The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, January 24, 1879, Image 2

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    The Huntingdon Journal
J. A. NASH,
HUNTINGDON, PENN'A
FRIDAY, - - - JANUARY 24, 1879.
Circulation LARGER than any other
Paper in the Juniata Valley.
THERE will be a special Court held for
this county the first week of April.
A morrilltr wilt be made in the Leg
islature drying the present session for the
passage of a local option law.
SICHATOR H. G. FISHER is chairman of
the oommitteo on Banks, and also a mem
ber of the committees on Accounts, Mines
and Mining.
THE Nationalist knows that we have a
"case," sod if we were so disposed could
make it very plain to all the world "and
the rest of mankind."
W. A. BURROUGHS, treasurer of the
New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail
road company, has turned up a defaulter
to the amount of $17,000.
THE President has sent to the Senate
the same of Wm. K. Burchinell, formerly
°four town, for the office of Receiver of
Public Monies, at Fairplay, Colorado.
IN view of the fact that so many Con
gressmen are sick and dying down at Wash
ington, it would be a good idea to start a
religion§ revival for the benefit of our law
makers.
O'LzAitr, the pedestrian, made the
snug sum of 812,000 in his match with
Campana, a couple of weeks ago. This
sum includes the stakes and the money
taken for admission fees.
A FIRE broil; out at No. 62 Worth
street, New York city, on Saturday eve
ning last, and before the flames could be
stayed property to the amount of two and
s half million dollars was destroyed.
THE Everett Press man don't like Don
Cameron, and evidently that paper hadn't
reached Harrisburg previous to the vote
for Senator, on Tuesday, or there's n.)
telling what the result might have been.
Tut grocery store of Messrs. Etter
Shanklin, of Harrisburg, was rohl)ecl, on
Friday night last, of $1,600 in cash and a
gold watch and chain valued at $250. The
watch is numbered 107,572, Appleton,
Tracy & Co , movemet.
HENRY FELTERS, editor of the Bloom
ington (Ind.) Coupler, who killed County
Attorney Rogers, while the parties were
indulging in a drunk on. New Year's eve,
has been indicted for the crime and the
grand jury has found a bill of murder in
the second degree. His bail has been fixed
at $5,000 for his appearance at court.
ON Friday last, at Norwich, Conn., Mrs
Kate K. Cobb, was sentenced to the pen
itentiary for life for the.poisoning of Mrs.
Bishop. bhe is reported to have showed
- Lit) emotion when the sentence was pro
nounced. Her accomplice, Bishop, the
husband of the murdered woman, will be
tried at the ensuing March term.
Ex-Gov. Wm. Bmica was 65 years
old on the 31st of December last, and on
the evening of that day his friends and
neighbors, to the number a hunired,
crowded his house and gave their distin
guished friend and fellow citizen quite a
surprise. The best of feeling prevailed,
aid it was the happiest impromptua gath
ering ever assembled in that ancient town.
THE lawyers of the State are trying to
organise a State Bar Association, the prin
eipal objects of which are to obtain uni
fans isles of practice, to elevate the stan
dard for admission, and to exert a united
influence in securing better legislation.
And while they have their hands in they
ought to resolve to conduct themselves as
though they were gentlemen when arguing
a case before a jury.
MR. STENGER'S taste for office has led
him to enter the list of aspirants for the
Secretatyship of the United States Sec
ate. A Washington dispatch says that be
will be supported by Senator Wallace and
the entire Democratic element in the Penn.
sylvania delegation, .and his chances now
are considered equal, if not superior, to
those of any other candidate. Mr. Sten
ger is delighted with the atmosphere of
the capital, and having been beaten by
Mr. Fisher for a seat in the XLVIth
Congress, he is willing to serve in the ca
pacity of Senate clerk in order that he may
be able to remain in the "city of magnifi
cent distances."
GATHERING THEM IN.—On last Satur
day afternoon the Secretary of the Treas
ury issued the., eighty second call for the
redemption of five-twenty bonds of 1865
coatlois of 1867. The call is for $20,000,-
000, of which $10,000,000 are coupon and
$10,000,000 registered bonds. The prin
cipal and interest will be paid at the treas
ury on and after the 18th clay of April
next, and the interest will cease on that
day.
Following are descriptions of bonds :
Coupon bonds dated July 1, 1867
vameiy :
$5O, NG. 37,001 to No. 46,000, both in.
elusive.
11100, No. 47,001 to No. 60,000. both
inclusive.
$5OO, No 37,001 to No. 46,000, both in
elusive. •
$l,OOO, No. 48,001 to No. GO,OOO, both
inclusive_
Total coupon, 610,000,001
Registered bonds, "redeemable at the
pleasure of the United States after the Ist
day of July, 1872," as follows:
$5O, No. 1,551 to No. 1.925, both in-
. $lOO, No. 11,401 to No. 13,850, both
iuclosive.
SGOO, No. 6,251 to No. 7,250, both in.
$l,OOO, No. 23,751 to No. 27,750, both
ioclasive.
$5,000, No. 7,101 to tto.. 8,150, both
910,998, No. 9,951 to No.. 13,259,1*th
inclusive.
Total registered, $10,000,000
Aggregate, $20,000,000.
HON. J. D. CAMERON
The reelection of Hon. J. Donald Cam
eron, as a Senator from Pennsylvania, on
Tuesday last, by such a handsome majority,
was a just tribute to a worthy and careful
public servant, and with the Harrisburg
Telegraph we believe that the people of
Pennsylvania will never have cause to
regret it. Ile has served just long enough
in the Senate to establish his high quali
fications as a legislator, his broad capacity
as a statesman, an 1 his fidelity to every
trust confided to him as the upholder of
certain well defined political principles.
On questions involving Republican princi
ples, Senator Cameron's convictions are
deeply rooted, and his resolves inflexible
He is not a Republican from policy, but
from conscientious convictions of right
founded on duty. This is the Republi
canism for which we have ever contended,
and this is the principle in our party in
whose success the State and the country
will always be benefited. And on ques
tions relating to Pennsylvania interests—
her vast material resources, her internal
commerce as this ramifies through the
other States, her foreign commerce and
her manufactures, Senator Cameron is
second to no man. in the State in his knowl
edge and grasp of their importance. It is
such men taut we need in the highest
councils of the nation, and while the Re-
publican party seeks such men for its
highest hoo and trusts it will be able
to win just such victories as will make
Tuesday's events so glorious in the history
of the Keystone State.
Following is the vote for Senator in de
tail. The vote in the Senate was :
Editor,
FOR J. DONALD CAMERON.
Butterfield, Jones Reyburn
. .
Cooper, Keefer, Roberts,
Davies, Lawon, Royer,
Elliott, Lawrence, Seamans,
Fisher, Lemon, Seymour,
Gassam, Meily, Smith,
....
GiMilan, McNeill, Thomas,
Grady, I%lylin, Wadhams,
Greer, Newell, Wright,
Herr,
•
FOR MESTER CLYMER.
Alexander, Ermentrout, Jackson,
Beidelman, thof, Paulson,
Clarke, Hall, Ross,
Cochran, . Herster, Schnatterly,
Craig, Ilolben, Wolverton,
Crawford,
- - '
Mr. EvcrLart, Republican, voted for M.
Russell Thayer, of Philadelphia ; Mr.
Kauffman, Republican, voted for Edward
McPherson; Mr. Lee, Republican, voted
fir Galusha A. Grow ; Messrs. Nelson,
Democrat Greenbacker, and Parker, Re
publican Greenbacker, voted fur Daniel
Agnew. Mr. St. Clair, Republican, was
absent
Tik,‘ following is the vote in the House:
FOIL JAMES DONALD CAMERON.
Aektrly, Gaus, Miner,
Bliley, Gearing, • Mitchell,
Baldwin, Gillespie, Myers,
Barrett, Gordon, Neale, A. C.,
Blackmer, Graham, W., Neill, James,
Boone, Greenawalt, Nichols,
Bordner, 11a41, O'Lanihan,
Brooks, Harkness, Patterson,W.ll.
Burgess, Hazlet, Patterson,lV.H.
Burton, He wit. Petroff,
Butler, 11111, 17„ Pollock,
Campbell. A. 8., Hill, John, Redfern,
Caugbrey, Hill, Jos. M., Reynolds, J. A.,
Clarke, Holgate, Reynolds, T. J.,
Colhorn, Holman, Roberts,
Davis, E.. W., Hoverter, Rumberger,
Demuth, Hoyer, Schrock,
Dorrance, lluhn, Shoener,
Dunham, Jerreeki, Silverthorne,
Eberly, Kincaid, Snavely,
Edwards, Kochersperger, Souder,
Elliott, Landis, J. H., Stephens, J. W.
Emery, David. Landis, Jno. H. Strein,
Emery, Lewis, Law, Thompson,
Etter, Leigh, Underwood,
Evans, Lewis, Voegtley,
Farr, Lowing, Walker, Jae ; D.
Flinn, Markley, Walker, Alex.,
Frazer, Madill, Walter,
Fullerton, Magill, Watson
Fulmer, Maneely, Wheeler,
Fulton, W. T., Matlack, Wilson,
Fulton, A. II , McCandless, Worthington,
Gantt, McConnell, Yarger,
Garrett, McKee, Long, Speaker,
(latched, Miller.
FOR 111 ESTER CLYMER..
Anderson Graham, G. H., Porter,
Banks, Hackett, Provins,
Bennett, Hallowell, Rhoades,
Bowman, Heller, Riegel,
Bradford, II orophrey i, Soanlan,
Brant. Jones, Soh aeffe r,
Campbell, Win. Kirk, Scholl,
Cassidy, K nictle, sellers,
Crawford, Kahle, Sherwood, D L.
Dannehower, Leighty, Sherwood, G E.
Davis, A. G, beech, Short,
Donahue, Marker, Smith, 11. J.,
Drum, MoCachran, Smilhi.S. J.,
Earley, McCloskey, Smith, Geo. F.
Elder, McFall an, Smith, C. A.
Eldred, Messenger, Stephens, A W
Fabel, Moore, Sweeney,
Faunce, Murray, Taylor,
Fenlon, Nakel, Truby,
Findley, Newbake - , Vanderslice,
Foster, Nicholson, Warden,
Gammell, Noble, Weiit,
Gentner, O'Neill, White, W. It,
Gephart, Palsgrave, Woodruff,
Gillard, Patterson, 'tern,
Graff, Philips.
FOR DANIEL AGNEW.
Cargill, Hines, Shear,
Conrey, Mooney, '
Thickstun,
Dewoody, Mortis, Welsh,
Doyle, Reeder,. White, J.
Foust, Seaton.
Messrs. Mapes, of Venango. and Wolfe,
of Union, voted for Edward McPherson.
Absent—Messrs. Liggett, of Kirks, and
John B. Smith, of Luzerne.
RECAPITULATION.
The following is a summary of the vote
in both houses :
SENATE. HOESF: TOT.
It. D. U. R. D. G.
Cameron 2B ... ... 104 ... 3 135
Clymer ..........
Agnew 2 .„ 1 13 16
McPherson
Grow
Thayer
Absent 1 ... ... 1 1 ... 3
Total
Immediately after the vote was an
nounced by the two houses of the Legisla
ture. a committee, consisting of Senators,
members and citizen , , waited upon the
new Mark Sopttor and congratulated him
upon his sucetss. lie replied as follows :
GENTLEMEN : I thank you for this
compliment and for the spirit which im
pels you to pay it. You are here to
day to crown a glorious victory, won
through the agency of a strong organiza
tion, and to inaugurate as Governor of
this State the gentleman of your choice,
whose election was secured by your devo
tion to the principles of the Republican
party he so ably represents. By an ac
cident of time you have on the same day
witnessed the inauguration of a Governor
and the election of a Senator to represent
you in the Congress of the United States.'
Your representatives have chosen me for
that position, and I desire to thank them
fcr it and you for your cordial approval of
their choice. But I especially desire to
impress upon you the necessity of keeping ,
up your organization to carry the State
for the Republican candidate for the Pres
idency in 1880—whoever he may be—re
membering always that the late contest
was but a skirmish to prepare you for the
more vital and commanding struggle to
time. To win that victory we must stand
shoulder to shoulder. Each member of
our organization must be prepared to
yield at all times a point for the securing
of general strength and harmony. Again
I thank you very sincerely for your kind
ness, and hope to meet you hereafter to
celebrate ot*; er vietories, won by your de
votion, your activity and your impregna
ble discipline. [Applause].
32 15 3 ]O7 78 1G 251
THE INAUGURATION OF GOVER
NOR HOYT.
The inaoguration of Henry Hoyt,
at Harrisburg, on Tuesday last, as the
eighteenth Governor of Pennsylvania, is
repotted to have been the pran,l24 affair
of.the kind ever witneased ill ti,;; State.
The military display was uttignifi :cut be
yond description, while the tiumereus civic
societies added inuell to tho appearance of
the plrele and•helped to swell the ranks
of the thousatrls who turned out to do
honor to the in-cowing Governor. It is
estimated that there were not less than five
thousands troops in line, and about three
thousand citizens, After the proceSsion
had passed over the advertised route it was
marched to Capitol Hill, where the oath of
office was administered by Justice Wood
ward of the Supreme Court, when Gover
nor Hoyt spoke as follows :
Gentlemen of the Senate and House of
Representatives, and Fellow-Citizens : We
are associated, to-day, in observance of a
time honored custom. To you, the occa
sion which convenes us is mere:y cerento
nial in its character. And yet not only to
you who are gathered immediately within
the sound of my voice, but to all the citi
zens of the State it is an occasion of serious
import. You and they are to witness a
change in the Chief Magistracy of your
Commonwealth. To myself, it is more
significant. While I gratefully accept my
share of the pleasure incident to a pageant
like this, it is suggestive of delicate duties
and grave respensiblitiea. Elected to be
Chief Magistrate of the State, my official
life begins here and now.
You have witnessed in my assumption
of the oath of office, a sacred appeal to Al
mighty God and a solemn Vedgeof fidelity
in the discharge of my official obligations.
"The Supreme Executive power shall he
vested in the Governor, whc shall take
care that the laws be faithfully ()sweated "
This is the language of our State Consi
tution. It briefly, simply and adequately
defines my principal duty. I fully under
stand these words—l fully comprehend
the oath I have just taken. The people
of Pennsylvania expect me to keep that
oath. By the help of their prayers, and
by the favor of Divine Providence, I ex
pect to keep it.
It will be a common pleasure to us to
be exempted from giving special attention,
at this time, to matters of public business.
The conspicuous ability, and the long and
varied experience of my distinguished pre
decessor, has permitted nothing to escape
his attention which concerned the public
good, or was of sufficient importance to be
commended to the special action of the
General Assembly, or which might chal
lenge the consideration of the people His
last Annual Message is a document at once
so judicious, timely and comprehensive in
its review of public affairs and its recom
mendations, as to relieve me, for the present,
from all care in respect to that branch of
the executive duty. I may, therefore, re
gard myself-as at liberty to glance at some
topics, not inappropriate to the occasion,
in whir all good citizens feel a deep con-
cern.
The question uppermost in the mind of
titexountry relates to the revival of busi
ness. The last five years will be memora
ble in our National history as a period of
industrial depression and consequent social
distress. These five years have disclosed
the causes of our troubles, and their ex
perience should lead. us up to the true
methods of recovery. They will be found
to lie in the moral forces of society and not
in legislative enactments or executive in.
terference. I shall offer you no discourse
upon the financial theories which have
vexed us during these years. We have
come, with great unanimity, to recognize
the actual facts which lie at the bottom of
this whole subject. A. generation of
younger business men had came upon the
stage at a period of excitement, following
the war, and of speculation, fairly reaching
the degree of gambling. The vastly ex
panded credit which men gave one to an
other, in all forms of business, the result
of an inflated currency, led to unnatural
values, as measured in such currency. The
temptations fur contracting debts were
great and not easily resisted We spent
more than we earned; we forgot that . "the
extravagance of the rich was not the gain
of the poor"—"that profusion and waste
were not for the good of trade"—and that
everything consumed and destroyed was so
much lost iu the labor which had produced
it. Circulating capital was locked up in
fixed property The wages fund was im
paired. We abandoned the maxims of ex
periettee and the simplest truths in political
ec t411:. 1 . We measured values by a
at rd not common to the civilized world
with whom we were in daily and necessary
commercial intercourse. We . failed to re
member that the issue of paper money,
whether greenbacks, National bank notes,
bills of exchange or checks, did not add a
dollar to the wealth of the nation, and that
while indispensable as a circulating medium
it could only have a representative value.
W did not advert sufficiently to the present
sical and financial fact, that by the
tacit agreement of the nations, the precious
metals are the only standard of -value, the
only "current money with the merchant."
We did not seem to know that the instincts
of a practical, shrewd and enterprising na.
tion of' business men must finally and for
ever reject the use of an irredeemable cur
rency. At the last, pay day came, as it
always must, and bankruptcy came with it,
as it always will under like causes. Our
capacity to consume was destroyed. The
producer was without buyers for his mer
chandise. Debtor and creditor alike had
to pause for the day of settlement. A sys
tem of economy and saving was forced
upon us, aed it was the one process to re
store us. It cost us a hard struggle, self
denial and suffering, but the result was
health, moral and financial. The virtues
of sobriety and industry, renewed in prac
tice, give us discipline and strength. They
widened and deepened our manhood and
womanhood. Discarding the cheap de
vices of mere theorists, the dishonest pro
posals of mere agitators, and the charla
tanry of a politic:ll economy which under.
took to teach us how to create wealth with
out labor, we are now ready to go forward.
Henceforth we are to produce and ex
change actual thing', and not gamble in
merely fictitious values. Resumption has
taken place, confidence is restored, and
business will gow in healthy channels so
long as values are stable and their measure
honest. Pennsylvania is an empire in its
resources, and her people in the past have
developed and used them only by the
' virtues of labor and economy. For the
future we took except the same conditions.
It is possible, that, within our borders,
there may be required some readjustment
of our population to the centres of Industry
—some ruditribution of labor and capital.
Your Bu r eau of Labor and Statistics, when
adequately orgtinized and administered,
will furnish, abundant datj upon which the
intelligeoce of the people will ant.
I desire here to bespeak the freest and
fullest co operation of the people with their
Chief Magist It is equally their
' privilege and thetr duty to make their in
tunas and their vrish'es .known through
their legislative representatives, by corn
mittee, by writing , or by direct personal
interview with th e Executive. Such care
ful, special, intelligent, unreserved expres
sion upon the part of the people, would
enable both the Legislative and Executive
branches of their government to act with
a eleater appreei-Ition of their necessities.
I speak no.w for myself alone, but I am at
the same time confident that I express the
sentiments of every gentleman who is offs
cially ritited to the State administration.
We are renewing, in part, the personnel
of our State government, at a period of
inomenkpus interest in our national affairs.
The one great question yet to be solved is:
Shall government by the ballot he main
tained in this country, with equA
rights fur all legal voters. Pennsylvania's
attitude on that question is known wherever
her name is known. That she will insist
on the enforcement of the authority of the
National Constitution, in every State of
the National Union, is as certain as that
her mountain peaks point toward heaven,
and her rivers roll to the sea. Under no
circumstances can she ever recede from
this position. Strong in herself, stronger
in virtue of the constitutional relationship
to her sister States, she will be magnani
moue, conciliating and patient. But justice,
in the end, must, with her, be paramount.
Upon this high ground she will demand
that the provisions of a constitution 'nude
for all, shall be conformed to by all. This
question goes not only to her political con
victions, to her estimate of the worth of
our civilization, but to the elnsciences of
her pipulation. Pennsylvania bows in un
alterable devotion to the grand ideas of
the supremacy, perpetuity and glory of the
nation.
I have detained you, fellow citizens, be
yond my intention, and will therefore
claim your indulgence but a moment longer
fir a personal allusion. I should be guilty
of insincerity if I affected indifference to
the Imamr of the trust your suffrages have
confided to me. I am incapable of ex
pressing my heartfelt sense of its value T or
the strength of my purpose to prove that
it has not been misplaced. So much, in
brief, to those to whom I directly owe my
election.
One word to my fellow citizens who pre
ferred and supprted my honorable corn
petitors. It is worthy of a free people
that they bear tbetnselvcs with propriety
and self-control, through the contentions
and excitements of a general election. It
is gratifying to myself, and doubtless
equally so to all who were actively en.
gaged in the late canvass, that there was
so little manife.tation of bitterness. The
great debate was conducted with calmness,
as it was also with earnestness. For the
kindness and courtesy extended to me by
my political adversaries, I have to .say
that if they bad voted for the from the
same sense of duty which gave their bal
lots to my opponents, I could not be m-)re
firmly resolved than I am, to be impartial
and faithful in discharging the obligations
I owe to them as Chief Executive of the
Commonwealth. My political views and
convictions will and ought, unquestiona
ably, to influence and shape some of my
official recommendations; but in protect
ing the constitutional and legal rights of
the citizen, no party distinction can ever
for one moment be recognized.
In eunclusion. fellow citizens, permit
me to remind you of the individual re
sponsibility of each citizen, for the aggre
gate well being of the community. Each
of us owes the highest measure of fidelity
to the justice, the power and the right em
bodied in the State. Under the peace
and protection it secures all our traffic is
prosecuted and all our prosperity is shield
ed. Under it the social principle is al
lowed scope to found asylums, lodges, sem
inaries and churches, and to perfect the
Commonwealth itself
There can be no right citizenship with
out an intelligent understanding of the
principles' which the government organizes
and of the ideas which it represents. Each
citizen should be able n his own infor.
oration and not depending on any inter.
ested jobber or meddler to tell when there
is a departure from rectitude, where a
wrong tendency sets in, and where a peril
confronts us It is a cardinal principle
underlying the political creeds of all self.
governing people, which affirms each cit
inn to be as fully responsible for the wel
fare of the State as he is for his own per
sonal safety and happiness. Private citi
zen and magistrate are equally under this
fundamental law of the republic.
As you have heard me bound by an
oath to obey the laws of the Common
wealth, so have I, in turn, the c.-relative
right to bear the voice of the thousands
of freemen in pledging themselves.to obey
the laws which they themselves have
made. No strength of soldiery, no wealth
of farms and factories, of railroads and
coals, no protection of goverment;l me
chanism can save a fsithles people from
perishing.
CONGRESSMEN ELECTED
On Friday afternoon Of last week Gov
ernor Hartranft issued his proclamation
declaring the following persons elected at
the last genera election to represent
Pennsylvania in Congress :
Ist district, Henry H. Bingham.
2d district, Charles O'Neil.
3,1 district, Samuel J. Randall.
4th district, Wm. D. Kelley.
sth district, Alfred C Harmer.
6th district, Wm Ward.
7th district, Wm. Godshalk.
Sth district, Heister Clymer.
9th district, A. Herr Smith.
10th district, Reuben K. Bachman.
11th district, Robert Klotz
12th district, Hendrich B. Wright.
13th district, John W Ryan.
14th district, John W. Killiuger
15th district, Edward Overton.
16th district, John I. Mitchell.
17th district, Alex 11. Coffroth •
18th district!, Horatio G. Fi4her.
19th distriit,' , Frank E. Beltzhoover.
20th district, Seth Y. Yocum.
21st district, Morgan H Wise.
22d, district, Russell ErretL
23d district, Thos. M Bayne.
24th district, Wm. S Shallenberger.
25th district, Harry White.
26th district, Samuel B. Dick.
27th district, J. H. Osmer.
In the Eleventh district, the only one In
which more than one Ect or election re
turns were filed at the State Department,
the Governor declares Robert Klotz (Vern
ocrat) elected. Gen. Chas. Albright (Re
publican) was certified to as elected by
part of the return judges, but the Gov
ernor seemed to think Mr: Klotz entitled
to the e..n tifieate, and so declared.
SHUPE, the proprietor of the Advocate,
a Greenback paper extensively circulated
in this county fOr a very brief period last
fall, and then shut up shop, defrauding
thousmds of peop!e out of the money they
had paid him on subscription, again looms
up, and thrJws out another bait to the tin
suspecting. The subscription price of the
paper was twenty-five cents a year, and
now he promises to :end it for the remain
der of the year for an additional fifty cents.
We vi::rn our readers and all others against
this swind!o, tor 7.g.ef.an fall it ley p.o other
name
HON. ROSCOE CONKLING Was unani•
wowly nominated fqr the United States
Senate by the Republican caucus of the
members of the New York legislature, at
Albany, on Monday night. The Democrats ,
have nominated Lieut. Gov. Dorsheitner.
Ttti Pennsylvania Editorial Association
held its eleventh annual session at Harris
bur.; on Wednesdly last. The attendance
was large. Appropriate resolutions on the
death of Morton McMichael, Louis A. Go
dey and 1-Jenry T. Darlington were adopt
ed. Cape May was selected as the object
ive pint fi Jr next summer's excursion.
The following, tdfig:ers were elected: Presi.
dent, 11. J. Stalk} ; vice pre4lents, Jac lb
Zeigler, .J. 11. Shoibley and J. 11. jiffies,
Philadelphia; secretary and treasurer,
S. Men.imin ; Lvsistant, recording secreta
ry, Samuel A. Smith; corretTonding sec
retary, C. H. Berger; executive commit
tee, Y. S. Walter, Hiram Young, A. M.
Rawbe, D. W. 11. Bradley, Capt. E. J
Ilitiekeu.
Os Tuesday list, several States elected
United States Senators, as follows : Pen
sylvania, J. D. Cameron ; Missouri, Gen.
Jil4ll3i Sheilds; Illinois, Gen. John A.
Logan; Indiana, Daniel H. Vorhees; North
Carolina, Z. B. Vance; Florida, Wilkin
son Call Connecticut voted on Wednes
day and elected Orville II Platt.
State News
Lint:lslet county spent $42.385 93 on
its indigent poor during 1878.
Jacob 2211 was acquitted of a charge of
forgery iu the Laneaiter Court on Wed
neslay.
The Ittuctster grand jury yesterday
ignored the bill charging George Martin
with manslaughtce
Rev. Hammond, the evangelist, is still
preaching in Pittsburg, and ,his revival
meetitiLs are elowdoi nightly.
Gustavus Rell, who murdered an inur
fcnsive young uwn► n:►wed David Tate, at
Petroleum Centre in 186 S, has been re
leased from the Western Penitentiary,
having served out his tern► of eleven years
and six months
Samuel Wi!sin), president or the First
National Bank of Clarion, died suddenly,
of neuralgia of the heart, on Tuesday
morning. He was one of the leading
business men of Clarion c)unty from its
organization, and was well known in Pitts
burg and Philadalphia basines9 and po!iti
cal circles.
Governor liartranfc, his signed all the
pardons recommended, inclUding that of
Hurry Lynch, of Agegheny, sentenced to
the Penitentiary for forgery, and commu
ted the death penalty of Blazius Pistorius,
ex Catholic priest, convicted for murder.
Warrants have ben issued for the execu
tion of the wife murderers—Sayers, at
Philadelphia, and Ilezekiah Shafer, at
Chambersburg—on the 18th- of March
next.
President Gowen has written a letter to
the officials at the mines in Schuylkill
county in reference to the Beechwood
strikers. Ile says that in view of the
desire on the part of the men at Mount
Laffee to go to work again the colliery may
be started on Monday of next week. 'You
should say to all the men in your employ,7
continugs the letter, "that as we have
gone to great trouble and expense to se
cure a winter outlet for Schuylkill coal,
which will enable them to obtain steady
work at this season of the year, we have
reason to look for kindness and good will
on their part rather than the hostile atti
tude shown recently at a few collieries."
$:)00 REWARD !—They cure all diseases
of the Stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves,
Kidneys and Urinary Organs. and $5OO will
be paid for a case they will not cure or help,
or for any thing pure or injurious found in
them—Bop Bitters. Test it. See "Truths"
or "Proverbs," another column. Jan. 17-2 t.
NO OPTICAL DELUSION,
BRILLIANT REALITY I
GREAT BARGAINS!
4
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all . ICX7 X 3LA 3Di , Aaicsr 13 Mil AS. 4 0 3EK.,
JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS,
No. 423 PENN STREET, HUNTINGDON, PA
Aug.23.]
IaiIYSICIA.NS APPOINTED.
The Directors of the Poor of Huntingdon
county have appointed the following physicians,
in the respective boroughs and townships, to
take professional charge of the "out-door poor"
who may need such service; and all those who
may require such attention. will call on thosep.hy
sicians thus appointed, as no others are authori
zed, nor will be paid by the Directors for profes
sional services rendered to the "out-door pour,"
other than the following, vis:
Drs. Orlady and McCarthy, for Logan twp., and
Petersburg borough.
Dr. J. F. Wilson, for Barree township.
Dr. M. M. Brenneman, for Carbon township.
Dr. Samuel 11,11, for Upper West township.
Dr. J. A. Deavor, for Franklin and Warriors
mark townships.
Dr. 0. W. Simpson, for Mill Creek, Mapleton,
Union and Brady townships.
Dr. D. P. Miller, for Huntingdon.
Dr. T. Harnish, for Alexandria borough and
Porter township.
Dr. 0. W. C. James, fur Orhisonia and Crom
wcll townships.
Dr. J. Kelly_ for Carbon township.
Dr. A. J. Hamilton, for Casaville borough and
Case township.
Dr. J. W. Wintrode, for Penn, Walker and Lin
coln townships
Dr. A. It. McCarthy. for Mt. Union and vicinity.
Dr. W. L. Duff, for Jackson township.
Dr. W. P. McNite, for Shirleysburg and Shirley
township.
Dr. W. S. Madden, for Springfield and Clay
townships.
Dr. Z. T. Jones, for Tell and Dublin townships.
By order of the Directors of the P.:Kir.
GEO. W. WHITTAKER,
Jan. 24,1879. Clerk.
E XECUTOR'S NOTIC E.
[Estate of JACOB SMITH, deceased.]
Letters testamentary on the estate of of Jacob
Smith. late of Minnesota, (formerly of West town
ship, Huntingdon county), deceased, having been
ranted to the undersigned, all persons knowing
themselves indebted to said estate are requested
to make immediate payment, and those having
claims to present thew duly authenticated for
settlement.
ANDREW MYTON,
Nero Mills, Jan. 24,1879. Executor.
WILLIAM W. DORRIS,
. • A trorney-at-Lato,
402 Penn Street, • UpITING DON, PA
March 16, 1877—y
Hosts of People are Martyrs
To sick headache, that infallible symptom o
a disordered stomach, liver and bowels. Many
suffer from it as many as three or four times
a week. They do so needlessly, for Hostetter's
Stomach Bitters, by toning the digestive
organs and regulating the bowels and liver,
removes the cause, and dispels the painful
symptom. The intimate sympathy between
the brain and the abdominal region causes
the slightest disorder affecting the latter to be
reflected, as it were, in the organ of thought.
The reform instituted by the Bitters when the
digestive, secretive and evacuative functions
are in a state of chaos, has other and more
beneficial results, viz., the complete nutrition
of the whole physical economy, the restoration
of appetite and repose, and an increase in the
power of tl►e system to resist diseases of a
malarial type. [jan. 10-1 M.
-
E F Kunkel's Bitter \Nine of iron
E. F. Kunkel's celebrated Bitter Wine of
Iron will effectually cure liver complaint,
jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous
debility, chronic diarrhoea, disease of the kid
neys and all diseases arising from a disordered
liver, stomach or intestines, such as constipa
tion, flatulence, inward piles, fullness of blood
to the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea,
heartburn, disgust for food, fullness or weight
iu the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or
fluttering at the pit of the stomach, swimming
of the bead,, hurried or difficult breathing,
fluttering at the heart, choking or suffocating
sensation when in a lying posture, dimness of
vision, dots or webs before the sight, dull
pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration,
yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the
side, back, head, chest, limbs, etc., suddee
flushes of heat, burning in the flesh, constant
imaginings of evil and great depression of
spirits. Price Si per bottle. Beware of
counterfeits. Do not let your druggist palm
off some other prep' ation of iron he may say
is 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—ouly in $1
bottles. E. F. Kunkel, proprietor, No: 259
North Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sold
by all druggists and dealers everywhere.
TAPE WORM REMOVED ALIVE
Head and all complete, in two hours. No
fes till head passes. Seat, Pin and Stomach
Worms removed by Dr. Kinkel, 259 North
Ninth Street Philadelphia, Pa. Send for cir
cular. For removing. Seat, Pin or Stomach
Worms call on your drugirist and ask for a
bottle of Kunkel's Worm Syrup, price Si. It
never fails. Common sense teaches if Tape
Worm be removed, all other worms can be
readily destroyed. Dan .3
NOIt FOR BARGAINS !
Goods Going at Cost
S WOLF'S
ClothillEalifiFtuilisliiiagion,
418 Penn Street, Huntingdon
In view of the fact that I have to vacate
my present room in the Spring, from this
date I will close out my entire stock of
CLOTHING, lIATS, CAPS,
GENTS'. FURNISHING GOODA,
TRUNKS, VALISES, BOOTS, SHOES,
I have FIFTY OVERCOATS that I will
sett at 10 per ceut. under cost.
These ODS MUST BE SOLD, and
I gnarrantee bargains to every person who
buys of me.
S. WOLF.
Jan 24 4t.
BUT X
Come and See Me.
DEALER IN
ring of all kinds done promptly.
Repai
A DMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE.
; Estate of JOHN C. LONG, deceased.]
Letters of Administration, (de boais non cum
testaments annexs), having been granted to the un
dersigned on the estate of John C. Long, deceased,
late of Porter township, in the county of Hunting
don, and State Df Pennsylvania, all persons know
ing themselves to be indebted to said estate are
requested to make immediate payment, and those
having claims to present them duly authenticated
for settlement, at residence of the Administratrix,
on the farm of P. K. Harnisb, (post stile) address
Shafcrsville, Huntingdon county. Pa.)
SARAH E. LONG,
Administratrix D. B. N. C. T. A.,
• Shafersville, Huntingdon co., Pa.
JOHN BERRY,
Solicitor,
319, Penn &net, Hun'i igdor, Pa.
Jen. 24,1879.
LINDSErS_pLooDIEARCHER . •
Is the greatest se oced Rem y '
Teller, Scrofula, Ulcers, Its
and all Blood diseases yield to Its wonder
. 1.1 powers. Pure Blood is the guarantee
of health. Read: "It'cured my son of Sera-
N. Brooks, Patnessitts, O. "It cured
my child of Erysipelas."—Mrs. B. Snuiltsrr, Lar
inters, Pa. Prise $l. It. E. SELLERS &
Prop's, l'ittsburgh, Pa. Sold by Druggists amt
timutry Store Empire.
Apri&lV,'7B-1 1
NOTICE IX PARTITION.
lEstate of ISAAC HORNING, deceased.]
To Sarah &ming, David Henry Horning, Anna
Cora Horning, and to David Henry Horning,
Guardian of Clara Ella Horning, Ella Nora Wood,
Frederick Shiner Wood and William Frank Wood,
Paint Creek, Bourbon county, Kansas, you are
hereby notified that by virtue of a Writ of Parti
tion issued out of the Orphans' Court of Hunting
don county, I will hold an inquest on the estate
of Isaco Horning, late of Barren township, deed.,
on Friday, the 14th day of February, 1879 at 10
o'clock, A. N., when you can attend if you think
proper.
SAM'L. 11. IRVIN,
Sheriff's Office,
Huntingdondan. 21, t
116TOTICE. •
-A- 1 1 Having purchased, at Sheriff's sale,on the
25th of December, the personal property of George
W. Fink, in Shirley township, together with the
grain in the ground. I herpby notify all persons
not to meddle with the same in any way.
BENJAMIN FINK.
Jan.17,18;9-Zt,.
New To-Day
---
Etc , Etc., Et, ~
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New Advertisements
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that 'The Union
Game Association, of Cassv i Ile, Huntingdon
Coun
ty," will wake application at the present session
of the Legislaturdief Pennsylvania, to change the
first section of the General Ganie Law, approved
June 3, 1578, so as to extend tho time for hunting
Deer to the first of January, incluai e t! .
JOHN M. STEVER. Prest.
J. F. EVANS, S ec ,
Cassville, Pa., Jan. 17-4 t.
lIHUNTINGDON ttz, BROAD TOP
MOUNTAIN RAILROAD AND COAL
COMPANY.—OFFICE, No. 417 WALNUT ST.,
PHILADELPHIA, January 18, 1879.
NOTICE.
A-1 The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders
of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail
road and Coal Company, will be held at the office
of the Company, on Tuesday, February 4th, 1879,
at 12 o'clock, noon, when an election will be held
for President and Directors for the ensuing year.
Jan.l7-3t,
NOTIC K.
I hereby give notice that William P. Platt,
a boy that I bad bound to me by tine Directors of
this county, did on the morning of the fish inst.,
run away without any just provocation, and I
hereby warn all persons not to employ, harbor or
seclude him about them, as I wilt hold them ac
countable for damages. And furthermore I will
pay no debts of his contracting.
•
SAMUEL ISENBERG
Sbirleysburg, Jan. 17,1579
NOTICE.
INotice is hereby given that application
will be made at the present session of the Legisla
ture of Pennsylvania, by the Board of School Di
rectors of Beady township, Huntingdon county,
Pennsylvania, for the pasiage of an act, author
izing said Board of School Directors to levy and
collect a tax sufficient to pay off ~nd discharge a
balance due and unpaid for money borrowed to
pay Bounty to volunteers who enlisted and were
credited to said township during the late rebel
lion.
By order of the Baard.
ATTEMT :
GEORGE EBY,
1 Secretary
Viok's Floral Guide.
A beautiful work of 100 Pages, Oae Colored
Flower Plate, and 300 Illustrations, with Descrip
tions of the hest Flowers and Vegetables. and how
to grow them. All fir a Five CENT STAMP. In
English or German.
The Flower and Vey,table Gorden, 175 Pages,
Six Colored Plates, and many hundred Engra
vings. For 50 cents in paper covers; $l.OO in ele
gant cloth. In German or English.
Viek's.llliodroted Monthly Magazine, 32 pages,
a Colored Plate in every number and many fine
Engravings. Price $1.25 a year; Five Qopies for
$5.00. Specimen numbers sent for 10 cents.
_ _
Vick'z - Seedm are the best in the world. Send
FIVE CENT STAMP for a Floral Guide, containing
List and Prices, and plenty of information. Ad
dress,
JAMES VICK, V.ochester, N. Y
Jan.l7-1m
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
A COMPLETE POLITICAL. COMMERCIAL,
L I TER A R Y and FAMIL Y JO URNA L.
General Sews Department —As heretofore, Tug
WEEKLY PRESS will publish the latest Associated
press despatches from all parts of the world, and,
in addition, will contain special telegraphic news
from our own correspondents in all sections of the
Union.
State News Department —Our State Department,
which has attracted so much attention, and been
so warmly received during the past year, wilt be
greatly improved for 1879, and all events of im
portance will be faithfully chronicled by corres
pondents in every city, town and hamlet in this
Commonwealth. This feature will be fully ap
preciated not only by Pennsylvania readers but
by others who formerly resided in this State.
Oar Currespondenee.—Arrangements have been
completed for the receipt of weekly letters from
New York, Boston, Washington, and other cities,
and our numerous correspondents in the West and
on the Pacific Cost will continue their interesting
contributions. Our regular European letters will
also be a prominent feature of Taft WaeKLY Pness
for the coming year, several distinguished writers
have recently been added to our already large
staff.
Incidents of City Life.—This always interesting
department will be greatly extended, and is to in
clude, in addition to the regular local news, spe
cial articles to be furnished by the best descrip
tive writers on the city staff. All phases of life
in a great metropolis will be reflected in this de
partment, and should prove both entertaining and
instructive.
___
Literary and Mi. cellaneo Ise Department.—The
Literary Department of THE WEEKLY PRESS will
he under the control of DR. E SIIELLTON MAC
KENZIE, Literary Critic of THE Pizzas, who will
be aided in the miscellaneous selections by exper
ienced members of the editorial corps. Our aim
will be to furnish the very best original and selec
ted matter that can be obtainoa, such as stories,
poems, sketches, etc., etc., thus giving many col
umns of matter of interest to all classes of readers.
The Agricultural Department.—Mß. THOMAS
MEEHAN, the editor of this well-known and very
valuable Department of THE WEEKLY PRESS, will
remain in charge during the coming year, and the
mere statement of this fact will be sufficient to
commend this journal to all who are engaged in
Agricultural pursuits.
Financial and commercial Department.—Nearly
all classes of readers will find our Financial and
Comulercial reports of inestimable value in their
business relations, for this news can always be
relied upon as unbiased and-authoritative. The
farmer, the mannfaoturer and the merchant can
not afford to be in igneranoe of events constantly
occurring in the business world, and to them the
information given by TOE WEEKLY PRESS is a
necessity. Oar quo'ations are always the very
latest that can be obtained, and are telegraphed
from all the business centres of the globe.
Our Little Anple —Since this department was
started we have received many letters of congrat
ulations from both parents and children, and in
the future this feature will be made even more
prominent titan the past. It is to be placed in
a
charge of talented lady, whose love for the little
folks cannot fail to guide her hand aright in the
selection of their weekly feast. The Pessler's
Realm, which has proved so popular, will remain
in charge of its well-known editor, MR. WM. H.
GRAFFAM, of West Scarboro, Maine.
The Editorial Department.—lt will be seen that
not only one page, but the entire paper will to
carefully edited, and nothing that could possibly
add to the value of the journal will be omitted.
The editorial page, proper, will include leading
articles on all the current topics of the hour, and
though THE PRESS is Republican in principle, it
will be found that in great questions its influence
will over be cast in favor of the right, irrespective
of partisan or other influence.
TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR (Postage Paid).
New subscribers sending Two Dollars now will
be credited with the paper until January 1, 1879.
SINGLE COPIES-FIVE CENTS.
ASK YOUR NEWSDEALER FOR IT.
THE PRESS COMPANY
(LIMITED),
S. W. Corner S,venth and Chestnut Streets,
Jan.77-4t.1 PHILADELPHIA.
IF you WANT
ANYTHING,
Cestomre,
Boarders,
Agents,
Orders,
Servants or Place,
Lawyer or Case,
Musical Teachers,
Popular Preachers,
Cooks,
Books,
To Hire or Let,
Offices,
Basement,
First Floor,
Casement,
To purchase a pet—
Horse,
Mare,
Monkey or Bear,
Bloodhound or Spitz,
Frze from Fits,
To hire a Hall
A Tender of Bars,
A Driver of Cars,
An Elegant Carriage,
An Opulent Marriage,
Play, Concert, or Ball,
Skates,
Sell to gay Creatures,
Diamonds,
Pearls,
Rings,
Curls,
Ot wash for features,
To buy an odd thing,
Or sell an odd thing ;
Cats,
Rata,
Mats,
Flats,
Bats,
Pantaloons, II ate,
Resplendent Cravats,
Mutton or Reef,
Financial Relief,
Stocks,
Clocks,
Locks,
Socks,
Portmanteau or Box,
Pig, Sheep or Ox,
Or even a Bean—
Then in a tries
Take tho advice
Written below—
Plates,
Sheriff.
ADVE
ThoElan him! !
OLORED PRINTING DONE AT
C
th. Jima a 1 Office at Philadelphia prices.
J. P. DONALDSON,
Secretary
AMO3 SMOKER,
President.
Jan.l7 4t.
TERMS
Aught
I To be Bought
Silver or Gold,
Merchandise Sold,
, Goods to Appraise,
!Opening Days
To announce;
Houses or Acres,
Butchers ur Bakers,
Boats,
Votes,
Dress, skirt or flounce,
A Cure fur Disease,
I A Handy Valise,
A Muslin Chemise,
:1 ireese,
Teas,
I Bees,
Peas •
'
,0r are prune
;To make known
Your Store,
; Hostelry,
; Dry GOOlll,
Upholstery,
i Picnics,
Excursion%
icknneks,
!Diversions,
'Clothes ready made,
Increase of Trade,
coke and wood,
Pictures,
I Lecture.,
An kinds of Focal;
Works on Theology,
I Magic Astrology,
i Wealth or Felicity,
I World-wide Publicity,
F legs,
I Bags,
Rags,
Nags,
rims shirts and collars
Alanighty Dollars, •
Houses to Rent,
Store, Tenement,
IC:nth to be Lent,
Cash to be Spent,
Scent,
Tent,
swan Cement,
100
Reed the advice—
('heap is the price—
Written below-,
RTISE
New Advertisements
H AIR. ARTIST.
I am now prepared to manufacture Switches,
Sec.. on the meet reasonable terms. All orders by
m9il will receive prompt attention.
Mapleton Depot, Pa., .Inn. 10 ::t .
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that application %via be made at the present
session of the I., , gislature of Pennsylvania to
reAuco the compensation of the Treasurer of Hun
tingdon county from seven hundred dollars ($700)
to five hnndred dollars (SAO), for traveling and
collecting taxes over said county, and to fix the
rate on paying out and handling the funds at the
rate of two (2) per cent., instead of three (8) per
cent., a:4 h ti Leen allowed heretofore to County
Treasurers. ALEX PORT,
D. B. WEAVED.
Huntingdon, Pa. Jan. 8, 1879.
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWEIRI
SPECTACLES, EYE GLASSES, &c.,
at very LOW prices at
KERN'S NEW JEWELRY STORE,
No. 526 Penn street, opposite Brown's Carpet Store.
.7 - 43 - flepairing in the Watchmaker's and Jewel
er's line attended ti,. [Jan .3-3 m.
THE ORIGINAL & ONLY GENUINE
"Vibrator" Threshers,
MOUNTED HORSE POWERS,
And Steam Thresher Engines,
Made only by.
NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.,
%.ITTL.E CREEK, MGM.
GRAIN Raisers will not Submit to the
enure... wastage of Oroin k th e interior work done by
the other machines, when once posted on the inference.
THE ENTIRE Threshing Parvense.
mod Often 3 t.l 5 Times that amount, am be mit, t y
the Extra Grain SAVED by these Improved Machines.
NO Revolving Shaft. Inside the Sepa
rator. Entirely free from Beazer. Mien, Haitulem,
and a ll MM n time-wasting and grain -waiting comp',
cottons. Perfectly adapted to all Kind. and Condition. of
Grain, Wet or Dry, Long or Short, Headed or Bound,
NOT only Vastly Superior for Wheat.
Oats, Barley, Rye, and like Grains, t. the net, St,-
,sidul Thresher in Flax, Timothy, Millet, Clover, an.i
lite Feeds. R.:mires no " attachments " or "
Li change from Uraln Milked&
MAILITELOUS for Simplicity of Parts,
using leas than ono-half the usual Delta anti (.eats.
1.....4es no Littartnes or ll...rims.
FOUR Sizes of Separators Made, rang-.
1,!, from six to Twel‘o llorso saw, watt two agyl.i of
iii.,uute.l Horse Powers to match.
3TEAM Power Threshers a Specialty.
special dm Separator made exprumlyr for meaui Power.
OUR, Unrivaled Steam Thresher En
t 'it., vim. Votuable I inprovensev a and Distinctive
) liaxures, far beyond any other make or kind.
IN Thorough Workmanship, Elegant
rorlee of Parts. Conipletenese of Equipment,
etc-, our “Vinewroe" Threaher Outilts are Incomparable.
rob Particulars, call oft o*r Dealers
or write to us ler illustrated Circular, which We malt tree.
Jan. 10, '79-13w
1879-THE NEW YEAR-1879
In enterirg upon a new twelvemonth, which
begins with every sign auspicious for all the ac
tive, literary and artistic interests of the country
with every indication of an immediate future as
favorable to the advance of liberal enterprise as
the immediate past has been adverse; the pro
prietor of the
THE NEW YORK MERCURY
repo.% to have a new life, as it were, infused
into this so long representative metropolitan
weekly repository of Literature, Dramatic and
Musical specialities and general news. Always
a pungently original and endlessly varied epitome
of the most attractive literary novelties, artistic
information, social saliencies, choieest regular con
tributions and brighest journalistic department
of the day, it is intended that it shall be made
yet brighter and more comprehensive in general
,by the addition of striking new features and the
aid of an increased force of first-class writers.
Any current number of the paper now will serve
to show the progress of these invigorating and re
juvenating improvements, at once recalling to
thousands of readers the most brilliant past epochs
of their favorite weekly's veteran career and
eclipsing all precedents therein. The New YORK
MERCURY for the year 1879 will be far stronger
than ever in its great standard specialities,
SPLENDID SERIALS,
OFFICIAL DRAMATIC INTELLIGENCE,
COMPLETE STORIES AND POEMS,
STRIKING SOCIAL NEWS,
and its usual unrivaled array of the best of con
tributions and fresh ideas in every line of inter
elting reading ; and it is designed that inimita
ble new specialities in
ORIGINAL HUMOR,
THE ROYEAN.CE OF REAL LIFE.
SOCIETY'S WIT AND SPARKLE,
LITERATURE'S NATIVE STRENGTH,
and the grandest work that liberal inducements
can obtain from the most celebrated f•-reign, as
well as native, pens, shall be among the future
characteristics, of the paper. Better times seems
to have come, indeed, at last, to encourage fresh
outlay in the interests of publio instruction and
amusement, and the New Yoae MIRCURV will be
found
FOREMOST IN THE VAN
of institutions recognizing and acting upon every
encouragement to fresh and generous enterprise
that the New Year promises to afford. A goodly,
loyal army of old friends and new arc already
subscribers, in every part of the Union and in
many parts of Europe; but an even greator con
stituency yet needs just such a combination of all
the choicest Literary and Artistic attractions of
the whole newspaper world in one great weekly,
as they may find in the
New York Mercury for 1579.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
The NEW YORK MERCURY, with its fifty-six col
umns of sterling, original matter, will continue
to be issued at Eight Cents a copy, and sold by ail
newsmen and periodical dealers in America. To
mail-subscribers our terms for 1879 will be (cash
in advance): Single copies (postage paid), Tit REF:
DOLLARS PER ANNUM.
Write plainly the name of post-office, county,
and State. Specimen copies sent free to all ap
plicants. Address WILLIA 3i CA LD W ELL, pro
prietor of the New YORK 31CRCURY, No. 136 Ful
ton street, New York City. Dec. 27-4 t.
SC OOH, OKS,
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