The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, July 28, 1876, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOL. 40.
File Huntingdon Journal.
J. It. DURItORROW, -
PUTLIAIIERS AND PILOPRIETOIN
(Oita in new Jtirits At, Building, Fifth Street,
1 . 1111 DON .11 ii)4IN.kL i. published every
Fri.lity I.y .1 It. lit anoaaww and J. A. Nl/411, tinder
li k .• firm name of J. R. Duitiiattitow AL at 82,00 per
annum ADVANCR, or $2.50 if n, t for Co.,n
six month'
trout date cif ,iibdcription, and $3 if not paid within the
..a
No Fir, dkcuntinued , unless at the option of the pub
li•hers, until all arreantgec are paid.
No paper, however, will be cent out of the State utiless
aliicilutely paid for in advance.
Traludent advertimeniente will he Inserted at Twelve
A,D A-nktv cyNTS per line for the first insertion, 81e.VEN
ANII .A-HALF Wirt; for the meow! and PIVY CENTS per line
1 . , all enloierpient incertionc.
quarterly awl yearly business advertisement.
ium,tlr.l at the following rates :
! 1 yr
3111 Glol
50 4 501 5 50; 8 1101 1 4 coll 9 0(1 18 001$27'S 38
'2 ' In 01! 10 00 12 00Ncoli18 00 30 001 50 8.5
3•• • 7 10 00 . 14 011 18 001%'c,01134 ((0 1,0 001 65 80
4 ti ins 11 00,20 00 ; 18 0011 c 01136 00iG0 001 80 100
All Itt.,lnlionti of Associations, Communications of
limit ,1 or individual interest, all party anniiiincenieuts,
and notices of Marriages and neatll, , , exceeding five lin.,
will I,e charged TEN CENTS per line.
. . .
Iw.gal and other rt"ticem will ho charged to the party
having them inserted.
Advertising Agents must find their commiesion'outaide
of these lig , trt, _
All ad;ert;3ing accounts are due and collectable
when the adre,tisemeut is once inserted.
.108 PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors,
:lone with Twn,. and dispatch. !land-hills, Blanks,
Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed
at the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing
line will be ev4ented in the most artistic manner and at
the lowest rat,.
Professional Cards
CILDWFLL, Attoroe):-M-Law, No. 111, 3rd street.ll. Ofli,e fi.rmerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & 'll il
[apl2;7l
1)R. A.B. BRUMBAUGLI, offers his professional services
1 to the , owmuurty. Office, No 623 Washington street,
one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. Ljau4,'7l
STOCKTON. Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister's
IJ. builqing, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E.
J. Greene, Ilabiiugtlon, Pa.
(1 E). B. OR LADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street,
U Huntingdon, PA. (n0v17,15
G. L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. Drown's new building,
No. 520, Penn Street, Iluntingdeu, Pa. [ap12.71
ILW.
tr D , U ,t ell i k u lt i N nido S n urg ip e a tin Dentist, No 6. 2 c 2 h ß i7 Penn
IT C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No.—, Penn
11 .
street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl9,'7l
[ FRANKLIN SMOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting
• don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal busi
ness. ultice, 1:29 Penn Street, corner of Court House
[deol,'72
T SYLVANI'S BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon,
O. Pa. (Mice, Penn Street, three doors went of jrd
Street. [jau4,ll
T W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim
4 • Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the
Covernment for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid
pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of
fice on Penn Street. Dan4,ll
. trill R pr tlß -0 0 i ll ,
o t t s o o r , n e e ra y t c -L o tu r ' i
4 1 l o u r n V i ngi t o h n k , o b d ' o a
county. Particular attention given to the Fiettleincut of
...states of decedent. Office in the JOURNAL building.
T S. GEISSiNGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public,
1/. Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 7:10 l'enn Street, oppo
site Court Hon,. [febs;7l
j) A. OItBISoN, Atturney-at-Law•, Patents Obtained.
rt. Oflicc. Penn Street, lluntingdun, Pa. [tuy3l,"ll
SQ E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-La, Huntingdon, Pa.,
• u - office in Moni tor building, Penn Street. Prompt
and careful attention given to all legal business.
[augs,'74-limos
W ' ILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting-
I don, Pa. Special attention given to collections,
and all other legal business attended to with care and
p,midness. Unice, No. 229, Penn Street. rapl9,7 I
Miscellaneous
NEALTN AND ITS PLEASURES,
- 0 It -
DISEASE AND ITS AGONIES:
CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM
HOLTiOWAY'S PILLS.
NERVOUS DISORDERS.
What is more fearful than a breaking down of the ner
vous system? To be excitable or nervous in a small de
gree io most destressing, for where can a remedy be found?
There is one:—drink but little wine, beer, Lr spirits, or
far better, none; take no coffee,-•-weak tea being prefera
ble ; get all the fresh air you can ; take throe or four
Pills every night: eat plenty of solids, avoiding the use of
slops; and if these gulden rules are followed, you will be
happy in mind and strong in body, and forget you have
auy nerves.
MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS,
If there is one thing more than another for which these
Pills are so famous, it is their purifying properties, es
pecially their power of clensing the blood from all im
purities, and removing dangerous and suspended secre
tione. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for
female complaint., they never fail, never weaken the
vstem, and always brings about what is required.
_SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF
APPETITE.
These feelings which so sadden us, most frequently
:arise from annoyances or trouble, from obstructed prespi
ration, or from eating and drinking what is unfit for us,
:thus disordering the liver and stomach. These organs
must be regulated if you wish to be well. The Pills, if
+taken according to the printed instructions, will quickly
.restore a healthy action to both li•erand stomach, whence
:follow, as a natural consegence, a good appetite and a
.clear bead. In the East and West Indies scarcely any
.other medicine is ever used for these disorders.
HOW TO BE STRONG.
Never let the bowels be confined or unduly acted upon.
lt may appear singular that Holloway's Pills should be
recommended for a run upon the bowels, many persons
:supposing that they would increase relaxation. This is
great mistake, however; for these Pills will immediately
.correct the liver and stop every kind of bowel complaint.
flu warru climates thousands of lives have Leen saved by
the use of this medicine, which in all cases gives tone and
vigor to the whole organic system, however deranged,—
health and strength following as a matter ofcouree. The
appetite, too, is wonderfully increased by the use of these
Pills, combined in the use of solid in preference to fluid
diet. Animal food is better than broths and stews. fly
removing acrid, fermented, or other impure humors from
the liver, stomach, or blood, the cause of dysentery, diar
rhoea, and other bowel complaints is expelled. The result
is, that the disturbance is arrested, and the action of the
bowels becomes regular. Nothing will stop the relaxa
tion of the bowels so quickly as this fine correcting med
icine.
DISORDERS OF TIIE KIDNEYS.
In all diseases affecting these organs, whether they
secrete too much or too little water; or whether they be
laicted with stone or gravel, or with aches and pains
settled in the loins over the regions of the kidneys, these
fills should be taken according to the printed directions,
and the ointment, should be well rubbed into the small of
the back at bedtime. Thin treatment will give almost im
mediate relief when all other means hare failed.
FOR STOMACHS OUT OF ORDER,
No medicine will so effectually improve the tone of the
etomach as these pills; they remove all acidity, occasioned
wither by intemperance or improper diet. They reach
the liver and reduce it to a healthy action ; they are won
.derfolly ettice,ious iu cases of spasm—in fact they never
fail in curing all disorders of the liver and stomach.
Fevers of all
kinds,
Fits,
!Gout,
Headache,
Indigestion,
Inflammation,
Jaundice,
Liver Complaints,
Lumbago,
Piles,
Rheumatism,
Retention of
Uril.e,
Scrofula, or King's
Evil,
A,th
Bilious Conga:tints
Blotches ou the.
Skin,
Bowel Complaints,
Col ice,
Constipation of the
Bowels,
L.:uaumptinn,
Debility,
Dropsy,
Dysentery,
Erysipelas,
Female Irregu
larities,
CAUTION!—None are genuine unless the signature of
J. Ilaydock, as agent for the United States,surrounds each
Id, of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will he
given to any one rendering such information as may lead
to the detection of any party or partied counterfeiting the
medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be
spurious.
* * *Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY A:
Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and
Dealeni in Medicine throughout the civilized world, iu
boxes at 25 cents, 62 cents, and $1 each.
Bri' There is considerable saving by taking the larger
sizes.
N. B.—Directions for the guidance ofpatieuta in every
dis.rder are affixed to each box.
apr. 28, 1876-eow-ly.
WEDDING CARDS !
WEDDING CARDS !!
We hsvc jast 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 cent cheaper than Philadelphia
or Sew York.
api-tf.] J. IL DURBORROW £ CO.
J. IL DUR 8011110 PT, - - - J. A. NA S 11.
The Huntingdon Journal,
J. A. NASh,
EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE NEM JOURNAL BUILDING,
No. 212, FIFTH STREET,
lIITNTINGPON, PENNSYLVANIA
;
3m I Gin ;Om I I
$2 00 per annum. in advance; $2.50
within six months, and $3.00 if
00000000
[apliB, '7B.
00000000 SUBSCRIBF:. 00000000
glugggg
TO ADVERTISERS
Circulation 1800.
The JOURNAL is one of the best
printed papers in the Juniata Valley,
and is read by the best citizens 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-
crania. 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,
gggm
,TOB DEPARTMENT
,
o
a,
cr
Co
co
Sore Throats,
Stone and Giuvel,
Secoffeary Symp-
tort.,
Tic-Douloureux,
Tumors,
Urcars
Veneta! Affections
Worms °fall kinds
Weakneiss front
any cause, &c.
I .7.
- COLO'
i All business letters should be
dressed to
J. R. DURBORROW & CO.,
Huntingdon, Pa.
•
.3P
he un t ingt on rn .
Printing
PUBLISII}:11
-IN
TERMS :
wit paid within the year.
0 0
0 0
o 0
0 0
0 0
00000000
PROGRESSIVE
REPUBLICAN PAPER.
o o
0
o
0 0
o 0
FIRST-CLASS
ADVERTISING MEDIUM
5000
READERS
WEEKLY
I—i I
Fr
co
V•
,
I O.
co
(-4
.
,
C ,
•01..
`..<l
:NG A SPECIAL'
PRINT
Original '1,4(0.
A Hundred Years.
IIY .1. W. 1VY.1.4 11
When Guilford's feeble battle-cry
Fell on our infant nation's ear,
And Freedom bade Oppression tly,
Mare' hand inscribed "a hundred years
When !lope's taint ray but dimly shone
Where power now her standard rears,
lips thunders awed the British throne,
By echoing loud "a hundred years!"
When patriots bathed our sacred soil
With mingled streams of blood and tears,
Whilst Britain's vanquished hosts recoiled,
Peace angels wrote "a hundred years !"
Let despots shrink and stand aghast,
As Freedom high her banner bears,
'Twas Clod the mighty fiat east
That spared her life a hundred year:
In vain may tyrants strive to quench
Her tires by widowed mother.' tears,
Or from fate's band the stencil wrench
That paints in blood "a hundred years!"
Thus gazing down Time's rapid stream,
The bright Centennial dawn appears,
And 'neath its soft effulgent beam
We shout aloud "a hundred years !"
Let patriotic bosoms swell,
Nor hide in shame the flowing tears,
That from life's mystic fountain well,
When history writes "a hundred years !"
Let all the world assembled gazo,
As gratitude a column rears,
Nor any wish to dim the blaze
That swept our shoresa hundred years.
dea Viscellanp.
The Work of Rebels.
A llattio-Scuroti Ropliblica
An Interview with what is left of Senator Twitchell,
What He Thinks of the Condition of Affairs South.
From the Indianapolis Journal.]
Senator Twitchell, of Louisiana, whose
attempted assassination about two months
ago was noticed in the Journalat the time,
is now visiting at the house of a friend in
this city, being on his way to New Eng
land, where he purposes to spend the sum
mer. hi the course of an hour's conver
sation with the gentleman, a representative
of the Journal gathered some facts relative
to the condition of affairs in Louisiana, and
to his own experience there, which are of
general interest :.
- Senator Twitchell is a native of Ver
mont, born of good family, and possessed
of a liberal education. He entered the
Union service at the beginning of the war,
and served till its close with credit and
some distinction. In the battle of the
Wilderness, fought in Virginia, May 5,
1864, he fell on the field, shot through the
head, and only recovered from the wound
by reason of his vigorous constitution and
previous good habits. At the close of the
war, when his regiment was mustered out
of service, he found himself in . Northwest
ern Louisina, where, having formed an at
tachment for a Louisiana lady residing
there, he married and settled. He has
been a citizen of Louisiana continuously
since that time—eleven years. Ile has
had children born to him there, and has
buried at least one. He has spent eleven
of the best years of his life, and has done
wore to develop and build up his portion
of the State, in all that goes to constitute
a State, than any hundred native Louisi
anans in his district He is a large land
owner in Red River Parish, and the third
largest tax payer in the parish, having ac
cumulated his property by honorable en
terprise and close attention to business.—
He introduced the first new machinery into
the parish after the war, has erected sev
eral mills, and inaugurated other improve
ments. He is chairman of the parish
school board, and has been very aeive in
establishing free schools there. In former
times, and under Democratic regime, they
had uo schools there worthy of the name.
A few years ago the Republicans passed a
good school law, under which a good work
has already been done in the way of estab
lishing schools. In Red River Parish there
are ten schools, all established through the
efforts of Senator Twitchell. In deference
to Southern prejudice the white and black
schools are separate, though both are run
on the same basis, and paid out of the
same fund. Under the law of the State
the whole poll tax goes to the school fund,
and as every colored man pays a poll tax,
and many of them property tax, they con
tribute their full proportion to the schools.
And Senator Twitchell says they pay their
taxes not only cheerfully, bUt promptly,
regarding it as an honorable badge of citi
zenship,
For some time past Senator Twitchell
has been regarded as one of the leaders of
the Republican party in Louisiana, having
talent, nerve, and many of the qualities of
a leader. On the 2d of last May he was
crossing Red River on a ferry-boat at Cou.
shatta, in company with his brother-in-law,
Mr. King, when a horseman rode up on
the bank which they were approaching,
and, taking deliberate aim with a Westfield
repeating rifle, commenced firing at them
Senator Twitchell was unarmed, his broth
er in-law had only a small pocket pistol.—
The man fired deliberately and with pre
cision. The first, or one of the first shots
fired, struck Mr. King, killing him in
stantly. The next one struck Senator
Twitchell in the leg above the knee. With
this he threw himself into the water, and
graspino• °
the side of a skiff with both hands
ordered the colored ferryman to row him
back to shore. Meanwhile the firing con
tinued. Presently a ball struck his right
arm above the elbow, breaking and disa
bling it. He still held to the skiff with
one hand, and the firino• ° went on. The
next shot grazed the back of his neck, just
between the shoulders. Another struck
and broke his left arm above the elbow.—
He was now disabled in one leg and both
arms, but being a fine swimmer he threw
himself on his back, and, assuming a float
ing pssition, commenced floating down de;
stream. By this time tin, assassin had
emptied his rifle of sixteen bullets, and
drawing a revolver began firing at the
floating man with that. Meanwhile the
colored ferryamn, at the risk of his life,
overhauled him, got him into the skiff,
and took him ashore. The assassin emptied
his revolver, firing in all twenty-two shots,
then mounted his horse and rode away.—
Senator Twitchell has since had both of
his arms amputated between the shoulder
and the elbow, and still survives, an arm
less, crippled monument of Southern in
tolerance. He scouts the idea of the attack
on hint being due to anything else than
.0
5!..7
0
1
HUNTINGDON, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1876.
p hatred, and entertains no doubt
whatever that it was preconcerted and ar
ranged. Since he went to Louisiana his
brother and two brothers-in- law have been
murdered there, and having now contribu
ted both of his arms to the cause of civili
zation in that State, he thinks he has earn
ed the right to live therein peace, though
he doubts if it will be accorded him.
When he left his home he came away
under a military guard. furnished by order
of General Augur, at New Orleans, and
he does not intend to return to Louisiana
until after the Presidential election. If
the Democrats carry the State and nation,
he will not return to Red River Parish,
and gives it as his opinion in that case
that no Republican can live in the interior
of the State. lle says that on a fair vote
Louisiana would go Republican by at least
10.000 majority, but unless something, is
done to protect the negroes in the right of
voting, the Democrats will carry it by that
majority or more. In ease the Democrats
come into power, he thinks that all the
white Republicans will be forced to leave
the State, and the negroes reduced to a
condition of serfdom not differing materi
ally from slavery. They are easily intim
idated, and are but just beginning to out
grow the demoralizing and dehumanizing
effects of slavery on their race ; if' deprived,
therefore, of all protection, they would
quickly succumb to the forces brought to
bear on them, and sink back into a condi
tion little, it' any, better than the one from
which they recently emerged. Of one
thing he is very certain, and that is, that
every colored school in the State will be
wiped out instantly after the Democrats
come into power. He says the better class
of planters and business men in the State
seem to deprecate, perhaps really to depre•
cate, acts of lawlessness and violence, but
they are utterly powerless, and, in fact,
make no earnest eftOrt to restrain these
elements. If the Republicans carry the
country next November, he will go back
to Louisiana to live, and he will fight it out
on that line while there is anything left of
him. If the Democrats are successful, he
will make the best disposition he can of
his property, abandon the graves of his
wife and child, his murdered brother and
brothers-in-law, and seek safety in the
North.
• 41110.. --......-- - -
ONE MORE VICTIM.
Funeral of Mrs. HelOllE. Willis, the Sister
of Senator Twitchl
A Frail Body Which Collld ilo Loner Bear
the Barden of Sonthera Crilelty,
[Special Telegram to the Inter-Ocean.]
INDIANAPOLIS, July 10, 1876.
MRS. HELEN E. WiLLIS, sister or Sen
ator Twitchell, of Louisiana, who has been
stopping here for a few days to recover
her health, so badly shattered by the shock
of the murder of her husband two years
ago, and the more recent attempted assas
sination of her brother at Coushatta, died
yesterday. She was buried to day in the
presence of a large assemblage of citizens.
The address was delivered by the Rev.
Dr. Bayliss, a leading Methodist minister.
He details the circumstances of the perse
cutions to which Twitchell's • family had
been subjected, speaking very strongly
and earnestly in denunciation of' the out
rages. He said of Mrs. Willis : "The
chronic dread of evil from murderers be
came a burden too heavy for her. In her
last illness in this house she would wake,
look around her half bewildered and alarm
ed, then close her eyes again, and on open
ing them again and recognizing her friends
would say weakly: 'Yes, I know you; I
am not afraid of you; you are Marshall's
friend,' and like a soothed child she would
lie quietly down to rest." He concluded
as fbllows : "We are sometimes accused
of flaunting the bloody shirt for political
effect ; of reviving memories which ought
to sleep in forgetfulness; of dragging be
fore the startled and unwilling eyes of
this age, the ghastly skeletons of horrors
which, but for our persistence, would have
been forgotten before now. But this day
is no mere memory. This is no buried
horror just now newly exposed for tragic
effect.
This woman, whose weary body we to
day carry to the new made grave, is almost
as much the victim of Southern cruelty as
though some assassin's bullet had pierced
her heart. They have killed her. They
have loaded her with horrors until her
frail body could endure it no longer. Indi
anapolis is called to day to the task of bury
ing one of the victims of Southern hAte,and
the victim is a woman. And what of her
only surviving male relative ? Is this
some ancient terror, some forgotten wrong,
but just now restated for effect? His
wounds are not now healed. They are
almost fresh enough to be ghastly. Scarce
ly three months ago he was as well as any
of us, and now he is so helpless that he
cannot wipe away his own tears ! and this
is America, the land of the free and the
home of the brave ! The land whose his
toric boast has been its Southern chivalry!
The land where men can think what they
please and speak what they think ! The
land where more has been said about
freedom and the rights of man than has
been said in all other nations since time
began ! Oh, how the eloquence of these
mute lips and these handless arms rebukes
and scathes us in our boasting ! Our talk
of freedom is a sarcasm. These white lips
do mock at us. Freedom for the South
yet waits its natal day. lam sure I say
only what these lips would say could they
speak, and only what this brother will ap
prove when I ask, not as a partisan, but
as a man, has the time come for us to el
evate this proscription into power ? Shall
we dare, with these facts before us, to en
throne the political principles with which
these assassins are identified ? Shall we
give to such gigantic and bloody wrongs
as these the sanction of a political victory?
It becomes us to consider the question, not
as partisans, but as freemen who love free
dom, and as Christians who love God."
Nasby.
Mr. Nasty Goes to the St. Louis Conlat
lion—He Returns Entirely Satisfied
with the Platform. and Candidates.
CONFEDERATE X ROADS,
WHIM IS IN TILE STATE UV KEN•
TUCKY, Joon 29th, 1876
I hey returned from St. Loois, and mity
glad lam to get back to the scene of my
fucher laber for the next four months. St.
Louis is a hot city, but ez the likker is
alluz good there, and ez the Tilden dele
gates, ez well ez the anti•Tilden ones, hed
lots uv money, I made out to get on.
they never argood with a delegate without
askin him to take suthin, I didn't make op
my mind till the very last.
It win the most interestin convenshun
I ever attended, and I have bin to em
senee the one that nominated Martin Van
Booren. This wuz the most interestin,
hccoz it wuz so thoroly dovutid to reform,
wick alluz is my best holt. El I can't be
a reformin s uthin t am abslootly mizrable.
It gave me noo hopes uv the Republic
to see the sperit uv reform that filled the
soles uv all the Dimecracy present, that
is, neerly all uv cm. Occasionally an
anxious lookin farmer delegate wood re
mark, "what Tel we do with the curren
cy ? arid then John Morrissey wood imniej
itly shut him up with the remark, 'l)—n
the currency—µ•at we want is retorn► in
the Government."
And when a Noo England hiznis man
wood ask, "wat shel we do with the cur
rency ?" BOSH Kelly wood d—n him I;,r
introdoocin disturhin eminence into the
convenshun. '•Wat we want is reform,"
the Bolls would continyoo, and ef the man
didn't sing small, some uv the Bosses' re•
formers wood go thro hint. A grate man
is Boss Kelly. I don't wonder that the
Noo York Dimocrisy love him.
John Morrissey is the most ardent re
former I know uv. Ile wuz so entirely
devotid to it that I saw hint stop a game
of faro, at a bank wich he run doorin the
covenshun, to argoo with an Injeany dele
gate, who wuz a losin bootitully, that ef
the Dimocrisy din't git control uv the
Noo York custom-house and postoffices,
the country wuz roomed shoor. In the
coz uv reform he wuz willin to devote all
the profits uv his banks at Saratoga and
Washington.
Boss Kelly was even more urgent fir re
form than Morrissy. He said that until
Tammany got possession of the Govern
ment, he cood see nothin but room ahed.
Give him a platform which pronounced
squarely for reform, and he wood feel en-
Ourridged to promise a Democratic majori
ty uv 40,000 in the city uv Noo York
alone. With the Custom House and Post
offis in the control uv Tammany, lie cood
afford to pay ten thousand repeaters, and
give stiddy employment to every shoulder
hitter and brooser in the city. He wood
feel justified in charterin a thousand gin
mills, and to make shoor uv the State he
wood promise to give any majority in the
city that mite be needed. Reform wuz
his watchword.
Doolittle wanted reform—he yearned
for it. Ile sed that until a President wuz
elected that wood make it possible for hint
to be Minister to England there wuz no
hope uv the Republic. He wuz disposed
to yceld everything in sich matters ez cur
rency, and tariffs and sich, but it wty, uv
the first importance that the country be
properly represented at the Court of St
James.
The Southern delegates wuz ekally urg
ent fur reform. Vat they felt wnz neces
sary wuz a complete change. They bed
groaned for twelve yeers under the hurors
uv nigger votin. and anything that wood
give ew releef from that wood satisfy cm.
Enything to git back to the good old idee
uv the swpreniacy uv the suoperior race,
and the reduosio itv the nigger to his nor
mal condishun. One Georgy delegate ac
tooally shed teers over the sufferins he hod
endoored. lle sobbed audibly wen he re
marked that it wuz now ten years last
Christmas sence he lied shot a nigv,er. His
shot gun hung yooselis over his fire place,
and there wuz ashes on his north. "Give
us a Dimecratic administrashen and re
form!" he yelled, and itnmejitly accepted
the invitashen uv a Tilden delegate to
take suthin. None uv em ever reloosed
that. from anybody
The work of the convenshun wuz well
done, and victory must perch upon our
banners. There wuz a row among the
Noo York delegashen wicl► thretened at
one time to mar its harmony, but it wuz
happily settled. There wuz a conference,
and the offises wuz divided so ez to satisfy
all the reformers. Kelly is continyod in
posession uv Tammany Hall, and the city,
while them ez favored the great and good
Tilden will hey controle uv the Federal
patronage. Ez extraordinary services will
be needed, Imo offises will be created and
appointments that naterally wood go to
Republikan States will all be given to the
doubtful ones. Several reformers who
wuzn't satisfied with this arrangement—
with prothesis uv wat wuz to be given em
after the election—wuz pade so much mon
ey in hand, after which they wuz enthoosi
aztie for the great reformer as anybody.
I stood out, myself, and got a fair slice ;
but it didn't do me any good. Bascom
wuz with me and saw the money paid and
he demanded it uv me, and got it too on
account. There ain't anything in life so
disgustin ez payin old likker bills. That
likker is gone, and ain't no good to voo—
it can't warm your bowels agin. i7nder
stimulatin inflooences one kin afford to
pay—but to pay this yeer for last yeer's
delites, wich hey fled forever and can't
never be recalled, except in memory, it's
disgustin. I never did like to pay for
memories—they ain't substanshal.
But I shel hey the postotlis at the Cor
ners shoor, of Tilden is elected for long
afore the time comes, I shel be in debt
to Bascom agin.
The platform caii't help sootin the Dim
ocrisy uv the entire country, pertikelerly
when the candidates is taken in account.
It is the most flexible platform I ever lielpt
to construct, and the Dimocrat wich can't
stand onto it ain't worth the name. In
Ohio and Injeauy we shel swear its soft
money and reform, and pint proudly to
Hendricks. In Noo York and the East we
shel swear its hard money and reform and
pint proudly to Tilden.
Ez I shel hey to swear) both seckshons
I hey two speeches alreddy prepared, one
uv wich is hard money and one soft, and
the other orators of the party hey fixed
theirselves likewise. I wood sejest, now,
that ther may be no mistake, that a cow
witty be appinted in each place where a
speech is to bo made, to see that the speck
er rises sober, and that he Bits the right
speech started. After the reform speeker
hez made his speech to the citizens, uv
course he shood be allowed to git ez full
ez he chooses, but it wool be terrible to
hey him git up and make the. speech in
Hartford, Connecticut, that wuz inteudid
fur the lattitude uv Terre Haut, Injeanny,
or to make in Injeanny the hard money
speech wich he shood yoose in Connecti
cut.
With rich care, and reasonable work,
ther can't be any question ez to the result.
The Dimocrisy liez bin on to grass so long
that they will fite ez men never fought
afore, and we shel win. With "Reform !"
in our mouths and Postoffis in our harts,
we shel march forrerd to victory. But we
hey but to work fur it.
PETROLEUM V. MASHY,
Wieh would like to be Postmaster,
P. S.—A serious trouble threaten"-'
at one time in St. Loois. The M .ayor
that city 111,1 fixed upon the nite arm' the
settin nv the eonvenAhun to make a rade
onto the gamblin denq and Ow hon.el of
ill rep.irt in that city. 1:4-hintly 710
win;l ;iv it in time to hey it po4tponz-d.
lied it been carried nut 1 shudder to think
wat wood hey bin the result. Two-thirdi
nv our men, refOrm delegates. would hey
bin gobbled and woe.' hey bin before po
leece inagistrate4 in the mornin. Tilden's
money bed bin distributed that
and the refornient he.l eaAli enuff to jo4tif7
ern in ma kin a nite nv it. and they win a •
drain nv it. Iled them 1i0n.4.4 bin raided
onto that nite the eonvendion wool , ' heir
bin obiged to adjourn fOr want ill- a quo
rum. I'. V. N. 1
- - -.Op. •
National Democratic Phtfo7m.
I►ESOI.IS r TONS .1;0)17M , 1T . : 4 T. L.,T:4
The following resolution. seer • adopted 'uy
the national democratic convention, which met
at St. Louis JllllO '27tl. 14:6, and con.titnte
the platform on which Tilden and Ilendr!cks
stand in the presidential campaign
We, the Ilelegat , !3 of the democratic party of
the IThited Stales in national convention as
sembled, hereby declare the administration of
the federal government to he in urgent need
of immediate reform ; and du hereby enjoin
upon the nominees of this convention and of
the democratic party in each state a zealons
effort and co-operation to this enti,and .to here
by appea: to our fellow citizens of every form
er political connection to undertake with na
this first and most pressing patriotic duty.
For the democracy of the whole country we
do here reaffirm our faith in the permanency
of the Federal Pelee, orr devotion to the con
stitution of the United States, with it. amend•
ments. universally accepted as a final settle
ment of the controversies that engendered civ
il war, and du here record our steadfast eon-
Vence in the perpetuity of republican self
government ; in absolute acquiescence in the
will of the majority, the vital principle of re
publics ; in the supremacy of the civil over
military authority ; in the total separation of
church and state for the safety alike of civil
and religious freedom ; in the equality of al!
citizens before just laws of their sewn enact
ment ; in the liberty of individual conduct
unvexed by sumptuary lan's ; in the faithful
education of the rising generation, that they
may preserve, enjoy and transmit these best
conditions of human happiness and hepe. the
noblest product of a hundred years of i hange
ful history. But while upholding the bond of
our union and great charter of these our rights,
it behooves it free people to practice also that
eternal vigilance which is the price of liberty.
Reform is necessary to rebuild and establish
in the hearts of the whole people of the rninn,
eleven years ago happily rescued from the
danger of a corrupt centralism which. after
inflicting upon ten statea the rapacity of car
pet-bag tyrannies, has honey-combed the offi
ces of the federal government itself with inca
pacity, waste and fraud, infested states and
municipalities with the contagion of misrule,
and locked fast the prosperity of an industri
ous people in the paralysis of hard times. Ite
form is necessary to establish a sound curren
cy, restore the piddle credit and maintain the
national honor We denounce the fAilure for
alltheseeleven years to make good thepromise
of the legal-tender notes which are a changing
standard of value in the hands of the people
and the non-payment of which is a disregard
of the plighted faith of the nation. We de
nounce the improvidence whirl* in eleven
years of peace has taken from the people in
the federal states thirteen times the whole
amount of the legal tender notes and squan
dered four times this sum in useless expenses
without accumulating any reserve for their re
demption. We denounce the financial imbe
cility and immorality of that party which dur
ing eleven years of pace hasty:vie no sulraars
toward resumption, that instead has obstruct
ed resumption by wasting our resources trot
exhaustin,g all our surplus income, and while
annually professing a return to specie payment
has annually invented fresh hindrances there
to. As such a hindrance we denounce the re
sumption clause of the act of len and we here
demand its repeal. We demand a judicious
system of preparation by public economies. by
official retrenchments and by wise Inane..
which shall enable the nation goon to assure
the whole world of its perfect ability and its
perfect readiness to meet any of its promises
at the call of the creditors entitled to payment.
We believe such a system well devised and
above all entrusted to competent hands fur ex
ecution, creating at no time an artificial scar
city of currency and at no time alarming the
public mind into a withdrawal of that vaster
machinery of credit by which ninety-rive per
cep , . of all business transactions are perform
ed, a system open. public and inspiring general
confidence would from the day of its adoption
bring healing on its wings to all our harrassed
industry and set in motion the wheels of com
merce, manufactures and the mechanical arts,
restore employment to labor and render in all
its national source the prosperity of the peo
ple:_ . . _
Reform is necessary in the form and mode
of federal taxation, to the end that capital way
be set free fr►m distrust and labor lightly bur
dened. We denounce the present tariff duties
upon nearly four thousand articles as a master
piece of injustice, inequality and false pre
tence. It yields a dwindling not a yearly ris
ing revenue. It has impoverished many indus
tries to subsidize a few. It prohibits imports
that might purchase the products of American
labor. It has degraded American rommeree
from the first to an inferior rank upon the
high seas. has cut down the sales of Amer
ican manufactures at home and abroad, and
depleted the returns of American agriculture.
an industry followed by half our people. It
costs the people five times more than its pro
ducts to the treasury, obstructs the processes
of production and wastes the fruits of labor.
It promotes fraud and fosters smuggling ; en
riches dishonest officials and bankrupt* hon
est merchants. We demand that all custom
house taxation shall he only for revenue.
Reform is necessary in the scale of public
expense, federal, state and municipal. t►ur
federal taxation has swollen from $6 0 . 0 00, 900
in gold in 1860 to $450,000,000 is currency in
1870. Our aggregate taxation from $114.000,
000 in gold in 1860 to $720. 0 0 0 , 000 in 1 450 :
or, in one decade. from less than $1 per head
to more than $lB per head. Sitter the war.
the people have paid to their tax gathers more
than twice that sum for the federal govern
ment alone. We demand a vigorous frugality
in every department and from ev.ry officer of
the government.
Reform is necessary to put a stop to the
profligate waste of public lands and their di
version front actual settlers by the party in
power, which has squandered two hundred
millions of acres upon railroads alone, and oat
of thrice that number has disposed of less than
a sixth directly to the tillers of the soil.
Reform is necessary to correct the omissions
of republican congresses and the errors anar
treaties and our diplomacy. which have strip
ped our fellow-citizens of - foreign birth an 1
kindred race recrossing the Atzanti: of the
shield of American citizenship, and expo,ed
our brethren of the Pacific coast to the incur•
sions of a race not sprung from the same great
parent stock, awl in fact now by law denied
citizenship through naturalisation. as neither
being accustomed to the traditions of a pro
gressive civilization nor exercised in liberty
under equal laws. We denounce the policy
which thus discards the liberty loving Ger
man and tolerates the revival of the Coolie
trade in Mongolian women. imported for im
moral purposes, and Mongolian men hired to
perform servile labor contracts. and demand
such modification of the treaty with tu•r t'hi•
nese empire or such legislation by congress,
within a constitutional limitation, as to pre•
vent the further importation or immigration
of the Mongolian race. _ _
Reform is necessary and can never he effect
ed but by making it the controlling issue of
elections and lifting it *hove the two false is-
sues with which the office-holding class and
the party in power seek to Smother it the
false issues with which they would enkindle
sectarian strife in respect to public schools, of
which the establishment and support belong
ing exclusively to the several states and which
the democratic party has cherished from their
foundation and resolved to maintain without
partiality or preference for any class, sect or
creed. ami,....w.itjuitit,snnts.gruting from the
`7cm-slay to any of the false issues by w
Uv they seek to light anew the !lying embers
ieCtinnill bite v.o.fiwof "VW fr,Sto., .I.l , Alrir 'bpi. APPOPIP inielP 11111,041.01.
n at Ti ra I y estratileti, h , st now renritte.t , rt dm . riermaip. mod `r.
nye intli7!mhle reptthli , Sad I • irterty , to It...navvy
.i . y vidp 4 . 1.16
Ref.rm ttereeftry th. sort r• .
- newt. Try sow pitifotPh.d. se die smetsig
the pale- -
the
•spetn•nr. prns , .. that ~ Ain t war -
-al enn.fqr• o f •h• znr.rm,n , a' '•7 , -..- - ••• ,
pis:sib!. if it• sarvir• eghlr.ll
change st eviery plarfialt. to. hi w pr se fwmfght ,
row V. the helTnt neve. he•of relying
parry /owl ir.4te.4 lorovor soe.rtio.w.ll
fnr prnse4 enasp.tewey sopi heir{ 1.40 , iiy
in the pnhlir . ;4,3
pi , rnnicr •hnnfel nei•Ser !ie • 'UT -wen
Tint• of ill pvi)lie ass sot the ine•rinteen , nl
their amnito.n. p- ,
Ira the p •~l.•r•iit•art 'fist the , pmt
in poser r anrk 0.-ft 7n pro,',., l
ry refnrei.
i n :erlrTri ,a i•rillra,ll7 • •
er grads, of proWir sprvies: T rrrinrt....
Virg Pre=i4 , :nt. jnders. wneenri.
ra!,inet ani a!! nt!por• alftanr
pqMie 4PTIF.Sriot 1e- 'Aegis 11...
nw„ a prit:l"P , A. 7 rah:
When the ann.si. of •1 1 ,,s
•ii• &ears,. ing een , nr. V•.. r-.TT•ten•
t la:, 'posh'? nf thy boa,. ofropremn , atirir•
marltetsne ril,rsza as * prooldinat oirr.
:en2tor., hie' their sot.*
N 4 I*** . of T....fing
ittee, 0( the nem 170r..,•illives evp.***4
in jobbery a Lep serr.“ 3 l.• of tb tr.amerr
forring balance* i i the pnhlir *cement* * late
attorsey hipprorisesittliir p AU*
; t •Lorre'.try of tiso "Miry •nr• , -;•oefi at en
rich:ng rr,en i 4 6,7 rwr , .otair.• e.ll
prnfits of r..otrart. ',14 ea
antbaspador to gnenn-I i-ensisre4 in a ilirite..e
-or*lol• itpern:Vion . 7 7 .1 e Tale
?et•retar7 wee•lc ennvirt,noe sp."
trial f..r rssity ri...tnrcetly M fraatla :neon the
.ry Ir.ar ininveKhs.l r
hizh erineev flnd ennferred oh.
, Irmonirtration it enmpletr Mot 31,.. Sr*. K i r a
in reform mast he the people. • , hoir.
pat men frocn *motto? parts.. 'PO ?kW 4i meow
of one polittral orrinizostim, tiatort filo itopity
pn!.•tic and 1,4; I.y rinnitinc no •-hinr.
or p3rty x. CAI Zet , Itan,r , o% -.4gro,
and no reform.
MI these Aimee.. wrong. .sn•l cringe.. the
prodort of foreers Illvweelpolviev
party. creel" a iseepiiisv fne ?efnenv
confessed by the rrpuhlicses them...tree. list
their refornicrs are vnte.l ;n their con
vention and dial:Oared fen." the "whine.. Ti.
party a IBOLVO of honest rovers aro papwartese
to ri.si4t the 411 row nlir•ilnt.l•?4, ,tll 4.1.111. f.
and Refnrm ran only be 'sad hr
pencrfitl civil revointins.
We demand 3 change cf .7 .tern. 1 rilinge
of s•lmin.;stration, 11 change .st par.y.
mny have a change nr ot.geores and men
Our New York LOW.
N io v Jelly 2:5. 1476
Ti.- tie, roe
I , a nift! - l rl, . 1-
Tllf. PITRIZWIR
Th e i n t ent , h e ee i f !he past !API lief! kg
To n* happily over. at least 1 1 . 8), 3 lila..
Tuesday afternoon the ei , T win visst•-•1
by the heavie+t +toms ~r thin, era iististnitikr
awl rain kn ,, wn fir year+, whip+ Lioute4
fruit thr , u. it't the aP..rnoon with tire in
t^rvil,, of eessati-o. till after ton it
niirht. The riu was ahno!ntely 4introsthetl.
ind the air was Jr;ieionsi: en.l thereafter'
hippy contra.t t. the 4titfin; heir wt . the
part three we k+ .
helt , i ietwin hr h..n ?he apn•st
:err. that that !la+ to , :n known in thP "ivy PA ,
eights :war. Th.• thernvons.ter h-ao inn*
In lilt. awl .nayrii there f.fir. !ikirvlr
oxr• l r ; ,. n 4 the .4.3;•.
anti 111, 111 . 1!1: JO' 14t..r t.. 45. tPf
et.sy+ iv h..f wrPrt 11.7?
t. , hive them e”ntinne thrv, w-rks.
with..nt ceimattnn iet nab. iv vontorthmit
nnpreee•lent.A. Every awl.* has
heen a e , iltrion ~ r ab•.r- • mem
the 4tr•et. hors," Itri, ! :
alp! 19.1
in their stitlinl: .zarret+ it ww. terribie
f.r the re.itlents r .orn7 andl opeeinno
bowies rtp-tnwn. what non4t it h:tve bre, Air
those e..inpelle,l ot-e7irT 4 -Irrets. twit Itent
air or T..ntilati.n. an•l 4 , thjert...l b. tit*
4meil f th , ton..mrnt hnisses '
These pe , ,ple 4 , lff-re.' 311 the •netnr,..•
the ilarnnefl. an.) thoq.-in , l4 nt Joni. shed.
The mortahly Law h...
tire:tarn'. i• 4 ••‘•••or ! .1. he
1111 own
Tt w3:4 n. , thprz the
three week. p t‘t tee .ee .tront; nt-R girl*"
in the street an.l tail preurito--- 4rnmitit. -
tome woisla cvy. bit the p..iietraten knew
better it w.+ • , in.tr.ke. att.l the Inpg64,-
lanei-. provisle,l by the eity would , Irive hp
and carry the lufferer off to the b"vpitsi
pripvitied for the purpoi4e. Of the east.
sunstroke one I.lr very ref ever
reenver their h..alth in f ill Pia etey
methical authorities have given the meat
minute directions for avoiding this fer l ibb
e3sualty, bat
. y,st not half evf Very few oh.
verve them. .1 wet eloth in th , .. crown et
the hat is a certain awl .nre preventive.
but nevertheless' not one in ten t the th,
9implo pree..tution.
‘I
No matter how moth 11•n5..---115, papers
howl about it. or bow motels they way la
.sert to the contrary. Tilden will not reerawn
the undivided support of the Deamoer.atie
Party of this eity and State. Ile botch'
the nomination with money which he
swineil. •l ont of the people in e x ifrooll
sehentes.bnt he has ant enough to bey the
election. The leaders of Tammany will
Fire him a .iipport. for he has already Ai
vided up the ',thee, among them. and hat
partitioned out the Arta.; hot there be
members of Tammany. •trt•l Dertwermy
who are not member. .if Tammany. what
cannot be hough? or driven. and John PEA
ly is havinr trouble with them. Their
are thousands in open r-volt. and teems
anls mere will follow them Kett by the
way, speak in., ,if this Reformer:* it ri a
fiert that th , Itrookly• rinr. a more glen
germ's one than Tammany Pres. went en
m'•-se to St. Louis. and eorstrihuted of the
money they h -t of the people of
Brooklyn to the, rinds that nominated
-.slippery :.tarn VI Ant this fart remem
bered. that the Broniegn rinr—the mom
onseritpu'eitm .harnelees, and
altogether bad set of politieal thieves 10.1
plunderers the country was ever rwroavi h
—wer.% all and singular. in favor of r 1
den . 4 nomination. and are • y h is eheww
,net trusted counsellor' in the eanepail/n.
Tins is a matter that ors.-ht to be hossmin
.howinr how much the -reform - pirmita
in the DeDNWTIII ie pi.atforui re,aly f o rga .
Goy. Illayei* letter of 'crept-ewe
the liveliest 4stiAtlsetinn to the Rep-abb.-am
and the better c:.es. of Penmen/. As a
I),nsoerat said to foe the other day. ••It
has the ring of true metal awel I know "nail
we'll enonzh to know that he swims it iii
awl will carry oust all he my. I shall vote
rir him. - That letter .with it. manly Ist
terances. atel the well known chararter
the man for tioinz what he e 5..., wtil isohe
ilayes huntire.i. thettistvianf. 'mart It
iS an that in every
Ayteptoat.
ward of Now York and Brooklyn Repobri
cans are orranitins into !rare sod Wheel
er clubs, and this without the interfeveare
of effice holder+. or thoAn who are pleoted
to consider therri4elsei "leader
pe.,ple are inocirt : : to the enpport 4 the
em,:innati ticket Apentineowly. )07
will elect it 24 ecrtain 24 fAte
Tilt ritIITINNTAT
•
thr terril.lo 11..-0 4 1t t rprt er.
thee er•ll hi. , shoe sper thoos owl r o p
•-en that dove. soli bir to am
Th. -.Meet 4 dos prosois also bow 11•4011.
4.4 oil espooisiOrso s Ass dos
re Si sir% emporia, UP ,1111111111111 OP Vial=
esirwr.s• P Awe "WO it se
, Isfirserio lerre4 sorlsomr she sortie WWII
eye .fr seel oar 1 6, s lessolowe
y •-irrs vssorbessi 1-bet
ro flew. tar bees se 4 Ow iftridl •
67 ears 'fr.. re massar 4 elbs os.
r•wygo 104 rm. 44.
so *orb mviipotr.• .e.r `we maid Is
I - -er;ms• SM. this sir 4 SIONIMPIP
iipirememplir. purl Or Mgr I.IPW
..easel. Ego tho itteine ilortlema a
tta-r.- tr.- s pow of moribillo—oot sosob
af . OA AMOR 1111 1 Iwo Uri pip, mod
tilt.-ad A sale. was .yiso IMP tbir
Floek isvmms tad ter ocolistitisty imir by
*kr., V woorto. I ossrod wry to r shook
or dot toopittoo or• otyorior r sort' SAW
ON*" • hvie, 10 t 116. 1, Jus eseimo4y db.
I ...Tr.. dory ow!
0 1 , 1F010 taw alarf an wiribiNese s imam 4
poottotto by ~r. 411 sod lu iwelftse.
trflielb vr.• . 10 .1. mob, qir sim stiri
ty. n to rims alp tip retstossaul
Th. kw 0.41 tom it, soil sigh
..TOT. aryl pot bow, sow OM. is as vim
avoll tb-it. at so semi so Ito
*a thaw .4 UP as any Saw
F arm are- *vire. Who Ihnirords sap vim ow
sad romoniniolv. Inn ea be do.
omit *tow do- rot* oom om p li e o p rA Itive se .
brt : tad rot ...so It.or 0004 os
.loos ros sim otostrow Imusarre peosihsor
tool As Negate? railer 4bortilbfad lest
awl ...ow pow .
Mil I'TI.L WWII
the sissowr wit lbw
pill iris Iff,'"Anbli. fah. iihsrbss Nom is
441 ie sw neon.• veyintn. sm. owe Jaw*
1 . Ayer. :be proprisser sod ouselbsiossir
4 P%..rry rikiesd sad s awe dhow pow
pri,tar7 ssmiseines bun rise inane vise is
2n :wins& 4 s priente soyints war lens
ft. smear bin sonsys thr ashes by.
vt.i en( !stn sb• oily, sod orvadhosand bias
• lilt* wow ems--ins Ihr boor
rqlsrml sone•y—miens iii Masa id sloe
k weir e has bet Iwo iarrer tiff bier ipbrisimess
4 , 4 .1” big mak sod botiosebt Wok
II it ussosbisy ow mama broomp-oftrb.
thirty yin's be hew mai sod wiled sow
fair the elk .sir =him mew
• UNA. boos is 211 id bun
en
vowl. llw tote poill Op its resiqpNieudi
a• !rsbiir mask bus the &Ps dime br bad
smie his tnessey in rap one susions bias.
srs.l ho we. , nespillssi tw fir* soy r ors
w!).. prwbobiy owe um bosses ties bisomilt
Hi. friends, us sy.r. time 4 Ingilididd.
In.?" 4 the -limes semi he sown god.
iisog tie Aut .iffiserre, mod e. be lady bow
spit st to sdirmeed my_ web sedrsons
srms....r led issalrog dor And filiv eery
4 111 ie. that bs kw maim sr sped I , ;*
*.lore=) Ow_ vii 4 wish $ bail sod wed
srobp.i rA the issiwet 4 is, weds mods
• x snider Rineen se .ibe wish ie. be yams
▪ se.l wt i f 4noddsor earl bee asp to se
107:isous limey so s gend thine. bus y.si
ems rum re re Neo
mak •it love pine w pessersi 4senwebe
eh. pewee as a simihnsell lee=rs Ina shoo
ynsi ors M usiedbr Its rem mg its se Witt,
as Tiblets le. sod be essemostal by the De
• 1.4 r Ch. proesdror7.
1 - Tt X tI I le &MIR CT
rt.• e-prow4vrinfr :s do* rive. 4'
:• •how, s• seseb nt ~4 arrielko me met
••• sorbing , Threw vim brasiridho.4 l l••••••
••• nee Awe boor mar issusism for
time. iw tes and sidirs. bs dm" howip bows
I.r imisses thew vorismisis
ri"owe ma Ow tr..vir year 11 4 1.“.•
Pw•-V1 4orirly depreeistissr is dm rail/ 4
Rh.. •tvpt.- • norti at tihr preseirs tint ie
I 41-4P7 wT tivero. the I.4.oe , tlhimser prio.
0p... in 145. J. the prier .1 eh& boss pullie
hy.••• 1.0 ~vs. purr puss 4. at ivb.dw
avie t, : tptop le Tie lhot A APIr
•Iree ;pp viver4.4 :78 And A.
ntber *miry ire nr Pt"rr amp pe.••
ass ape umerispes shoe* sow
fr rnwar-i • 441 fterdmor leas..
Where it a R .a 4. ch. .lie es amprolbem
Awe, ressumrs •
puma sf Pi.-1 per pumeno %Pr ovary me_
up.apporp and rbild, MAlMtits sesmil 1111b
pr.motingt airiest 511.111110.10, lbws
she bad isr.es• is bawd oboe tit lies
*et Sr. him- roe no, besintrury. J.
twit homy. soil claw 44 ase ow.
ser , e= .4inqgt 4 P ars 1641 wit ire , Res
4.-st 4 a *rhos !het Ind Ai, 11111 M.
.tr•l ker 'he way. the ..refiev at ma vast
...I to 'shirr liar. 4 igt..49. w was
•w:t 4 risthrs that 0.-.4 'Sets* do wipe
flit_ raw IMP hail in New Tdvil swat Aware
nwsry. is pi, 4 %atavisms vast.
awl if it it istriwasi. sii dr fallivassa
tit* shritist 4 that presses vs
"'barb at dm saw stmer. wiry Slab Airy
*neer Priivissamit owl erwrydiag As ob.
rat mi.. *Soh artr amuse or ismi•trav
3.4 the people t hew saw
they wain this tot Ita d Orr
bore dr atatery a. pity Le wars awry ass
inane % 6.11' artteitp. 4 hosery bipor
sot the., ir/11 mews it etwo is a it obi
The Syr.. re.twar-taws amid bit s& anissow
war prw,... Sst thii sim dlihr iv 4.
Sr loot. The fropi.r. w.irssrrwst. oaf ars
noes lre to tS aolvarstav* 4 the 11.4“,..:
r., sew piapr.+ at eteasprr rts.
11 .1.4, LA:11.10AOR •:.'WR
Th. ivineirrig Clod. .;pimism ).•
&i.nt mak.. JI di 1-1.- limbers mpf
M m arnme.-
Eht.-h sow! efillift At ow..
Snag SNP s 01411
Pt 1 . 30 P 1111 97 r' 2 . 111 2 C^, am& eissi~....;
No' pnrprioe. he -he boiddisic 4 $..,
•er.soir rens is hieetoor s pie.*
r...h,,..rab:...,tee.-eolowse. ft logo
•litst Lowl ern
to New t Irmo the or.", of oil
:row' hog. ..tite-!-Aliorispoto glom ibc
the lose I. .ofely ..4 *at lie
4,11 fiotisEoc how woe sore flosip wow.
so 4 !wise• mew tbsw soy other .i• rho
Roe teleise! your. ore froliionsbi,
New bowie to saireo toptiesit. mit
dot tg•rrisory re ties violist,' of dr bettor,'
Vas vireo he Ira& 1114 Iteveieto
Whits.-y. rho roiiiielhor 4 lir Porde
Rai:rvisif refooo4 e.ove with tar ro.e
oinr.filiori. awl be r be.
• flArresit nvegPli. yew* sew by
eroopietety morwoutoiel "MI intitom
Theo rale fl'iwihme tow inirisoll into • dr
• rorosisioit ouloors•so. cull die 44
eltarartor was ries Ammer. 1. Isilleet.
Memo lip *mine simmemen is lir IPA. ,
vr,ris rises twenty-11v* sale MP- lbw
the lies-Tnriger wf 0.463, it i•
the , irstrwetio• 4se oil book
irrt othiA ?hey ;Inf. trill Ito tripitsiei wti
$ fir.' mow
Mr •evlrs.
so aliniumari.y 4-al. si *oil hp all OW
Inaba. is inn flrnel, Or OIL So-
Maly so be ewe Thr• sae
veryegionarowpar. I ems =6
NO
PT Irmo