The Huntingdon Journal. taut and ottothold. • Business Habits. There is probably not one farmer in ten thousand who keeps a set of accounts from which he can at any moment learn the cost of anything he may have produced, or even the cost cf his real property. A few farmers wholywe been brought-up to bt4ineas 14ittkeep stleb n. *centiAtti . , are able to tell hovi theiP a 1 airs . iirOiy.ress, l what each crop. each kind of stock, or each animal has cost, and what each pro duces. Knowing -these points a farmer can, to a very great extent, properly decide what ems growiaud what kind of sttiek, e`-will keep. - lle..will thus be able to apply his labor and money where it will do the most good. He can weed out his stock t an4ietain , only such animals as may. 138 kO l iitlf#ol - tffit• fot-tW *to:dr fluih knowledge, farMers continue, year after year, to feed cows unprofitable, and fre quently sell for less than her value one that is the best of the herd, because she is not known to be better than the rest. Feed is also wasted upon ill-bred stock, the keep of which costs three or four times that of well-bred animals-, which as has been prov ed by figures that cannot be mistaken, pay a large profit on their keeping. For want of-keeping .what they cost, poor crops are raised year by year at an actual loss, pro vided the farmer's labor, at the rates cur rent for common labor, were charged against them. : To learn that ho has baen working for 50 cents a day, during a num ber of years, while he has been paying for help twice as much, • would open the eyes of many a farmer who has actually been doing this, and would convince him that there is-some value hi fignres'and book accounts. It is not generally understood that a man who raises 20 bushels of corn per acre, pays twice as much for his plow ing sal harrowing ; twice, as much for la bor, and twice as great interest upon the cost of his farm, as a neighbor who raises 40 bushels per acre. Nor is it • understend that when he raises a pig that makes 150 pounds of pork in a year, that his pork cost, him . twice as much, or the corn he feeds brings him bat half as much as that of Isis neighbor, whose pig weighs 300 pouuds at a year old. If all these things were cleat , ' set down in figures upon a page in an accoantbook, and were studied, there would be notbaly a sudden awaken ing to the nprofitableneis of snail farming, but an immediate remedy would besought. For no person could resist evidence of this kind if it were once brought plainly home to him. If storekeepers, merchants, or manufacturers, kept no accounts, they could not possibly carry on their business, and it - is - only because the faimer's business is one of the most 'safe that lie can still go on working in the dark, and throwing away opportunities of bettering his condition and increasing his profits.--dmerican Agricul turist. Agricultural Chemistry and Geology: Q. Of what substance do the different kinds of grain usually consist ? A. They consist Chiefly of three sub stances : starch, gluten and oil of fat. Q. What proportion of each of these usually exist in 'heat ? A. One hundred pounds of wheat flour contains about 50 pounds of starch, 10 pounds of gluten, and 2 or 3 pounds of oil. Q. In what proportions do they exist in oats ? A. One hundred pounds of oats con tain about 60 pounds of starch, 1S pounds of gluten, and 6 pounds of oil. Q. What do potatoes and turnips prin cipally consist of ? A. Their principal constituent is wa ter. Q. How much water is contained in 100 pounds of pota(Oes A. One hundred pounds of potatoes contain about 75 pounds of water. Q. How much water is contained in 100 pounds of turnips ?. A. One hundred pounds of turnips con tain about 80 pounds of water. Q. What quantity of starch do potatoes contain ? A. One hundred pounds of potatoes contain from 15 to 20 pounds of starch. • Q. Are the proportions of starch, glu ten, etc., always the same in the same grain Or root ? A. No. Some varieties of wheat con tain more gluten than others, some varie ties of oats more oil than others, and some varieties of potatoes more starch than others: Q. Have the soil and climate any influ ence /Ton the proportion of the ingre dients? A. Yes. The wheat of warm climates is said to contain more gluten, and the po tatoes and barley grown upon light or well drained land, more starch. Q. When grain or potatoes are burned do they leave any inorganic matter or ash? A. Yes, they all leave a small quantity of ash, Q. Of what dues this ash oormist ? A. It mules of the phosphate of pot ash, soda, lime and magnesia, of common salt, and other saline substance.—[Profes sor Johnson. ARAB HORSE MAXI Ms.—Adirondack Murray, in his "Golden Rule," mentions these as Arab horse maxims: "Whoso raise(h and traineth a horse for the Lord is counted in the number of those who give alma, day and night, in private as •tvell as public. He will find his reward. All his sins will be forgiven him ; never will any fear come over him and dishonor his heart. Observe your horse when he is drinking at the brook. If hanging down his head he remains square, without bending his limbs, be possesses sterling qualities, and all parts of his body are symmetrically formed. Let your colt be domesticated and live with you from his tenderest age, apd when a horse he will be simple, docile, faithful' and inured to hardship and fatigue,. If you would have your horse serve you on the day of ttial, if you deairi him to be a horse of truth, make him sober, accustom ed to hard labor and inaccessible to fear. Noah Debolt. of Aleppo township, Greene county, 'died a few dap since, in the eighty-fourth year of his age. Scribner's Monthly 1876. SCRIBNER,'S MONTHLY. 1875. We invite the attention of the public to SCRIB .SIOXTHLY, which now deservedly ranks among the BEST ILLUSTRATED PERIODI CALS OF THE WORLD. The papers illustrative of American Scenery which have appeared in its pages, among which were included "The Wanders of the Yellowstt,m3" and the "Grand Canon of the Colorado," have won wide-spread admiration on both sides of the At lantic ; and .The Great South" articles, with their beautiful engravings, have been re-issued in book form in both Great Britain and America. For the coming year we have broader plans than ever before. The magazine Will be enlarged, and there will be Three Remarkable Serial Stories by American Writers. "GABRIEL CONROY," BY BRET HARTE, Of which the Boston Post says: "It is a serial that will make every new number of Scribner's eagerly sought fur, if it had nothing else to recommend it " The The Canadian Illustrated News predicts that "we have found at last the American novel" The Lonisvi)le Courier Journal says : "The second installment is even stronger than the first, justifying all that teas looked for." lye begin in January. “PFIILIP NOLAN'S FRIENDS,” BY EDWARD EVERETT HALE. This is an historical romance. The scene is laid in the South-west, at a time when that terri tiny was first Spanish, then French, and then American, and when war was emminent, to obtain the control of tho mouth of the Mississippi. It is likely to be the great romance of the . Mississippi Valley, as GABRIEL CONROY will be of the Pacific Slope. "THAT LASS 0' LOWRY'S," Br FANNY HOD(SON BURNETT. The friends of "Scribner" who have read "Sur ly Tim's• Trouble," "One Day at Arle." "The Fire at Grant - ley - Mills," and others of Mrs. Burnbtt's short stories, will not need to be assured that they have a rare treat before them. The scene of the new novel is laid in an English mining town, and from the first page to the last the interest is un flagging. Among other notable papers we mention the following : A SE COND"FA RMER'S VACATION," by CoL. GEORGE E. WARING, descriptive of a row boat ride of two hundred and fifty miles, in one of the most fertile and interesting of the vine-grow ing valleys of Europe—a region never seen by the ordinary traveler, but full of interest, in its social and industrial aspects. A rare collection of REV OLUTIONARY LETTERS. A SERIES OF IL LUSTRATED ARTICLES ON AMERICAN COL LEGES. The Series includes William and Mary, Harvard, Yale, Michigan Stare University, Wes leyan University, Amherst .Agricultural College, Princeton, Union, Bowdoin, Trinity, and other, typhial institutions of the country. Elegantly il lustrated articles on OLD NEW YORK,illustrated papers on'AMERICAN CITIES, tte. The editorial eontrol and direction of the Maga will remain in the hands of Dr. HOLLAND, .who will contribute each month editorials upon current political and social topics. Our readers may look to "TOPICS OF THE TIME" for healthy opinion, "THE OLD CABINET"' for pare sentiment; "HOME AND SOCIETY" for graceful economy; "CULTURE AND PROGRESS" for criticism; " THE WORLD'S WORK" for industrial intelli gence; "BRIC-A-BRAC" for wit and innocent pleasantry. Scribner's Monthly is now recognized, both in this country and in England, as the great repro- sontative American Magazine. Encouraged by the favor accorded to 'it by a generous public, we shall aim, during the Centen nial year, to eclipse its former achievements in both its Literary and Art departments. Scribner is sold by all Flasr-CLAss BOOKS'S': LEns and News-Dealers. PRICE $4.00 A YEAR; 35 CENTS A NUMBER. The 10 vols. complete, Nov. 1870, to 0ct.1875, maroon cloth • 520.00 • do. do. bound in half morocco 10.00 Vols. begin in November and May. Any of the earlier volumes (I to VIII) will be supplied separately to parties who wish to complete sets at this rate i. e., cloth, $2.00; half morocco, $3.00. DOOKSELLERS AND POSTMASTERS' will be supplied at rates that will enable them to fin any the aboveoffers. _ _ Subscribers will please remit in P. 0. Money Orders, or iu Bank Checks or Drafs, or by regis tered le:ters. Money in letters not registered at sender's risk. November and D'cember numbers free to all new subscribers for 1876. SCRIBNER & CO., 743 Broadway, NEW YORK . [Dec.l7-75-tf. Business College. 9 7- ie New Haven, Connecticut, FOR THE MERCANTILE TRAINING -OF YOUNG MEN, CHARLES R. WELLS, President. 11.E.N7?Y L. HILL, Secretary. Established in 1864. The most extensive, thorough and complete in stitution of the kind in the world. Eight thousand graduates of this.college now in successful busi ness in the principal cities and t6wnsof the United States. The Pat 1116 of ilficatiou for YEE Moll. Magnificent granite building, with elegantly fitted and furr.ished apartment's for the application of and carrying out of our novel and systematic method's of , BUSINESS TRAINING. Yonag men, who contemplate a business life, and parents having sons to, educate, are particu larly requested to serial for documents relating to the college, which give full information as to terms, conditions of entrance, etc. Address CHARLES R. WELLS, President, n0v3,'75-y] New Haven, Conn. Furniture and Carpets. SOMETHING NEW. TWO LARGE STORES MERGED INTO ONE! EXPE`7BES DECREASEL,PRICES REDUCED and greater convenience secured to customers. JAMES A. BRO IVY Thies plvasure in announcing to all who want to buy CARPETS & FURNITURE That having become Bole proprietor of the Fur niture store formerly owned by "Drown Ty huret,".he has combined with it his large Carpet Store and' • Tap LADIES Will be pleased now to find the CARPETS, as well as samples of FURNITURE on the first flour, without climbing stairs. My stock comprises a great variety of Kitchen, Chamber and Parlor Furniture, Mattresses, Picture Frames, Brackets, and the largest stock of CARPETS in Central 'reniasylvanis. Floor and Table Oil Cloths, Win dow Shades, Wall Paper, Carpet Chain, all colors; needles for Howe and - Other machines. Estey Organs; also Howe sewing machines at cost. I manufacture part of my goods in both the Carpet and Furniture Department, and please NOTICE TIM PACT,' That as I BUY LOW FOR CASH, and having made this new arrangement, reducing expenses, I can Lei' at such low prices as will make it the in terest of buyers to call at No. 525, Penn Street. Until March 10th, I offer AT COST, for cash, Wall Paper and a great variety of Carpets. 'Fcb.lo. JAMVS A. BROWN. Literary SOMETHING OF INTEREST TO THE OLD FOLKS, AND:TO THE BOYS AND GIRLS. THE BOSTON .JOURNAL, in a recent issue says: "Picture to yourself what a magazine for children ought to be—how bright and winning in contents, how pure and stimulating in teaching, bow resplendent with pictures, and then turn over the pages of St. Nicholas, and you will find your ideal realized." THE CHICAGO INTER-OCEAN; : St. Nicholas is an institution of which Young and Old America are as proud as England is of Punch. A house without St. Nicholas," continues the writer, "does not deserve to own any boys and girls; no dog should wag its little tail while pres sing its noise through the area railings, empha tically, we would observe that should the sun con desend to shine upon that house, his solar majesty would make a big mistake." The first volume of St. Nicholas was a surprise even to the public that heartily welcomed it, num ber by number. Newspaper critics expressed en thusiastic approval; children and parents were alike delighted, and congratulatory letters from distinguished men and women poured in upon the sublishers and editors, CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER wrote: "I do not see how it can be made any better, and if children don't like it, it is time to change the kind of children in this coun try;"' WHITTIER, our great poet, wrote: "It is little to say of this magazine that it is the best child's periodical in the world;" and words of hearty commendation came across the ocean from such earnest workers and popular favorites of the young as GEO. MACDQNALD, CHRISTINA ROSSETTI, and CANON KINGSLEY. Beautifully bound, superbly illustrated, and filled with good things from the best writers (in cluding three long serial stories,) the first volume of St. Nicholas, complete in itself, is a finer Christ mas gift for girls and boys te-day than any siflgle book in the market, excepting ST. NICHOLAS for 1875, Which, with its magnificent pictures, its two com plete serials, • and its innummerable shorter sto ries, sketches, poems, fairy tales, rhymes and jin gles, bits of wisdom, its French, German and Latin stories—its fun and its puzzles, Jack-in-the pulpit, the Letter-box, &c., &c., is eveh more su perbly attractive. ST. NICHOLAS for 1574 and 1875, 4 Vols. For the convenience of libraries, and because many children Lind the two large volumes for '74 and '75 ratter bulky to handle, we have had these twenty—four numbers bound in FOUR ELE— GANT VOLUMES, and inclosed in a neat box, under the general title of THE ST. NICHOLAS LIBRARY These four volumes are sold for $B, being only twcisdollars a volume—a beautiful and valuable Christmas present for an entire family of young folks. Tlus NEW YORK TRIBUNE Bays: "In the avalanche of immoral literature that threatens the children, some strong, vitally wholesome, and really attra ctive magasine is required for them, and St. Nicholas has reached a higher platform, and.ommands for this service wider resources in art and letters, than any of its predecessors or contemporaries." THE - SUNDAY—SCHOOL TIMES says: "A cleaner, purer, more trustworthy 'periodical for children, cannot be named. The magazine does not claim to be religions, but it is on the side of all that is true and good, from beginning to end." The religious press all over the country heartily commends ST. NICHOLAS, and virtually echoes the opinion of the New York Christian Union, that it is" A DELIGHTFUL MAGAZINE FOR ALL CHILDREN BETWEEN FIVE AND EIGHTY SEVEN." ST. NICHOLAS FOR 1876 Promises even greater attractions than the prol: vious volumes. A strong feature of the new vol ume is an AMERICAN SERIAL SRORY, "THE BOY EMIGRANTS," BY NOAII BROOKE <, Giving the adventures of a party of boys on their long journey across the plains, with a vivid por traiture of their LIFE IN CALIFORNIA DUR ING THE DAYS OF THE GOLD-FEVER. Mr, Brooks brings to this work, in addition to hie well known literary gifts, a thorough familiarity with the features of that wild country and the people then flocking toward it. What he has to say of them is pervaded with a subtle and intense savor of reality that enables the reader to follow the characters in their adventures with a positive sense of companionship. The Contagion of the "gold-fever ;" the great diffieulties and perils which beleaguered their journey across the plains and mountains, and finally the adventurous, half civilized, and yet, in a certain rude way, poetic life in the mines of California, 'are all described with wonderful truthfulness and skill. Add to this the elevated tone pervading the work, and the irresistible attraction wnich such a narrative pos sesses for boys, the value of this stirring, healthy serial becomes evident. There is to be another and shorter serial, begin ning in January and running through three num bers : "JON OF ICELAND," BY BAYARD TAYLOR. A delightful vivid story of an Icelandic boy's career, full of in,idents, which would ha v pen in no other country, and graphically touching upon the customs, life, and general features of that strange land. THE BEST GENERAL READIMG for boys and is insured by a list of present and promised contributors, among whom are : William Cullen Bryant, George .Mac- Donald, Christina Rossetti, Louisa M. Al cott, J. T, Trowbridge, T. B. Aldrich, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Abby Morton Diaz, Harriet Prescott Spofford, Donald G. Mitchell, H H, Edmund C. Stedman, Lucy Larcom, Charles Dudley Warner, Bret _Hark, Frank R. Stockton, Eliza beth Alters Allen, T. W Higginson, Lucre tia P. Hale, Prof. R. A. Proctor, Mrs. Oliphant and Rev. Edward Eggleston. Special papers are secured or promised, viz.; Astronomy for Young Folks (Prof. Proctor) ; Chapters on Windsor Castle and English History (Mrs. Oliphant) ; Talk With Girls (Mrs. A. D. T, Whitney, H. H., Louisa M. Alcott, Susan Cool idge and Mrs. Dodge) ; Little Housekeepers' Pages. (Marion Harland, author of "Common Sense in the Household"). Also, Incidents of American History, Practical Handwork for Boys and Girls, Sketches of Adventure and Travel, Fairy Tales, and Stories of Home Life. A Young Contributors' department is to be added to the well-know and approved Regular Features ; and in short, the Magazine will be made as useful, lively, and en tertaining as the purest and best writers and ar tists can make it. Some of the Finest Works of the Great Painters have been engraved for St. Nicholas, and its il lustrations for 1876 will surpass anything ever yet attempted in Juvenile literature. $3 00 A YEAR ; $4 FOR BOUND VOLUME. We will send the magazine one year, beginning November, 1875, and either of the two bound vol umes as above, post-paid, for 57.00 ; or, a subscrip tion one year and the two volumes forslo.oo. The price of the 4-volume edition is $B.OO. All n?ws dealers and booksellers will receive subscriptions and supply volumes at above rates. November and December numbers free to all new subscriber fur 1876. Scribner's Monthly and Nickolas, $7. SCRIBNER h CO., 743 and 715 Broadway, N. Y, [Dea.]7-75-tf. Miscellaneous. WEDDING CARDS ! WEDDING , CARDS We have just received the largest assortment of the latest styles of WEDDING ENVELOPES, and WEDDING PAPERS, ever brought to Huntingdon. We have also bought new finites of type, fur printing cards, and we defy competition in this line. Parties wanting Cards put up will save money by giving us a call. At least fifty per cent cheaper than Philadelphia or Yew York. ap7-tf.] J. U. DURBORROW S; CO. HItOBLEY, Merchant Tailor, No. • 813 Mifflin street, West Huntingdon, Pa., respectfully solicits a share of public pat ronage from town and country. [0ct18,72. S . L. KIRK & WHOLESALE GROCERS 130 North THIRD St., Corner of Cherry, PHILADELPHIA, Have in store and offer for sale, at the lowest market prices, and on the wont reasonable terms, a large and well assorted stock of GROCERIES, TEAS, SPICES, FISH. CHEESE, &c. Selected with care in this, New York and Baltimore mar kets, to which the attention of Country Dealers is particularly requested. [aprl-ly. PLAIN PRINTING, FANCY PRINTING, GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE Pianos and Organs 'RION PIANO FORTE Estey's Cottage Organs. r ;. 7 -146 - t• ;-.., tatt , —.o---i: ,- -'• , :": 7, r . ciVii - ii- -, , '..' s 7. 4. /11. ___.---- ---- 7 --- . ----- - • ' ' . • ----- 7, - -. ' if il lf:7 - 6 •k • 1 , _ A- -• i 014 L LEAD.. ":1-I•4k-,.. ‘ l,, D ~.. : z -1 . ONE THOUSAND MADE AND SOLD MONTHLY. NEARLY OR QUITE DOUBLE THAT OF ANY OTHER MAKE. THE SWEETEST AS WELL AS THE MOST POWERFUL ORGAN IN THE MARKET. Also the PATENT ARION PIANO, WITH FOUR NEW PATENTS. E. N. BRUCE a CO., No. 1308 Chestnut St., deelo,7s] PHILADELPHIA. SITTX GENERIS. _ , .1...." .. ..;:,,,1,,,: , •,...7. - 3" • . r.Z.MAM&CILI I , --) r s 'MERUIT4'rEfiI .11271PiA. 1.173. Ink 7, . ' (;,.. 11: ' -- t' ii .'... .*:'. sA% , , , 7-4 4 44 1 . 1 t -: ( ;,.: ..-.4 1 L .- —. . • _ Ly. , - —,'' . - ~~. _.-„,11, , , 5.,,, 2 6 7 • -6 _ i•i; r , ) , ..1..„, ~.,. 1..! 1 , 3 • _A , n , ~.„. 30 , - 4 4.24,14 ~.......... , ~ , , . q .....- A i- 6—,. hArnoil MASON &HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS. UNEQUALED=ZUNAPPROACHED in capacity and exoellencO by any others. Awarded Tile HERESTMEE DIPLOMA, OF HONOR AT ViENNfc,lB73' PARIS,IB6, ONiv American Organs ever awarded any medal L I in Europe, or which present such extraordi nary excellence as to command a wide sale there. ALWAYSawarded highest Expositions,l hest bi premiums eri.. a nt Indne well sa Europe. Out of hundreds there have not been six in all where any other organs have been preferred. BESTDeclared by Eminent Musicians, in Loth hemispheres. to b 3 unrivrded. See TESTIMONIAL CIRCULAR, with opinions of more than One Thousand (sent free). INSlST o ta n ke h a a n v y in .fth a er M . a D so ea u le a' rs li ge a t rn LAl; lFn ciE D n o co n m ot - Brisst3Ns for selling inferior organs, and for this reason often try very hard to sell something else. NEW 'STYLES Ven th t. mo e st ve i r mpor ma rt imgoeve w Solo and Combination Stops. Superb Etagere and other Cases of new designs. PIANO-HARP CABINET ORGAN Au ex quisite combination of these instruments. Oft EASY PAYMENTS Organs sold for caen ; or , for monthly or quarterly payments; or rented until rent pays for the organ. CATALOGUES and Circulars, with full partic ulars., free. Address MASON & ILA MLIN ORGAN CO., 154 Tremont Street, TON • 25 Union Square, NET YORK; or 80 & dame St.. CI - HOAG°. Vi March 24, '7s—y Cattle Powder. Now is the time to TRY IT, this season of the year, when your COW begins to FAG and FALL OFF. Sales in the past year over FIVE TONS;;PER MONTH, in packages of 12 ounces each ! RETAIL for 25 cents ; FIVE packs for $l. It is universally rewarded with one aml the same report, viz: That it does all it promises. It is a purely Vegetable Compound, and will never do an animal any harm. It is compounded upon strictly chemical scientific principles, looks differ ent, smells different, tastes different, and is differ ent from any one Cattle or Horse Powder in ex istence. As a medicine it will cure all the ordinary dis eases of Horses, Cuwa and Pigs. It will keep an animal in good, sound, healthy condition, and above all, it will make an increase upon the ani mal product of over 25 per cent. The cow to which it is fed, will give from one to two pounds of butter per week more on the same food. The Beef Cattle will fatten in the same pro portion, sooner and better, and the hog will thrive to the astonishment of those who try it. All we ask is a fair trial, and our word will be verified. This "CATTLE POWDER" has proved a sure preventive and a certain cure for Chicken Cholera or Gaps. I'. A. MILLER, Solo Proprietor, HAM REMOVED TO NO. 147 .IVorth Third Street, PIIILADELPH [A. " For sale by Dr. J. C. FLEMING & CO., and JOHN READ da SONS, Huntingdon, Pa. Jan. 28, 1876-5 t Stationery. CHEAP ! CHEAP !! CHEAP!! PAPERS. v FLUIDS. N- 1 ALBUMS. Buy your Paper, Buy your Stationery Buy your Blank Books, AT THEJOURNAL BOOK & '3TA TIONER I' STORE. Fine Stationery, School Stationery, Books for Children, Games for Children, Elegant Fluids, Pocket Book, Bass Books, And an Endless Variety of ' Nice Things, AT THE JOURNAL BOOK if STATIONERY STORE COLORED PRINTING DONE AT tka Journal Ofsoe at Philadolphia prices. Liquors. G. T. SIMONTON, SUCCESSOR OF HILDEBRANI), WHOLESALE AND RETAIL LIOIJOi STORE IN BAIITOL'S BUILDING, EAST END OF WEST HUNTINCDON, In the vicinity or Fisher's Mill, BRANDY, WHISKEY, WINE, GIN, ENGLISH & SCOTCH ALE, BROWN STOUT AND DUBLIN PORTER GINGER ALEX HAMPAGNE, CLAR ET, N. E. RUM, JAMAICA RUM. IRISH and SCOTCH WHISKIES, FRED LAUER'S BEER, ALE and PORTER, bottles for family use. Always on hand the lb'lowing celebrated brands of Whiskies: BLUE ROOM, WILSON'S, HANI'S, DAUGHERTY'S KOOKEN'S (of Birmingham), CALE'S BOURBON of KENTUCKY. Fine Old Southern APPLE JACK. Medicinal bill a SPECIALTY Jan. 14, 1875—tf Planing Mill. HENRY C. MUNSON, COTTAIIEPLEINGMILLCO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, FLO ORIN G, Brackets, Moulins Stair-Railillis PLASTERING LATH, COMMON AND FANCY PICKETS, FRAME STUFF and all kinds of LUMBER The members of the Cottage Planing Mill Co. being largely interested in the Lumber interest in Clearfield and Centro counties, they will at all times keep constantly on hand a full supply of the very beet WHITE PINE, well seasoned, and parties favoring us with an or der will receive prompt attention, and all work GUAQANTEED to rehder satisfaction. Office for the present at Henry k Co's. Store. S. E. HENRY, Supt. Huntingdon, Pa., Sept. 1, 1375. Travellers' Guide. PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD. TINE OF LEAVING OF TRAINS Winter Arrangement. WESTWARD O, ,rl' I STATIONS. c.^.l A. M. A.M 11301 I N. Hamilton .11 43 : 7 24 1 Mt. Union , 11 511 , Mapleton 11 591,-- I Mill Creek 12 14 1 7 48 HUNTINGDON 12 32i- lNter'ur b a 12 411 ll3arree 11; . /Spruce Creek IliirmingkEm 142 1 08 , 8 al Ty rwrit .., IWI Tipton - 1 27 Bell's 31i115 Altoona 1 321 1 56 9 00i dP.M.iP.I/1.1 The Fast Line Westward, leaves Huntingdon at 8 13 P. a., and arrives at Altoona at 9 30 P. 31. The Pacific Express, Eastward, leaves Huntingdon a 8.35, a m, and arrives at Harrisburg 11.35 a hl. The Philadelphia lixpress, Eastward, leaves Hunting don at 11,58 p. na_ and arrives , tt larrisburg at 2.35 a m H UNTINGDON AND BROAD TOP RAILROAD. Winter Arrangement. On and after Sunday, NOVEMBERIS, 1975, Passenger Trains will arrive and depart as follows SOUTHWARD. NAIL. STATIONS, P. 31 Huntingdon. Long Siding McConnelletown Grafton _►larkleehurg Coffee Hun Rough and Ready Cove Fishers summit Barton Riddlenburg Hopewell Pip!!e Run 13r - sifter's Biding. Tatesville B. Run siding Everett Yount Dallas BEDFORD SHOLTY'S RUN BRANCH, SOUTH No. 1. ZIP. A. M. 10 20,8axt0n,... 10 351 Coalmont 10 40 Crawford. 10 60 Dudley, Jan. 1.75. STATIONS, Miscellaneous. To THE CITIZENS Off PENNSYLVANIA.—Your at tention in specially invited to the fact that the Nation al Ilanka are now prepared to receive subscriptions to the capital Stock of the Centennial Board of Finance. The funds realized from thissource are to be employed in the erection of the buildings for the International Exhibition, and the expenses connected with the name. It is confident ly believed that the Keystone State will be represented by the name of every citizen alive to patriotic commemora tion of the one hundredth birth-day by the nation. The shares of stock are offered for $lO eash, and subscribers will receive a handsome steel engraved Certificate of Stock, Imitable for framing and preservation as a national memo rial. Interest at the rate of els per cent. per animal will be paid on all payments of Centennial Stock from date of payment to January 1, IM7II. Subscribers who are not near a National Bank canre - tuft a check or post-office realer to the undersigned. 1 , 111.:DK. FRALEY, Treasurer, Aug.20,73t0Ja1y3,70.1 In 4 Walnut St., Philadelpia. COME TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE FOR YOUR JOB PRINTING If you want sale bills, If you want bill heads, If you want letter beads, If you want visiting cards, If you want business clink If you want blanks of any kind. If you want envelopes neatly printed, If you want anything printed in a workman like manner, and at very reasonable rates, leave yoururders at the above named office. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL Only $2.00 a year. Drugs, Patent Metheino-t. Pprium , rv. ,,C R. pee int"..rue :bet eititerte 4 ifaariteri , ... and •iciaitv that by ha* jawt frosie go. city a new an.i week of LEATIIERS. Bfsas tND tH.)M4. tTS .4:t1) SA,,e 4r... whi..lt he IA prepsr..l t.. se:, .1 reet'y dared pri.-n. Don't forget •h- , n." italul .a ..IMP rPialllll.lo4. .1/41 ¬omers gesorrally Ago reirwB.4 ' f at. L oi saipTi AND 4 11 , 11 M. _IT SII.IFFFR'4 NEW STORE. THE satrieri'nee Mime Me 41,1 frion.is an.i , n4t.,114..re. :bat be buses re ceived from the Ea4t a :arm. a.. .I wee sebtebei woe* of Roots and 'lb.«. r.br 14,n. +. , 04.46 which h ie prepare., a.. 511 a trio tower Hine soy other iroahliAltetrat to :boo. Items a prareemil shoemaker. sad hooting !wt emot.ierediki report 'see, be letters hirn.:( that its meet emote., So surpassed in :he coanrr. Give him a rail. at 1;(10T t ti . 4 tlf }F. ST•PRI.: ~,„ lbr • iv... ~ • NTIN.:DOS. be a. , •.„ 1110110 Saba m LL irt kni t durable m.nner tiseinit torb Ty. 1.4 n. 4. . 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Stssirseer aisimmiiv ~4Yi~ .v."! TT.Vr't a .•" Pftil'4l. Obe+•• Pbarive. Di•riak Maws