VOL. 50. The Huntingdon Journal. .1. H. DURBORROIV, VIIDLISIIERS AND PROPILINTONS Office in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street. THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Auesday, by J. It. DURBORROW and J. A. NABH, •u.ler the firm name of J. R. DURBORROW & CO., at per annum, IN ADVANCE, or $2.50 if not paid :or in six months from date of subscription, and .s i f not paid within the year. Ni paper discontinued, pnless at the option of 11, 0 publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. . . Transient ad;e n rtisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-lIALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-lIALF CENTS for the second, and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent inser tions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertise ulents will be inserted at the following rates : I 13mI6m19mily 6m19 m 800 1 4col 950 18 00 $ 27 $ 36 12 00 s " 24 00 36 (,0 60 65 118 00 4 " 34 00 50 00 65 80 121 00 1 col 36 00 60 00 SO 100 450 551 8 00 10 00 10 00 14 00 14 00 20 00 1 Inch 2 " Local notices will be inserted at FIFTEEN CENTS per line for each and every insertion. All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party an nouncements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will ho charged TEN CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission ~utsitle of these figures. Alt advertising accounts are due and collectable , t h e n the advertisement is once inserted. JOB PRINTING of every kind, in Plain and P. ncy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch.— li d-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ice., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, anal every thing in the Printing line will be execu te.] in the most artistic manner and at thw lowest rates. Professional Cards P. T. BROWN BROWN & BAILEY, Attorneys-at- Law, Office 2d door east of First National Bank. Prompt personal attention will be given to all legal business entrusted to their care, and to the collection and remittance of claims. dan.7,71. 11 W. DUCITANAN, D. D. S. I W. T. GEoRGEN, M. R. C. P., D. D. 3 BITCEIANAN & GEORGEN, SURGEON DENTISTS, meh.17,'75.1 223 Penn St., HUNTINGDON, Pa CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, D • xo. 111, 3d street. (Alice formerly occupied 113 7 , les,es. Woods & [ap12,"71. bit A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers hi 3 professional services to the community, , iitice, No. 523 Washington street, one door east of ;he Catholic Parsonage. [jan .4,11 . Gl KO. B ORLADY, Attorney-at. Law. 1 Over Wharton's anti Chancy's Hardware t.,..e, Huntingdon, Pa. J. GREENE, Dentist. Office re • moved to Leister's new building, Hill street {Tv ~tingdon . [jan.4,'7l. (2 L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. N.A • timwn's new building, No. 520, //ill St., Hunt iugdon, Pa. HUGH NEAL, ENGINEER AND SURVFYOR, Cur. Sulith i ield Street and Eighth Avenue PITTSBURGH, PA Second Fluor City Bank TT C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. • Office, No. —, Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap.19,'71. I-FRANKLIN SCLIOCK, Attorney • at-Law r Huntingdon, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal business. Office 229 Hill street, cornor of Court House Square. [dec.4,'72 BYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at u • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, hree doom west of Smith. Lian.4'7l. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at- J• Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in the sercral Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular attention given to the settlement of estates of deco t,. in he JOURNAL Building. [leb.l/71 A W. MATTER v, Attorney-at-Law !Jr • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Soldiers' claims against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed to with great care and promptness. I , 2ice on Hill street. [jan.4,'7l. S. GEISSINGER, Attorney-at • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office ono don East ui It. M. Speer's office. [P21).5-1 K. ALLiss LOVELL, L ovELL & MUSSER, Attorneys-at-Law, HUNTINGDON, Pd, Special attention given to COLLECTIONS'of all kinds ;• to the settlement of ESTATES, atc. ; and all other legal business prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. [nov6;73 - 1:1 A. ORBISON, Attoraey.at-Law, -&-t• P:.,tents Obtaine4, Office,,32l Hill street, Ltuutingdon, Pa. [saay3l,'7l. E. FLEMINQ, Attornepat-Law, 1 1 / 4 -Y• Iluntingdon, Pa., office 319 Penn street, nearly opposite First National Bank. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. Aug.5,74-61nos. • WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention diver, to collections, and all other 13gal business 4 tewlud te,w,il.h care and promptness. Otsce, No. fill street. [aplB;7l. Hotels. jrNIATA HOUSE, BEDFORD, PENN'A This well-known house has recently been leased by h , .; undersigned, who, having bad the experi ence of a number of years in keeping a first-class botg.l, respectfully mullets the patronage of the puhlie, 46(4(41 attention will i.e vice's to transient oarders, Arningernewie will be wade by which persons 0311 !MVO meals at all Imre. Boarding $1,50 per day. itqarolere taken by the day, week, month or year. no, MANY J. RIFFLE, DICKSON HOUSE, (Formerly Fartner's lintel,) 14: , irth east corner of Fourth and Penn Streets, 111.INTINODON, SAMITEL DICKSON, . - Proprietor. llsving la.qly taken charge of the bickeou (C 01114.141 Farmer's liotel,) I KW nvw pre imr, I to entertain strangers and trav e l ers In th e ~,ttsfe e ory manner. The house and stable havo 1, , ,th undergone thorough repair, My table will be tilled with the beet the market can afford, aw l the stable will be attended by careful Witter., May 5, Is7s—y WASHINGTON HOUSE, Corner of Seventh and Penn ktreete, HUNTINGDON, PA., LEWIS RICHTER, - - PAOPRIETOII. Pernment or transient boarders will be taken at this house on the following terms : Single meals 25 &tents; regular boarders $ll3 per month. Aug. 12, 1874 MORRISON HOUSE, opp(NITE PENNSYLVANIA R. R. DEPOT HUNTINGDON, PA. J. 11. CLOVER, Prop, April 5, 1871-ly, ,1. R. DURBORROW, - - - J. A. NASH. The Huntingdon Journal, J. A. NASH, EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, $2 00 per annum, in advance; $2.50 within six months, and $3.00 if 00000000 J. E. BAILEY 0 REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0 0 - 0 00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000 ~~~~~~~~ TO ADVERTISERS : Circulation 800. Lapl7-tf. [p12,'71 feb.l7-ly The JOURNAL is one of the best printed papers in the Juniata Valley, and is read by the best citizens fa the county. It finds its way into 1800 homes weekly, and is read by at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST advertising medium in Central Penasyl- vania. Those who patronize its columns J. HALL MUSSER. are sure of getting a rich return for their investment. Advertisements, both local and foreign, solicited, and inserted at reasonable rates, Give us an order- ;mug JOB DEPARTMENT JULIMIA STSZET, Viiir All business letters should be ad, dressed to J. It. DURBORROW & CO., Huntingdon, I'a r - .•_, 1 ..'::. he • ... '-, .-... ':. .::tingdon Journal. Printing. PUBLISHED -I N No. 212, FIFTH STREET. TERMS : not paid within the year 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 00000000 PROGRESSIVE 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 FIRST-CLASS ADVERTISING MEDIUM. 5000 READERS WEEKLY.. Cr a O G' Po 71. I :CIALTY, Pitl Stationery Store and News Depot PITY' YOUR STATIONERY AND ALL ARTICLES IN THAT LINE JOURNAL STORE. Cheaper than tie Clioapost Competition Defied ! The stock on hand is ono of the largest and most varied ever brought to Huntingdon. It con sists of PIRIES, TINTED, REPP, ALEXANDRIA PAPETRIES. PIRIES, TINTED, WOVE PAPETRIES These are some of the finest Papetries manufac tured in Europe. They are retailed by us at less than they are wholesaled in some of the cities of the Union. To the above fine articles we add the following l'A PET RIE STELLAR, NEW ERA, VERNON, NE PLUS ULTRA, CODLIN & SHORT, LONGFELLOW BERTHA, YALE, VICTORIA, BRIGHTON, CAMBRIDJE, HARVARD, ALEXANDRIA COURT, COURT LINEAR, CENTENNIAL. LYITML PAISTRIES'. IRVING, CLEOPATRA, DIAMOND, ST. JAMES, REVERE, PACIFIC. Papetries fur the Children, BIJON, LITTLE PRINCE, CALEDONIA, UNDINE AND ALL SHADES AND GRADES. QUADRILLE NOTES, ONION PA PER, ANTIQUE, IRISH LINEN Twenty kinds of COMMERCIAL and other NOTE Papers. LETTER and CAP Paper in large quan tities. PACKET NOTE, LETTER, SER MON, and almost every style and variety in use, CONGRESS CAP, and LETTER, BILL, CAP, RECORD CAP, BRIEF, all kinds known to business men; Finest and best articles. BILL HEADS, LET. TER. HEADS, Note Heads, STATEMENTS, CARDS, ENVELOPES by the cart load to suit every... style and variety of paper. All shades and colors as well as size. PENS, PENCILS, and INKS, INK STANDS of every patern and style. PA PER KNlVES,splendid articles. PAPER WEIGHTS that will prove a joy forever. POCKET BOOKS, large and small, every style, costing from a few cents to several dollars. CASES FOR NOTES AND PAPERS, Examine this stock, it cannot he AurpaAmed in the county, GAMES, GAMES, GAMES, GAMES enough to keep the old and young of the entire neighborhood employed throughout every eve ning of the year. There le come for both the Urave and the Gay. A game for everybody ! 19 0 111 . 0 "1, BLANK BOOKS. LEDO EltS, DAY BOOKS, CASH BOOKS, MIN UTE BOOK S, EM ORA ND CMS, TIME BOOKS, BUTCHER BOOKS. ORDER BOOKS, COMPO SITION BOOKS, RECEIPT and NOTE BOOKS. All kinds of COPY BOOKS. A large assortment of SLATES, cheaper than dirt, and last for all time. BOOK SLATES, the cutest thing for students. SI ATE PENCILS, and CUAYONS, many kinds. or every deseription. NOTES to fait the ,life and the liberal, Some that will take a man) *bin dean off or leave it an If dirty, 41 14 ALBUMS, QUITE AN ASSORTMENT. REWARD CARDS that can't ho beat. They are the bandleetneet thing (wt. They make the h-arts of JiVJo felke leap, fur joy. by the dozen, large end mall eke, Itandaserno as a Chrome, Alen, a few ellitOMOS that are per fect pictures. 4 ' BUILDING BLOCKS that take up the thee of the little folks. Acrobats • that never tire. We would like to mention everything to our read ers that we have on hand, but it is an endless job. Come and see us and ask for what you want. If it is anything in our lino it will he forth coming. AT THE ALL SHADES BLANKS PICTURES HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1875. Uht Putute For the JOURNAL. Lines on the death of Monroe Crots:ey. BV A. D. TA11.01: Hark ! what music greets my ear I And what forms in the distance are so bright I 'Tis the angels, they are coming near, With their harps and robes of white. Nearer, nearer, they come ; 'tie for me, The music sounds so sweet and clear ; I long to go and to forever be With the Savior, for death I do not fear. Father, motbei, why do you weep ? "'Tis not all of death to die," In Heaven again we shall meet With the Savior up on high. Brothers, sisters, fare you well! Do not mourn for me ; I soon shall break this deathly spell And my soul will be at liberty. 'Tis•hard for me to die, But my Father calls and I must go To meet Him in the upper sky, And sing Ills praise forevermore. When I in my grave am laid, And you the path of life do tread, Remember who t'was that said "Be prepared to meet your God." The death messenger is here; I feel his cold and icy hand ; So I must leave you all so dear ; But hope to meet you in the pronaized land. Farewell loved ones ; I'm going home to Heaven, The angels have come to bear me up on high, Thank God, my sins they are forgiven, I am not afraid to die. Winfield, Kansas, Oct. 16, 1875. plaiug fra tilt wain. Edgar Allen Poe. OFFICIAL MEMORANDA BY HIS PHYSI CIAN OF THE POET'S LAST HOURS "REST, SHORE, No MORE !" The New York Herald, in sketching the history and progress of the Poe 111onu ment, which was recently, dedicated, prints an interesting narrative of the poet's death, furnished by Dr. J. J. Moran, who was connected at that time-with the hos pital in Baltimore, and who attended Poe to the last. These particulars are now first made known, and in view of the mys tery which has surrounded the whole sub ject, will attract great attention. Dr. Moran says : Edgar A. Poe was brought in a hack to the Washington University Hospital, sit uated on Broadway, north of Baltimore street, Baltimore city, on the 7th of Octo ber, 1849. He had been found lying upon a bench in front of a large mercan tile house of Light street wharf. He was in a stupor, whether from liquor or opium was not at first known. A gentleman pass ing along the pavement noticed several persons collected about the spot, and, look ing in through the crowd, was suddenly impressed with the face, and on close in spection recognized the poet. -He had been there since early dawn. A policeman sent for a hack and di rected the hackman to convey him to the above named hospital, which was in my charge, being the resident physician and living in the dwelling attached thereto.— It was about ten o'clock in the forenoon when lie entered the house. He was im mediately placed in a private room, care fully undressed, and critically examined. I had not then any knowledge of his pre vious condition or what where his habits. There was no smell of liquor upon his per son or breath. There was no delirium or tremor. His skin was pallid, with slight nausea at the stomach and a strong dispo sition to sleep. Die condition was more of a stupor. lie was sponged with luke warm water, sinapisms applied to the feet, thighs and abdomen, and cold applied to the head. I had the room darkened and he was otherwise made as comfortable as he could have been in hia own room at home. In half an hour after I left him lie threw the cover from his breast, opened his eyes and said : "Where am I!" "You are in the care of your friends;" to which be replied, "My best friend would be the man who would blow my brains out with a pistol." "Try and be quiet, Mr Poe ; we will do all - we can to make you comfortable and relieve your distress." "Oh, wretch that lam ! Sir, when I behold my degradation and ruin, what I have suffered and lost, and the sorrow and misery I have brought upon others, I feel that I could sink through this bed into the lowermost abyss below, forsaken by God and man, an outcast from society.-- Oh, God, the terrible strait lamin ! Is there no ransom for the deathless spirit ?" "Mr. Poe, do try and compose yourself, and take this draught ; it will soothe and revive you." He reached out his hand to take the glass, the nurse raising his head, while I administered the cordial. lle drank it and was laid down, closing his eyes as though going to sleep. He remained in this state about one hour, when he again waked up, suddenly opening his eyes. I said to him—both to be of service and to ascertain whether he would be PO in. dined— "Will you take a lithe toddy ?" Ile opened wide his large eyes and fixed them steadily upon me, and with such anguish in them that I looked from him to the wall beyond the bed. He said . "sir, if its potency would transport me to the Elysian bowers of the undiscovered spirit world I would not taste it. I would not taste it. Of its horrors who can tell ?" 4'l must administer an opiate to give you bleep and rest." Then he replied "Twin devil and spectre of crazed and doomed mortals of earth and perdition !" I asked, "Have you a family ?" "No, my wife is dead, my dear Virgi• nia; my r►other•in•law lives. Oh, how my heart bleeds for her ! Death's dark angel has done his work. lam so rudely dashed upon the storm without compass or helm. Language cannot tell the gush• ing wave that swells, sways and sweeps tempest-like, over me, signalling the 'larum of death. Doctor, write to my mother, Maria Chum. Tell her Eddie is here. No, too late! too late ! I must lift the pall and open to you the secret that sears the heart, and dagger-like, pierces the soul. I was to have been married in ten days." (Here he stopped to weep.) _ . "Shall I send for the lady ?" I asked, supposing she lived in the city. "Too late ! too late'.,, I said, "Oh no; I will scud my carriage immediately." "No, write, write to both. Inform them of my illness and death at the same time." "Give me their address." "Mrs. Shelton. Norfolk, Va., and Maria Cletnm, Lowell, Mass." Noticing the color ruing to his fitce and the blood vessels filling up on his temples, and the eyes becoming congestive and in clining upward, I asked no more ques tions, but ordered ice to his head and heat to his extremities, repeating the cordial with an anodyne, and waited with the nurse outside the door for fifteen minutes. No further change, except that his pulse had increased in frequency and was feeble and flying. I had sent for his cousin, Nelson Poe, having learned he was his relative, and a family named Reynolds, who lived in the neighborhood of the hospital. These were the only persons whose names I had heard him mention living in the city.— Mr. W. N. Poe came, and the female mem bers of Mr. Reynolds' family. He con tinued in an unconscious state for more than an hour. On again examining his pulse I found it was feeble, sharp and ir regular-120 to the minute. My partic ular friend. Professor John. C. S. Mon kur, came in at the moment. As soon as he fixed his eyes upon him lie said, "Dec tor, he's dying." I replied, "Yes, I fear it is all over." He carefully examined the case, and, being in possession of all the facts in re gard to the a g ents employed and symp toms presented—which were carefully noted down in a record book of the hos pital—he gave it as his opinion, which I was fully prepared ti corroborate, that Poe's death was caused by excessive ner vous excitement from exposure, followed by loss of nervous power. The most ap propriate name for his disease is encepha litis. The doctor advised free use of wine, beef tea, gentle cordials, while using ice to the head. The patient raised his hand to his mouth, as though he wanted a drink. A small lump of ice was placed upon his tongue. I then give him a mouthful of water to see whether he could swallow freely. He took it swallowing with sonic difficulty ; but he drank a wine glass full of beef tea. He seemed to revive, and opened his eyes, fixing his gaze upon the transom over his room door. Ile kept them unmoved f,r more than a minute.— He was lying directly opposite this trait- SOUL lle seemed trying to articulate, but was inaudible. At last he spoke feebly. "Doctor, it's all over. Write 'Eddie is no more.' " "Mr. Poe, you are near your end. Have you any wish or word fin. friends ?" He said, "Evermore!" • I continued : "Look to your Saviour. There is mercy for you and for all man kind. 'God is love.' " "The arched heavens," he rejoined, "encompass me, and God and His decrees legibly written upon the frontlets of every created human being ; and demons incar nate, their goal will be the seething waves of black despair." "Hope and trust him." "Self-murderer, there is a gulf beyond the stream. Where is the buoy, life-boat, ship of fire, sea of brass? Rest, shore, no more 1" Ilis eyes turned upward, and with one general tremor all was over. This occurred about twelve o'clock, mid. night, 7th October, 1849. I had in the meantime learned from him and afterwards from the porter at the hotel on Pratt street, then Bradshaw's, now called the Maltby llouse, that he arrived there on the evening of the sth ; was seen to go to the depot to take the cars for Philadelphia, and that the conductor, on going through the cars for tickets, found him lying in the baggage car insensible. He took him as far as Havre do Grace, where the cars then passed each other, or as f►r as Wilmington, I forget which, and placed him in a train coming to Baltimore, He had left his trunk at the hotel in BA", ticnore. Arriving on the evening train he was not seen by any person abour, the hotel when he returned to the city, The pre sumption is he wandered about during the night, and found a bench some time before morning to sleep upon on Light street wharf, where he was seen and taken from about nine o'clock the next morning. After death he was washed and care fully laid out, dressed in a suit of black cloth and placed in state in the large ro tunda of the college building, where hun dreds of friends and admirers came in crowds to pay their last tribute of respect to the deceased. Not less than fifty ladies were each furnished, at their earnest sl licitation, with a small lock of his beauti• ful black hair. Ile was a handsome man, elegantly dressed, and but few could claim advant age over him in this regard. iiis head was exquisitely modelled, forehead very prominent and largely developed, its measurement corresponding to that of the great Napoleon Bonaparte, a cast of which was in my possession. His skin was fair, hair raven black and inclined to curl, teeth perfectly good, and eyes grey. His weight was about 145 pounds, and heighth five feet ten inche . s. His hands were as deli cate as a lady's. Ilia shroud was made by my wife std a few of her lady friends, who considered it an honor to contribute in any wise to the distinguished poet. J. J. MORAN, N. P. Resident Physician, for seven years, of the Washington University Hospital. Broad way, Baltimore City, Md. Look on the Bright Side. Look on the bright side of things ; it is the right side. The times may be hard, but it will make them no eaisier to wear a gloomy face. It is the sunshine and not the cloud that makes the flower. Full one•half our ills exist only in imagination. There is always that before or around ns that should cheer and fill the heart with warmth. The sky is blue ten times where it is black once. You have troubles, it may be; so have others. None are free from them, and perhaps it is well that none should be. They give sinew rind tone to life, fortitude and courage to man. That would be a dull sea, and the sailor would never become skilled, where there was nothing to disturb the ocean. It is the duty of every one to extract all the happiness and enjoyment he can without and within him. Above all, he should look on the bright side of things What though appearances do look a little dark —the lane will turn and the night end in broad day. In the long run, and very often in the short, the great balance of life will right itself. Men arc not made to hang down either head or hands, and those who do, only show that they are departing from the path of true common sense and right. There is more virtue in one sun beam than in a whole hemisphere of clouds and gloom. Therefore look on the bright side of things. Cultivate what is warm and genial, and shun what is cold and re , pulsive, dark and morose. The Turkish Bath. Mrs. Burton. in her Inner Life ~f Syria. Palestine. and the Holy fiand." gives the followin: , description of a Turk ish bath : Firstly, we enter a large hall, lit by a domed skylight, with a huge mar ble tank in the centre and f;itar little foun tains spurting in the corners. All around are raised divans, covered with cushions. Here we wrap ourselves in silk and woolen sheets, and towels aronnil the head. We shall now pass through six marble rooms, all with domed skylights, nimble floors, and a gutter cut in them to let the water off, and surrounded by large stone basins and troughs, each with its tap of hot and cold water. The first is the cold room, the next warm, the third warmer, and so on until you come to the sudariNne. of about 120 degrees Fahrenheit. Here the operation commences. Firstly, they lather your head and Bair thoroughly. Then you are washed over, first with flanael and soap, if you like ; secondly, with a brush and soap; thirdly, with /If and soap. Li f is the fibre of the palm frond soaked in water, sun-dried, and pulled out. It looks like a large sponge of horse-hair, and it rubs as hard as a clothes brush. You are douched from head to foot, between each of these operations, with tubs of hot water thrown at you and over you. You are then shampooed with fresh Layers of soap, and douched again. By this time you are beginning to feel rather exhausted. They then cover your face and neck and arms with a sort of powder which looks like meal, and mare you through the other rooms, each warmer than the lr.st, till you are turned into the hottest. If it is steam, 150 degrees will content you; if in dry heat, you can without practice bear 300 degrees. Your stay in the ralidfrrixne lasts about twenty minutes. They give you iced sherbet, and tie towels dipped in cold water round yoor head, which pre vents your fainting, and makes you per spire more freely. The white powder passes away of itself. They scrub your feet with a hard, roi'gh stone ; indeed, it appears to me that eae's first skin is wholly peeled off. Now pu move back again through all the lama, but gradually, staying ten minutes in each. You are again douched with water and shampooed with towels as you pass from heat to c bid. The most rigorous IX all when you arrive at the latter, when pails of cold water arc thrown at your back and poured down the spine. In the last room the final sham pooing is done with towels. We now re turn to the ball were we first undressed, enveloped in silk and woolen cloths, and we incline on divans. It is ail strewed with flowers, incense is burned about us, cups of very but and rather bitter coffee are handed to us, and naari„silea are placed in our mouths. A woman advanee.s and kneads you like bread ; you fill asleep during the process, which has almost the effect of creme:ism. When you awake you will find music and dancing, the girls chasing one another, eating sweetmanata, cracking nuts, and enjoying all sorts of fun. Moslem women go through much more than the above perforiaanee, ea pecially in the matter of being honea'd and having their eyebrows plucked. The best time for the bath is with a wedding party preparing a bride. One feels very light after those baths, and the skin is wonderfully white pasterns are not con tent with less than peeling the outer skin off. ___....... . 4OP , Th 3 Father's Duty. We estimate a mother's importance in her family, as high as any one can ; and yet we do not believe that she monopolizes all the qualities needed in the ;neat work of training up human beings. famil iarity with her children places her in some respects at a disadvantage fur the exercise of wholesome authority. The wise father will not iudeed take the reins of the final ly government fr,tu h i s wife ; but he will make his children feat that her Lrrntle sway is sustained by a firm aiol sea y band ; that behind their in ither's tender heart steads a cool judgment. and 3 will stronger than their own, and that they cannot impose upon the one Lor resist the other. But if he would be truly. he father of his family. he must not be a stranger to them. It will answer no purpose for him to come once in a while to meet some great emergency, and awe down rebellion by hard authority. He must be the com panion, the friend of his children. S:rong, natural love must be the base of beneficial discipline. But this is also, we had almost said, equally necessary fur the father himself. Nothing keeps the heart so fresh and young, saves it from bitterness an I corro sion through the circa and conflicts and disappointments 01 life, as the dilly enjoy ment of a happy home. A man of business, or a scholar, who thus allows himself time fur relaxation, and for the play of ilomestie affections, will in the course of years have accomplished more, with less wear of mind and body, than one who has been all the time on the stretch, seeking "to catch the nearest way" to wealth or aoy other object of personal or public good. Tallow Dips. Seventy years ago, when gas and kero. sene were not, and wax candies were an extravagance only on state occasions, even by the wealthy, the tallow dip was an article or necessity, and "candle dip day" was as certain of occurrence as Christ mas, though, perhaps, even less welcome than the equally certain annual Vor. Day. Fancy an immense kitchen with before mentioned fireplace in the center of one side. Over the blaze of bac!flog and fore stick, and something like half a cord of - eight-Exit wood" are swinging the iron cranes laden with great kettles of melting tallow. On opposite side of the kitchen two long poles ahoet two feet apart, are supported at their extremities upon the seats of chairs. Beside the piles other great kettles containing melted tal low potted on the top of hot water. Arrow the poles are the slender candle 1044, from which depend ranks upon ranks of candle wicks made of tow, for eindle wick later inventi4n. Link, by li tt l e b y ,„4., lessly repeating the slow proems of dip ping into the kettles of melting tallow and hanging them to cool, the wicks take en their proper coating of tallow, To oaks the candles as large se passible was the sign, for the more tallow the brighter the light. When done, the ranks ef esmilee, still depending from the rode, were bey in the sunniest spots of a sunny garret to bleach —l4pincatt's Wm. K. Scott, a wealth resident Erie, Pa., has subscribed for onedtalf ®f the stock of the'New York Elevated Rail. way company which is to furnish rapid transit from the center to die circumfer ence of that city. Tit-Bits Takeo so ille Fly. her 311! prfropecti or air hunk I..twoon Japast stt:l elainat torsip. 311.416- hat; lik• it i. ree , rie.l in -o;nriir.r . • Trav els. rolorido will take part in the newt Prendentill . eetN.A, Lavin ! : doer.. alesww al votel, The plarility of .1. II Mew titn mp.- hem ramli,Lite covwfroir of Weimorbis xetts 5.1:62 vote.. EstrmAive an.l tirAtrartive prairie Ikea are in *union-0 Kan4-a4 aten the Pine of the Fort Se , )tt Itiilrma A retest corner i• lard rim the rimer that commodity Tip to 164 and 17k swots in the New Tart methet. Miss Clapp. of Alts. JIIe . Vibe was Auppnyte=l t., have bee* shill-wheal moot weeks 34 , , is still miasiair. The election nn the Missnmri new roe stitnti.in was hell on Sotnniay. a Inge nisjority voted in its 'lslet'. It i 4 rarnore.l at Warhinstoe that Trims. firer New is to be appoinated Pristatnetar- General in place of Mr. Jewell. During the absence or the Priem of Wales in India the Primes, will visit her father ar..l anther in Copenhagen A ri.irat ytofgs prevailed alma: the Nor Kn. jaml roe* Satordary ailit. de. log ewe:44,l.2We laina7_4. to rhippiag. It is 4ai,l in Berlin that the Imperial Goiernoient is about to formally maltirr Coma Yon Arnim frogs the peigie sonlisr. Southern Repot.heal* aro said as brow the nomination of Comm, Bars, of Ohio, or Chief Jastiee Waite for the Pres idency. Mrs. Grant's ree--ptioas at the White House will not begin till about riwisenuas ileac. Mrs. Fred. Grant wiil raise is the rccept ions. Ilcr pet'sl highnese. the Myelitis* of 1114. inburg, was safely 41ivered of a dnuarkeer it hal f ptAt te, taortrw4 at 11.:,..twe1l Park. The yield of void and 'Over fr,tut tine territories of the 1 - hired grate. for the year in.; will be at lease age hawked million dollars. Seeretnry ehnnaler. it in sna, aPiN sat recommend the tramfer st she Instate Be. real: to the war departimeat is hirs Garth eotnieg report. .1 lady in ilraghimitne amid es exhibit, as one of her choicest pnaismoissp, as ISMS or John Wit. Bootle were se the night of the assassination pigeon abooeiarg assteis Gkr Kim. bee been arranged between James Goodie Kninett and Travi4 Vas Beres. to take place in November. r.srl Seibert, says that idolise ties gill a strong livid •pi. de Wester's De monetary. and he behaves ditty will leis it out ti the bitter mid_ The at..tamest,. in the dine iitveivieg the right of the state 4, imams nitro.' rate.m. were cone:Wed Thertmisy in the United States vapretne court. When Morrikmey eau latelseled et s 'ewe. former - is it terrible to rant 4n the re 4ible depravity of the man he was ea/led tipm to beit.—.V. r. Trakeser. Illinois takes the link plate in the nabs of basin...et failems rut the vest threw fourths of 3 ;ear. The eentlier et &if. eres awl the amount wax $0131.. 979. The corner-stone of the amaeueares s Dr. John Withergron was Yid in Phil- November It:. The steam im be of bronze. I I lr.,et Isizh, awl to eget 820.000 tienivicve the Awittr:eme Traze::i= ores. near pl.tyinz iw &mewed. of fen to play one eight dloria/ 16 , 4 ewarage. meat in America for the hem* of be Coe tenhial Feed. The New York r/10,4 .bee;aret that the late fliPpatelses front WamlsiwOrie ie rr.pe4 to the (',Lan tisestion are ISM :emissive" and tha there is no intention es the pun of the administration eitamrs its Obey - - with re;-irl t..) Spain. The lake vote is VI -baea that the e,lor line in the& state le n 44 tripod oat. The degenerate ort a very teesidern. ble vote from the mimed peyelatiees. set kient t.i amine their weestinecy in the emitrol of the Aare. The jury in the rote of the &mho etr easionel by the esploeine of the losposp. tivs boiler at Bound Week N. J. ; is tweed s verdict Avelering Ant as was to Name. This ismitoot toss ie = evidence tending so Awry this ills haw was old and snit for tree. The -leach.% miffed preseher" ef Chow ter, S. V., Ammonia; whoa eneweatissisear sod sow 'fat* te1111110?, IWO Wes osevisied of issuing , a frasdislows seis.l westsieree for no by a jury of Maid. awes sew ben were of bra owe solar, sod sii seam 4 he. eint erereb. The metal report el' the 111asewa and Al , baa; railroad shown that die arise Ass* is 5T4.325.060; total debt lieltifiliaa. IA: 574.1111.17 ; net ~vie! of *a reed Ilar the year. 81.211.411 21. Tod alums" of riper - 36e; the mot 95.3 I WWI no income in reportel to be $1.111101.114.44 leas than !mg, ye.r It has been 4eeeteil roeain Creirend Cowan an weiltaat oeerweiry the ewer's!, ' soil after di , report f4' the lismovise port-event to the "realm& The terrt i 4 ctrl Ater weir in% will be snit la. The report is fell of the Re 4 lined oweatiwine at prettied. sad will be distributed in a few dim. A private letter v....nivel ?PS WJ iertoo revile th, •oevooktry 4Me koodoomo and Mesieas eAsesiosito Orr toadies" stow sgaievt the *mita SAMtOOOO Trwto that Fir Wellomel ilbereoso bee de. rifled thyt fan entarsei etakas with Aar )(elk,* geeereemeoe will be arefrmid. Prvereeenr Oetne, 4 Visor Cellefe. *be has airestly mode biemeKkeemelity boom by be. esplermiese 4 .b. oolooisy of 111. Amino ricer, bar wrings • Mier le Or elosieber of emorastoo *Alec fie 11011/.. MOM io swop e• hommerso dor morn of gle gnus leariNv rOviv RAW A exererpemiest et the X. l floo41. ; wise, en she seetteriey et • Cosibillimos oat diem oboe Illsomman Alamo pi lair 'ari l s.' Pee assume( Pee. voG• is sloe bens arses: my km w• is vie air hob skew rim rineir Joao's Kbe s *Nee wok mod MN eteit help se. Let every am dot i• • ass reStow sx thadiori figaind. e.••••••• vo , S rpm VIM arilllia ib.e. arr.owie fir answermisit 4•0111 Mos to Ow Tomlllow hoillilio, tg got rogray latilkof loam liS samisitie *um Asp ifflrsios by J . A raw/Iw. PAS*. Sawal, ICifislow.. Pa. eselbs sr Ihr by a Aier son.h.v. 14. Tie. s anew LEA soil pawl *Mb pm th• Isserevies, mow: WeluP s esvidisi geoPily paw swig dighlirenall SP $ 71111141 W. swl wimp ins ramp owned war* tor pear albaiiiitod elms b.. Go mot? to the hailer gal te. rip iv ire thee al So y as aril sari gawp s omata of doe Id 1',,., simmiler se die or , fives. Id . /Übe s sessiil aasp■oise of mob +r.►ar. sussior amil amillii vie per mire ibis a trims Emil t. ail mil bow it Asia be eat la. 11kiln se re Wei Whew sow bre alwall Wow Oak Billissee so pna lois per sin pe• pas go basin in sin' - 9th. At et purr gm al imam, gr. Awe aging Wiwi Ada re alipe a• tam awe. leek by sposill sissease or dime as maw 1414 whet as par alhoifini a. hew 11* Cm j eseebseli *Nei, awl jetseinestp. 12.11. Erse is d sea mar - 'gin 'gin am re dame iresmies awe hilt 13*. ban or Issee bre to jpat row mar es oily awe. 1 Iv. lkdesser ft Immo bye argesper pope iv may is a how ummor 11*. sad ill oil* mbar embeve Awing tie weema 144. Rewire die ewe isposeid 'saw eisee &rim die lesom 17t11. Woke wet et imegib sea same. elms se roe aelliw ee adwm liesseher it re so pousai Litio noprillsor mem aresik ir a pod Mi. li—mier is dm annot El pod yes lesnie lbws es lailease INV sesinply sposysimult Pimpliness br Se NWlillbs. No inerbor ems mommil COS sod dor esibly :bp dem so met &Ay repo& vise foe assb lleiledielk lie mem bow Irell the toseber say dirt hp adhommilki tie sidi a• le misi. le ilit iselb is al die how iv Ismiiiteatelkaysimirami big burolisigir id As subila mil ained • aillaiii pins by idlidi hum lad ti cord is underammed A. 'mss Apo of limp resimine di dbrsvadd—a• list dir mars bsomphilip of to. Immo alligymail; so sysme sod lesseyliss i assonil es lopers arksabits iustsesdos. Wow sill pisislsos. mid ii f. essesass w eh& sour of miss" sine aseitile. ne t , aim 4 est aid pods epos maw ie sisserst f rsurre. irsispti aid se tierlier awe sundae Owe wishes daily propensiss. Sorevintl wear immlise t. asastisbas red seirsel. A sseslid mid eispiesimis bairns,. isseirepos sad asmiussiess sesefiers. sod salipilisswed I,IIIIIIIIP and pp mew sir ielispsessiblisseyseass: be :be erbe.4 is rimeeies 1 all dew ems ar. pod meal lir es wive sur die esmis. silty apse date y issisosises. 11, imeopasiteal is da "irk 4 41141 emosimp: them is pow isisibissuil pispows. to re cassias mitisedirly is s eves id 'mg sr the taiirbirr se is tie asbreir Ms pious 1110111, de lire st her pos. is pispeo► rise lior it. Illrislbass Sur wiry semi talon awl Emmy alspodies Were iv *be melt ; sod flaw ism ir iranwal Wass Tb• pupil eilß Immo my mar* s die kadier repos or ills teacher is iseprilirial mai Wia f ?Mr: k: if eisibur sp. p-ari 650 re ibis Asa* sisb shoe ?az no his lam Seems sisoillhoMee in awry spAronmespa OM baly.si ii a fir ire of *stirs arri Aga it - INA los apparel 3.1 ifiribasol is awed "f -rogs. Wait Irt a 1....: at a eltabi slissonsiber pima" s bass. if re wile se we Am s esellowie ems sosessiss aima la lin 416 Es es* SIP yes or we loroprinor. amps op 4. lho awn r asson► pia kW so mob is •Om tisßlllio right book simile ie Sabi -is ease filo *Ow ors s !ti is rarieini 111, IMAM, stioloo haome los Moo sea AGO stsis its bio Irak to be pima i palm ihr t 1 r oast dogs & to at"b Waft isr limmisee se rs fito unarm or bio awe loorirsi *dim aroma sow ono. owl mei in At tilso. in iIP MOW sosolopirolo am& swop 411110 iv idly win midi IL nos it is sib re es • iftslism.- TN Mrs musk orrlb r dsi Tow /sir ir "sly sahib. Taw asps r famossims i Tr is dig yrs sibssill sap Ms MS Ihr pus seal ; by reldbium of per mils MS SAO is mei of per am ?big piss. Aar mile ismillsoark Oar srbp rinift, is aid •p_ sad ose Ass Os arasosmos im Ar Or mi. 11111ilini 4 doe say. sue Web mow sire being Orr es de olid#4ll6P Cririihr its strilsoases fkoososo 4 11 :84o spur risk mil ter mom sf owe gm 41, egoseo wry ansub ere bar gram 4 ask As loos OW is Sib sr Oro tibs 4 visommes owl is is pea, mai Mb ANS Sr ens sidiogril by Os raptor is Os mossmissse ft hie pr dowse Ilsr obey, rim* Mosey surisr, Assn romp • ii•NI pw. foommk Ms womm ANN pm. rids Ow dor cost write./ doll so foal s. of yerissise.— Woof IlkooP. Bfritwo to Law —Avow sw erorsi tbisir ..roy fragsvaby Jim tekbew tamriarlimir to ter aw. soli yells ow soakimi Wimp ef dim ir popoisp bogie. Absi eatirart•anwa. ir boom AIM ilbr Ihr WI it Aga • die =or wialbsiona Mt w+ sir, to/ eft OW Ow dir et wornisimitamajp. am,. awe 1161, rip lopmp die millem • man ets! OWN, emsfpoilste 4 dhp Els i ft* 40 V fay arilipla or lira. w eavramenbrawilhmurimse 41160 OEM EMI1:2"1011.88 Om le blip de IMO me in IAV ewe WW I* OW. ghe 401W1.11411 11.1.1116 I. eft se ram! tawl. Op Ihr essbeir 041. 1111111108004. dim moos Mr maw 41111aiiiipieb 'my sob id by Wing es dir No. 46.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers