VOL. 42. flie Huntingdon Journal. °glee in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street THE HUNTINLIDON JOURNAL is published every Friday by J. A. NASH, at $2,00 per annum IN ADVANCE, or $2.50 if pot paid for in six months from date of sub scription, and *I3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, unless at the option of the pub lisher, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-HALT CENTS per line for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-HALF CENTS for the second and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent insertions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertisements will be inserted at the following rates: 13m 16m 1 9m I 1 yr 13m 1 1 6m 1 j 9m 1 lyr 1 n Is 3 501 4 501 5 501 8 001 1 / 4 ,c0l 9 00118 00'427 $36 2" 1 50:) 1 8 O.) 10 00112 001I4'col 18 00136 00' 50 65 3"I 7 00110 00,14 00118 001%col 34 00150 00 65 60 4 " 8 00114 00120 00 180011 col 36 0060 00 80 100 All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party annon.cements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will be charged TEN CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to th.) party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission outside of these figures. All advertising accounts are due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. _ _ _ JOB PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch. liand.bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed et the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing line will be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards• fl CALDWELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street. 1/. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods dz Wil liamson. [apl2,'7l DR. A.B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional senior* to thecoumunity. Office, No bM Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. Dan4,ll DR 114181EILL has permanently located in Alexandria to practice his profession. [jan.4 '7B-ly. IJC. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister's . building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. K J Greene, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2B, '76. GBO. B. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [n0v17,'75 /1 L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. Brown's new building, U. No. 520, Penn Street, lluntingdon, Pa. [apl2.'7l H. C. MADDEN, Street, Bun' tey-at-Law. Office, No. —, Penn n, Pa. [apl9,'7l T SYLVAN - US BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, el • Pa. Office, Penn Street, three doors west of 3rd Street. [jan4,'7l [ W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the Government for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of fice on Perm' Street, Dan4,'7l ILAS. GEIER-NEER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, . Hntittrigtlon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo cite Court House. [febs,'7l Q E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., 1.3. office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. [augs,"74-6mos WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney -at-Law, Hunting don, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Penn Street. [apl9,'7l Miscellaneous. NOTICE i TO CONSUMERS. --40 F E -.. ... o, c, t., f,: TOBACCO E v l y ,4 g `di • The great celebrity of our TIN TAG TOBAC 11C0 has caused many imitations thereof to be ,placed on the market, we therefore caution all g Chewers against purchasing such imitations. • All dealers buying or selling other plug tobao - co bearing a hard or metallic label, render them ,. selves liable to the penalty of the Law, and all persons violating our trade marks are punialla 11' ble by fine and imprisonment. SEE ACT OF CONGRESS, AUG. 14, 187 G. -' The genuine LORILLARD TIN TAG TO .= °BACCO can be distinguished by a TIN TAG on TO- E, teeach lump with the word LORILLARD stamped -E thereon. ae 0 Over 7,OSS tons tobacco sold in 1877, and nearly =3.000 persons employed in factories. Taxes paid Government in 1877 about $3,500,- E.OOO, and during the past 12 years, over $20,000,- POO. E 7:„ — These goods sold by all jobbers at mannfac turers rates. [mehB-3m AVERILL BARLOW, 45 South Second Street, (BELOW MARKET,) PHILADELPHIA, PA. Has a great variety of themew styles Queen Anne and Eastlake FURNITURE, IN ASH OR WALNUT, together with a large Stock of all the Latest Designs of Chamber, Parlor, Library, Dining Room, Church, Office and COTTAGE FURNITURE. Also, WOVEN WIRE BEDS, springs of various patterns. BEDDING, MAT TRESSES, of every quality. Folding and Orien tal Chairs, Piano Stools, &c., at VERY LOW PRICES. [ jan2s '7B-Iy FOR SALE. CHOICE FARMING LANDS MINNESOTA B, AND DAKOTA, THE Winona & St. Peter Railroad Co. The WINONA & ST. PETER R. R. Co., is now offering for sale, at VglIT LOW prices, its land grant lands along the lice of its Railroad in Southern Minnesota and Eastern Dakota, and will receive in payment therefor, at par, any of the Mortgage Bonds of said Company. These lands lie in the great wheat belt of the Northwest, in a climate unsurpassed for healthfulness, and in a coun try which is being rapidly settled by a thriving and indus trious people, composed to a large extent of farmers, from the Eastern and the older portions of the Northwestern States. H. M BURCHARD, Land Agent, for 1.1110 of Lands of said Company, at MARSHALL, LYON COUNTY, MINNE SOYA. GEO. P. GOODWIN, Land Commissioner. General Office of Chicago North-western Railway Co., Chicago, ill. To all persons requesting information, by mail or oth erwise, Circulars and Maps will he soot free of coat by said Land Commissioner or said Land Agent. [rrichl-bm Manhood : How Lost, How Restored. Just published, a new edition of Dr. *- Culverwell's Celebrated Essay on the radi . rum cat cure (without medicine) of SPERNATOB.- EWES or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Seminal Losses, ImPoTitsicy, Mental and Physical Inca pacity, Impediments to Marriage, etc. ; also, CoNSWIPTION, EPILEPSY and FITS, induced by self-indulgence, or sexual extravagance, ..tir Price, in sealed envelope, only six cents. The celebrated author, in his Admirable Essay, clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming consequences of self-abuse may be radically cured without the dangerous use of internal medicine or the application of the knife; pointing oat a mode of cure at once simple, certain, and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what his condi tion may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. 4f? This Lecture Rhould be in the hands of every youth and every man in the land. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, poet paid, on receipt of ail, cents or tw•o postage stamps. Address the publisher!! THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO., 41 Ann St., N. Y; Post Office Box, 4586, April 12-1878-Iy. CHEVINGTON COAL AT THE Old "Langdon Yard," in quantities to suit purchasers by the ton or car load. Kindling wood cut to order, Pine Oak or Hickory. Orders left at Judge Miller's store, at my residence, 609 Mifflin st.. or lilies Raymoods may 3,'78-Iy.] J. H. DAVIDSON. NOW IS THE TIME TO SECURE TERRITO RY FOR DR, EGLE'S GREAT WORK, THE NEW ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF P MINT 1•7" S V.A. INT I _A— The grandest selling book for the Pennsylvania field. Lib eral terms to Agents. Send 62.00 at once for complete outfit, or 10 cents for our 64 page sample, and name terri tory wanted. Address D. Cf. Goodrich, PUVAbet, HARM/BURG, PA. Don't fait to say *Neat paper you saw Vas in. [mB-3m. lle untingdon ournat Mercantile Appraiser's List. APPRAISER'S RETURN OF MER CANTILE AND OTHER LICENSE TAX for Huntingdon County. I Samuel 0. Isett, duly appointed appraiser of Mercantile and other Li cense Tax in and for Huntingdon county, do here by certify that the following is a correct list for the year 187 S, of every person or firm, who is act ually subject to pay a License Tax, under exist ing laws of this Commonwealth, in Huntingdon county, with the names of all persons exonerated on appeal stricken off. -•- • --- Alexandria Borough Hatfield & Co.. ...... Philips Wm., & Son Walker E. P Birmingham Borough Thompson John.. Barret Township, Crownover 11 Crownover & Bro Crownover A Brady Township Burnham A. P. louse B. Broad Top City. Houck Amon.. Carbon lownship. Fisher & Miller l3 10 00 Reckert & (Jo l3 10 00 Reed J. J l3 10 00 Toole Felix l4 700 Lewis Royer 6 50 00 Cussville Borough Green J. B. F l4 700 14 7 00 Beaton J. 0 Cromwell Tbirms ip Dewees & Co Coalmont Borough. ...... 14 7 00 Flanigan L. W Dudley Borough. _ _ _ Brown Win Franklin Awnship. Bathurst H. A. Ewing A. G l3 10 00 Keitly Huntingdm Borough. _ _ Africa D. 8 l4 Brown, James A Buchanan & Sou l4 Beyer A. Black T. W l4 Black T. W Black J. H. & Co l4 Brown, Philip l4 Thicker Wm l4 Beck & Fleming l4 Cunningham J. 0 l4 Carmen J. R. Crites W. K Durborrow J. R & Co l4 Denny. & hleMurtrie Decker David l3 Fisher W. H l4 Greenburg IL Owin D. P Glazier & Bro l2 Holtwerorth H. E l2 Henry & Co Hagey John Hanulgar Mrs. If l4 Johnston, George W l3 Jacobs B l4 Jacobs & Co. l3 Kennedy Wm l4 Leister Jehn Lewis T. J l2 Lewis Wm ll McCullough, Samuel.. i.... McCullough J.H l4 Montgomery T. W. l3 March Mrs. J l3 Neal & Long l4 Port & Warfel, Billiards Roman H 14 Robinson H. C l3 Bead John & Sons . l4 Read John & Sons, Patent Medicines 4 Smith S. & & Son 14 Smith 8. S. &Son, Patent Medicines 4 Stewart & Pleoner l3 Shafer George l4 Siminson E. fd l4 Thomas 3.11 l4 Wolf S Westbrook R. 8 l4 Warfel, George l4 York C. F. & Co l3 Yenter J l3 Juniata TOWnshir. Grube Martin,Distiller S 25 00 Jackson 21nonship. Green &Gregory . 34 709 lluston,Gteen &Co l4 700 Huston, Green & Co. l4 700 Harper A. W l4 700 Little, George E l4 700 Lognn Co. No. 2 lO 20 00 Mcßnrney & Nephew.. l3 10 00 Lincoln Township. Cohn Simon. Hess J. & Co Morris Towns), ip Davis Wm Grains W Law John H Wait T. C Isett ................... Mapleton Borough Rex M. L. Marldtsburg Borough ifcMurtrie E. D. Aft. Union Borough. Adams T. H l2 Cerman A. E Fwing A. G Stevens F. 1) Wolf B lO Orbisonia Borough. Krugh A. & Bro l2 Urnison._T o .X..,--...... ...... ....- .................. Porterilliail); NAnnt Medicines 4 Reed C. 11 Royer, Downing & Co Pheaeant A. M l3 Oneida Township. Green Barton...—. forte( • lbwnship, Lowery & Eichelberger l'enn Township. Grove A.F AS'hirky Township. Johustou A Shirlegsburg Borough. Brewster W 11 —. Kerr W. 11. ........ .. Saltillo Borough Brewster J. G Shope A liudwu S),ringfied Township. Brewster, J. C l4 Lock 1) Shade Gap Borough. Montgomery &Co Swan W. C Tell Township. Blair J. M Julies & Burdge Three Springs Borough. Covert A Stevens ............ ........... ....... 111 ..... Heck E. G Stevens F. D. & Co Walker Township. Doug'ase, Joseph-- ...... . ..... —...—...--... Lagle George, Brewer ...... ..... 7 States George l3 Warriortm ark Township. Funk David Punk David, Patent Medicines 4 Houck 8.11 Mattern J. H. £ Bro. l2 Robinson W. H l4 West Township. Cresswell & Porter l4 Confer & Cu. Hewitt & Bell March M. Patent Med icinee Oburn Joseph - 13 10 s[q, Rnmberger & Bro ll 10 0 0 Troutwine Samuel Petersburg Co—operative store l3 10 00 SAMUEL G. ISETT, Mercantile Appraiser. LIST 01? HOTELS Brady 7bwiiship. Metcalf, 11. Z . Dudley Borough. Gould, E F Horton, D. F Huntingdon Borough. Free, John . .. Hough, J. W Hallman, W. S Leister, Henry. Miller, John 5... . . Moebus, Frederick . . Thomas, George.. ..... . . Morris Township. Haslett, B. F. . Shade Gap Borough McGowan, Wm .. . . • • • Welsh Ww. . . Warriorsmark numship. Chamberlain, James ••• •••••• West Township. 5 50 00 ...5 5000 SAMUEL G. ISETT, Mercantile Appraiser. Chamberlain, Henry Grallius,Abmham. 7elsA 11 license not lifted on or before the let of July, 1878, will be left in the hands of a Justice of the Peace for collection. G. ASHMAN MILLER, County Treasurer. Mayl7-4t] NOTICE. OF ADMINISTRATION 11 [Estate of GEORGE WELLS, dee'd.] Letters of Administration having been granted to the undersigned, living in Huntingdon, on the estate of my late husband, George Wells, late of said borough deceased, all persons knowing them selves indebted•to said estate will make payment without delay, and those having claims against the same, will present them properly authenticated for settlement. ELLA WELLS, apr26-Bt3 Administratriz TOYS AND GAMES OF ALL KINDS Just received at the JOURNAL Store. Elle ALISO' (*lva. There's some one living in this town (Maybe you know her name, And maybe, should I write it down, Your own might prove the same). Who, when you say, "He's good," will cry, "Indeed! You think that's true, But," very confidentially, "You wouldn't—if you knew ." Class. License. 12 $l2 50 12 12 50 14 7 00 One says, "What pretty girls go by I" "Oh, horrors ! you djn't think So !—Since we're you and I, I'll say, Le- parents drink, And she—well, I won't tell it out, Though I've no doubt 'tis true. You think - she's nice aud•pretty—bu• You wouldn't, if you knew !' 13 10 00 14 7 00 14 7 01) 14 7 Ou If one sings sweetly, "How she flats !" If dressed in taste, "What style!" Supremely "vulgar" all her hats, Her dresses simply "vile." And when good Deacon Busby failed (A noble man and true), She said, when we his lot bewailed, "You wouldn't, if you knew'!" Let those who admire and love who can This malice-breathing dame Who seems to think a pr)sperous man MLitt surely be to blame ; That beauty is a mark of sin ; That goodness must be crime; She sees but thieves and rascals in The heroes of the time. 13 10 00 11 15 tso 13 10 00 9 25a Sometimes she doesn't hesitate To tell us what she knows. And in nine cases out of eight A lie is all she shows. For virtue's sake, I hops to find One good old doctrine true. Some heat for such I should not mind, You wouldn't—if you knew. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. 14 7 00 torll-Etticr. A LOVER'S VENGEANCE. There was a great party given at the house of Mrs. C—in Lexington Avenue, and, moving majestically as a queen among the "goodlie companie" was Emily Fulton. She was as beautiful as a poet's dream.— Her rich olive complexion .was faintly tinged on either cheek by a soft, peach like bloorni -jos were as dark as mid night, and her hair fell almost toiler waist in luxuriant curls, their jetty hue relieved by a crimson rose fastened near her temple. Her features rivaled in the beauty of their classic outline the finest work of an ancient sculptor. Acknowledged as the belle of the evening by all present, she received the many compliments which were paid her with the greatest coldness and a slight air of weariness. "flow beautiful she is !" said one of a group of three gentlemen who were stand ing near her. "Yes, magnificent, but ut terly heartless," replied another. "As ar rant a coquette as ever breathed," skid the third. "Poor Martin fell in her snares and worshipped at her shrine with the greatest adoration for nearly two years, and, at the very moment when he fancied he had attained the summit of his hopes she cast him off as a wayward child would a broken plaything." "I heard she had re jected him," said the first speaker, "yet they seem to be very firm friends." "Heaven preserve me from such friend ship !" replied the other. "Martin is as hot-headed and passionate as any child of the sunny South; although outwardly he appears as cool and collected as any of us. He k Rowe be has been played with, and he will yet make yon fair lady rue the day she first trifled with his affections. See, he is making the way through the crowd towards 'IR. Who is that foreign-looking gentlemen in company with him ?" .... 14 7 00 .... 14 7 00 7 00 10 00 12 50 10 00 12 50 15 00 12 50 7 00 12 50 12 50 20 00 12 50 12 50 5 00 12 50 12 50 10 00 "I do not know him." "Nor I." `.Good evening, gentlemen," said Mar tin, as he reached the group. "Allow me to introduce my friend, , Senor Rojalf, of Venezuela." The usual salutations were exchanged, and after a few moment's conversation Mar tin remarked : "We must leave you gentle men, as my friend is exceedingly anxious to know la belle Fulton. By all appear ances she has already made a fresh con quest in the person of the Senor." A slight smile flickered around the mouth of the Venezuelian, as he allowed himself to be led immediately to the presence of Miss Fulton. The introduction being over, the lady made room on the sofa beside her for her new acquaintance and they became en gaged in an animated conversation. He was tall and slim, and as straight as, an arrow. His face was very dark, Ad wore a heavy black mustache. His eyes were grey, and looked as if they could be coree as cold as marble, or at times scintil late gleams of fire. His dress showed him to be possessed of the most faultless taste. Emily Fulton had at last found a foeman worthy of her steel. She listened to his stories of his country, with the most in tense interest, her face glowing with adnai- Lion as she listened to him. 10 00 7 00 1) 00 10 00 30 00 7 00 7 00 10 00 10 00 7 00 10 00 12 50 7 00 7 00 26 00 lu 00 7 00 5 00 7 00 12 50 7 00 The social party broke up at last, and Senor Rojas handed Emily to her luxurious carriage, which was driven rapidly home. "He shall be mine 1" articulated the beauty to herself, as she rolled quickly along. As the South American turned after the car riage was driven away, he met Martin face to face. For a moment the two men gazed in each other's eyes. The face of Martin was deathly pale from excitement, while that of the Venezuelian wore a•cold, sneer ing smile. "I shall succeed," said Rojas. "Are you certain ?" "Perfectly ; I seldom fail. lam somewhat fatigued, so I must bid you good night. I will call upon you to-morrow." "Good night," replied Mar tin. 1 0 1? up Class. License. 5 $5O 60 . L 6000 .. 5 6000 5 50 00 5 50 410 5 50 00 5 50 00 5 50 00 5 50 CO 5 50 OU After the night of the party in Lexinz ton Avenue, Senor Rojas was a welcome visitor at the residence of' Emily Fulton. lle was her constant companion to parties, balls, and the opera. Go where they would, Martin always followed them. lie seemed to haunt their , steps like a spirit. People who knew Einily, said that she had found a new victim. Months rolled on, and will the Venezuelian paid his devoirs to the fair Fmily, much to the disgust of her matter of-fact uncle, with whom she was residing, and who incessantly grunted . out—"l can't see what you can find in this cold, yellow faced fellow to admire.— I want to see my brother Tom's orphan child married to as American." But Emily bad a will of her own, and, what was better, a large fortune in her own right, and therefore she regarded her uncle's comment with the supremest in difference. 5 50 00 5 50 00 5 5t4 0G 5 50 00 One bright sprino. afternoon, Emily was seated in the magnificent parlor, arrayed in all the beauty of a splendid toilet, when the Senor Rojas waS announced, and in a moment after the South American entered the room. Soon there was a pause, and then Rojas said very abruptly, "At The Backbiter. BY KATE CLARK BY JOHN G. 110 CH HUNTINGDON, PA,, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1878. last, Emily, I am able to return to my own country." Emily Fulton gave a sudden start and involuntarily laid her hand upon his arm. The old, mocking smile played around the lips of Rojas, but it was un perceived by the startled girl who sat be side him. "Why not remain here !" ex claimed Emily. "Remain here ! Is it possible that Miss Fulton can feel an in terest in one like me, so unworthy of you ? Oh, Emily, Emily, I loved you from the first night I saw you—loved you with my whole heart and soul. Can you, will you return my love ?" There was no answer, but a lovely face rested upon his breast, while his arm stole around a yielding form. "But why should I talk of love ? I, who am as poor as man can be !" "Dear Ro• jas, I have riches. I have enough for both." "And would you leave home, kind friends, all that you hold most dear, to share the fortunes of a poor exile like myself?" "All, dear Rojas, all !" The coquette was conquered. his face was flushed and his eyes shone with their wonted fire, as he said, "Then be it so. Together we will reach our far off home. Once there our future life shall be one long dream of love." A weok after this conversation they were married, and then took their departure for Caracas, where they arrived in due time. Time sped on its winged flight, and Emily became conscious of a change in the manner of Rojas. His demands for money became more and more pressing. Soon his absence from home began to grow lunger and longer. One day while Rojas was lying on a sofa in his chamber, smoking a cigar and en joying himself, the door of his room was suddenly thrown open, and his wife rushed in with the air of an enraged tigress. All the fire of her passionate nature was aroused within her. In her hand she car ried an open letter. The senor smoked on unmoved, although he surmised something terrible had happened. His coolness mad dened her. "Rojas !" she cried in a voice almost choked with passion, "Rojas, you are a villain ! You have ruined me ! I received this letter a moment or two ago," she cried. "Tell me, sir, are its statements true or false ?" and she placed the letter in his hands. Rojas removed the cigar, and read the letter without moving a muscle of his countenance while so doing It read as follows : NEW YORK, January 6th, 1875. DEAR MADAM : Allow me to congratulate you on your choice of a husband. In accept ing him you not only pleased your own fancy but mine also. I chose him for you. Know you that your husband, Senor Enrico Rojas, is no Venezuelian but a New York adventurer, his real name being Joseph Parker, his pro fession, gambling. You spurned my love and I am now revenged for the slight you put upon me. I wish you every happiness with your dear husband. Your old friend, HARRY MARTIN. "Well, sir, is that letter true or false," said Emily. "Madam, it is true," was the cold reply. "True ! My God !" groaned the wretched woman sinking into a chair. "Every word," replied Rojas. "Villain, Villain ! you have despoiled me of fortune, robbed me of my virtue, but you shall rue this ya! I have a home yet !" "Then seek it at once. I have no desire to detain you. I have no claim upon you, you are not my "Not your wife ? Liar !" _ "Not PO, for when I married you my first wife was living. I never loved or cared for you. You were rich, I was poor • your fortunewas a stake worth play ing for ; I played for it and won it." While he was speaking the eyes of Em ily rested on a small dagger which was lying on a table near her. Possessing her self of this weapon, and as the last words passed his lips, she sprang madly forward and plunged the dagger in his bosom.— Rojas uttered a loud cry and then fell for ward on his face, a corpse. Emily stood for a moment viewine , the body, with eyes that gleamed with the wild fire of insanity, and then plunged the dagger into her own body, dying instantly. Harry Martin was terribly avenged.. L **tt Dist_tilan Locomotives Without Steam. The London papers publish an account of what is known as the Walker substitute for coal in the generation of steam for locomotives or marine engines. This plan, it appears, covers an arrangement by which air is converted into hydrocarbon gas of great heating power, and is then stored in a chamber subjected to consider able pressure. From this it is forced out again, through a pipe to the perforated tubes, from which combustion takes place in the furnace and by burning hydrocar bons—with the gas—in a gaseous or much divided state without the adjunct of ex ternal heat to gasify or divide them. The Leavy oils, in this divided or gasified state burn over the grate in conjunction with. the hydrocarbon gas. The principle, as thus explained, is regarded as of extreme simplicity, and the practical arrangements are said to be equally so, insuring a cer tainty of operation, and, in fact, reducing the question of preference to one of cost and convenience merely. The comparison for storage room and economy in this case, is shown in the following data, namely : That if the calorific power of coal per pound be estimated at 8,000 calorific units, then that of liquid hydrocarbon per pound. must be taken at 13,000 units which gives an advantage, weight fur weight, of 63-i in beating power, to a liquid hydrocarbon, compared with coal. Again, in the com bustion of coal, as carried out in the usual construction of boilers and fire grates, only a very small proportion of the heat theoret ically developed can be made use of, while by the use of burning gas and hydrocar bon, a in a gaseous form, close home to the healing surfaces, it is claimed that much greater percentage of useful evaporation is secured. A Good Wife. A good wife is to a man wisdom, strength and courage. A bad one confusion, weak ness and despair. No condition is hope less to a man where the wife 'possesses firmness, decision and economy. There is no outward propriety which can counteract indolence, extravagance and folly at-home. No spirit can long endure bad influence Man is stoug, but his heart is not jean. He needs a tranquil home, and if he is an intelligent man, he needs its moral force in the conflict of life. But if at home he finds no rest, and there is met with bad temper, jealously and gloom, or assailed with complaints and censure, hope vanish es and he sinks to despair. BISHOP GILBERT HAVEN. Services in Memoriam of the Mur- dered Chisholm Family. A SIMONG SERMON FROM THE EMINENT METHODIST DIVINE-POLITICAL TRUTHS FROM THE PULPIT-THE NATION'S EX ISTENCE DEPENDENT UPON AN IN CREASE IN THE STRENGTH OF THE NA TIONAL GOVERNMENT-THE MASSACRE PROVES UNIVERSAL NATIONALWEAK NESS. MEMORIAL SERVICES. Services in memoriam of the late Judge William Wallace Chisholm, daughter, and son, whose murder in Kemper County, Mississippi, one year ago, has been recorded in history, were held on Sunday May 19, in the Metropolitan M. E. Church, in Washington, D. C. Every pew in the church was filled, and a large number of extra seats had to be provided for the large assembly. The congregation included many distinguished persons, and also Mrs. Chisholm and her son. The feature of the service was the eulogy pronounced by Bishop Gilbert Haven, of Georgia. At some points during the delivery his utter ances agreed so well with the sentiments of his bearers that the latter, lbrgetting for the moment, the day and place, inter rupted the speaker with bursts of applause. Rev. H. R. Naylor, pastor of the church, delivered a short sermon. He made men tion of the fact, that the remains of the murdered members of the Chisholm family, over which no funeral services had ever been said, were now being removed to their final 'resting place at Lock-haven, Clinton County, Pa. lie selected as his text St. John xiii, 7.—" What I do, thou knowest not pow; but thou shalt know beyond." His theme was the mystery of the present dispensation, and upon it he preached an eloquent and appropriate sermon. Upon cetneluding, he presented to the congrega tion Bishop Haven, who proceeded at once to speak. In accordance with the race-honored custom of sepulture, be said, they had come together that day to engage in the solemn duties demanded by the dead no less than by the living. We come to bury, npt to praise. We come to satisfy the just longings of a widowed and child-reft heart, of a fatherless and sisterless family, that their dead may be decently buried. After giving a short history of the tragedy which . gave occasion for the services of that day, and paying a touching tribute to the brave and devoted daughter, Cornelia Josephine, and the martyred father, he observed that had this violence happened at the hands of the red man, how the whole land would have rung with indignation. "We shall not enter," he said, "in the field that lies before your every thought. Why was this deed done, and what shall be the end of these things if allowed to go uniebuked of the Nations ye need not that I should teach you. Your hearts- are in diting no pleasant, though, perhaps, it way prove a profitable matter. The sod den lamb, the unleavened cake, and the bitter herbs, made a useful meal to the thoughtful Israelite. He reflected on the hour when death reigned in every Egyptian household, and his own, by miracle, es caped. So we may sup on lenten food this hour.and find it nutritious to soul and spirit. The angel of death, not God sent, but devil driven, hovers over much of our land, smiting with blood-strokes the vic tims of his cruel wrath. He has left your homes free, yet only for ,a season. If we allow" MURDER FOR OPINION'S SAKE to be the law in one part of our land, it will soon be of all parts. Can one member suffer and not all suffer with it ? Can a leading citizen and his family •be set on and slain in Massachusetts for political causes and peace and safety attend the ballot in Mississippi ? No more can the reverse be true. The present honeycomb. ing of Pennsylvania with murder, which stern and unrelenting justice cannot abate ; the communistic threatenings in sfhicago and California; the bloody strikes along, the Ohio ; the tramp wandering murder ously over one half of our Union, is the natural, the inevitable outcome of the un willingness of - the - National Government to protect its citizens in the other half. The theory that State governments have such absolute control of life and death within their territories that the nation cannot cross their boundaries to protect its citizens and punish their murderers, has brought us to. this weak and miserable pass We are of-' frighted at the shadow glowering at our own hearth-stone. In secluded Vermont in crowded Cincinnati ; in remote Maine; in Central Indiana, the same terror besets us by night,-the same -deadly danger by day. • One Indian massacre arouses every part of the land, be it the Modocs of Oregon, or the Sioux of Minnesota, or the Utes of Qolorado, or the Comanches of Arizona, indignation and wrath leaps from end to end of the continent, and that, tao, when no one dreams that the dread foe is to steal again into Eastern homes and renew his horrors at Wyoming, or Schenectady.— But this deed has universal national appli cation. It proves universal national weak ness; it breeds universal national disaster. A people that cannot protect itself is no people. It falls to pieces when it allows its members to be cut to pieces. [Ap plause.] Said a gentleman to me but yesterday, who had just returned from abroad : 'The old world is over-governed ; we, under governed.' Nothing strikes one more forcibly on re entering his land than THE LACK OF NATIONAL POWER Over its own citizens. Unless a stronger government arises we shall dissolve and disappear as a nation. We sigh for the verification of the seal of Massachusetts, an uplifted arm holding a sword which alone gives placid quiet under liberty. We have taken the first step in verifying our right to exist as a nation on gigantic fields of strife by bloody and costly valor. We must carry forward and complete this work in the national protection of every citizen in his every right. [Applause.] We must defend freedom of speech and free dom of ballot, or we perish from the earth. To this coming perfection of national peace and power this sad event will contribute. This family group are martyrs to American equality of right, to the Declaration of In dependence, and to the preamble of the Constitution. It was for the cause of equal rights the father fought and the family fell. It was for the protection of every citizen at the polls ; for true Democracy ; the government of the majority of the voters, legally and fearlessly expressed; for the American nation; for the rights of mankind that this citizen of America, with his brave son and braver daughter, laid',, down their lives. Their cries of agony and death shall never be forgotten, never below, never above ; "Their moans The vales redouble to the hills, and they To Heaven." Their forms will be wrought into marble, painted upon canvas, honored in prose and verse,held in high and higher remembrance as years and ages go by. The children of the fathers who so ignorantly slew them will build their sumptuous sepulchres.— That lone and dread procession that thrice threaded the dismal path a snore of miles —a feeble fe . w, without minister, or even sexton to assist them—bearing the bloody dead, in jeopardy of life, as, they pursued their mournful journey, will yet be changed' into a solemn, penitential, but glad multi tude of the citizens of the same county, with their wives and daughters and sons, gathering about that green spot, where they were thus buried, to make confession of their fathers' transgression by such deeds of atonement as marble, and eulogy, and prayer, and sermon are able to give.' May those remains, now on their way to a safer resting-place, be recalled, as were those cf Dantes, by the city of his birth, by those still hostile fellow-citizens to the place of their birth and death, and the name of that country, so dishonored now, by this act of penitence be restored to its former esteem. To the future then, poor stricken wife' and mother, poor fatherless and sisterless youth, to the future cast your wet but hopeful eyes, wet with joyful tears, tears for the dead beloved,, joy that they died so gloriously and won in one' short hour im mortal fame. Ilad they not thus died the world had never know them. Had they not thus died liberty, equality, fraternity for all our land and all its people, perhaps i had never been attained. There may be MANY ANOTHER BLOODY STEP ere that high tableland, humanity and, America, is reached. It may be that others who now speak: and hear may be required also to make far thefr nation like holy sacrifice. Ip, this city, where our greatest citizen gave his life for the life of the land, We can properly note the slow and bleeding feet of the martyrs to Christ and our country. Nay we, if called, be as willing and ready to follow the Christ and these his disciples for the protection of the work of human regeneration. It may be that the whole nation will yet be compelled to wrestle in the sweat of this great agony for equal rights of all men, as it has had to wrestle for independence and for existence. It may be that Enceladus will yet arise from under this mountain of permitted prejudied and hate in a manner at which all the world shall stand aghast=—a • , Kemper: County massacre in every. .bamlot , lcti the land. It may be tbatme shall yet be com pelled to cry out in bitterness. of spirit : Ah, me ! far the land that is sown, With the - hwivekft of despair!' ' • Where the burning nindere; blown. From the lips of the Overthrovin, Enoeladas, fill the air ! God forbid that such a horror shall light upon our laud. God will not forbid it if we let his children's blood cry to Him' from the ground. God did not forbid, could not turbid, Cain's deluge for wash ing out Cain's sin. . • Yet if the deluge shall .come; if ..the waters of death shall .prevail even above the tops of the highest 'Fountains ; if the nation shall be wrapp'el in the flames of civil strife more dire than,atiy we have yet felt, and our indiffereaoe to t he' fate of our brothers shall doom us to a worse suffering, out, of it all shall the new earth come, The deluge shall pass awaytte land of rigii'tetai• ness, of brotherliness, of Christ, witlidn't I caste or violence, or murder, shall pear Isbev.S the flood. And then will still gleam forth, nay will more brightly blaze, thefame of this just father, this brave lad, this Comelean jewel of filial maidenhood., HOpe, theu, sad hearts; - "hope and en: - dure, and be patient." Pray for those - A' have despoiled your house Of itshotte;Atifi bead, its heart.' Pray. for them bylwasneii pray for them with all 14 beawt. -40 . 1411. you be still one household, fur tlitts : prays, your family in heaven. in Christ they lived, for Christ they_ died, with Christ they dwell. Live ye in Christ in petition for the forgiveness of your enemies, tstilhat if spared the martyr's fate, yog may still rejoice in the martyr's crown, fbr then you shall win like honor from God, with those of your own flesh and blood that have gone' up, yes, blessed be the Lord, gone up, Up, up, up, in human love and reverence, in earthly fame, into heavenly seats, through great tribulation, and have washed their robes of blood, and made them white in the bloodier blood of the Lamb, who died for them as they died for Him, and will make them to reign with Him in peace and bliss for ever and forever. Causes of Sudden Death. Very few of the sudden deaths which are said to arise from diseases of the heart do really arise from that cantle— To ascer tain the real origin of sadden deaths, ex periments have been tried in Europe and reported to a scientific Congress held at Strasbourg. Sixty-six cases of sudden deaths were made the subject of a thor ough post-mortem examination. In these only two were found who had died from disease of the heart. Nine of the number had died of apoplexy, while there were forty-six cases of congestion of the lungs —that is, the lungs were so full a. blood that they could not work, there not being room enough for a sufficient quantity of air to enter to support life. The causes that produce congestion of the lungs are cold feet, tight clothing, costive bowels, sitting still, chilled after being warmed with labor or rapid walking, going too suddenly from close, heated rooms, into the cold air, especially after speaking, and sudden depressing news operating on the blood. The causes of sudden deaths being known, an avoidance of them may serve to lengthen many valuable lives which would otherwise be lost under the verdict "heart complaint." This disease is supposed to be inevitable and incurable ; hence, many do not take the pains to avoid sudden death if they knew it lay in their power. FIRST passenger in a street car, looking at a lady opposite—"l wonder why women don't know when they have got enough paint on their faces." Second passenger, with sarcastic smile—"lt is like wbisky with men. When they once begin, they can't stop." A FELLOW who hid under a sofa at an informal Bostop .akiAsjonary, meeting, says that the tb,irty,five ladies spoke twice of the down•trodden heathen, and more than one hundred times tit' a new kind of hair, dye AN Indiana father crawled under a corn-crib and wept because his daughter married an astronomer. 'MO World For Sale. BY REV. RALPH HOYT. The world for sale !—Hang out the sign ; Call every traveller here to me: Who'll buy this brave estate of mine, And set me from earth's bondage free?, 'Tis going !—Yes, I mean to fling The bauble from my soul away— • - . I'll sell it, whatsoe'er it bring:— The world al Auction here to day ! It is a glorious thing to see— Ah ! it has cheated me so sore! It is not what it seems to be— For sale !—lt shall be mine no more. Come, turn it o'er and view it well ; I would not have you purchase dear-- 'Tis going—going !—I must cell! Who bids ?—Who'll buy the Splendid Tear? Here's wealth in glittering heaps of gold— Who bids ?—But let me tell you, fair, A baser lot was never sold— Who'll buy the heavy heaps of care ? And here, spread oat in broad domain, A goodly landscape all may trace— Hall—cottage—tree—field—hill and plain— Who'll buy himself a burialplaco? Here's Love—the dreamy, potent spell, That beauty flings around the heart; I know its power, alas! too well— 'Tis going !—Love, and I must part!— Must part !—What can I more with Love? All over the enchanter's reign— Who'll buy the plumeless, dying dove— An hour of bliss, an age of pain? And Friendship, rarest gem of earth— (Who e'er hath found. the jewel his?)— Frail, fickle, false, and little worth— Whe bids for Friendship—as it is ? 'Tis going—going !—llear the call : Once, twice, and thrime!—'tis very low ! 'Twas once my hope, my staff, my all — But now the broken staff must go! Fame ! —Hold the brilliant meteor high ; Ilovi dazzling every gilded name! Ye millions, now's the time to buy ! How much for Fame? How much for Fame? Hear how it thunders !—Would you stand On high itlympus, far renowned?— Now purchase, and a world command, And be--.with a world's curses crowned.. Sweet star of Hope with ray to shine ~• In every sad, foreboding breast, Save this desponding orie Of mine— Who bids for man's last friend, and best? Ah ! were not mine a bankrupt life, .• This treasure should my soul sustain;' ; But Hope and I are now at strife, • Nor ever may unite again. And Song!—For sale my tuneless lute; Sweet solace, mine no more to hold; The chords that charmed my soul are inute; I cannot wake the notes of old Or e'en were mine a wizard spell, Could chain a world in raptures high— Yet not a sad farewell !—farewell ! Must on its last faint echoes die. Ambition, Fashion, Show, and Pride— I part from all forever nevi"; Grief, in an overwhelming tide, Has taught my haughty heart to bow— Poor heart! distracted ah ! so long, And still its aching throb to bear— „ How broken, that was once so strong! How heavy, once so free from tare ! No more for me life's fitful dream— Bright vision vanishing away ! My bark requires a deeper stream, ' My sinking soul a surer stay. . , By Death, stern Sheriff! all bereft, I weep,. yet humbly kiss the rod; • The best of all I still have left— , My Faith, my Bible, and my God! A Warning to Motkers. • A writer_says,."Whatever you do, don't' punish any sikef ottisi2 . 9 l (R. Ittimelission by 'refusing -the 'go h -Tat e any other methed . of eorreCtinethati that. If you have once seen a little creature sighing and s)bbing in its sleep for lack of the accus,otned caress you sternly' refused—which to the tender little heart was a grief your world calloused nature could scarcely comprehend—you willucver do it again. We know a mourning moth er, Whose ()nee sunny hair is at thirty-five as • *bite as three-score years' and ten should make it, whose life is a perpetual sorrow and who repeats with remorseful tears the story of her little boy'slast night on earth ; now, in punishment for a series', of mischievous pranks and small disobedi• ences (which she now knows were bbitr bf the fretfulness and nervousness .Of ent disease),.. she refused the good night kiss and sent the little culprit s &twigless to bed an hour before his time 1.40 i be begged and entreated for but one littie kiss, and at last -sobbed. himself disiebnSolate to sleep—she stealing. bet% heart againstihiti,l as she fancied, ,for his wind !how„as,k.he., fever spot reddened .and glowed upon )ais• cheeks,lie'tosied upon his pilloW, ,calling corrtiti - .lally in his dreams. 'ICisS matume " Kiss me, mamma I! Vustone!'' How, later in the night,i, whet) the physi cian pronounced the , widisna i ,disease, diphtherie, in its most malignant form, she pressed a thousand frantic kisses Urn unconscious lips thatscill raved ceaselesSly,' for "one little kiss !" 'And how, before the next bed time came, the crib WOW WNW t less, and a small corpse in the.parlor f below,, like an avenging Nemesis, had banished happiness forever from that mother's heart." ;loyalty, Joseph Cook in a Smoking Car. Boston Letter to Detroit Free Peeked Talking of bankers recalls the adventure which a Bank President from a country town lately met with in journeying over the Boston and Providen.e Railroad. He was puffing a cigar in the smoking car and ruminating upon dividebds and discounts, obvious of higher thoughts, when a burly individual, who had just entenCand taken a seat in front of him, turned around and remarked : "Sir, your cigar annoys me." "Sorry for that," replied the banker, emitting a graceful cloud. "I wish you to stop smoking, sir. I say it offends me," continued the unknown one. "Sorry you don't like it, sir, but you are not compelled to stay in the car if you don't." The smoker was beginning to be amus ed, the stranger to be excited. "It is a disgusting habit, sir. No gentle man, no Christian, would be guilty of it," said the stranger. "That's a question of taste," said the smoker; "and (puff) tastes dilier." "Do you know who I am, sir ?" "No, sir, and excuse me for saying, I don't care." "Sir, my narneis Joseph Cook !" (Seri cation.) "How do you do, Joseph ?" Mr. Cook to Conductor—" Conductor, put this fellow off the train." Smoker to, Conductor—" Conductor, put this fellow off at some asylum." Conductor tried to explain matters, hint ing mildly that smoking cars were so calted from a peculiar idea that they were reserv ed for smokers ; but Mr. Cook, scorning such base equivocation, took down the conductor's name and number, and threat ened to crush him with the whole weight of Boston 'aristocracy and culture." I tell the tale as 'twas told to me, and be lieve it to be substantially correct, the refusal of our Boston Boanerges to have his baggage examined at St. Albans, the other day, confirming its probability. "Did Socrates go to . hell ?" asks the New York Star. Well, we can't say, positively, but we think it quite likely. Ile said', when he went out that he . was going to Natchez, and a man who would go to Natchez would go anywhere. —St. Louis Post. 13)31iiiiffieH • Rebal Taatioc, a. ,1 • 411416 HA POSTSIAOT It SA 41V LETTER TO SOUTHERN DEMOCRATS HIS OPINION OF THE POTTER, BILEOLU- TION.-7JAYEE4 :ilk 'Quip) AL L ND TILT*N INA II titli§/PULUMI-liolol4ll+o FACE THE MOST MOMIINTOUS CRISIS SINCE 1561, apiD,IT.4 4477, , , 41 ler*al 4 igiOPA letters received from friendt is the South disetthrtrig sympittirrwittraervfibrerlir unseat President 1 1 14e14 lioietnaster Gen eral Key has written the following open letter to the people of the South WASiIINGTON, NV 28. The circumstances attending saga of the Potter resolution to inveistigtte the ; alleged frauds in the Prepid,up,ciel nitee tion or 1876 in the States of Ledisians and Florida, together with the subsequetit dec larations of many influential Democratic politicians and journalists, evidence : that if both Houses of the Forty-sixth Conktess are Deniecratic the majority intend to dust President Hayes and inaugurate Mr. Til den. - , The title of President Hayes was settled irrevocably by the Forty-fourth Congress in the act creating the-Electoral- Commis- sion, under which be was legally 4eolared elected, and legally inaugurated.:. The Forty fifth-Contuse-hae-no mere-right to dirpate his election than he has . to question the title of any yieterimmennsteat. ant to his sen6-ie-thatr-betly7---The- Forty• sixth Congress will have so motartightt to ignore him and to recognize hie dopfrated contestant, Mr. Tilden, than Mr. Hayes would have to-send-a-Me-of seldiess to the House of Representatives to useeat & Dem ocrat whom he might consider to, have been wrongfully seated or fraudulently elected. The leaders in , this desperate attempt to Mexicanize our institutions rely con4dent, ly upon the "solid South" to furnish Or bulk of the Democratic majoYitylif"tbe neat House of Rep reve n talthes;Vfrt Fietfde being already secured. Retnemberinhithe encouragement wbieh the ;.4ort•iterk.Dini• ocrats in 1860_ancl_1861 eatanded to the Southern Statesto secede, and treaterer in which the promises of aid and comfort were fulfilled, can the Southlin people af ford to join this revolutionary inclerbent with the certainty that whet the inevita ble hour of peril eomef they will again be left unassisted and alone to,meet the storm from the Nor*totee-more—tMieed-by this attempt to revive as issue whosesettleitsent was forced-by public opinion 'upon an um nilliag Congress ? 1 ,, • In the dark days or February, 1877, when civil war over the disputed election gas imminent and petri'ols' tretabled fbr the safety of Itepublicati institutiona l the Southern members of Congress aveettnl the danger by cumpelling the eoeupletion of the electoral count enter • thi lased **fell parties in Congress had imaididit 11,10 ;,i But now the Itepresetuntken:frAnt Southern States, with a very -fey,. cacep dens, have joineda movement's subvert -the results of their' farmer pittriat% tidbit ; and tq rem oirok the: jangler, to that shard */ from which les*,4hon tsta years. Age is war saved by their efforts. 0 ! t. t , Grant that—in_pormittiatolist—natonomy of all thi t Suttee, and in ~fteiatiog vid zepa ,t,o office in Abe, South tooteadof otiignip era, ViesidegyHayes 'has but his constitutional ddtY, itoes thatti 'the Southein-reprbigghtatiireg for 'attifilsi ing to invalidate his which •• they sot tabli*hed, qr will, itivatify tbegi t,lie entagrz,aptin in . danger, .war in the eff_A to unseat ,him ,aisA meg-, orate Mr. Tilden ? L '• •' The.zoutn . Tistw r poaqiiiTeTwt opt meetxiti4 crisis in itii Tiialol7 ltiOer To 13dOise the 'reediff'boiiituet elf tte* ieeo. 11 reSentativeS is Ell atitniKtive - viesit We' 1 -• charge pooplti of..ther Sontbl-ingeei , n.nothingi;un*,4 4 l ll Arifipt-.410 sire lie . clowefali or the Iten to tut v.W 07 'WOIII rejoiCefo see it again c i v il :.• LUIS r If theifieldreiehttitives'hiViilineVitkit -' ,ed . their serifinTergi ; - as..l. believe to_} O t s dase, then Che'''peozat' . "'Bl` c ilfe "Sainerb ltaf6s eltettld tike tare thst4a4he FahiY:i 'math Congress 'they_ atcktaepr warded rby - linen who will defe4 * (14410rher* ceaf..., Litlillicleace and. pr . eyepti,tha,P;rxipp• ~ ,tion'broUr institutions. 'to do' this ' they 'May' be 'Min Offgdikract indepeadent of the , Demiticiatsieliffilpr Recentevents bate detakAastritted" , the inability ofil,aboCritreifiehiVil — ifif Con gress to resist the tnairciates'oUtte daieus and the *terrors of the party lash Oki ' , Oft wielded and the other inspired, bliaeniVitio.- . seem willing to endanger the, yellige Pr, the country sad the stability of r ‘ fpoiblicalt institutions for the' sake orrelleagp bn Or • litical epporrefftetted to tlsEihNieldr ding the "spoilsof vilebory,"/- -,_ !-: :ac , .-.. , If the Deitocratie Reprettentedies- of the South could uut re 4. , ,, - -rb: .v - mn. rens com mand to pass the or retolatittnil the mendedand:withoes debate; bomitilkaisot:, MS i be able it4l.he ,g 4k Y ; pi4h, WIW p ** • :Pg 5 , sist a similar crms l nclo - liggorel IV . i as President and to ree4eiee*Mr. if en 7 „ • It is therefVre de"ditti ett . e - Foti ern people to afford a erdirninrebideiteiViltiPq uewed devotion to the Unioh in :ma, 1 they now enjoy every right of eitiseaship ! A and are subjected to no restriction not laid ~ upon every eitieen-, -by- seeding—represen tatives to the Forty-aii.thCeogrenviedged to resist, at all hazards the- zieyoisSiogiol--, schemes of the mischief makcrs Abil i sotap „i, to have gained control ck f the Heintip a pf 3 Representatives of the 'Forty' tttift'Mii gress. - :... • .:....! -f 1 . 5 4 mew: qg To this end the people in etery diettiet t sheUld meet publicly, organize and reeolwe-4, to support no person for Congress wlio, bA"..., given aid to this movement, an who will, i . not pledge himse! to sustain tlxp *le Of President Hayes during the ttftlifotitliiialP 4 he was elected against all attemro- overthrow. ~.,,- 73.:A Only in this way ca 9 ii . grays daest TA ji the republic be averted and enniTtetng , proof be given that the confidenee 'with %A misplaced which .President Royer , tram- , a Jested in the South, when he wialselteutitsfr , p i troops from-the State Hogs" of:Sq9Llii i 'F it olina and Louisiana. I have spoicsn,f iti-_ , , i , ly and earnestly, for i feelttat r ,i k ou _ tit' unworthy to represent thii'Soufti ile'i e'•' -. Administration wet* .i tti vomit' , silent :I= ,- now. Invited to Ole Catbinet as it itilembh-'l l ern man, to see that justice was 494 . 1 e. 04 .. the South, required neither to ap4logise for my record,norlio itisOWn my 'lGOine t ar i priatiples, it is my Atrif now to tkitiftie'rr people - of the South of 'the- dasagar sehivtrut threatens the oCAlntr.,y. No tip Roul %ape 0,1 that the schemes of, the men who 4 , .. , A ., - . gineered the movement to co dent liayes can be cittiieck itho i a Li , . , v • r ~,.- .;,, 3 i eivil war. To avert this danetr, 'I. ' ir '--` dently rely upon the patriotism and honor of the people of my native section. D. M. KEY. Ty a 11P(Tei at Nes
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