The Huntingdon Journal. J. A. NASH, HUNTINGDON, PENN'A FRIDAY, ----- MARCH 12, ISSO Circulation LARGER than any other Paper in the Juniata Valley. Entered at the Poet Office, at Huntingdon, Pa., as Second Class Mail Matto. Republican State Ticket. FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT: Hon. HENRY GREEN, OF EASTON. FOR AtiDITOR-GENERAL : Hon. JOHN A. LEMON, OF BLAIR. Republican National Convention. A National Convention of the Republican party will meet at Chicago on Wednesday, the second day of June next, at 12 o'clock noon. for th nomination of candidates to be supported t•r President and Vice President at the next election Republicans and all who will co-operate with them in supporting the nominees of the party are invited to choose two delegates from each Con gressional district, four at large from each State, two from each territory, and two from the Dist i..t of Columbia, to represent them in the Convention J. D. CAMERON, Chairman. THOMAS J. KEOGH, Secretary. COL. Tom SCOTT, as president of the Pennsylvania Railroad Ccmpany, receivt.s a salary of $24,300 per annum. NEARLY 300,000,000 postal cards wen used iu the United States last year. Pt2st masters must have beets kept busy reading 83 many.. ONE of Harrisburg's prominent physi cians, Dr. Jno W. Bechtal, has got him self into trouble and prison, on the seri ous charge of malpractice. HON. SIMON CAMERON was 81 years 010 on Monday. A large number of his friends and admirers called upon him do - ring the day and extended their warm congratulations. THE council for Brant and Hummel, two of the Raber murderers, has made application to the Board of Pardons for a commutation of the death sentence to imprisonment for life. THE Republican members of the Maine Legislature have chosen delegates at large to the Chicago convention, and instructed them to support Senator Blaine. Eugene Hale beads the delegation. ANDREW HOPKINS, esq., editor of the Washington Review and Examiner, and founder of the Harrisburg Patriot, died at his residence in Washington, Pa., on Friday morning, aged fifty-fve years. A RUMOR from Port Carbon, in the anthracite coal regions, is to the effect that the Mollie Maguires are busily engaged in re organizing their society. A little more. hemp will have to be stretched fur the benefit of these cut-throats. HON. ED. M'PHERsoN has been ap pointed Secretary of the Republican Con gressional Committee, with headquarters at Washington. The selection is a capita one, and his long experience in such labors renders hint capable to discharge the du ties of the position in an efficient manner. THE valedictory of Hon. Ed. McPher son, as the editor of the Philadelphia Press, appeared in that paper of Saturday last. Mr. McPherson took a position on the paper, as a political writer, in Septem ber, 187 E, and since January, 1879, he has occupied the position of editor-in chief. THE McVeytown Journal has just en tered upon its eighth volume, and in announcing the fact "Cooney" "does it proud." Under his management the paper has been made quite remunerative, the which we are glad to hear May it con tinue to prosper, and by the time it reaches its sixteenth birthday may our friend Conrad retire a millionaire. CHIEF MILLER has issued a call for his Democratic braves to meet in council in Pittsburgh, on the 18th inst. The Fulton Democrat says that "it is an outrage to compel eastern delegates to go to Pitts burgh to please the little Tilden coterie around that city." The chief of cipher alley carries the wampum-belt, and his fol lowers in the tribe do as he orders. SENATOR CARPENTER made a speech in the Fitz John Porter case, on Saturday, and took strong grounds against his re instatement in the army, contending that Congress had no power to set aside the finding of a court martial. The speech was an able one, but just before its close Mr. Carpenter spoiled the effect of it by the propoiition to re-nominate Gen. Grant. We cant see what Grant's candidacy has to do with the case of Fitz John Porter. THE hoodlums of San Francisco, under the lead of Kearney, have threatened to burn the property of any person employ ing Chinese. They have placarded the city saying that they would lay the city in ashes unless their demands were com plied with 6-en. McDowell, commander of the army of the Pacific, under orders, has sent several hundred United States troops to San Francisco to be in readiness to quell any riot that these lawless vaga bonds may inaugurate. For self protec tion, against this rabble, the law abiding eitizens have organized committees ofsafety, and if a riot should be precipitated it will be bad for those who are led to acts of lawlessness by thy Irish Communist, Deni- Kearney. The decent people of San Francisco should offer a price for his head. A. M. PURDY, of Palmyra, N Y:, send, postpaid and free to all applicants his valuable 24-page Catalogue of Fruits anti Flowers, giving kinds, descriptions, ta de of planting, &c. Every person who has a rod of garden or ground to plant, should have it. He also sends free asi Peimen copy of THE FRUIT RECORDER AND COT TAGE GARDENER, a monthly at $l.OO per year, devoted to fruits and flowers—it speaks for itself; while 25 cents will get his 64 page SMALL FRUIT INSTRUCTOR— a work pronounced by all who have seen it, the most concise and practical of any yet printed. Persons sending to him now will get the Catalogue, and the FRUIT RECORDER for 1880, and the SMALL FRUIT INSTRUCTOR, all post paid for only One Dollar. He accepts postage stamps for odd change. THE RIOT BILLS TRIALS. The Riot. Bill bribery eases were call-:d for trial in the Dauphin ceunty court, ou Mon day last, when pleas of guilty were enter ed, by counsel, in the cases of Wm. IL Kemble, Jesse R. Crawford, Charles B. Salter, and Wm. F. Rutnberger. The plea of Wm. H. Kemble included "corrupt so licitation" only, and di I not admit the corrupt offering of "any money or tbinc f,f value" to any of the persons named in Ihe indictment. Keitib.e was also under indictment for perjury, but it is thought that his plea of guilty in the other case will avoid a trial for perjury. This turn of the case took every one by surprise, as no one expected that these defendants would acknowledge their guilt, and their trial waQ looked forward to with great interest by the people throughout the State. Rep rcsentative Charles E Wolfe, of Union who was inArumcotal in bringing to the surface this rotten tr.ins.,ction, and who the leader of th) , H u-e Committee tor the 1)1..1-within. regards the result as a com plete vindication, and justifies his cout,e in instituting the prosecution. his object in these prosecutions was to expose the modus operandi of legislation at Harris burg in these latter years, and by so doing he has accomplished a good wot k, and in the future the work of the lobbyist will be attended with some danger to his pocket and his personal freedom. The penalty which the act of Assembly attaches to the offense of corrupt solicit, tion, to which these defendants have plead guilty, is a fine not exceeding $l,OOO, and imprisonment net exceeding one year. The minimum punishment is not prescribed. After the disposition of the above cases, the Commonwealth against Emile J. Pe troff was called, and after some delay, caused by the late arrival of Judge Jere Black, counsel of the Commonwealth, a jury was sworn, the case opened by the District Attorney, and the examination proceeded with. The other cases put down for trial at this term, by request of counsel on both sides, have been pos , poned, and it is the general belief that they will never come to trial. By agreement the 29th inst. has been fixed upon as the Lime for the impo sition of sentences on Kemble, Rumberger, Salter and Crawford. Editor. The Poi itiphone. Congress is still engaged in doing noth ing—but drawing pay. The New York T tztune contends that Blaine will have thirty delegates out of the Indiana delegation to Chicago. Chairman Cessna is making a rigid in quiry into the legal qualifications of the names suggested as Presidential Electors, before making public the official list. Hon. Ed. M'Pherson has sold his stock in the Philadelphia Press, amounting to a one-tenth interest, to the holder of the majority interest, said to be a Pittsburgh iron dealer. Senator Wm. B Elliott, of Philadelphia, who is a delegate to the Chicago Conven tion, from the First Pennsylvania district, declares publicly and emphatically that he is against Grant. The New Yolk World, the leading Democratic paper in the Empire• State, as serts that Mr. Tilden is paying $5O a head for delegates to the Pennsylvania Demo cratic Convention. If Tilden should be nominated at Cin cinnati, and it looks as if he had the party well in hand to bring about such a result, the New York World will have a very un palatable dish of •crow" to gulph down. The German Republicand of Cleveland, to the number of over thirteen hundred, have signed a protest against a third term for Gen Grant. The Anzei:yer, the Ger man organ of the same city says that it Grant is nominated it will repudiate him It is said that Tilden has already se cured over five hundred rooms at Cin cinnati, and his agents are still in search for more. It looks as if Sammy intended to run that convention to suit himself, and he intends to chalk the hats" of all his followers. And so he should, for he will never miss the amount required to do it from his bar'l The Tilden boom had a reverse in Al legheny county, on Saturday last, at the meeting of the Democratic committee The Tildenites, with Col Barr, of the Post, at their head, wanted but one Convention called, but their proposition was voted down by a decided majority, and instead of one convention there will be ten, one for each Senatorial and Representative district in the county. JUDGE JERE BLACK. is given the credit of preparing the plan and writing the re port accompanying it, for a change in the electoral system of choosing President and Vice President. It advocates an election by a pluarlity vote, rather than by a major ity, and discusses at great ler. 4 th the histo ry of the present system, and of the differ ent elections held under it. The old sys terse grew out of Federal distrust of the . people, says Judge Black, but he forgets to add, says the Harrisburg Telegraph. that it worked very well as long as the Democratic party had a majority of votes in the College. When the Democracy were repudiated by the people they went to work to destroy not only the electoral system, but that also of the Government. If the Democratic effort to improve the electoral system was honest, it would de serve respect, but it is only another shape in which they desire to defeat the will of the people in using the elective franchise THE National Greenback Convention met at St. Louis on Friday last. The associated press telegram says that the convention adopted resolutions similar to last year. Stttphen B Pillage, of New flatnpshire, was nominated for president by a small majority and B. J. Chambers, of Texas, for. vice president, although a telegram had bees received from the form er stating that be would not accept a nomi nation in opposition to the nominee of the Chicago convention. Motions putting in nominatimrJohn C Fremont and Solon Chase were not seconded. The national executive committee was announced and the convention adjourned to meet in Chicago on June 9. There was great confusion and W. H. B. Lauton, editor of the West Tennessee Whig, with five other e Mors, withdrew. amidst cries of "get out." Second Open Letter to R. Milton Speer SIR I—lli II;y• letter published two weeks ago, I cruel the lldur , Tracy of the county to bear witness that you had, in your personal organ, wade on me a most 'shameful, wanton and ungrateful attack.' and that solely because 1 had not voted f.r you for School Director at at ,lectiott w hieh you said had "no political si„.nifie:inee." Norwithsiarnling you own and coot, 1 paper, and its heading reads,'• S. FLT M ING iti Cu., FUBLISILEItS. S. E. FLEMING EDITOR,' and you, in your own pk r- n represent Mewing & Cr , "with all the rights and appurtenances," as we law yers say "thereunto belonging," you take refuge behind your nominal editor and claim that you did not write the article attacking we, arid that you did not see it until it appeared in print. Tne language of the article, howe%er, is yours. You re peated almost the identical language cut, I,ined in it, to a group of your srecil ad miters, in a store in this town, before it appeared in the Monitor. Besides, who ever knew „fa e,ilunin arid a half editorial app raring io your newsiriper, ;hat been writ, n or snpervi-ed by you' Wit!. )our man in burkiani I have n thin_ ro do. lam to:, old a sr.rrstuao to waste my ammuniiirin on a tom tit. It is you. sir, ah as own , r and publisher nt the news paper, and author of the article in ques tion, I hold responsible. . . Bern of a race, of Democrats who have been somewhat conspicuous in the history of the Democratic piny ~f• this State, I value to this county in 1847, and in every campaign since, ae the people of this county well know, I have ilevoted my time, ener gies and best talents for the success of the Democratic party and its principles. I believe that the perpetuity of our free in stitutions depends wholly upon the success of the Democratic patty and the mainten• ance of its principles I have been no office seeker. I have always considered it a duty, as well as a privilege, to work for the suc cess of the Democratic party, and with the blessing of God, I will continue to fight its battles as long as I ant vouchsafed health and strength to do so. In 1870 I was nominated by my party and elected to the Senate of Pennsylvania. For this honor I feel very grateful. I was in the Senate three years, and I thought that my con duct there was acceptable and had been generally approved by my constituents, and I still think so. I defy you to specify and point out a stain on my official record, or a job that I ever voted for while in the Senate. It is a very easy matter for you to say in your newspaper that I supported "all the jobs, big or little," but words, with you, are very cheap, and until you specify some job I supported, you must stand in the pillory, convicted of defamation, and of willfully intending to blacken the char acter of your neighbor. And just here I will remind you that you say that my " record was so notoriously bad that when I "opposed a bill in the Senate dividing the "Ste e into legislative districts, C.I. A. " K McClure, editor of the Philadelphia " Times, who was then a member of that body, made the retort 'that it wasn't "worth while for Mr. Petrikin to oppose " any bill districting the State, because no district could be made strong enough to " elect him.' " I have you still in the pillory. Stand up, as I intend to convict you of wilful! and deliberate falsehood. I was qualified as a Senator in January, 1871, and my term expired at the close of the session of 1873. The only bill that was enter tained or passed for dividing the State into legislative districts, whilst I was in the Senate, was during the session of 1871. The bill passed, waling Centre, Hunting don, Mifflin and Juniata counties a Sena tonal District, and met with no objection from me, because it gave us a decidedly Democratic district. The bill was sent to the Governor for his signature on the 25th of April, 1871 and afterwards became a law. Cu!. McClure was not then a Sena tor. He did not take his seat in the Sen ate until the 27th day of March, 1872, after a contest with Harry Gray, who had been returned as Senator to fill the unex pired term of George Connell, who was the Senator from that district when the Leg illative apportionment of 1871 became a law, and who died after the close of the session. During the time, therefore, that I was in the Senate with Col McClure, no Legislative apportionment bill was enter tamed, and he could not have made the "retort" you falsely put into his mouth When you take up your pen again to coin a deliberate falsehood, be careful that the records cannot be found to refute it. Have I not convicted you of willful falsehood ? That I have will, I believe, to use a favor ite expressicn of your own, be "the honest conviction of every unbiased mind." You stand condemned, and I will lave your punishment with the Democracy of the county who you attempted to deceive and mislead. My justification of my Senatorial career is spread upon the Legislative Jour nal and the records of the Senate, and I again defy you to turn to the record and point out a single instance in which I ad vocated a job, betrayed my constituents or left a stain on my official life. With the single exception of the time when Mr. Stenger was a candidate for Congress, and when, on account of my active efforts to nominate you against him, and because of my political association with you, I was accused of voting against Mr Stenger, my fealt• and devotion to the Democratic party and its principles have never been impeached. No one knew this better than yourself. When your father and your brother, each in their turn, were can& dates on the Democratic ticket for Sheriff, I gave them an ardent support. In 1870, I nominated you for Congress, and my efforts in your behalf contributed largely to your election. In 1872 I again assisted in your nomination. In 1874 you were again a candidate, and I did my utmost to secure your re nomination and election. At the Conferencea t Newport,you were defeat. ed and Mr. Stenger was nominated. Have you forgotten what transpired in your room at Newport, when you received the news of your defeat, when, raising your hand, you said to the persons there present, "Gentlemen, I am defeated," and turning to me, continued, "but I will never, no, never, so help me God, forget the devo " tion of Major Petrikin to me, and I did " not deserve it." If you have forgotten this, there are living witnesses who will testify to it. I did all I could to nominate you, but your back-pay record was too strong a dose for the average Democratic stomach, and you came home from the Con ference breathing vengeance on Stenger, and you labored secretly during the whole campaign to defeat him. Being your warm friend, and disappointed in the failure to nominate you, I also came home from the Conference in a bad humor, and if in that campaign I did not give Mr. Stenger that active support I should have done, I am sorry that the friendship I then had for you should have so far misled me. I hope my conduct since has atoned for my mis guided action I say this is the only blot in my political featly to my party. 1 have always since reeretted it, and have on all occasions asked my party, as I now pub licly do, to forgive we. Have you ever said you regretted or asked to be forgiven for it ? I charged in taffy letter two weeks ago, that you bad bought the Monitor with your back pay receivedfin Congress,for the express purpose of defeating Steuger's election, and to this you put in no denial, although since that you have published two issues of your paper. You have never denied it, cannot deny it, and it would, I suppose, be beneath your dignity to ask the Democracy to forgive you—and that. because knowing you as I do, you imagine you are their tna-ter, and they are your servants. You noel law and received your education iii the Zee of my p , nd myself We never charged you a cent fir your tuition. Son after your admit sion to practice law, I assisted you irr -ecuring ail e.tetien as int Cliatk to Fietise of Representative- of' Pentisvi y-etia Y.. 0 wto a cindolite for Di-oriet Att. roey. and I did all I could to elect you I have al , eady --tated wh rr I drd t 11.1t11 '- nate and eleet you to C •ngress the seveiai ierws y• i w re a can•lid :re I oever, from Ihe time you first came to HuntinAon, have so much as laid a political straw in your path. With all this devotion to your personal and political fortunes, I am charged by you, for the first time, in a public news paper, and that your own paper, with want of fealty to my party, and wade the sub jest of a wicked and unprovoked attack And why ? Because you, being a candi date for School Director. neminat.d on a Fusion rieket. comps •d of Democrats an•i Greenbackers, I would not support you. Aioeds ••nd niiiitster- or Go ace detetid u-:!: is that the Shihb 'hub of the D w cr:ey ? I an elector ha- n:it votrd rr you tor School Director, is he guilty of dant:table heresy and with a r, fitiement of eruelt' unparalelled, must he be read out of the party and consigned to the tender mercies of W H. Woods and W M Williamson ? This is the test you have wade in your newspaper, and it was upon this pretext. whatever other selfish or malicious motive may have lurked behind it, that you sin gled out Mr. McNeil and myself and made us the target for your malice Now. sir, in the support of Fusion tick ets, how stands your record ? Iu 1869 the Woods wing of the Republican party oh rained the control of the County Conven tion and nominated the Republican Coun ty ticket with Williamson for Treasurer, Fouse for Prothonotary, Lamberson for County Commissioner, and Richardson fl ir Director of the Vow.. The Democrats in County Convention, agreed to fuse with the Scott Republicans, upon the following ticket : Treasurer, Cloyd, a one armed soldier; Prothonotary, McNeil; County Commissioner, Jackson; Poor Director, James Smith. Every man on the ticket a Democrat but Cloyd, and consequently, it should have received a united Democratic support. True, however, to your selfish instincts, because 'Williamson, if elected Treasurer, would have deposited the Coun ty funds in the Union Bank, in which you are a Stockholder, you used the most strenuous efforts to defeat Cloyd and elect. Williamson. To accomplish your purpose, you wrote letters to prominent Democrats, enclosing the Democratic ticket with Williamson's name on as Treasurer, with a five dollar bill, and saying, "where you " cannot get a Democrat to vote for Wil " damson let him vote a BLANK fur Treas " urer; under no consideration let his vote "be cast for Cloyd." Notwithstanding your efforts, you lost your money, and your candidate for Treasurer was defeated, and Cloyd and the whole Fusion ticket were elected by handsome majorities. Had I been the owner of a newspaper, and charged you with a Want of fealty to your party for your opposition to part of this ticket, nominated by your party, and had said that your conduct was cowardly, no one sooner than yourself' would have complained that it was a hard measure to meet out to you. Yet, because on a fusion ticket, nominated by yourself, I did not vote for you for School Director, you have, in your newspaper, vented your malice on my unoffending head. To this attack I replied in a Republi can newspaper, because the only newspa per in the county, professing to be Demo cratic, was owned and controlled by you In that letter I said, "I have been con:. ,' pelled to say this much. Considering the unprovoked attack you made on me, "you could hardly expect I would have 't said less. Upon how you shall deport " yourself in the future, will largely de " pond whether I shall ever publicly say " more " Again you renew the attack in the two last issues of your newspaper, in language of which you, if there is such a word as shame in your vocabulary, should be ashamed. You do not, as every well thinking man would say you should have done, apologize for the wrong you at tempted to do me, but you say we stand by every wordin the article, and have no " apology to make." Neither do you at tempt to justify your conduct, but for the benefit of your three hundred subscribers, you then entertain them with slang and Billingsgate, such as only "an extraor denary Quarter Sessions lawyer from the mountains," as one of your Congressional Colleagues once called you, only could do. You call me "a dirty creature." Did you write that in your sober senses ? I have heard you orally apply such epithets to Hon. Wm. A. Wallace after your defeat for the nomination for Congress at New port. I have heard you call Hon. John Scott "a dirty hound." You have, for the purpose of acquitting a culprit you were defending, in your speech to the jury defamed the character and motives of the pastor of the church of which you profess to be a member, and in the same speech, to the same jury, in like manner, defamed the character of the Episcopal clergyman of this town. You have used like epithets before, and I suppose "as an extraordinary Quarter Sessions lawyer," you are priv ileged to use them again. But this is the first time, I believe, I have known you to put such epithets in writing and apply them to me or anyone else. You, however, have a newspaper of your own, and are privil eged to do so, if you wish. There is no argument in epithets, and Ido not intend to use them. If I did, I might say that when after you had been sworn in the Tyhurst libel case, I heard some one say you were very "inexact" in your testimony. That when you tried your case against Greenberg, that I heard Greenberg say that your testimony in the case was flat perjury. That at the last court, when, after you left the stand as a witness in the Green Eby case, Ex. Sher iff Neely confronted you with a written receipt,and denounced you as having sworn to a down right positive lie. I might say that when you testified in the Tyburn Walls libel case, "that you were not at home at the time of the Inquisition of Lunacy," that you had hardly left the stand before a respectable gentleman of this town, and a brother of one of the jurors, said "that is not true, because Speer told me when the Inquisition of Lunacy was sitting, that he was interested in the decision of the jury, and asked me to intercede with my brother and have him decide in his (your) favor." The truthfulness of these charges you can settle with the gentlemen who made them. I do not endorse them, but pro duce them to show how easily they can be made, and how, even your spotless charac ter and name. may be sullied. I shall not bandy epithets with you, or use slang. I consider them only the weapons of uncut tured persons, and fur want of argument used by them when worsted in a contro vcrsy. Having applied to me the epithet of "dirty creature," you proceed to call me "bankrupt," say I am "despised," "bro ken," "ruined," &c., and:indulge in other choico language to show how scholarly and gentlemanly you can be when occasion de mands it. You then intimate that for years you had endeavored to lave me from some unmentioned fate, and then cap the cli max of your littleness by saying, "before "Bruce Petrikin wastes any more time ' heaping denunciation on the Monitor and g its editor. we would sugge,t that he 'pay the $lO.BO sub,criptioo which he o tvos '' And i 4 i' p sir& Ili At piaa lohnoi th.s sinnz and niilineagee an araswer to my !eater? You had traduced nod abused me in your own new-paper for n•'t voting for you for Sch.,ol Director, and whet I reply in my own ju-t•ficati-n y ur u provoked and malicious att ick, is a his L way you an-wer are Andy ,'u, t o t tioe a reiaresa rraative in C.oagress fr .m th aalsrat ! ! ! D ua't you.thank you s••ou d tail- tout head in sn awe? If i wa: my misfortune, by reason of eudi.tse menu far friends and relatives, to have met with financial embarrassment, do you think it is manly on your part to flaunt it in my face in the columns of your news paper, and sly of me that I am a bank zupt ? Ilad I been as close fisted, avaricious tel grasping as you have been, and had I set my face, and steeled my heart to those who, in their hour :A' need, sought my ail, I might to-day hive been the pos , aessor of ten ritn?s more t han ever you in your great w , aitb,ross-ss You are a very w , althy man You are a very Craaesu ilia ! You inns , be wo , lta :he Inagoiti •ealt sten .f t we• t - thousand dollars !! You are on. or 'h. oi.A g laate* of the land ! Vanderbilt. A•ato• and Jay Gould, are as paupers to your presence But being su exceedingly wealthy, you should not have taunted and jibed your poor neighbors with beity , bank rupt arid publish in your paper that owed you $lO.BO for subscription, which I paid befor e the last issue of your newspaper, ,and which you had not the decency to ac knowledge. Yon had never asked me.to pay this $lO.BO, nor was I aware that I owed it. 1 had paid many bills for adver tising and paper books on presentation an supposed my subscription was included. ' I learned=through the columns of' your newspaper, for the first time, that I owed you $lO.BO, and I promptly called and paid it. Now, candidly, do you think, if you had owed me $lO.BO, or any other sum that I would have published the fact in a public newspaper ? Contemplate, for an instant, your language and your conduct Great God ! can any finite mind encom pass the length, breadth and depth of your meanness? And what, sir, do you mean when you say that you endeavored to save me from my fate ? What fate ? And when did you endeavor to save me ? If, by this, you pretend to assert that at any time or un der any circumstances, yon ever did me a political or pecuniary favor, I have only to say that your mendacity is only equalled by your meanness. I oever craved any political or financial favors from you. I don't owe yon one farthing, and never did, excepting all the time the now historical $lO.BO. 'The obligation is all on the other side as I have shown above. I have been the main prop and stay of your political fortunes. It is not amazing, however, that you should have made such a preposterous and impudent claim, because I think no one will now be astonished at your bold ness, mendacity or malice. When and how did you ever save me or any one else Let the record you have made for your self in the cases of James Walls, Jacob Hoffman, Henry Greenberg, James C. Smiley, and others, answer. Your whole pathway is strewn with the wrecked for tunes of men who, trusting you, you have betrayed and deceived. It would be refresh ing news, indeed, to learn that you had ever saved any one. I have already written a long letter. I said in my former letter, I regretted that you, by your conduct, had compelled me to write that one. You made the attack on me and my self-respect compelled me to answer it. To the Democratic party of the county, both you and I are unimport ant factors, and the grand old party will live, and its men and measures will con tinue to control the destiny of this COULI try when you and I are in oar graves. Had you not resumed the attack on me in the last two issues of your paper, I would not have written this letter. I have en deavored to repel your fresh assaults. There is but one other subject to which I will refer, and then, unless you otherwise will it, I will drop a controversy, which you commenced, and which must be dis tasteful to Democrats, and pleasing only to Republicans. For the opening of the con troversy you are alone to blame. The subject to which I refer is the "back pay" to which I referred as taken by you, and with which -you purchased the Monitor. You kindly remind me that you accepted "just what the law gave you and not one cent more," and that yen "voted against the bill providing for an increase of salaries of members of Congress, but when it became a law you accepted the increase." The italics are your own. Now what are the fa cts ? You did vote against it. You have heretofore led your friends to believe that you had spoken against it on the floor of the house. That, however, is a mistake, as no such speech can anywhere be found in the records of Congress, and you do not now claim that you did anything but vote against the bill. Your name is recorded on the first passage of the bill against it. The history of that vote, however, has never been written. At least three of your Democratic col leagues in Congress say that if your vote had been needed to carry the bill, that you would have voted for it. That on the calling of the yeas and nays, yon sat, pen cil in hand, closely watching the vote, and when your negative vote would not change the result, you voted no If that is the correct history of your vote, is completely robs you of any credit in voting against the bill. But suppose we give you the benefit of the doubt and say that you were conscientiously opposed to the bill and so voted. Your opposition, then, could only be founded on the belief that yon had not earned the money, and that, therefore, it would be robbery on your part to put your hand into the Treasury and take $5,000 of the money wrung by taxes from the hard earnings of the people, that did not belong to you. You must have held to this opinion, or you would have voted yea. But the record shows you toted nay, and then took the money Had you voted yea and then took it, yon might have persua ded somebody that you were moved by bon est and proper purposes, and that the money properly belonged to you. But by voting against the bill and the receipting for the money, you wrote your own con demnation. Was there any law, human or divine, that compelled you to take that $5,000 out of the Treasury ? Were you co erced to do so? Did any of the soldiers of the Republic arrest you and bring you before the Treasurer of the United States and try to compel you to take this money ? If they bad, you could have answered, "I will not take it, I voted against the bill, and it is wrong to rob the people." But it seems you did not act in this way. You did take it. Not so, however, did your townsman, Hon. John Scott, who voted against the bill, and returned the .nosey Leto the Treasury, notwithstanding it "becam? a law." I use your italics again. Not so did forty six honest, conscientious m--m -bers of the same House of Representa,tive. , and twenty six Senators, who had voted against the bill. They refused to touch the money They argued that it would be robbery to take it. That they would he in the position of a men who had received stolen goods. In other words, it would be "ill gotten gain." Avarice, your demon, seems to have been hurrying you on to your ewn destruction, and regardless of conscience, in defiance of all morality and justice, and in the teeth of public senti ment, you clutched the $5,000, stuck it into your pocket and started for the moan- tains of Pennilvania Woe is th; next. chapter in . his busi nese? Wh o you thwe y u folio your ,ou hie! .-0 .1 • if A. C vcottoo o• t Dc iiourwy i'..-.lls) . va .14 wet at Wilke,..harr.. oil he 27th of ust 1873 On a s tbstitution from Dr Big.low, y.ll wet to that. emiveutiun de terruin,d t• bray,• the in.lign.tti in ihat had been arou-eil at: iinst c,l and this • who to.•lt the hick paw. a•iii i.isiste I on the Coureuiton dectitig yo u of the (3,ive-.11. H. ti,e p,..p• s e 0: euiloisi,„. y .ur back pay r.!0.,..t The C •-iou ttce, b a majority of one vote, selected you as President of the C-mvention, but when your - uame was reported to the Convention a scene was enacted such as never before ~c euved i,r ;:rtv Democratic Couveutiod in this State. It hid aiwa)s been the usage of the political conventions to en , iiirse the report of the wontnitice to name perma tient officers, and it' there was to be n CID it was always fought nut twfore the ,ommitt,e, me:. o , tlunng its delibontious. Not so, how:. , -er, in your ca-e, as th, very tuelit;oti •i' your Ila:iie ;pi President. rase a storm of th.l I,d M.. Y. rk. itoerrup.cd reading of Ow rep , rt. (I quote from th onotett proct•edio4s) : 'And moved a non concurrence of the convention in the re port of the committee so far as read giving as his reason that Speer had, as a mem " ber,of Congress, taken back pay." You, in vain, attempted to stem the torrent, and said you hoped you would not be stabbed io the house or your friends. I quote again from the printed proceedings : "Messrs "C W. Carrigan and J. Lawrence Getz " spoke in behalf of Mr Speer The lat " ter gentleman upheld the back-pay bill " and was hissed from the floor. That "sense of the Convention was almost " unanimously against Mr. Speer being " the permanent Chairman. In a short. " speech be withdiew his name and moved " that the name of Dr. Andrew Nebinger " be substituted. This was carried and Dr. " Nebinger took the chair." The conven Lion then, proceeded to nominate James E. Ludlow for Judge of the Supreme Court, and F M. Hutchison for State Treasurer, and then the Committee on Resolutions re ported a series of resolutions, and amongst 'them the following : Resolved, That we condemn without reserve the act of Congress granting additional salaries and back-pay grabs as unjust and unjustifiable, and demand its immediate and unconditional repeal, and we denounce every member of Congress, whether . Republican or Democrat, who supported the law, or received the money procured thereby, and we especially denounce the conduct of Presi dent Grant in using the influence of his high po sition for its passage, and whose official signature made it a law. That is goo I Democratic doctrine, and I suppose Son will not object to it go ing into Democratic households It may do good. The printed report reads, "the reso lutions were adopted unanimously." You were a member of that Convention and must have voted for the resolution and your own condemnation. otherwise the re port could not have been adopted unani mously. This is the record you have made for yourself. When I said, therefore, that the $3,000 was "ill gotten gain," I was only repeating what the assembled repre sentatives of the Democracy of Pennsyl • vania, and yourself of the number, ha d unanimously resolved. I will not now or ever call your attention to what the public press at the time said of your conduct, unless by your conduct in the future you shall compel me to do so. I have endeav ored to prove what I said in my former letter, that you are sordid, selfish and un grateful, and in conclusion will warn you that when, in imitation of your illustrious prototype, you erect a gallows to hang Mordecai, have a care you are not sus pended from it yourself R. BRUCE PETRIKIN. New To-Day. RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES of THE HUN TINGDON COUNTY ALMS HOUSE, from December 4, 1878, to December 2, 1879, inclusive: DR. To balance in hands of Treas urer at last settlement, Jan uary 1, 1879 ...$ 1912 20 To amount paid to the Alms House Treasurer by County Commissioners To amount of insurancerecei v ed on Alms House and fur niture To amount paid by the Stew ard in Hagey case 4O 00 Do. in Kettle Gray case ll2 50 To amount received by the Steward from Mifflin county 105 00 Do. from Blair county Bl 05 To amount paid by Simpson lc Armitage on the Hance Campbell judgment lB3 59 --$18785 51 CR. By amount paid on orders during the year 1879... .$16814 80 By balance in hands of Treas urer 1950 71. EXPENDITURES. FOR FARM. CR. By labor on farm $ 288 66 a difference in trading horses 97 00 " two head of cattle 26 75 " burning lime 22 2d " oloverseed, plaster and seed potatoes 45 10 " repairs 24 61 " smithing and wagon re pairs 4B 43 ----$ 550 81 FOR PROVISIONS. By 5,070 pounds of beef furn ished house $ 26J 55 " 5,809 pounds pork do do 291 07 " 433 " bacon do do.. 26 93 " summer meat ll2 63 " apples, cider, vinegar and potatoes 29 60 ---$ 720 83 FOR MERCHANDISE, HARDWARE AND CLOTHING. By Henry Co., and others merchandise, clothing and hardware furnished houses 1231 40 --$ 1231 40 FOR OUT-DOOR EXPENSES. By relief furnished 230 eases, continuous during the year $ 3650 22 " relief furnish 176 cases, less than a year 698 82 " physicians, for medical services " coffins and funeral expen ses 248 97 " John Griffith, for 'one month out-door services... 22 10 " Michael Stair, 12 months out-door services lll 61 " A. B. Miller, 11 months out-door services 152 83 " James Harper, 12 months out-door services 8 00 $ 5472 86 FOR REMOVALS. By Justices, for relief oruers issued $ 131 45 " constables, for removing paupers $ 163 26 FOR MISCELLANEOUS AND INCI- DENIALS. By percentage on $11,809 22 at 3 per cent. paid to Alms Mouse Treasurer for 1878 $ 356 07 " Sheriff Irvin. for keeping four insane four months 201 61 " L 'wry Jacobs, for keeping lour insane one day 6 00 " JOUIVIAL, Globe and Mon itor for publishing state ments, etc........ 151 V. 5 "Al Tyhurst, ,or order book.. insurance on Alms House property lll 25 " cash paid overse,rs of V ll ley township. Armstrong county, for relief and fun eral expenses of Thomas Johnson, four months' re lief for ye.r 1875 137 12 " coal 92 79 " outline 3B 90 " cobbling 39 57 " cooking and labor in house 232 71 " tin, stoneware and repair ing l7 15 " butchering and woodchop ing 3O 90 " recording deed, and adjust inr weights and measures 4 16 " weaving carpet, and ashes 5 67 " drugs 2 00 " fine paid Canal Co., for New To-Day. Send for Illustrated Circular and prices. until you have seen the Most Elegant, Simple and Easy Running Machine in the Market.—The Ever Reliable VICTOR. VICTOR SEWINC MACHINE COMPANY, Woittrn Brand.). Office, 235 STATE ST., Ca:FA:A(IQ, ILL. MIDDLETOWN, CONN. S. b. Si & bO.IN , HUN IN GL) , driving on tow-path " George W. Whittaker, ior report to Board of Public, Charities, and annual stitements, and settling with Auditors, 1878 27 00 " James Harper, attetailii.g settlement with Auditors, and assisting with re ports SALARIES , By Michael Stair, for sersi ces as Director 12 mos...s 67 20 " James Harper, for services as Direetoi I.;r 12 months 57 60 " A. B. Millvr, for services as Director for 12 months I 11 0 " G. Ashman Miller, servi ces as Treasurer, MM.— " Dr. R. Baird, services at house one month " Dr. W. P. M'Nite, *err ces at house 11 months... " Geo. W. Whittaker, clerk 12 months " J. R. Simpson, E,q , at torn.y for Directors 12 months " Jackson Harmon, Steward for amt. of his account ---$ 1493 76 FOR RE-BUILDING ANWFURNISH ALMSHOUSE, AN D BUILD ING OUT-HOSPITAL. By Henry Snare lc Co., for re building Almshouse, per contract " Henry Snare d Co.. for work not included in con tract " Henry Snare Co., fur oil paint, lath, glass and lum ber " If. B. Lewis, for repairing water tank and pipes " furnishing Almshouse " Jackson Harmon, superin tending work on re-build ing " James Harper. assistant superintendent " Beyer, Guyer & Co , fur building hospital 245 :ell " B. Wolf, for lumber 24 33 " M. Swoope, for mason w'k at hospital lO 40 " labor at hospital, and shin files. l3 St " Beyer, Guyer Co., for plans and specifications of Almshouse " J. R. Simpson, Esq . ., attor ney ..... " G. W. Whittaker, services as Clerk ......... " Lindsey 1c Co., publishing proposals " J. L. M'llvane, Esq., iur viewing A Imshoust; " Samuel McVitty, e9q. dn " J. C. Smiley, do do " Michael Stair, Director, for services " James Harper, do " A. B. Miller, do., du " E. Eyler, rent of house for seven months.— RECAPITULATION. Aggregate of orders issued for 1879, for general expenses $11225 31 Rebuilding Almshouse and furnishing same, and build ing Hospital $ 5619 51 .-------;:18894 82 Amount of orders paid for '79, as shown by Treasurer's statement, as above $16814 SO Outstanding orders unpaid • SO 02 $16894 82 WE, the undersigned, Auditors of the county of Huntingdon, do hereby certify that we have exam ined the orders, vouchers, accounts, etc., of the Directors of the Poor of raid county, and their Treasurer, and find the same to be correct, as above stated. Witness our hands at Huntingdon, this 15th day of January, A. D. 1880. JOHN LOGAN, T. 11. DAVIS; And tors. E. PLUMMER, STEWARD'S STATEMENT.-JACK -1,-/ SON HARMON, Steward, in account with the Huntingdon County Almshouse, from December 4th, 1878, to December 2d, 1879, inclusive : DR. To amount drawn from Treasurer, on orders s7l9 96 CR. By cash paid for postal cards and postage stamps $ 13 89 By cash paid for traveling expen ses By cash paid for car fare of pau pers By cash paid for freight on goods 43 07 Allowance—Salary of Steward 450 00 —Matron 5O 00 --$719 96 .$18765 51 ARTICLES MANUFACTURED. 71 women's dresses, 11 pairs of pants, 27 sheets, 47 chemise, 24 aprons, 35 skirts, 25 sacques, 27 bonnets, 23 pillows, 27 pairs stockings, 23 bed ticks, 23 pillow-slips. 33 towels, 15 bolsters, 9 shroud', 21 handkerchiefs, 2 n ghtgowns,l7 pairs drawers, 51 shirts and 7 saps. PRODUCE OF FARM. . . 589 bushel;;l;;;C, 384 bushels oats, 1115 bush els c , rn, [in ear,} 7 husht Is cleverseed, 13 bushels rye, 620 bushels potatoes, 13 bushels beans, 75 bushels lei:11410es, 25 bushels beets, 25 bushels tur nips, 12 bushels onions, 4,800 heads cabbage, 6 barrels of kraut, 25 tons of hay, 13 four-horse loads cornfodder, 4221 pounds pork, 360 pounds veal, 500 pounds lard, 800 pounds tobacco, 2 calves, 1 breeding sow, 8 shotes and 12 gallons of apple butter. STOCK ON HAND. 4661 bushels wheat, 241 bushels rye, 276 bush els oats, 7 bushels cluverseed, 1200 bushels corn, [in ear,] 375 bushels potatoes, 9 bushels beans. 15 bushels turnips, 180 cans tomatoes, IS bushels beets, 130 cans fruit, 12 four-horse loads cornfod der, 20 tons hay, 2500 heads cabbage, 6 barrels of kraut, 15 bushels beets, 8 bushels onions, 2400 pounds beef, 9000 pounds pork,l4oo pounds lard, 8 much cows, 1 bull, 4 heifers, 8 shotes, I sow, 4 head horses, (oldest 11 years, youngest 7 years), 10 pairs gears, 6 flynets, 1 road wagon, 1 farm wagon, 1 spring wagon, 1 buggy, 2 wagon beds, 1 fanning mill, 1 corn planter, I grain drill, 2 mow ing scythes, 2 wheelbarrows, I threshing machine, 3 plows, 7 corn hoes, 3 cultivators, 2 harrows, 1 pair hay ladders, 1 hay fork and tackle, 9 bay forks, 4 shaking forks, 8 hand rakes, 2 scoops, 3 shovels, 2 picks, 2 mattocks, 2 crowbars. 5 axes, 1 cutting-box, 1 reaper and mower, combined, 2 grindstones, 3 iron and 2 copper kettles, and 175 head poultry. MONTHLY TABLE. SHOWING ADMISSIONS, DISCHARGES, DURING YEAR g- - 7 1 , - z g e 4 • - crF3 E-ig-g 11-r i F4l - 6 , - , 0,104.- t i itsi i tvi 1 t !la t... 2 t c . 11 62626262.622t. 202 : 422-..: .4 1-4 -4 . CO GM G:2 NCTO.CTCO CO tt N .. tCI 0 0 0. 0 0 1.10 c 0•—• O 0 0 0 0 0 0 ca —maul . —4 P •-• t 7, .• U2p.10.41 0 , 01 CT GO CT 0. 0 , 4 CO 0 0 0 Op 0 OP -a m -Of the inmates in the /louse, there are 7 in eaue-4 males and 3 females; one of the females colored. _ _ In testimony of the correctness of the above ac count and statement, we do hereunto set our hands this day of January, A D. 1880. 1 JAMES II ARP ER Directors A. B MILLER, of J. HAFFLY. the Poor. Attest—GlßO. W. WEITT > KER. Clerk. March 12, 1880. NEW VICTOR. 7 ZI In pursu tnee of an order of the Court of Com mon Pleas of Huntingdon county, the undersign ed, A:signee of George B. Brumbaugh and Martha P., his wife, will expose to sale, at public vendue or outcry, at Markiesburg, Penn township, Hunt ingdon county, Pennsylvania, on • 23 SO 1 592 39 All those certain tracts or pieces of land the property of the said A ssignors, situate on both sides of Big Trough Creek, in the townships of Lincoln and Tod, known as the "Savage Forge Tract," bounded and described as follows, to wit: On the south and southeet by lands of Mrs. Pat terson and others; on the southwest by lands of W tn. E. M'Mortie, on the west and northwest by the , Raystown Branch, lauds of John Donaldson, Henry Hess. Reuben Sow,. and others, notion the northeast by a tract of land, now or lately owned by ii ove's heirs, containing about EIGHTEEN IiUNDKED ACRES, be the same more or less, havin4 thereon erected a TWO-STO- , RY STONE DWELLING ROUSE, A TWO-STORY WEA fIIERBOARDED 1 1 1 : 110U•nE, several TENANT HOUSES, t and a SAW MILL, with about TWEN TY ACRES of cleared land. This tract is com posed 01 original surveys or parts of original sur veys, male in pursuance of five warrants, dated the 13th day of March, 1794, granted respectively to Temper Shaver, Peter Shaver, Ge irge Prough, Jo,eph Miller, and Nancy Davis, and of a survey made on a warrant dated the 18th day of Febru :try, 1833, granted to George Thompson, being the same property conveyed by J. Simpson Africa and wi•e to Georze B. BrumSaugh, by deed dated the 21st lay of July, 1574. An undivided half of all to nerals lu all, upon the land is reserved in in said dced. 27 00 9: 6 100 00 :10 00 719 90 11,15 00 mho, a tract of tituber Lnd .ituated on f wsey's mountain, in the township of Lincoln, bounded on the Lortheaot by land of Henry Boy er; on the southeast by land of Theobald Fonse, and on the southwest by land of Henry Brum baugh, er:ntaining SIXTY-FIVE ACRES, be the same more or less. '5 00 3. Als i, ali that certain lot of ground situated in the borough of Marklesburg, being n u inhered IS on the plan thereof, front ing sixty feet on the Huntingdon and j ' o o 4 Bedford road, and running southeast • ;; wardly at right angles therefrom 160 - feet to an alley, bounded on the north east by an alley, and on the southwest by lot No. 111, hrving thereon erected a LAE,GE TWO-STO RY W EA TH ER BOARDED DWELLING HOUSE and STOREROOM, and other outbuildings. 47 20 20 00 4. Also, all that certain lot of ground tstua , ed in the borough of Markiesburg, being nutulAred 27 on the plan thereof, fronting sixty feet on the Huntingdon and Bedford road, and run ning northeastwardly at right angles, tueretr ,, tn, one hundred and sixty feet to an alley, hounded on the southeast i by tot No. 25, owned by George John f-ton, and on the north >agt by lot No. 27, owned by Hann- Shultz, having thereon er,o ted a TWO STORY LOU OR FRAME DWELL ING HOUSE. 32 00 10 00 3 CO H 8 40 4 6) 22 30 31 61 52 00 5. Also, all that certain lot of ground situftte4 in the township of Peen, bounded by lands of Samtiel Johnston on the south 1▪ pwee, awl lands of Daniel Harris on the sotitheat, northeast and northwest, • containing ONE ACRE, more or 10118, having thereon erected a DWELLING HOUSE +. •d other outbuildings. _ _ . 31 50 ---$ 5669 51 6. Also, all that certain lot of ground situat,d in ►he borough of Huntingdon. being riumber,d 8 in block "ti," on the plan of Wharton, Miller a .d Anderson's addition, fronting fifty feet on Hill (now Peon) street, and extending west wardly at nigh angles therefrom, to the right of way of the Penn,ylvania, Railroad Company The "Savage Tract," (No. 1). is believed to contain large deposits of hematite iron ore. TERMS OF SALE.—One third of the purchase money to be paid on confirmation of sale, and the residue in two equal annual pay ments, with interest, to be secured by the judg ment notes of the pu-chaser. HENRY BRUMBAUGH, Assignee of George B. Brumbaugh. March 12, 1850. DISSOLUTION.—The copartnership heretofore exiaing under the firm name of Henry & ,is this day dissolved by mutual con sent, Joe. G. Isenberg having withdrawn. All accounts due said firm will be paid to, and all ac counts due by said firm be settled by the new firm of Henry . Co. S. E. HENRY, THOS. &JOHNSTON, B. F. ISENBERG, JOS. G. ISENBERG. Huntingdon, Pa., March 6th, 1880. The undersigned, (of the late firm of Henry ,t C 0.,) have this day formed a co-partnership and will continue the business of Forwarding and Commission Merchants, Manutacturers of and Dealers in Flour, Feed, Seeds and Grain of all kinds, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in General Merchandise, Anthracite, (+as, and Bituminous r!oal, Piaster, Nails, Glass, Salt, and Lumber of all kids, at the old stand, Nos. 732 and 731 Penn Stre, t, under the ti-in name of Henry t Cu. S. E. HENRY, THOS. S. JOHNSTON, L F. ISEN BERG. Huntingdon, Pa., March Bth, 1580. Referring to the above notiees, we take pleasure in informing you that we shall keep a full and complete stock of everything pertaining to our easiness, and purpose, by courteous treatment, (selling our guo Is at thu very lowest prices,) to merit a share of your patronage and confidence. We shall make a specialty to fill all orde►e en trit4.4l to us with promptness March 1244, PIANO S st—,.coyer 0(.4.. $2lO to $l5OO. OR GANS, 13 .t.eno, 3 bet Kee& 2 Knee SY, en@ millailaM=l.llo WOW, Book, only s9g. air iiinstrsted Cat4lol4Utl tree. -tarsi's Daniel F. Beatty. Washington, N.l. Mc. CREEDY'S CORN SOLVENT, NO CUBE. NO PAY F., sale by Druggi•te au • l Shoo Bailors. CALI BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa, Goul. Agents. $777 A FEAR and expenses to Agents. Outfit Fres Address P. O. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING BUREAU,IO Spruce St. N.Y. Muth 12-4 t. FOR SALE-THE FARM FORM erly owned by Levi Ridenuur, situated on the Rsystown Branch, five miles south of Hunt ingdon. It is a very desirable place ef 1:19 acres. in good condition. Terms, $3.000; one-third cash ; balance in easy annual payments Address or inquire of A DMINISTRATOWS NOTICE. AA. [Estate of ROBERT FLEMING, deed.) Letters of Administration having been granted to the undersigned—whose postuffice address is Peter:burg—GU the estate of Robert Fleming, late of Jackson tp.. dec'd., all persons knowing them selve, indebted are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims to present them duly authenticated Cement. HENRY RtDY, Adminiattpitor. ~. 1., ... I, TallFilrY —••pai'atiqw!a -aluatri.xlot - ADMINI-STR TOR.'S NOTICE. lEbta , e ()% SAMUEL EIDER, Deed.) Letters of Adinini,tration having been grouted to the nridersl4ned—whose poit.Ahoe &Wears is Warrioromork—on the estate of. Samuel Rider, late of Warri , trsmark, dee'd., all persons kaowing themselves indt.,bteol ore requested to mate im mediate paym , at. and those having elaints to pre sent theta prop.:::,. autbPntieated fur settlement. SAMUEL RALSTON, Administrator. -- .ql- 1 1*1 •sglsaq Tunof{ uaJPIN3 i 11 'ClainOhl ua.IPIND .----linol The Carlent.tte Gold and Silver Mining Compa ny of Leadville, Col.,own more valuable Gold and Silver Mines than any other Couip.tuy lo :he State. Tho stock is ten dollars per share, fully paid up, and nonassessable. They now offer limited number of shares for sale through the uil ••erAigned, at $2.00 per share. References and information cheerfully given. Direct all orders ind vominen.cations to S. M. BOYD, 144 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa., I'. 0. Boa 1064. Ll 6-17. New To-Day. SNPUCITY SWLIFIEDI cements September, 1878. Standing the VICTOR has long been the Sewing Machine in the market—a fact , a host of volunteer witnesses—we now Infidently claim for it greater simplicity, vonderful reduction of friction and a rare ibination of desirable qualities. Its shut is a beautiful specimen of mechanism, . takai rank with the highest achievements inventive genius. Note. —We do not lease consign Machines, therefore, have no old Ines to patch up and re-varnish for our Sell New Machines Every Time. Liberal terms to the trade. Don't buy ASSIGNEE'S SAE. SATURD-4Y, APRIL 3rd, 1880, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, NOTICE. TO THE PUBLIC. JOHN R. DBAN, Huntingdon. Pa, March 12.9 t febl3 febl NAHUM STOCK FOR SALE. HENRY ,t CO.