The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, October 06, 1876, Image 1

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    V - OL. 40.
Huntingdon Journal
J. Ill7ltltOltßOW,
1.11:LISIIERS AM) PILOI.ItIY.TOIL:
in n w JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street
JOI'ILNAL, is publish.] every
by J. IL Duswoar.ow awl J. A. NASH, under
Ue• tinu nanau of J. R. DVKnOaiww• & Cu., at 1200 per
vn lawn ix ADV(NCE. or $2.50 if not paid fur in six months
from date of :•tibscription, and /3 if nut paid within the
_ _ _
No paper (li...continued, unload at the option of the pub
until all arrearage4 are paid.
i.aper, lc,aev..r, will be nent out of the State poleax
al.-..1ut,•1y !mid for in advance.
Tras,„,noit a. vertosements will be inserted at TWEEVZ
A,D crs•ri per line for the first insertion, NEVILN
AND s-siatz czars for the second and ►tva czars per line
sulsiesirt , •ut insertions.
I: ... ;War quarterly and yearly business advertisements
a sit Ise• inserted at the following rates: _
Om I 1 yr
au Gm
110 '7:3 5 0 ' 4 5 ,,, 5 501 4 091 1 4.,1 0 6011 s 001827 $36
2 - ; 5 011 5 0 , 110 00 , 12 00W.4.,1 18 0136 00 60 65
7 0 , 1 10 0.•,1-1 00!13 , 1 001 3 4c01,34 00 60 00 66 80
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All Items,!Moots of Associations, Communications of
linr t d or individual interest, all party announcements,
and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines,
will be charged TZ,I ersers/per line.
I ... and other notices will be charged to the party
having them in Be rtel
A.lvertising Agents must find their commission - outside
of tliem• figures.
Alf adrertising eterounts are due and cultectabk
I,hr a the win, rtisentent is once inserted.
.1441 PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors,
dm, with neatness and dispatch. Hand-bills, Blanks,
Carl 4, &c., of every variety and style, printed
at the 4iiirtedt notice, and everything in the Printing
line will be executed in the most artistic manner and at
the lowest rated.
Professional Cards•
11 . CAI.DWELL, Attoroey•at-Law. No. 111, 3rd street.
I / •
011 ice formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods &
rapl2,ll
IA A.B. BRUMBAUGH, o ff ers his professional services
I tothecommunity. Office, N 0.623 Wsehinaten street,
east of the Catholic Parsonage. [Jan4,'7l
L• C. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister's
.building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E.
.1. Greene, Huntingdon, Pa. [aplli, '76.
rIEO. B. ORLADY, Atturney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street,
U Huntingdon, Pa. [n0v17,75
GL. DODD, Dentist, o ffi ce in 8 . T. Brown's new building,
. No. 520, Penn Street, Unntingdon, Pa. fap12.71
11. W. BUCHANAN, Surgeon Dentist, No. 228, Penn
Street, lEutitingdutt, Pa. Lmchl7,ls
1 f 0. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No. —, Penn
11. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. (ap19,'71
f FRANKLIN SCLIOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Ilunting
►l . don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal busi
ness. ()Ince, 229 Penn Street, corner of Court House
13.in:Lre. [de04,72
J. SY I L .a VA O NIS e, Bp e tI n it, t3t A ree tto t rn t e h y r -at-Law,
rd
west of run,
Strvel. [jan4,'7l
TW. SLATTERN , Attorney-at-Law and General Claim
. Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims agai net the
Government for back.pay, bounty, widows' and invalid
pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of
Penn Street. [janl,'7l
ll. w D i r l lt p l3ol , L ic ß e o i W n ,
the
t . o . rn v
e e ra yltt , li ;
Courts o n f n Ing t o i , g La n . ,
eotinty. Particular attention given to the settlement of
eAut,s of decedents. Office in the Jousrm. building.
S. G EISSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public,
IJ. liontingdon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo-
A,. C..1:11 119 ii,
A. ORBIF.ON, Attorney-at-Law. Patents Obtained.
11 • Oilier, 3'21 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [my3l,ll
SE. FLEMING, Attorney.at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
.office in 3lnnitur building, Penn Street. Prompt
and careful attention given to all legal businems.
[augs,l4-6mos
WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting
don, Pa. Special attention given to collections,
and all other legal business attended to with caro and
promptness- OM., No. 22./, Penn Street. [ap19,71
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 ner
vous system? To be excitable or nervous in a small de
c•ree is most destressing, for where can a remedy be found?
There is ono:--drink but little wine, beer, cr spirits, or
fir better, none; take no coffee,—weak tea being prefera
ble; get all the fresh air you can; take three or four
Pills every night: eat plenty of solid.s, 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 DAUGHTERS.
If there is one thing more than another fur which these
Pills are so fatuous, it is their purifying properties, es
pecially their power of clensing the blood from all im
purities, and removing dangerous and suspended secre
t:one. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for
footsie complaints, they never fail, never weaken the
..vstem, and always brings about what is required.
SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF
APPETITE.
The, fe,lings which so sadden us, most frequently
arinc from annoyances or trouble, from obstructed prespi
rat ion, or from eating and drinking what is unfit for us,
thus disordering the liver and stomach. These organs
taut 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 liverand stomach,whence
t.llow, :LA a natural conseqence, a good appetite and a
clear hoad. In the East and West Indies scarcely any
~t;wr me,iiciue 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 sh:p every kind of bowel complaint.
In warm climates thousands of lives have been saved by
tier use of this medicine, which in all cases gives tone and
igor to the whole organic system, however deranged,—
health awl 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 front
tlic liver, stomach, or blood, the cause of dysentery, diet
rlitea, and other bowel complaints isexpelled. The result
is, that the disturbance is arrested, and the action of the
howels becomes regular. Nothing will atop the relaxa
ibm of the bowels so quickly as this fine correcting med-
Wine.
DISORDERS OF THE KIDNEYS.
In all diseases affecting these organs, whether they
,erete too much or too little water; or whether they he
afflicted with stone or gravel, or with aches and paius
tattled in the loins over the regions of the kidneys, tho4e
lilts shoal be taken according to the printed directions,
and the Ointment, should he well rubbed into the small of
the lark at I,dtime. This treatment will give almost im
mediate relief when all other means have failed.
FOR STOMACHS OUT OF ORDER.
No medicine will so effectually improve the tune of the
stomach as these pills; they remove all acidity, occasioned
either by intemperance or improper diet. They reach
the liver and redlace it to a healthy action; they are won
derfully efficacious in cases of spasm—in fact they never
fail iu curing all disorders of the liver and stomach.
• FeverA
Ikinds,
Complainti Fits,
lib aches on tile; Gout ,
4' all !Fore Throats,
Stone and Gravel,
Secondary Spiv
toms,
Tic-Douloureux,
Tumors,
!Ulcers,
'Venom! Affections
Worms of all kinds
Weakness from
any cause, kc.
skin,
11,w el Comphtints,l
coNci.
Indigestion,
Inflammation,
Jaundice, _ .
C,Tistipation of the
,
lt,,vels, !Liver Complaints,
Cn:itmptiJn, I Lumbago,
Debility, 1 l'ileq,
Dropsy, . Rhenmatisui,
I rssen tery, Retention of
Erysipela,. Urine,
Female Irregu- Scrofula, ur King's
lari ties, Evil,
CA UTION!—None are genuine unless the siqnature of
t. 11,,plock, as agent for the United States,surrounde each
hox of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will be
given to any one rendering such information as may lead
1.• the detection of any party or minies counterfeiting the
medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be
spgrhots.
Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY &
co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and
lb.:dere in Medicine throughout the civilized world, iu
b,txes at 25 cents, e 2 cents, and $l. each.
N;T There is considerable saving by taking the larger
N. it.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every
, iisorder are affixed to cacti box,
ajar. 2S, 18 -I'd-cow -Iy.
WEDDING CARDS !
WEDDING CARDS
We have just received the largest assortment of
the latest styles of
WEDDING ENVELOPES, and
WEDDING PAPERS,
t.v er brought to Huntingdon. We have also bought
new funtes 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.
spi-tf.] J. R. DURBORROW CO.
J. B. DURBORROW, - -
J. A. NASH
The Huntingdon Journal
EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE NEV JOURNAL BUILDING,
No. 212, FIFTH STREET.
HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA
3m I Oadlyr
$2.00 per annum. in advance; $2.50
within six months, and $3.00 if
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TO ADVERTISERS:
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Circulation 1800.
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
Domes weekly, and is read by at least
5000 persons, thus making it the BEST
.advertising medium in Central Pennsyl-
vania. Those who patronize its columns
are sure of getting a rich return for
•their investment. Advertisements, both
local and foreign, solicited, and inserted
at reasonable rates. Give us an order.
;mu
JOB DEPARTMENT
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:Nu A SPECIALTY.
Original P&p.
R ustic Patriotism
El J. W. WELCH.
iSeridt• a rippii lig fonntiiii
At eve 1 ;:tt mu down;
Its sift nneeaeiog 1111111rnitiri
Disponi minfortuise's fruwit
The Slimmer wind waa playing
Amid the, trailing vim .1;
Which overhung it, wader,'
Amongst ivy native pines.
The riiiiking sue wi:lkitniiig
The mountain tnp pg.! eight
Maiming u'er it.. Hanna
A ',trestle of mellow light.
Wliikt ou Ow grandeur gazing,
Wide!' crowned thorn rugged hills
Where Freedom's spicy zephyrs
As sail:test iuccu.w hWell.
My everr-lemyKthey
Before my eye portrayed,
The Man., the blood, the angundi
Which for the gem were paid.
I *night ihtt worth to fathom
Of Freedom's priceless boon ;
Sent by indulgent Heaven
Through clouds of deepest gloom,
When lo I.eauteons phantom
From Faney's mime did rise ;
Clad in u robe whose opleivint
Vied with the sunset
And v upon my forAead
She placed her snowy hand
I stow! ILI trembling silence
Awaiting her command.
Then in my ear resounded
Those wor , ls In stectmts
"On tell the thrilling roh,ry
In every freeman's 'ear.
Sing of the deeds of valor
Accomplished by my power;
WIIOTI hope grew pale and faltered
In battle's darkest hour.
How o'er the gluon which khrowled
My infancy, was tear'd
The sacred etarry banner,
The Hag the finnan feared.
How bravely it wa4 carried
Through all those weary years;
Nuw spurned, dishonored,
Now wet with Patriot's turns."
"Until it proudly floated
The banner of the free
The ensign of a nation
Secure from tyranny."
Thou . fiuling from my visiou
She from the scene withdrew
Till loot iu ether's ocesn
She sought her native blue.
Connuiesioned a recorder
I grasped my rustic pen
To trace the march of Freedom
And note het final reign
My Fancy backward peering,
Through Time's beclouded maze.
Now grasped the infant gleanings
Of Freedom's welcome rays.
I heard the dismal thunder
Of bloody "Bunker's Hill;
But on its crimson summit
Her light beuiguly fell.
And whilst her brave defenders
Unconquered yet did yield,
They taught the haughty Briton
The price of Homes field.
But ah the youthful Warren,
Lay slain upon its steep;
A sacrifice most potent,
While Pity stays to weep.
Well may Columbia's daughters
Their fondest tribute bring ;
And o'er the early martyr
Their saddest requiem sing.
But while mad grief was wringing
Each patriotic breast,
They swore eternal vengeance
As they laid his form to rest.
And 'neath their infant banner,
A nation few but brave,
They vowed the chains to sever
Of England's weeping slaves.
Ah feebly fell the glimmer
Of hopes inspiring light,
Upon those hearts enshrouded
In despotism's night.
lied ever cause such power
Its votary's to charm ?
Incurring royal hatred,
And daring war's alarms.
"What though intense privations
hang o'er the gloomy way'';
What though the cannon's thunder
The fainting soul dismay.
Though Hope in sullen silence
Refuse to cheer our way;
When duty calls to action
We willingly obey.
Let slaves submit to tyrants,
And wince beneath the lash ;
Columbia's freemen welcome
The musket's deadly Hash.
Nor hesitate to enter
The gory field of strife :
'Twere better Death and Freed•un
Than Slavery and Life.
Our comrades fall around us,
Their life-blood stains the soil,
'Tis but a swifter rescue.
From dread Oppression's coil.
And those who live will battle,
Until our banner blue,
Shall wave o'er free Columbia,
A nation tried and true.
So Life or Death 'tis Freedom ;
The foeman we defy ;
We'll breath the air of Liberty
(Jr in the struggle
And thus they cheered each other
With pledges ffmil :in tree;
As Freedom's shining harbinger
With order they pursue.
No longer then did wowler
Pervade my sluggish mind,
That Heaven, to our nation,
Had in the end been kind.
Since Death brings victory's chaplet,
Why should we wish to live r
Unless 'were 'neath the banner
A second life to give.
For had the arm of Britain
Each fearless patriot slain,
The principle in either,
Untainted would remain.
'Twould cling in mystic glory
To our Ileaven-favored shores,
Until the great Archangel
Prod:Lime, "Time is no more."
And then while tyrants perish
Within the quenchless flame:
'Twould mount the vaulted canopy,
To heaven whence it came.
But tyranny was thwarted,
Though deep the dark device;
And Freedom's sweetest incense,
From many hearts &all rise.
Though many were the victims,
That on her alter fell ;
Aud loud the cried of angui,h,
That on the air did swell.
Impelled by unseen power,
None could her arms withstand ;
'Twerp ill for Marl to battle
Against Jehovah's hand.
'Twas thus our fair Colunilda
From chaos slowly grew ;
'Until the world admires •
Her principles so true.
The gem by Ptitriots planted
Ilan rooted deep and wide,
A lid birds of varied plumage
Upon its boughs abide.
ttc.ct gibtellang.
Not the Right Man.
eD
Mutly was shaving when Mrs. Motly
came in from the barn with her empty
milk bucket and said:
"Benjamin, I'm tired of my life, so I
am. Some varmint has killed the old
yaller hen and eat up all her chickens;
the white turkey has gone off with fifteen
little ones, and I don't expect ever to see
'cm again; Dazy's down with the buckeyes,
and the colt's broke the gobbler's leg. I
told you how it would be if we went to farm
ing; but yGu will never take my advice."
"Never mind Nancy," said Motly "may
be it won't always be so. If a certain
man's nominated, and if Ido my biggest
for him I'm pretty sure to get in the Post
office. I've been as good as told by them
that ought to know."
"0 for 1" exclaimed Mrs. Motly, "won't
that be awful nice ; then we can live in
town, and I can have a hired gal to do my
work, and Angeline Sophia can have a
pianer, and Johnny can learn to be a doc
tor or a lawyer, or something."
"Yes," said Motly; "now, Nancy, be
sure to put a clean shirt and some collars
into my valise to-night, for I must be off
to St. Louis tomorrow morning. I want
to be on the ground to watch them New
York bummers, for, as Voorhees said, vig
ilance is the price of liberty."
So Motly went on his way rejoicing and
Mrs. M., who never reads the newspapers,
and was too much delighted with the new
prospect to dream of failure, went on mak
ing her preparations to live in town.
tt
O
'-
HUNTINGDON, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1876.
In due course of time Motly came home,
looking lobed, dispirited, but his wife was
too busy to notice his looks, and not
word was said that night about the action
of the Convention. Next morning when
they went to the barn to milk the cow,
Motly asked, looking about the stalls for
something :
"Why where's Sultan ?"
"I sold him," replied Mrs. M., very
coldly.
"I'm in no humor fur joking, Nancy,
where is the horse ?"
"I sold him, I told you wonst," repeat
ed Mrs. M. "I know'd we wouldn't need
him in town, and thought maybe we
wouldn't get another chance to sell him,
and then I wanted the money to buy
things."
"Oh," groaned :hotly, trying to sup
press the indignation that 'made his face
ghastly "who did you sell him to ? Maybe
I can buy him back."
"No you don't, 'cause the man 'as got
him was agoin' West," said Mrs. M., "and
he's there afore now, I guess."
"How much did he give you fur the
horse ?" asked Motly, sitting down on the
half bushel and resting his head on his
hand.
"Ife said the times was bard and he'd
give we $l5O for him and not another
cent, and if I didn't take that I could keep
the horse, and I jest took it; it's a pile of'
money these times."
"What ? a hundred and fifty dollars ?
Why, he was the best horse in the country.
I have refused $5OO for him."
"Yes, I know it, and I told the man so,
but he said that was in good times, and be
wouldn't give a cent more. And now,
Benjamin, don't ask me for the money,
'cause I bavn't got it."
....
"Havn't got it ! Is the woman crazy ?"
"No ; I laid it out fur a nice dress to
wear in town. You didn't except me to
do without one fine dress, did you ? And
me the wife of a postmaster, and a living
among the town big bugs ?"
"Nancy, do you mean to say that you
paid $l5O for a dress ?" inquired Motly.
"I do, Benjamin, and it was dirt cheap
at that; and I'll ba obliged to have a vel
vet cloak and a bonnet with a feather in
it. But I guess what we'll get fur the
cows and sheep 'll pay for them, and I
won't git 'em till we go to town for fear
the fashion 'll change."
"Nancy," said Motly, and it seemed to
do him good to say it, "we are not going
to live in town."
"Not goin' to live in town ? Benjamin,
what do you mean ? Didn't you tell me
with your own lips 'as we was agoin' to
move to town and have the postoffice—
didn't you now ?"
'•No," said Motly, "I told you that if a
certain man was nominated at St. Louis
he would be purty sure to be elected, and
if he was my chance would be purty good
to git the postoffice, and we'll never go to
town to live."
"Oh, for I oh, for I'm dying, I'm dying,"
screamed Mrs M., filling into such lo
lent hysterics that it took the united
strength of hotly and the hired man to
take her to the house
'Hotly is disgusted with politics : says
the St. Louis Convention was a game
where the New York bummers beat the
'West with a cold deck of cards, and that
he wouldn't vote for Tilden to save the
country from the rule of Qeen Victoria.
Indeed, the slightest allusion to the action
of the Convention throws him off his bal
ance ; but if anybody wants to see a mad
man let him ask Motly how much he got
fur Sultan.—lndianapolis Journal
Walking in the Fiery Furnace.
In London, on August Sth last, exper
iments were made in the grounds of the
Alexandra Palace with an extraordinary
invention, by which results somewhat an
alagous to those recorded as miraculous in
Jewish history were achieved. Mr. Oers
berg, a Swedish mechanician, claims to
have invented, and Captain Ahlstrom, a
compatriot, to have matured and fitted for
practical use, a dress which will enable the
wearer to dash with impunity into the
fiercest fire for the purpose of saving life
and property. At the east end of the
palace, between the circus and the ban
queting hall, huge piles of old dried wood
were heaped up, intersected by narrow
avenues, and the wood was drenched with
petroleum. The consequence was that the
moment a light was applied to the pyre
the whole blazed up with a flame so fierce,
and sending forth a heat so intense that
the thousands who had gathered around to
witness the scene were forced to retire to
a more respectful distance. The sun's rays,
which had hitherto been inconveniently
felt from above, were quite forgotten in
the glow which now flamed up from be
low, and it really seemed as it there was
malice in the tonguei of fire that spat out
on every current of passing air. Standing
forty yards to the windward of this fierce
fire, the heat was all but intolerable; and
even the firemen of the Palace brigade,
under the command of Capt. Archer, the
chief officer, were fain to give a wide berth
to the burning centre. Then it was that
Captain Ahlstrom, clad in a dress not at
all unlike that worn by Capt. Boynton
when he paddled himself across the Straits
of Dover, made his appearance on the
scene. His costume consisted, so far as
it was possible to ascertain, of an overcoat
of fustian, covering an inner garment of
wool and felt. Between the two skins, so
to say, is a network of veins through which
are pumped continuous supplies of air and
water, the main air tube, before it reaches
the body, being inclosed in a large water
tube, and by such means kept perfectly
cool. The escape of cool air is through
orifices in front of the face, and the cur
rent so made forces back the flames, and
leaves perfect breathing space. Assurance
was given that the clothing was in no way
chemically prepared, and is simply pro
tected against the action of the flames by
the torrents of water that pour over the
man from head to foot. With the greatest
possible nonchalance Captain Ahlstrom
walked into and through the fiery furnace,
not only flee from discomfort, but ap
parently with enjoyment. After spending
ten minutes in the warmest climate it is
possible to imagine, enveloped at times SD
as to be hidden by flames, he carried out
a chair which was on fire, sat cooly down
upon it, and, to the amusement and as
tonishment of the crowd of spectators,
smoked a cigar.—Scientific Smerican.
THEY sat in the parlor, and he squeezed
her hand. "0, would this hand were
mine," he sighed. "Why ?" she simpered.
"Because if it was mine I could knock a
bullock down with it better than with a
sledge-hammer." The last seen of that
young man, he was trying to climb on top
of the house by means of the water-spout.
IT is said the Indiana Democrats give up
their State.
Miseries of Childhood
One of the greatest of the pi.lites
ntise
rics of childhood arises from dress. A
boy suffers dreadfully if his clothes are o f
a peculiar cut or a shade finer than his
fellows'. I have known a boy made mis
erable because he was compelled to wear
a collar of a peculiar and picturesque cut,
and one of my gloomiest periods of morti
fication hangs round a sash that I was re
quired to wear, which was considered au
reasonably broad. The undying laughter
or a scornful schoolmate still rings in my
ears. When I came home and complain
ed of it I was made to wear it, to show me
that I must, be indifferent to ridicule ! As
if a child of seven could conquer and kill
that emotion ! The decision was very no
wise, for it simply caused me to suffer, and
took my mind from greater and better
things. Had the sash been removed, I
should have forgotten about it; as it is, it
has become the shirt of Nessus, and clings
tightly to me through life.
A lady told me, a few years ago, that
she felt she had made a fatal mistake in
not allowing her daughter, when a little
girl, to have a hoop skirt; all the other
children had thew at the dancing school,
and looked, as she thought ridiculously
like ballet girls, so she scut her child in
among them in a lanky robe, which made
her look very unlike them. The child
was thus. rendered conspicuous and unhap
py. She wept and implored, and begged
to stay at home, but was made by her
strong-minded parent to go and endure.
After she had greatly suffered by this pro
cess her mother discovered her mistake,
and found that the subject of dress was
hereafter to be her daughter's one subject
of thought and interest, while a certain
bitterness had crept in, to the great inju
ry of an originally amiable character.
There is danger always, in thus asking
of our children a virtue too great for their
years, that we create the very vice we seek
to cure. If children are dressed like their
fellows, costume assumes its proper subor
dinate position. "It is the skin of the
part," said a famous tragedian, and it should
be like the skin—fitting, and not otherwise.
If that lady who denied her little
daughter the hoop shirt had been asked
herself to go down Broadway in the Bloom
er costume she would have rebelled. decid
edly; and yet she demanded of her little
daughter a courage ten times as great, and
inflicted a suffering immeasurably greater.
For children can suffer. There is an
intensity about it; like their appetites, it
has not been dulled by repetition. One
of the few privileges of growing old is
that we cannot suffer so keenly. We know
from repeated blows that time will cure us.
We get not to care—but oh, the strength
of yotithful grief! What enormous vitali
ty it has ! how protean its shapes! lam
never astonished when I hear of youthful
suicides. The absence of the fear of death,
so peculiar to youth, liat we get accustom
ed "to the sweet habit of living," and hate
to change, but youth has tbrwed no such
habit—the ahseuee uP this restraining
principle and the love of cliAnge conspire
to make suicide possible. Then the vision
of what grief is; the terrible curtain that
mercifully hides the future. drawn all at
once ; the pang that rends the heart as we
recognize the friend untrue, the promise
broken, the future void—no wonder that
the river seems SO merciful. the knife so
kind, the poison so sweet ! Youth has uo
philosophy—Appleton's Journal.
A Printer's Dream.
A printer sat in his chair, his boots
were patched and his coat threadbare ;
while his face looked weary and worn with
care. While sadly thinking of business
debt, old Morpheus slowly round him
crept, and before he knew it he soundly
slept; and sleeping, he dreamed that he
was dead, from trouble and toil his spirit
had fled, toid that not even a cow bell
tolled fur the peaceful rest of his cow-hide
sole. As he wandered among the shades
that smoke and scorch in lower Hades, he
shortly observed an iron door, that creak
ingly hung on the hings ajar, but the en
trance was closed with a red hot bar, and
Satan himself stood peeping out, and
watching for travelers thereabout, and
thus to the passing printer spoke : "COlllO
in, my dear, it shall cost you nothing, and
never fear; this is the place where I cook
the ones who never pay their supscription
sums, for though in their life they may
escape, they will find when they are dead
it is too late : I will show the place where
I melt them thin, with red-hot chains and
scrapes of tin, and also where I comb their
heads with scraps of glass and melted lead,
and if of refreshments they only think,
there's boiling water fur them to drink;
there's the red-hot grindstone to grind
down the nose,
and red-hot rings to wear
on the toes, and if they mention they don't
like the fire, I'll sew up their mouths
with red-hot wire; and then dear :ir you
should see theta squirm, while I roll them
over and cook to a turn." With these
last words the printer awoke, and thought
all a practical juke, but :till at times, so
real did it seem, that he cannot believe it
was all a dream; and often thinks with
a chuckle and grin, of the fate of those
who save their tin. and never pay the printer.
Good Advice to Young Men.
You are the architect of your own for
tunes ; rely upon your own strength of
body and soul. Take for your Star, In
dustry, Self reliance, Faith and Honesty;
and inscribe on your banner, Luck is a
fool. Pluck is a hero. Earnest effort in
one direction is the surest road to wealth
and position; diligence, stick-to it-nez.:s is
the winning hand. Don't take too much
advice; keep at the helm and steer your
own ship, and remember that the great art
of commanding is to take a fair share of
the work. Don't practice too much Hu
mility; think well of yourself—strike out
and assume your position. It is the jost
ling and jaltings of life that bring great
wen to the surface. Put potatoes in a
cart over a rough road, and the small po
tatoes go to the bottom ; turn a raft of
logs down a mill race, and the large logs
come on top. Rise above the envious and
jealous; fire above the mark you intend to
hit. Energy, invincible determination,
with a right motive, are the levers that
move the world. Don't drink, don't chew;
don't smoke; don't swear; don't deceive;
don't read novels ; be in earnest ; be self
reliant; be generous. There are two sides
to every balance, and favors thrown in
one side of the scale are sure to be reci
procated in the other. Be kind; be civil.
It is a foolish man who does not under
stand that molasses will catch more flies
than vinegar. Read the papers—they are
the great educators of the people. Adver
tise your business; keep your own coun
sels, and superintend your own business.
Make money, and do good with it. Love
God and your fellow men. Love truth and
virtue. Love your country and obey the laws.
l) t'
Old Tilden's Poor Show.
LI ?11, -••tr;I
" I 4, I:. K.
S•••• Strorny, lb.. ink , !arri ••1:04,n0.•r,'
goanfal , ,n drunp. for a 0)4 ;
Eafh day as thr tittle grows warmer
Ilk !Kutner,' are traiird in th. diva.
Ch.,rn. —fob. Tilden, ynnr raki , i 4 all
0 - 111iieh. otlgh,./-.0111(11,
V' ,n r ei.kw lik es ritir Etc.. i 4 all
pewiplo will vilw iron
When tliw rerowl thwy
Yon'rr v!.arp aq they make 'ern. my ro4 , Trr,
Edit your trirkn arr ton thin A, bi 01.,.
Ainl we know you re the artfal:e.t ,i(ater
That ever et-trim - 4 plamkr away.
Cle , rus--Bnt Yetuny, ;OUT games nrw Du 01,
YoRF r..nA r l ro n rm.r nee nn tp..
Att.] find Pre• the ran CLA4
A mighty hard rkm y..n nos•ft
Yon', a yon know it; yon ,
w,ak .li4). wat, ran A.;
An•l y..n yon will Mot you h.til twtti,
pitimPlf io lbw gra.
rhorui--Fur th.mgh lOW
Tn net. mont abominably .Mw.
'(•tiny don't want • Janne "Rpformor
With too many qtrinie to hie how.
Vol tall nw Contraction will matter
ThP problem of National &lit,
But Wn OW, thp nnparinr Abill Va. ter
Hid safe op your slaann ar.•n y,t.
(lawn.-oh, Sammy. how rated pm d. an,
What rioado you play 1.4 and
Your two-fared appeal l th.. people
Will call fur a tbunderinz no !
No wonder ynnr forehead I. clarnmy,
Your feetinan a prayerful lIITISAP—•
Whpn yanr record in opened, p..or Sammy.
And you stand tare to Ewe with Stith. Itay...
Chorea—And, Uncle, your wor,ler will ,Trues,
Your fears like a fr.ihet will er ,, w.
When fraud and 1.1 faith and
Confront you like ghosts in a row.
oh, S4irnmy, yon flabby Warp.
A fraud and a suck arel a ..41„
We've chartered a Salt River milor
To ferry your ticket t.)--well.
Chorna—We'll mend y.n where humbnv
R here Tweed and Mg pall anzht
And yonr dr..ama 61.0 hn I.•uK
water+
or tntal nhlivi•.n 11•)w..
At Last.
At last the country is aroused to a correct
estimate of the possibilities of the future.
What are these pos s ibilities?
1. The elevation of Samuel J. Tilden to the
Presidency.
2. The restoration of the Democratic party
to full control of the administration of the
government.
3. The reinstatement of the ex-rebels as
directors of the Democratic party.
Who and what is Tilden : 5 Ile is a man
who received his political education from
Martin Van Buren. lie is a man who devised
nearly every mammoth railway consolidation
scheme that has been con,urnmated in this
country ; he is the great railway wrecker of
the age. lie is the man who in 13-16 with
drew from public life because. as his bio
grapher says, was able to discern at that
"early period the importance, in this country
'at least, of a pecuniary independence for the
'successful prosecution of a political career,"
and embarked in the profession of railway
wrecking. lle was a secessionist in principle
in 1860, having made public his views on that
question at that time, in almost the exact
language used by Calhoun. fie sympathized
with rebels iind.the cause of rebellion from
the day of the firing on Fort Sumter down to
the surrender of Lee at Appomatox. On the
:6th day id' December. 1860, he committed
perjury. In the month of May lest as Gover
nor of New York he ti! , l with the Secretary
of State a message or memorandum in which
he declared that there had been los reappro
priatious during the yesr 1876, whereas the
tact is that thirty days before he had signed
reappropriation bill for a large sum ; and
five days before he signed a reappropriation
bill for another large sum ; and on the very
day of the date of the message or memoran
dum he signed two reappropriation bills for
the aggregate sum of $BOO.OOO. As Governor
of New York he made a corrupt agreement
with the agent of one Willard Johnson, a
Democratic canal contrictor, whereby he con
sented to hold (and did hold) until it should
become a law by lapse of time a bill then in
his hands providing for the payment of $55,
000 to Johnson on a contract which he (Til
den) had in it state paper previously declared
corrupt, and upon which Johnson had already
received three times the contract price.
This is the leader, the standard-bearer, of
the Democratic party. %%Alai is the party
itself? It is the same party that through its
chief, Buchanan, then President, declared that
there was no power in the Constitution to
coerce a State back into the Union. It is the
same party that through other of its chiefs,
then Cabinet ministers, scattered the nary to
the four corners of the earth, corrupted the
army, and stole money from the Treasury to
prevent the use of either for the maintenance '
of the integrity of the Union. It is the same
party that through its chiefs in New York
City bowed the knee to the British Minister,
Lyons. imploring him to counsel his govern
ment to intervene in behalf of the rebels in
arms fighting against the nation. It is the
same party that opposed the constitutional
amendments conferring freedom and suffrage
and civil and political rights upon the black
man. It is the same party that voted the war
a failure, and demanded peace at any and
every sacrifice of national honor. It is tha
same party that in the last Congress discharged
maimed and invalid soldiers of the Union
from the public service, and appointed in their
place soldiers of the Confederacy. It is the
same party that in the last Congress through
its ex-relict representatives defended the
atrocities of Andersonyille, Libby, Belle Isle.
and through its Northern representatives ap
plauded the defense; and as these two classes
of representatives clasped hands, with exult
ing shouts, over the graves of Union soldiers
brutally tortured, cruelly starved, and finally
in cold blood assassinated, this Caine Demo
cratic party said. Amen' It is the same party
that massacred citizens at Coushatta, Colfax,
Vicksburg, New Orleaus, and Hamburg. It
is the same party that convicts colored men
of petty offenses, that it may hire them out
to their old owners and taskmasters, to he
beaten and starred, chased by bloodhounds,
and whipped to death. is there any doubt
that the Democratic party of the nation is the
bond slave of the Southern wing of it' Is
there any doubt that this Southern wing. once
in power would make of the National Dem
ocratic party a tool to nullify the amendments
to the Constitution ? Is there say doubt that
it would find in Tilden that servility which
has always been the price of Democratic
success ? - - -
These are the facts that Mr Inter meta has
substantiated over and over again from the
day it was founded down to the present time.
For its fidelity it has been scouted and re
viled as the "bloody-shirt organ. - But there
has never, dating all this time, been wanting
fresh evidences of the diabolical purposes of
the late rebels, and although The Infrr Orreis
has stood alone among the great journals of
the North it has never hesitated. because there
has never been a time since reconstruction
commenced when blood has not flowed like
water from the veins of innocent black and
white men at the Smith. But now there are
legions of newspapers at our back. Their
sneers at the "bloody shirt - arc turned to
shouts of alarm. Even:l;eor;ze William Curtis
comprehends at last that, while he has been
crying peace and good will, and maundering
over his civil-service hobby hundreds—nay
thousands—of free citizens of the Republic
have been baselessly murdered under the very
folds of the American flag, and that the /114344
sins are at large ; and worse still, that they
propose to administer this government.
THE Boston Times, a paper that has all Along
favored the candidacy of Tilden, has now
thrown the old humbug overbosrd and come
out for Hayes and Wheeler.
Tux Cincinnati Times sap, a Repithlican
gain of from live to six Congressmen i+ certain
in Ohio, and n gain of from four to tive is no
less sure in Indiana.
Tue Allegheny Mail, heretofore the Jupport
er of no party, has hoisted the names of Ilayes
and Wheeler.
IThe Peril of Ow Now.
_ _
o r•h•qtion aw.l for...rot • 'rem t elm r.
*.r.-ih!. Wilt- for •'4 n^r,..1910,001, !ha,
78, :g 7! 311:Ty• •e• irq 4.'44..4, .14 !he
1 . ...,•-rirri , "•. •ntt Or 4,•••
. .t• .. • n fli.o.sero...l*, sr; of
▪ t'ary ‘tis.l 40.4 he' tvirthor
inz tlor, rtrsn •••. of =telly&
1117 ! •-." yr,r , w.l.rw :1 Poriahr
for•
th. r. • 4 ervn• no a • dopy
▪ 1.7 "1,1 , 74 .4 1 - -Init.•.l :4omett. -
g•rtrter with 4 , 4•-h t 'Aar , 14 Mel yeetril •••,-
?ant f:.,1 Th.. •'•••lVlrrer..•l
A 7 7 . 't. • • 'lle .tpliodlt t -oproomirts-
tier] m I .• !Fr, .4•• llttnia•
rvireilw r f free
rho
Ind!i;t4 grlt 1.17- I. t../PtS...? ir.et
thr , r fifth a's!! -h.
of glavrtv Anti th, ./ t Irflyo-wth
Amortilizio-nt sit ,(
-rtrttel I , re swponf•i,,,t
nient. tiftba. awl th.; mow 0,
of a ,lir,•et ir tin 'n ryTaitivet
of tit. f"rn..r "'to... in Illitinsvol *Nair*
The actual qs n. . tr. thwi *torn. ...lett
partiriper..ll in the n.tiel:ion. bar bone sinnt
:.cents a ,rf C.,,tro.e. nf
•!.. : .f:• , tea , T 7 Pr.etivrai
~ Ileir v•tr. "h4"r•foro. 41..nt't
!1,. pnii!wil ..!nstipa• wstb th pnr
woo. of r.: , ininn/ ampoininneiwy —into rv
tnrn. y M.yr. rll'Orf4. l '7• in
r,„ t e 1.,. et•
~tr•ngtli
fir •:. • -oornei.. ••••- .f •
••linitP4 . 4 00th - In.ler 'he ;., .f for ms.-
S.reAfifloia.a. w fi i). prefeit itroitrif
gi-eeen f.rm.r sip, • ,setor:ingr
Wes: Ir;r2;niar to h it.pre.entott•••4. t•ot
.natorl,:n..lertnto! 7,t.. i&A Ti-
of mil thr ntiptr :tease.. I z • riowsids• s
I:Ppre.entativo!i. 177 , :t.naterrs. tt . •I•Pe - •r 61
vote 211. in °Mer for lb. f3rro.r :f...-.4sion
-14tA, therefor.. withont • -sost..ll i•oftlf.' to
oectsre , -..ntroi of h..tb th. P.,•eeofiv. Lei
is!ative hr,inehea of ~ ise f;r•ose , -•se,po-. -h. as._
eeaaiona felifeh they n I from •4.
14 : Flopres.rftow4 ,-, . .11 .-7,3forf.
. :troi efretor.b: vote -4. 31
To accomplish this grain. they
selves i 4 no: an iinpoosihte tail'. im , -e
that they li:slit. :nit moth of , tee ~. tier
of Northern sopport that ia!ts wiot theta in
their lea." of power pr....rim,* to Aar
war I,nt they know. 114:). That the great rank
and 5 1 ,e of the Dewier-stir party in •he
Northern 4t.atitT, lotions to return to power.
hoary fir ot!Sce. th.r.ti:yr for pn'a:;."
wiil eazerly Ten 4 thevn.t•ivp. to 40-vhsren pot-
With little in7lirj zai! Ottle ear- as few
th o ., pnrposcs really
they conti.lcnry coont tar their strafe , . 7 :+en
&tors. ::1 FtepresentAttr-it. Inui 3: siartarti
tot's.
7.4.ich 13 the pr,,j,eted plan of the Dennewrstic
m :‘ ,,,, ig , e ; of the St.ate: y in opeo retie:bon
an•l let ni pat nor pencil right her apon its
weak point—it 14 t4l h. (wind in tsar .- - a l ow of
".united Sont:s. There is no .in•te•l
There is no sn•di aeetinnal political *vans,
as .b• words convey. it is one plisimmill by
the game minds !hat panned the Annitherit
Confederacy, and shaped hr the ebat-rwas
and knives of S uithern raffiari—of Wait,
Cremes and Ku ii;iss
Instead of :here ',in"; a inite4 South. lire
Southern States are. Republican by
an a gigre;ate risajt•rty of Those fiv•
States hire 10 :' 4 .-mst.pra. ant T electoral
rotes which by right belong to the Republican
party ::and by the same token !here are at
(east nr.xrp.:sion...l + s cr i pts
which retzirn Republican Repriminita
tire?. rut thee R.-puhiican majorities.
Sen
ator .z. .4 -.3.1 e!-rt.,riai rotes. the
Southern ',ender. pr.r.n..- to wipe out by sorb
magiacreg ot i• - itgh , ort. rmssisallik
Colfax and llarnliorz. They propose to ash*
a -nnited ii.th inch tools as the shot
gnn an.l the liture. inns reperiontahwn sea
their rlertorai .3
the e•frinehisetnrut of the DelTO. and they
intend that it vlsail work to their advantage
and their 'nat. and not to that of the aerobe
Lean party and the cause of freedom.
This it the perll of the hour. and tate that
we must fa.•••. There can he litt:• donbt
the evitv •lia , would result from the return or
the 4 , CCs,i4filiSt leviers to that eeetrei of the
nation for which they are no-: telseasing.—
For what they did ia the putt we eon nee
conjecture that they would in the totem :
and the immediate ev.;t. overlookialg :be
rarer one. to follow, would he * wi tu d r etge
plundering of the Treasury to meet the Say
million.; of Soother, claims already prevented.
awl a shameful opprestion of the race for
whote enfranchisement we are !akin .new
credit to otirtelret.—Csaeosmers Ames.
--...-...--4.--- -
A Young Man's First Vol..
••Wate:i the l aion w.tb a Jealous eye.
I*.ter.e.ll A1•1.-sr.
Y , oi Are :boot ter cart yonrfirer vo•e—yossr
Centemstwl cote at the nest Presideatiwi *lee
tiose who have not ecimer sweeper
nowt,/ I•l....iTifiril with the Dernoer.stie parry,
hew:ire! fbi not make a raise step a: tiro*( Act of your poiit . o.al , areer. lbs ant attach
yourself in the beginning to a political ovgars
izution tli.tt 14 manifestly .irswing toward !Ise
close of its existence. to.i which is wa=ited
down icy an insiipportable load of infamy that
will 1,..,.•)m.• more jln.l 711. .to od,ons :n hsstory.
Keep in in.n.l that 'lie Eh-mos-mei.: party bail
committed the highest c,itete known to civil
jurisprudence—Tresson ' maw the larceey
of Ike ir.orl4l' y•.•, e.rionot . iskf ems weenier say
cie.i orionts.ttion dear apale Atratver•-•spiti oar
ayginit Aft fejartattf , ?.r-rwowtf awl dirt mg
yew/weir!, ,at 110 , Tv.-7ry asiawswarti) se
dying, anal is its expiring mime"' s it gawps
in spite of the •••tratii rattle awl sfeirriwas tee.
owns. ••2eferes."' Towne men. let it pews
away' Lot •41 perdition w.tis :We :its on
it 4 tonvie!
itar4 t., t'ay pLace
Str,tny:e tiorr Jr; +rile , :hr.-.
Awl 1...f0re 7 •
D.. 1..,t I.y p.m; tiro. y.vor e'entenn:4l r.its
breathe new ,its int., a cm?.r that stink*
throu;,:hont the II :4 .iyinz.
it not' • R•eses for tee I.por etweisate waseieme "
Remember that If the lea.lery of the pew
Lifers r•hei:ion in.l ;bete Deraorrittsc
at tli, North it.ut h.iert .tealt with seesse.fine
to the r..mmon 111 W of nation., as they week.
have been in Enctiind, France. or qerisist.y.
or Any iii.overnment save oar owe. !bey
now - he rotting aodirt the fallow* la
stest.' of •snwortittly surrsvist to riposted esea
stitsitional irw ant revile the party witiels
preserve.' the rat,' ' •• Wste/s "rer
with 1 ',lb.*, •7••
What Would Follow.
Tilden . s triumph would b. the trintspis of
wrong over right. of injustice over justice, of
an.l vice over totelligenv• se.l vir
tue.
It woul.l srt cirtiatt,ont back at :east ha!? a
century.
It would .Irstrov anr at 4oeue sea
abroad.
k drat; :he country to early bomb
ruptcy Coronzh repo.liattos.
It wool,' invite disorder. an.l he folluirod
by riot. gaol probably !.v eivll war.
It wool.' crush out the :emu ~C.vyalty in
:he :4ou:h sot hinter its jrnwth swot *vele"-
ment in the North_
It wonl.l restore power to the -or who be
trayed the nation and tried •o •Ir+tray it, sal
would hand over to the testier NWITUPO of ita
anemic; s It.•pahlie that I ve4 berswer
of the ;artifice of it= !n:r.V. .•'s.••i4 nit• 4.-
fen.te.
It would be to let .4 witloull 1 91 ,-.do to
allow IN•m. k t., w;o, 41,-h VAlf•lgly
of the world ha: , ries...r
13 it p.43it.fe tbat any istellivet men with
the history of the Democratic party Micro
him. and 1 knowledge of the sosteriel Owl
gives it stn.weth. can ;moppet Democracy in
the coining ste,tion :0.11 fewboDi ' It iPmsl4l
in.l;,ate fierzroe of p.ditieat iairrstitodo softie%
we are not wilting to behove can 4onfi.l
:trnong the friends of the nation.
Tits l)ensoerfat• of Vermont las.t
` et ii
for them a New Hanipseirs Cepperbeed, whw.
in 1,4.:5. whpn the stag of the Ceres* Ntew
Hampshire Reztment. on its 1.-4 nm Mos :he
war. VVIA earned ,rito the bail 4 Use Renew 1
Hepre•tentAtive.i. the Soldiers' Vutiiins t..H no
ing before the House. said: -The rtessoetinry
of the country w•ll never swhinii to itse ripest.
of an•le,-tion tiri,nst tbess he ostilters'
I 'The 1 0 10 Pip If neetifiew.
.4, stet 111144110.... 4 +.w sir lofty
I V vet roelimilrr **...."1110..... •
irr 4 ionne.. 1 1.-everwr." iftrysr *We-
Use liverw• Jnit.• V V-moupoo. ofiriatro
rampONAP , P-4.
-in • -* 1 i - .MUM fwalll4l
bI
t o•tv..tl , o
.• • •••• •
''4lll a• - -•
fnenmair
r"-pre.p.. iollbm 4 ‘....tair 4
low raOloofrores via ••••
'meg limmiltim• • 1 1,011.10, ssul 11,01 , • WOW.
M 1.... at Ihollionst 1111boorlysie r Aprquah...
;,..f .1 M Lams“
34 ragerfort Thar r. . Ilkirribpr. ar-ve Wirir art
4/1/.1.04•11' • tools s • rm.4.PIP•II. sr
rsellt slanalpv S. • -e
-•rimos. :* ivs triftwese•
11 0 • -116.
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