untin,gdon Journal 'Tie Fill! MA'fTER ON EVERY PAGE , h; AD W. L. FOULK, agent no, Pennsylvania, Ohio and We; ginia Press Association, Is the cooly person in Pittsburgh authorized to receive wiv, - tisements for the JOURNAL. le has our beat ra Laws ReAting to Newspaper Subserip t ons and Arrearages. Tho followi•.g im the law re;ating to newspapeni a aulmeriberg. 1. u bleri la ho do not giro express notice to the con iNido•red wishing to continue their sub- .edor the digenntinnance of their pen' oli,hers may continue to send them unti all a rrea ra 4.• • are paid. 3 It maimed hi neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the olive to which they are dire.ted, they are held responsible until they bast:settled their bills, and order ed them divan utinued. 4. If subscril,,s move to other places without informing the publish, rs, and the papers are sent to the former di rection, the are Itch! responsible. 5. The Courts ;rive decided that "refusing to take periodi cals front tle office, or removing and leaving them un . _ called for. ;- winui facie evidi;ce of intentional fraud. 6• Any perso,, who receives a newspaper and makes UZI of it, whet i ••••• he has ordered it or not, is held in law to be a subseri: ,, r. . If subscrit,n4 pay in advance, they are bound to give notice to toe publisher, at the end of their time, if they do not wish continue taking it; otherwise the pub lisher is au zi,rized to send it on, and the subscriber will be resi.o:. Able until an expressnotice,withpayment of all arre,,. is sent to the publisher. HUNTINGDON POST OFFICE. Time of A rr 'rat and Closing of the Mails. Mails arriv,• .1 follows: From tho it 7.32 a. m., 5Z5 p. m., 8.10 p. m. `• 11:,•. at 8.30 a. tn.. 9.24 a. ru., 4.10 p. 111. (clo9l 1 . 1.111 Altoona and Peteriiburg,) and 10. E (Huntingdon and Broad Top R. R.) 635 and dosed mail from Bedford at 8.25 a. m. and Conpropst's Mills, (Wednesdays ~ttirdays) at 12 in. " Uai /II Church (Wednesdays and Saturdays) at 11 a. in. Close as folio : For the E::-t 900 a. m., 8.15 p. in. ,t 11.40 a. in., (closed alai] to Petersburg,) 5.10 tn., 7.45 p. m. " 4 (11. & B. T. B. R.) at 830 a. m., and closed lima to Bedford at 7.45 p. tn. " Donation and Conpropst's Mills, (Wednesdays and Saturdays) at 1 p. " Uhl... Church (Wednesdays and Saturdays,) at 1 p. la. Office open tr . an 6.30 a. m. to 8.30 p. m., except Sundays and legal holid tys, when it will be open from Ba. no to 9 a. ru. AN APL'RENTICE WANTED.—An apprentice. with a fair English education between tb.3 ages of 16 and 18, will be to ken to learn the printing business, at thi office. A boy from the town preferred LOCAL AND PERSONAL grief Mention—Home-made and Stolen. Faus are ilirting. "Laughing June." Hunt the shady side Corns an] bunions are ripe. The whii.••orwill is on the wing. The wear: er is getting extremely hot. Fruit, it i said, will be quite abundant. Paper ha,:qing is going on quite briskly. The farmc+•a have finished planting corn. "Bisque" .s what they call it at Westbrook's. Business N.. - as partially suspended on Tues- Boi:r,i of Pardons meets on Tuesday next Green cucambers last week ; ten cents a smell. B. F. Ripil ~ esq., of Rockhill, was in town last week If you OIVI7 the printer—pay him. He needs his money The weat!,r on Tuesday was all that could be desired Lindsa the Local 21'cus, is "doing" the centennial liandsom picture—The new flag in the Diamond. The Wilson brothers drive the handsomest horses in tux❑ Fifth stre;:t was the principal promenade on Saturday night, Our Tunl;er friends are off to the Annual Meeting in 4. Olio, The Pres!,yterian Parsonage is being very ace, up to Tuesday morning last, had sold eighty five and a half Centennial Excursions• This does not indicate much travel from this point to Philadelphia and return in the last The mange is making sad havoc among the I fortnight. much impr,ved N few shad were caught at N!wport, Juniata county, last week felines and canines. Extra trains arc becoming every day occur. rences on the P. R. R. The colored band made its de3ut at the Cas tilian on Saturday night. Africas' Directory for Huntingdon county is iu the hands of the printer. The Lewistown races open on Wednesday next, to continue two days, The first mosquito of the season presented his bill to us the other night. • A letter box at the station, it is thought, would be a great convenience. L'oor old Jimmy Walls is perambulating our streets hungry anti almost naked. Hollidaysburg's military organization has gone where the woodbine twinetb. A liberal display of bunting was visible throughout the town on Tuesday. Rev. M. P. Th. , .yle's speech, on Decoration Day, is universally complimented. The "Limited" was an hour late, on 'Tues day, and she passed this place a kiting. Richard Langdon, jr., is now employed iu the Auditor's Department of the P. R. R. I. 11. Llildebrand has removed to Railroad s reet one door east of Col. \Williams' saloon. There can be as much pride beneath a plain d oess as.bet,eath the most gaudy or ta.vdry at tre. Centennial visitors are not numerous from this section, owing to the high fare on the railroad The 31.arrison House is a very cool and pleasant place to stop these warm days. Terms reasonabit. Argument Court adjourned late on Friday night. Some thirty-five or forty cases were disposed of. Quite a large number of strangers wera in town, on Tuesday, and participated in the decoration ceremonies The Tuckers held a Lc,ve Feast, at the James Creek church, on Saturday last. There was a large attendance Milton S. Lytle, esq., has his history almost ready for the printers. Have you subscribed fur it yet ? If not, why not ? A handsome arch of evergreens, decorated with flags, spanned the Church street entrance to the cemetery on Tuesday. iuperintendeut Gage has his trotting horse, "Robley" at home again, after a few weeks t - aining on an ea3tero course, Prof. Campbell is doing his full share of ministerial service, and there are none who can fill the bill more acceptably. A small bunch of trunk keys, found in front of this ofliee, will be handed to the owner on application to the Journal Store. An eastern bound train, one day last week, ran over and killed a ground hog, in the neighborhood of Warrior ridge Station. Due. Davidson is Deputy Inspector of Weights and Measures under I. 11. Hildebrand : esq. lie is making a tour of inspection. Eph. Corm:Dan ; jr., of the Carlisle Mirror, dropped among his Huntingdon friends on S:tturday night and tarried until Sunday even- A four-legged chicken is Oneida township's latest curiosity. It is the property of Samuel Neal, esq., and is said to be as lively as a cricket Some of the board walks, in West Hunting don, are in a terrible condition, and the matter should receive the immediate attention of the council. JUNE 2; 1876, One of the clowns in Barnum's new show puts this conundrum : 'Why is the Centen, vial like home ? gccuuse it's the dearest spo' qu earth.'' . Joseph Bardine, esq., of Mount Union, is off to the far West. lb means to look up at Pike's Peak and down on the Arkansas before he returns. Subscribe for the JOURNAL during the cam• paign. One dollar will pay for it six months, Xo good citizen can do without a political county paper. tf. They have "Mollie Maguires" in Cambria county, and the first victim of their hate is Patrick O'Brian, whom they beat to death a few days since. On Tuesday of last week the Brewery of F. W. Roach, of Hollidaysburg, with several houses and stables belonging to other parties, was entirely destroyed. The boys do not exhibit as nine!' agility in jumping on and off moving trains as they did a short Ome ago. The several arrests reported have had a salutary effect. When a man stops at a hotel he pays his bill at once, why can't you do the same thing with the printer. Why not pay fur food for brain and stomach alike? The most cost-ive chap about the town i 3 the Sheriff. There is an amount of complaint against his charges that indicates a deep seated feeling on the subject. We take pleasure in acknowledging a very tandsome serenade, on Thursday night last, )y parties unknown to us. We appreciated heir kindness and their music. Our friend, C. 11. Anderson, esq., has sold his interest in a valuable tract of coal land, in the Broad Top region, to Frank Hefright, esq., of this place, for the sum of $B,OOO. Baggage checked from Huntingdon to Bel mont station or Centennial grounds. This will make it very convenient for those who desire to stop near the Centennial grounds. The Juniata Valley Camp Meeting will com mence at Newton Hamilton, on the 22nd of August, and continue ten days, all other statements to the contrary notwithstanding. The finest assortment of picture ornaments oralorning ladies fancy work and any thing that a highly-colored head, picture, or motto will adorn, for sale at the JOURNAL Store. tf. Some of our young people need the grace imparted by a Professor of dancing. They want to get over the lump, thump, thump, lump movements so frequently heard in public places. J. HALL MUSSER, Postmaster Special Local advertisements put in the three papers, JOURNAL, Globe and Monitor, at FIVE CENTS per line cash, for the first inser tion and THREE CENTS per line for subsequent insertions. tf. Building and Loan Associations are excel lent institutions to help build up a town as long as property is on the advance, but God help the unfortunate when there is a down ward tendency. The Hollidaysburg Standard has entered upon its thirtieth year, and Bro. Traugh says it was nevermore prosperous. May its present editor live to conduct it for thirty more years, and may its prosperity increase. William Graw, who runs the Express on Broad Top, will soon have been; eleven years upon that thoroughfare. The engine ho is now running has been in service four years without having been off the track. Get your letter heads, note heads, bill cads, cards, envelopes, etc., etc., printed . at ie JOURNYL, Job Rooms. The largest stock the county, and prices down to the bottom ure. Send along your orders The report that Col. Tom Scott would carry soldiers of the Mexican war to the Centennial free of charge, was without authority. The Pennsylvania railroad managers are too fond of the almighty dollar to do so generous an David McCaban, esq., ticket agent at this Miss Hawn, of Mill Creek, will accept our grateful thanks for a most magnificent boquct• The exquisite taste with which it was arrt.n ged gave us infinite satisfaction. We assure the fair donor that we most heartily appreci ate her kindness. Bunnell, of Lewistown, happened to stop over night in this place, on Thursday of last week, but he "hadn't time" to test his skill, with our friend Fisher, over a friendly game of chequers. It looks as if Mr. B. was afraid to face the music. There hasn't anything half as nice stopped at our office for half a decade as the last No. of the Proof Sheet. And then it is full of the wittiest and best sayings, the handsomest specimens and everything that is nice. Well done, friend Munday. "Gantz's Band," composed of colored citi zens of this place, treated our people to some passable music one night . last week. This organization has the material in it to make a good band, if the members will bring them selves down to liar.' study. At a meeting of the members of the Pres byterian church, on Wednesday night of last week, B. P. Isenberg, R. A. Orbison and Charles Kershaw were elected deacons. They were regularly ordained on Sunday morning last by the Rev. A. N. Hollifield. The new School board will organize in a few days. IVe hope the new Directors will insigt upon rescinding the action of the old board on the school book question. If they do not every - mother son of them should be prosecuted for a violation of the law. There should be only one superlatively grand celebration of the 4th of July in Hun tingdon county in a hundred years—we would recommend as much—and this should be at Huntingdon. Every man, woman and child should help to do honor to the occasion. Now that the warm weather is coming on) some one desiring to contribute to the tem perance can: zould do good work by opening a place, in town, where the thirsty could ob tain, at a moderate cost, good fresh iced . but termilk. Let some one try it. It will pay. We assure our Mapleton friend that we pub lished the Game Law just as we found it.— Black Bass can only be fished for from the Ist of March to the Ist of July inclusive. A friend suggests that for all that arc caught in this neighborhood it will not pay to worry over it. Prof. Jule Neff, son of the htte Doctor Neff, of this place, is engaged in the celebrated McClurg hand of Philadelphia_ He is an ac complished musician and will, we have no doubt, fill the position with great credit to himself and do honor to the Silver Cornet boys. Headache arises from different causes. Con gestive Headache is produced by an undue quantity of blood in the brain, to which high livers, robust people and young women are liable. Dr. Bull's Vegetable Pills regulate the bowels and thus divert the current of blood from the brain. Orbisonia is training for a good demonstra tion on the 4th of July. Better join with Huntingdon and get up a County Centennial Celebration. These celebrations come only once in a hundred years and they ought to be gotten up in huge proportions and not by dis trict displays. Between four and five hundred employees were discharged from the shop of the Penn- sylvania Railroad Company, at Altoona, last week. For several mouths past an unusual large number had been employed, owing to the building of a great many car 3, and that the rush is now over, their discharge was not unexpected. Mr. Richard Langdon, of this place, has sent to the centennial an immense lump of coal, 6i feet in length, n feet in width, 2 feet and 7 inches in thicknes3, and weighing 3,400 pounds which was recently taken from the Cum berland, colliery, on Broad Top, Huntingdon county. The lump is the largest ever mined in the Broad Top region. The Cataract Fire Company, of Lock Haven, the Nepture Hose Company and Sheridan Troop, of Tyrone, with their excellent band, are announced for this place on the 4th of July. A large number of Grangers and town ship delegations are also promised. This is right. Turn out every man, woman and child. Only once in a hundred years. Ladies, now is the time to buy your pat- terns of Spring styles at the JOURNAL store.— We are selling large numbers daily. The Domestic Patterns are universally admitted to be the best in the market. We refer with pleasure to Mrs. Madara, Mrs. Libkielter, Miss Macy Bumbaugh, or any other Dress-maker in town. Any pattern not on hand promptly ordered. tf. No man should be tolerated in a place of great public importance who is a boor. The man who does not comprehend the amenities and courtesies which characterize gentlemen has no business to come in contact with the public. lle should be banished. A man ought to be able to perform, at times, a dis agreeable duty, but he ought to perform it like a gentleman and not like a Hottentot. Three members of the "Mulligan Guards," of Alexandria, have again got into trouble by forcibly entering the house of Mrs. Kirby, of that town, on Saturday night. From the fre quent acts of lawlessness committed by these young men we would advise them to leave the law-abiding and staid old town of Alexandria, and emigrate to some more congenial clime where they could have a larger scope to ex hibit their blackguardism. The following is a new law, enacted by the last Legislature, which may interest people iv s ho have kindred or friends in the Western Penitentiary. It recites that it shall be law ful for the wardens of the penitentiaries of this State, at their discretion, at the request of any prisoner therein, or any relatives or friends of such who will furnish means to pay for the same, to subscribe for any daily, week ly, or monthly periodical, of a moral, political, or religious character; and receive and deliver the same to such prisoner. Provided, That such papers and periodicals first meet the ap proval of the inspectors of such penitentiaries. iA note from S. C. Tussey, esq., dated Spruce Creek, May 24th, informs us that his black horse "doe," stolen on the evening of the 12th instant, was captured, with saddle and bridle, and a bag under saddle, branded "N. Crum," on Tuesday the IGth instant, on Round Top Mountain, in front of the Potomac river, about three miles from Hancock, Maryland, by Abram and Henry Ditto. They were hunting their cattle and seeing a horse and man in the brush concluded to know his business. The thief retreated into a thicket, up the mountain, but getting into rough ground had to abandon the horse to make his own escape. The horse arrived home on last Wednesday. The thief travelled via McConnellstown, James Creek and Sideling Hill to the place where be was discovered. We congratulate Mr. Tussey upon the recovery of his property. A CENTENARIAN.--A friend writes us While traveling through the Broad Top coal region I had occasion to visit a place in this county called Paradise ; I, however, doubt very much whether this is the veritable gar den. There are, however, a number of streams in the neighborhood which might answer to the Bible history, and any amount of trees and shrubbery such as Eve attended to. Here it was that I met our Centenarian—Caleb Robinson. Born at Meadow Gap, Huntingdon county, on the first of November, 1773, and reared, it might be said, under the tomahawk and scalping-knife of the Indians, and so well is he preserved at his advanced age that he enjoys perfect health and all his faculties un impaired. The secret of which is that he is constantly engaged at some work for himself or others. He has spent his life in doing good and earning his bread by the "sweat of his brow." He is now engaged in building his two hundred and twenty-third bake-oven, having kept a diary of all transactions. The old gentleman is a mason, and the following totals will exhibit to the reader the result of a well spent life. He has built -284 chimneys, 161 mills, . . 108 barns, 22 cisterns, 72 churches. 91 walls in wells, 134 cellar walls, 222 bake ovens. 138 dwelling houses, This veteran of over one hundred years resides with his son, Lewis Robinson, who justly prides himself in pointing to his father as a model to all men, temperate in all his habits and constantly engaged at something in order to make himself useful in his day and generation. And just here let me call the at tention of our young loafers to the tact that last winter this old man shaved eighteen thousand eight hundred shingles while they were sponging on the community. BEN. F. B. MDDLE.--In the Baltimore Daily Christian Advocate, of Monday morning last, we find the following brief sketch of our townsman, Rev. F. B. Riddle: This excellent minister is a native of Centre county, Pennsylvania, and is now forty-six years of age, and just in the full vigor of man hood. He was educated at Dickinson Col lege, where lie laid the foundation of his scholastic training, and then was a student at Concord Biblical Institute, where he received important advantages in his theological studies, which 'lava given his discourses culture and Entering the Baltimore Conference iu 1857, and becoming a memoer of the Central Penn sylvania at its orgacization in 1869, be has filled some of the most important appoint ments, and we name Shamokin, Berwick, First Church at Altoona, Danville and Huntingdon —the last named being his present charge.— He is a rapid speaker, with quite a logical cast of mind, uses plain language, very prac tical and clear, and few excel him for keenness in debate. These elements of character have given him prominence in his own Conference, and be was honored as one of the five min isterial delegates, which was no mean com pliment, and his record at the General Con ference will doubtless be such as to give sat- isfaction to his constituency. Recognizing his scholarly acquirements, Dickinson College honored him with the de gree of A. Al. Being still in the meridian of life, the Church is likely to receive much ser vice for years to come, if his life is spared. MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION.—Immediate. ly after the decoration ceremonies,on Tuesday last, an election was held for officers of the Memorial Association, with the following re sult : President, T. W. My ton; Vice Presi dent, J. G. Isenberg ; Secretary, Geo. B. Or lady ; Treasurer, J. K. !sett. Executive Committee.—Milton S. Lytle, Chairman ; B. F. Isenberg, W. F. Bathurst, G. W. Gray, W. F. Cunningham,W. K. Krites, Samuel Coder, B. X. Blair, John Flenner, H. C. Weaver, John H. Westbrook, Dr. D. P. Mil ler, George W. Fleck. A full line of interesting Games, for the lit tle folks, and big ones, too, at the JOURNAL Store. Come and look at them and hear how cheap they arc. tf. DECORATION DAY.—This day was bet_ ter observed at this place, than it has been fog• several years. A large number of people came in from the surrounding country and helped to swell the numbers. The Methodist Sunday School, the Fire Department, and a large number of private citizens participated. The procession formed at the Court House at I o'clock, p. m., headed by the martial band followed by the children of the Sunday School with wreaths and flowers, then came civilians, Cant's Brass Band, Plicenix Fire Company, The . Huntingdon Fire Company and the Independent Hook and Ladder Company. The line of march was up Penn to Sixth, up Sixth to Church, down Church to Fifth, up Fifth to Moore, down Moore to Cemetery. Rev. M. P. Doyle delivered one of the most effective and highly complimented addresses ever delivered here on such an occasion. It was brimfull of patriotism, and carried away the audience with words of fire that made a deep and lasting impression upon them. After the ceremonies at the stand were com phted the graves were appropriately decorated and the procession retired to town and dis banded. We are indebted to the Globe for the foi lowing report of the speech. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, FELLOW— SOLDIERS, AND FELLOW—CITIZENS—We are assembled, on this memorial day, in this city of the dead, Co honor the memory of the brave soldiers who sacrificed their lives to save this Gov ernment from disruption, and the principles upon which it is basedfrom defeat. We have come to con:memo rate their sufferings and death; to honor them with suitable and appro priate ceremonies, prayers and music, and patriotic words; to decorate their graves with flowers, emblematic of the delicate emotions which their valiant deeds stir within oar souls, and the manner in which those deeds are ado . rned in the unfailing memory of our hearts. It is a becoming service, a binding duty, and a coveted privi- lege. It becomes a nation to honor its defenders, to•perpetuate their mem ory, to ever bold in the highest esteem the men whose lave of country arose superior to love of self. It is a duty the nation owes the brave soldier, and which it may not neglect. The nation which would maintain its honor un. tarnished, which would have its ban ner defended from insult, must ever regard and hold sacred the memory of the heroes fallen in defence of that honor and that flag. And it is a cov eted priviler to surround the ashes cf the brave martyrs who offered them selves a sacrifice upon their country's altar; to catch a spark of the patriotic fire into our own souls, and warm our hearts with the glowing flame which blazes so gloriously from their sacred memories. It was with considerable hesitancy that I consented to address you on this occasion, feeling, as I do, my ina bility to do justice to the cause. lam no orator, and can pass no eulogy upon the fallen heroes worthy of their deeds. Nor can I give appropriate expression to the swelling emotions which heave the grateful and sorrow ing hearts assembled here this day. I owe the honor of this appointment, to that disposition all of you possess, to respect and favor any one who has taken part in the late great conflict, the struggle for human rights, which has so successfully terminated, and the blessings of which you so appre ciatingly enjoy. But the humble part which I have taken in this work does not qualify me to do the nation's dead the justice which they so richly merit. It is true we have seen the patriotic citizen when be resolved to be a vol. dier, when his heart burned with in- dignation as he heard of the insult his country's flag received, and as he saw the principles and truths so dear to every intelligent freeman's heart endangered. We saw him when ho bade the last farewell to loved ones, when he gave the lint parting kiss to weeping wifo and crying children, to sorrowing mo ther and sighing loved ones. We saw him as he cast the last lingering look on his receding home, and the un friendly hill intervened, and shut out the view of the home and dear ones which never more gladdened his sight. And we heard the heaving sigh, and saw the quivering lip, and the silent tears chase each other down the strong man's cheek. And we know some thitg of the terrible conflict which was waged between love of family and love of country. But we cannot describe it. In that parting hour was waged the most terrible conflict of the war; the conflict between home and the battle field, between love and duty, between care for wife, mother and children, and care for Liberty, Truth and Country. This struggle has never been re ported. No human eye saw it. God only who made the heart and gave it the wonderful powers it possesses, could witness, down in its bidden deep, the warring of these einotions.— The soldier felt it, and when honor and country triumphed, the nation was saved, but the soldier died, there and then, and laid himself upon the altar of his country a living sacrifice. Ard we saw him upon the weary Match, hungry and foot-sore, urged on by the booming of the distant cannon, which invited him to the assistance of his struggling brothers in arms; when casting behind him every comfort which retarded his progress; when he laid himself down at night in his bed of swamp, with no covering but the friendly sky, no light but the familiar stare; when on the lonely picket, the whistling of a stray bullet, or sudden fall of a companion, made him feel for those helpless ones "far away in the cot by the mountain," who would never see him again ; when, upon the fiery field of carnage, amid the deafen ing din of battle,the roaring of cannon, the bursting of grape and canister, the shrieking of shells, and the ()rack ing volleys of destructive musketry, he made the dreadful charge; when, with cleuched teeth and determined purpose, with every thought shut out, but victory or death, he rushed upon the foe ; when the crashing bullet or the murderous steel pierced his noble heart; when, with life blood ebbing, and ghastly face, he murmured in the ear of a pausing brother his last earth ly words, of Country, wife, or mother; and when his released spirit ascended to the God of battles. These scenes we have witnessed, but cannot de scribe. Nor did his surviving brother sick en and faint at the heart-rendieg scene the fields of carnage presented, though line after line was torn down by the fiery hail; though column after column reeled and fell like the waiving wheat before the tornadoes destruc tive sweep; though the earth was strewn with the mangled forms of his fallen brothers, and ghastly faces up. turned, and stiff with death's impress, gazed on the advancing line and plain ly told the fate of him who faced the destructive fire ; yet on they sped, each breach was filled, each line re. stored and with the soul cheering shout of "We'll rally round the flag," the bloody field was won. And, U, my hearers! bow numernie are thuse gory fields. I may nut even attempt , O enurnera'e the countless tfittle-fields upon which our heroos ugbt and full, and rase and focor,ht again until victory perched every where on our starry flag. The names Of these battle flelde are legion. They grace almost every valley Of the fi uri ny south, and adorn every mountain and hillside of tho erring mates Every inlet of their coasts and every river and stream received the hlc o id o f the brave men who defied disaster and defeated death. 0 let us riot forget this day the un known graves, of the nameless dead, which lie unnoticed on these fields throughout the land, laid tenderly down in their house of clay by some friendly comrade, or by the unfeeling hands of the misled fire. There they lie, the hope of many a inother'e heart, the bead of many a happy home, the attractive center of many a joyous circle, the just aspirant to a nation's hunore. They he unnoticed and un known on mountain tops and eloping hills, in the fruitful vales and lonely glens of that erring land they died to save, and which is united to us to day by the tender cords which connect those graves to loving aching hearts. No I not unnoticed, nor unknown; God sees that spot and guards it well, until the mornirg of the resurrection, when their sleeping dust shall rise transformed, and at the trumpet's Sound shad rally again around the standard of the King of Peace. Then will lle adorn the brow of those wbo loved and battled for the truths with gar lands of immortal flowers. Lot us not forgot the unmarked graves of the nations nameloed siead, but let our hearts go out this day to every distant battle field, and paume, and in our hearts let fall a teur to the honored memory of those who shed all their life blood br U 3. Aro there words in all our language sufficiently lender to be spoken of these ? Ie there a laurel too fadeless, to be laid on their graves? Are there flowers to be gathered by mortal bends too pure and sweet to adorn the spot where they sleep ? Can we, by the sweetest strains of music, which die so soon on distant hills, or by orations which disappear like the morning dew, suffi. ciently honor the memory of the na tions dead ? No, my hearers; the most gifted tongue must tail,—how much more I who am so deficient in speech. But while we cannot sufficiently eulogize our nation's defenders, we can become more deeply impressed with the service they ha•e rendered the country, if we considered the char acter of the cause which called them from their peaceful homes, to die upor. the battle field, and by pledging our selves to the unswerving support of those principles, we shall most effect ually honor those who have committed them to our care It is the character of the cause which gives merit to its defenders. If the cause which receiv ed the sacrifice of thost. breve soldiers was good, then its consideration will impress our minds with the value of die price paid for it. If we consecrate our hearts to its support, as long as it ' stands, so long will there remain a monument erected to the memory of those who fell in its defense. And as long as one generation after another enjoy its advantages and realizes its benefits, so long will the memory of the Union soldier be held sacred in patriotic hearts. It is not by decking their graves with flowers, nor by eiminent orations, which will facto as rapidly as those wilting blossoms, scattered upon these sun scorched mounds, tat we can perpetuiße these memories. But it is by considering the truth, and solemn ly consecrating ourselves to its de fence, that we shall realize the worth of the mon, who looked not to them selvem, or their selfish interests; but looked higher and far above, and be yond all of thei,e ; who knew no of ject. but the success of the truth ; who ap preciated neither time nor toil nor cost, nave as it vindicated the supremacy of law, and brought victory to our insulted 114 e, who had no aim in Ha but tie triumph of a just and right. eons CallSt3 One hundred years IL;o a congress of brave and honest men declared to the world the self evident truths that all men werei created free and equal, and are inalienably entitled to lite, liberty arid the pursuit of happiness. They appealed to God and to all true men for the support and vindication of these truths. They consecrated their own lives and sacred honor to the cause. Victory perched upon their banner. And this great popular and free government is the result of that announcement of truths and their devotion to then). But at the same time that they de clared these truths to the world, and sacrificed to maintain them against all foreign powers they were ignored in the case of many lives, precious to God, within the States which they declared free and independent. had they at that time applied those truths to every burr an being, black as well as white, and by a little more sacrifice of property and money as well as blood they would not have entailed upon us, that evil which has almost divided our country and overthrown our government. A little more sacri fice, a more complete recognition of these self evident truths would have removed the only dark spot upon the sun of our liberty, and %you'd have prevented this ierrib!e war thruugli which we have passed, and these pre cious lives we mourn to day, might live to bless the country which they died to save. So, also, might our citizens, and leg islators, by their peaceful bullots,and a propercompensation of interested par ties have removed this evil,and preven ted such bloodshed, at a much lees cost. even in money, than the four years war. It was a sad neglect of duty ; of the use of suitable and timely expe dients to correct mistakes and to rep• dress wrongs. It was a national sin, against light, and knoweledge and truth. And sin when it is finished bringeth forth death. _Either the na Lion tenet die and these truths must flee to some other land to be advoca, ted by other people, or this nation must offer up on the field of battle its bravest sons to atone for the na tions sin,and wash it out with the blood of its true hearted citizens. It is a cause of great gratitude this day that when the great battle between right and wrong, between truth and error, between liberty and oppression, was fairly inaugurated, there were not wanting brave hearts to rally round the flag which bad carried hope to every clime, and invited the oppres sed of every land to the protection of its benignant folds. When that flag was insulted and the principles which it represented were endangered, there rushed to its support brave men cf every creed, and of every party and of every nation ; with equal zeal aad devotion to the starry bf►oaer which waved above them, they went forth to conquer, and with thk\ir blood they washed out the lerrors of the past, sad atoned for the natioo's sins. The y oung repub;ie fplined an.titor rletory and the quesriou r,t inqn's fwvic ity for self-government passed heyon4 the region of doubt into the clear alums phere of assured fact. But, Fellow citizens, we must rint coppice that this great Virtory has overthrown every en , my, and tnattb• solution of the popular governamit problem, has placed 1111 out of the reach of danger. No, my friends, "Eternal Vigilance is the price of liberty " %Ye roust eon t:nue to watch our blood-bought rights, and guard them well from the numerous enemies, which are constant ly eluding them. Even now before ttie hooinirig of the cannons have fair. iy died from our ears, before the wid ow bus laid aside her mourning, or the soldier's orphan has acquired the strength of manhood, we see such •vi deuce,' of human weakness, sun!) out. .breaking depravity, such infidelity to national trust, that the heart grows faint, nod hope die, in the soul, and man doubts his kind and loses coati dance in human nature. While, yet, aria nation is groaning under a heavy debt, with business prostrate, and national industry at a stand-still; the men whom the people trusted, to Peer the ship of state through the intricate channel of financial ditlicultioia, have forgotten the public trust and satiated :their oungry maws from the treasures of the nation. The leaven of selsshness appeals to have permeated the whole body politic, and threatens the very cause which has been wrested so late ly- from the hands of the destroyer. If treason had inlused itself into the various departments of the government before the war, and threatened its over, hrort, fraud, and dee. hone6ty have no insinuated them• selves into the same departnients, and equally endanger the public l i ce. Every thing in this country at th'i day has a tendency- to turn trot', the straight line and beeento cro,dted. It i 3 not only wiliAsey that het4 turned crooked but business, and people, acd ways. We have croaked eabioetcand senators, crooked judges, crooked leg- iAlutors, crooked wieerdblies, eri i *rook ed municipa!ilics. We have crwked parties, crooked politice,cruoksd polio clans, and crooked elections. Ws Have a crooked financial •c*t•m, and crooked business. Evary bn•inee• and thing is inclined to twist, and turn (min sL,•:light mad of truth into the crooked labyrinths of error. There is a tearful tendency at this day in this nai.ion to crookedness, acd we ought OH this occasion, and in the presence of these graves,to open our eyes to the danger* which threaten our govern ment We are celebrating our first centy nisi year. The tree of liberty planted by the fathers, and watered by their own blood which has been so lately pruned of its det6rrnity by the sword, bus spread forth its inviting branches to the persecuted and downtrodden of every race and clime and they have found repose beneath its protecting shade. To-day each bough gratefully bending with the ripe fruits cf a su perior civilization is the surprise of older and more favored governments. whose subjects have crossed the seas fromtbe distant east,like Sbeba's queen, to behold the wonders of this young Republic. While they shall stand mute with astonishment at, the progrml made by untrammeled genius, and de clarc that half was never to .d them, they wid be equally surprised at the ease with which corruption insinuates itself into the very heart of public life, and mends contaminating streams into every artery and vein of the body politie. until the whole bead has be. come sick and the whole heart is failo. Why, my hearers, there 'appear, to b. no soundness in cur r•ountry nr gov ernment to day. All Alen seek their own, and not the welf.:re of the ea- Lion. Not the triumph truth ur the victory of right. ''The chief thi• g thoueit -f that's their oVII, pr..ii•, WitiCii muAt lie seetired Illhatever comes ot it" ()or nation this day resembles a taut young man, com.ily in appearance and pleasing to behold. whope prect , eiono development exhaus's his vital f.ree, and sadly predicts his P pettily dirusolo twit. Jlsr y a lritool of humanity, who OULU ViSit our chores during this Ex position shall sigh to see, amid the grand and great productions of this land, the germs of sell destruction so rapidly growing in her fruitful soil. Masy a political scientist, who hoped to find in the Young Republic of the West, his ideal government, will sigh to see the fair ebip of State, amid the foaming breakers of political fraud, drifting upon the threatening rocks, while her crew,drunken with the wine of past success and present prosperity, unconscious of surrounding dangers, rejoice amid the roaring breakers, and dazzled with the prismatic hove of the enchanting spray, approach the hostile beach of popular indifference already strewn with the wrecks of pop ular governments. Fellow-citizens, I would call on you this day of sacred and sad memories to awake from your dreamy slumbers; open your eyes to the stern realities of the scene which your government presents. See the flag which has so lately been washfd with blood from the dark sin of Slavery, again trail ing io the filthy slough f political fraud; and the government whiob w• so lately wrested at such terrible wet from the hands of treason, has fallen into the hands of political trichinosis, who would barter their tools as they have their country for filthy lucre Do not urderatand me cow, as meaning that this is to be done by tb• tearing down of one party and the en throning of another. No, fellow citi zens, Ido not say so. And let no man deceive you by any such delusive words. I have nothing to say against the parties, and I have nothing to say for tbern ; but I have something to say a ga inst, the corrupt men who control them. These are found in boll par ties. The conduct of a Tweed and Connelly is too fresh in our memory, and too glaringly dishonest to be c•v •red by the fraud of a Belknap or a Babcock. Fellow-citizens, these soldiers whoa we mourn to-day did not bequestb the principles for which they fought, bled and died, to the keeping of crooked parties or crooked politicians, but to you, the people. To you, to eget, indi vidual is this sacred trust committed. This you can do by intelligent and righteous legislation. Remember,tbat the ballot executes the froemso's will, 'as the lightning does the will of God.' The nation neglecting the proper ass of its ballots, mast resort to ballets.— Tbe Czar of Russia by a single *trek, of Ibe pen abolished serfdom in his Empire. It took us four years to do a similar work with a million and a half of swords. The British government abolished slavery with one drop of ink. It took the blood of throe boodrei thna4ars r , r oar Drava ofiritsina te d-rd: R4fitornb.r , her . tl, J fed that, roe lei e•w .r• 1 if we ;.. *6-6 Out right.-e-s Iswe With Isle. ma alai wash tit niirghteoue 110.41 with blhred. I), dare to be et wierhfol t y..er pear. f.. f •4 lions at him. a. the lives* ....edirre were upon the field et hatOe. Pore to defend them by Oa ;plolli ,:pe• ape of vow' begone a* y-er • Wier* did 0 , •16 their rnu•loots Itegiat Mei arreaensag wrong as they ed the yellies sharps of Ibe enemy, sad Tao will des yaw part io perpe:bating t-oe gloriosa aft,- ern rnstit of the people. for t^e people Do this, my fellow e,fisirsa . DP this my brave eqiuradee of many a bard contested Sold, ern.. 'might the last prayer whicb trembied Lis., lips of our ifyin h e brothers. se their spirit* ascended *mid the eras% and iiirs of the battle to the tiod wh.) Barre them. And w:th th• return of each opcort. Its :nog o• our irnitrot irs;loyo skied mil, in the sionohinn of hosvon sod blossom with lb. eboienot dower', thero snail not hit wanting Ass& to dock their groom*. A. long se thaw bletwingo aro or.j..yod hf the onn• serf daughters or men. on !nog w - '1 thine be erretod in each heart, s osonnmertS of grateful mem - wit-6, more :wrung than the granite of the atfaisai,tieer bills The gloriGu. raoritentent of eternal tru•A • on which evil b. in serii!e.l in letiero of spiritual etta light the n.start. the deeds, Lb* prier,- pies, of th• heroic. ;he iamotritt. awe Godlike Situ , " K 1.1: 1,111 f" iNtf.‘!‘t ;+ my' pr9"•II '•1►• 'ti•+ .w..oc recur , l th.• • ~ 1 4.ien 4.4'h for a citizen of thi. minty, wh., oreiprei i MO apiejoila mar. I 1 the riblie emb- mantled a large share of the estrat of his fel c,tizeni. Wm. Mann, Jr.. of th. firm 4 Wm. Mann. Jr. a co.. mannfaetnrers of axes awl e•lg. , ‘ tools, swijneent. to , hia paw.. easeete hit death on Wednesday night of last week on the ohio river. through a itearnboat *spiv sion. Fie was on a businett trip. etpeetiosig tw ri s k. Ar%ansaa and ?..sat b.f.?" hie r2turn. On Wednesday be took passay. oe !hc tteaml,,at Pat rleborne ,t grentvitte !Athena. to proceed down the riser. .1! niett Coe boat made a stop alongside the at-toner Arkansat apt nultot below town. Mr. Mann batl retir-.1 to his North the night in the enhin. .I'. 11 nAnek the boilers exploded with a heary crash. shatter ing and setting tire to the hoot. and klling. and injnrinf a atruher of hand: and passettgare —the exact numher we bar- not yet learned. NI:. Mar.n with hit heft under him V 34 blown up through the cabin and fell -Toe Vie roof of the Arkin's.. &Ile. derl . •tp,aie l with the mattress still under him. 'lead by colli 'ion 'ha. , ceiling was crushed. and death came go suddenly that dembttese it was painlett. A merchant , of Eriantrviite. Irani that Mr. Manzi had .aken pasemee in 'Me Pet elelinrne, proceeded to the seen, of the dis aster, nest day. and thnt rue decemerti wns identified : otherwite he might lot ease ntree. for, shocking to relate. the op., his finger, noon w ilia name and nnadesee ► were engraved, had liven stolen tiefciee bis body was found. Ms other effects, incliadisig pocket hook, krol.l watch. paper+. etc.. ware all missing, hatinz been sto!ca or destroyed in the ;sutras IE3 remaina arrive,' at his hone. iha afternoon. and acre interred .at the brick church abovo need, v:I:e on Taeielav se'.r►on... The finer:o 7f 7%, !ante•? .1.-r he^•t 1 ronn.7. on:ihi.le of Le-ri•!teen Mr. A.l'll ',air , . an sni: :Id.. wife an ! children, 'rho a week ago had one of the west delightful home,' in the world. which cow alas, t 3 turned inzo houle of raonroittg. their bereavement they have the !heartfelt ihylupathie.: of the entire cotanetswity. for rear me.) are ,I 1 noir^r=aiiy rear-etc.! by all cLaseee of community tva.4 Wm. Wan,. Jr. lie was aged .19 yeas, 4 rcariths. and 1 0 dart, at the time of 11:3 .icath.—Lewartewe Tsar Ansiverfat The Evil Fruits if West Digestion. There it nn pathological Part sores e!..sey s“certained thin 'hat the "twit forigoisib4. phniel or nrrr ,•14 Are fireetly trim... able to imperfect 134ntnnia, w it. 4 tr of +mfr.! prneem.t. MI), i s rift/Plit.y cr..in ttontathi lima leo, in:. other Mere enlasiwww arc loower:e•.* tore , ery mei.... in ± ' , WM celmie to pailimte lts .ymptormi. •rne w vy to) lirPtl,Z! !len tit- SWI P TCPTI y 'tem IA vv. Wan' the Jige4t:Y. in.' sarliertait:s. ispon unorestrsete4 re.itwo it* estniiiiti rine' ii 10,4oIntely dependent. a 11o:owner 4 Steanneb Balers wil.l Jo Mfg/ hrace and soothe the 'Peahen''d tad i e. rusted nerves, and induce +mesa, retee.bisig Aleep—natnre's catbaiiees.—theme ail the 40-called 'terrine* to be &rend in :be pe te r_ mibc..perna or out of anise glasefot etf the Hi tter4 4honf.l he take* lbeler• each used. Jane! Int. Altoona reoet•eil an viper s.ry gin Mow this wreck in the risspensioe of a ,errst lumber of employee* in the railroad sharpr. roe ime penlions commoneed on Moods, and were OM. tinned on Tueelay an.l yesterday. ated the total number ovirapended .s amid le be th hundred and Arty. The raw* of the ~pets *ion i* in a groat meievire owing to the Ihilare of the centennial, the •nereneed nose wed he. ing nearly whist the Company had antieiroom ao.l not I le!) ao will warrant the farther building of rolling floe Tae and Reading And othe• railroads have Mar in4pemied large numbers of their em ployee* for the same remelts. The stespeaded workmen in thi* city have the vying o nhy the entire comminity, and we Oneerefr hope that the sieve will speedily gorse whew An tin*ine*s of the constry will set only innoify, command, the employment of every mecbauic and !aborting man. Alloorno if)Ll.olllA7'ft PILAW AND thirTllll37 The Victorws of &klieg.— Dessestor lisessikr. Steam. Electric Telegraphs. relative& /a_ have eacb !sad their parlittaiso ovation", bat the matt who hos redwood Hoe spier.* of imis. ease. and elleriated tae marries" of inanimate of his fellow beings, is. ro say the least ail. eat itled to our soitairatioe. Holloway has et pearb o l a fifrtim, in rtrprwipmee we siehorso tie r, ,it lo nnt the w I. 14,1 ales ellhetio• rnre s vf isreasdel vat& poi. ream-news. whoop iug-cosach, sad all diamrairrs •Iliorfisie Ark& hood. his rills sad thistasens are r Ilassoliar ma household words la gator. Alia. MMus and America. Mothers 4terro;.l airy.? Ito wise out a vopply. F.tr - r W.MTH K one ton.— Aro yoe `nlfering with t'osoweerptios. Coosho. *novo Colds settled ow the lirsost. or wry Owasso .f the Throat and Lwow If sip go to yew Duorgist's :4usitils a ass, sod we a boobs of Iloscartes Gsow.k. ehrewv. Thew wirer haw lately heels introdweeel Ihossfloesissioy. mote is selling on its owe Merit& no propie sow going wild over its roeveiw, sad 41rwarieur wit over oar zowntry are wills( so of its ism derfal cares aeseise their emoSonsire. If yea wish to try its rapenior rirter, get $ Powayte Rottle for 10 resift. Lame sire bolds 71 meow Three dose; will relieve ray ease. Try it awl -wow-19es. If you *lnt In organ Ibeep—io Wee.... So fty or Beatty. call at tie JO C. 1141. stare I Wu Kamm. aft 116 af 4w5 R S.. . • is,ir war gswilmiste • y 1.1, ~it ....is 4t ve4 rig soots ...14 et 411-Ekrew., 1111601111 rime jr - rbrime, Wm, lei Wog rigimestivo awt , ant 'MAP soall rig tf... 4.44? • le lir iberilw. et -lift. .t•t lir ?venom. aye finals lay RA. ftr mor esp., twos • welt . : *WV I r, • 1,, reap* fni , • 7.1e11 ,ortnnr.tt .* tire. 4 11...71 4,st. %mg roar .. int*. !sr peiw ' • ..... . 1).. ant fail to 4e* 11re. L M. Sininuoria . , very is. aiwortamet 4 Kits. Parma/P. Logan' Vadat w •nr. n 4. (1614roma- vincit or MI RIM frlrrresemme. Nei "MI Itz,rres Ire sr— /1••• —1 N.. bum Ill•rforlit •••• r•••.• lbw s sow Trwl ba• bum refuls.4 Comer L des IP" lbeibelenr ry sol 4 how lAN/. is weir% 'NM IMO wet 1... 5 e o f twit rare?, WO. ilie• oar • snit brillbsitS! named •••• too ss b• Ibabes flor eistri•T •• bare moor For or row ago, votir..47 • 411111barom "ow *eft •Pb•• mew berm bees T• 4 Tlboio led *owe • aril la Ibis bammils hy Goo. Qom).*Wt. mpumm ibir mar 'smith. !ter troogroma o• bar home or NOR Ira Mot mit tram aofefo4 mowebto fir ow .I.totiortoarmoro of awl ifiamor • .0901. Tr.) 4. , lbw this Test ofts *sum m soy way As a pert sr parr.. of 11.11 444 mit Daft so tr+ om ragoverid. ,* sot wore vaih•- t.l t.. •tior thernio. marmomoogy .4 WWI wet • stexiewse s h alt y' lorwo. eat Imp pp poreauf. Not Tovoiood ocher mfammaa wathrafr, and cam. Mao oviotrore room aR Sam Cue- mosireisiti awe is tibial, Sum* tier wind tip. bed ism disposed sf. Thew la as .1_ 4 4 peasselb list misvpirieser beer ' Airs bob sill Imre is se solar. sad so __ is vitt toss* tbi. esessy • pad sneak We set Ur nisi *SS Cart far mew 1111 AND gnaw susider sr psi alle- 114 =1110 1111. 104 whilily ewe Ste." •if mei leo ties sec* sus / lid I**.l. s 'story. ',waives*. Spy T. . 7inxt 7arrnik r•••rilisy vograimig or" eusberboof "'onto's', rowel* Air Os Ore rid' fassiossy sod Mays Taii•pe. as psmosor olossofflo Hero. Varivweig rear e, - • sew aorwa. wish ttb. tier,ftv appenniere of Isar toe 11. pr...net rowpoc-t" obr v•iwpri. 111Neet. them arr. S•Wis tiw Ism Sow spew Ore l` Ihe • rm.. esh rf set 4.01wer.1 % . 1r nor esfrir••.9l 'Vt.. fin MAO at bass so "ohossup jinni& new., weessia sprossomo k sot imooor Ihr Slop 4.r. row,. Oml law. ileme per sue is itwori ?,usie art 4 ortiMbig llorey .! bee sersrage of awe a lbsiag pee sot frist erwp ink up Ow, snap* mid pi is. Nem mem* nopmassese s r. 44 suer b ..sio.t.t woe *weft wir maw tbse piowS., v.v.' bffl.4 Sr Ito Ip. !loss. Plat aropH osoingli Mir torso if toy tt- not tin Olt us sobs s heal Tait& got to oar WPM!, pose of widow. is a Soy statism go li. P. It 8.. owl is so ow PC. 4 with * irbisooolt sew sot a Swim water :soil. Aft Sweets ammo solo sod soft. soup byre In seas +sem loisdhos is s sem swingy Ilea it rots piste. Throw aro otio omit worry bops s I s bosisillot Woos Ihr So s.- t ..- roilsoot worpiorist. ottob the *voiles sr its pines. .1 *roe serf bort an 4 raifte.i tire se seat. et simio tams awl tosioe taw. YU tort is shOpood to it. *km sod Lownismisie. A purl ewe die owl bas poseismol sword toolloil some st bowl on ti. osisossios so* is gawk lir se is is coiled book) - *NNW Sari sot amt asa strtippisir a law giseillOp eV los& sot lased twists oho tiortor eloppoll awe 11111ftwi etorrsol eerie, dor sorsoisr. Obis* b. steporif s. tbe LOSsoso loos Swat Tb.. win soh • Woo :5 4.sommid mot issirsors ...woo ter.. DOS. i I mums* ■A , %,..rosit 1...00p Sp Omilig• 111 elb wsuaras perm towniniesk Pii. Aim 11l OM noire Mbar Moor 11lbws am* pwr - . ..... _ pw• mune Dams par awl _ 412•Nmsumil fleliwinsaa P.... issl64 ...-..—. -- Caere 16.11 Velure V ▪ ... ik Proof Climprire 9 . Prabove , Plisow• wad... /0.9.► • • alerama lb.sibor. ft*. Or lIIIK --WI t . . 11111.0111 - aa etr It IL P. imam/. is wage IPairmiegaik, me Ito INIO wit„ M 1... J. a. limp% le.. lialove dielamai leis. Peeps 11.4."041. aura 4 •US mildro. CS - Writ— ILL •Pat tam alb 41/..• Abe beer ./ tb. WWI. IT New. J. • Illsom JAmmo S. Cwt ea Whom ratio t aa. bob 4 itswas aresidir 1/1" BRAT - rITTIN —4.• se. ztell . runi4wee w 11. I twit W fwmaraap. bt arow. W. Aim t Sawrost. w lissiew4l.. Mrs gams t Orkikik w Ireovempilline -vermelt. New To- Day . ottril tYkr csWIT AALIL -01- VILEINZ FAN - WO TOWN 11111011MIIITY. _ - Thr somiwigesal ma. is roar a" tbe preismouri rartsp.• r Jr": Prlt, r 1 Tliet rrrtam *pp /AU 111.11~m %SIM AIWA. 4111=11 • "0.0014 swommollapp. Illemisease wolp. . • lbsof wslw irre•.4 ae 4a. rim* i.wl4lVi Form Asasailifa MUIR ..trov Ilibastrogas 4 !_..1. Owes OS 1.....1 AIMa.. *lliussi wow is, ip..4 femme/ ~ ..umliftre, OP ma OHM ammi..4 ono* 41Soi. nrinsea. rein d framosim.• • -0/ hwir. AM. ••••••111 ter wawa ports •Orirom.4 sham le as a *me .draw sir P.... 40 I 1/.. nobrgidia *maim ease Arise bx lbolllO podlNlSimp mow ...wow sea sew Owe ors... 'elle line fe • • !, raw. ono plboo MO mom lltio *Ow -• eon oopoikob mob woo. gloom opPowip ••• somp. oar b.. a wopoirboos 7 N; OfifilA D of es 4 .10111.dlw amp nu m! RAILS AXIIP MOOR, ..4 oroorlbros moommor oo moan, ID iong mitt* so 4 toortiomboo totootor elk and oito At: Itele put ipme wee to ipoo. ergo insillimir TUX TOWN 11111MILITT earsirs• ilimiuml". ONO assummo t~ is•• et iressi. amose es 40. ewer Ommespe. lbelbere sressok as is isses..* esssass., 100111spisp_ssory. na. Meg wiesemi pose Ni um% rllmweigampow ••••••4 • Prom redlllog arm I blip •• I tow awry rms• Aare &ism wpm aim ISO moll lOW asmadorir The - risysiog eindhse It It ONSSIIIV. JrNlll 0411. •44 :A.m. s.. ws Ow IwomOso foOmassow Tin git—Owmage r. SPiplOwesolOsmiliw 4 - amok MOO, %Om, ww. mood —ii owpossis wr low wk issime by Isallawbb se pourybp. W. L MOM imingieb Awe 11411 fair • Kummer mivirit 0111 rallThrot gr. liallwe 1•11601•111111, lbssisfi Ilim ea cne Om solhavrllisik INNS nor Dm. r • . do fa. ail* 4 Aaiun Illimillog bre Peels imeinerilb 4111W4„, Ipollimpliew ikinasileur is• MO elle of soft warsaMagia ppm% au* four bass resimit IMP awe elle puma Om prroor* dirmarafarl ihr gists e- SSW ITS. IMP _ 1101 I ._ II MIN •a • •• • ANIP • a • AP I fie 'a Me► to
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers