The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, February 16, 1877, Image 2

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    The Huntingdon Journal.
J. R. DUB-BORROW, -
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A
FRIDAY, - - FEBRUARY 16, 1877,
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
DEFEAT OF THE STAY LAW.
The Bill . providing for a Stay of Execu
tion, which has been pending for two
years, in the House of Representatives,
was defeated oa its final passage, on
Wednesday last, by a decisive vote. The
Legislature of Pennsylvania, by this ac
Lion, has deliberately turned its back upon
the thousands of debtors, honest men, who
want to pay their honest debts, and tells
them, in language as strong as language
can speak it, that they have nothing to ex
pect at its herds. No, honest debtors, you,
the many, are to be left to your fate to
oblige capital, the few you who have
wrought and toiled and skimped and starved,
for the last two years, are turned away as if
you were the mere toys of wealth. Who
has done this thing ? It is said the lawyers
did it. We do not believe it because we
know that the ablest lawyer in the House
favored the Bill.
We know that lawyers, like other
people, take care of their own interests,
sad the presumption arise?, naturally
enough, that they opposed the Bill from
selfish motives. But this is certainly a
mistake. Lawyers are making no money
out of the present depressed condition of
the country. Judgment notes containing
a waiver of everything, save Civil and Po
litical Rights, are no advantage to lawyers.
A ruined community has no money to go
to law with. An impoverished people can•
not buy real estate, nor . institute great
ejeetments, nor engage in any legal dis
putes. Good times are the times for law-
yers. They make money when every one
has plenty of money to spend. Any thing
that will better the times will add to their
practice. No, no; we are not willing to be.
Leye that lawyers are so short-sighted as
to defeat a Stay Law in the face of the
wholesome provision which gives a free
holder seven years time to pay his debt.
No lawyer ever lost money by this stay,
nor will any lawyer ever loose money by
any other stay based upon good and sub
stantial reasons as this one is.
Then, again, we hear that the large cit
les opposed it. There are a few
hundred men in the large cities who are in
the wholesale trade or, perhaps, in manu
factories, these appear to think that a Stay
Law would operate against them. This is
also a groat mistake. A Stay Law oper
ates Is a bar to immediate recovery and
as soon as it becomes operative, the efforts
to compel payment cease fur the reason
that the creditor does not wish to wait two
years for his money, and consequently be
comes to the conclusion that if the debtor is
left alone he will pay in less time, and in
mine cases out of ten, he does. This was
the case in 1862. City creditors are oan
accinantly sure of their money because men
eannot continue business without settling
up old scores. Wholesale dealers and
manufacturers, therefore, stand in their own
light by opposing a measure of this sort.
While they are reported as being against a
Stay Law the hundreds of thousands
around them need the law as bad as the
country does. As an evidence of this fact
it ill said that tha late Sheriff of Philadelphia
cleared, during his term of three years, a
half million dollars !
It is high time that something were
dose to atop the wholesale wreck and ruin
which is to be found everywhere. The debt
or clue have no longer any rights in Penn
sylvania. They are entirely at the mercy of
.the creditor class. Yes ! proud old Pennsyl-
FIUlaiS about to drive hundreds and thous
ands of workingmen from her farms, her
workshops, her railroads and her factories .
It cannot be otherwiSe. The laboring classes
will find more liberal laws and greater pro
tection, and they can find them in every
other State in the Union. Just think of
it I Pennsylvania is virtually without an
Exemption Law ! virtually with Out a Stay
Law ! ind virtually without the advanta
gee of an Inquisitorial Jury ! The creditor
elms has asked all these concessions to the
debtor class to be ignored and the Supreme
Court has sustained them in their infa-
mono assumption. Now, then, when the
country is going to the dogs as fast as it
can there is not a single ray of hope for
the debtor unless the Legislature comes to
his relief. And—it refuses to do it.
IT is plainly talked in Washington, so
says the newspapers, and the action of the
House, on Saturday, seems to give war
rant for what it said, that the Democrats
now having lost all hope of Tilden being
counted in, propose to prolong the session
until after the 4th of March, and thereby
require a new election next fall ; and it is
claimed by the Democrats that there is a
loophole in the law by which the House
can recess themselves from day to day
forever. A Washington special dispatch
to the Pittsburgh Telegraph, on Saturday,
823 :
A Democratic revolutionary scheme is being
secretly talked about to-day. They are de
termined to prevent the inauguration of Hayes,
cost what it may. If the Louisiana eases shall
be decided in favor of Hayes, the Democrats
intend, if possible, to prolong the time by re
sorting to various kinds of dilatory proceed
ings, so as to prevent a decision of the Presi
dential question before the 4th of Match,
-thereby making another election necessary.
It is feared that, they will experience very
little trouble in consuming the remaining
twenty-two days without reaching the end of
the list of States. Already ten days have
transpired since the counting of the Totes be
gan, and only one of the several contested
,eases Lave thus far been reached.
NEWSPAPORIAL.
Altoona's Daily Globe is a live sheet
and deserves success.
- - EDITOR
The Perry county Freeman come to us
on the half sheet last week.
The Lewistown Sentinel has put on a
partial new dress, which improves its ap
pearance.
Pitcairn, of the Altoona Tribune, has
been licensed to exhort in the First M.
E. Church of that city.
The Johnstown Daily Tribune, and we
say it without fear of contradiction, is the
best inland daily in the State, and much
better than many dailies with larger pre
tensions.
The Temperance Vindicator has thrown
away the outlandish looking head that it
has been using for years, and supplied its
place with one that is some iniprovement
on the old one.
The Osceola Reveille has again made its
appearance under the management of Bris
bin Bros. It is a neat paper, and deserves
a liberal support from the business men of
the neighborhood in v:hich it is published.
Tho Evening Telegraph, Pittsburgh's
handsomest daily, within the past six weeks,
has added two thousand names to its sub
scription list. The Telegraph is a live pa
per, and deserves this success at the hands
of the people of the smoky city.
George Francis Train's Paper is the lat
est novelty in the newspaper world. It is :
"A Psychologic Museum of Facts and
Ready-Made Encyclopedia of the current
events of the day ! Live Ideas in this Dead
age from the Most Sane Man in this Mad
World!" Price $1 semi-annually. Ad
dress Psychologic Publishing company,
No. 919 Chestnut street, Philadelphia.
The Philadelphia Times will commence
the issue of a weekly paper on the 3d
pros., which promises to be a very inter
esting sheet. It will be four times as large
as the daily, and will contain the current
news of the day besides all that is rich and
and rare in the literary world. Nobody
has confidence in .McClure's politics, but
everybody appears to like his paper. The
subscription price of the weekly will be $2
per annum.
THE present Legislature is said to be
the best that has assembled in Harrisburg
in many years. The saloon-keepers say it
is "no good." There are not enough frol
icing and drinking people in it.
The Commission's First Decision,
The Electoral Commission decided yester
day to take notice of no evidence in the case
of Florida except the certificates sent in from
the two houses, and such extraneous evidence
as may be submitted touching the eligibility
of Humphreys, one of the Hayes Electors. The
decision was supported by the three Republi
can Senators, the two Republican Represen
tatives, and Justices Strong, Miller and Brad
ley. It was opposed by the Democratic Sen
ators and Representives and by Justices Clif
ford and Field.
The effect of this decision is simple, but im
portant. It confines the attention of the Com
mission to the certificates, which are three in
number. "Certificate" is a technical term
used in the Constitution to indicate the pack
ages sent to the President of the Senate, and
purporting to contain the vote of a State for
President and Vice President. In the present
instance, there were three such packages.
One contained the vote of the Electors who
were declared elected by the Board of State
Canvassers, who held commissions as Electors
issued by the Governor in accordance with the
declaration of the State Canvasser, and who
also forwarded with their vote, the certificate
of the Governor, required by the Federal stat
ute, stating the names of the Electors. The
second "certificate" or package, contained a
statement of votes cast on the 6th of Decem
ber for Tilden by a body of men claiming to
be the Electors of the State, and sustaining
their claim by the proceedings of a Circuit
Court of the State, copies of which were in
closed. The third "certificate," or package,
contained a statement of the same votes cast
by the same body of men, with a certificate
made out in January, by a new Governor, to
the effect that by an act of the Legislature.
approved Jan. 27, a new canvass of the votes
in the Presidential Election bad been made;
and that its result was to give the office of
Electors to the men who had cast the alleged
Electoral votes in December for Tilden.
These various papers, so far as the vote of the
State is concerned, constitute all which the
Commission consents to censider.
Some light is thrown on the disposition of
the case likely to be made after consideration
of the papers, by the arguments on which all
other evidence was excluded. The Democrats
asked the Commission to go into an investi
gation of the acts of the State Board of Can
vass and of the facts on which they were bas
ed. They asked the commission to enquire
whether the board had exceeded its powers,
and whether it had used them erroneously.
These things the Commission declines to do.
The Democrats produced certain proceedings
in the Florida courts and certain acts of the
Florida Legislature, based on the alleged error
and abuse committed by the Board of Canvas
ers, and intended to remedy such error and
abuse, The Commission having refused to
enter upou.au inquiry into the conduct of the,
board, will not probably give any weight to
legal or legislative proceedings relating to
that conduct. The only thing which remains
fcr the Commission to decide is which -certi
ficates" contained the votes of those Electors
whom the State of Florida appointed, and on
the face of the contents of the certifi
cates there is hardly room for any doubt as to
what the decision will be.
Concerningthe eligibility of Mr. Humpbrey's
it is on record that at the meeting of the Flor
ida Electors Humphreys, who had been a
United States Shipping Commissioner, testi
fied, under oath, that he had resigned his office
previous to election; that his resignation bad
been accepted by the Judge to whom he was
required to send it ; that the letter of the
Judge, notifying him of its acceptance, had
been receiveda week or ten days before the
election ; that another person had been di
rected to perform the duties of the office, and
bad, in fact, performed them since before the
election. These statements are now fully con
firmed by documentary evidence. We know
of no evidence capable of overturning this*;
and the decision of the Commission to con
sider this point does not seem of any essential
importance in the Florida case. Of its force
as a precedent it is too soon to judge.
Finally, in regard to the decision just ren
dered, it is to be remarked that it appears to
exclude the evidence taken by Congressional
Committees, a large amount of which the
Democrats sought to introduce by the device
of citing it in their objection and attaching it
to that document. It is probable that the
Commission, refusing to .consider such evi
dence in the case of Florida, will do the same
with reference to Louisiana and South Caro
lina. It will not, however, be bound to de
cline the consideration of evidence taken by
committee in the Oregon matter.—N. Y.
Times, Bth inst.
THE whole of yesterday was consumed in
the argument as to the eligibility of Mr. Hum
phreys, one of the Florida Hayes electors. He
was a United States officer, but resigned and
his resignation had been accepted before Ile
was voted for on the 7th of November, and
there would seem to be no sound reason for
excluding his vote from the electoral return if
it shall be decided that he received a majority
of the legal votes of his State. We think that
it would have been better for the friends of
Mr. Tilden had they passed the quibbles which
were thrown out to obstruct Mr. Humphreys'
vote, and gone at once to the controlling is
sues raised by the several Florida returns.
There were no intimations given by any of tht
commission during the day which can be mag
nified into importance, and the real work on
Florida will begin to day. The decision as to
the eligibility of Humphreys will decide noth
ing as to the Louisiana or Oregon disqualifica
tions of electors, so that no consequence what
ever will attach to the declaration to be made
to-day that there are no ineligible electors in
Florida. The outer brambles of the contest
will be pretty well cleared off to-day, and the
commission will now get down to the marrow
of the dispute.—Phgadelphia Times, 911 i inst.
Pickings from our Exohanges.
Ten new Cardinals are soon to be ereated
by the Pope.
M. A. Kearney mayor of Wilkesbarre, died
of pneumonia, Sunday night.
Treasury balances—Currency $11,802,153 ;
coin and coin certificates, $88,618, 227.
T. Walston and Messrs. W. H. Walker k Co.,
whisky firms of Louisville, Ky., have suspend
ed.
Lewis 0. Lenheirn, of Great Bend, Pa., and
his son are both awaiting trial in New Yorit
for forgery.
Prof. David Swing doesn't like the ancient
theological injunction, "Prepare for death."
Ile says it ought to be "Prepare for life."
The California quicksilver product in 1876,
was 67,889 flasks, with two mines to hear
from, expected to increase the amount to 70,
000.
Judge Clifford, of the United States Supreme
Court, weighs three hundred w pounds, or bet
ter.
George 11. Corliss, the steam engine maker,
is talked of as the next Republican candidate
for Governor of Rhode Island.
A prayer meeting has been planted in th e
midst of the stock speculators in Wall street.
There is hope for this country yet.
At New Haven, Conn., an Itallian, for $5,
drank twenty "schooners," or about two gal
lons of lager beer in three minutes and a half.
The Jews of New York are not going back
to Palestine. They prefer to invest in Fifth
avenue lots rather than in property on the
Jordan.
Secretary Fish has stated that be will not
accept any foreign appointment, and an
nounces his intaition to retire altogether from
public life.
A bill just introduced into the Minnesota
Legislature "to prevent usurious interest,"
fixes the legal interest at the liberal rate of
twelve per centum.
lion. James L. Johnson, formerly a member
of Congress from . Owensboro, Ky., committed
suicide. Mental depression occasioned by ill
health was the cause.
Tassey Stewart, a farmer of Ynba county
California, has been arrested, charged with
attempting to bribe Secretary Chandler to
make a decision in his favor in a land case.
The ice gorge in the Susquehanna, at Port
Deposit, has wtsted away until the river is
clear of ice above Rock run as far as the eye
can reach. Below the channels are growing
wider.
Mrs Gottleieb Vogele, thirty-five years of
age, was horribly mangled by dogs while going
to her home, near Newport, Ky., Saturday
night. She is not expected to live.
The statement made in one of the New York
morning papers, that Mr. Tilden had under
taken to forecast what the Electoral Commis.
sion would do, is unfounded.
A number of Pacific coast capitalists have
formed a company, with a capital of tea mil
lion dollars, gold, to get out lumber in Alaska
for ship building and other purposes.
Samuel Smith, a farmer, was waylaid and
robbed near Franklin, Ind., Sunday, by a
young man named John Cochran.- Smith's
skull was broken, and he will probably die.
Deputy M trshall H. H. Hughes was shot
and killed Saturday evening, six miles east of
Independence, Mo., by two men named Green
and Miller, whom he was attempting to arrest.
Citizens of New Y‘ark have petitioned the
President for the pardon of W. H. 11. Ely, of
Tarrytown, N. Y. convicted of aiding in na
turalization frauds practiced in Tarrytown at
the last election.
On Saturday night 11. J .Razier, a merchant
of Sparta, Ga., was waylaid while going home
from his store. lie was struck with a slung
shot and robbed of $lOO and a watch. He
has since died.
The requsition of the War Department in
favor of Captain Eads for a half a million dol
lars' worth of bonds on account of his work
in the Mississippi river has been honored at
the Treasury Department.
•
Judge Gottschalk, of the St. Louis Circuit
Court, has issued a final decree in the suit of
St. Louis against the St. Louis Gas Company,
giving the city all the works and property of
the company and $40,000 in cash.
It is stated that the reason Representative
Springer did not present the objections to the
electorial vote of Chaffee, of Illinois,
was because a similar case would come
up in Louisiana which could go before the
tribunal, while Chaffee's case could not.
The ineligibility of George D. Chaffee, it is
alleged, is due to the following facts :—He
was appointed United States Commissioner
March 12, 1858, and he has never resigned to
this date. A certificate signed by Judge Treat,
the Circuit Judge, shows these facts. The
Republicans assert that Mr. Chaffee has not
acted as United States Commissioner for a long
time.
A statement having been published that the
late parade of the Knights of Mounts in New
Orleans was a gross travestie of the President
and his Cabinet, Governor Nicholls telegraph
ed Colonel Burk, to-day as follows : "The
sentiment of the whole community is oppos
ed to what appeared at the celebration Thurs
day, and it is universally condemned and re
gretted."
On Friday last the House refused permis
sion to the Lonisina Committee to have their
report printed at a private establishment, so
it was vetoed by the Democrats to print the
report in the Record, and it made one hundred
double-column pages of solid nonpareil, which
was put in type, printed, and bound in twelve
honro. Mr. Clapp says no other printing house
in the world could have accomplished the
feat.
State News.
Meadville fed 431 trampi last year at a cost
of $6,310.
Venango county has 12,000 school children
and 250 teachers.
Bible readings for ladies are held daily in
the parlor of one of the hotels at Parker.
John A. Stuber, of Allentown, is recruiting
young men for the Black Bills country.
Thirty partridges were found frozen to death
in one bunch in Berks county recently.
A mortgage of $10,000,000 was transcribed
in the Recorder's office of Montgomery county
last week.
Berks county boasts of the largest Agricnl•
tural Society in the State; it has a member
ship of 5,620 farmers.
At a recent meeting of the Catholic Con
gregation at Latrobe 60 men signed the tem
perance pledge for one year.
The locomotive works at Connelleville are
now running full time and have a large num
ber of unfilled orders.
The debt of Chester county is $489,912.70;
at the close of the war it was $1,000,000. The
reduction last year was $20,250.
John Stayer, of Pine Run, Lycoming coun
ty, will put into water 500,000 feet of logs and
400,000 feet of boards.
Many of the schools in Cambria countylave
had to be closed on account. of the great
prevalence of diptheria among the children.
Distracted by grief for the recent loss of a
son and husband, Mrs. Jane Criswell, of Pitts
burg, took arsenic and followed after ber be
loved.
In a short time the Tamaqua rolling mill
will go into operation with a force of 80 men.
It is proposed to turn out daily nine tons of
cotton bale hoop iron.
Mrs. Keller, of Montour county, committed
suicide by hanging last week. She bad been
a patient at the Danville Asylum, and was
discharged as cured.
Murphy, the Temperance agitator, now
boasts that his army is 35,000 strong, and
every day he sees new "to let" playcards upon
drinking houses and saloons.
"Agricultural Hall" is to be taken down and
cut up into seashore cottages and caravan
saries where prosperous agriculturists may
spend the money by the sea they made by the
la n Y.
The Easton Express says : Our two National
banks have on deposit nearly $BOO,OOO and
over $5,000 in unpaid dividend?, belonging' to
persons not sufficiently ip need of funds to
call fcw it.
Dr. R. A. Robertson, of Titusville, has fall
en into a large amount of property in Ireland,
by the death of Sir William EL Robertson, his
father. The doctor has lived in Titusville for
a number of years.
There are only about fifty Chinamen at Bea
ver Falls now. These ate all engaged in the
cutlery works. The others who were there
completed their labor contracts, and have
gone elsewhere in search of employment,
Personal.
Hou. A. H Stephens continues to improve.
Kate Field is one of the regular staff of the
London Examiner.
Jeff Davis has taken up his residence a t
Beauvier, near St. Louis.
Judge Davis relinquishes $lO,OOO a year for
life for a Senatorship.
Mr. Moody is credited with having made
2,500 converts in Chicago.
Thomas Nolan, a lawyer of Brooklyn, has
sued the Eagle fur an alleged libel.
W. L. Scott, of Eric, is credited with giving
his daughter $15,000 a year for pin money.
William B. Astor was recently made a Mas
ter-Mason by a lodge hi Jacksonville Florida.
Logan was an actor thirty years ago, but
afterward became an exhorter of the impeni
tent mule.
George D. Prentice, one of the sweetest
poets this country ever produced, rests in au
unmarked tomb.
Professor Phillips, of the Western Universi
ty is to repeat his course of lectures on Expe
rimental Chemistry.
In Scranton a little boy named Phil Connor
aged five, while coasting, was drowned, the
sled having run into the river.
Mr. T. P. Roberts is the engineer under
whose direction the survey of the Castle Shan.
non Railroad extension was made.
Prof. J. W. Ilarvey, of Unionvilie, having
been deputized by State Superintendent Wick
ersham to fill the unexpired term of 11. F.
Pierce, deceased, entered upon the same on
February Ist.
E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron.
E. F. Kunkel's celebrated Bitter Wine of
Iron will effectually cure liver complaint, jaun
dice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous debility,
chronic diarrlnea, disease of the kidneys, and
all diseases arising from a disorded liver,
stomach or intestines, such as consumption,
flatulence, inward piles, fullness of blood to
the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heart
burn, disgust for food, fullness of weight in
the stomach, sore eructations, sinking or flut
tering at the pit of the stomach, swimming of
the head, hurried or difficult breathing, flut
tering at the heart, chocking or suffocating
sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of
vision dots or webs before the sight, dull pain
in the head, deficiency or perspiration yellow
ness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side,
back, head, chest, limbs, etc., sudden flushes
of heat, burning in the flesh, constant imagin
ings of evil and great depression of spirits.
Price $1 per bottle. Beware of counterfeits.
Do not let your , druggist palm off some other
preparation of iron he may say as good but
ask for Kunkel s Bitter \Vine of Iron. Take
no other. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron is not
sold in bulk—only in SI bottles. E. F. Kun
kel, Proprietor, No. 259 North Nir.th Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sold by all druggists and dealer 3 every
where.
. TAPE WORM REMOVED ALIVE
Head and all complete in two hours.. No
fee till head passes. Seat Pin and Stomach
Worms removed by Dr. KUNKEL, N 0.259 North
Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Send for cir
cular. For removing Seat, Pin or Stomach
Worms, call on your druggist and ask fur a
bottle of Kunkel's Worm Syrup, price $l. It
never fails. Common sense teaches if Tape
Worm be removed, all other worms can be
readily destroyed. feb2-liu
"Old Reliable."
There are many reputed remedies for that
very prevalent diseas, Chronic Vassal Catarrh,
but none which have given general satisfcc
tion and become acknowledged standard
preparations, except Dr. Sage's Catarrh Reme
dy. It continues to enjoy an unprecedented
popularity. This reputation has been through
the permanent
.cures which it has wrought,
having proved itself a specific in the worst
forms of the disease. Pierce's Pocket Memor
andum Books are given away at drug -stores.
National Notes.
Correspondence of the JounNAt.]
WASHINGTON, Fob. 10, 1877.
The Question and Quesiioners of the Week —Republican
Prospects Bright—Not oat of the Woods Yet—lnterview
with the President—Grant as a Talker—llls style and
manner described by an old "Merchant of Eloquence"—
Does Fame give happiness—What Grant said.
Only one topic has been talked of this week—
the probable result of the debates before the Elec
toral Tribunal. Every man and woman in Wash
ington has disappeared. The bipeds that look
like them are only Interrogation Points—mere ?
divided into males and females—cunningly disguis
ed in dress—or—overcoats or else carrying hair
pins and the rest of the costumes usually worn by
women. The Republican Interrogation Points for
the most part "guess" that Hayes w ill win ; and
the Democratic Interrogation Points generally
"reckon' that Tilden will be counted in. The
present outlook unquestionably is that Hayes will
be declared elected. But altho' the prospects fa
vor him, the result is not yet sure. Florida does
not decide the - dispute beyond a doubt, al&ho' nine
out of every ten Republicans believe that the first
decision given practically ends the case. I have
spoken with Some of the best lawyers on our side
of the Senate, and I find that they are hopeful but
not confident. The telegraph will tell you the rest.
Congress is "making believe" that it is doing
business, but it is only "marking time." Nobody
cares about it and its members can hardly keep in
their seats. The Supreme Court for the time being
is dissolved. The Legislative and Judicial
"branches" of the Government are withered limbs.
Only the Executive Branch is left in a healthy
state. It is still run without calling for outside
help. ,"Let the dead bury the dead." Let us
wait until its "suspended animation" is restored
to vigor before noticing Congress again. I shall
speak about the live Department of the Govern
ment this week, and leave the graveyard and hos
pital departments in peace.
I had a long talk with the President last Sat
urday—that is to say, he did the long talking and
I did the long listening.
The "Silent Man," the "Sphynx of the White
House," when he does speak, is one of the best
talkers I have ever met ; and for seven weary
years I "sampled" the best talkers in the country
every week of my life, and for several hours of
every day of every week. As other men deal in
hogs or whisky, I dealt in orators and authors. I
was a wholesale merchant of :eloquence, so to
speak ; and sometimes I did a brisk retail business
in Talk that could not be called eloquence wiat
any loyalty to truth. There are a few fam
ous orators in the land—outside of the . strictly
professional orators—whom I have not listened to
by the hour in their private as well as public
talk. If "practice makes perfect" I ought to be a
pretty fair judge of tongue-goods, for I served a
full apprenticeship to the art of listening critical
ly to conversation, in order to decide whether the
talker would succeed on the platform, and to un
derstand, for practical business purposes, the
grasp, scope and complexion of his mind. The
habit thus formed has become a second nature.
I listen critically to every one. If I were in the
dock and doomed to die on the scaffold, the ter
rors of the hour could not overcome this habit;
for I should watch the judge's construction of his
periods and pass literary sentence on him while he
was passing judicial sentence on me.
Grant's talk is noteworthy for its clearness, its
Saxon simplicity, its terseness, its.grasp of facts.
and its strong massing of statements. He talks
rapidly, never pausing for a word, never using a
word more than is needed to make his meaning
clear, never uttering a word that tells of a doubt
in his mind. No man I have . ever met obeyed
Goethe's advice so faithfully—" Tell me what you
think; I have doubts enough of my own." He
never once said "perhaps," or "possibly," or "it
may be," although he spoke of South Carolina pol
itics and of the financial problem that are thick
with chances to use them. His verbal Style has
one charm very rare now, and daily growing rarer
among our public men, because, I fear, the mental
soil that it springs from is less prized by the peo
ple. He always chooses the shortest words: A
child would not have been able to grasp his argu
ment, because it dealt with an abstract question ;
but it would have known the meaning of every
word he said. For five minutes once his talk was
as rugged as Carlyle'e in the form of his thought;
but be was as clear and simple as Bunyan in hie
words. It is only the sham great minds that wal
low in long words. The pages that thrill us in
English oratory; the poems that have soared high
est in the pure air of song • the hymns that have
stirred for ages the souls of the'pure in heart ; the
prayers, the blessings, and the curses, that have
moulded. the life of a hundred generations—each
of them and all of them are clothed in the words
that the children prattle in their play-grounds.
Lincoln's Gettysburg speech, Butler's farewell ad
dress to the army of the James, Grant's every-day
talk are specimens of the purest Saxon that Amer
ica has given to the literattire of the century.
There are pages of Grant's War reports that will
be quoted some day as models of official rhetoric.
They have all the great qualities that such writing
should embody ; clearness, brevity, modesty—and
above all, they have the rare merit of stopping
when the story is told.
Grant's tone is as decisive as his words. Ile
speaks with an earnestness and power that leave
no doubt that he sees his points clearly, and, so
seeing, believes that the one duty is left is to make
them a base of operations against all who assail
them. His mode of stating his views is so strong
that it sounds aggresive—not offensive, not intol
erant either in phrase or thought ; only he seemed
to be addressing the viewless opposition with an
"unconditional surrender, or I shall move on your
works at once."
Grant's manner forms a striking contrast to his
words and tones. It is a modest or rather a bash
ful manner. It is Hercules with the distaff—the
manner of a man conscious of power but half
ashamed to find himself toying with words instead
of fighting with armies. As he talks, his eye lights
up and shows the hidden power that has made him
the greatest single force of our times. No an in
America is so truly tho representative of reserved
power.
thant's memory is a marvel. Ha never furgets
anything. Ile can talk by the h.iur about the po-
Utica! condition of every State, and give the dales
and facts that most of us prefer to recall by prosy
in the Tribune Almanac or McPherson's }land-
Book. I found that he knew all about the politics
of South Carolina ; and whoa he talks of the fu
ture of the party he shows by his accurate knowl
edge of politiCal staristi••s that be foresees dan
gers that hardly any of our public men even dream
of.
Grant is a good listener. Men who suffer with"
the verbal complaint think that they are good
talkers and they cannot wait ion g enough to listen
to any other voice. A healthy talker can be
known always by his power of listeniag As soon
as Grant answers a question or ends a topic, his
lips Laity together; he reaches out for a match,
lights his cigar again, faces you and never inter
rupts you. If he has nothing to say he cultivates
international good will by adding to the income of
Cuba. (If any man can invent a more diplomatic
synonym for smoking let him draw on me at eight
for a cigar.) If I were a French writer and de
lighted in epigrams I should say that Grant listens
like a loaded mitralluse—collected, cool, silent, but
giving one in front of him the impression that he
is ready to fire off a volley if he should not chanee
to like your style. H .wilt knows all about this
trait. He never stands in front of Grant now.
A •• bar'l of money" couldn't tempt him to do it
:,gate.. _ _ •
What Grant said abont the financial situation
was a brief of his message that he had ready for
Congress but had not yet signed. The only con
fusion of ideas in it that I could see was his theory
that there is any such thing possible ass "healthy
inflation" of the currency. InflatiOn is the mere
fat of the financial system; and when men or sys
tems go into training they must first of all get rid
of their fat. They need purely mus,ulitr develop
ment. A bloated man looks healthy, but he is
sick in exact proportion to his e,:tra bulk. It
seems to me also that the message, one of the
ablest he has ever sent to Congress;. would have
been entirely unobjectionable if he bad left out his
suggestions as to the repeal of the law that limits
the amount of fractional currency and silver coins.
They complicate an i 3,110 which is simple and wise
when presented on its own merits.
Republicans who have been led to belicue that
Gov. Chamberlain is not worthy of the entire con
fidence of the Nation, inay be interested to know
that the President, who has studied the Southern
question thoroughly, regards him as a man of it. -
tegrity, who gave a pure administratio t to South
Carolina, and is to-day "the ablest man in the
Union who is the Governor of a State or among
those claiming to be Governors."
But I do not intend to report the conversation.
as I did not visit him as an interviewer but as a
private citizen.
. _
The old question always comes "p one
brought into personal relations with men rd great
genius or in lofty positions : Ln fame and power
make men happy? litre is Grantwh, has risen
from the humblest rank in life to the highest po
sition on this planet ; from a tan-yard to the White
House ; from the dull obsedrity of a poor man's
struggles for bread in a Western village to the
dazzling eminence of the greatest historical repu
tation of his nation. Surely, he must be a happy
man—or regret onl: that he must soon lay „own
his symbols of power and popularity ?
"Well," he said, "I have just a month left; ami
it seems to me that I eon hardly wait for the time
to leave to come."
So, sixteen years of glory anti power, end will
an eager longing for quiet and rest ! Epectetus
was right. Our happiness must come Lot from
what we have but from what we ore.
JAMES lIEDPATIL
Our New York Letter.
New YORK, Feb. 14, 1577.
A Wedding In High Life—The Legal Bripinth—Politi
cal—Crime—Beanies,.
A WEDDING IN HIGH LIFE
The papers are filled with accounts of a gorgeous
•'wedding in high life," which has afforded an itn
tnense deal of amusement in the clubs and among
the men about town. The lady in the case is the
daughter of a very wealthy man, who has some
thing over a million in her own right, and the
groom is a young man from a Western State, who,
only fortune was his voice, and a handsome face
and figure. The voice a very rich tenor, by the
way, has brought him SSOO a year, in an up-town
church, which sum has had to take care of his per
son, for that was all he had. The lady is past her
hey-day, and has the additional disadvantage of
not being a sylph in proportions. list the million
and over ! Half that sum would convert a much
uglier woman into an angel, and the young singer
found her defects in person no drawback whatev
er. Especially wero they not noticeable, after she
settled upon him an income of $16,000 per year
for life, and made over to him $lOO,OOO in his own
right. That proceeding eovered all her defects,
and he was led like a lamb to the—nuptial altar.
Prom this time out the gorgeous rooms of the lady
at the swellest of the swell hotels, will have two
occupants. Rather a good speculation counted as
a speculation—for a young man with only $6OO
per year! But then think of his being pointed out
every where as the husband of the rich Miss Croe
sus ! Think of bow hie fellows, who havn't mar
ried a million and over, will sneer at him, and turn
up their noses at him, for doing what ihey would
give all their earthly possessions to be able to do.
It will be hard lines for the young roan, and pos
sibly he his more than earned his money. lie
professes to be happy, tund swears, as he drinks
his wine—wine is a late habit with him--that he
actually loves her.
BLUE: GL ES.
Some years ago lien. Pleasanton publi ned an
article in which the assertion was wade that rheu
matism and a dozen other diseases could be cured
by permitting the beams of the sun to shine
through glass alternate white and. blue, and fall
upon the afflicted parts , that vegetables grown
under blue glass would produce infinitely more
than that exposed in the n tural way; and that
animals—carves, pigs, chickens, etc., kept under
blue glass would grow twice as fast as when in any
other light. A few weeks ago the article was re
produced, and this rime i took. The city papers
published it, with a lot of wonderful experiments
that had b en tried, and immediately a demand
for blue glass sprung up that was svonderful. In
two days every particle of blue glass was taken
up, and the astonished dealers had to telegraph
for supplies. Rheumatics used it, animal fanciers
covered their quarters with it and all carts of ail
ing and bed-ridden peopla are trying the new cute.
One writer asserts that he cured himself of rheu
matism by this simple ar,, , en,y, and others are
claiming that they are getting great benefit from
it. If there is anything in it it is queer ibat it
has never been discovered before—if it is a whim
it is certainly the most whimsical whim that has
ever struck the people. Look out for a blue glass
mania in your part.
EXCESSIVE FEES,
It pays to be a lawyer in New York, if you can
get any thing to do. The will case of the late
James It. Taylor makes an exhibit that is start
ling. Mr. Taylor left an estate that is worth
$200,000 cash, which has been enhirely eaten up
by the lawyers. One firm getsslo,ooo commission
for the sale of ten shares of Tiine9 stock. Other
firms got fees ranging from $4,000 to $211,000. and
now the litigation stops because there is nothing
more to pay the harpies with.
The papers in the city have taken the matter
up, and are urging the formation of an association
to resist the robbers. The charges for legal ser
vices are always exorbitant and oppressive. They
have more the appearance of robbery than charges.
and there is no use in going to the courts about it,
for•the judges aro lawyers, and never decide
against the craft. A young lawyer considers him
self amply provided for two or three years, if he
can become counsel in a decent bankrupt case.
There is never anything left of the assets, but the
attorney gets a fair start in life. Ile always con
siders himself in condition to marry when such a
plum drops to him.
POLITICAL.
The action of the Commission in the ease o:
Florida gives great satisfaction to the Republicans,
and the Democracy are correspondingly depressed.
In fact, they give np the case, and privately admit
that they are beaten. But don't suppose that the
struggle is to end here. Notwithstanding all their
professions of a desire for an amicable settlement.
and that this Commission would do it, Tilden will
carry tho case to the Courts, and make another
fight there. He has set his heart upon the Presi
dency, and his followers upon the fat plunder, and
neither he nor they are willing to give it up as
long as there is a plank to hang to. Tilden, in
anticipation of an adverse decision by the Com
mission, has gathered around b , m the best legal
talent attainable, and every day they are in con
sultation at his house. Depend upon it, that so
long as he o' his gang have a dollar, they will con
tinue the fight. They are playing for high stakes,
and it makes difference to them how much their
perversity may cost the country by keeping it in
an unsettled condition, or how much the inflam
matory appeals they make destroy confidence and
retard the business of the country. AB this is
nothing whe, put in the scale against the neces
sities of a hundred thousand bummers who want
places. But the thing will come to a sudden end
as soon as the Cominission 114. s registered its de
cree. The business men in that party are tired ut
being made the cat's-paw of the speculators, and
they will insist that that decision shall be final.
But look out for the Democratic papers just about
this time Mr. Tilden's bureau has just sent ott
a batch of ready-made editorials of the bull-dozing
order, breathing slaughterings and vengeance if
Titden be not counted in. They announce their
determination of going to the Courts, and if that
fails, "freemen know how to secure their rights,"
which is to say, if they are beaten in the Court
they will appeal to arms. Of course, they won't
do any such thing, but if they can frighten th.
Republicans Into a a urrender, it will be so much
made.
CRIME
The police columns have been unusually full
this week. The most terrible murder that has oc
curred for some time was that of Mrs. Flood by
her husband. It is the old story. Flood was a
working man, and Mrs. Flood was, in these hard
times, kept on very close rations. Mrs. Flood's
sister, an abandoned woman, came to live with
them, and she very soon showed her how to mend
her condition. Flood discovering his wife's re
peated infidelities, lett her, but could not keep
away. lie knew that she was criminally intimate
with a man named Alfka, and so last Saturday
morning he went to Alfka's room. The guilty
pair attempted to escape, Mrs. Flood running in
her nightdress toward her room. Flood, crazed
with liquor, followed the affrighted woman, and
just as he reached her door, plunged a tinsmith's
reamer into her breast, killing her instantly. He
escaped, wandered about for a day or two, and fi-
Daily gave hiintielf up. Ile said he srui tired of
life, and wanted the authorities to hanz him as
soon se possible. lie loved the woman dearly.
but m.iddened by the knowledge tbar also h•.l de
meet. d him, killed h.r. and wR0t... , 1 to so.
soon as possible. Ile will rn,ke no .I , •ret,e.
"But Coop., it is i.npr:,,rilvent f t !,f•, and
not hanging?"
"I will kill rnrlelf, r t lr. "I
don't waa't to hvt, and will no!."
The trmu.in w ro very heaut,ful. and the ha,band
bad alwv home a good character.
B17$111!4.4
Is very had, and the railroad fights are tasking it
wont). Thu iliieriminatinn against Ne w r” r k
driving the grain trade to ..rber point. , and ttre
outln.:k it Mae. The I,rch:srits ar.i bolding meet
ine legging the Legislature to lower the toils on
the Erie Canal, Fo th nest rummer there will hr
some revival in thi• parti , ular, b■t through the
Legislature there is but little hope that it will he
dune. The railroads want the canalo killed. an•d
he - ween theta all New York i• onleeing
There will be nothing done till spring, and I bare
very little hope then.
_ _ •• - -
Legislative Cor7cspondenee.
HARII-13 :4. 1•;77.
For s,mr• rta-mn f , r :anfah r thr
to have gotten !Ise the H .ti•,
of the perherg S.,r
gmaller aml score compact t
and quicker to arrive at a decision than Ibe nn
weildly and generally le, experio.tertl House.--
However the latter is making an effort to catch up
and succeeded in pasaing the first hi;) of the
present sessi ,n on Tue.day test. ft we. a coin
partitively tinunportant luA,—authoriz ng
of courts of quarter se,ions and over and :1.1.'11;a,
to take recognizance. and hail in certatn ea." , -
hut it .'humor that we have sr,- d .wn to ir.,rk in
earnest. On and after Thursday of nxr wee 4
there will be' two daily .es,ioni T ae 44 ; ,y s .
Wtdrit-odiyi and Tntirs.l,y.—the mornin4
from 19 to and the afternoon APA.I.•II
from tr, 5 n'ol.wk. A re.oontion has 4 , c0 ad.v.••l
by the 111,iint and 5,1": r to th, s, n u e
ence providing fur a final adjournment on March
15th, ro meet in adjourned annual seowon on the
first "rueselay of January lAN. There seems to
be a determination on aii to have th e "work
of the p e gA ori fini,,hed by the time fixed for ad
journment.
A hill of great interest end impertance
nese men throughout the Sea' an.l at the rem
mereial centers of the county pa?zie,l reeon.l reed
ing in the ilense on ICednenday It pro In.
that upon a' dindgments now ',mai ni e
or which may he obtained within :ex ro,roh+
the passage of the act. or upon which a A:iir
real estete bag not yet been confirms I there a::
be a stay of exeeetein for tin. :2)
pain nge of the act an rezarde ju,loneore now en
ietirsz, and fro e their da , e a: toga,- Is j,e: ern.
olitaitied tt month+ after .la'" ~f • -
vided that the defenden• in p , -.I of re 4
tate in the county where the juutern nt to el)t . sined
Or in any cnnnty of the State to which the jedg
Merit in transferred worth at a fair valnation
rllllO eufficient to pay the name: or the defenian:
may give eeeurity for the payment of the name
which mnet be eppreved by the e or' or .fieriee
before wbotn it was ei.t.now I wi•iiin *di d tyr from
the date of the jis , lgment er t:i- pen. lee
The provisions of the are vary trweel•in;
extend to jndgment: ent -re I or fn he enter.-1
well upon bond or ?Tarrant of attarney an even
mortgage to oectire the time, ar-I to any eis',:e
quent owner of the premiere an well an to the
original mortgagor. It give: any m•)rt;eiger or
lien creditor whine interest weal I be a:Trete,' hr
lute a like right with the defendent to Haim :nay
and makes invalid any waiver of gray m ude af:er
the passage of the act. It applies malt jnagraentn
entered or to be entered upon conditional verdict,.
stipulations or warrants of attorney in e e ti ce ,
ejectment. It makes any person. firm. hanger
broker who bold collateral. for delee dee or to he
come due responsible in double the amount fee
which:they acre pledged if they se:l the name a t
public or private ea'se within two ye.ra of the
passage of the act. It Jaen net app'.; to any ex
ecution for the collect inn of Aix motel's interest on
any judgment not less than S.ioo, or for ir.terent
on jitigniente entered for security for the payment
Of money to li - i‘lows ernbane or minors, er jade.-
merits for the wages of lab r. Thong's thin hill
has not passed finally, as erroneously stated Iv
some papers, the large ••ote, 103 to 67, by which
it passe] second readinr indicates that it will pat:
finally melees there should he a std len and great
change of opinion as to the merits of the bill. The
'tehate upon it was long and spirited, and pr.hably
everything that could be said for or against the
measure was brought out and thoroughly dieeaseied.
Yesterday in the llonie after a long debate a
hill ceding certain lands on the Ohio river to the
United States for the purpose of erecting dame,
locks, he., to establish slack water navigation, was
defeated. Petitions for the re-enactment of the
local option law continue to pour in ranielly.—
Some of them are of immense length. Memtor%
of the legislature are beginning to feel uneasy
upon the local option question and express much
anxiety as to its elect upon politics. it.
New To—Day.
NOTICE TO SCHOOL. TEACH ER: ,
ER: ,
Foutteen Teacher. wanted to teach tee
Huntingdon borough school.. An examination of
Teachers will take place by the County ••:uperin
tendent, at the old ichool hone, in .ai•l hor.trigh.
on SATCRDAY, March 10th, when all telpher.
are invited to attend. The election of teacher.
will be mad. the following week
- T. S. JOHN ;TON.
A. ELLIOTT, Pre.t. Hunt. School Ilour.l.
Secretary. IG
A SSIG NEE'S NOTICE OF AP
POINTM ENT.
[ln Bankruptcy'
In the District Court of the United Stat•s for
the Western District of Pennsylvania.
To 'chow it may cose,ra The nnder•i;nsd here
by gives notice of his appointment a• ae.ignee of
John S. Miller. of Huntingdon. in thn , onuty of
Huntingdon, State of Pennsylvania. within •aid
District, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt upon
his own petition.
Dated at Hantingloo. the '23:1 day of .TAnnary,
A. D., 1.1'377. JO-i£Pll ti. FENBERii.
feblo-3t] Atlignes.
ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE
I EN•rae of .10SE PH PEA VER. 'le•',l I
Letter,' of Adminigtration. with the will ann.,
harinz. been granted to the on.leriizne.l.re.i.l
inL: near MablenAville P. 0.. on the e"ate of Jo.-
el h I Lte of Sprine.el,l towoehip.
alt per,on, knowing them,elves indebted will mak.)
imme•tiate payment, and thole having etaimm will
present them duly authenticated for ettleraent.
ELIZABETH DEAVER.
Adminixtratris.
feb-16)
New AdvertisementA.
NOTICE.
Having parch.t=a4 the personal prorrty
of Samnel Hirst, an l I , ft the same in his no,sess
ion, I hereby notify all persons tio;. to meddle with
it in any manner.
fel,9 3ti O. B. BRUMBAUGH.
"The Best ix the West."
ATCHISON. TOPEKA & SANTA FE R. R.
N I)!-4 IN KANSAS.
2,500,000 ACRES,
of the hest Fanning and Agricultural Lands in
America, situated in and near the heautifal rot
tonwood and Upper Arkansas Valleys, ID thy ,:ar
der of the West, on
l! Ye‘tr'4 Credit. with 7 per rime litcreq.
FARE REFUNDED
purehreers of 1..1.
Zir•Cireulars , . with map, givin.; full infurma
tiuu, sent free. %.I.lreti3 A. S. .1011NsON
Act;ny L,lnd Ononii..iurter, Tprk 8, Khan •t•
DR- 1t 11 . /ACK:4iN.
feb9-3tn] . lluntinplon. Ps.
AUDIOR i S NOTICE.
[Estate of MA /: TIN GA TLS, der',l.)
Tne undersigned auditor, appointed by the Or
phans' Court, of Huntingdon county, to tepee:
liens, if any affecting the share of the parties in
intei est, in the late estate of Martin Crates. Late
of Franklin township, deceased, will attend to the
dirties of his appointment, at the office of the Dia_
triet Attorney. a' the Court house, in Huntingdon
on Saturday. February IT. lATT, at 10 o',loek A .
M., when ant where all persons interested in a iid
estvir may arrar if they rice proper.
V. E. McNEff..
feb2 3t] Au liter.
FOR RENT
The "EXCHANGE HOTEL. - now occupied
Cot. John S. Miller. ;tic:veil one sionre fro.
Raiirond Depot. in the horongh of Ilontingl n.
ALSO. The Summer Re.ort known as - HU S
TING bON WARM SPRINGS," Rre mile• 3. , rth
of Huntingdon. Furniture for sale.
For terms, apply to
A. PORTER WILSON.
jan2,3-tfl Huntingdon. P.s.
AGENTS WANTED rots TRI CENTENNIAL
GAZETTEER OF THE
UNITED STATES,
showing the grand results of oar fires 100
Everybody buys it, and ageite make frmss $lOO to
$2OO a month. Also, for the sew hietorienl work, Our
WESTERN BORDER,• - "P''"* -1
araptur 41.tory
of American pioneer life 100 YEARS AGO
—itsthrilling eontlicts of red and white foe., ex
citingadventures, captivi'ies, forays, "emits. pio
neer wemen and boys, Indian war-paths. esm?-
life and sports. A book for old and younx. Na
competition. Ennrmoas isles. Extra terms. Il
lustrated circulars free. J. C. MeCURDY * co
Philadelphia, Pa. [septl.--6m
BLACKSNIITHING.
JOHN H. STURTSMAN,
Having again resumed the business of Black
smithing, at the old stand, on Seventh street, is
prepared to do ail kinds of work at short antics
and on reasonable terms. 11,,r.. SA•xria, a Ype
eialty. ban.l9-Ita.
' SCHOOL . of every B OOK S
variety, cheap.
at the JOURNAL STURR.
Dry-Goods, Notions. Furni4hinit Omero«. 4. At.
VT, S. TAYLO R,
MARCIIs‘ ()LI) rii.‘,Nli
No. 615 Petal! Sirtyo.. ilenn%t.
Ilajll4r r.iv.'l '
aN - 7EVT DR - ESS )0 - - 0
in :IA
:in Pe
New
Dei s , Now f )i)ora f;::py
arist :sr • 1.; r•-r
NE - NV C..% !ALOES MI sLI:-%
T„
Linen—nlea , iwiLMf
low. .a. yrs 30 El.- 21F° rt. 0 0 3FI
Llitek 1H ,; . -
•
Men and Boy's Wea:: ai:
Germantown
New Notions New N9tion3
lifitrikma uvery ‘l , 4eritoi.,7l. V -
artel
t ;:01-04,
LaeiiPs' ti and ' , iv -4. 74. /7 . .•
•N I:. ;4 . •-7
r.:• ti tnii 4 . 7 _
c • M 1d....
UT41 , 1 ki Fmgri ur mf GCS.
r• - .
to 11•Int•r - •
GROCERIES
- W. S. TAYLOI
t.
MIAIICHS' OLD STAMM.
II iNT TING~DON, PA_
JA/wary 20, 1577-ti.
Legal Aelvert6ement:
OUTSTANDING B.II.ANCV- 4 DI . V. t i .tt.r ABLE YAWS AT MlL
:be (:,.anty. at •he 4eteieaseat "rah Awe. A 1r ITs 45L1. rive.
tom for the year 1474.. rt. .....1.....ip.... twee ..iii mew a ereemiate "awi is.
4 'ow. 1110•4.. a sap/ .4. * inimmoillhinge mo It sib
J 1 .
TOW' 1111 T I
••• i
•..,, er .eviaohip, •as time tie~... !Jo Illoinel?.." liwiew•e4.
-4 .7. .4 ... =
4 D.I l , . r.r.t.r.rtnitm; ... ,- ~ if."""se 1 •••• "di. Awn. abolowlllOme t...... 611. eue.
12)E../Ctill2 ... i ~.4 . 4 ..• ..• "1 t., Niitt .4 Herb aralawee. sod -or ..... was. 4 .Bir
•I -.. '"" •. .. sate s . a••• 4 4r isionoo w• aver To , 40.1. 44 .
Illiirk...• - j ft., . ... bar 7. 1.0110 • •••• • 4p...4 Too inory Low Woman a largo
6T. 1 ' It) 1 ,70 ~. , Wi11,.... .7...:: r:7ln: et ' Felonry Ataalir. 4srebtw Illono esie labor wesbniiita
Jon;ata ; rot, eeiyaw . 3 - mg.. ere 4 en meagre 4 i.e.. pork •Ifieno M. , iti. -
14*. l'ioznn
IT T. city.
CAA..
nial••••••1. 4vlll.,wir. ... 12 71 -,, 7V. 1 0 1 .116-4 .11 I/TU.llll' 4 w,
Brialy Ir7Z. 1;.. IrLy
I 4 t:!• • be • . vi 11.......
Barn., T. .teirart .- 1:3 7 4
CD. . II Tic., _.... 471 :: It .:7 .. .
Corby* ; .1.. I:miry__ 11/ .r.. 2) le .
Illoide-wia. • J.... 111...ry . I 30-
Jarkins. ' .1 1.. laillOwit. 1.1 wii I ••
Clay._ ..... ___ 11734 I". It 11.4 **oll7 I:: i.. , 1
....
V Pita ..- ...... ...... Ansi," Woo :4 Ir. 3 ••• . .
Wallve
lerreirrina J.... If.nri . .:2 , I* .f. .., ..
1,114.1 re. If
Hunt's 4th yr
5
--.
itlllll-••111111
Jot /too.
Ilt.. tare.--- , - Vi r /11. 31 P.tiIIIIIR.
wigs.... ....... ...
rah's.
gemo_._ ...... .WeL ‘. Ibraney. Ct. 12 ..5 . V ..- rime MITO4I. Newriscd..... Ps.. 4......, at never%
Batty...-_......!.--.-. TO, Soft . 71 tz 5 4 . 11•••••••••• roe T wetage. ovviiiwo .... weinwonirot. 4..
LT. City...- C. IL inprihm.. .., it • 111 1------- roblie that b. bee • -wee ''''''''volt tae 4141) 4 . 'N.
Camila. i Z. II Moose '.:.; 411 Me -
Crenne.ll....-1-, J. D. 111..wwinte atm C , t er ih.ohi.. roe •• progiseee to mod. woe* ao Amp
thohootie.._ l --1 P. iiik.droas.... Ai S* - -1* __._ at son 1.• pre vl•aobiow. Air eallowtoo getsamellari-
Dahlia-....-1..- IW. A. Illoboo-• 19 !, ' '''' --- P****/•••••••• • iper...d./. 4*.• isi• • ...ult. 'tab 3410
Pooldia...- --4. W Loarll... VT 7 , 4 414 . ... _
H.a...,...-!.-1... isww , -- 1- ' 7 " 4 ' 17. , - i..t pHOOL KS.
f10prae11.....-:-.11 W Pim._ • :4 se ,
Hiit'g let w....- 10. Berra? .. Pa* 2. tT C ..- 6.) h i l
1 o Itermy Ile 111 • -
S. IP 1144ma* 3'73 lIIP 4V . _
IA - ...... ~. W raat 1•111 41 2lt ...
Elr llowar. leo 11)31 Me
scHooL ROOKS,
, W .i•twoinvor t3ll 41 3lf . _...
Lisotin. 1 Jaw llosow . 114 TS 111 OP .... -
orraimais.... ' T. - X tear_ ta se s-...
: W ; 1.""
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SC II 0 f)ls KIS.
~... ....... ...._ ....... A b.**. ; X• 1.1 32 I* ..._ -
,bade bap__
neeienl4.l-
Shirley
Shirlinoilunt.
Tell
'6.4 •
..
-.."
. 4 1 . /11)111 . % rtt iota,* tee. IICOIIL4
The... thwimpi•-. P II brave .. c IS :S.
Caw.... ..-. 1.....- awbowe Wow 11.4 111; ' .- ,*ll/71)14)1, t ett fonnetp.„ SO 10 )1(..*
walks ' J.'s 1.90110." AI 2r: a
trarrainnoirt.'..._ l 4lowarewal... Pe 79 111 la p
90.4 1. ..._ Jr. lenrylei 06 3 "s a is-
• • --- M • iff If Of, I:rysiemkery gi Pflii. 4
74.41ti11e.- 1...- CIL Wrarffb7 ".7 .10. O'V
- 74111 111, 1 0 :rsvianar* gill 111L4
Total amnion of r , wirsty tax. fri..15.:.19: Staa. . .
i fillini, •:r ,iieruir 1111111(.4
tat. s%* '.9): Militia Saw.. 11110.13. :s
Jaolinient : 1 1.). 1.1. A prd T•rin. 1 4 7 e. tic 3,17: 21. : 4 4'..11/1 111 1 7e-odor. BI1W111(.4
with 'term.% r.olleetni by P M. Left*. en-. a• :4flie Wei, &mk,. aIaPIE 4
Attorney for rornisivrinners. from feliawmos •,...1 jilioni.
!ten4-r• RS 0,11(.4
Ire , .rs„ arol tot y..: pail over by hie • ..11. , ow- --‘
ty Trea....ur•r. JAML 4 I nut DEIL.' I I. Sr Flesll. :4Ts-C.r. AIerPIC7I
.1. J. WIITTR. ‘l('iiile)i• Apoo3;er. iillOioC-1
W. 11. 13.-c. 11 . 11/1411. : 4 7ollorew 11110111. 41
fehl-190' k 1 i• • .• • •
+/'111.)1, I , if"' lassr.-. 311111t: 4
"TA W. i'l'aOrri )1: . 44 'Re Mill Dieetaienenesk NO PO )1I . 4
if • :•14 PENN 412F.F.T. .11•[1/.)1. ( 1 ;.-• w sr.-. WM A: 4
iirvTr:Gr' . ' l . ".
.4ciffillt. 1 . ..0v r. -4 - iiMIIIL4
cant for
-et •IDel )L 4 . .. n.; it,......-. 11ew.1t. 4
SCHOOL BOOKS, •...it - ifillll I' .tte R.v.it • starlit=
.01 . -1 411# Mg. DO - sir in- 3.• t. Mlle 4. 4
SCHOOL .k. elit . l:l.l FURNITFRE. 41'illoo)1. 1).-Iwile% 11.... b.. 18 11 •41- 4
Rea J.... .4' iit WO )1. Drawing 111.4. Illelenii 4
4 roller,. ' 1 4 . 111)111L De - eirnez r sr+ ifo le 4. 4
ti/ograpb i.e.
44 . 11 e M)1. Druguoz rseto. 811t$1:1
Arits..
Grammar% * - 111)()L Prtar+tor I * -w+. ROMA . 4
Writ iiz rock•. 'WHIM'. 1.......wre ille-pe 11197,414 4
. 111,-"•:',11 11..ot•. *• IR,- HI, T.airtiar.' lian. P/O o , lit ..
;,....,g M 1"...
;.)raipeg •' sr+. : 4 11111OW ,(, , raw leer.' iii.rvi 3115H1.-i
Writing Char,. Awl seater( .siser kiwi 4t filti)C4 ai m ,
flitlia• Nat./.
K•adist Chart.. -%. iieboelle .f she osmosis , f . nourees , 7-
Elorkhwarl !Oa: -:, arch s roil awl easiplear km •
Iti•loiiter'• teietinaaries. 4 •'1H)01. o T_lTllriltiT
.•t1 Rolls. 1 4 .-howl 6.:1•.
al ;wee. Set *IOW AP 131111”
Sek.0111•4110,T•••••••• D....
i;1....6.e. lice.. In, 38 4114
Every 11•••• , :4. chart. and hind ef 4prirst4.• ••-
iLir:d .
w in a . a "ic 4.. !to. h. l, „ . l 4ea. :.s iensy r. wr com l . T cwrimprs .
.4 JOCIINIL NTORE
T.v.borq. , ordially ins i toll. A5l 4.sfriagairatimer _, -
and or , 1•r• will rverive prisiant attwarios. Call on
or ii•lilr•••, D w pbtlf7T'lM. )0(11,ilL KrOBE.
jsa:!il to :.' , 14 Nos qt. Ilanittilna. 4 • Pc
A D3IIINISTRATRIT'S NOTWE. palm ATI . 4 tI.It ,f ILE.% L r... 4 IrATE.
A - [ Zee wto .1 rl/0. 4 . T1111.11P.10.V. lee . I. _
Letters of Adoinioniti-ie honing Oro srusairi rh r se ho er .h, i,.. ez , A.m.. .„....b s ,„„ . .
t o the ...b oro n,. ti•iiir is Coshiowet borooteh. ••• roomy tho War. ?.,a. will met at orielow. wi. -
th• e•tato of Thomas Th...we...a. liww of wad bee ..e re-re , " spas oboe. be were oiwireee. ........i.
inch. t 1,„.•,,, ., as p 5,..... , r ,...,„., !b.........4.... is ... a... 0 PT ITT rive* .1e.111110.0 wereere -......-,
.I,b t ,,i t „ std ....tat., wrlll oak.. paynowe oitheor orr... er.• ••••••••• are varilbe Swam woe -to i e ..--
.klay. anl throws haying claim. *guano •is none set) rinalowed arab ? smog dossews. 71.• law- , -
will prwsrot the, frturrilir sathestioneed lbw me- ; soss•• F oams* 4 , a
tlitaaent. 311-4 It Y A'4o 111011 "°N. • TWIt.irTORT Lis:- FRAIIK ;11117:.4l.
iaal2l A diehniatralrin.
Jar hoot.
- . _..:- .. ""fik 620 ••••• 4 1. la* Flews gears , mad day. s..-
IIROBLICT, Merchant J.• anine. fl. emery estbstillogre. now ow ems esseelbae ...e.
• 813 Millis rtreet. Weer Ileariartwa .4 Wafer. int! a War mosii.• 4 wipe end pi.*
pa.,y saiirite a •11: .t. , 4 pairs, pas. maw. Isametear belt. Of lie treat Will parsavere
restage rs r erall eo teem sad ....norm 'rnot ta. all. as lie inharriller taimmehl so SI OM as V'S.
- "meg- P. , wow snap is 0/141111•111 Iswilliewv.
SITBSCRIBE FOR THE JO! JORNAL. At../....,.. J. q . ~ e, la Illa
.1:/aly VIM s year. 1.r.m.7.0" 4 . ariglisma
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PROVISIONS ete..
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615 PENN STREET.
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