Tlie Huntingdon Journal FRIDA Y, JANUARY 21, REA DINO MATTE•;K ON EVERY PAOE %V. I. FOULK ,kgent ur the Pennsylvania, (Thin and Wes Virginia l'ress Assoeiatinn, le t h e only pernmi In l'irt?iburgii 4uthoriz4ql advertinfilicnts f++r thu Jut RNA L. lie ha, it 6,4 (4,0 Laws Relating to Newspaper Subscrip twins and Arrearages. et.ting tipo.p.p..r. xtyl ii , ri Li•re, I Mules iii. r 4 st irt pr...rr teak, is. OM eon trartAlru coorhlernl Meiling to continue their rub cr 2 If Nuiewriberrl order the siloiroetitillialee of their per)• tims.s6ll.her. may continue to mini them until ell .irr,qtra4eil sire paid. it..t, iiegieet sir refine, to take their periodical., from the wiles to which they dirs. tea, they are held romponrible mail tiler nave rotted their 1,1111, tool order ed Ilium direuittlion, , 2 ... llrultreriliers more to oilier olseer without infortsilog the puldirberit, and the leifierA are Wilt to the former ill nation, they are hell! negro:4l4e, i. Courts Willi decided that "refuritig to take perloili .alm from the oftlee, sir removing Anil 1811,111 g them tin ...fled for, lr prima ,faci4 evideiire of Intentional trawl. C' Any pera.nl who reueiver a newspaper and maker use 01 it, whether he has ded..rod it ur nut, is bold in law to be a Nutoieriber. 7. If subscribers pay In minutiae, they are hound to gine notice to the pithilrher, at the enil of their time, if they ,10 nut wirli to continue-taking it; otherwise the pub 'hiller in authoringd to rend it on, and the Nuloicriber will he rerponsible until an expnan notice, with payment or all arreant, le rent to the publtrher. HUNTINGDON POST OFFICE. June of Arriral and closing of the Maas. M.tils arrive as 0,1 lows: tin Mast at 7.31 it. tn., 535 p. tn., 8.10 p. m. " West at 8.30 a. in., 9.24 a. tn., 4.10 p. in. (closed mull from Altoona and Petersburg,) and 10.03 South (If untingdon and Broad Top R. R.) 63.9 P. in.. and closed mail from Bedford at 8.25 a. in, " Donation and Conpropiithi Mills, (Wednesdays and Saturdays) at 12 in. Union Church (Wednes lays and Saturdays) at 11 a. in. Close as follows : Fur the East at 9.00 a. tn., 8.15 p. tn. '• West at 11.40 a. in., (closed tuail W Petersburg,) 5.10 p. m., 7.46 p. m. " Small (11. & B. T. It. R.) at 8.30 a. m., and closed m ail to Belford at 7.45 IS. m. " Donation and Cunpropst's Mills, (Wednesdays mid Saturdays) at 1 p. m. l'iiion Church (Wednesdays and Saturdays,) at 1 p. in. taco open from 6.30 a. m. to 5.30 p. m., except Sundays and legal holidays, when it will be open from Ba. m. to U a. in. REDUCTION ! Until further notice, we propose to insert specials, or locals, in our local col umns—not among the items, but distribu ted through the local matter—at TEN CENTS per line, eight ordinary words constituting a line. No charge, however, will be made fur less than fifty cents. tf LOCAL AND PERSONAL grief Mention—Home-made and Stolen Mud, mud, mud The ice men are gloomy Williams' saloon is gorgeous "Drummers" are on the icing. Everybody is talking Centennial. Buy your stationery at the Jove Net Store, Young America enjoyed the skating- last week Religious revivals are in progress in all di rections. Ice houses are reviving their Centennial supplies The next legal holiday will be the 22d of February The tree peddler will soon start on his an- uuai tour Quite a large number or persons attended the Globe sale. The weather-wise will soon be interested in ground hog day. We are indebted to Capt. George Fleming, of Alexandria, for favors. Rev. Dole filled the pulpit of the Baptist Church on Monday evening. L. S. Geissinger has been nominated by the Governor for Notary Public. Court breaking down so early, last week, fl atenod.things out effectually. A. A. Jacobs is now conducting the "Dixon House," late "Farmer's Hotel." Brother M'Crum, of the Miffiintown Inde pendent, was in town on Friday. Al. ll'Pherran, of Alexandria, has secured a position on the Centennial grounds. Victoria Woodhull regaled the lecture-go ing citizens of Altoona on Tuesday evening. Skating was very good on Friday and Satur day. Shinney was a part of the amusement. Candidates are already announcing them selves for next fall's election in Blair coupty. Send us the local matter of your commu nity. We want to give everybody a hearing. A load of good kindling wood—dry yellow pine—will be taken at this office on subscrip tion. Counterfeit fifty cent fractional currency is in circulation. The imitation is said to be good. A son of David Deuiser, of West Huntingdon , broke his left arm below the elbow one day last week The name of Perrysville station, on the line of the Pennsylvania railroad, has been changed to Port Royal. L tugdon's new distillery is for rent. This is a good opening for some man who under stands the business. The ticket agent of the P. R. R., at this place, says there is but little falling off of travel as compared with other years. If you have any small debts hanging around, hunt them up and pay them. Particularly that little bill you owe the printer. Donation parties are all the rage just now, hardly a night passing that one of these sur prise parties is not upon the tap's. Rev. Hunter, of the First Baptist Church, immersed three persons, in this place, after the morning service, ou Sunday last. The water question is looming up again.— The Chief Burgess ought to order another vote on the subject at the Spring election. The new bustle is the biggest thing out.— There is one in West Huntingdon. ' Keep your eyes open for it. It beats snakes all to pieces- Municipal and township elections will be held on the Lith pros. Aspirants will take due notice and govern themselves accordingly. Workingmen, don't forget the meeting on to-night a week, to consider the report of the Committee to devise ways and means for your benefit. Correspondents should never write on both sides of a sheet, particularly when such ele gant and cheap paper can be had at the Joun- NAL Store, A company should be formed to run the Boot and Shoe Factory. It has a very good trade, and if well conducted there is money iu the business Three brilliant planets, almost equi distant in a straight line, Mars, Saturn and Venns , can be seen every clear evening in the South- western heavens The young lady, in West Huntingdon, who eat one htindred and twenty oysters, at a single sitting, says she don't like them as much as she did. Our waste basket fattens on the communi cations and circulars of Weaver k Co. of Pitts burgh. They make a mighty nice item for the old paper man. The new Board of Commissioners hag had a week's experience in running the county with an empty Treasury. They find that it is not an easy matter. . It is said that Huntingdon county will con tribute $50,000 to the Centennial Exhibition in the way of travelling and other expenses during its continuance. 1876 Marksmen wr•ill remember the rifle tow na meat which cranes off 111 this place on the 22d of February. A larg.e parle is being raised for the occasion. John Free superinteudi the interests; of G. Taylor Simonton hi the West Huntingdon Li quor Store. 'We me Free In F : iy that lie hi n good man for the place. l'unetuation wt.!! first n4' 1;io literature hi I;ef.re that time wi;rds mere putt° of ,our u,,rrt.4poriol.eutri are uot yet aware of its it -;e. Washburn's "injunm." nn WI dnesdny atter noon, am they paraded our Strut^, created great excitement arnmi:: tle juvenile,, and children of n larger• wrowth, Fifth 41.11,14 wa,: pr , •:.fy 4,,'••:.r or I,Hirt•rn on Sunday evening. fe p , .. +64:1.11 in standing on the corners, hat. B!seese made them "Kit up and git." Henry Brumbaugh, of this Voice, lots a copy of Martin Luther's; bible printed in 171;5. It is as goo] a , now a:, , 1 fr,in present appear 'lnce might last a thonftand years. We It!: s r ry to hear that our much es teemed friend, Jolla Dougherty, emi., of Mt. rnioe, has lost the sight of his right cyc, and see.; very indistinctly with the remaining one. A sneak is a fellow, who, because he does not like some one, goes about the community trying to injure the object of his hate by all msnuer of 'yin:: device. Reader, are you the fellow? Young man, if y.ni ,loo't want to fill a druidiarirs grave, quit th'iliklag whisky. ft is astonishing what u ownivir of yoang men ars nightly on our strleti fa 7 l of the fluid and running over. The editors of the Monitor ought to have been magnanimous over their victory, but ii - stead of this, they manifest the bitterest sore ness. Come, colic, gentlemen, get over this sort of thing. The Monitor libel prosecution brought to light how the machine is run in Huntingdon county. Nor had the Rep iblicaus any ad vantages over the Democrats. The records were equally bad. The Workingmen are waking up to their in terests. It is_very seldom they come before the public demanding any advantages for themselves, but their dire necessities at this time compel them. J. HALL MUSSER, Postmaster. The farmers arc beginning to realize some money on their last year's cereals, and they are coming forward and paying up the old scores. We shall give each a Centennial re ceipt if he desires it. The Commissioners propose to lessen the expenses of the county by repealing a portion of the s...alp law. About $15,000 nave been paid for these luxuries during the last five years. flurry up the skunks. Ellsworth, of the Philipsburg Journal, is disposed to doubt the ability of Mr. Gary to do what we claim :or him. Come over, young man, and have those little doubts removed.— We warrant you will go a.T.vay satisfied, A son of Mr. Shingler, of Mill Creek, and a nephew of Wm. Hower of this place, injured one of his legs so severely, in amanner which we failed to learn, last week, that it was thought amputation 'would be necessary. A Centennial Entertainment will he given in the Opera House, on Tuesday and Wednes day evenings, of next week, under the aus pices of the colored citizens of this place.— The proceeds to be applied to church purposes .Milton S. Lytle, esq., if properly encouraged, gill prepare a history of Huntingdon. Every citizen of the county is interested in a work of this kind. We hope that he may receive the assurance of sufficient renumeration to make it pay expenses. If advertisers want to reach the farmers of Huntingdon county, they must advertise in the JOURNAL. It reaches the families of a thousand of our most substantial farmers every week. They stand by the JourtNAL because the JotraNAL stands by their interests. A meeting of the military company, re cently recruited in this place, will be held in the Court House, on Saturday evening next, for the purpose of electing officers and also of receiving the names of any persons who may desire to join the organization. The presses, types, cases, etc., of the Hun tingdon Globe, were sold, at Sheriff's sale, on Friday morning of last week, for the sum of $1,255 to Mrs. A. L. Guss and Abraham Guss, sr., the father of Prof. Guss. V. suppose the Professor will continue to run the concern. When you think of "reducing expenses' don't delude yourself with the idea that you have made a good thing by stopping your ad vertising! For you may be awakened to the unpleasant fact that you have reduced your business more in proportion than your expen ses. The latest invention is an alarm clothes line. It is of wire and is connected with a strong electric battery. An attempt to remove a garment from the line sounds an alarm in the man's bed room, turns loose four dogs and places a shot guu in position to rake the yard. It will prove quite popular. The store of our townsmsn, Richard Lang don, esq., at Dunbar, Centre county, was to tally destroyed by fire on Thursday morning of last week. There was nothing saved, not even the clothing of the clerk, Dick Langdon, who was sleeping in the store, and who barely escaped with his life. The loss, we learn, is fully covered by insurance. The season for publi sales is at hand, and we would remind our readers that we are prepared to print illustrated sale bills on short notice and at prices to suit the times. Our assortment of display type, borders, cuts, &c., is large and varied, and we can get up a sale bill that will "knock the spots" off any other establishnient in the county—or out of it, either. tf. "A loafer" writes to us and wants to know what young men are to do in the evenings if they are not to be permitted to stand on the streets. lie says they are not permitted in stores, shops, barrooms nor any other public place and now they are to be arrested if they stop on the streets. The town ought to have a public library for the use of young men. Ladies, now is the time to buy your pat terns of Winter styles at the JOURNAL store.— We are selling large numbers daily. The Domestic Patterns era universally Admitted to be the best in the market. We refer with pleasure to Mrs. Libkicker, Miss Mary Bum baup.:li, Mrs. Madera, Miss Sade Search or any other Dress-maker in town. Any pattern not ou hand promptly ordered. tf. The Methodist and Baptist churches were crowded to overflowing on Sunday night.— A large number of persons were unable to gain admittance to either edifice, every inch of room being occupied by those eager to hear the Word. By-the-way, wouldn't it be a good idea to keep the children at home, es pecially on Sunday evenings, when a religious revival is in progress ? Carey, son of John A. Pollock, of West Hun tingdon, proved himself a hero on Saturday last. He and a boy named Westbrook were on the ice ou the river. Westbrook broke through and sunk up to his neck. Carey was the only person near and by means of a Shin ny-stick he tugged his companion out. We learn that several others broke through but no serious accident occurred. Within six months three letters directed to us, and mailed at Shade Gap, haye been tam pered with and an aggregate of eight dollars stolen. They were all opened and the money extracted and then closed up with mucilage. This is the only trouble of the kind we have had in the county covering a period of five years. The Postmaster at Shade Gap insists that he is the only person who has access to the letters at that point. We have received a photograph of the (.3or• neliu 4 triplets, P.M. Grant, W. T. Sherman aril .1. W. limey, from Mr. S. IL Miller, artist, of (Sr Tire children are inr.v seven years old, and are tine looking boys. Any person desirous of procurilig a photograph of these children can do co by enclosing twenty five cents and a postage stamp to Mr. Miller, at Orbisonia. The money arising from the sale of these pictures is to be applied towards the education of the children. Early on Tuesday morning some bold thief broi:e one of the large window panes in Har ry Fisher's saloon, and stole from the window two boxes of segars. The act was committed while a train of care, filled with troops, was lying at the depot, and it is supposed that the thief belonged to them. Harry sleeps in his saloon, and awoke just as the segars were be ing abstracted. Ile saw the thief and at tempted to use his revolver, but the weapon did not go off or else there would have been one scoundrel less at the inauguration on Tuesday. A LITERARY CURIOSITY.—Our friend, Montgomery, late Treasurer of this county, hands us the following; literary curiosity, in the shape of a scalp order, written by a Jus tice of the Peace, in one of the townships in the southern end of the county. We publish it as near the original as possible, omitting names cud location : Huntingdon Co S 5 TotheTreasurer ofSaidCounty -,-, of said County of Hunting don Being Duely Sworn produses one Wildcat killed By him in said County of Huntingdon and Township of - on the 7th day of Octo ber 1874 and !having Mutulated the Scalp of said Cat (It was a Big Cat weighi-ng 361 lbs an, was about 6 ftlong. and was Equal in Contest to 3 Dogs. but you know they Cat took to a Tree and - - Being an expert gunner tried on Mr. Cat and gave him a deadner and that Said cat has been mis chievous Claming large toll from our farmers in they way of Turkeys Gees pigs lambs & (now that Said Wildcat is dead) and harmless). you are therefore Required to pay to Said Two Dollars. $2.00 they amou• nt allowed By law for killing They Big Wildcat and I thinks they amount allowed By law for as big a cat as that is not as much as lie should have. when they law allows they same for killing of cats not half so big Witness My hand At October AD 1874. "HOLD THE FORT," is the title of the hymn which has lately taken hold of.the pop ular heart, and is sung more than any other at the present time. ,Every church-goer has beard its stirring melody during the pas t month. Here is the incident that gave birth to the hymn : During the late war a party of Union soldiers were besieged in a small for tification in the mountains of Tennessee. For many days they had held out bravely fighting, as brave men always fight, but at last, when their supply of provisions had run out, when their ammunition was getting low, and famine and suffering was staring them in the face, they began to lose all hope, and seriously thought of surrendering. Just when their suffering had reached its height, and human endurance was well nigh worn out, they saw, on the mountain top beyond, a soldier waving a signal flag. Eagerly they watched the mes, senger, and eagerly they read the welcome message, hold the fort ; lam coining. Slier man." This communication raised their drooping spirits—hunger and fatigue were forgotten—like men they did "hold the fort," and the rescue came. ATTENTION, STREET LOAFERS —For some time pAt th'e police have been trying to break up the crowds of loafers, who congre gate on the sidewalks and street corners : but their efforts were futile, and the nuisance had grown to such an extent that the Town Coun cil were forced to take the matter in hands, and they meet the case in the following sen sible style: "Notice to Street Loafers.—ldle young men and boys, who have acquired the habit of congregating OR the Sidewalks, on the West side of Fifth street, from Penn street to the Methodist Church, and on Fourth street from Penn to Allegheny sts., and at other localities within the Borough limits, are notified that they are liable to arrest for violation of a Borough Ordinance ; and as this nuisance has become almost intolerable and a matter of daily complaint on the part of some of our citizens, all parties HOW offending in this man ner will he committed to the Lock Up, and if necessary, to the County Jail, for the period of ten days, for each and every offense. "H. G. FISHER, "Chief Burgess." _ . A UNION SABBATH SCHOOL CONVEN TION will meet in the Union Presbyterian church, near MeAlevy's Fort, Monday, Febru ary 7th, at 7 o'clock, P. B. The following subjects are suggested for discussion : What constitutes success in the Sabbath School work? Opened by Mr. David Dunn. The duty of personal, pointed dealing with children, respecting their conversion ? Open ed by Rev. J. D. Thomas. Should teachers expect and seek for imme diate conversion of their scholars? Opened by K. A. Lovell, Esq. Should lesson papers be used in the class by either teacher or scholars ? Opened by T. W. Myton, Esq. What is the best method of conducting teachers' meetings ? The increased importance of the Sabbath School, in view of the determined efforts to banish the Bible from our schools, and other. wise oppose the religion of Christ. A black-board exercise will be conducted by S. W. Collom, Esq. Sabbath School workers and all arc request. ed to be present. Accommodations will be provided for all from a distance. J. M. ADAIR, J. C. WILHELM, I. HECKMAN, A. A. KERLIN, Fouts OE THEM !—On last Saturday evening the proverbially quiet village of Shir leysburg, this eounty, was startled from its lethargy by the announcement that Mrs. Daniel Berkatresser, of that place, had given birth to four babies—a quartette of little boys l The report was considered incredible for awhile, but it was soon verified by Dr. Stine, the at tending physician. We have heretofore heard of similar occurrences, but this is the first time that the phenomenon has been produced near our doors. The babies only lived a few minutes after birth, a fact much regretted by Mr. Berkstresser ; but in extenuation of this "regret," we must just mention that Mr. B. is the owner of a productive farm, and is there fore better prepared than most people to bring up four boys all at once.—Mt. Union Times. A PASTOR SURPRISED.—Rev. B. F. Clarkscn, pastor of West Harford Circuit, was very agreeably surprised last Tuesday night at his residence, Jarrettsville, by the arrival of a number of ladies and gentlemen, mem bers of his congregation at Ebenezer, bearing with them a set of parlor furniture, and pro visions in abundance, and having with them three experienced cooks who soon prepared from their baskets a very sumptuous enter tainment, which was enjoyed by all present. After spending a few hours of pleasant and social converse, aid having some delightful music from the organ, with singing, they re turned to their homes feelinggreatlybenefitted by their visit.—llarford Co. [Md.] paper. MEETING OF TIIE WORKING MEN.— A Stay Law and a Law Preventing the Waiver of Exemption Law.s. Advocated.—ln pursuance of a notice numerously posted, a large number of Working' .'.let met /it the Court liouo,e, on Fri.lay evening last, to hear the report of the Committee appointed at a previous meeting to suggest way; and means to benefit the work ing or laboring men. The attend:mew at the opening of the meeting was not as large as at the former tweeting, nail it was at first thoT;lit that Ilse meeting should adjourn over. Short, earnest and practical speeches were made by Mes,srs. Pollock, Weaver and Dar borrow. The latter gentleman urged in ef fect that the workingmen should act at once. That they were in the midst of one of the worst panics that had ever scourged the coun try and that their litt.e all conld he swept away from them in a day. That they should petition the Legislature at once to give them relief. That men should not be turned into the street houseless anti homeless when there is no opportunity afrorded for their escape.— That an Exemption Law, exempting at least a thousand dollars worth of property, should be passed. In the meantime the house filled up and Mr. H. Clay Weaver was called to the Chair, and D. S. Place appointed Secretary. Jir. l'ollock presented the following Report : Mr. President and Gentleman : Your committee, in pursuance of its appointment, at your prelimin ary meeting, have duly considered the question as stated in the meeting referred to, and do hereby respectfully report as follows: First. Tho condition of the Working People is such at this time as to awaken most serious sp preboosions in the minds of all right-thinking people. It requires no close observation to din cover that the tendency of the times and policy of our government is bearing down the working classes—pressing them into n trrow channels and a lower scale of existence. They aro borne down with burdens too grievous to be endured. Whilst they are being driven from service and employ ment on every hand, or the price for their Nervier, if employed at all, so reduced as to bring want and wee and misery to the home of the diligent work er. Labor is now rating at about what it brought before the war. The priced of commodities, large ly making up the necessaries of life, are almost twice that of ante war times. A debt of unknown dimensions rests upon us, the principal and inter est of which must ho paid by the industry of the nation. The very essence of your ability—your labor—is taken away, yet this enor•nous debt re mains the same, and your benumbed energies are always taxed the same to Inc. t it. and not only this, but the men holding and enjoying all these benefits of this dead wealth are exempt from bear ing any part of these burdens. Your debts and your taxes remain imt war rates, and these too your lwarfed energies must satisfy. Look where you will you find those who presume to be your mas ters combining, and cutting and shaping to suit themselves to increase their honors and profits at the cost and charges of you whose votes and labor place them where they stand. Where do you hear of the reduction of the salaries or fees of public officers, or the rates of charges by the gigantic corporations of your nation, or the rates of inter est paid for the use of money? Would not justice reduce all of these as well as your laborfrom which all of these are directly or indirectly paid? The partisan leader, in the political campaign, tells you he loves the workingman, and for him he lives and for him he will die. Put when did you ever hear of any of these affectionate gentlemen departing to the great unknown on account of justice being denied to the workingman? The great and good immortal Lincoln said to one of his friends: •'Sitting hero as I do, where public patronage centres as in a knot, it seems to me that the seven-eighths of the people were trying to find out how they could live off the one-eighth." Mr. Lincoln, no doubt, believed this was true, but had he inquired into the character or those inveterate bores he would have discovered no carpenter, nor blacksmith, nor stone-niasou, nor honest mechan ic br worker of any kind in that crowd, hut the men who pressed so sorely on the great-hearted President were those too proud to work and too lazy to steal. If there are forests to be removed the hand of industry does it. if the soil is to be mixed •mud mingled and turned over, from which comes that food that gladdens moan's hteirts and gives strength to his frame, the hand of industry does it. If the hills are to be leveled or the val lies raised, or. the waters bound to the instruments of man's genius, the hand of industry does it. From the hovel to the palace. from the bed of straw to that of the downy pillow—From the crust, of bread to the luxuries of lordly mansions, the nand of in dustry is recognized. But, on the other hand. who has sorrow and !nisery, who suffers from want and are scorched wi•h din t and pinched with cold ? Who fights the battles of your country and pays the expenses of weir? Your laborers, your work ing people. Your congressmen and State legisla tors combine in cliques and rings, politicians arc bound in leagues, corporations combine, men of wealth combine, and for what ? For strength, for advantage, to filch from the hand of the wealth producer. All this is to detract from yours and heap up their own unrighteous gain. Will you, our working friends, continue to gather the crumbs that fall from the rich man's table? 'Tis true it were better for you to do this than to lift up your eyes from the place ho did, but we are not incli ned to think that a further remove from the con dition of Lazarus would necessa-ily increase the sinners of our nation. J. I'. While all the great and mighty institutions of the land combine for strength shall the worker fight on singly and alone? Thus he is but a mere tool in the hands of his enemies to be manipu lated for pleasure their benefit and profit. We do not ask for you the rights ofothers. We ask only for justice. We do not ask for you the right of aggression. We ask only that the ag gressions of others cease and undue privileges be taken away. But our requests nre unheard. Your vo:ces are buried in the blight of self interest. The pur chaser of your labor sets the price and yott take it or starve, the seller of commodity sets the price of that and you can pay it or starve. But how will you protect yourselves you ask? Wo say to you, combine. You say you are weak. So you are. But you w'll never be strong individually, nor any stronger than you are now. But combine and your strength and influence will grow, pro vided your principles be correct and broad liberal and even broad enough to include the very enemies of your industries, when they repent and turn from the error of their ways. Thus far your committee has indulged in notice ing some of the conditions of your lives and some of the surrounding circumstances. The capital of the workingman is his skill. It is a good capital if employed profitably, and the owner is rich. The owner of money capital is in the same condition, if he can employ it profitably be is rich, if not he is poor, very poor. What you want then, is employment, and your committee believe that the only way to obtain that employment is through your own efforts.— By such a combination that will provide funds sufficient to obtain ground and power. We further believe that the interest of the working people and the public generally are more highly promoted by the operation of many small operations than by one very large one. For the purpose of making a permanent organization and putting it into prac tical working order we recommend that a com mittee be appointed to draw up articles of asso ciation and rules and regulations by which the as sociation shall oe governed. That the name of the association shall be styled the "Huntingdon Power Association." That after the association is permanently or ganized there be issued no less than six hundred certificates of stock at ten dollars per share, and that each owner of certificates have the privilege of paying for the certificate of stuck within six months after the organization is effected, that when there is 3000 paid in the association shall proceed to select ground and erect buildings, and so soon as there is sufficient amount paid an en gine of suitable capacity be purchased, that all contracts for work be at cash prices and made by specific and carefully drawn agreements and no debts shall be contracted until there is cash in hand to meet them, everything shall he done on a cash basis. And further after the works are in operation to the expenses of running the power there be added 3 per cent on tho invested capital and all accumulations of capital not required for enlarging or improving the works of the associa tion be l.aned to members of the association or to those using power, on security approved by the officers of the association at a rate of interest not exceeding 3 per cent. And again, so soon as the success of the asso ciation is assured advertisement, be inserted in several papers offering these superior inducements to skilled mechanics to locate here. And thus we have drawn this outline of the plan we propose for your consideration and ask of you its approval. Wo have drawn it thus mi nutely as the idea is now and somewhat novel. We do not recommend an institution by which a few can live as parasites of the many, but a great, liberal, unselfish concern by which men hav ing skill and industry may have the use of cheap and constant power, and thereby enable them to sell not their labor only but the products of their labor, and be out of the reach of the caprice of whoever may please t• exercise it upon them. Your committee also recommend that the work ing people use every effort to bring the business of the community to a cash basis, believing when this most wholesome and reasonable principle be adopted you will be relieved from a thousand mis eries you now endure. By the credit system you are lured into snares and misled by delusions, and you wake up to'a sense of your true condition only when in the iron grip of an unrelenting creditor. By the credit system the shrewd man spreads far beyond his foundation, but he falls, and while he may escape himself to others there is common wreck and ruin. The workingman is first to feel the misery of whatever wrong is done in the na tion, no matter from whom or what source it comes. Under the credit system business at one time rushes like a torrent, at others it rests like the calm-cursed ship on the bosom of the motion less ocean. By the credit system you are taxed and swindled by ways innumerable; by it the honest worker is fleeced at every corner of his exchanges. Under a cash system there may not be so much business done—yet we do not believe such would follow—but there would be no losses, and so much business would not be required. But how pleasant would your slumbers be when you could say in truth you owed no man anything.— Markets would never be overstocked nor panics fall upon you. To enable you to conic to a each system it is important for you to adopt measures by which you may he elialtieil to obtain the nervy caries of iito ,it es near (test as possible. We woild therefore reemetnimil that a 41,.111'111t tee i,t; ;lpioinntrii to consider the best means of ar riving at a cash system, and by what mewls the working people may obtain the necesseriem or life at the smallest cost. We would alto recommend that the saute committee consider the expedieney of building, the cost of and isilvistitti4e of a palaic market house iii the borough of Hunt Your committee had alna eonnider Won the water question, and rotative to it. we woohl ree.oa mend that a moil nitre° be, appointed w dory it shall Le to kepis., from what point a supply of water, and the nest weter for every purpose, may he mina advantageoualy obtained, what. kind of pow, may i,e. inuAt. a •vitinageou-if employed for .devating the water, what proportion of the work may he actually done by the people of iluntinis don, what will he the cost of putting water into one street and into every strset in the borough, and obtain the names of all those who would be willing to pay for the use of water. To make such a full a,,1 c ittiplete examination an will ena ble the committee to Ity before you a report an will give a clear and unmistakable idea of the plan and cost of this needed addition to your town. We do not fix the time when the work shall eommenee, but as it will require a year or more to prepare for it, the sooner the beginning he made the sooner we will enjoy the pleasure of the spout ing fountain, and we would further recommend that said committee bare their calculations of in terest on money borrowed for the building of said water works at a rate not greater than 5 per cent. The last recommendation that we have to make is that y u take measures towards has iag a stay law passed by our legislature. We believe that such a law would he a wise metsure, at this time, provided it would be so framed an to protect all alike. We believe it would be so regarded by that clans—the creditor class—against whom it would operate, because we believe most of them are good and kind-hearted men, who are willing to give their distressed but honest debtor time to save, for his own benefit, the result of years of labor end toil, and because pro! erty sold by the force of law brings but a tithe of its real value, thereby leav ing the debtor an imbecile debtor and the creditor with a just claim unpaid. All thin writes from the work of one hard-hearted credit, in * commuuity who pushed for his claim to the exclusion of all others, and the better hearted creditor, mach against his will, must become as relentless as the most bitter enemy of man. ("rider ordinary cir cumstances stay laws would be unwise. When business was fairly prosperous men should not contract debts they cannot pay, but where the most industrious and economical citizen is brought to the very gulf of ruin by wrong not his own, and when the homes of those who have made your town what it is, are being taken from theta and the owners thrown back to the time when they enjoyed youthful vigor to begin again the battle of life, a sound stay law would he most certainly wise. We would not have you entertain for a in, nicnt the idea of providing any scheme by which the law would cancel your obligations. We only ask that the hand of the relentless creditor he stayed, giving you time until trade assumes its wonted features, thereby enabling you to be hon est to yourselves and honest to your more charita ble, creditors. And, therefore, we woul.: recom mend that, you prepare petitions to our legislature, and obtain names, asking that a stay law be en acted. And thus your committee having. at considera ble length, considered such measures as they be lieve will advance the int , rests of the working people, we humbly submit this, our Report. Pending a motion to lay the Report on the table until Friday night two weeks hence, and that it be printed in the meantime, re marks were made by Messrs. Lytle, Durhorrow, Boyer and Pollock. The motion was unan imously adopted. Several committees were appointed, the most important of which was to get up peti tions to the Legislature, praying that body to pass a Stan` Law, and to exempt property to the amount of $l,OOO. A meeting, at the Court House, was arranged fur next Friday night, to enable all, who desire, to sign peti tions praying for the above stated object. A.CI3ICULTIJRAL MEETINO.—Tbe Hun tingdon County Agricultural Society mzt in the Court house on Wednesday evening, 12th inst. The Treasurer's report was presented, read and approved, from which it appears that there remains in the hands of the Treasurer a cash balance of $61,91, with $71,90 to collect on sales of lumber. The following resolution, offered to Theo 11. Cremes, was adopted : Resolved, That the PreAident and Secretv ries of the Society he authorized and directed' to ascertain the whole amount of indebtedness of the Society, and to issue certificates (dins. debtedness to each of the persons to whom the Society is indebted, such certificates to bear interest or otherwise, as they may think best. [We published the list of officers last week—ED.] IMPORTANT TO SCHOOL DIRECTORS.— State Superintendent Wickersham,. in his report submitted to the Legislature, says that section 6, of the act of April 20, 1874, applies to school directors, and it is their duty to comply with its provisions. We quote from the section : "The corporate authorities of every such municipality or district shall annually, in the month of January, prepare and publish in at least two newspapers of said municipality or of the county iri which the same is situate, if so many be printed therein, a statement show ing !n detail the actual indebtedness, the amount of the funded debt, the amount of the floating debt thereof, the valuation of taxable property therein, the assets of the corporation, with the character and nature thereof, and a neglect or failure to do so shall be a misde meanor, punishable by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars." REMEMBER THIS.—Now is the time of the year for Pneumonia, Lung Fever, Coughs, Colds, and fatal results of predisposition to Consumption and other Throat and Lung di sease. BOSCHEE'S GERMAN SYRUP has been in this neighborhood for the past two or three years without a single failure to cure. If you have not used this medicine yourself, go to your druggist's S. S. Smith, and ask him of its wondrful success among his customers. Two doses will releive worst the case. Ifyou have no faith in any medicine, just buy a Sample Bot tle of Boschee's German Syrup fur 10 cents and try it. Regular size Bottle 73 cents. Don't neglect a cough to save 75 cents. eow. CITURCII DEDICATION.—The new M. E. Church, at Three Springs, will be dedicated D. V. Sunday, January 30th, at 10/ o'clock, A. M. Among the ministers expected to be present, are Rev. Dr. Harmon of Dickinson College, Rev. G. W. Miller, of Bellefonte, and Rev. M. K. Foster, P. E. A cordial invitation is extended to all former Pastors, and to the public in general, to be present. By order of the Committee. A CARD.—Mr. Editor, permit we in your paper to express my thanks and the thanks of my family to the members of the McConnellstown congregation fo: their kind remembrance of us, by a liberal donation, in which they not only remembered the family wants, but also the wants of the Pastor's horse. May the Lord help them abundantly with tempo:al and spiritual blessings. GOVERNMENT AWARD.—The Fair banks Scale was again successful at Washing ton on Tuesday, and secured the patronage of the Post Office Department for another year. Quality, not price, is said to have settled the verdict in their favor, and the repeated ap proval of the United States Government must be very satisfactory to the Vermont scale makers.—Evening Post, Jan. 15. For loss of cud, horn ail, red water in cows, loss of appetite, rot, or murrain in sheep ; thick wind, broken wind, and roaring, and for all ob§tructions of the kidneys in horses use Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powdera. W. K. CRITES has purchased the Tobacco Store heretofore conducted by James E. Port, No. 105, 4th Street, and will continue on at the old stand. The best brands of cigars, to bacco kc., kept constantly on hand. An Irishman called at a drug store to get a bottl3 of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment for the Rheumatism ; the druggist asked him in what part of the body it troubled him nnst, "Be me soul," said he, "I have it in ivery bout and corner cc me." This is to give notice that all citizens troubled with Cough or Cold should at once procure a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Price, 25 cents. The Maintenance of Health. The maintenance of healt't it of.cn acute difficult than it: recover, .n , li Lions, extremes or heat or cold. rtn.l c•m•itant exposure to rough weather. are all many provocations of disease. There hat (.00 sure war of effectua'ly sy. , tem when thus subjected to influence., pr judicial to health. and that is to cAtalill4li.hy jwijej.mi t.,1,10. arid :11ter.olve inedication, viior of the body arid rc•zularity of it , function , . The properties of an invigorant and corrective are happily combined in Hostetter's Stomterh (litters, which, at tl e same tirae that it in fuses unwonted vitality into the stem. over cowl all tendency of the sto-narh, liver bowels and urinary organs to deviate from regularity in the discharge of functions upon which the welfare of the entire physicial or ganization is dependent. Ilealtli cannot he more effectuaily maintained than by using the hitters. Jan. 7-Im. Ht NTINIK)fri AND D To op I; %11, ROAD—Rrpori of CO/11 Shipp4: r moo For week ending Jan. 11, 1,174 Same time laAt year increa3e for week ~ Decrease for week Total amount gh:ppeil to date. 6329 Same date lnQt year $93A Increase for year 1175, Decrease Some people talk temperaoc, nt home to their peiglihors and frien,ls. hcv when they fv , from horn , ' they are certain to atop at a !i -,ena,d home. This is ronsi.frney. yoa want to encourage temper ince, Atop with J. G. Boyer at the Franklin !loose. A Brig etiti /Oa AST/ :ilowArn Virortiv. Dr. Ilmtehinson's Vort,sl,l, Worm DwAty, Price, 25 rents a hot. For !air by Prtr,iri•t4 and Storekeepers. A. W. '' right A c , , Wholesale Priggish. MarkPt and Front :4 t Philadelphia. [nov3—gm Mits. E. M. StmoxsoN, f.rnieriy E. M. Africa, ha.i just returned front Philadel phia, with a handsome assortment of hat.'. choice goods and novelties of the 4.•ason. All arc invited to call. rorncr of Fi th and Penn Sts., Huntingdon, Pa. tf. RDECM.ITI:43I, Nrrriar,.34, Lesnieno, tcrwrivirrr Gorr, SCIITiet , Nalltlqrs and *MT/ fhellette. vaereebeei cured by Dr. Firt.ra'a ItiflrMATlc ftr.lsr.Dy. JOHN ILE.ID £ SONS, Sole *gents for ihntinrim ,onnry, American Genius. Moody & Sankey. The great resiralintn, Meese, Mealy moot *Jokey, who staid old England with their el.. in- rice and on thilAi.m, are fair namples of American genies. springing front among the common people, their vyinpathiew are alive to the want.; of Me whole people, and herein lies the secret of their great vivre... Thom. who seek to be tar moot study ant he familiar with the waists of the maiweii, and prose loyal thereto. thin fact we tawy trace the grand starter. in bnnine.4, an well at in religion. undertakings, which many .tmeric.trin It tr Strikingly illustrative of th , -4a nuggenti.,.. in that great establi•hmert, located at Soffalo,,l. T., awl kriwri oath "Worbri Itispennary,"—a most appropriate 11311,, in.lensl, f or that cast institution, within whose walls tow mann facture!' remedies which are in demand in ovary quarter of the globe, and at which a corp.; dietinguinh• .1 phy sicians an.inorgeonn, under the personal diretion of in.- Pierce, are constantly adminintering to the n• alt of thousands of puff everywhere, and who, quirt,. in thelreatment ..f all forms of chronic isilmen!. haat...me no Well known that thPro it scarcely a h unlet in the land in which hi. name in not familiar. Its proprietor, says the If rald and Torchlight, of Detroit, "es a wan of the people, writes for them, and to them tenders his em inent profesnional sprvicen." His advertinementn are earnest exhortationa. Like the great revivalists, kin en_ tlinsiasm is multipliwl by the unparalleled goer.. of enterprise, no well at by the eflleacy of his renwatiea to curing diseane. The people hefier, in Aim an.l hi. rm. limo, hecanse, at the New York Trihone nay.. "hn nymme thigen with Clem in all their :afflictions, effort• and attain ments." Hence, Dr. l'ierc..*4 Golden Medical 11:nneorery in to-day more largely employal as a blotel an.l liver medi cine, and also as a cough reunnly, than any other reme dial agent in the world. His Favorite Fr'-wription, he does nut recommend as a "cure all," as in at often done by compounder...of worthless, humbug nnatrnm, but for all disea.ses and weaknetwas peculiar to women it how proved itself so much of a specific that it now enjoy great popularity and nniversal confidence. Dr. Pierre'. Pleas ant Inchoative Pellets, "scarcely larger than ninetaPl seed, - have proved no aggreeable and reliable a,' a ea thartic that they are rapidly taking the place of the large nitue,.ns pill, heretofore no much in while his tom: pound Extract of Smart-W.4A i• a firoril.• reataly for Colic, Cramps, Summer-complaint, Diarrha-t, Dysentery, (7holera, Cholera Mortls, and also as a liniment. tit , Dr Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and Dr. Pierre's Naval Doweh•, little need be said, as they are known everywhere, as the greatest specifics for ('atarrh and "cold in the heed," ever given to the public. Anil beside.' this large miswrite of success, Dr. Pierce seems likely to achieve as a great re nown as an author VI he has as a physician. lli. ensvans SENSE ManicAL A ovulate, a book of abont page., which he sells at the unparalleled low price of 'L.'s% has already been sold to the extent of exhansting two eslitionsamosset ing to forty thousand copies,. The secret of lie. Pierre's success, as well as that of the great revivalist, and scores of other Americans, who by their genius advanced step by step from obscurity Anil affluence and distinction. con sists in treating the people with consideration, sympathy . candor, and honesty. No man, who hopes to attaineitber wealth or distinction, can affori to deal nnfeiriy with the world or be indifferent to the wants and best interests of humanity. The American News Co., of New York. have changed their Bookseller's Guide to the Ameri can Bookseller, and issue it semi-monthly at $l.OO at year. It presents a very neat appear auce. The American Stock Journal.—Perhaps the cheapest farm periodical is the Afiscricaa Stock Journal. It is a 32 page monthly, devoted especially to Stock and Poultry Breeding. Dairying, Wool Growing, Bee Keeping, Farm ing, Veterinary Science, and other kindred subjects, in fact it contains a fund of valuable information that the farmer and stock breeder should not be without. MI who subscribe now will receive the back numbers for Octo ber, November, and December as a centennial premium. Subscriptions only One Dollar a year. Sample numbers, club rates, premium lists, etc., sent free on application. Address Potts Brothers, Parkesburg, Chester I 'Minty, Pa. The 11103 t sensible way of disposing of a lengthy, enthusiastic and flowery salutatory. is that resorted to by The liwacian and Artut, a new musical magazine, published by Edward A. Samuels, Boston, Mass. He says: "We have written a salutatory, a long. enthusias tic, flowery salutatory., and— have filed it away in a deep pigeon-hole of our desk." We have confidence in the judgment of an editor who could do such a heroic deed, and it wia in crease that confidence to find that lie has the greater heroism to—leave it there. $2.00 a year, and every subscriber receives the two beautiful chromos, "The Pic-nic," and "An Afternoon on the Lake," each 12:17 inches, well finished, and very attractive. Single Nos. of Magazine 20 cents. The first number of the Chrietan forme has been received. It is a neat 32 page maga zine, published at 37 Park Row, N. V., by Rev. Thomas H. Pollock at $l.OO a year. It pro poses to correct errors of all kinds in see,ety, advocates prohibition of the the liquor tragic, favors The Bible in the public schools, and is fierce in its opposition to Secret `societies. so called. It strikes us that there is a considera ble amount of valuable time and energy spent. in the direction of reforming the supposed heathen and infidel practices of Secret trrders. which might he profitably employed in other directions, where evils really do exist, and re forms are needed. There is a geld of useful ness large enough for the work of this Patriot. and where all its energy will be needed, with out dividing it and spending a part on work so useless and A. G. DOLE. Messrs. Wm. Wood t Co.. New Turk, fur nish the medical profession with several of the most valuable periodicals. New Remedies, heretofore a quarterly, is hereafter to he a monthly journal of 32 pages, same size as the Medical Record ( Tax lOi inches). Their Jour nal of Obstetrics will remain as heretofore, a large quarterly. This is the most valuable journal of this kind published, or furnished, in this country. It is really a book of over 200 pages, every page of which is carefully written by experienced practitioners. The Record has been issued for a year as a weekly, and is a necessity with many thonsand physi cians. Its eminently practical character strongly commends it to all who do not care to spend their time theorising, or reading the often useless theories of others. All these periodicals commend themselves, and are abundantly worthy of the extended popularity they have attained. The publishers club them on very favorable terms. LITERATURE. ,iv. Jot, t +l,or. rio.• ••• •;iyotrr fry..w.no. Sy M oir I A. Fw.m.ri. V.r!Nt.,4 4 , : M ,•• .43iiritt • , r •• nt. t) , .•w...1 !lye - ntarkshf. y!,.ro: of the f.m• 11.11 Whitton , • by Pot, r It:syn.. ..vonwetwory Nwron.. The I it ter,. ivy I s a by W. W. :4tnry Ithori,r..4l; Wye* he dish 7 1 •Irp•ro it Prtreflio. Pr'it. , A. • : An.. ,11 1 , 10 e, loottry my rvisktw MI torethor very ni.f:t..fivo Hid Vol likhlo v. 110, f e w t W th hity-fott Yaw% name--. .yr arity. ftrillr !air ••• tiitaxr. estr . t. rgzr-votr-ig , over moo irtge; 3 a i-..rp the inhorrlmmt pces , f4Ciott inw err will hetter. fur $19.1 0 . soy ogee ;Of th* .1111.1" i rin $4 111110mfbiite, tat weatithear jyy oyes with no Larrni Ayr for 3 year hoth pootpeir4 The pre..ef i• the w..bie womb., of the new r-sr sod two rotor... * Ger. Pot:trait. are rho prnAfigh•r•. tik. Rea4kr• airo4 frio.fa tho. A ;.t. 51..1 •••• leans that 0. FV , .•01 . -1 vwf'.ll .b. ', mi ." me o w fit. «wt• hon.. wirtyliewoll of J. N. P.O. a Ce. the iettp , r.w• 4twittiorvo 111.4.11motwel rg • , innery - Klmyrt N Nlgibr. •,1 itsr•-• Pswitt who.* •mt volume. boo- w00.,,y, app•ifol .4 Pew ..1,4 7wo p er. .. m ee 11.11...) of ?h. flood rwltowot are lino to type. wit! • pr/otenwf /4 .p...1y oomplotioly. re. wwilloresow ttwore of art/ priht.•46.4 , * !trey. •Ilwrafivre , awe afro..t.•l itn , ter skits*. tit - sox - twit.. at Montt rosy hot jo•lgfr4 from tint faot term ann. 2rt.nal Igo 111‘..470140 rriPerf• of o.3ifts• a0..9111y moneyortoot wok rho foot. low many nil, posy. Hite .16.0 form; pow 1,122, T a ,owtoto onmrter morfehew wifely... Mr. Knithf., ivy .h. way. tototortt. IMO " I f r'"P'''''S to iftflvo 'lt. qtr.. ..f ;twee tint, go whittle dm mow •vtotoet, wiry , flosseilitry irty•ntiow hoe ;nom •votot fIY. yotme.r Antahl M Witirnmit britta , i”3l mortmg anyetwow. mop tet.l I, •••PY.l.ennos sews. of hoe thottovo•l. ifpormwtt. vied Nadir •sr4 of rhea • hoarnlnh if its ism ',Hey poem. w ism •imowy.ivt. rose. Aim thew hwv. 4 1 1.4 owe inyfortio plow i• m 04414— Ity ..mtirmatitirt sit else , laietatiett Hit , rf twitting ny 'chine+ an 4 sersebesome. p.tented is 'b....Wry freer If.1“-sarySI. 1 4 12. Marty, 9. 147:. whir* ...pee ' , iv smell a VIM/ timely print.* p .•„.• efe , e.„..apier ,•• triple ..1n... • tne , (meteor.. • , se• M. IN..* owl ..r prsPro.-•i es , teee alviverre...l refry -of .nolov•vir. *PP 6 aI•. .•PP."••••rni !. • pre... %Ire pie,•.vrter l. hy. , or e lee pr.._ ploeirove , " his v... i•••••enee ,, . -- Thprw fv, le. than , n f. I irtl 9fPir wee! i nd•spi ap,stte•mi nn• her envi,retieeepoee ••r! • leefeee.!sr. meneverii * lior• 4( graph*. se4 sigte.% •Peee •• a ;Iwo, 'Sof titefftieveweel• ',Tr,. • 4n. Permiwate. Roseit enure woe •P••••• ne we—eel ,n ,•• HUWTINGDOII lIIIUSTI W. 4111, 118.,r- f • p. A...wry i. linpnrilln. 76. w Eters r.,•or Faxes I y Moat ..... . W Rll~ .. Ptak p..? Port. y Prim- r Ifirmwan p.r p.moot p••• to•b4 111.44 . . . . p moat rm.!. APles4 c",rii %Nei p ' we 1 • -• s .tpipt.• p p . • . 11...0....... ... _____ 0 Alt• , g. kfrr - 1. :111P Lim p 7. Roe ... ..... .. ... . _ ... ..... ___. _. Is , art.' ' , whims, IPIPPieI .t.t. rw•F IS P , Kne• ...I p bir 111.4,,...w WIWI 1P1.4.1. 11 Fre gr..... 11. - .3 .., .... _ 4111 Mew W ~ .,1. oweireshwil.- ;nerve Itm , •thy .7.....1, ipo AP peak _____ _.. . : •'. New York Reek& Norw T•ven : Jae. !•' I wrt aPI • 74.1 7 eni I I : 11 4 i . wow. 11 4 1. '47, En pi . go.. 11+):T.rii erstrs4 se..i A *4_ 1 04 i: Erie. 14: ,isms Stymy*. 1e!".4 Wiehires 11.-hirsis restrisi. 97 : cleveles4 sois. Pletameilb. )4i: AD I R , 1.-k 11•13s4. 1147: reeelloorT6 20.11 F . ..rt W.., n.. 14,40 Wooers r•e.. -..- .4111.....- Philladelphia Stork:. Pmts v.. Jen r* 1....11 • frt. P.nn•y I•s•ta 112: Plbells4.l phut iss4 2ef Rnotisir..”l: rnmeryrvae... 344: irof.i. 1121:N.netb...rs rostra? rie Lotosi. Lobigh V a11.v.4:1: 941 l'enrral Tr.ssopnrtassmo. 414: 1%1 Eno*. Ilia weed 4,11 • for•tir :_t•.:!tey ik i I . 51. Trail,' Market P3111..A cr•r las. Pi. tee fee rwiee4.1145174.- te. Pre4e. Peer inept, b.t fiat bate ettaaralla ttaatiy: astern family se Pesterel ••nie at Mats : gr.*. st 1170411. A. Rye emu at Si. Wheat Iris. .s 4 rs ieteer se le.ot Preneyte esa r iat Si-L.31.M. atabat at ta.t!era ta.l at it...ad 01. Re* at tieSS. Core levet. het st•e•iy. yeileve at .A. 1114. %es weak in price .44 lektent et 17thert for sinew . lZati r far wee.i. ireisky $l.ll :ee "Pewees issue hoen.l. Or altar. l' IP F: —PIPE . t.l, 11th too .hi r her .1, ,1 Pet.r., Mr. Clifortro rim"? !. Mime Msr7 S. l'ip.rr, both of Alsttatidr is New To-Day. Twesty-Elsistle Alaosesaell Mew! elf THE PON MT= Ulf 1 RAW CORIPAK OFFICE. 923 CHESTNUT ST. ?SIVA. AJsets Jinn it, I. 4.1 RIO Elrrri. Nominal, rwewtv.-f.... $1.3 . 1.629.79 Inter. .t r.,•.:1 • I 417.1,0 :7 IWerry.lp.., went • not 4. 2.i 19: Aerruedi iit.e it s,nso rt viers P., I neves. in w rhse stoeks ow's , 0.41 11:4.=1, V! 111.1,111141 fa 1 , 1 4 11U1t. 4 1:111.*Nr 4 1,44.4 4.11 esdoirisonte pai , ll Joe, premeigue. e 4 .1, 4 71 id Surromirmi as 4 tow relle I pn , licie4 l4: al re-troinrancepa.4l..tbre f.MIII pan teP . onlarpr an.i ripen.* t 11: *: i. • 1 .I,ivertissug. priatlag. tutrol:rail 14.1140 i Tate.. tieenr,s, a.. 1 :0- %41 Ise,lll/.71 At lissritet • •Iso. AS6 KTS, J.n. I, 1.74. United Stars+ Boa*, gose4 other stu•kt A A... 1 loans ....... 1.:7111,1177.14 34..rtigor, sail gnosis.' rm., opus pniperty appro..' at Cs..lU -240, sli first 1i0n...... Id: I Isosrgi lby 4,;• Premium a.m.* suit Loose soronstil by .-.1- I,opral 4:4,11116 I; C.sh us litso4 sod to trust compatriots Seri p iii• idosdr Ihskl by 1.. - .M B.atance Un bawls opt 1 7 1133.14 .% 1 1 .t t 134.411111. I I l8ILITIE: 4 . Loom.' ►.p..►tl. bat yet .11u. Re',Tye •t 4 eest, ter,t, rrpsire.l lawn. ..ststandiiig resit* 14...13.1114 110 Seri p yet oetstanJittig... :13.11Z0 tia gorplao to policy looLikero, .1 per east. basic— 7 17,91.14 Sorptso to polloy kokbes, 4i per coat. basis 1. 0 43.11111.31 Total paathor of poltroon latooOl la 1 4 73 Pollak.* hi fore* Jaw I, 1474 9S4S Menem of nob, e4.1*.053 IS SAMITIL C. HUNT. "044 , 40.4. SAM t' IM frfOlt IT. t. .INUL WIWI .11.-nowry 11F.`ittir _ FOR FIN ND FANCY PIItINTLI6 ao to tkoiooosoLollow N.w► .UT, M. ►l. 1101111 E. 32$ PENN Avgirtrz, PM•ifirr.",;l PI • • ft 'a... saw •411.1.• I,IIP- MIA 1 ELVET MM. hriv••••. sew; • fistr warm SIcII,I,IENE I Irk Tr:l, Mass sad BOINISIP. It WI 601,111 :11,Pnevw =AZ MIX SILOQUIMI, x r Fre INO en lA, 4.-... h., r. Fr, , 1574 3. 11.0-sp I 100-sp •r 3,1 '►AY J. Pr +W 1. ,Ells! 111! Wit 111 PARKER, MERCHA PIT TAILOR. 111 1.. 4 VP 4 0. smorl4 yr *nuir w. Vamsma wit •••••••-r. limit le Imo ....wev• • PENN NTIEZT. •rt 94.114.11 it NOM 4 Wyo. 011.4.4 1 .0 1.1111110., •••• .bst laratione to 4 swot F %:41110NAKII ••• .14.1 4' • • '• b 1...11111 _4 II VP 4 ni p.; b....N. alis4 11441 .111• PM. area LL $111) RZ %MTV! pm. inr asirt.v .-Tdt $r Removal! CLOTHINC FIPIC THE MILLION! T. W. MONTGOMERY. F.%: 4 111c0N %IMF. cure :v: IND •;F:3114" ItS1:01111116; CASIPOP ■M joie ...rt. 04 ... .t Mho taw spirto4 •••••• •wirr , -44pc.4 -to amalleseire. esoftinlowe NEN AID 11101r11 a.i flassoll r. il. tore Ilk-toserft edostwat Ve4.9obrre• as 4 Aso ihadla A.A.. 4fforthia.4ll6.•. M titv rampeaswee ••••••1111 wropy pow itairmimpot 4 4 , 151 e.g.% 116 . 1 .0 sa4 eastams 4 tuiptemiPre. (bilk it 4 owe listiolles tare.* owl *ft Itatillltio, OMR Mom. isismose JAW.. (.11%. assewso, PT., edit ion., Cud,aM ?...ograt 412.0, avt...t. it•• 1110.. 11,...1 Soo 11.• ors mot w. • *p i p • c•••••• woe not" Ow,. show Trositk 11126.4- d ik, Av.. WI *I rho.* I mill -Iwo" Orr ehatlll_ Nowise poorilesse sr psi rtrirdip tirim .be aiiefairterere, sera ,r. ftwilb. iMI pittpoteill ti wit Awl" sai.4 Its , we* why Piwasiss 1110wIloi1 psawfime• may of Ito abb , ... gp0.4.. fedi 4 ob Mew billyeetaip. ••• -ea ....diem vow dp.01.«. bee wairibormv Sh.• t roost* Ale CORNIER or /ITTII AID W.Lili -- 11610:11 9TIULICT.I. ev.ir .4-arm 14.•,.71,114 Travelogs' Odic_ pv.33sTiormitii RAIL 11.1.1110 rive » Lawrine se. es' 5c..7: z awry is, W.& 0 .4 ra • • 5 01 -g; " "!' ' 4l ' . " •. a • a a. a a 1 a a • • • • 4P4 _ IS Na , limmana---tMf 11 r. 44 , IS 111: 11111• flaaa- MOO a tssa 11 NV • INN _Ali Cr..* - y ON alb s .2 1.1 IN I' Ito Oronsitsititonit •• • • it. 11 .7. • milo ....__ 13 BS Prarnimalt • 1111• ._ • •• 1:2 Sour,. • it 3 la • 4 or sea is • 11 1 IN •60 - 11/0 4 • 3S - . • S 2 riR 7 1 .011.11* -- • 102 W ; - ISS 111341. • U __ 'illy 111. IS . • •1.11 9 VI re• 11..• rat all a. • - 114. rore Lama Illwaraap• 1••••• Ilawassaw r • Ilk ✓ arrwe... 10111wamaall t 110 r lb. Iltsomm t meat taw 1111meageno• US, • in. es* wrimPowee st.3o • ior Tao Pbbarba•••• Ilbeffabse 0/1x..710. ID rad swim. a `”rims ALM es rYTTN6 DON AID Ban D 1 1 1 W ainsanaa. is semi dim Aniiix 1111111111111111111$3. Traser well sow. woe Aiwa so me m. SMlrelltill tlta imegretow • ov, r • s.it r • r • Mss 7SP • SillimMillaseft-- • Sr 1101111mesp— .. • Ili ar C.W. Om— • IP as 0.10 mei • • Si& 0•••_ • as d• 11••••• 7 41i • S. NNW • I. 110 11111111~61 flk le IP to AN Pigmy , • Pi SO 1111•111Welle. am ti •sw~ . s *1 is ia aa= amme_____ • am , 11 s 11. eroms • Ilkiass . sat tt s 111.111111111111 • OS • - 1119•4117111 •VJ lagelire airtinv a• v. t niP 1.1.111111 a__. IV IP . lilt Csollueel 111 , Crwimbrd ss fie Pees. Are. I fs 1,47 CL T • I , P • 4 .611 ... iiserimer Filsodupper t; %wipe Pianism Phoriout illeorwre 161111.1111 1,6 r bag Sr- I "LEV. e 1 S. sew • • • • • • • • .► • f Saga Sow