The EhltiTigiloir Journal. J. A. NAOII. - - - Editor. . - - NOV ;::%I -7:1. Circulation LARGER Ga.! other Paper in the Juniata Valley. Thaa;:sgiying Pro am. ti PiZOCIANI d t' nition of the t:od of State.; who (• , 1 pca.c,•, health ac.d at andaait pro iw rii Iv i4t. people, 1, tkury M. lb,vt, Guvernor of do appoint riursday, the 271.11 day of Novem ber next, in pursuance of the recommendation of the Presideat of the United States, as a day upon which the good people of this common wealth, laying aside all secular occupations, may meet together in reverent thanksgiving for mercies received and prayer fur a contin uance of divine favor. _ Given under my haul an 1 the great seal of the Stale, at Ihrrisburg, this 7th lily of November, in the Year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred an.l seventy-nine, and of the Commonwealth the one hundred :u►d fourth. IlEsur M. !tort . . liv the Governor : M. S. QUAY. Secretary of the Commonwealth A LIBERAL OFFER! A PAPER FOR NOTHING ! We will s:md did .Toi r e lN Al,, I row uow until Jan 1, 1:43 I, to all new subscrib ere for $2. Here is a chance to get "the handsomest and best paper in the county" two months and over fin• nothing. All new subseriticr3 7 by payil). ceive the paper for a little over fourteen We think tl►ia a very liberal nionths offer, and should induce many persons to send in their names at once. The long evenings are here when every family should have a sufficient quantity of reading mat to on band fur i!s entertainment. The varied contents of the JOURNAL, and the liberal proposition we now make, t,hould insure it a largely increased circulation Ir you want a good paper ; NOW is the time to subscribe. THE Greenback party of Pennsylvania has gone join that of Ohio and lowa. How would Judge Mattern sound? We rather like it ; how does it strike you ? EVEN old Berks, the Gibraltar of De mocracy, "went back" on Barr at the late election. Tug whole Republican ticket in New York is elected except the candidate for State Engineer. COL HOOTON, Cliairmau of the Repot) lican State Conunitte, is spoken of for Congress in the Chester district. He is deserving. THE popular Awl-icon, .9yricultatist, and the JOURNAL, "the handsomest and best paper in the, county," one year for only $3.00. The money, in every case, to accompany the order. This is a rare chance. tf. THE Republican majority in Hunting don county, at the recent election, foots up eight hundred in round numbers.— This is an old-tinter, and would seem to indicate the differences that have existed among-members of the party for several years past have been amicably adjusted.— Jolhpastotem Tribune. WE expected to be able to publish in this week's issue of the "JOURNAL, the official vote of the State, but some six or eight counties failing to report officially we are unable to do so. At present But ler's majority exceeds 55,000, and it is thought when the counties are all report ed, that it will reach 60,000. IN Blair county the Republicans suc ceeded in electing their county ticket with the exception of Prothonotary. James Stewart, a Democrat, for the third time, has been elected to that office, by a major. ity of less than fifty. Complimentary votes did it. In Juniata county, that stronghold of Democracy, the Republican candidate for Sheriff was successful by a majority of over three hundred. 'foto' W. MATTELtN, Esq.—lt is but due to the Chairman of the Republican County Committee, John W. Mattern, esq., to say that the able, efficient and inde fatigable manner in which he discharged the duties of the position, during the re. cent campaign, has contributed very largely to the success of our ticket, and we believe we reiterate the sentiments of the Republicans of the county when we say that the patty owes him a debt of gratitude for the able services be has rendered in conducting the campaign. THE Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has decided thab the county of Allegheny must pay for all private property on trains and in warehouses destroyed by the Pitts burgh mob during the railway riots of 1877. The Pittsburgh Commercial Gazette thinks that $2,750,000 will settle the claim against Allegheny county on this score. This is putting the losses of the Pennsylvania railroad Company at $1,300.000. The company claims, however, about $5,600,- 000, so that the entire bill will be almost $7,000,000 which the taxpayers will have to pay. The present debt of Allegheny county is $1,750,000, and of Pittsburgh about $17,000,000. A DISPATCH of the 12th from San Francisco says : A meeting, ostensibly of cigar makers, was held last evening in Horticultural Hall, and it was addressed by young Kalloch son of the Mayor elect , Auditor Dunn and Kearney. Nothing unusual occurred until near the close, when Kearney announced that it was pro posed to organize in this city a secret so city called the Jacobin Society," whose object it would be to bang every and any merchant who should employ Chinese, or in auy way encourage Chinese labor.. The agitator called for a show of hands on the proposition. Instantly and with singular unanimity, the hands of all present were raised in approval. No disapprobation was shown, either by word or sign, of Kearney's proposition to organize a secret murderous society. Much excitement has been produced wherever this action is known. CONGRESSMAN FISHER INTER VIEWED. .ro t y t "VII-111 in. I !I. (I II ir. i,l)it; .2., IQ' blisi •. :,:t r:! so j,nuti in die capital city, fell into the hands of a reporter or the Tchle,ipb, who at once I,r:weeded L.) interview that gentleman on the Horious rvsult of the elections, and in answer to the question of what he thought ,)1* the victory in Pennsylvania he said it was about whit Waci expected by tio).-e who were familiar with the inside dissati,Kiction among the I)jwoeratic lead ers. It insures Pennsylvania fur next year, and the Republicans will carry it with case. Regarding the statement tele graphed to the New York World by its Washington correspondent, that the Po. moeracy would carry his (Fisher's) district next year, he smiled and remarked that a district which gave GOO Republican ma jority this year would not be likely to re verse it at a Presidential election. Speaking of Ohio, Mr. Fisher remarked that the Congressional committee knew that Foster would win a month before the election, and all its energies were bent to capture 24 legislative districts in order to compass Thurtnan's defeat, "and," he smilingly added, we carried them and laid the red bandanna statesman on the shelf." Of Indianl he spoke very confidently, saying that. if a State election had been held there this year the Republicans would have had 15,000 majority. "It is all right for ISSO, however," said be, •`and that's a fact that cannot be doubted. We will put a few square plugs into the round holes in Indiana, and the result will be a sur prise to the Democracy." "What do you think or the result in New York r ,•!, will re• "Well, it is about what we expected.— We knew Cornell would be elected and that it would be nip and tuck with the rest of the ticket. As it is it will take the official count to determine whether Potter has defeated Hoskins. The New York election will have a great influence on the selection of the next Democratic candidate for President—and his canvass. Both Kelly and Tilden will fight hard. If Til den is nominated, Kelly will fight him just as hard as he did this year; and harder for that matter, for it will be a question of life or death with Kelly, and he is a good fighter. Every man—every Democrat, I mean—who voted against Robinson will vote against the Gramercy Park eipherer, arid that will insure his de feat. Oa the other hand, if Tilden does not receive the nomination, he will quietly fold his hands, lay back, refuse to tap the bar'l for the candidate, and that ensures the latter's defeat. He won't spend his money when there is'no prospect of a re turn. Tha late election overthrew a good many people who were prominent. It dragged down Sunset Cox and Dorsheimer and others of that clique who always went —or thought they did—with the strongest party. With the Kelly party it was a fight for Tammany and the control of New York city. lie won, of' course, but at a fearful sacrifice." "Who will ho the Republican now inee for President?" "Grant, if he wants it, or Blaine. Either one will do." "Will it be necessary to carry any of the Southern States to elect him r "No, indeed ; we will carry every North ern State, including New York, Connecti cut, New Jersey and Indiana. If we do carry a Southern State, we won't get it. They will count us out. The same old methods will prevail. The next Republi can candidate for the Presidency will be elected by a solid North. and you can de pend upon that." Having thus delivered himself Congress man Fisher bade the reporter good night and sought his room. DID THE DECEASED LEAVE ANY THING ? Like the New York Tribune we would not invade the sanctity of an overwhelm ing sorrow. Heaven forbid that we should causelessly, or out of mere curiosity, in trude upon this great grief of the Demo cratic party, or that we should venture on this solemn occasion upon thoughtless con undrum or frivolous inquiry. Over the abundant manifestations of woe which we see among the leaders of that great but unfortunate party we would fain draw the veil of a decent and decorous regard. It is their funeral. Theirs as exclusively and specially as though it were protected by copyright and covered all over with letters patent. It is no business of ours, uor do we have any desire to stand off and coldly criticise the character of the pro cession, the behavior of the undertaker, or the deportment of the mourners. The corpse is theirs--it is l'or U 3 to sit silent as the heavy-heeled sexton waves his screw driver and calls upon the friends and rela tives to "pass up the north aisle and down "the south aisle, and take their last view "of the remains" ; for us only reverently to uncover as the hearse goes by. And if we can remember little or no good of the departed, we may at least say that there has seldom been a funeral of so absolute a character, or one which upon the whole gave such general satisfaction. Nor have we any desire to hurry up the settlement of the estate. Ample time should be allowed to dull the edge of afflic tion and accustom the bereaved to their new condition. But we do venture just at this time—not because we are at all im patient, but because the general public seems anxious for early information on the subject—to inquire whether the party which has just gone out feet foremost has left any effects; anything whatever to be administered . upon ; anything to warrant the heirs in keeping up the sign or con tinuing the business at the old stand.— There have been times when the deceased claimed to have on hand a large and well selected assortment of political principles. Most of them, however, were exclusively for Southern consumption, and the with drawal of that trade during the war left the party pretty nearly bankrupt. For the past twenty years it has been eking out a precarious subsistence by speculative ventures of one kind and another, from some of which it enjoyed a brief accession of good fortune suff'Di,.nt to turn its held f "Thirty Livcs Lost." and set it on the I =ts them di , l it deri It Sp o 1 the %v.., :pl.' 6., gainer by it, but ot •., v oi-ht t! party" l u ng" for theta, and it all wout to plecos. Sine tlic war it Itv anythi.. t• and everything that wai 11 ;you tin! iiiarket that offered the sliglit,q clime,: to trick the public awl ni.ik.! urn. It speculated reek u Republic dis affection with the grant administration; upon military rule at the South ; upon carpet baggers ; upon corruption in office ; upon the hardship of paying the National debt; upon the difficulties in the way of resumption ; upon hard times, inil ition, greenbackism, grangerism , Tildenisin ; ad, filially, on the emidonation of fraud. None of these have been profitably tures, though the party in the coffin worked tkem all with great as,i,inity, and at times seemed to be amassing capital at a rate which would place it above want fir a term of years. But these accounts were pretty much all closed out at a loss some time before the recent catastrophe, and in the late elections the chief business was to.res. cue as much as possible from the disastrous speculations on Anti Resumption in Ohio and Fraud in New York. In this effort everything went by the board. To the eye of the impartial observer, there seemed to be nothing left,—no inheritance fur the heirs, no pretext fir continuing business. no exen, , c fir keeping up the sign. And yet there may be something in the garret, amongst the old lumber, something .that has been stowed away there ever since the times of Jefferson, Jackson and Calhoun, that can be made to serve the uses of capi tal temporarily, or until hard times and poor crops bring around another chance to speculate on the country's distress If there is any sucji thing among the rubbish let the administrators bring it out at. (ice, or else put up the shutters and take down the sign. - r. -- - , ,* — 3 - - I:* , . \ 1 l it _ T s , r .:-..., __: , , -...• THE PYRAMIDS. by Republican Vote:. OHIO, lOWA, MAINE, ILLINOIS. COLORADO, NEW YORK, WISCONSIN, MICHIGAN, NEBIt ASK A, CALIFORNIA, MINNES OT A, NEW JERSEY, CONNECTICUT, RHODE ISLAND, MASSACHUSETTS, NEW HAMPSHIRE, PENNSYLVANIA DEMOCRATIC. Built by Fraud, Intimidation and the Shot Gun. K E KEN KENT K ENT U K ENT UC KENTUCK KENTUCKY, MARYLAND. MISSISSIPPI. CONGRATULATORY. What the Victory Means. HEAPQ 7 RS REPUBLICAN STATE COM., PHILADELPHIA, November 6, 1879. ) To the Republicans of Pennsylvania : The State Committee tenders to every Republican in the State, and to all others who aided in securing the victory of No vember 4th, thanks and congratulations. You have given the greatest majority ever cast in Pennsylvania for a Republican candidate, save that given to Ganeral Grant in 1872, and you have done this in a cam paign the seeming apathy of which, at first, alarmed the timid and the doubtful. You have given Pennsylvania a proud place in the phalanx of States demanding that our revived prosperity shall not be destroyed ; that our currency shall not be debased ; that the public credit shall not be tarnish ed, and that the rights and privileges of the citizen shall not be crushed out. All this you have done by your stern protest against continuing in power the Democratic party, which assails prosperity by collision with Ihreign capital to break down Amer ican labor and home industries ; that seeks to destroy a sound financial policy and sub stitute a crazy theory of paper currency; that prostrates public credit through State, corporate and municipal repudiation, there by leading certainly to the repudiation of our National debt, and that suppresses by violence in the Southern States those rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness without security for which gov ernments are contemptible and existence is a curse. By your voice these wrongs and dangers to the Nation hart been avert ed and the rights of all our citizens will be redeemed. F. C. llocrrEN, Chairman. A Trap for Pensioners. COMMISSIONER BENTLY WARNS THEM TO AVOID CERTAIN ADVENTURERS. The Commissioner of Pensions has re ceived a letter from an aged ft.tuale pen sioner, which, omitting the names, reads as follows : DEAR SIR : I wish to know if' Mr.- has any right to any pay. lie says he got the Arrears of Pensions bill through Con gress. I thought it took two thirds of the members to pass a law. He wrote to me before I got my check to know how much I would give. I told the man that filed my papers to pat me down for $25 I would like to know whether he is trying to swindle me, an old womal 75 years of age, or shall I give it to him ? 1 inclose the papers he sent Me. The "papers" referred to are copies of printed circulars which have been sent to claimants throughout the country by cer tain persons in Washington, with the pur pose of duping the ignorant by pretensions to influence, or with pleas of requital ... of alleged services. Commissioner Bentley, with a view to further exposing the disre putable schemers, furnishes for publica tion his reply to the above letter. Ile writes : DEAR MADAME : bi answer to your letter of the :14 inst., you are inlurmed that neither Mr. -nor any other person has any right to demand pay of you for any efforts they may have put forth to se cure the passage of the law granting ar rears. From the papers which you in• closed, and which, with your consent, I will retain, it appears that Mr. -is try. hag; to levy a tax for his private use upon your credulity and generosity. Respect. fully yours, J. A. BENTLEY, Commissioner of Pensions. ant tip,st p 'min ‘llt. pr. tit t 3.1111u,ark4 t • crs ith of Ariz . - : dut) 4 er, 11ta1lk i-; Cho s!tip into complyttnent. , , if I: WINO to !, :I . i . r in the t.: , ) r g ill hl !wither irt• these latter eases, however, is at 10-s life reported. Hatt t!:0 iii' (11:1111piOli is a tra: , edy in lt hlt`h !;;11 , ily one dark and lit artrendin:: wanting. '!'here will bo the usual speculation, inquiry and extenuation, mid no argument, no surmise, nor s.upposition and no 11 eritninarion eau call the d-ad from their sea sepulchre, or give consolation to the heart of a single bereaved sufferer. We confront this dreadrnl waste of human life with the un comfortable conviction that it, was need, less. It matters little to those who, with out warnin! , , were snatched from bre and whatever made lire dear, whether there was .fress carelessness or blundering sea mansh:p. or both. Even if for once and in this instance there were sense in the hack ti- 2 ,4 verdict or "Nobody to blame," the catastlophe would not be less terrible. Thirty human beings—men, women and little children—sucked in an instant into the maw of the merciless sea ! We cannot think ~r it without pitiful regret. I f umanly eonsider , A, it. is a misfort Judicially ei.nsidercd, it is pim,/ fiwic monstrous sham!! and a wrong 1 tic bur• den or proof is upon those to whom these lives were intrusted. upon those who bad contraeled to care for them, to show that the utmost vigi:anee was exercised, and that there is no sin of onti , sion nor of clunn:ssion upon their heads. Yet any thing like an investigation satisfactory to the public will probably never be made.-- The Captain of the Champion will tell his story ; the Captain of the lady Octavia will tell his ; both stories have, indeed, already been told inrquially and e.r pork, and with this we must probably be satisfied. If there should be civil proceedings in some admiralty court, how many will hear of their progress and result ? Such a court would be furnished with certain precedents, and would decide according to the law as it has long been expounded; but no law, no decision, no verdict would reach the moral heart of the matox —N. E Tribune. WII ERE TII E MODERN CINCINNATUS HAS The house to which the Gmeral was conducted in a triumphal procession is situated on the other side of the river from the city preper, in East Galena. It is a two story brick, square built and solid in appearance, and fronts on Bourhillier street. Ou the west side there is a ver anda, and front a flagstaff on the roof the Star Spangled Banner waves in pride This residence was presented to General Grant in 1865, on his return from the war. It was the gift of a few of his personal friends, awl not of the citizArs generally, as is currently believed. Gen. Grant re sided there from 1865 until a short time before his inauguration as President, and it is looked upon by the General and his family as "home " Yesterday, when your reporter visited it, half a dozen hulks were busily at work putting things to rights. The house has been occupied for some time past by an old soldier and his wife. Ail the published stories about the mag nificence of Grant's new home may be dis missed as canards. The house has been newly papered, thoroughly cleaned, and comfortably furnished. There are 10,000 homes in Chicago far ahead of it as to style, but few to beat in comfort. On the ground floor there are but four rooms—par tor, dining-room, library, and kitchen, and on the upper floor there are five bed rooms. Cineinnatus returns to his rural home after a triumphal tour through king's palaces, and settles down as a simple citizen. The sensible citizens of Galena made no attempt to do aught but give Gen. Grant a hearty welcome. They reckoned that it would be more to his liking that he should be made to feel at home, and his reception was em phatically a home coming. In every de tail this point was kept in view, and in none more so than in the preparation of his home. The visitor seeking the abode of the man who had once under his con trol more men than Xerxes wept over— the man who ruled for eight years a na tion greater than Ca3sar or Alexander ever conceived—finds a modest brick cot tage on a bleak hillside, and only recog nizes that this is the object of his search when he reads upon the door plate the name, "I.T. S. Grant."—Mr«ip Trihone. THE PARTY WORK THAT HE DID BEFORE HIS DEATH-WHAT HON. 81310 N CAM• ERON SAYS OF TIIE LOSS OF THE RE- PUBLICAN PARTY WASHINGTON, November 10 —Senator Sinvm Cameron, on his return with Sena tor Blaine on Saturdiy from the funeral of the late Senator Chandler, in conversa• tion with a friend on the train said that in the death of Mr. Chandler the Republican party lost one of its most aggressive and tearless leaders ; that to him, perhap, the party was more indebted for its success in the elections of the present year than to any other man ; that in his speeches in the late extra session he struck the key note and arouied the people ofthe North to the real issues and dangers which menaced the country through the revolutionary designs of the Southern leaders in Congress ; that his electrifying midnight speech in the Senate on the proposition of the Democrats to pension Jeff Davis diverted the public wind from local i-sues and turned atten Lion to the designs of the South should they get control of the executive as they have of the legislative department of the government. The ex-Senator said that the west intimate friends of the late Sen ator were convinced that the cause of his death was over exertion ia the late cam paign, as he had splken in Maine, Massa chusetts, New York, Ohio and Illinois, and was on his wiy to fill an engagement on the following. night in his own State. In speaking of the political outlook and the possible candidates for the Presidency he spoke in high terms of Senator Blaine, his admirable eimpaign in his own State and his brilliant speeches in Ohio. lowa, New York and M issachusetts, and that, outside of General Grant, no other name was consideted, but that Grant's name was irresistible and that he had no doubt of his nomination ; that so far as Pennsylva uia was omeerned an early convention would be held and the delegates would be instructed for General Grant, thus leading off in the movements preliminary to the Presidential c:oittst ; that in his judgment it mattered little whom the Democrats nominated ; that the people were not yet ready to allow the South to take possession of the government and would elect Grant with a smell. Tii Harrisburg car work has increased wages 15 to IS cents a day. :tre r Oil al 1~.. I~;i~!"IM Grant's Galena Home SETTLED DOWN .•-- Zach. Chandler, Liierary Notes. for N i~i ~ ........ IT "'" Ma.) 31010, the u •t. , ry I , y 11 , ..,•11..gg of "Ilow goiti.• Itrvl., thi. 141%, - : ;:tory, •"ri, 1:11,11,1*, . .. '1."... It. Siackloa pecnli.trly !tinny sly dvseription of llo• Centaor I;oys of Thrarr and their “gle:ts-yoll-piea,” Matcher:, With thine illustrations by the humorous arti.t. F. S. Chnrelt; au leo r.art story or a boy who saved "Mrs. Pigs" from an icy thrath ; all areoaiir, iry a h ry. of he", he hOote.l.laek-rahhils in Kansas; short story ot tii.' "f 1 lie Lail Dauphin," with a frontiviece rpartritit at the little prince. enLsave.l (row :Ipaihtire4 by tlrensa; and a thrilling hisi,ritul 1:1;‘,•k Philip the Imw when tlicy ,fide,lit like . - A new -tory of bo3•pranks, lino, and mtbdonr life' written I.) William 0. Stoddard, author of 'Dab Kinzer," and entitled — Annan; the fakes," is begun with a lively installment ; and there is an exciting account by Frank 11. Con v.•,” of a lad nho was lift "Adrift na the Orrau," .1 solcanic ishoid, and had many strange Anartie•le•ly Olive Thorne, illustrate) with eleven pirrtirrs Ji , sie ()Intl:, describes the ••Playthings" of all tints:sand climes • and a clearly written paper With candidly prepared diagrams, tells how to make "A Few Pretty Things in Fancy NVork.'' The Very Little Folks have hair pages of large type and Garr pi...larva to themselves ; and the• dup : uhnent,., ••)setter-l;ox" and "Itiiidle-lhix," are crammed aith funny ileitis, Ilia buys' and girls' letters, and riddles 01" all alt A Visage Rivalling in Yellowness That of a •'heathen Chinee," if belonging to one of our race, can scarcely he described as attractive. But worse than this, it is the in dex' of a- disordered liver,-of a liver that needs arousing and regulating. The remedy is at hand, prompt, efficacious. A course of llos letter's Stomach Bitters will expel the mis directed Vile from the blood and divert it into the proper channel, open the bowels, remove the dyspeptic symptoms which invariably ac company biliousness and counteracts the rap idly developing tendency to dangerous con gestion of the liver, which must always exist when the skin and whites of the eyes assume this yellow hue. The pains through the right lower ribs, side and shoulder blade, the nausea, furred slate of the tongue, and unpleasant breath which indicate liver complaint, in short all its disagreeable concomitants are soon remedied by this sovereign corrective, which iu addition to its regulating properties is a superb invigorant, and a pure and agree able medicinal stimulant, appetizer and ner vice. Nov. 7 .Tohnny Steele, 4-Coal Oil Johnny," is not working in McKean county, but is a horny-handed son of toil in Minne sota. New To-Day. A NEW BOOK OR. ER'S NOW TAKEN Agents can make most by selling anew w.)rk— the only one of the kind issued, "THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF COUNTY AND TOWNSHIP OFFICERS," by W. R. therly, esq., of the Wil liamsport (Pa.) Bar. Contains all theacts and decisions in relation to the various county and township officers, and treats the tax laws fully. Every officer and tax payer will buy one. It con tains 300 pages, neatly printed, bound in cloth and gold, and sold at $2 per volume. Fur agencies and terms apply with stamp to W. R. BIERLY, Nov.l4,tf. Williamsport, Peon's. ITHE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, For the Western Dis trict of Pcoinsyrvania. Benjamin F. Douglas, of Huntingdon county, a Bankrupt under the act of Coniress of March 2d, 1567, and the amendments supplements thereto, having applied for a dis charge from all his debts, and other claims prova ble under sai I Act, by order of the Court, Notice is hereby given to all creditors who have proved their debts, and other persons interested, to ap pear on the 25th day of November, 1879, at 10 o'clock, a. m., before J. Irvin Brotberlin, esq., Register in Bankruptcy, at his office, in Hollidays burg, Pennsylvania, to show cause, if any they have, why a discharge should nit be granted to the said Bankrupt. _ _ N0v.14 21, FOR SALE, Over 300 _Farms in Shenan- doalt Valley, West Va. Will take City property or Western land in part pay for some of these farms. Have a few farms for sale which can be paid for nearly as easy as to pay rent. Circulars airin'z lecati Olt price. etc., FREE . Address .1. 11. Itill . sTou, Martinsburg, W. Va. AGOOD PLAN. combining ...I,,oeratfng manym.lers 111 4111 c V 14,111 .41111 144.1 eVvry it./Vr 11N1;41 Ot rkill,tal hinnsegrllie.l.t. I...age pr ,tltll4llvidell p.. 1..4441 nye...titter. 14 $lO,OOO, Circular, with fis.l plutin: IWO: 114. W .111141 . 1.111.11,4,e.1 lu mock dealings, Mailed fled. LAWRENCE Is CU., 21 Stolid Street, New Tusk. WANTED. Yonng Men and Ladies to learn Telegraphy. Good sit uations guaranteed. Address with stamp. OBERLIN TELEkiRAPII CO., Oberlin, Ohio. $1.3 tO $lOOO f i o n r y t es ui t i e e ,l i f n .v W er *lt y ll u S io t n ., o .ltockszak o e i s t free explaining everything. Ad dress BAXTER & CO., Bankers, 7 Wall street, N. Y. tj%/FT a Month and expenses guaranteed to Agents. I Outfit tree. SHAW Lt CO., AUGUSTA, MAINE $777 A YEAR and expenses to Agents. Outfit Free' Address P. O. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine' N0v.14-4t. New Stock of Clothing Wlllell WILL ISE SOLO AT ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES, OLD ESTABLISHED CLOTHING HOUSE; IN THE DIAMOND, HUNTINHDON, PA Having abandoned, for the present, my inten tion of removing my store to Philadelpeia, I would respectfully inform my old friends and cus tomers, and the pubiic generally, that I have just purchased an entire New Stock of Winter Clothing for Men and Boys, of the latest style and best quality, which I propose to sell at prices lower than they can be purchased elsewhere. I feel confident that I can offer greater bargains in Clothing and Furnishing Goods than any oth er dealer in the county. N0v.14. H. ROMAN. 1879. NOVEMBER 1879. e "" ed LIUNTINGDON, PA., Is 'headquarters for the fullowieg goods : Black Cash- The prices are right. meres, The prices are right. Colored Cash- i The prices are right. mores, The prices are right. Blk. Alpacca, The prices are right. Col. Alpacca,lThe prices are right. Dry Goods, The prices are right. all styles. The prices are right. Shawls, Coats, The prices are right. Coatings, The prices are right. Sackings, The prices are right. Blankets, The prices are right. Comfort , , The prices are right. Flannels, The prices are right. Canton Flan- The prices are right. Deis, The prices are rigl . Table Linens, The prices are right. Cassimeres, The prices are right. Jeans, The prices are right. llosiery, Gloves, Men's, Ladies' The prices aae and Chiidren's The prices are right. Underwear, The prices are right. Laces, The prices are right. Fringes, The prices are right. Trimmings, The Prices are right. &c., &c., &c. ,The prices are right. Together with other goods too numerous to mention. One Price---CASH. WM. REED, 111Intingdon, Nov.l 4. miht, °port the Keventh v .hone' ;~ ral S. C. MeCANDLESS, Clerk. -AT TII E The prices are right. The prices are right. New To-Day. TM: CiSEZPiTHAN R, t 1.1 . 7.1.‘K AIM:: LT, "The. Chri, , ,al 1.7a;0n a 4 r Ireful to gr i cify the et,it w !tit, of it.: le t4er.: a, the t Ile 11l it•wtokiteals."--Sjrtet.-to. , Jottruo,. Is11)-Ni), Trtirwrrsl rtit :-:1!.1..AT HOURS. Re•v Rev. R:ty tncr, the Ilt. on' intotl. EVERY DAY PROBLEMS,by Jozieph Cook, lIINI4I'.a;III4,ME ILE By E I.v. Everett 1111 e, E kv.ird Eggleston, M. F Sweetser, Fred. B. Perkius, Jureph Cook. COOK EltY FOR By Juliet Corson, of the N. 1. Cooking School IN THE 610 i ROOM, By Miss E. It. Seuvil, of Mass. General Hospital. lIONIE TALKS, By Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher A Pforetfol Script Story : "UNTO THE THIRD AND kOURTII GENERATION." By Helen Campbell TEN MINUTE SERMONS TO CHILDREN, By J. G. Merrill, Frank Beard, B. T. Vincent, W. W. Newton, W. F. Crafts, Jas. M. Ludlow, and others. STORIES from the best juvenile writers, including Frank R. Stockton, E. Huntington Miller, Elea nor Kirk, Hope Ledyard, Hamilton W. Mabie, Susan Coolidge, Mrs. E. C. Gibson, Louise Stockton. Sarah J. Prichard, Eliot Mcgormick, Lucretia P. Hale. BOOK REVIEWS. By specialists in their several departments. PLYMOUTH PULPIT, A Sermon or Lecture-Room Talk each week, by the Rev. henry Ward Beecher. SUNDAY-SCHOOL PAPERS, By Rev. Lyman Abbott and Mrs. W. F. Crafts, The Outlook, News of the Churches, Science and Art, Fact and Rumor, give concisely the news of each week. The following persons have contributed to the columns of the CHRISTIAN UNION during the past year : John Hall, D. D., Philips Brooks, Jobn G. Whit tier, Judge Noah Davis, Judge C. A. Peabody, E. P. Rue, Frank H. Converse, Susan Coolidge, llezekiah Butterworth, John James Platt, Wil lard Parker, M. D., Constance F. Woolson, Julius H. Ward, Alice Wellington Rollins, Geo. S. Merriam, Gail Hamilton, John Jay, Chas. Dudley Warner, Leonard Bacon, D. D., Frances Wil ard, S. W. Duffield, D. D.. Wayland Hoyt, D. D., Mrs. D.ll. R. Goodale, Leonard Woolsey Bacon, Mary Ainge De Were, Mrs. S. W. Weitzel, Helen Campbell, Mrs. M. E. C. Wythe, R. W. Raymond, Ph.D , Charles L. Norton, Prof. W. S. Tyler, D. D. John Bur roughs, Rose Terry Cooke. TERMS :per annum, $3 00, Pour Month* $l.OO, SPECIAL OFFER. 2Ncw subscribers sending us $3 00 during November and December will receive the paper until January Ist, 1881. Address, The Christian Union, 27 Park Place, New York. Boston Office: Shumway t Co., 21 Bromfield St. Chicago Office : Room 99, Ashland Block. ONLY TWO DOLLARS A YEAR. The Boys and Girls and their Friends will find in WIDE IrIiVAKE FOR 1880 Hosts of things to enjoy. Among them will be Two Capital Serial Stories: FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS AND 110 W THEY GREW, By Margaret Sidney. Illustrated by Jessie Curtis. TWO YOUNG HOMESTEADERS. By Theodora It. Jenness. Illustrated by R.Lewie. There will also be Four Two-part Stories: Billy's Round. The Boy that was too Beautiful. Our Store. At Plymouth Oak Form. OUR AMERICAN ARTISTS. Mr. S. U. W. Benjamin will continue these pa pers which have been so gladly welcomed by the people at large, being the only Art Series ever prepared for young readers; and, as during 1879, they will be largely illustrated by the artists themse yes, and will also take up our Sculptors, Bird and Flower Painters, Book and Magazine Illustrators, and Engravers. CONCORD PIC-NIC DAYS. Under this title Mr. Geo. B. Bartlett will pre sent a series of Out-of-doors Games for both Boys and Girls. These amusement papers will be full of Concord reminiscences of famous haunts, and noted people whose names are familiar to the literature and art of two continents. Prof. M. P. Paul and his Discoveries in the Starry Heavens. Chronicled in verse by John Henry Jack Illustrated by Abiathar Ann, The entire collection will be arrang ed and edi• ted by John Brownjohn, and the drawings re touched by Miss Mary A. Lathbury. Interesting to Teachers. A SERIES OF Twelve Original Exercise Songs, for use in Public Schools, are being prepared for Wins AWAKE, under the supervision of Mr. Louis C. Elson, a gentleman well known to the musical public of Boston and New York. DELIGHTFUL SURPRISES EVERY MONTH. Now is the time to subscribe. Only $2.00 a year. Agents wanted. , Liberal Commission. Address all orders and inquiries to D. LOTHROP ifi, CO., Publishers, 32 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass. THE INDEPENDENT. THE INDEPENDENT appeals to cultivated men and wo men. It discusses current questions of religion, philos ophy, and politics. It is wide-awake. It is not afraid.— It seta people•to thinking. It welcomes fresh truth. It has numerous departments. It publishes more religious discussion than the religious reviews, more poetry and stories than the popular monthlies, and gives more' in formation than an annual cyclopedia. It hasa larger corps of the most famous writers tla►n any other journal of any other sort tu the country. It makes strong friends of those who read it. Try it for next year. e have purchased the newspaper copyright of the Boston Monday Lectures fur 1879-80, to be delivered, as heretofore, by the Rev. Joseph Cook, beginning Nov. 3d and the same will be given verbatim to the readers of THE INDEPENDENT weekly, together with the Pre ludes, after revision by the author, Sermons by Eminent Clergymen iu all parts of the country will continue to be printed. PREMIUMS, JEk- We have decided to withdraw on the 31st day of December, 1879, all the premiums now offered by us to subscribers, a full list of which appears below; so that those who would avail themselves of our liberal offers must do so before December 31st, 1870. Worcester's Unabridged PICTORIAL QUARTO DICTIONARY, Bound in Sheep. 134! pages. Over 1,000 Illustrations. Is;tieof 1879. Our contract with the publishers of the Dictionary ex pired Dec. 31st, 1784, and Messrs. B. Lippencott & Co. absolutely refuse to continue the contract beyond that date on the same favorable terms. We are, therefore, compelled to withdraw the Dictionary premium at the expiration of the present year; but we purposely give ample notice, so that our subscribers and the public in general may avail themselves of the surprisingly low terms to get the Dictionary, in connection with TIIE INDEPENDENT. We will send this Dictionary to any person who will send us the names of Three New Sub scribers and Nine Dollars; or who will, on renewing his own subscription, is advance, send us Two .New Names additional and $9.99; or who sill renew his own sub scription fur three years, in advance, and send us $9.90 ; or, for a new subscriber for three years and $9.00. The regular price of thelDictionary alone at all th• book stores is $lO.OO, while the lowest price of three subscriptions is $9 4144. Both the Dictionary and the three subscriptions, under this extraordinary offer can, there fore, be had together f,:r only $9.00. THE REV. JOSEPH COOK'S BOOKS, entitled, "Biology," "Transcendentalism," "Orthodoxy," "Conscience," “lieredity," and "Marriage," embodying the author's previous remarkable Monday Lectures. They are published iu handsome book form by James R. Os good it Co., of BUI4dOII. We will mail a copy of either vol ume, postpaid, to any subscriber to THE INDEPEN— DENT who remits us $3.00 fur a year in advance; or any subscriber may remit $5.50 and we will bend hint THE INDEPENDENT for two years in advance. and two volumes, postpaid; or any three volumes, postpaid, to any one subscriber who remits SB.W for three years in advance. Subscription Price $3.00 per annum in advance, includ ing anyone of the following Premiums: Any one volume of the household Edition of Charles Dickens' Works, bound in cloth, with lti illustrations each, by Sol. Eytinge. Moody and Sankey's Gospel hymns and Sacred Songs- No. S. Lincoln and his Cabinet; or First Reading of the Email: cipation Proclamation. ,line Large Steel Engraving By Ritchie. Size 26x56. Authors of the United States. Fine large Steel En graving. 44 PortraitA. By Ritchie. Size 2.4138%. Charles Sumner. Fine Steel Engraving. By Ritchie. Grant or Wilson. Fine Steel Eng - ravings. By Bitchy, Edwin M. btanton. Fine Steel Engraving. By Ritchie. The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln. By Frank B. Carpenter. Bound in Cloth. 300 pages. We offer one premium only jiff one year's subscription. Subscription Price $3.00 per annum in Advancc. ll Specimen copies sent free. Address, TILE JNDEPENDENT, New York City. IL,Cnt out this Advert iscuient. TO rl l l-1= People of Huntingdon THIS IS TO NOTIFY YOU, YOUR AUNTS. YOUR UNCLES AND YOUR COUSINS, THAT WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED FALL AND WINTER GOODS ILL OF It HIM WE WILL SELL BELOW ALL COMPETITION. BOOTS AND SHOES We have a very large stock of the best BOOTS and SIEGES that are put up in Philadelphia, and we will not allow any wan in the State to undersell us. We have a very fine assortment of LADIES' COATS, At Prices ranging from $3.50 to $20.00. CasAinereK and AllertnoeKt We have opened 20 pieces of ALL-WOOL IMPORTED CASHMERES AND MERINOES IN liblaMS 40,/..00070. Ladies' and Children's Hosiery. We have a beautiful stock of Hosiery for Ladies and Children, which we will sell lower than the low- To Clergymen $2 50, SILK FRINGE: We have tho host Siii RIDu ill the marks(, Cur Carpet Department is full of the latest patterns, from the Lowest-priced Hemp to the best Bod; and there is no use in anybody in this county trying to sell at as low prices as we rill, for it can't be done. Come and see before you buy elsewhere. 1 :7 6.A-13 - SE — M.A.DM C I-10TP= N CB-. We almost give Ready-made Clothing away. We can, and we will, undersell every other es tablishment in the county. Give ue a call and you will be benefited thereby. Frints, Illnslins, Canton Flannels, Cassimeres, All-Wool Flannels and Water Proofs by the car load—all offered at bottozn prices. 7 4A7C,C)3Li I\7' 331-LAINT MK. We have a very large stock of Woolen Blankets, Brown Blankets, Silver Grey Blankets and White Blankets, all at old panic prices. Pont' fail to see our blankets, if you need any. Oar cellar is chuck full of the very finest Groceries. The prices are below the lowest. The rush for our New Goods is now so great that we can't take time to further enumerate. Suffice it to say we have everything you may want, and lots of it, and the prices and finality are guaranteed to be the lowest and beet in the market. Give us a call and we can show you better than we can tell you. HENRY & CO., HUNTINGDON, PA. 00t3,1879, THE BEST PAPER, TRY IT! BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED. THE SCIENTIFIC HERM THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN is a large First- Class Weekly Paper of Sixteen Pages, printed in the most beautiful style, profusely illustrated with splendid engraving*, representing the newest in ventions and the most recent Advances in the Arts and Sri noes ; including new and interesting facts in Agriculture, Horticulture, the Home, Health, Medical Progress, Social Science, Natural History, Geology, Astronomy. The most valua ble practical papers, by eminent writers in all de partments of Scienee, will be found in the Scien tific American. Terms, $3.20 per year, $l.OO half year, which includes postage. Discounts to Agents. Single copies, ten cents. Sold by all Newsdealer!. Re mit by postal order to MUNN it CO., Publishers, 37 Park Row, New York. _ _ _ PATENTS.Sci In connection with the entifio American, Messis. Muss & Co.. are Solicitors of American Patents, have had 35 years experience, and now have the largest establishment in the world. Patents are obtained on the best terms. A special notice is made in the Scientific American of all Inventions patened through this Agency, with the name and residence of the Patentee. By the immense cir culation thus given, public attention is directed to the merits of the new patent, and sales or in troduction often easily affected. Any person who bas made a new discovery or invention, can ascertain, FREE OF CHARGE, whether a patent can probably be obtained, by writing to MUNN dc Co. We also send FREE our Hand Book ab nit the Pa'ent Laws, Patents, Cav eats, Trade Marks, their costs, and how procured, with hints for procuring advances on inventions. Address for the Paper, or concerning Patents. MUNN & CO., 37 Park Row. New York. Branch Office, cor. F. & 7th Sts., Washington, D. C. SALE OF UNCLAIMED FREIGHT. •--The Pennsylvania R. R. Co. will offer at public sale, on THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13th, 1879, at 10 o'clock, a. in., the following described articles, now at the several stations, as designated, unless the owners or consignees pay charges and remuve the same before day of sale: SPRUCE CREEK. Seed Screen and one old cook stove, 1 cider press, John S. Isett. 2 meat stands, ..............E. B. Isett. 1 box merchandise, Eli Rush. 1 bdl. p. sacks Wooner lc Thompson 1 grain drill, 13 pc5.,.... ..... W. E. McWilliams. 2 grain drills, W. M. Meek. 1 Walter A. Wood reaper, 1 Champi,n mower and reap er, 5 plows, 1 straw eutter.R. S Seeds. HUNTINGDON. 35 bbls. cement, C. H. Anderson 1 bag merchandise,W. H. Port . 1 boi hardware ..H. C. Robinson, 1 bar iron, 1 bdl. moulding, 1 grain drill tongue, No marks. MILL CREEK. 1 box loom, T. L. Lytle. 2 boxes hardware, Jacob Sharp 1 box burr rubbers, Broken tomb stone, Bar iron, JOHN REILLY, Oct. 24, 1879-3 t. Supt. of Transportation. NOTICE TO TRESPASSERS.-No tin is hereby given to all parties not to trespass on the lands or premises of the under signed, in Walker township, either by hunting, fishing or otherwise, as tife law will be rigidly en forced against all persona so doing. The destruc tion of fences, the hauling of wood and gravel, aid other depredations impel me to this step. 00t24.tf. JOHN M'CAHAN. Dollars A MONTH guaranteed. $l2 a 5 d r,e a4 , o il r t e l:c ; in w e el b s y .. t il li l e industrious. Capital not a k s e tart o you. M t e e n, w t omen i for us than at anything else. The work is light and pleasant, and such as soy one can go right at. Those who are wise who see this notice will send us theiraddresses at once and see for themselves. Costly Outfit and terms free. Now is the time. Those already at work are laying up large sums of money. Ad dress TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine. Juneti,lB79-Iy. SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, CHURCH BT., bet. Third and Fourth, 0et.E7,79. HUNTINGDON, PA New Advertisements HUNTINGDON COUNTY. THE LARGESI AND BEST SELECTED STOCK OF Ever bef , ,re brought to this market, KERR ARE A FEW OF OUR SPECIALTIES: LADIES' COATS. 13LACK_ AND COLORED, at prices ranging from 50 cents to sl. These are splendid bargains! We have opened several cases of PACIFIC CASHMERES AND BRILLIANTEENS, At prices ranging from 15 to 30 cents. These are extraordinary bargains, CARPETS. C4-X1.4:140303E1.130.. 35TH YEAR. MOUNT UNION —.Miller I McCarthy , lire. Collins. ...Mr. Lawser. R. M'DIVIT T. New Advertisements --. I /)- est. Come and see them. at city pricer!. "THE WEEKLY PRESS" NEW ATTRACTIONS. A PENNSYLVANIA SERIAL STORY. PRICE REDUCED TO $1 25 FOR SINGLE COPY $l.OO IN CLUBS OF TEN OR MORE, (INCLUDING PREPAID POSTAGE.) In order to place The Weekly Press within the reach of the Republican voters of the State, the price has been reduced to ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY-FIVE. CENTS for the year, by the single copy, or to ONE DOLLAR for the year, by clubs. The Press is thoroughly devoted to the princi ples of the Republican party, and maintains the Republican organization because it believes that the proeperty and progress of the people cannot be safely intrusted to any other exisiting political organization. During the year 1880, the most stupendous political conflict of this epoch will take place. Upon its issue will depend the political destiny of the country for many years. _ . The Press steadily resists the aims of the "Solid South," which is now organized to capture the Executive, to retain Congress, to remodel and con trol the Supreme Court, and to subordinate every public interest to the overmastering purpose of controlling the policy of the Nation, and thereby gaining by legislation and peaceful means what it lost on the field. The Press enforces the duty of preserving in full force the Constitutional Amend ments made to Secure the fraits of the war; up holds the right of every lawful voter to a free, and nnbought, exercise of his right ; inflexibly insists upon an honest return of the votes cast; justifies the use of all necessary means to prevent fraud ulent voting,and fraudulent returning of votes; accepts as fundamental the ( q tat right of every citizen to the adequate proteo-ion by the law of his political as well as his civil rights; main-• tains as wise the Republican policy ofßesumptiom and honest financial legislation; defends as sound. the policy of Protection to American Industry;. and, in general, follows whithersoever the Repub lican principles lead. Special measures have been adopted to Strength en the Paper in all its departments. THE EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT will be in• the hands of able and experienced writers, and the range of subjects discussed will be as wide as in any other first-class newspaper in the Union. THE LITERARY, THE AGRICULTURAL, THE FAMILY and THE CHILDRENS' E - P ART NESTS will remain in charge of experi enced and capable editors; and the Market Re ports will be full and acourate. CLOSE ATTENTION will be given to the State News of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. OUR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE will in clude letters from Europe, and all portions of the World. A SPECIAL FRATURE of The Weekly Press will be a Serial Story in Illustration of Frontier Lite in Central Pennsylvania, prior to, and dur ing the Revolutionary War, in which John Brady and his son, John and Samuel, and other Border celebrities will he prominently introduced. This story will be written by Mr CHARLES MCKNIGHT. author of "Our Western Border," "Old Fort Du ttuesne." and "Simon (dirty," and will begun about the middle of November. AC - Special Ti.rins will be made with Canvaa•- era. Air - Specimen copies bent free on application. plr`Parties scndidg $125 will be entitled to receive the paper from date till January I, ISSI. TERMS FOR THE DAILY PREss ONE YEAR. (including prepai I puAage)...SS 7'' SIX MONTHS, " •• ... .1 41/ THREE MONTHS," " I ... 2 at) ONE MONTH. " " " ... 75 Tex Tat-Weru Ll' PRESS, published every Tues day, Thursday and Saturday. Mailed to subecri hers (including prepaid postsge) at $4.40 per an num ; $2.20 for six months, and $l.lO for three months. Address THE PRESS COMPANY (LIMITED), S. W. ('or. Seventh and Chestnut Streets, PHILADELPHIA Brusse FOR 1880.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers