The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, June 30, 1876, Image 1

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    VOL, 40.
The Huntingdon Journal .
.1. R. DI7RIIORROW,
PURIARIIERS ANT) PROPRIETORS,
Ogice in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street.
THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every
Friday by J. R. DURBORROW and J. A. NASIf , under
the firm noon of J. R. Duanonnow .t Co. at $2,00 per
annum IN Any,NCE, or $2.50 if not paid for in six months
from date of 510 , seription, and 13 if not paid within the
year.
. - -
No paper dis,•ontinued, uulese at the optiou of the pub-
Ikhers, uutil all arrearages are pant.
NO paper, Iperever, will be sent out of the State unless
absolutely pai.: for in advance.
. . . .
Tratwijni mi• - ertitiements will be Inserted at TWELVE
AND A-HALF CENTS per line for the first inaertieu, SEVEN
AND A-lIALF CENTS for the second and FIVE CENTS per line
for all subsequ,nt insertions.
lt,mlar quarterly and yearly business advertisements
•vill be inserted at tho following rates:
tim ! 1 yr
59 4 5 50. si 991 1 ,‘,•01! 9 441118 00:1274 :3n
0 , .• 4 • in 00 12 001!,:coli18 00 , 36 00' 501 65
7 0.19 6,•14 00 : 14 04:n(!0II:15 0060 00 f;6, 40
Sill 24 00 1 16 00;1 c 01136 00 1 60 00 801 100
All Resolutions of Associations., Communications of
limited or indi, Anal interest, all party announcements,
and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines,
will be charged TEN cENTs per line.
Legal and other notices will be charged to the 'arty
having them in,rted.
Advertising Agents must find their commission - outside
of those figures.
All adrerti:•ina accounts are due and collectable
whyn the ad, J., ; , , ment is once inserted.
JOB PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors,
done with HOW..CIA and dispatch. Hand-bills, Blanks,
Cards, Pamphlets, ke., of every variety and style, printed
at the shorte,t notice, and everything in the Printing
bile will he ea'•cuted in the most artistic manner and at
the lowest rate,
Professional Cards
I CA WM - ELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street.
I. Office formerly occupied by Me•wrs. Woods St Wil•
[ap12,71
TIR. A.R. BRUMBAUGH, cffers his professional services
to thee,osstamisty. Ofth o, No 523 Washington street,
.1w do, east of the Catholic Parsouage. [jan4,7l
II C. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister's
J. buildimc. in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E.
J. Grvetie, II un.iugdon, Pa.
riElo. 13. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Prim Street,
jituvl7,ls
(11
. L. Hu I ientint, Offlee in B.T. Brown'm new building,
Nu. 52u, l'enn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap12.71
11 W. BUCHANAN, Burgeon Dentist, No. 228, Penn
11. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [rnelll7,'7s
1 C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Oiler, No. —, Penn
11. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl9,'7l
J• FRANKLIN SCITOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting
e). don, I'a. Prompt attention given to all legal budi-
M . .. Office, 229 Penn Street, corner of Court Howie
Square. bloc-1;72
I' P L:
, 131 €, A . 1 , 1, A
, I. Btret tt . ( t )rn t e h 3;- m at A tt orney-at- Law,
StrPet. [ j,in4,71
J
W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim
el • A I.7ent, n untimpli n, Pa. tioldienr (1.1.4 against the
Government for Inick-pay, lonnty, widown' and Invalid
petedoros attended to with great rare and promptneo,
~~f
flee on Penn Se met. fjan4,ll
T DURIIOIIII,OW, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
. aili practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon
county. Particular attention given to the settlement of
entatvi of ilecedvnts. Office in the JOURNAL building.
S.
.IJOEISSINa Eli, Attoruey-at-Law and Notary Public,
.
Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Nu. Peon Street, oppo
site Court Howie. [febs,ll
I )
A. OftliiS ,, S. Attorney-nt-Law. Patent. Obtaine . d.
It. Office, 3.1 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [my31,71
Q E. YLEMIN(i, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
Ea re In 31unit,, building, Penn Street. Prompt
and eareful attention given to all legal !Amine..
[augs,74--Omoii
WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting
/ 'lon, Pa. Special attention given to collection.,
awl all other legal toed... attended to with care anti
promptites.. Ottie, No. TPJ, Penn Street. fapl9,ll
Miscellaneous.
MARK THESEFACTS !
The Testimony of the Whole World.
HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT
BAD LEOS, BAD BREASTS, SORES AND ULCERS.
All descriptiouc of sores are remediable by the proper
and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To at
tempt to cure LAO legs by plastering the edges of the
wound together is a folly ; for should the skin unite, a bolt
gy dimmed condition remains underneath to break out
with tenfold fury in a few days. The only rational and
successful treatment, as indicated by nature, is to reduce
the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe
the neighboring parts by rubbing in plenty of the Oint
ment as salt is forced into meat. This will cause the
malignant humors to be drained eff from the hard, swol
len and discolored parts round about the wound, sore, or
nicer, and when these humors are removed, the wounds
themselves will soon heal ; warm breed and water poul
tice applied over the affected parts, after the Ointment
has been well rubbed in, will soothe and sorted the same,
and greatly assist the cure. Theta is a description of
llcer, sore and swelltng, which need not be named here,
attendant upon the follies of youth, and for which this
Ointment is urgently recommended as a sovereigt, reme
dy. In curingsuch poisonous sores it never fails to restore
the system to a healthy state if the Pills be taken accord
ing to tire printed instructions.
DIPTIIERIA, ULCERATED SORE THROAT, AND
SCARLET AND OTHER FEVERS.
Any of the above diseases may be cured by well rub;
bing the Ointment three tames day Into the chest, throat,
and neck of the patient, it will soon penetrate, and give
immediate relief. Medicine taken by the mouth must
operate upon the whole system ere its influence can be
felt in any local part, whereas the Ointment wilt do its
work at once. Whoever tries the unguent in the above
manner for the diseases named, or any similar disorders
affecting the chest and throat, will find themselves re
lieved as by a charm. All sufferers from these complaints
should envelop the throat at bedtime in a large bread and
water poultice, after the Ointment has been well rubbed
in ; it will greatly ambit the cure of the throat and chest.
To allay the fever and lessen the Inflammation, eight or
ten Pills should be taken night and morning. The Oint
ment will produce perspiration, the grand essential in alf
case.; of fevers, sore throat, or where there might be an
oppression of the chest, either from asthma or other
FILES, FISTULAS, STRICTURES.
"'The above class of complaints will be removed by night
ly l'ertnenting the parts with warm water, and then by
most effectually rubbing in the Ointment. Persons suffer
ing from these direful complaints should lose not a mo
ment in arresting their progress. It should be understood
that it is not sufficient merely to smear the Ointment on
the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in fora con
siderable time two or three times a day, that it may be
taken into the system, whence it will remove any hidden
sore or wound as effectually as though palpable to the
eye. There again bread and water poultices, after the
rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is
the only sure treatment for females, came of cancer
in the stomach, or where there may be a general bearing
down.
INDISCRETIONS OF YOUTH;-SORES AND ULCERS.
Blotches, as ti!so swellings, can, with certainty, be radi
cally enrol if the Ointment he used freely, and the Pills
taken night and morning, as recommended in the printed
instructions. When treated in any other way they only
dry up in one place to break out in another; whereas
this Ointment will remove the humor frets the system,
slid leave the Fatima a vigorous and healthy being.—
It will require time with the use of the Pills to insure a
lasting cure.
DROPSIC AL SWELLINGS, PARALYSIS, AND STIFF
JOISTS.
Althongh the above complaints differ widely in their
origin and man,. yet they all require local treatment.—
Many of the worst cases, of such diseased, will yield in a
comparatively short space of time when this Ointment is
diligently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every
other means have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills
should be taken according to the printed directions ac
companying each box.
Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the follow•
ing cases
Bad legs.
Ba i Breasts.
Burns,
Bunions,
Bite of Moschetoes
Cancers, Sore Nipples,
!Contracted Stir Sore throats,
Joints, Skin Diseases,
Elephantiasis, Scurvy,
.Fistulas, Sore Heads,
:Gout, rings, Tumors,
Glandular Swell- Ulcers,
Lumbago, Wounds,
Piles, Yaws.
Rheumatism,
!Scalds,
and &willies,
C , ,co-bay,
Chiego-foot,
Chapped Hands,
Corns (Soft)
CAUTION :—None are genuine unless the signature of
J. Ilereoca, as agent for the United States, surrounds
each boa of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will
be given to any one rendering such information as may
lead to the detection of any party or parties coun
terfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing
them to be spuri'us.
Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY &
Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Deal
ers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in pets at
22 cents, 62 cents, and Et each.
41- There is considerable saving by taking the larger
sizes.
N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every
disorder are affixed to each pot. [apr2B;76-eow-ly
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 fontes of type, for 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 oent cheaper than Philadelphia
or New York.
sp7-tf.] J. R. _DURBORROW & CO.
J. R. DURI?ORROW,
J a N
The Huntingdon Journal,
EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING,
No. 212, FIFTH STREET,
FT UNTING DON, PENNSYLVANIA.
3m IGm 9m lyr
$2 00 per annum. in advance; $2.50
within six months, and $3.00 if
00000000
0 PRt.atiEsslVE
[apl2B,
00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000
ugum
TO ADVERTISERS
Circulation
ADVERTISING MEDIUM
The JOURNAL is one of the best
printed papers in the Juniata Valley,
and is read by the best citicens in the
county. It finds its way into 1800
homes weekly, and is read by at least
5000 persons, thus making it the BEST
advertising medium in Central Pennsyl-
vania. Those who patronize its columns
are sure of getting a rich return for
their investment. Advertisements, both
local and foreign, solicited, and inserted
at reasonable rates. Give us an order.
ggmg
JOB DEPARTM
- COLOR PRINT
liOr All business letters should be ad
dressed to
J. R. DURBORROW & CO.,
Huntingdon, Pa .
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SPECIAL'
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atriztic *ticctions.
My Country 'Tis of Thee.
My country, 'tis of thee,
Sweet Igind of li erty,
Of thee I sing ;
Land where my fathers died,
Land of the pilgrims' pride,
From every mountain side
Let freedom ring.
My native country, thee,
Land of the noble free,
Thy name I love
I love thy rocks and rills,
Thy woods and templed hills,
My heart with rapture thrills,
Like that above.
Let Music swell the breeze,
And ring from all the trees
Sweet freedom's song ;
Let mortal tongues awake.
Let all that breathe partake.
Let rocks their silence break,
The sound prolong.
Our Father's God, to thee,
Author of liberty,
To thee we sing
Long may our land be bright
With feedom's holy light,
Protect us with thy might,
Great God our King!
The Star-Spangled Banner.
0 say, can you see by the dawn's early light
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last
gleaming ?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the
perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly
streaming!
And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in
;awe proof through the night that our flag was
still there;
0 say, does that star-spangled bannner yet wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave?
On that shore, dimly seen through the mists of the
deep,
Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence
reposes,
What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering
steep,
As it fitfully blows, now conceals, now discloses 7
Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first
beam,
In full glory reflected, now shines on the stream ;
'Tie the star-spangled banner! 0, long may it
wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave !
And where is that land who so vauntingly swore
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion
A home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has washed out their foul footsteps'
pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the
grave;
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth
wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave !
0, thus be it ever when freemen shall stand
Between their loved homes and the war's desola-
tion !
Blest with victory and peace, may the heaven-
rescued land
Praise the l'ower that bath made and preserved
us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it le just,
And this be our motto, "In good is our trust";
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall
wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave
FIIANCII4 SCOTT h . EY
July Fourth, 1876.
A century old to-day !
Upon our spiritual eight there steals
A vision of old age; a spectre gray
Creeps to an open grave. and trembling kneels,
And kneeling, fades away.
Yet, 'tie not death we celebrate,
Nor yet decrepitude, nor wan decay.
The shouts with which the nation greets the Day
Are full of lusty life, and faith in Fate.
Time has not lessened, but increased our might;
No spectre rises, but a giant, armed
For peaceful fight.
These are not evening shades that dim the light;
'Tis morning, and the risen sun has charmed
Away the dismal night.
What is this hundred years?
To us a life's full span; the tomb
That holds three generations of our race;
A period from whose womb
Have come those grand discoveries which place
A thousand years of knowledge in our bands.
So wonderful appears
This fruitful Century to-day that stands
Completed in our presence. that it seems
Its predecessors were but hurrying dreams
Fleeing away before this hundred years.
We boast our hundred years:
We boast our limits, washed by either sea ;
We boast our teeming millior.s, and that we
All, all are free!
Wakening our tyrant's fears,
Our jubilations shake the world,
Which makes our holiday its own,
With flags of freedom everywhere unfurled,
Waving in every zone.
A century old to-day !
Yet nature gives no heed;
The great sun rises, shines and sets,
Unmindful of the joy or grief that frets
Our bosoms as he keeps his way.
The ancient Ocean cares more for the weeds
He flings ashore
Than for man's aspirations or his needs :
The silent stars ignore
Us and our destiny ; the gathering storm
Abates no threat; the seasons pass, and warm
And freeze us as they did before.
What is a century to the sun ?
Or to the hurricane? or the shining eyes
Of heaven, that have seen hundreds from their
skies ?
The whole material universe moves on,
Uncaring that a hundred years are gone!
VI.
What is a hundred years?
A speck upon the dial-plate of time !
How infinitely small to God appears
An Age—to us so spacious and sublime !
To our small vision is the small event
Expanded and enhanced.
We claim for man a power pre-eminent;
By dreams of immortality entranced,
We hail the wondering skies,
And bid them yield their secrets to our skill.
We smite the sea with ships and work our will;
We drag the lightning down and tie it fast;
Ilainess the air and rise
To heights serene, and dare the raging blast.
Yet all these feats so vast
Are only ravellings from the fringe of power;
Nature perceives no conquest and no loss;
She for a while permits—then, with an hour
Of flood or earthquake, spoils,
Unconsciously, the fruit of all our toils !
She bids the raging Cyclones toss
And tear, and overwhelm
The stately ships that claim to rule their realm.
Yet man, too, hath his triumphs in this war;
The vital spark outlives
Material forms and gives
Immortal lustres to the ages past.
Down the dim paths of centuries afar
Shine thoughts of beauty which can never die ;
Immaculate conceptions which inspire
- -
All noble souls and fire
Great hearts with generous desire.
What though the pile aspiring to the sky,
Wrought with artistic cunning, cannot last !
What though the dust of ages hides from sight
Cities of which tradition only tells !
Nobler than these, and beautiful as dreams,
Fabrics of hope remain with love alight,
-
Wherever - dwells
Good will to man, adorned with fadeless beams,
VIII,
A hundred years!
How in its perfect circle hath the power
Of progress waxed! how have the mists
Of superstition vanished from man's sight !
How have his hopes prevailed above his fears!
In that decisive hour
When Freedom closed with Slavery in the lists
Of deadly combat, Freedom won the fight!
By one great deed,
A charter, written with an iron•pen
Dripping with brothers' blood, has freed
A race of slaves to be a race of men !
Ix.
Illustrious Day, all hail !
We celebrate our Nation's birth ! am
Our songs of joy haunt every gale
HUNTINGDON, PA., F.
And echo o'er the earth!
And riot with martial sounds alone,
Of cannon's roar and trumpet's noisy blare,
We vent our joy upon the listening air.
But build a temple to the Arts, and throne
The gods of labor and design
Within its walls. Hero time and Beauty meet,
And hero entwine
Their locks with garlands from the poet's lay
And while the orator,
in speech divine,
Sets gems of wisdom from the antique :lay,
The minstrel of the Future strikes his lyre
In matchless strains filled with celestial fire;
And as the echoes die
Amidst tumultuous shout and jnyful cry,
The prescient car, intent, with rapture hears
Them sounding down another hundred years!
—J. M. W inchell, in the Oalary for July.
c4fnbtp mkuct pap'.
DECLARATION of INDEPENDENCE.
When, in the course of human events,
it becomes necessary for one people to dis
solve the political bands which have con
nected them with another, and to assume
among the powers of the earth the separate
and equal station to which the laws of na
ture and of nature's God entitle them, a
decent respect fbr the opinions of mankind
requires that they should declare the
causes which impel them to the separation.
We•hold these truths to be self evident
—that all men are created equal; that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights ; that among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness ;
that to secure these rights, governments
are instituted among men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the gov
erned ; that whenever any form of govern•
ment becomes destructive of these ends it
is the right of the people to alter or to
abolish it, and to institute a new govern
ment, laying its foundation on such prin
ciples, and organizing its powers in such
form, as to then► shall seem most likely to
effect their safety and happiness. Pru
dence, indeed, will dictate that govern
ments long established shall not be changed
for light and transient causes ; and accord
ingly all experience bath shown that man
kind : - .re more disposed to suffer, while
evils are sufferable, than to right them
selVes by abolishing the forms to which
they are accustomed. But when a long
train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing
invariably the same object, evinces a de
sign to reduce them under absolute des
potism, it is their right, it is their duty,
to throw off such government and to pro
vide new guards for their future security.
Such has been the patient sufferance of
these colonies; and such is now the ne
cessity which constrains them to alter their
former system of government. The his
tory of the present King of Great Britain
is a history of repeated injuries and usurpa
tions, all having in direct object the es
tablishment of an absolute tyranny over
these States. To prove this, let facts be
submitted to a candid world.
He has refused his assent to laws the
most wholesome and necessary tOr the pub
lic good.
lie has forbidden his governors to pass
laws of immediate and pressing importance,
unless suspended in their operation till his
assent should be obtained ; and, when so
suspended, lie has utterly neglected to at
tend to them.
He has refused to pass other laws for
the accommodation of large districts of
people, unless those people would relinquish
the right of representation in the legisla
ture—a right inestimable to them, and
formidable to tyrants only.
Ile has called together legislative bodies
at places unusual, uncomfortable, and dis
tant from the depository of their public
records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing
them into compliance with his measures.
Ile has dissolved representative houses
repeatedly, for opposing, with manly firm
ness, his invasions on the right of the peo
ple.
lie has refused, for a long time after
such dissolutions, to cause others to be
elected ; whereby the legislative powers,
incapable of annihilation. have returned to
the people at large for their exercise ; the
State remaining, in the meantime, exposed
to all the danger of invasion from without
and convulsions within.
He has endeavored to prevent the pop
ulation of these States ; for that purpose
obstructing the laws for naturalization of
foreigners, refusing to pass others to en
courage their migration hither, and raising
the conditions of new appropriations of
lands.
He has obstructed the administration of
justice, by refusing his assent to laws for
establishing judiciary powers.
He has made judges dependent on his
will alone for the tenure of their offices
and the amount and payment of their
salaries.
He has erected a multitude of new
offices, and sent hither swan 3 of officers,
to harrass our people and eat out their
substance.
He has kept among us, in times of peace,
standing armies, without the consent of
our legislatures.
He has affected to render the military
independent of and superior to the civil
power.
He has combined with others to subject
us to a jurisdiction foreign to our consti
tution and unacknowledged by our laws;
giving his assent to their acts of pretended
legislation,—
For quartering large bodies of armed
troops among us:
For protecting them, by a mock trial,
from punishment for any muriers which
they should commit on the inhabitants of
these States :
For cutting off our trade with all parts
of the world :
For imposing taxes on us without our
consent:
For depriving us, in many cases, of the
benefits of trial by jury :
For transporting us beyond seas, to be
tried for pretended offences :
For abolishing the true system of En
glish law in a neighboring province, es
tablishing therein au arbitrary government,
and enlarging itgboundaries so as to render
it at once an example and fit instrument
for introducing the same absolute rule into
these colonies :
For taking away our charters, abolish•
ing our most valuable laws, and altering
fundamentally the forms of our govern•
ment :
For suspending our own legislatures,
and declaring themselves invested with
power to legislate for us in all cases what-,
soever.
He has abdicated government here by
declaring us out of his protection, and
waging war against us. _
lielas plundered our seas, ravaged our
coasts, burned our towns, and destroyed
the lives of our people.
lle is at this time transporting large
armies of foreign mercenariep, to complete
the works of death,:desolation, and tyranny,
already begun, with circumstances of
cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in
LUDAY„JUNE 30, 1876.
the most barbarous ages. and totally un
worthy the head of a civilized na ti on .
lie has constrained our fellotv-citizens,
taken captive on the high seas, to bear
arms against their country, to become the
executioners of their friends and brethren,
or to fall themselves by their hands.
Ile has excited domestic insurrections
amongst us, and has endeavored to bring
on the inhabitants of our frontiers the
merciless Indian savages, whose known
rule of warfare is au undistinguished de
struction of all ages, sexes, and conditions.
In every stage of these oppressions we
have petitioned for redress in the most
humble terms ; our petitions have been
answered only by repeated injury. A
prince whose character is thu: marked by
every act which may define a tyrant, is
unfit to be the ruler of a free people.
Nor have we been wanting in attention
to our British brethren. We have warned
them, from time to time, of attempts made
by their legislature to extend an unwar.
rentable jurisdiction over us. We have
reminded them of the circumstances of our
emigration and settlement here. 'We have
appealed to their native justice and mag
nanimity, and we have conjured them, by
the ties of our common kindred, to disa
vow these usurpations, which would in
evitably interrupt our connections and
correspondence. They, too, have been
deaf to the voice of justice and consan
guinity. We must therefore acquiesce in
the necessity which denounces our sepa
ration, and hold them, as we hold the rest
of mankind, enemies in war—in peace.
friends.
We, therefore, the representatives of
the United States of America, in General
Congress assembled, appealing to the Su•
preme Judge of the world for the rectitude
of our intentions, do, in the name and by
the authority of the good people of these
colonies, solemnly publish and declare that
these United Colonies are, and of good
right ought to be, free and independent
States; that they are absolved from all al
legience to the British crown, and that all
political connections between them and
the State of Great Britain is, and ought, to
be, totally dissolved ; and that, as free and
independent States, they have full power
to levy war, conclude peace, contract alli
ances, establish commerce, and to do all
other acts and things which independent
States may of right do. And for the sup
port of this declaration, with a firm re
liance on the protection of Divine Provi
dence, we mutually pledge to each other
our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred
honor.
Signed by order and in behalf of the
Congress.
• JOHN HANCOCK, President.
Attested, CHARLES THOMPSON, Secretary.
James Smith,
George Taylor,
James Wilson,
George Ross.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Josiah Bartlett,
William Whipple,
Matthew Thornton.
MASSACHUSETTS BAT
Samuel Adams,
John Adams,
Robert Treat Paine,
Eldridge Gerry.
DELAWARE.
Cesar Rodney,
George Read,
Thomas M'Kean
MARYLAND.
Samuel Chase,
William Paen,
Thomas Stone,
Charles quail of Car
rollton.
ABODE 18LA?iD, RTC .
Stephen Hopkins,
William Ellery.
CONNECTICUT.
Roger Sherman,
Samuel Huntingdon,
William Williams,
Oliver Wolcott.
VIRGINIA.
George Wytbe,
Richard Henry Lee,
Thomas Jefferson,
Benjamin Harrison,
Thomas Nelson, jr.,
Francis Lightfoot Lee,
Carter Braxton.
NEW YORK.
William Floyd,
Philip Livingston,
Francis Lewis,
Lewis Morris.
NORTH CAROLINA
,William Hooper,
IJoseph Hewes,
IJohn Penn.
NNW JIRSEY.
Richard Stockton,
John Witherspoon,
Francis Hopkinson,
John Hart,
Abraham Clark.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Edward Rutledge,
Thomas Heyward, jr.,
Thomas Lynch, jr.,
Arthur Middleton.
PENNSYLVANIA.
Robert Morris,
Benjamin Rush,
Benjamin Franklin,
John Morton,
George Clymer,
OZORGIA.
Button Gwinnett,
Lyman Hall,
' George Walton.
ottert Viaellang.
Our New York Letter.
NEW YORK, July 10, 1876.
The Centeiazial—New Ideas—Transfor
mation—Boston—Real Estate.
THE CENTENNIAL.
Everybody is advising everybody else
to stay away, in the consistent manner of
human nature, but nobody seems to take
the advice to heart. It is true that all
the departments are not in order, and
probably will not be much before the fourth
of July. There is enough now to see that
is of interest, but it will not be advisible
to visit the exhibition till after the middle
of this month. Till the summer heats are
over, Philadelphia is one of the hottest cit
ies in the Union. It is not on the coast
directly, as is New York and Boston, with
a sea breeze of its own to cool it each af
ternoon, but is inland, and lies shut in from
the ocean winds, so that it lies baking in
airless heat all midsummer. The parties
of country people coming from the Cen
tennial are apt to be cross and wilted•look
ing already, their linen dusters soiled and
stringy, their money used up pretty close
ly, and the whole party foot sore, and tir
ed of being crowded and stared at by fine
people. if there are children along, they
are fractious with fatigue and excitement,
their mothers will with trying to keep
them in order, till every woman of them
is willing to give bonds, if she can only
get home again, never to leave it for a
score of centennials. This is a picture of
not a few groups one sees leaving the ex•
hibition. I would advise having all the
children of a neighborhood boarded out by
the stay at-homes in turn, while their
fathers and mothers go to the Centennial.
It is no use trying to see it with children
in tow; they don't see enough to pay them
for the trouble of going, and their room is
wanted for older folks. The young ones
will probably live to 'have centennials of
some sort when they are old enough not
to be nuisances. Let their parents go
without them, and take what comfort they
can from the big show; they will iu most
cases be glad enough to get home, but will
have enough to talk about tb last them
the rest of their regular lives.
NEW IDEAS.
The very change will do people in the
country good, by bringing them face to
face with the last production of civilization
and giving their ideas friction with those
of other nations and classes. It takes
such an occasion as a Centennial to bring
out the folks who need to visit fairs and
expositions, the stay.at-homes who hardly
leave the town they live in once in twenty
years. They are apt to carry home some
notions that astonish the beighbors, not so
much with the novelty of things them
selves, as with the strangeness of seeing
so-And-so adopt anything fresh. It is
pleasing to see alteration that passes over
some groups as they grow familiar with
new modes and customs. They walk about
the first day awkward and old Ilishioned
enough, the observed of all observers, or
would be it there were not so many old
fashioned to keep them company. The
next day the girls have a new necktie, the
boys drop their turn down dollars Co
standing ones, and they buy the obi lady
a veil to cover her bonnet which isn't the
latest style. Then as the linen ►lusters
get soiled atol wrinkled, the young men
take courage, anti finding haw cheap cloth
ing is in the city, come out in a ready
made suit of neat style, and while they
are about it, a fancy straw hat that trans
fortas them into very pleasant specimens
of intelligent young American gentlemen,
that is, presuming them to have good man
ners to start with, which most boys brought
up by good mothers, have, whether they
belong to country or town. The girls not
to be behind, study the way the city girls
do up their hair, and when they find their
home-made poplins growing too warm,
venture on an embroidered linen areas or
two, ready-made, and a lace scarf u► soften
the effects round their necks. They get
fresh gloves of nice color and pin their
dresses back like other folks when the
brothers hint that they would like to see
them look more like other folks--even the
old lady, by the time she has a new polon
aise, to keep her long veil compiny, looks
quite re4peetable, anti when the whole par
ty goes home, they take back a notion of
living and appearing better that will do
them good all their lives.
TRANSFORMATII)N
One lady tried the virtues of city shop•
in a very satisfactory manner. She W 44
quite plain, with that straight-haired and
high-browe.l plainness which form. the
most hopeless sort of bad looks. She burnt
her hair off frizzing it. and it would not
disguise the severity of her face•. Even
her devoted friends wished she could do
something to make it easier to endure her
looks. While in the city one day she
desperately went to a Broadway magician,
I was going to call her, but it really is a
hair-dresser and cosmetic artist, who nn•
derstands the art of making most of faces.
The plain lady sat down at the e'iffeur's
glass and told her "Do whit you can to
make me look Letter." No sooner said
than done. She looked in the class more
than satisfied. By skillful adjustment and
a few tonchea to supplement natnre, she
was transformed into a very passable-look
ing woman, with style. if not positive bean
ty.
The first thing her husband said to her
was, I don't know what yon have been
doing to yourself, but you certainly look
better than I ever saw you." her friends
said, "Why did you never look so before.' "
In private her husband insisted on havinz
the change explained to him. A dozen
hair-pins were pulled out and the original
homeliness stood before him. A band of
soft natural curls woven on an invisible
fiundation shaded the unpleasant brow.
giving the face a softened expression, and
a braid of hair, fine and delicately light
in weight. was added to the twist at the
back of the head, making a shapely and
classic knot. The whole arrane'emeat
weighed only three ounces, and when on,
defied detection. The husband thought a
minute He had always scoffed at toilet
tricks, but their effect was too much fir
him. Discipline must .'e mainntained in
the family, however, at any Cr'?, and
turning to her he said with delicacy. "My
dear, I never liked false hair. as yon know,
but I think you had better continue the
use of a little additional hair, till your
own grows out. And if I catch you go
ing without it, you may betake yourself
to the Cen!eunial for all me." The wife
heard, and, being a dutiful woman, obey.
ed. But great was the wonderment in her
neighborhood when she went home. with
her new coquetries, so transformed that
her family agree in protesting that her
husband got the best looking wife of the
lot after all. They agreed, finally. on the
theory of tartly development to solve the
mystery. Her husband keeps the secret
well, and when questioned on the anhject
only shakes his head.
BOSTON
since last week I have been in Boston.
I was in hopes to find the old city in bet
ter condition than New York, but I was
disappointed. New England is even flat
ter than New York, and there is more
mourning, and with better rea.son. The
manufacturers are overstocked with goods.
the hands are idle and eating up the ac
cumulation of former years, the mercantile
interest is consequently as fiat as it can be.
and everybody is discouraged. One of the
heaviest publishers in the city told me that
his sales, wholesale and retail, did not
amount to $3OO per day, which was some
thing less than the daily running expenses
of his stor.. When the book trade goes
slow in New England, there is not much
hope for anything else. There is very
little building going on, no new enterpri
ses are entered into, and there is a universal
feeling of depression.
Speaking of depression, the Philadel
phians feel it just as badly as the other
cities. The Centennial has not been as
productive as it was expected. The hotels.
restaurants and bars are doing well. but
the trade that it was expected to bring has
not come. The people come simply to see
the Centennial, and not to buy goods, and
they see it and go away. The sea-board
cities are suffering, and I fear they are to
suffer tier sonic time to come.
REAL ESTATE
in the city is fearfully dull, duller than
ever before. There isn't a piece on Broad
way that will sell for mortgages, and rents
are going down to nothing. Bottom has
not yet been touched, as had as it is.
Rents have gone down 75 per cent. and
are still declining. The weather is fear
fully hot. and everybody feels the dead
languor that hot weather and dull busi
ness always brings. Pt VTR°.
Proverbs.
Borrowed clothes never fit.
Better go round than fall in a ditch.
Better go alone than in bad company.
Better go to bed supperless than get up
in debt.
Cut your coat according to your cloth.
Catch the bear before you sell his skin.
Charity begins at home but does not
end there.
Do not rip up old sores.
Doing nothing is do- . .ng ill.
Diligence commands success.
Debt is the worst kind of poverty.
Dependence is a poor trade to follow.
Deeds are fruits, words are but leaves.
Do unto others as you would have them
do to you.
Every couple is not a pair.
Everything is good in its season.
Everybody's business is nobody's busi
ness.
False friends are worse than open enc.
inies.
OUR CANDIDATES .
RathPriori! B. ILL3PA. =if Obi.,
Ittithertlir , l I: Ilaye. n.minated att
Cincinnati by the
Conventinn frr l're-eident the Visited
State.. has had an active sn.l istpwraat
career Ile biro in I)etaiwar • euenty.
Obi., Iktnber I. 1-+*.r.:. After receiving
a culler late at
Gambier. °hi.). he 4tn.lied ;ax in r •bres
bu.4. With the preptratiqn he Ilia. re
ceived he entered the law ..f Ilar
vard when,- he zradlated with
credit.
lie beizin the prae! - .e• .4 his r u
in Cincinnati, anal tn..! wish ..t winch 011W
celYs that h.' was app..into.4 sniie.it..r.if that
City Ihs genial wanner. art 1
unite him exeoesiinety pfiptilar in pen
fession. awl his rrartie • Icy. rapi.ity
ins; when t h e war of the rebelii.n. Fornise
mt. If., was ?bon just fairty-iiine years
41, in th, prime ..f eitirairr.l
in ni,iny imio,rt hit , he ...211 rmr
tro.p+ way th.• f•r him te. throw
*gide the in .' (i nn f i t ,
efinipownt9 4,1 t'nr poirber
priiT,r,l his set-Tiers it ..n•-r. as. 4
nn the 7th 4.1.;:i0. was svro.inte.l
major of the 21. t liv , ) Infantry Re•ztarenis.
Ili. tirst wee, with !Lowery*. its
Wtst 3 tome ww peat:.
advocate on that I.enertl's stair be N..-
veinh , ir, 1 4, 2. he wt. pri.rwne./ 'i••..-
tenant , nl ,, fleirT. and !Wolfe coup:marl of
the 2:t.1 Ihin, and elation...l to oiewlownitel
it dories the 4prin7 eampaign yowler t;Pa
eral until he wa:4 w•>rw•lied at
the batti.: of 7 4 .,,5th stain.
wrs apptiinted eninnel iwf this :) , h
I lh t., in the oinve year. !Pe wm. prey... 0 ,4
by wound from rsisensistT etinamanef.
and afterward,: woe trust:ferret, beck
firm , r reziment, the Deeember rs,
186'2, he was phseed in essmumawl ef the
Ist tirizade, Kanawha Divisions, ami bad
it until :4heridan . 4 rie:,:ty at W
i n S..psemher. 1403, irh,.st Le 1.,k eima.
mind .4 ;he division. !c-I , lint. , it throw!,
the haulms of the year
Whitelaw ReCI: now !.Byer of the New
York Tribune, relatese this inee.inte of
Vol. Hayes at the battle of Wineiestor
lie was leailinre his men lawn
they eagle npon 3 Y1N1T35 , 4 *Mae silty l
; the water was waist 4rep. mai
inme over:Town with heavy OWN
almost 4tr,triz estongh to bear tie oeigikt
of 3 man. while the bottom wait inft and
miry This 4eerneal an impessishie Anew
an.l the whole line hesitated .11,4
t%)l. Illyee. lie immediately 4pnrr.ei his
h o rie i n t,, 4leorrh a rltteit if.
of artillery and ninsketr7 When lime*
half way acres the animal mire , l hope so
ly. anal then the tAnnel , iiiensennte4i sod
w 3.1-1 me. twin?, the lirit sea to Prow.
All thronsh the melon he way esprete4
; men fell ali aroin.i him assi
hi 4 adjutant fell by his 1;40,
In I frtolv-r. 1 4 1;1. Har. was
appointP4l brirviier zenoral for zsliest sod
in Ow Fret Lei 4 Wm
chest.r. 1141. ind (',,hr rredi.
in the orifin2 Prmr***4o4
exrditi-n 2: -.in.• urf fur
fro it wtirfi tiro Wir IMIIMINIOOI
A fterw.3l-14 11.1 w.r. pr tnente.l to bp s are.
jor seen..r2l f.r r4llost aal 4istiostriellost
girls esira , ..re4 is arseft
so rife 20 , 1 partSirstP 1 is misey horrips.
but Asap bore himself hrai•ty
i;•.1 . ,r.; the elev.(' of war h.
e:eete.l a member of Umzr...... an 4 le 1 4 04;
wan re-eleete•l .ro-f onve avajrnrity
Althontth vole 1 7...1 bovvre sos 4 1164
often pleveted lief.ro the e rR..
Maya fet in Vol:repo thee* tittb
ont making eksoinorate "Perk. 0.
1'44 110.1Pri. ill•oW , Ver Vr hid 6.114it5 fet L.
Pu bl ican ,n, in•l .-.von lee.. 4
itisl-zonent
In 1-4:7 h. w• •toiainionely nominate
by ;carry r., errroi..r Olio, Awl
after a spirited in which be twib
an artier part. and which w*.eaarieat..l
by the nezro , Ineste.e. b., was
6. 0 ,1 over Alien 1; 'Thurman by ars
jority '..!.1;5:: in a fatal poll ref vtinno,
dins narrnwly , s , apiwz was
renotrinited it the effuse of his term re
3:1.1 eleeted by a aysjority of
7.51 s over Gcorte 11. remilet• is Its
1; 4 72 he was beaten fir ronurees by Ran
ninfz. Liberal Republican.
The neat appearance of Mr. Hayes as a
cv.ndidatc was last fall. when be iris now
init. - A on the public whoolgplatr.rm after
a 4harp ennte.it with ingize Taft. whose
eso 4idney in /Tuition to Mr. flay., war
nn fault of hi. own. hat watt dee entirely
to a letter which Mr. 11.1y,ii wr .te the
night hefort: to the ro n cc n ii,:n. ~f w hi c h
the following , i. an extract : ••I rannot al
low my name to he Tried against invitee
Taft. Ile herame a candidate after 4e
clined. lie a pure man an 3 a nonn.l
Republican. I will not accept a momenta
lion obtained with contest anwinet bine."
The pith an.l point of the voluntary ow
ilorsement which Mr. Harm five. to
Judge Taft lies in the fact that the eon
test Of the Convention tnrried on an ewer
iretic effort to placate the Liberal Ripelbrr
can part.: by his nomination. The weeps
failed. and Mr. Hayes hem's. , a clnoininnt.
aceoptin, the nomination by tetc•graph the
same day. In the bitter aid hard fnallot
Can V 3.*4 which followici Mr 113y+ nuts
11CC.C341 . 111, receiving 3 mojoriry of ::;o:14
over Allen
Gorcrnor n ,t a hriLialt maw.
but an able one. and will mike an exe.4
lent President. lie is on orator. but are
efficient officer. The last public othee he
held was that of Centennial Cois a mio4onasee,
which he re,itrtted when he beea.ne Goy
ernor.
William A. Wheeler of New Tork.
li on . Willi3m A Wheeler 3 n3ninso,“-
ly nominated at Cincinnati, is one of the
best men who could have been clinsen %sr
the place, and one who will give sallow
lion to the party throughout the truism
Like general Hayes. who heads the tieltst.
his character is negative rather than primi
tive. lie has long been in publics lire. blot
until recently has aehieveil but slight dis
tinction.
Mr Wheeler was born at M
Franklin cimnty. New York, dime 3,
1819. lie had a common school easea
tion and spent a year in study at the Vat
versity 4 Vermont, and. after pas/list
seven years in a lawyer's °See in hissative
county, was in 1819 admitted to practiets.
After a few years' pitsetiee he was eke
to: district attorney as a Democrat, awl
whoa his term expired (he hal dialoged
his politics in the meantime,)be was eke
ted to the New York Assembly as a Wbiz
lie was re elected, :,nt at the dose 4 his
second term retired to the practice of km
proftition
A short time afterwards he became first
the cashier of his local bank, a position the
held for fourteen years, and at a later
date became president of the I hriewsberpr
and Rouse's Point railroaa, continuing in
t !'" "rr" - ••• , " .r lir •,4 I
•
:,•3r•
At the -haat tbo rit Fatly
-lowi Itersbriesik art emarri :be Auto
Jassiwary, I. a. bet bap aim
fw tbe Lowisisime holly affassellisrl by
the Itepiebreeme pwey. &ben ramplatit
a Itypiebitess. wee a do ins Lamoomma
poi tf. pissime 4 Iftimienes
pc., tem.. t.. irbseb ltt. Illrborier sossisr
lA. sue. in rrwessgastsse. s p00r..4y bousrs.
ry PM
der ememeem. 4 1 43x1 mei 1 ,4 e7 , 9
Kr Wheeler oftwedr doe Amoser. moil
tf.. fen 4 tllie summid poor be mom Ale
mow We 'tor Timmy 1,94111141 Caw
gritig. Parrying! *1 ellommet die MMumur
sommtime—CTemmis. am —4
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was :bra ommommed I. sa ohm _ _ _
1..4 ...me of time ..iriammr war anima b.
mar metf.rmly the i 4 doe Ilfulem
3•A
_tar? 4 Tierty.mmomel.
I Mr Wheeler Al ma metier rah
-4.-ret..- 1 4 .17. sitimm if mom elommil
39.4etem 4 der 71... p Terk err raffititie
te.frsi 4 low maw
poresiy 41•17 ere& mum
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.smuts...._ 3314 is mi. by arommomil
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2 friesvi of p.leiie marmseastar sad
srn.n4 wins siciummilm min
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vspnr za. that felltaro nr . Ib.•
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hardly tisk yaws At est sill slump Is
tits bows wises burr anther 4101. The
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Importasese of ?Iwo.
I.e 10•01 C wrlere. tree PiMOM mil Ow
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