VOL. t). The Huntingdon Journal J. R. OURBORROW, ÜBLISIIERS AND I'ItOPRIETORS otlice in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street TH lII'STINTOPON JorRNAL ii 1/11b1I.holi ovory I,v .1. IL. 1,1.1.'4010W and J. A. NASH. ender th.• two mono of J. R. butar.naow A: Co. at $2,00 per anion/. IN tr,v4Ner. or 12.50 If not paid for In six months tr , ,nl data ~ f .ao,cripti, . n, And 13 if not paid within th.. 1•, itni..s.4 at the option of the put)- I r-, un.YP all arr., raw , are o,d. N o pap••r, ffirw t .yer, will out of th.. State Tiffindn piaci ibr in advance. ratneent airertie,rn .nto evi!l be inserted itt rWrr,vr nvit rr.Nrs per line for the tiret insertion, tiEvEN AND A-Hot.? f,r the second end tivE corers 1,:" line fur .oiloieriiii•n: qn.tru,ily and yearly bn, , toem fidrertixemcnts 1).• tLe fn! owing mtes ot Iyr On 6in 4 5 , 0 S Sir. 4 itoo,4roli 9 04104 (10*.f.71$ 36 01 4 (Pot 1,c01:18 10'34 Oft; bp! 65 7 ./.) •Nr!l.l 0 , 14 Or Yetor:l4 (41,40 901 65, 40 h 4. II 91; . 29 0 Ib 00;1 c 01136 0O 00 00i 80j 100 I I •1 4 6 ! All ltev , liitions of Assiciations, Communications of litint,l or i Interest, all party announcements, and icittees of garriage,anil Deaths, exceeding fire lines, will tio rhargoil t is ,ANTS per I;nm 1,01 and other notices will be charged to the party tiocimr them inserted. _ . _ - Vverti4ing Ag,uts m.t tin , l their cornrulmAion:outsidu r,f tigu,n. All adn,rti,ing n,counts fir, du, wul collectable win the adrorlivment once insettwl. .108 PIUNTTNG °revery kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, 110111! with neatness and dispatch. Blanks, Carl", of every variety and style, printod It. it, shortest ',Ake, and everything in the Printing line will he executed In the most artistic manner and at the lov.,it rates. Professional Cards• 1) C .1 0 1 1 , 11 7 .. 7 1. 0 1 lli :.o A y tts) oc ra o ;?: , - ,x lal i r it, N .N 0 r . , 1_11 ., , 00( 3cd " !. 111 A.F. BRTIMBAUGfr, offers his professional services to the conimnntty. Offiefi, N 0.523 Washington street, one t1...r east of the Catholic Parsonage. Lian4,7l Fc. STOCKTON, Surg,•on Dentist. Office in Leigter's . building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E. .1. Greene, Iluntingdoo, Pa. [apLA '76. E. B. ORLADY, Attonwy-at-Law, 40 Perin Street, [n0v17,75 GL. r. 01113, Dentist . office in S. T. Brown's new building, . tie. i2O, Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2:7l if W. BUCHANAN, Surgeon Dentist, No. 228, Pun ,treet, Huntingdon, Pa. 1j • C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No. —. Penn 1. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl9,'7l I FRANKLIN SMOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting . don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal busi nesl. (office, 229 Fenn Street, corner of Court House [dec4;72 Square. SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon , J. Plc Office, Penn Street, three doors west 1 3rd Str'•et, T W. MATTER:, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the Government for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of fice on Penn Street. [janc7l TR. DCIi.BORROW, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., . will practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon . . ,untity. Particular atter.th.n given to the settlement of estates of decedents. Office in the JOVRNIL building. T S. GEISSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. '230 Penn Street, oppo site Court House. Ifebs;7l A. ORBISON, Attorney -at-Law, Patents Obtained. it. Office, 31:1 Penn Street, Iluntingdon, Pa. Duy3l,'7l E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., S offire in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt :.nd care':ul attention given to all legal busine.. raugs,'74-6mo. IXTILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting -1 V don. Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 221, Penn Street. rap 19,71 Miscellaneous HEALTH AND ITS PLEASURES, - OR - DISEASE AND ITS AGONIES: CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. NERVOUS DISORDERS. What is more fearful than a breaking down of the ncr vous system? To be excitable or nervous in a small de gree is most destressing, for where can a remedy be found? There is ono:-drink but little wine, beer, cr spirits, or far better, none; take no coffee,—weak tea being prefera ble; get all the fresh air yon can ; take throe or four Pills every night : eat plenty of solids, avoiding the use of slops; and if these golden rules are followed, you will be happy in mind and strong in body, and forget you have any nerves. MOTHERS AND DAUGH.TERS 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 clanging the blood from all im purities, and removing dangerous and suspended secre tione. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for female complaints, they never fail, never weaken the system, 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 liver and stomach, whence follow, as a natural conseqence, a good appetite and a clear head. 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. It 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 a great mistake, however; for these Pills will immediately correct the liver and stop every kind of bowel complaint. In warm climates thousands of lives have been 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 ofcourse. 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. By 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 THE KIDNEYS. In all diseases affecting these organs, whether they secrete too much or too little water; or whether they be atHictod with stone or gravel, or with aches and pain■ settled in the loins over the regions of the kidneys, these fills should be taken according to the printed directions, and the Ointment, should he well rubbed into the small of the back at bedtime. This treatment will give almost im mediate relief when all other means have FOR STOMACHS OUT OF ORDER. No medicine will so effectually improve the tone of the stomach as these pills; they remove all acidity, occasioned either by intemperance or improper diet. They reach the liver and reduce it to a healthy action; they are won derfully* efficacious in cases of spasm—in fact they never fail in curing all disorders of the liver and stomach. Fevers of all kindo, Fits, Gout, Headache, Indigestion, Inflammation, Jaundice, Liver Complaints, Laming°, Piles, Rheumatism, Retention of Urine, Scrofula, or King's Evil, Ague, Asthma, Bi lions Complaints Blotches on the Skin, Bowel Complaints, Colics, Constipation of the Bowels, Consumption, 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 lox 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 counterfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be spitrious. * * *Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY & Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in boxes at 25 cents, 62 cents, and El each. 4?. There is considerable saving by taking the larger SiZi.9. N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients In every disorder are affixed to each box. apr. 28, 1876-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 now 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 New York. ap7-tf.] J. R. DURBORROW A CO. J. R. DURBORROW, - J. A. NASII: The Huntingdon Journal, EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, No. 212, FIFTH STREET. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA 3 / 1 1 ; 1;111 91111 lyi $2 00 per annum, in advance; $2.50 within six months, and $3.00 if [spl2,ll 00000000 00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000 [jan4,'7l ulivugg TO ADVERTISERS Circulation ADVERTISING MEDIUM 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 bomes weekly, and is read by at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST advertising medium in Central Penusyl- 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. ; u mg JOB DEPARTMENT Bore Throats, 'Stone and Glove], Secondary Sy mp- tome, Tic-Doulouraux, Tumors, lllcers,_ 'Veneta! Affections Worms ofall kinds Weakness from any cause, &c. - COLOR PM: Mr All business letters should be ad dressed to J. R. DURBORROW & CO., Huntingdon, Pa. .. , ~. -,- i-i ~... • . ._• i:. _,• ,' ~.. . 4 , A - -) i 111 fl_ I° d 4 11 , • . . ~. Ai r --11 ," . ~5' •k , 1 6 - i „,, . f a y ; Jur/. a l .r: . ... - -- Printing J. A. NA SII. PUBLISHED -IN TERMS : lot paid within the year 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 00000000 PROGRESS I V IC REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0 0 o 0 o 0 o o 800. - FIRST-CLASS 5000 READERS WEEKLY , R i Q~' p d ~4 of rol ev -0 o a• CfR 't .-i 0 OQ P S :NU A SPECIAL' Ori*al Vottrp. tY JEAN MCK01:01 Memqry brings ua thoughts of the past,— Thoughts of sweet pleasures that could not last Remembrance of dear ones gone before, Whose faces and forms we shall see no more. It carries us back to childhood, Whcu we ro:.►ued over hill, dale, and wildwood, With I,r( t her, sizter and friends so dcar— - But we have long since dropped on their graves a tear. In fancy we gee a dear familiar face lVhich time from our memory cannot eraoe But wt. ri:member again of eceing it hid Forever 'neath the coffin lid. We remember a brot'ler who way noble and grauJ, But he went to the battle in a far off lard; And we remember the tidings of that battle well, For it told the spot where our brother fell. Thus brings memory thoughts sweet and sad, Foine make us weep, others make us glad; Some the, bind um a , with a spell, Others that strike the heart like a knell. Though it may sadden the heart We would n"t with it part, But cheriph it ever dear Ad a gift from him we should fear, *torg-Celltr. KATE'S FASHIONABLE LOVER. Kate Stanton was a very pretty girl, and not only a very pretty girl, but a very winsome, clever, lovable girl. What wonder that all the marriageable young follows for ten miles around adored her, or would have adored her on the slightest provocation. But it was generally voted not worth while to waste breath by sighing in that quarter. Clarance Herbert had a monopoly of favor there. Kate had, contrary to the custom of young ladies, preferred her schoolboy lover and early playmate to all others. The two were not engaged, at least not formally ; but the mutual good understanding that existed between them was almost sure to end in matrimony. Almost, but not quite sure, for "the heart is deceitful above all things." On a certain day there came down in that part of the country a most fascinating man.— His name wus Sidney Dale, which all the young ladies thought a very romantic name, indeed ; his dress was faultless, his manners easy, his conversation lively.— But perhaps his strongest point was his moustaches. How long, and black, and fierce they were. None such had ever been seen thereabouts. He appeared to be a gentleman of leis ure without visible occupation. He lived at the best hotel in the country town, and had always plenty of money. No wonder that all the girls went quite wild, in the feminine fashion, about this modern Adonis. And this being the case, think it not strange that when he began to pay Miss Stanton rather particular attentions, she did not frown upon his suit. On the contrary, she was so gracious to him that the knowing ones, who had hitherto booked her for Clarance, began to be less confident. Clarance was, of course, not very well pleased with the turn affairs had taken, but what could he do but wait developments ? And this he did, with as good a grace as he might. But when Mr. Dale had been in that locality some two months, rumors effecting his character began to be whispered about in certain quarters. Finally, Clarance, without any seeking on his own part, became possessed of in formation of a very serious nature, that could not be doubted. His position be came at once a very unpleasant one.— What he learned was known to very few. If be told Kate, be would be liable to an intolerable suspicion. Yet he could hardly stand by and see her compromise herself by permitting the addresses of a scoundrel. He waited some time in the hope that somebody else would make the distasteful disclosure ; but nobody did, and so, one day, he rode over, resolved to say his say, and to trust to Kate's magnanimity not to misunderstand his motive. He was fastening his horse, when the sharp report of a pistol, followed by merry laughter, greeted his ears, coming from a dense part of the shrubbery, by which the house was on all sides surrounded. Following the sounds, Clarance presently came upon Kate and Mr. Dale, engaged in the rather unfeminine diversion of shooting at a mark. The young lady had a passion for pistol shooting, and was no bad shot—a fact she had just been prov ing. Being in an excellent humor in consequence, she was disposed to receive Clarance very graciously ; but he, disgusted with his errand, was not amiably inclined. He declined to take a part in the shooting and seeing a copy of "Marmion" lying on a rustic seat near by, he took it up, and strove, not altogether in vain, to lose himself in its familiar, but ever welcome pages. Kate was rather piqued at his boorish ness, and when the shooting was over, Mr. Dale insisted on presenting her with the weapons used, and she not only accepted them, but did so with a warmth of grati tude that was partly prompted by malice. When Dale had gone, rather an awk ward pause ensued; for Clarance went on with the tale of Flodden Field, and Kate, after critically examining her present three or four times, was at a loss for an occupa tion. At length she broke the silence with an ironical accent in her voice. "Is that book new to you ?" Clarance looked up quite serenely "Not new, but alsiais engrossing. Your friend is gone, I see," as if he had just noticed his absence. This was certainly not a propitious time for the disclosure Clarance bad to make, but be defiantly resolved to go through with it. "By the way," he began, "it was of him that 1 came to speak. I have recently learned, from a most trustworthy source, that he is a gambler by profession, and that be is here to keep out of the way of an indictment. I thought it my duty to tell you," he went on, with a slight touch of irony, "so that you might be able to give him the coup de grace before every one knew the story." Kate, keenly nettled at this speech, said more than she intended. 0 et, "Suppose I don't choose to believe all this of a man who appears in every way a gentleman ?" "In that case," said Clarance, cooly, but stung to the quick, "I have nothing more to say than good evening." And. taking up his hat, he was gone before Kate had decided what she ought to say. She walked slowly towards the house, swinging her hat by its strings in a vexed but unrepentant mood. This unpleasant state of mind continues the two following days. She could not believe Clarance guilty of the baseness of willfully traducing a rival. Yet there !Y. - Memory HUNTINGDON, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER F. 1876. might have been some mistake, and like most high spirited, generol:9 people, our young lady was not inclined to give up a friend at the first breath of suspicion. Her pride, too, was enlisted in Dale's favor; yet, after all, she could not help some qualms of conscience whenever she thought of her old lover. The second day was as gloomy es possible. A cold per sistent rain poured down from early morn ing till late in the afternoon, when it held up for a short time. During this interval, Kate was standing in the hall looking out listlessly at the sullen sky. where the sun appeared a mere angry spot in the gray waste of cloud, when Mr. Dale, unexpectedly to her, rode up the drive that led to the house. She noticed an unusual gravity in his greeting, and her heart foreboded a scene as she led the way to the drawing room. After a few absent remarks, the caller came di rectly and rather clumsily to the matter in hand. He was not much in love, at least not more than it is easy for a young fellow to be while proposing to a pretty young girl; and the words lacked fervor; for nothing is harder to feign than the grand passion. Do what he would his words I:d a busi ness like sound, as be told "thc old, old story," that he loved her as he never loved any one else ; that, would she be his wife, his life should be devoted to bet happiness. He then tried to take her hand ; but Kate drew back with a little Oliver, and instinct, subtler than reason, warned her that all was not as it seemed. The wooer saw and understood the gesture, slight as it was. He stopped short, turned quite pale, then said, with some emotion, fur his disappointment at last was real— "l see, Miss Stanton, my suit is not agreeable to you, hut I will not annoy you further." The tears came into the girl's eyes at that ; she held out her hand with some half audible murmurs of regret and esteem, but quickly drew it away again. Then occurred an awkward pause of more than a minute, broken at length by Dale's low good-bye. A moment after ho was riding swiftly from the house, amid the pelting rain that had begun to pour down once more. Kate watched him disappear, not without, pain. She really liked him, though not quite well enough to marry him. Her re morseful feeling, however, brought with it another source of anxiety to her mind. That morning her father, sole surviving parent, by the way, had been summoned to a distant town by urgent legal business, and the flooded state of the roads would probably prevent his return before morn ing. Contrary to his custom, he had left a considerable sum of money in his strong box. The house was far from any other house. It was, moreover, very inefficiently guarded, there being in it be-ides Kate only two female servants and a deaf old man, whose slumbers the last trumpet would scarcely have broken. To be sure, in that quiet locality rob beries were almost as rare as earthquakes. But still, robberies were known to occur, and Kate felt that there was rather more than an agreeable flavor of adventure about the prospect before her. But not being naturally timid, she determined to make the most of it. When bedtime came, therefore, she had a fire lighted in her father's bed-room, where the treasure was—for the air was as chill as in the late autumn—loaded the pistols Mr. Dale had given her, put them under her pillow, went to bed, and in spite of certain ridiculous fancies that flitted through her brain, and in spite of the storm that made the windows rattle and the shutters creak, presently fell fast asleep. Outside the night was most dismal. The rain fell pitiless, and an east wind blew in chill, damp gusts, that made the very trees shiver. But the man who fairly groped his way to Stanton's door did not seem to mind it. He gained the front steps just as the great clock in the ball struck two. From beneath his coat he produced a dark lantern and lit it within the shelter of the doorway. He thrust a small iron instrument into the keyhole. With a slight scraping sound, the key was turned and the door opened. The light flashed over every object in the hall, that the bearer might know the position of each. The first door on the landing opened into the sitting room. This the man passed by, but stopped at the second, which led into Mr. Stanton's bed-room. Again the light scraping sound, and the door opened. He started at the sight of a fire, but entered, closed the door softly behind him, turned the key and put it in his pocket, then crossed the room, stealthily, yet steadily, to the opposite corner, where the strong box was built in the wall, placed his lantern upon a chair and examined the lock. His hands were wet and benumbed. He walked cooly to the fire and bent his masked face over it. At this moment Kate awoke, suddenly and completely; and saw the dim outlines of a figure bending over the embers, a light shining upon the wall. Luckily she was too much frightened to cry out. She lay perfectly still, gazing stonily at the motionless figure till it moved to the corner farthest from her, and began work on the strong box. This gave her a moment to think, but the more she thought the more her terror grew. It was but a mere spasm of fear that her hand was thrust under the pillow. It encountered the cold barrel of a pistol. There was something reassuring in the very touch. She drew it forth. The sturdy look of the little weapon was like a friend's strong arm to the frightened girl. She half rose, pointed the pistol and drew the hammer. The sharp click startled the man from his work. He turned quickly, but stopped for a moment irresolute. For half that moment Kate's hand shook helplessly, then for a single instant was quite still. And then the whole house rang to the deafening report. And with that my heroine became once more a wom an, and fell fainting. So the roused household found her, when at length they gained access to the room. On the floor near the box now lay the burglar, insensible. The mask had fallen from his face. It was Mr. Sidney Dale. The rest may be briefly told. Dale, though severely stunned, was not dead, the ball having, as it were, merely felt its way along the outer surface of the skull. There was a trial, of course, and people came to see, "the girl who shot the robber," and hear her testify. It being the first offense, the prisoner was let off with five years, but the night after his sentence he escaped. But what of Clarance and Kate ? Oh, they made up their little tiff, as sensible people who love one another al ways do, and have been jogging on in comfortable matrimony these twenty years. ctslect Iliscrilinp. Gentlemen. What is a gentleman ? The question has been put and answered more their once, yet there remains considerable doubt I upon the subject. People are not disposed to accept the verdict of the poet that a gentleman is an individual whc, never dares a mean action and never tells a lie, lint conscientiously performs Hs duty by his neighbor. Nor are they prepared to ac cede to the contention that a gentleman is a being who comes of a noble stock, and soils not his hands by selling calico by the yard or tea by the pound. Yet, if they were asked to define what a gentleman is the majority would, probably, only he able to say that a gentleman is—a gentlemen, or in other words, a n indefinable some thing. Nevertheless, they seem to be able to instinctively point out those whom they consider to be gentlemen. Nov:, of what sort are the persons who are honored by their favorable verdict ? Well, it is to be feared that the fortunate ones are judged principally upon the score of their exteri ors and their clothes. A man may be no toriously a hard swearer, a deep drinker and immoral ; he may be known to be ut terly wrapped up in himself' and to have coarse and vitiated tastes, yet his claims to the title of gentleman are often readily ad• mitted; provided that he keeps his face cleaner than he does his conscience, that he has a certain air, and that he medulatee his speech in a particular manner. On the other hand, people who aro virtuous, well read and of temperate habits, arc placed among the common herd unless they are masters of those little arts which look so simple and are yet so difficult of acquire teent. It matters not what garb they have on unless they wear their magnificent ap parel with a peculiar grace. Indeed, you may dress two men alike and when they are sent into promiscuous company ene will be set down as a gentleman and the other as something else. Yet neither may commit a positive breach of manners or do anything else exceptionally brilliant in the way of politeness. They are judged upon the principle that a straw suffices to show which way the wind blows. The angles at which they hold their arms, the manner in which they shake hands, the way in which they walk and stand, the methods which they adopt of using their pocket handkerchiefs and other little thine's, all tend to form the judgment which is passed upon them. At the same time, it is doubt ful whether the judges, unless they are of a strongly analytical turn of mind, note in detail the signs upon which the verdicts are formed, the signs, so to speak, being more palpable to the instinct than the un derstanding. The signs that we have in dicated are, of' course, supplemented by others. When men talk they arc bound to show, to a greater or less extent, the stuff of which they are made. Thus. after the two persons in question have relieved themselves of their sentiments, and have joked for a certain time, the grounds upon which they are judged become somewhat clearer than they are at first sight It will be found that one individual is prone to indulge in loud laughs or awkward smirks, while the tone of his conversation is low it is not absolutely coarse, and tends to indi cate that he possesses a somewhat petty disposition. The other, however, though he may be petty and coarse-minded, has the good sense to keep his pettiness and coarseness to himself, and to assume that he does things on a grand scale and looks at matters in a grand way. Nor will you find him giving utterance to sentiments which though possibly laudable in them selves, are apt to incur ridicule. It may be asked how it is that it is easy to make some people, shabbily dressedand not par ticularly blest by fortune, pass for gentle men with very little trouble, while appa rently more favored individuals can by no means be made to do so, however much they may be drilled. Is there any differ ence between the blood and bone of one man and those of another ? Certainly the being who has a short, squabby figure, a pug nose, and a coarse, moist skin, is lia ble to be set down as of plebian origin. But he need not of necessity be so stigma tized, there being many men who, though thus heavily handicapped, are freely ac cepted as gentlemen. At the same time it must be stated that the individual who is slim and gracefully built, and has a straight nose and a bright skin, stands a much better chance of being declared a gentleman than does such a personage as we have referred to above. This, howev er, is by the way. The truth appears to be that certain occupations and associa tions tend to form in people faults of per son, manner and thought, and that these faults became so ingrained in the persons whom they afflict that they become almost ineradicable, and are transmitted from generation to generation. Thus the man who has to indulge in much rough labor becomes utterly slouching in his gait, while be who is given to small transactions in barter loses sight of large matters iu petty calculations. Besides this, it is to be feared that those whose livelihoods arc dependent upon others acquire a truckling demeanor which never leaves them, though it may be set off with a disposition to play the tyrant to those to whom it would sim ply be a waste of time, in a pecuniary sense, to be subservient. Thus, when they leave their shops, offices and warehouses behind them, they carry with them, uncon sciously perhaps, a disposition to pay hom age in quarters where it can but be out of place and excite contempt. Of course, the children who are under their care are af fected by the example which is set them, and thus the taint that we have explained clings to families with what seems singu lar but is really perfectly natural tenacity. From all this it will be seen that the ten- • dency of' the age is to dub gentlemen those who display the most taste rather than the best morals and greatest sterling worth. This may be ground for satisfaction or it way not; but there is some comfort in the thought that those whom society is pleased to honor are, after a fashion, the best train• ed of their species. It may be urged that there is an undue tendency to consider trivialities at the expense of great ones ; when men are in question ; and this is un doubtedly so. But it may be replied that the instinct which induces men to do this is a natural rather than an acquired one. For instance, a cestermonger, who has no love for aristocracy in the abstract, will, in spite of himself', pay much more deference to one whom he recognizes as a gentleman than to an individual who, he feels, claims kindred with him. At any rate, a very obvious lesson may be learned from all this, and that lesson is this—those persons who wish in the future to stand well in the eyes of the world must not eschew self-culture while they are in the pursuit of wealth.—London Liberal Review. CniipaiAn. "Hotd the fort .•' illo! ray ~,i irn, l ol2, ,eo Waving in the sity ! fle:ir the ..h , tuts frw niine t.. Vietnry is nigh' Clvirti+- Hold the fort, for li.a . res rutoing 5t,11, ! 4, ,r4 en3wer th—v' the T , 11..D. , :tys "She will ~ P C the ri , m, banner wavi...; The lwaureuul Stripe!. 'Twa? hernr in triumph by unr loader., r the Star: , fkn,l Chorus—liol,l the f; , rt, f"r Hay, i.; .orning lira; t'uo vogl. q - Our; show a k t• ovr r, , rrrtrt Sew EriglFtn , l •'W. will ' 11, my eet;:rttfi.a qe-e th• From her:, to t h. otregr , n. Reinf r,erpor; a nr, Arpenrly•,— The %leery vr hr- w,r; Chorus-11.11 Tiay.4 WAVe th' bann'r rtt..v.• Carutina .•ir• will rice ho•TA a:tOtif If.ty^P !ifl; "01; "11.1 j: i 1311" C.,pa rr,, • ?, go Viefury will iir w',n Chortle—Hob! the for', Wheeler'; enuring' iignali ;till ! Shout the news to CalitierniA- New Vork say.. "Ill!ie will '" Fierce and long my to the battle our te'a'r- arl and true: We'll drive vibe, ee,..• before u•i. IVith th' White awl Rine' Chorus—Holil th: fort, for 11;yes le corri,ng' Ytet'ry iglals still' S.wl he an , wer to New .Teeiisy •iap, "We will "' For the Right; of Ilan we'll battle, For th:ough the World' No rebel power ^ia e're reign e'er While this flag's unfurled' Chorus—Hold the fort, fir Hayes i• emning ' Vieery signals still: Penn;ylvania greet. Arkenea•, A:..1 both s'oont "We will!" No traitor's hunil shall ••••7, +hi; h.r.:.^r, Or sit in Lincoln's seat • , With Right and Justice iv , will triumph, And er'ry foe defeat. ChoruP—Holi the fort, for Hayes 14 :ranting ixtaalA still Oar leaders never were defeated-- lowa say;, "We will" We'll sweep the country North and Sonth Sweep it East and West! And place our leaders in the White Howie, Before we take a rest' Chorus—Hold the fort, ter Hayes is coming ' Vierty Fignals still hear the F hont from Washington-- Ulysse.i "He will!" COL. "BOB." lamEßsom., who made the famous speefdi nominating Mr. Blaine in tho Cincinnati Convention, made anoth er speech a few days since betlme a county convention at l'eoria.lll. The Democratic journals having villified him and misrep resented his remarks, he writes the editor of the Transcript as follows As a great deal has been said concerning a few gentle remarks that I made before the county convention the other day, and a great deal more about remarks that I never made, I think it right far me to tell what I did say : 1. I did say that the w..rst ward in Yew York, the ward in which there is the most ignorance, the most crime, the most vice and the most lice, would give the largest democratic majority. 2. I did say, speaking of General Grant. that he had done more than any other man. probably, to save the nation ; that I could not forget that at Donelson the eagle cir cled up the cliffs to victory for the first time, and that when I heard a dirty, lousy democrat or rebel slander and curse him, that I felt outraged. 3. I did say that this was a time of gen eral suspicion—that everybody suspected everybody. That it' an office-holder had a decent suit of clothes, he was charged with stealinm ' them, and that lazy loafers would sit on the corners with faces that bad not been washed for a year and denounce ev ery man with a clean shirt "as a thief." Upon the subject of shirts, dirt and ver min, I made no other observations. What I did say is had enough and, true enough without any addition whatever ; but bad as it is and true as it is. I am willing to, and do. stand by every word. I do say that the worst wards, the worn cities, the worst states, are the democratic wards, the democratic cities, and the dem ocratic states. Ido say that the Ham burg murderers are supporters of Tilden and Hendricks. I do say that the haters of liberty—the assassins of colored men. women and children—the masked wretch es who ride to the hat oldie freedman and shoot him down like a beast, disregarding the prayers and tears of wife and children. I do say that these men arc not for Hayes and Wheeler. I do say that the real friends of liberty are the only friends of labor, and that those who vote for Hayes and Wheeler are the best friends of liberty. labor and law. I write this for one reason, and one rea son only. lam unwilling that any one should believe that I judge men by their condition or position instead of by their heads and hearts. R. G. Ixtizasonn. - "A Wolf at the Door." The remark of governor Tilden that a wolf is at the door of every home in the land, gaunt and hungry," is thus hand somely paraphrased by the Ogdensburg Journal: The wolf at the door of 'eery home in the land—gaunt and hungry—is the wolf of the Democracy. demanding to be fed It is the same wolf that for a century fed upon the flesh and blood of human cbattles in the South ; the wolf that, being threat ened, in 1561 sprang with savage ferocity at the throat of the nation, and inflicted wounds that has nut yet been healed ; it is the same wolf that has devoured the substance of the people of the city and State of New York, which drove timid men from the polls. which invaded the halls of justice and of legislation, and which obeyed no voice except that of its keepers, Tweed and Tilden ; it was the wolf that stood guard, gaunt, and hungry and cruel, at Andersonville ; which for fifty years surrounded with mortal p. ril the life of every person in the South who would not pay tribute to it. neither re garding age. sex nor condition ; it is the same identical wolf that pulled down Charles Sumner in the Senate of the United States and left him stunned, bleeding. mangled and almost lifeless ; it is the same wolf that took the life of Lincoln. brutally in the presence of his wife and friends, and plunged the nation into mourning ; it is the same wolf that, with bloody jaws and glaring ferocity, now interposes be tween Republicans and the ballot-box in every Southern State. and imparts to the approaching political conflict all the tragic incidents that surround a life and death struggle. The wolf of poverty and hunger may threaten the lives of a few of this country, but the wolf that haunts "every home in the land" is the wolf' of Demo eraey—gannt and hungry TN! " C.IRMER3" MASSACRE qtr N 101' , A....vitro of the 534 Affair. :-:fx Ni. 1)i VW TuAT P.*/ ": ININTVNIZ7. K. ~:,. .r! - V I V PECN - 7 , .1•••• tot. :Nil 1-7.: r , i- N: ?ph .,-nt • r wir i l fosok ~kne. the !' `7 . 1.1" , I 7 7 ^ ,- ery i yr I- prshiii.ht trt Ah;ishni 7/-er t'le first rh•- ms.rri , 7 •• 11 T 7 , rig 1114. 3 , 17.11:t-ISA I • -1-.4t the foie— 1 .4 fir 1111• . 4 !• ". °SI! I llt .1. !1.1.«9•-r.• • , •;• • :wt . + , );.3.-.t am. 17,1; h • I,d CI yrs iv ,f) , erri !I- r-rt fed ar.l wi•e; 1 ar .4. h ••• 7 ••••• h.. 41 'fr rF r' r t'r 4 ',mitt., 61tr1.- 1 •Inhn .r.•n; frnnw , no:11.4 mr.rnir!. ti • !Et I f•.-:r nt ir-ris i4st.4o.lPlittm in 4 4 ',IPA 04 vim* Zit 1. rre - 4.. •-• 4 nicerr...nnt4 h i , hi re r, r 1 ,r -.2 ' l l , y 111 u . Pa/,tin — 4l I'l'l 0/ T. 11•.7.4t 11/1 Northern irn ,, ••4 v • •4! 1• -.3h • ! 4•• 111 ! r') .ii4ev.n•rnt P. I .‘•- h. , •1 •Fat -t• • Z r7A. h. .•fr wieb sr...nth hp r'lreent r4.4ent. I,se handy with hi. *Parn"-r--, -its'lrt be i bin 1334:i 'Pt ht.. noel gab •”tril' 4 flr arreen cleat •IP- 4 , ,, rr m u? . 1 rnr.in •nr wan!! when r•—rtarigt . 4 , T u-e-4inc N! 7 1 17 I• 17 1.70 f-r I r. 1,1 • t *, ,rm , rl7 3 • - .I.•krs know 0,30 h- :n't P, in .!tat wri7 In i -won , -ft 2:14 !raj: him : "ghat .J j.. n win? 7 - Irv.. --I want p.m -at :r, 'T hick fly the hart. ii—r 7 v,fir Y a ,• l / 4 -•• wit !h. 21v...-r will not zi a rli. eenrersadm-1 in b o t ,00lf to -43- : that !he Rie".Pl' arnt!ot poosfen! es he cirri Firrall7. pregse4l fur a IT,* n fare t enttin the xri4s, the nib-: -r »d pirstaply that hot' I .1., the work ..f is• Sri ; , "w h!n" :01 that h.... 1 owil him for work "V, tomr , an , lTry far ?him it" wriran , e : _ _ f•ts , n.• ..11:pve do. 11.;rt. , 4 iron;t saihNi i _l.'. VI I i NSkt• !IP 4.1/.!11 . ` to strike fists .dad •he .A. 0141 h' whaled him if the 22 ha in . / ' , lute to t)e In *le me:er the ni••- , r wit w,nt. 1,1, 1 c mn.l beik % .lr.nb 1E -,-71 , 1-" , 1 •• 1 it • TV NA • hell ;T J0.• . 4 wiz intindA to MS 2 erinigion etw:st !!- • tw. rir,- old we defer:min.-4 to nip in :he I , ld a •lr,a_Fii irve4 our - 1e17e:4 = te -17 Rae,, irir4 ire 21'.71.4 We went to the 1v... -1)e . 4 how.. an.i f_mn.l that he he,l a 411.4 :-in. an aj p. 30 1 a hoe, .videntiy 111 DA ITV vite4 1 7 .! On the way to another niErzrr'• ha's.. to 9eareh fir arm., w 4iAitiverri the 37zrrr in his feel,' pret,.adin to be it ir.rlt ieein2; as he ran ontif !maker Gasitr. who t leath on a ni:zer rat i &sit thrt.rv:h him and he eorpe.i I'v etytir.e that niz:f..ririt...t.!;.l t 4, rise agin the white,.. tilt Dlr.'s . ; WAT r. 11) HE an: n)a Tr on. wP he 4 4).4 vino. rifles and revolver.; but was r.te 110.1 he t.. spree that we tee-int to roof! eis.)n him ' Th.. next how., w•• mere tr, we &anti the a 'wain in hi. front .inor rtri. H. heti hi. havin ail an.l harneteist hiy inniel to rim u. town. There e... 4 n • but one interpreta.hen put mit., thin ap.ve Ile wiz a coin to the to jute the movement akin T. SS vn we vsh e ri ••where in h—l he was a :mitt:. bosomed in the moet feentiieb costumer that he wa-sa't aware that it win any av oar bitai.. ~4 went • on hartuw,in his anima:'. Es a ineaAure 31t;•ty hi.. 4 hr.! ar:z bloweti off. an.l we w.-nt on I eann.)t &fen.' the arkz<hen IT ..ar people after this, ,v,-ept by 4iyin. that they Ira marblenegi by was T her he •I covered, and hot every nic t er they ene4 fin'l. N. kin I Wiz:l:rpm. rae mewl. have witb-hel,l from si !la:at ".ati.i,n.-e newary to ferlin. Ev e r *enr-. they got the noose nv that llanobetrz trinhie they hey +ll,wed theieselees s hge. e e 2 pmeible, and when the mite to the I*.r -nerA u, tra.le they irritated 14 by zwirt-4 to 1•611oek'os, and zottin hmne es ariddiwkiy they cond. Think tur Here it.. Ira is :114 ruiiist ass poyoiatihen me inferior brills a thirltin for onr blood. armed .!s I bey .how ed. awl mena,in an in •-•rery tray We tOnn.l aim and boe-t In Of aim: every holue, and frekently Ant game wieh they hcd bin too eunnin to load till :hey 'no ted to y,weie em Awl Rat Will 'Sore .iarnnin ther milt. the moment we appeared to 'ems the bloo.l-thirty wreteht». ferlin that they porgy wot ,li_eenvered, ram ilk* rabbet. Not one or 'ern had theharlihno4 to 'tan.' afore u awl iri—r rie-stion4 ?it to 'em. I will .4ay that thin:4 wit: dAne wider the heat Tar wieh I can't arleter.se for Two wlrnmin win killed. but it Inis accidental. 14.aker Garitt bed hie r.s. ded onto the h:L.bariti tll7 • no IV . ..In vid the imprudent woman ru.be.l 4 1;,r. h int and reverred a halt 'hat wasn't intrnifid her. The other aboneed ('apt. Mel'eltee by orderin him .iat ur her h,nrie. an.l course hi.. 4hot ;ran w.:nt off :nd .he ex pired. I hey no apology to offer fiir Lie :akin ff ny the first two atemt., Intonesibee mon be eon.idered Theo' people twirls us a thirit in fir .osr bl. sl wins 'Fume , wir property and we vrlmmetia ev .we lent nely .ibejense but respect N. by the ark shea tlr a tyranieie e.nw.riturerir, they bey become raters. and in-ist that store the' law they are our Whes them meet as they bow. bnt they ref.woeto table orf ther hats. or sekdewledie that they ore is any ~ e nse. interior beim. Tlwy mow to the piles beside is. they wolit wort for as onlew they ehoni.e to. mad in .very way they impose upon n 4 Kin s high-toneil 4hivelry .3.11n0r this It can't be exported. W. waist prove. but they mn4t oboerve the only enedishais oo wieh peeve i 4 possible. Awl in their inothirilinwohea they r' ibbetteil by that feen,i ,;tier. Whew Deekin Pltrain. that b1e..W.1 islet. ramie! jailer Tom. wieh was afore the liar hie niter, to work for Imo. Ri tt fer forwa int!iy arre,l bin' :t - M j• • n . i - • mr? • line, • !I •••:: 1111,4161! -wrr be evig her v-yw (rift I. , lrtk sive tile sir I elew• w-rt • roe iii... ilia axis --tr.- !ter : %me rev bee prre Mr Iwo. r s r mil/ IPkit , -.. sod •Is joy a ortvg •-• -.4"--4,4••• nftineNtpe ter 14lw • 11P,IF :Me x... 4 amp ~11 11. - , 110 . IW, I • . • j • h•te rirst rihnihelrt. r 54 rt wink,* vs .../ 4 br3n Of 1 1 -r- Af:: I ..rt4 -tv ,to - NvostP4 worm i••• • trip.* "rut... • On+ lbw bon' 140 v. lir II ks tibp mourre me orb 'Ow •4.1. give gm "mammy 4 1... 4 nIV - ;VIP VP OP'‘llllol l o4b IP/ A. or-rrny , “at row !Port sal or eili maw -n• is is. dins Iry •-sell •• nr An. MOM vie ofit *iv -.••7 iry : r • -7,••&,• •,, s►► ' s yob, Ind by • n• 3 4 ..19 -1,7•17 )1 sS IIEETIV; 14 OS. A. 4ENOINCICS. • • V -vow. 1-.e4 ow. 4+-iallow If 4 ity ;NOS VS S. I , ; . • i ► -v4., ii 17t.11 PT %CIL ail sire ?'" MU A- is sibir Assibypror .Ir 4 ist4.-.We r and adasismarstime. as w••••~7 - 9* fro", 1014 mminPr - 10- el. ',ire. Pry V it •TA "701 4 4 .124/1111 •Ir , -rs•-•4 rownis their imam.. sea 1111 lie ea ivutsaises A fpuilwiTft J. to Ilierbir 'zoo ivrT __ boor Me -4 pease ami emirs rAmor iit boreftebsPit grew by toil r In. I , us Snow !mew wiffalkiro er npeeneevie 116pollimos emeleeir for de mil. Arise i .sr WisPr• wr»i Wed Ina am• p.. ollehrr stole oreieffre ea be t • hip- Lame earmisly p.*444% arrireitairgolit br mar v:b ruirevive ftirry >s I IL/ VIM. %-e* .73 . 7.74 else' 111445 e. T,. slaw* •isrrire Aurae T r 1 111. e. , &ado iorwire :Arroariber. Mit* vire dr. isii billieur Ser Ar ;f4 thr immoise. .tomil aro for Two In4s..T asst Air Twat: ' V - srev,r Tri 0.0 4n-r-tr- v-s no fa W W. 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J ralks• libos limit we goy 4 s v 7 nets MINK 1 4 1 . every 4ely Are, ether rielb to m beellieli• berg. beteg emery I. rimumdh ewe ear owwwwy. us. s. refeasit ow jew s (woe. Riot mow i Ammo. J. ?aim unihoso 4 iihro, r to .sari a Whir 1.4. onosoioomorilly 1111011,11111111 • ate !Unbars :lean br doe room May thiamin& 4 somoso 4is sir ou war irry betri to raw 11111411141111110 EN do. poem 4 Ilia gross alloorr. ?Wm' • emir "iv 4141.«, fi...a• • p— r.. %11. :;; 1 • - • r ., •r* ♦ I V 1 DEINIOCIRATIC ; awl - MOW
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