The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, February 23, 1877, Image 2

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    The Huntingdon Journal.
DURBORROW,
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A.
FRIDAY, - - FEBRUARY 23, 1877.
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
THE Grand Duke Alexis of Russia ar
rived in New York on Sunday last accom
panied by prominent (HI
cials.
IION. DAVID REID, of Pittsburg, late
United States District Attorney fur West
ern Pennsylvania, died in that city, on
Saturday last. lie had hnn an invalid
ever since his removal from the position
named.
THE Southern Democrats load to bridle
their Northern conferees. The chaps who
are "invincible in peace and invisible in
war" were full of Waste', but the imper
turbable Ihn Hill and others sat down on
their ardor and flattened it out.
THE Government is making a vigorous
effort to break up illicit distilling in the
mountain regions of North Carolina. Sev
eral revenue officers Lave been murdeied
by the distillers. The North Carolina De•
mocracy are willing to die for-free whisky.
THE wluld-be assassin of Gov. Packard
is the sou of a Ccrman Lutheran preacher
of West Philade'phia. named Rev. C. F.
11Telden. The assassin is aged twenty
nine years. lie last fall obtained a sitna
tion in a dry goods house in Mobile, Ala •
bama
THE Electoral Commission uniformly
voted Bto 7. The Democrats claim that
the Republicans were entirely too part iz
yet the Ilonter never voted once against
the interests o► Mr. Tilden. From their
standpoint there was nothing partizan in
this. We are not so clear about it.
JOIIN MORRISSEY is now out of busi
ness. The bets are ail off. Tilden is aus
yerpilt. The dog is dead. Every thing
has run into Black Friday Bad ! bad !
The world to him is all a fleeting show.
Alas, poor John ! We pity him. Re
form ! Raf►rm ! Why treat thy apostle
thus ?
TIIE' Democrats uniformly ende.tvor
to belittle the Electoral Commission by re
peating that the -t- , eceo spit can not
beat the ei , rlit." If. there was any chance
in the commit-sion they were responsible
for it. The election, however, of Judge
David Davis to the Senate took the only
chance for the Democracy out of it.
THE Oregon busine , s was a very un
profitable investment for the Democracy.
Morton is reported to have said, early in
the session, that in Oregon he had discov
ered a bonanza. lie has made it pan out
handsomely. There ought to be no fur-
ther trouble with tile Democracy in that
State.
iT is'nt every one that can make a booby
of himself as readily as the Speaker of the
Home of Represeatatives. The decision
in the Louisiana case, by a tribunal select
ed by his friends, so upset him that he
was incapable of the courtesies and de
cencies which characterize gentlemen.
The next Congress: we hope, will select
'some one to preside over it that will main
tain its dignity.
THE Northern Deniocrats at Wash
.
jugton became terribly exercised, on Sat
srday last, when the Electoral Commis
sion declared,notte go behind the returns
in'the Lonisiona ease. They snarled and
gnashed their teeth until a btranger to such
quilduci, would have supposed that the
whole pack vias going into violent rabies.
Ailey *mid not look at water. They took
theirs straight and swore blue lightning.
Is was simply awful, but no one was hurt.
Bowe felt good when•they were done M
ein' while others complained of violent
headache. They cooled down, however,
'in the course of a few hours, and went to
bed in the couch they had prepared for
themselves. It was an uneven bed but
they had themselves to blame for it. They
are now convalescing.
Tn E Pittsburgh Gazette and Commercial
have been merged and now appear ender
the head of The Gazette Commercial. This
is an extremely sensib;e move. There was
no earthly necessity for two such extensive
morning dailies, both Republican in poli
tics, in the smoky city. What a pity it is
that there are not a few more consolida
tions. It would he a thousand times bet
ter f(r both the publishers and their pat
sMS and tile party weuld pill largely
thereby.' lid this county, for instanee, ue
have three or coar starving Republican pa
per. where there is not, really, sufficient
support for one good Republiean paper.
t Is, all are starving and bobbling
along as best they can without being able
to do half jusiee to their subscribers. The
people are to blame ; it really seems as if
they did sot want en...fit:dila papers. We
wish all patties c,,heerriel hi the above
'consolidation abundant success both pecu
niarly and politically.
Tug New York Times of the 620th inst ,
cams nip Ire Deutoerttie furor over the
Loaisiatin e.!ision thus pointelly :
"The first impression which the public
gets from all this furor over the decision
of a tribunal which owes its existence t o
Democratic votes is that it is an evidence
of weakness. When a man gets into an
angry dispute, which, after much violent
discussion, he contrives to refer to an ar
bitrator of his own choosing, and then,
uhen the decision goes against him, flies
into a passion and abuses the arbitrator, he
gets laughed at. Every one sees that he
submitted his case, not because he wanted
a fair declaim', and was ready to abide by
it, but because he expected to win. If he
cries out that he has been cheated e he only
shows that he has been trying to cheat his
opponetst.. Every word he says against
the tribunal be bad himself provided only
makes him ridiculous and contemptible.
And parties are judged in the same way.
If there has been all unfair decision by
the Commission; the rights of one of the
parties have been denied them ; but what
right had either party to build confidently
Jan the vote of the Commi-sion.? Th.,
Democrats did so, or, as they now confess,
they would not have contrived it; bat
they hive only crverreached themselves ;
they haVe fallen into a snare which they
set for the Republicans."
WE SAY NOW THAT WE WILL
NOT DO IT !
There was a time when some men in this
county urged that the Globe and Journal were
engaged in a controversy of which they dis
approved and that they did not feel like patron
izing them. But that time has happily passed
some time sity:e. There is now no reason why
every Republican should not patronize one or
both of these papers. Every man who pro
fesses to be a Republican should take at least
oue of these papers, and gi; e one or both the
job work and advertising that may be in his
hands.
Instead of this we find men who have held
office, or who do hold office, who still want to
hold office, at the hands of the Republican
party i ho give their patronage to non-politi
cal papers and job offices.
Those of us who have to bear the heavy ex •
penses of publishing political notspapers have
just cause to complain. During the campaign
we are expected to do any amount of work for
candidates who have never patronized us, and
then be abused often for not doing enough.
Often even when we secure the election of men
they seem through instinct or ingratitude to
commence a war upon the printers to whom
they owe their election. We ask every honest
man, is this right?
There is hardly au officer now in limiting
don county that is as true to the printers to
whom he owes his election as lie should be.
There are men who owe fat offices to us—to
sonic of them worth fortunes, who do not pat
ronize us as they agreed to. _ _
There are at Ilti; time no less tlmc four
men looking forward to a nomination for Sher
HT in this county who do not take the Globe.
There advertisments and job work go to the
Local News office and elsewhere. We propose,
and we hope the Journal will second the mo
tion, to let these men look for their support
to the place where their patronage goes.
There is and can be, no excuse for such con
duct. We intend to expose, before the pri
mary election all such aspirants. They are a
curse to any party. They wish its honors
and profits, to eat its substance, live on its
patronage, and let the papers which' fight the
battles, acd secure their election, die in star
vation. We say now we do not intend to do
any work for such men.
We eepf the above from this weeks
Glob , . There is no doubt at all that both
the Globe and the JOURNAL hart;
cause for coc►plaiwt, and especially the lat
ter. We have vigorously supported every
regular Republican ticket for six years.
We have never faltered when the hour of
trial has come. And we have e , nfidence
enough in our own efforts to clais, that we
have always been equal to the occasion ;
and yet, with all our fealty to party, sacri
five of time and labor, we have been sup
ported in a luke warm manner by three
fourths of the Republican politicians of
the county. They have never considered
that they were under any obligations to as
sist in keeping up the Republican p:ess
after a campaign. We have witnessed more
indifference and ingratitude on the part of
those who are seeking preferment, at the
hands of she party, than is manifested any
where else in the United States Here a
man will invoke the aid of-the newspapers
to give him a position, and as soon as he
is successful, he turns his back upon the
papers that elevated him, and. that keep
the party together from year to year,
and patronizes those establishments that
will do his walk at mere cost. In short,
in Huutingdon, Republicans do not feel
that they are under any obligations to help
to keep up the organization throughout
the year by supporting the only mediums
that constantly uphold their principles.
There is as much difference in this respect
between Republicans and Democrats as
their is between day and night. Demo
crats throw everything in the way of pat
ronage to their papers because they know
that they cannot succeed without them,
but the only question with Republicans is,
Where can I get toy work done the
cheapest ? Patronage to the amount of
thousands of dollars annually, that could
be done as well and as cheaply at home, is
controlled by Republicans in Huntingdon
county, who send it abroad or give it to
non-partizans to execute. What encour
agement is there fir men to endeavor to
keep up large and creditable newspapers
and to support a party, under such circum
stances? It is unreasonable to ask or ex
pect it. No wonder that newspaper men
get out of humor and refuse to carry the
heavy burdens which are imposed upon
them. If newspapers have to paddle their
own canoes they cannot be expected to be
the pack-horses of the party. We are glad
to notice that our neighbor refuses to in
dulge this sort of thing further. He has
our sympathy and support in the move
ment.
THE Mount Union Times is sorely vexed
because it is precluded from doing any of
the county advertising by the special
Printing Act and therefore, earnestly
urges its repeal. We do not feel like de
fending the act in question at this time,
but we emphatically approve of the spirit
and reason of the thing. If it is necessary
to give public notice, and the various
statutes directing public notices to be
given acknowledge time ne,essity, as does
every individual of common time!, then
the law shoal.] provide r,r the greatest and
meet extensive circulation that can be se
cured ; i, e. all lags] notices required to be
pabirshed it. a certain number of new,-
papers. should, to fully carry out the prin
ciple of giving inforueitiou and to accord
with the spirit of this class of legislation,
be published in the pipers having the most
numerous circulation. The idea of pub-
Jibbing a legal notice in a sheet of three
or four humoired of a circulation, published
and circulated away from the centre of
bueinese, where not one in ten interested
can sec it, is simply preposterous It is a
violation of the spirit and theory of ad
vettisitie. It: is au imposition upon the
tax payer , . It is a fraud upon parties in
interest who have a right to expect that
all legal notices. in which they arc inter
ested, will be published in the most exten
sively circulated ueelituns. And, when
notices tute tot thus published it is a strong
presumpti that the patty has good raa
sous lin. keeping the geueral public from
seeing what he is e.aupelled by law to
publish. The public itioe in such a paper
is a were evasio:m. It is sue et tie ways
of whipping the devil art , uod t he stump so
counton to men who fear the light or day;
Fur these reasons, and many others, we
have always advocated the pablicatiun of
all legal 'natters in at least two of the
most numerously cireuiatA newspapers in
a county, one of them representing each
of the leading political parties, so that
every individual, of whetever political
predilections, could find all legal notices in
his own most widely circulated journal.
A few words more There is no ques•
than bat larger journals cost more, because
they cannot be worked by a mere boy, or
a girl or two, but they give three, four or fire
times the amount of circulation and charge
seldom one third more. In other words
they give four or five times the stnonnt of
service and charge very little mare fir it.
It is very evident, then, tlrit when the
Mount Union Times claims :bat tli.! county
printing could be done fur a thousand dol.
Jars a year less than it is, that parr would
be willing to do it for the difference be•
tween that amount and what it really costs!
It is only necessary to add that the whole
establishment might be purchased for a
considerable less sum than the difference
in (inestion
WE stop the press to announce that it
was on Wednesday last, the 21st inst., in
the present year of our Lord, that our
handsome and esteemed fellow citizen,
George B. Orlady, esq., I:nd Miss Mary
J. Thompson, of Curwensviile, Clearfield
county, merged into one. It is a happy
union and may they ever continua to float
on the sea of Time as gayly and as jovially
as they commence their grand and pictur
esque voyage.
THE following Borough officers were
elected on Tuesday last, viz : K. Allen
Lovell, Burgess for one year; D. P. Gain,
Assistant; It. M. Speer, J G. Boyer and
T. S. Johnston, School Directors; Frank
Hefright, S. B. Taylor, 4. W. pattern
and J. S. Africa, Councilmen; J. 11.
Westbrook, Constable; 11. Dill Strickler,
Auditor.
UP to the time we go to press the two
flous.7:s or Congress have counted down to
Orel4:Al. The election will be sAtled be
f..re the ckst, of the week. No one doubts
that nave,. will be declared elected. The
Deurwr4F. propose to aefinie,ce without
further grtmblinv.
THE seven Denr...trais .711 th i:'oLo
mis,io:, did not. hesitate 1,, I,:rjaie them
SOIVeS when they thogght, th•tr,
they could seeure a Democratic President
in the perz ,- .)n of "k`flippery
llox. HENRY W. WILLIAMS, of the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, died at
his residence in Pittsburgh, on Monday
afternoon last.
Another Political Assassin
The Democrats have been very anxious to
get rid of Gov. Packard, of Louisiana, and
time and again he has been _threatened with
assassination. On Thursday an attempt was
made to carry these threats into execution.
The following telegram was sent Thursday
night:
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 15.—The extra Times
has the following: At half-past 11 o'clock
this morning the vicinity - of the Govetnor's
room in the St. Louis street State House rang
with the sharp reports of two pistol shots fired
almost simultaneously, and in an instant there
was an intense excitement abroad and a rapid
hurrying of a crowd toward the Gubernatorial
apartment. Here it transpired that Mr. Pack
ard, while seated in his chair surrounded by
a half dozen callers, had been suddenly ap
proached by one of the parties, who, drawing
a pistol and leveling it at Packard's heart, at
almost point blank range, pulled the trigger.
At that very instant Mr. Packard struck the
weapon down, and simultaneously with that
movement the weapon exploded and the shot
struck Mr. Packard in the knee. At that in
stant Mr. Packard closed with the man and
threw him to the floor. Diligent inquiry fail
ed to divulge the name of the man, anything
about him, or anything about the cause of the
attack. Report has it that he was a corres •
pondent for a Northern paper, but now all in
formation is vague.
ANOTHER ACCOUNT-FOUR IN THE PLOT,
New ORLEANS, Feb. 15.—Packard's wound
is only a flesh wound, and is very slight. The
following is a statement of an eye-witness of
the occurrence : "Two men, one of them the
wounded man, who gave his name as Joseph
Huttle but whose real name from papers found
in his possession is ascertained to be W. W.
Weldon, and a slim,one-armed man, who gave
no name, called at the door of the State Cap
itol and asked to see Mr. Packard. There was
some demur about admitting them, when one
proclaimed himself to be an ex-Federal officer
and the other a discharged soldier. They were
brought to the head of the stairs, where Wel
don represented that he was a correspondent
of the Philadelphia Press, and desired to see
Governor Packard. The name of Joseph Hut
tle was sent in, but the one-armed man de
clined to enter. Weldon reached the execu
tive office, where he found Packard seated at
his desk talking to Judge Boreman, of Caddo,
who occupied a chair on his right. Weldon
sat down in a vacant chair immediate
ly on Packard's left, and after an instant,
somewhat sharply, asked, "When can l see
you ?" Mr. Packard turned and found a pistol
aimed at his He immediately struck it
down, and the weapon was discharged, the
ball striking him in the right knee-cap and in
flicting a slight wound. Mr. Packard imme
diately dealt the man a blow with his fist,
striking him between the eyes and knocking
him down. Several parties in the room drew
their pistols and fired, wounding the would-be
assassin seriously, but not fatally. Of course
a scene of intense excitement immediately fol
lowed. The one-armed man was arrested and
conveyed to the office of the Superintendent
of Police, and Weldon was kept a close pris
oner in the Executive office. Mr. Packard was
conveyed to his private apartment on the sec
ond floor of the building, where his wound
was examined by Dr. A. W. Smythe. It is
not of a serious character, but might prove so
if not carefully tended, and will lame him for
several days. The man who shot Packard says
his name is William Henry Weldon and that
his home is in Philadelphia. lle says farther
that be has a mother and sister living there.
Details of the Oregon Infamy.
DEMOCRATS GREATLY DISTURBED BY RE
CENT EXPOSCRES-TILE EVIDENCES OF
OCILT.
A clebpatch fromWasiiingtoo : give 3 this
The deciphered Oregon dispatches, as pro•
duced last evening by the Senate Committee,
have created a great deal of disturbance among
Democrats who bad hung a slight hope upon
the action of the Commission in the Oregon
we. They have also caused much distress
to Senator Kelly. lle had an earnest con
ference with Senator Kernan and David Dud
ley Field, and the two last named also talked
the matter over together. Kelly, in his speech
which wore a virtuous appearance, bas
made it impossible for him to explain
further, lie must deny his statement in the
Senate by admitting the truth of the despatches.
There was a promise of a display of Demo
cratic virtue, which failed, if it was ever se
riously intended. It was threatened that a
resolution for Kelly's expulsion would be
offered by &Democrat, which would have been
a useless exhibition, because it would have
been done for political effect at this time.—
Kelly cannot be made Tilden's scapegoat.—
Ilia offense, however, is very grave. In one
despatch be fully endorses the purchase of a
Republican Elector, and the use of money by
himself is made certain by two despatches.—
He telegraphs Pelton that he has borrowed
money on his individual responsibility, and
trusts it will be replaced; and the same day
receives answer to go ahead and he will be
reimbursed. These two despatches are not
signed, lint they are so connected by substance
and by date that the addresses make the
authorship absolutely certain. The baud
writing is also said to fasten the evidence.—
The cafe on Tilden himself is worse than ou
Kelly. There is the despatch from Grover di
rect to Tilden, sent, no doubt, as an authen
tication of the information uuautboritatively
conveyed by Patrick and others. Then Pat
ton, Tilden's Private Secretary, conducts the
transaction, taking the money desired fur the
purchase of a Republican Elector from Gov
ernor Tilden's bank, the Third National.—
There is only one other question to be settled :
Was the money paid from Mr. Tilden's private
account? As the case stands to-day every
body believes it was. The belief can be re
moved only by clear and direct proof as to
where the money really came from, and any
attempt to prevent an investigation of this
branch of the subject will be received se
equivalent to a confession of guilt. Other
despatches are being deciphered by the key,
and will probably be made public to-morrow.
Cashier Jordan, of the bank, is expected be
fore the Committee to-morrow. A curious
connection of questions and answers is shown
between a despatch from Pelton to Patrick
desiring the fee to be made contingent and
payable in March, and a despatch from Patrick
to Pelton declaring that this cannot be done,
which same despatch repol•ts minutely the
disposition to he made of the money.
Senator Kelly says he has intention to
make any public explanation of his dispatches.
He says haiwas not acquainted with the cipher;
that despatches in cipher were read to him,
and, believing they contained only the words
read, he signed them. He says lie signed no
despatch knowingly which contained the
words given in the interpretation of those
printed to day. This will strike the average
mind as a very weak explanation, but admit
ting that Senator Kelly was deceived by those
who were plotting to steal the Electoral vote
of Oregon, it cannot be denied that such de
spatches were forwarded to and from Oregon.
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, chtouic or nervous debility,
chronic diarrhoea, 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 bead, 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 sonic other
preparation of iron he may say as good but
ask for Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron. Take
no other. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron is not
sold in bulk—only in $1 bottles. E. F. Kun
kel, Proprietor, No. 259 North Ninth Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sold by all druggists and dealers every
where.
TAPE WORM REMOVeID 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, l'l►iladelpina, Pa. Send for cir
tiler. Fur removing Seat, Piu or Stomach
Worms, call on your druggist and ask fur a
bottle of Kunkel's Worm Syrup, price $l. It
lever tails. Common sense teaches if Tape
',Vona be removed, all other worms can be
readily destroyed. feb2-1:a
The Gospel of Merit
Where there Is so much rivalry as in the
manufacture •of family medicines, lie who
would succeed must give positive and convin
cing proof of merit. This is an age of inqui
ry. People take nothing for granted. They
must know the "whys" and "wherefores" be
fore acknowledging the superiority of one ar
tide over another. Among the few prepara
tions that have stood the test, those manufac
tured by R. V. Pierce, M. D., of the World's
Dispensary, Buffalo, N. V., have for many
years been foremost. The truth of any state
:vent made concerning them can be easily as
certained, for Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery are
now prescribed by many physicians in curing
obstinate cases of Catarrh and incipient Con
stimption. The discovery has no equal in cur
ing Coughs, Colds, Bronchial and Nervous af
fections. It allays all irritation of the mucous
membrane,-aids digestion, and when used with
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets readi
ly overcomes torbid liver and Constipation,
while the Favorite Prescription has no rival
in the field of prepared medicine in curing dis
eases peculiar to females. If you *wish to
"know thyself" procure a copy of "The Peo
ple's Common Sense Medical Adviser," an il
lustrated book of nearly 1000 pages, adapted
to the wants of everybody. Price $1.50, post-,
age prepaid. Address the author, R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y.
__........- 4 .—.
Our New York Letter.
New YORK, Feb. 21, 1877.
O'Mahonefs Funeral—Raid Upon Canada—Speculating
in Benevolence—Political—Lent—Labor Wall Street Re
iigion—Basinese.
THE FUNERAL OF O'MAUONEY
Men go out of sight very soon. Twelve years
ago, Col. John O'Maiioney, filled the newspapers,
which is the modern trump of fame, and his name
was on the lips of men. He hid been a patriot in
Ireland, had bearded the British Lion in his den,
had emigrated to this country, and organized the
Fenian movement, and was its acknowledged head.
He had gorgeous quarters, a "staff," and all the
ribs of a great warlike enterprise. He had every
thing, in fact, necessary to conquer the independ
ence of Ireland, except men and arms, and some
other trifles. But they had a good time of it.
While the servant girls and laborers contributed,
and wh n the regular Irish quarrel came, O'Mah
oney subsided. As he was an honest man who
actually believed in the possibility of military
operations against England, he went out pour and
lre has lived in poverty and obscurity ever since.
Ilia death last week was the first that had been
heard of him for some time. The Irish gave the
dead "hero," an immense funeral. All the socie
ties turned out in regalia, and every Irishman in
the city got out his plug hat from the box where
it had rested since last St. Patrick's day, end the
city was alive with them. His body is to be taken
to Ireland for interment. And speaking of the
Irish, would anybody suppose that human creduli
ty could go so far as to contribute money fur another
RAID UPON CANAD I
0' Donovan Rosso.. who was an Irish "Hero,"
is also receiving contributions of any sum . that
servant girls and simple-minded laborer: , choose to
give, to form a "Skirmishing Fund•" lie propos
es to organize a regiment of skirmishers to annoy
the rear of thu British Lion in Canada, while
other "heroes" attack him in front on the obi sod.
All this to occur as soon as Europe gets into a
general war, which will take the attention of Eng
land. The average Irishman is a queer institu
tion. The race in America may be properly divi
ded up int, dupes and dupers. The moment a
speck of war appears upon any horizon, the "lead
ers' immediately issue a proclamation, announc
ing that "Ireland's opportunity" is at last here,
sad that all that is needed to secure Irish inde
pendence is—money. Any sum will be received,
and from any source. The servant girls and la
borers take a liberal share from their scant earn
ings, and give it to the beats, who collect all that
is possible, and then let the thing die. One would
suppose that after a dozen or two such experiences
the people would know better, but they don't.
The innocents are always ready to be sheared, and
there are always "leaders" to shear them. The
contributions to O'Rossa's skirmishing fund, is as
absurd as it fills columns in the Irish newspapers.
TROUBLE IN THE BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES.
It is to bud that one can't give a dollar with any
mats nty that it will reach the people intended to
be benefitted. The benevolent societies of the
city are undergoing examination, and a vast
amount of rottenness has been developed. One
institution for sheltering distressed women was
found to he a purely private speculation of two
enterprising young men, and had no shelter or
anything else, avid who were collecting a great
deal of money from the charitable. They had the
sublime impudence to appeal to the authorities
for a share of the State appropriation, and were
caught. Other institutions were rim.' to be or
ganizations for the support of a parcel of desul
beats. The offilers, and there are an immense
number of them, were all under heavy pay. The
collectors were paid a heavy percentage upon their
collection" ; heavy rents were paid upon which
"dlvviei" were doubtless allowed, an t altogether,
it was as route 33 Tammany, end I can't say
more than that. Don't suppose all the societies
are of this class—there are dinierving ones, bet a
large percentage of them are proper subjects for
close watehiug.
I'Cil.l7ll:.t L.
The D.onocraey are in the Ad Up., They g i ve
up ail hope of sliding Tilde,' iu by the ledectoral
ao I are ti ICI arrati{iog f.r their Dew
Wally:lig!, Their only hope now is hi an appeal
to the e,orts, which Tilden has deterusined to
make, apparently forgetting that five wt.ot,e s of
the court will have declared their ideat of the law
iu ti e case while they are on the C•nninission.
This light ill (or a parpoge. Hveri if Tilden is de
feated tlizy have hopes that President Hayes can
be hull-dozed into being very liberal in tlse giving
of places, for the sake of conciliating them, and
healing their bruises. The action of the Com
mission int,ts with approval from the businesr,
men of the city, irrespective of party stniiations,
and the attempt of the hot beads to go ba.s of its
decisions and prolong the contest, finds no seeking.
The point now is to have the agony over, and the
question settled, and there will be acquiesuence in
it, no tnatt,r wh:ch way it g 0.7.3.
Lr.rirr,
Lent is on us, and fashionable New York mor
tifies the flesh for forty days. Doriug that time
the fashionable woman is expected to get down
into the valley and shadow of humility, and this
she does by eating no meat, nod abs•aining from
worldliness altogether . This is accomplished by
dropping all high More in dress, by resolutely re
fusing to dance, and letting parties severely alone.
They humiliate themselves in dark velvets at Sly
a yard, and black lace to mateh, and in that hum
ble garb—dark-colored, wind you—dance in the
afternoons. lu eating they distinguish t hemselves.
The good natured bishop generally gives all who
can tell a white lie a dispensation to est meat, but
those too conscientious to ask it manage to drag
out a hungry and mortifying existence on soups,
fish, eggs, and a thousand other preparations.
Potted and spiced meats not coming inside the
restriction, they manage very well. Nursing
mothers are allowed meat, to give them strength,
and so every mother whose child is nourished by a
wet nurse escapes the prohibition, and indulges in
steaks and roasts as usual. Lent is a good thing
for the fashionable woman. Afters season's hard
dancing and theatre-going it is well to have forty
days of quiet, in which to meditate on her sins,
and decide what she shall get for for her Spring
clothes, and see that they are properly made up.
Then there are the art galleries to go to, and the
shops, with quiet card parties in the evening. The
PerVi ,e 8 in the sweH thurehes TORk6 A very good
o ! e•i- I, P.t.pe&!OlV r.a , nly
einployttl in the ti re. Farhionahh•
religion is a very eat i,' - actory The yek, is
wade very easy.
LABOR,
There are fifty thousand men in the City of New
York out of work, with every prospect of remain
ing su till Spring opens. There was but little
building last summer, and there has been none do
ing this winter, and in all the mechanical pursuits
stagnation has been the rule. Everybody wears
their bouts Pali clothes a month or two longer than
th -y riii, anal nobody buys anything in the way
of furniture or furnishing wh r can possibly avoid
it and consequently a heavy per cent. of those for
merly employed in these pursuits are sitting still.
and many of them starving. Ma can get men by
the hundred fur 80 cents a day, and strong men
are willing to take office boys' placesat $1 a week.
The wages that are paid are fearfully small. A
car-driver, exposed to rain and fro-t, standing on
his feet from live in the morning till ten or eleven
at night, gets $l.BO a day. "It's hard times.' -
said one to me ; "but what are you going to do?
If I should quit, there would hea thousand apply
in' for the piste • in an hour, I'm glad to get even
this." .snd women ! why an advertisement for a
woman to do anything, at any price, will bring a
thousand answers by noon of the day it appears.
The charities are overburdened, end private indi
viduals are beset. The professional mendicant,
with a thousand different dodges, takes away a
large part of what the really honest poor ought to
have, and so hair-red, and r•ot clothed at ail, they
exist somehow waiting till the spring opens, and
s•,:ne kind of business commences.
PRAYER IN WALL STIIELT
'Ube most curious plum of the religious lading
now prevailing, is the series or prayer-meettiqs
daily for the Wall street gatnhle.s. The hulls
and bears have been finally touched, and the Owe
of meeting is daily thronged with them. An l
they show a great deal of feeling. lAA us hops
that it will stop some of the gambling that his
made that street a by-word and a reproach. If
they should ail get decently converted it
make a wilderness of it. The spirit is among thew,
though, and they apppear to be ailected as other
sinners are when under influenue. If anything is
accomplished atnoug these rxe..n it will be a tri
umph of Christianity that aii: ouusctigb the talk
of all the infidels in the world.
lIVSINF.SA
Beg'ns to shotv u slight improvement. Tip.•re are
a great many merchants in the city frcui th,
`oath and West, and they cre haying none.iilwr
ally than for t=ooto The rc:iituFti..ti
ne,4 by the 1113.i1;1'.. ~ f Now 1i9.4 1 .in - 1
witlletbillC to mak.. a : ~o r the
indications are r w,:: ...•
f‘.r likse timv; in
Legislative Correspondence
11ARicvq1: 17, 1:!7;
• .
The iegisator, has afljr,uriteil over froui l• r : itv
until Wednesday evening and the members have
scattered in all directions, come to their homes,
some to Washington, D. C., and some to IVarhitig
ton Pt. But few reinain in Harrisburg. There
was much opposition to this adj.:it-nine:o hut the
great desire of really of the members to beat home
during the election prevailed over other considera
tions. Those wh , .) did not take a special interest
in the election took a trip to the national capitol
to see how the High Joint Commission is getting
along or jeined the legislative excursion t, visit
the Reform School or ".Morg.inza" in Washington
county. This institution is applying fur the neat
little appropriation $82,000 from the State, and
the geese that lay the golden eggs for such insti
tutions have been invited to pay a visit to the
school. The board of managers will make things
as pleasant as possible for the colons, and will he
disappointed if they do riot receive a handsome
souvenir of the visit at no very distant day.
Not less, and probably more, than fib bills have
been introduced up to this time in the Senate and
House: as yet but few have been disposed of, and
it is difficult in view of this to see how the legis
lature can adjourn by the 15th day of March, as
provided for by a resolution passed by the Ileuse,
without letting a large number of bills, and some
of them very important ones, lie' over until the
neat session. It isprobable therefore that th•res
olution wilt be reconsidered and a later day fixed
upon.
There was a rumor on the "Hill" to-day, which
however I could trace to no authentic source, that
if the Commission appointed by Congress to settle
the disputed presidential question should decide
in favor of Hayes, and the House of Representa
tives should refuse to submit to the decision the
legislators would then pass a bill to provide for
putting the Pennsylvania militia on a war footing
so as to be prepared for all emergencies. There
may be nothing in it and I give it to you only for
what it is worth.
The bill providing fur a stay of execution for
two years, a synopsis of which I gave you in my
last letter, was defeated whi.n it came np for final
passage by a vote of 79 in favor to 93 against it.
Its friends were very much disappointed at this
result and seem to be very sore over it. Another
bill providing for a stay of execution in certain
cases has passed second reading. It provides for
a stay of one year in all cases where real or per
sonal property offered at sheriff's sale is not bidden
up to two-thirds of its value—the value being
fixed by appraisers appointed fur the purpose.—
The friends and opponents of this bill seem to he
pretty evenly matched and its fate is doubtful.
The former assert that the times are so out of
joint that some measure of this sort is imperatively
needed to protect the embarrassed debtor and save
his lands and goods from being sold at one-third
of their real value. The latter, in return, assert
that there are poor creditors who need protection
as well as pour debtors ; that it is a mistake to
assume that the creditor is always rich and the
debtor poor. There will Le a warm tight over this
bill when it comes up on lin,l passage. It will
be supported by ail the friends of the defeated
stay Lill liist mentioned and by some who were
opposed to it, but it is not safe to predict that it
will command the 101 votes necessary to pass it.
The bill 1,,r the improvement of the Ohio river
which was defeated on Friday of last week has
been reconsidered and again placed upon the
ealandar of the House. It will come up again on
Wednesday next.
Judging from the nuial.er of I,etitions presented
every day in the Senate and House praying for
the passage of a local option law this question
must he exciting a great deal of attention among
the people. Seine of them arc of huge proportions
and when enrolled reach dear aeroes the Hall of
the House. The energy and persistence of the
temperance people are evidently making an tin
pret-sion on the legislature and the hill is strunger
to-day than when it was first presented.
Quite a flutter took place in the Democratic
camp on Tuesday last when Mr. llitehcock of
Erie introduced a resolution in the House reflect
ing severely upon the National House of Repre
sentatives for ite treatment of the Louisiana Re
turning Board, now in cu3totlyi for contempt of
the House. Seeing that the resolution would pass
the democrats got mad and left the Hall, refusing
to vote.
A bill has been introduced and favorably re
ported from committee repealing the act incorpor
ating the "Ancient Order of Hibernian.." or Mollie
Magnires. Considering the public feeling con
cerning these gentry there is no reasonable doubt
of the passage of the bill. B.
New To-Day.
NOTICE.
I have this day bought of Scott Bilingard
ner, one White Cow, one Brood Sow, ono sh oa t,
one sled, one plow, one single shovel plow, one
barrow, two head of Horses, and left the same in
his care, and all persona are hereby notified not to
meddle with the BMOC, SAMUEL SAYLOR,
Union t,ownsbip, February 19, 1877. [feb23-3i
~ECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES
of Huntingdon county Alms House, from
December s, 1875, to December 5, 1876 inclusive
RECEIPTS.
To amount drawn from county Treaa•
ury on orders . 513,493 13
To JoLit Logan, Steward, for cm!' of
dillerent peroonr 204 $3
EXPENDITURES,
VOR V iRM
By lAbor on farm, including farmer'',
waged V $
4:4 90
By Landis, Culegate and Myers, for
- - --
, _
sm __
ithiog
By lime, plaster and phosphate 1 ott 40
By two road, feed, and 778 lbs. of shoots,
• - - -
CD! , HA 66
By lo,ust pqAtio of Brftfadt, Long,
Hegi' 1 fS'
uumber of persufis for rmudries 24 70
I, rft',YJsJ ~i,
B sondry persons for ff, co lbs. of beef $ 531 145
By sundry persons for 3,153 lbs of pork :N2 f,f
By flour, wheat, potatoes, honey, but
ter a,.1 fish 7O 59
l'Olt MERU] APIDISE
By numerous persons for merchandise 1,654 28
By 1111111CTOUS persons fur clothing 350 1.04
By numerous persona for hardwire l3d 85
FOR OUTDOOR ItXPEISY.M.
By rtlief atfOrtled 44 cases, continuous,
(luring the year 52,5L9 Oft
B; rdiefsffurdel several cases less than
si year 1,633 IS
By reliet htforded numerous cases with-
out r.gard to tiwo 727 SO
By uutnerous phyriciamt fur tue,lical
services 587 16
By coffins and tuiteral expenses 167 75
By Directors fur outdoor eer,ices 549 86
$8,185 37
miseELLANmous AND INCIDVITAL.
By L. M. S;t3wart, erg., for costs in Mc
amnia case . $ 191 88
By percentage on .$13,985 90 paid to
'rreasarer for 1873 419 57
By Doyle, Drake and Myers for coffins. IS 98
By cooking in house B2 68
By lumber of Withington, Baird and
Dougherty 55 48
By insurance on Alms House property 223 13
By medicine for inmates 49 30
By D. P. Harvey for cobbling f3hues ;3 97
New To—Day.
By coat. .
By tinware id M. S. & A. S. Illarrisiin IS9
By Journ.i.l, Muniti,r an 4 iikbe ter
statement
By p eunciries 4 , 7
By Ju,riece for relief order"
By variouA per3ons fir moving, Fr4oper.
'By Pi p•••tor+ for ,erri.,.4 during thP ypar = 3 4 9 AO
By Dm McNito and Stine f,r Ft, ie.§
at holt,
By George W Whittaker for merviee,
as clerk
By John Logan, zitewar I, nosoun
of his account
Aggre,ttltw
STATE.MENT howing mon.y p:ii•l Treamary
by Dire,torP and Stewari an.l ul.. tramp• re
litvei by the Stewar , l:
Money of oeereters of I:e.d two., Juniist.l
eounty, paid into Trea,ury :.y
.314. bey nyttev. Alexan ter paid two Tr.,.
'try by John l j pg , tn
P..elitrflurnished Irsti :ramp: :with 3 the• 4 1'0;
Clothing furnieberi trans!,
THE I)lRl7‘7ToftS ?1 , 0 Nuntin:pl.4l
e•iiinty. in ar!oriun: viioi J.
~.trorrey f.,r he Direetor
To ea.!! pr. J. W. Matt.:ru, req.. in Jane
ease
To pr. Mrs. Dorea,
Evon4 1,.n I
Some. pr. N. 11. tori)in
Ca,h 1.03 for ru,orling the Mors Saulpir
cke.l
Writit.4 111 v.]
in th.,
,to
Cit,h p lid s, R A
Ca is F:.l nie prinf:nz
F• ••• !•aria_
ei I.n
i. r
~ei~ll
Pir...,
toroy.%
jad;ler ut w
iutereAt 9 muntriA an•l II .i.iyA It!
A j.i.igtn.,at flat,. of t..t. •4.1;
tour lIIf 'ls t !Taff rea,
jn,lgnoent not. of t:. N i;ow,r,x
$17.50
A promissory woe Or 1). Lct.i.r. Jr.,
nr..l other trutitre4 or t!1 F.,•••0r,•;,.
31 , ,tint Union. 1* .r $5. 1 1 ita-rr , t
montll.l ani II day!
A s ...ied note of A IV. CA•I 1. , r
:12 1, 0, intert-gt sic tn,n.:ta
It. 4:11 . :TI 1.
To arununt raid the Treaoirer • f ten
Alms Muse iq County 'f rea•urer.... 1.1.;
By amount of orders p.t:•l
by the Treasurer of the
Alms lluule for the year
1576, as per the atone
detailel report
By amount of orders paid
by the Treasurer of the
Alms House for 1875 and
previons years includ
ing orders for
We, the undersigned Auditors, of the coun'y
Huntingdon, do hereby certify that we hare exam
ined the orders, vouchers, seeeunts, etc., of the I).
rectors of the Poor of said county, and find the
same to be correct, as above stated. ,' lmes* our
hands, nt Huntingdon, this I Ith day of January,
A. D., 1577. W. H. REX,
JAMES' HP , SIrrAI.St)7I,
J. J. WHITE.
febS3l Au.litors.
New Advertisements.
N OTICE TO SCEIOOI, TEACHERS
Ftnirteen Teachers wanted to t. ac h t h e
Huntingdon borough schools. An examination of
Teachers will take place by the County Superin
tendent, at the old school house, in said borough,
on SATURDAY, March 10th, when all tea.•hers
are invited to attend. The election of trackers
will tie made the following week.
- T. S. JOHNSTON.
A. ELLIOTT, Prest. Hunt. School Boar L
'.Cretary. (frb- Id
A SSIGNEE'S NOTICE OF AP
`l. _ POINTMF.NT.
[ln Bankruptcy!
In the District Court of the Unit• I States for
the Western District of Pennsyl•isnia.
To ,cAooe it Nifty Celle w : The undersigned here
by given notice of his appointment as simirnre of
John S. Miller, of Huntingdon, in the eounty of
Huntingdon, State of Pennsylvania, within said
District, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt upon
his own petition.
Dated at Huntingdon. the .3 I day of January,
A. D., 1977. JOSEPH G. ISENBER9.
febl6-3t] Astigeop.
ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE.
Karate of JOSEPH DEA VER, deed.]
Letters of Administration, with the will annex
ed, having been grabled to tbeundlrsigned.resid
ing near Maddensville P. 0., on the estate of Jos
eph Deaver. late of Springfield tPwnship, dee'd.
all per:wile knowing themselves indehte , l will make
immediate payment. and those having claim's will
present them duly authenticated fjr •ettlement.
feb-14j
PUBLIC SALE
op
Valuable Real Estate.
[Eente ,J ANDREW SPA NOII dev..l.]
By virtue of an order of the Orphane' court of
liunting.lon county, had in purulence of proceed
ings in Partition, the undersigned will expose to
sale, at public outcry, on the premised,
Oil SATURDAY, Fehrkary 24, 1877,
at 10 o'clock, A. M.. shout 2i miles east of Shir
leysburg, in Germany Valley, the following descri
bed Real Estate, to wit:
No. 1. All that certain traet of land, known au
the "Mansion Farm," situate in the township of
Shirley. bounded by lands of A. M. Lata, Samos
heirs, M. 11. hyper, and others, containing 341
Acres, more or less, about 150 acres of this farm
are cleared and in good state of cultivation : about
7!, acres of the land are nearly level, the tealaara
Timber Land. There are on tue premises a large
Stone House, Stone Bank Barn. and all accessary
outbuildings. There are a large nnsilww of Fruit
Trees on this farm, such as Apple. Pear, Peach,
and Cherry. This farm has running water inmost
of the fields.
No. 2. Known at "Middle F.:►rm." ♦bout one
rinorter of a mile frit° Mansion Farm, bounded.,
ollows: On the north by lands of M. H. Kyper,
on the east by tondo of A. M. Lars, south by land.,
of said estate or l'pper Yarns, west by lands of
.loine's heirs, containing l 9 Acres, more or less.
the greats part of tins land is Limestone lead,
about 90 acres cleared and in tolerable state of
cultivation. the balance well timbered with ehes-
nut (nth and other timber. The improvements are
Log House, Log Barn, Corn-crib sad Wagon-shed,
a number of fruit trees on the premises and good
running water in moot of the Mikis,.
$13,697 V 6
No 31 . Known as the "Upper Fenn." adjoining
Middle Farm, hounded by Middle Farm no the
nortb, on the 'not by Blaet Log Mountain, south
by lands of Dar id Rover, and on the west by land+
of David Mstiarvey's heir*, eontaining 102 Amor.
more or !PH, about 100 acres of which are 'desired
and in a tolerable state of b e t an ,..
timber land, some good beds timber, wbite nab
and chestnut, with a Log Illoti+e, Log Bans 65i44
fret, Wagon-shed, Corn-erii+ and other neeiramary
outbuilding+. A good spring of mooing water
nee r th e d e o., with running water in weeny every
field : a nomher of fruit tree s on the premise+.
i 1,0113 7L
Thep,. (Arras wre convenient In ithorels
ev, arol the market,.
TERMS :—One-third ar the porehesie money to
be paid on eonsrrostion of sale; one-third in one
year. with intereot, to he ;wined by the Lowliest , '
mortgage the porehaeer ; the renanininx one
third at the death of the widow, the interrot to be
paid annually to the widow, to be mewed. he.
l'oAeespion given on the first day of April
next.
8105 OM
Si. H. KYPER.
feb2-te)
NOTICE.
Having purebaieci tho perennial property
of 'Samuel Hirst, and loft His mine in big pcimmetta
ion, I hereby notify all riervitio to meddle with
it in any la-inner.
feb9-3t) ii. It. CRI SiPAF'tiFF.
$2,142 06
FOR I:ENT.
The "EXCHANOE 110 TEL," now oecopied
by Coi. John S. Miller. loe•tted one meant frogs
Railroad Depot, in the hurough of Huntingdon.
ALSO, The Summer Refort known as "HUN
TINODON WARM SPRINOS," ire miles •orth
of Hunting.lon. Furniture fur sal*.
For terms, apply to
A. PORTER WILSON.
jan26-tfJ If untingdon,
BLACKSMITHING.
JOHN H. STI'RTSMAN.
Having again resumed the business of Black
smithing, at the old stand, on Seventh street. is
prepared to do all kinds of work at abort neties
and on reasonable terms. /for. .Thosiso a Spa
cialty. ja0.19-im.
?i :.
RlCllin 41
$ 12s 4;,,
115 21
2r. 7rt
sALAII:IF.,
11500
73 60
715 44
=i. -,:;
ir 097 'irt
47 50
1 1 192 50
SIM:0 4 01i. P•fi., 34
.s.t
i F'
211 on
o
l:i i.rx (
23 I"
I !_'
42 2R
i , 7lq 2.1
;1.1,r):: i
ELIZABETH HEAVER,
A.,ministratrix.
Dry-Goods, Notions. ritroisisiag Om& Ogoossikao
W. S. riI.A."Y-1-sCR,
01,1) STAND.
No. Gli Pemi Strrt•t. liuntinz,don. Prnn'a..
rt. • Larztb 13• - •11r hi' 3 :1 ,
4, 15 n, at rh..
NEW DRESS GOODS.
in al'. r4t. NPVIr Nark I :sonnst.r.. 311 Wowq..l - 3rvi
Black anti 4 'ol.)refi Alparao. ail prireo. Keck
tht• he4t anti chimps-4i in town.
No.w Fhtnn..l4. Gray. Flannel... Near P ariii r3nnri 4 . !4ripe4 1r . 21P1.•
n N?w ()per.) Flatin..l4. Plain any' 371.1 V , t!..
( . ;st i f.. n u-hite an.! Tin..
f•fgitcols wi. t., ..ty T.) Th.. tolIr • i•• • .Iro 3:1 ?hil• 7• - Sr •
, flools anti are 3r) 4 tan-,
NEW CALICOES & M
Tho- , ho inton , i+ •wiiinfr, 31 .4.1 .;•wlei I' 4
;•••01 1.!••;1•• 1 +•` T1T11.i , 2 , 1.,*1 t4;:te at 4
;:n •!ia:rt - it : 0 ••••n•- ....r ,r.i.
Table I,in , •ii—Blearilvil. and Trirkev
'VET ..11k. al' 3FI. -2E° Xit. 0 0
Nrix,..l, I \fix-j. rle •.:..
r , r ; :i! ;PA '7;1.. _: 4 •,"r , ••• - TTY '"'
Men and Boy's Wear of all Kinds.
".•
New Notions !
I:,mon. 4,f ry Frinz, .zr I Trinirti:n••4
and 3n.; 11114: - ..:1
4 ;:..% * 4 , Laolie4 . and Und..ra-par.
_KID (ir'I,C)A - T=.-;
,
ti..- NApkin-. T..w..i4.
4. New [Wt. , . Sew 1 . ... 1 .1Jr4 .ind I :tr-.
Linon
GENTS' FURNISBING GOODS. EATS An , Z.
white and (..)1,41.41 rnikrts.•:ir. I • , f ro is t
P.,,••••• • I ~ 1 1- 1 1-4. 0•11,4
1_111'0.11TE!) - /,'ENSIJ".-1111 ••twn•-i
GROCERIES.
W. S. TAYLOR.
1111ARCEEP OLD STAND,
615 PENN STREET.
1-11INTTINCIIDON,
January 26, Iri77-tf.
Legal Advertisement.
OUTST ANDi Ni ; 11.% N D 1
dm County. •t ta• ei,ct;,www• with A•wii
tors„ for lb* year 1474.
TtillN, l llllll
se
sod 71 f"LLRrT•. 1!
1111ta , l'ORS • a. w. of 4 . 2 7
2 . ? '
1114irl.y
RT. city 1 4 171) S. a: Wi11.,.... rnor 03 :0
Juninta Petwr 'Ark" .
Line4.l 9
Mt. P 1R Dom . 4 "...4
I T. 147 t 9 4 . 3 r
..lits. Conti .111 .31 11 ."
I ~,R1 moot - 7 :o
Brody ...... ;1973 Sby . ..... kvi 74 P 4 :4
94994999. 173 .4
Cr...._"1, Tay199......_ • IM" II
Carbon ... . Jew, Casty_.... 117 V
13.4447... 2 19
J 1.. 11414 , 4149 121 411 41
Cloy ......._ ..... . 1974 r. R Illeticske 13 •••
I rlk.fs A *drew W OD 74 V 2 va
Walter .
11.ndorime J•Pe• 11.44ry 94 II 3
11..prwo II .3. non W IMt . fe.2
Misfit .atla v
Jerks..
Mt Cola, J
Tlo.amine tis 41
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