 1k..1, 1:59
N..rtli Ninth St.,
Wi.rul, 1 . 1.1110V , 0. (Nil ;111.1 ir.• rr. t..
f o r rirrnt . ir, ~I•vo.k your W. , rtu : , cr•
up. 'I. It
0 :1
e
Tno Exposition will be euntinnedono woek from
Saturday, Nov. 6. Ailtnis,ion reduced to twenty
five cents.
* More than half a century
6 I'.
• ago Dr. H. D. SELLERS.
a celebrated physician of PittsLurgh. ered
and used in his practice the popular renieJy known
throughout the country as
S E E ' S IMPERUL COUGH
SYRUP.
This is no QUACK remedy. fr was Loin of wis
dom; nurtured by science; and thousands or Hy
ing witnesses of its wonderful curative
l,3cc,•rs.—
It is pleasant to take- anti sore to cure Coughs,
Colds, Croups, Bronchial Affections, 'CH:ling in
the Throat, and all ,ii-.cases of a ltio,ii-ett baLure,
E. Sellers Lk Co., l'itt.iiurgh. Pa., are ak,i, pro
prietors of
JOHNSON'S It HEUMATIC COM
POUND,
the great internal remedy for Rheumatism, Ncu
ralgia, Headache, &e. You can have a doctor al
ways in your house by keeping SELLERS' Fatn-
Hy Medicines on hand. THEIR LIVER. PILLS
are the oldest and tile best in the market, and
every bottle of their Vermifuge is warranted.
For sale by all dragqistf: and country dealers.
.lOJIN LEAD. SONS.
Nov. 10 3 Til. Huntingdon, Pa.
$5
$5
X 5.00
$5
$5
Five Do tars wiT.I purchase a Fraction of an In
dustral Exhibition Bond, that is certain to draw
one of the following premiums, on
DEC:EI/BEI: 6th, 187.5,
A tenth which cost? only ,IrLw any of
the followine, and will lo received by the Com
pany at any tiny: iv si.: montl.:. in the par
ch:tie of a $2O Bond.
This is a chance for gain and no chance for !oss.
10 Premiums of $3,500 each,l
10 I,COO
YO 500 " I
10 300 " Paid in Cash,
30 di 00 "
10 " r and no
100 20 "
290 10 " I deduction
444
39000
2.10" 1
THE LOWEST PREMIUM IS $2.10
Each fraction must draw this sum.
All Fractions will ho Bond with t 15.00 to pur
chase a whole $20.00 lion
This is a ehynce for a P.rtune, aril no chance
for loss.
A $2O Bond participat in frir driwingi each
year, untill it has drawn me of the following pre
miums :
$lOO.OOO.
$2!, $5 O , 8100, $2OO. $.300, $5OO, sl.coo,
$3.000, $5.000, $lO.OOO, $35.060,
;45100.000.
The BonCs issued by the Industrial Exhibition
Company, are a copy of the European Ilovcrn
meet Loans.
The Bonds arc a safe investment.
PEOPLE OF SMALL MEANS
can find no better or saftr inrcetment. No chance
of loss. A fortune my be acquired
ON DECEMBER JANUARY 3rd.
1' :R('11 Now
lIOW TO PURCHASE :
In person, or by certified Check, or F.aprese, or
Postal Order, or Draft, or enclose Greenback's in
a registered letter, to, and made payable to the
Industrial Exhibition Company.
The funds raised by salc . of these Bond.=, will he
applied to the erection of a
CRYSTAL PALACE,
which every American will he prvad of.
RECOLLECT,
The Industrial Exhibition i 3 a legitimate entcr
prim, chartered by the State of New York.
Its Directors are the best citizens of New York.
It has had seven drawings since July 1571. ant
paid out in principal and interest,
i;750.000.
Any one obtaining a premium, the :ompary
pledged itself not to make public.
This enterprise is simply a new form of bond
in no sense is it to be recognized as a lottery.
There are nu blanks. Be sure and purchase at
Once.
$ 5 will buy a Fraction for December (1:11, 1575.
:.Z 5 " Quarter Bond for Jan. :;rd, 1576.
10 " Half Bond " " "
S2O " Whole Bond " " "
All Bonds are exchangeable into city lots, in
the suburbs of New York City.
Each Bond-holder is regarded as an honorary
member of the Industrial Exhibition Co., and is
welcome at l'arlors of the Co., No. 12, East 17th
Street. Agents wanted.
All communications .1 , 1 remittances to be made
to the induatral Exhibition Co., 12 East 17th St.,
bet. sth Ave., and Broadway, New York City.
_
For the purpose of giving the Bond-holders of
the Industrial Exhibition Co., full and complete
information as to the progress of the Company,
and a complete list of the drawings, an Illustrated
Journal will be published, viz :
The Industrial Exhibition Illus!rated,
Subocription One Dollar per year.
N . And one sending a club of 15 subscribers, with
$l5. will be given a premium of one Fraction or
Bond. club of 27 sub,criherr, a Bond; club of 50
subscribers a whole Bond. Addreev,
Industrial Exhibition Illustrated,
12 East lithl-;trvet, New York City.
860 Will purchase 13 Frnetions.
Nov.lotoJan.l,7o.
Now .Advertisements.
DISSOLUTION OF P ARTNER—
SHIP.—The partnership heretofore exiAt
log between S. 11. .4 P. 0. Decker, under the firm
name of S. 11. & P. 0. Lecher, has this day—Oct.
27, 1875—been dissolved by mutual consent, and
the accounts of the late firm are in the hands of S.
11. Decker ik Co. for settlement.
S. If. DECKER,
P. 0. DECKER.
Huntingdon, Nov. 3,1875.3 t
- - - -
FOR FLORIDA.
FOR THROUGH PASSAGE TICK
ETS to ST. AIitIESTINE and all lantlinZA
on ST. JOHN'S RIVER anil interior pointo in
FLORIDA, by oiteuiniibip to SAVANNAH, prol
thence by rnilrond or Pteambont.
Apply to WM. L. JAMES, general Agent.
Philadelphia and Smithee” .
glrf South Delaware A oit ,
Nov. 3, 1575- to
NOTICE TO FARMERS.
The highest market rive will lie pai , l for
Chickens, Turkeys, (lose iitul Ducks, at Deeker's
Store, two doors east of Fishers' Mill, 0et.13-tf.
WANTED.
IVanted Dt,ker's g , :ore, two 'loots Pan
-r Fishers' 31 ii ;ill kimls Poultrv, for whiell
‘lighest market prices will iac paid. 0et.13-tf
RANTED.
Wauted Chickens. Turkeys, tlee , e, and
Ducks, at Decker's Store, two doors cast of Fishers'
Mill, fur which the best market price will be
paid. Oct.l3•tf.
MBA. M. MOORE,
325 PENN AVENUE,
PITTSBURGH, PA.,
will open the tiest week in November a elio;ee nmi
elegant assortment of the latest novelties for Win
ter in
SILK VELVET SUITS,
Patuasst Camas Hair Costumes,
SICILLIEiNE JACKETS,
Hats and Bonnets,
a large invoice of
SEAL SKIN SACQUES,
MUFFS AND WAS.
October 27, IS7s.—y
r (;•,:tiriP 3014 or
from two I
New nra-:
NE R( rT-. k ;
ILE_V;I" L. I:* !LI.
The. An•l - , Anr,,:tte in
gitutinn worid.
grailnatd.... , GI :iv: r w a i n
ness in :ha ;,or,-;; , i: .Ar•rs An I , hr f
State..
_liffht UI of EdllC3llOll
YORIT JP
tth - L.
Mn4niti,cnt !aney
fittetl 3nl faro;. in-. 1 r • oion
of : on, :v . : etr, port.: • , n 1 ••tAti ,
inett.o.l,
BUSINENN TRAINING.
$5
$5
men. ,r.:t•ts:lo.tt.•
and parcnts 4,tvin4 , I.:ei'...tr.-
larly requep.:tql r.-Vit!n4
the t .
•011 . .... flee. fir...,
FS' 5
$ 5
rfAzU.c:=
nov2,'7s—y]
ESILiIMJS
DRESS GOODS.
Our enlarged eA..ablillinient
us the opportunity to display a far
larger stock than ever before.
We are (laity opening
IMPORTED NoVELTIEs
Fine Dress Goods
together with large lire:. (.;*
MEDIUM PRICED
DRESS GOODS,
to which attention
Nev Aciv-rti,vinents
FREIkTC; 110 TEL,
i - ;
W
All M., lern ineltvlia4
It,ouse per day nr.al upwards.
T. .1. FREN(•II .€
July2B- lyr
STE.I3I ENGINE AND AGI:Ici - 1.-
Till AL IMPLEMENT FACT..P.V.
N.,. 1 , 11, i!talz",n
't TA WI j;; thr -. .T4. ./. •-an *ire t. i.s ioutomiliwo
o:tr many Arr eowrite, in! ...oto 'Mt
Manuf.'cures 3mi rn hi. m nt ry f r nil have 3.4 ..-Irriplete a ltork a. the mu.st floovitriwougen9ll4 wislh to fah** 4111.-
itir.,l; of tolol.inc AA f , r PRICES. we harep.t .I“wn jnot 14 low 1+ RI Min
to 5 Oil at, and herie,oly I . ..Fere :hat. .ere
Special attention given to fitting op cheap eta.
of Machinery, iiesigne•l for tnal: roannfacturers.
Secontl-hand Engines and Machinery at low Prices.
Drawings fur Machinery an.l Patterns nir mooi ng ,
wade to orier.
ENGINES and MACHINERY set up, and CY
INDERS bored out without moving fr6fii bed. is
any part of the c.ourary.
Agent for Kreider. Zinrlgrafi k Cn.. Millwrights
and Machinests, who build and completely tarnish
mills of every kind. Employing meehasiis who
thoroughly understand their trade, mtifrietory
work will always be produced.
A Blanchard Spoke Lathe .ale At 2 very tem
A pril22-tf.
.~ ..~
PITTSEMEGII. PA.
For upwanip of tir.nty year! the
nert; College of the 1 - ni'mlfitate#, a;;"or•!4rtneritial
le,l u.lvantagep for the thorough. praetieal 'dura
tion of young and [lliadic. ;Aged men. ,tru.leire
arltnitte , l at any time. ,„'ir-rer partielaire, .v.I.
&err, d. C. SMITH, A. M.,
Principal.
Th e ~I nrot rITY cr , t..1.C.411 ie 'IS* n ly
inetitution of the hint, in thi. city. that we re
commend to the pnhlie
lbsiirrsr, Arpt. 1:,-••m•••
KIRK. BATE & BERWIND.
Wholesalo Grocery
COIIIIISSION
b y
13ff Nt , lllll
Utter fir male is huge and otoels of 1
liroterios, TEAS, sp IC ES, le.. 4 4 . W. am,. •
Preislty of CuFFEE 1111.1 Slllll P. I)ar 1 . ; , .r0f
MU PS RTC henry F. , r;tY, Y 1,% FIATIPI - P. Liner,
‘.14,0n Act , ißrr. A, IP*. WP.p••••;.ily
MAIL OR DEES and fill their with a. remelt nen
an.' Rt as 1.. w price. no if roirtie• were !,r, o•nt
019 kf. 6.ir own setsettonA.
IVe i.nlir it CONSI6NMENTS of PROIPUCE.
our facilities for disposing of whi , •hr enehie. is• to
obtain the very highest market prices,.
New Advertisements
A 1; ENTS
-IA- Make from $lO t., C , 21 , per day in AAllinx
our tine new oil chroino of Washing:on and Mar
tha. ::cri , l f•or terms.
EXCELSIon PUCLISIIINoi .
::Ns Market :4., Piv.:a.
net t3-I,nl
NEW GROCERY, CONFECTION
En' AND ICE CREAM SALOON.
C. I.ONCe has just opened, at his resi4enee. in
West Huntingdon, a new tirneery. Confectionery
and lee Cream SaI••on, whore ever} thin~ pertain
ing to these t•ranches of trade can be ha.i. ice
Cream furnishes!, at short notice, to famitie, er
parties. His rooms are snperior to an• others in
town. The patrowlze ••f the public is respectfully
oliei ted. y
STIMPINI: !
pist reN•irot a ;.7.4P as•ortment "r stamp.
from the east, I am 11011 prepared t..do :tampion
For
BRAIDING AND EMBROIDERING.
I als. Jo l'in'Ain; v• the sh.rtr,t
.. :;,
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL.
Oily $2.06 a year.
71i
,
c-1, ccnnecticut,
\Th :\
P . I.j
E3tablis'aal i 3 1834
W Pre+i:lent.
Neer Haven, Coat'.
:, _. ~ ~
.~lti.;
vited
CLOrr - r-4 - IMR,
_
_
CORNER E ' ORE= - TB
P: I.&DET-tPMA,
; .
n• T!: s::RfwEty
rat
..f
T. A.
ASI►
jaoe.:i) . i yr.
LITAMPING :
).1
MA•iTIZ t;. 'MAY.
41:1,31ifflia Street.
NEW Dr . PAPT.V:NT:: . ; f - -'ha "ihaw'4.
Lae
! ..ro-*
Merl ,
:
Trc
le • , r
I
tplciallil Gut I Wit
- ME GREAT CENTRE FOR BOOTS &SHOES
dUSTON R CRUM,
1 N ~,
rEftOA 1) STREET,
N f ) -
i i p t ifi e d in p ra i i i nz n..w_FALL:sr.l WINTER
. 46 ark. Rai
GIVE TES
MENS' BOY'S & YO UTASEN
HARD-MADE and W.
WOMEWS ) MISSES' ) NM
91 - 170:1 ASD 1,.10ED MOW, ('P .%LL "TILL('
Birs, Mit IMO liar, I Odes
;I . fin F. f r i." l P r; .% lA, THE I.E.1D111; a'TTLIK.4
The p!are :n Awn -rhPrP oi in ro- •he "wisehriorgi
BURT 4110Et!4.
F:4tate.
X. I lIT. h I 7...511 . llif f rA ts l 9Mfl'—'
IrTIN..DON A6lolrl
11..1 Romef. .u4l. Mir
thorn wh.. wish to rinquar. win !roll it ovireti tw ?!«rairsT.
their tklirontag• ••, tho
is mos.-tiers w th *heir proortipeo A...ontirro-rie
Low. in the eitrleinirot Ertatoo.4.. ere site. •
effort •.p.e.ty notersetory peirrbsore noel Pelee
of form.. !•,wn rinolier howdah.
LLI. 1 7liT 4 falta.
ffrintinfirs. Ps.
lliArellaneor 4
FOR ALL KISS 1,6
GO To Tit
.101 - 10.%;,'
N!NDS •v
TIE Jot - RNA:, Or
latOß ?DEAN)) FANCY
e. a. es JAMS* MO
.•••
Wii!.-
. 1' isopi !4liatris.
• •-- :1
H U NTINGDON, PA.
A iTLI, LINE 1W
A COMPLETE 170 FIE OT
MUM & CO.,
Stoves. assrests. esslos
Ovate Aloft loam 11....
Xiftrair mod Voribfrisp4 ;Ike'''.
' PEEALUr SIAM OWL
%•—• tespe... e
KV. s S norr oe
11 • wed NI Amos Amnia,
1' 1 - r - rr4 it Ft(
7 so. ••••-• vtrwtsato • r-4
• -r- wleur
r".••••,.4 • roma 0r.% Zailieln.
1,4 eirt aor sori 4 to o....igiftedi
lye
y NM.; CON }l,SSlifi
OF A VICTIM.
gt - TLIgNo;
liwha r'harwlik
rrrneh matt!- IV*-
Zi•ie7 7 4 k :lir
W..7it
With ;'sie lUirder.
'aidoey Mark I 'ern."...
'tVith i.aie 11*Pler•
nvvin.a 3r-v
Amok
.a 47- .
!Pin ket : 4 tl►l'.
1:••+!!A' Shall, 4.
ir y
♦fly vascasso
/ 4'
1f.... • ,
N.-s
i ollp
,•••• ••• ••••• • dboleo.
21E? MT 9001111.
'ea~