'IHjVt'.fffl'h!'- " ' '' . 11 ' '" n ""' """""" "'triiwiMJ irT jj i " i hi mi j in i i ni ' ) r !-Jtjla 1 . I i CANDIDATES' CARDS. Juniata Jntiitel. MIFFLISTOWN Wednesday Morning:, July 24. 1872. B. F. SCIIWEIER, r't'ITOR k PROPRIETOR. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. FOR PRESIDENT, GENERAL U. S. GRANT. ill 1LLIKOI. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, HON. HENRY WILSON, OF ASACHt. SltrTS. FOR GOVERNOR. Q EN. JOHN F.HARTRANFT or MOSiTUONERT COI NTr. FOR SUPKEME JUDGE. HON. ULYSSES MERCUR, OF HHAI'FOIIO COI XTT. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL. GEN. HARRISON ALLEN, OF OAItKF.N OOfNTV. JOR fONGRrSMtS AT I.ARt.K, -,FN. HUtKY WHITE, of Indian. .EN. LEMUEL TODD, uf Cumberland. Dll.KlHTm AT I.AK1.U Tl THE COXSTI- TCTIOXAI. roSVKNTin.N. WM. SI. MEREDITH. Philadelphia .1. GILLINGHAM FELL. Philadelphia C.eu. II A!! II V WHITE, Indiana. ;en. WILLIAM LILLY. Carbon. I.INX riAIUKOLOMEW, Schuylkill. H N. MALISTKK. Centre. KM. It. A KM ST KONG. Lycoming. WILLIAM DWIS. Monroe. JAMES I.. REYNOLDS. Lancaster. rMMl'EL E. DIM MICK. Warn. fiK'iKiit) V. LAW HENCE. Washington. DAVID X. WHITE. Allegheny. W. If. MM:Y, Lehigh. .THHN H. WALKER. Erie. GEO. P. ROWELL & CO, 40 Park Row, New York axi S. M. PETTENGILL 4 CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, Are mir tale agents in thai city, and are au thorized to contract for advertising at our lowest rates. Advertiser? in that city are te- quested to leave their favors with either of the above houses. READIN5 MATTER ON EVERY PAGE. Republican Primary Election. At a ir.eiting of the Republican County Committee, held according to pievious notice, nt Wilts' Hotel, in Miuiintuwn, on Saturday, July C, 1872, Ihe following resolutions were I porter, but is the recipient of public hna adnpted : j pitalities in a city from which he should HtmlrtJ, Thai the Primary Election be ; be promptly and ir"Vgnantly banished, held ai the usual places on SATURDAY. Al'til'ST 24th, 172. Senator Buekalewf 1000 and 500. Met ween the hours of 2 and 7 o"clock P. M , i and thai the Return Judges met tat the Court , Joe Democrats love to talk about House, in Miftlimown, on honest Charley Buckalew. He is a State MONDAY. A U JUST 2oth, 1872, j Senator, and as such receives one thou at i o clock i . .u. i Retolred, That Ihe manner of electing Re turn Judges, and the qualifications ot voters lie the same as prescribed and carried out last year. 1,'rtolcrd, Thai John A. Gulltiher and John Moizer be and they are hereby appointed members of the County Committee, to repre- sent W alker towni-hip, and G. R. Henderson to represeut Patterson borough, in place f ' J. w. Parker and L. V. Sicber. of Walker, i and Samuel II. ISrown, of Patterson, who are JOHN BALSBAC1I, . Aiex. Wuoiiwahii, Sec'y. The rinderpest has again broken out in Russia. " Thk cholera is Moscow, Russia. raging dreadfully in The grave diggers of Woolwich Cem eterv, lyondou, are on a strike. Saw mill hanJs at Williamsport are on a strike, and so violent have their actions been jliat Governor Geary has called out j troops lo restrain them in their riotous i conduct Voorhees, of Indiana, w ho so bitterly j manufacture capital out f tbe charge opposed the nomination of Greeley, has j that the State Treasurer is speculating in been nominated by his Democratic ftiends State funds, by depositing them in cer for Congress. Since his nomination he 1 tain institutions and drawing the percent Is for Greeley, reiionnciug and indirectly ;age, and thrusting it into his pocket for denouncing the Cincinnati platform by . himself. They then cooly add "Genera! advocating its opposite principles. I Hart rati ft is the acquaintance and a friend , ihal .llnnilail tC l n rr Wiltin.n'a li.n . . ... . , , .. , , ,. the Boston Jubilee, visited Philadelphia , . i . ti i r -i tun. ai ii .1 ni u - last, vieeen. - i uev uuinuer iortv-eiffUl men, who average about thirty years of age, and each is a skilled soloist." They will tike home with them $75,000, the earnings of their trip to A merica. At midnight on the night of the IStli inst., as the King and Queen of Spain were returning to their palace, they were fired on by five men, but received no injury. The King's guard killed one of the would-be assassins, and arrested two ; others and lodged them in jail to await their trial. I. a Greeley demonstration in North Carolina, last week, a number of colored men participated. Subsequently the col ored marshal was whipped by his indig nant brethren. It it to bo bped 'that' the colored people of tki South will not follow in the footsteps of the Kuklux against their political opponents. The j persons guilty ot tbe outrage have been arrested. The Democrats have started a new lie on the president to the effect that he has authorized a bet on Lis electiou The editor of the Daily Wlgcomin addressed a vote to the President relative to the report and received the following reply from the President's private secretary : ' ThePresideot directs me to say, in re gard to that charge:, that be never in his life made a bet on the result of an election ; nor has he authorized or ad vised any one to do so. He had no knowledge that any one had made a bet with Mr Wilkes until he read the an iionnrerorrit in the newspapers. " Qaestlonable Company. It is well known that during the rebel lion, the Rebel Government constantly kept in their secret a strong party of men ia Canada, whose duty it was. with the aid of Northern sympathizers and corrupt men, to put into practice such diabolical schemes as they might from time to time, concoct. Oue of the schemes con ceived by the sojourned rebels in Canada was the burning of Iew lork City Tbis, however, failed. Another was the peace scheme in which Mr. Greeley, became a pilgrim which Abraham Lin coin sifted by his proclamation, ' To all whom it may concern.' Another was I the assassination of President Lincoln, which was otrried to a successful issue Prominent among the Canada rebeU ea gaged in all of the wicked woik done against the Government was George N. Zanders. This obnoxious per.-enage has recently come into iolintate relationship wiih Horace Oceley. They are fre- nuentlv iu each other's company. But i a day or two ago Mr. Greeley took him to listen lo a sermon by the Rev. I'r Chapin, a noted Uuivei6alist preacher in New Yora city, and Mr. Greeley's pas- i tor. It seemed like questionable com ' Danv for Greeley lo keep, and thr congregation so considered it, as may be learned from a New York paper, that speaks of it as follows : On Sunday morning last, much to the surprise and indignation of the congre gallon. Horace Greeley, accompanied by George N- Sanders and Theodore Til ton, walked into Rev. I'r. Chapin's church, taking seats in Mr. Greeley's pew. It was soon known that the no torious traitor who was hatching con spiracies in Canada during the whole of the rebellion was Mr. Greeley's guest and an expression of disgust was mani fest in almost every countenance, for in our w hole city there is not a congrega tion more distinguished fr its iutelli gence and loyalty than this one. Nor did the circum-tance fail to attract the attention and the rebuke of the eminent and eloquent pastor, whose patriotic heatt must have burned with indignation to see a man who had conspired to burn our city and assassinate our President thus openly and shamelessly patronized by a prominent member of his congrega tion. This man, Sanders, who was wan- I dering in Europe until Greeley's nomina tion tor President, was a guest at a ', recent political breakfast to aid Greeley's j election, where he met Erasttis Brooks and others ot that stripe. the incen diary who burns a single dwelling goes to State I'rison, while George N. Sunders, who conspired to bnrn the whole city of New York, and whose agents actually kindled fires simultaneously in several parts of ihe city, is not only Mr, Gree ley's intimate political friend and sup- gand dolarg a epg8ion. Last winter he was Chairman of the committee to inves tigate the Gray and McClure caso. The duties of a coi.test committee belong to the duties of a Senator. The Senator took his committee to Philadelphia, TJiey ,0(1 j ,ne carg on frre tickets, , , . Their labor did not comprehenu the con- tiuuous space of a week Their expen ses did not equal those at llarrisburg, for they made the State pay their board while in the city, aud reported McClure as entitled to the seat, aud a bill of ex penses, for the State to pay, amounting to twenty-six thotisaud aud sixty five dollars. Of these tbouBauds Mr. Buck alew appropriated five hundred dollars to his owu pocket, thus making the State pay him fifteen hundred dollars instead i of oue thousand dollars. That is aspect men of the Senator's honesty. ! The State Treasury an! the County Trea ts wry . The Democrats just now are tryine lo ;ot the .treasurer. Ibis is done to in- f . TT . jure Hartranft. It may be true that . m , , , fctate Treasurers have for a long time been thus speculating, with State funds We think it would be infinitely more proper for the howling Democrats in our own county to review the record of some of the Treasurers and Collectors of this county. It is probable that their record will prove them financiers of the very kind that they and their friend have been condemning. Come, gentlemen. while you are on the Treasury question get a little nearer home.- . If Mr. Buckalew had lived in the days of the Revolution he doubtless would have been a Tory, for even at this late day, after it has been proven that man is capable of self government, he ques tions and opposes the governmental prin ciple of extending the right' to vote to the masses. Read him on this point, as he delivered himself when in the United gtate. m 1S66 "Now, sir, the objection which I have to a large extension of suffrage in this couutry, whether by Federal or State power, is this : that thereby you will corrupt and degrade elections and prob ably lead to their complete abrogation hereafter. By ponring into the ballot boxes of tbe country a large mass of ig norant voters, and votes subjected to pe cuniary or social influence, you will cor rupt aud degrade your elections and lay the foundation for their ultimate destruc tion. That is a conviction of mine and it is upon that ground that I resist negro rage and female suffrage, and any other proposed form of suffrage which takes humanity in an unduly broad or enlarged sense as the - foundation of an ermngpment of political power." Bis Account SUted Mr. 'Buckalew has been fortunate in acquiring for himself a reputation as an honest and disinterested Democrat. His record, wkicb is being looked np, makes sad work of this late inflated Democratic politician. If no other record than the investigation of the Grey-McCIuw case could be reached, it alone would be suf ficient to remove the wool from the eyes over which it has been pulled- II is frieuds not only inflate him, but he lends a help himself in hi speeches when he declares that he is not in "pub lic life for the purpose of making profit for himself. How adroitly he speaks to impress the public with the belief that he desires no office and possesses no itching palm. The following offices that, he has'held. and the money he received from each, tells how nearly his acts and his words correspond An exchange slates bia ac coniiHUis : ' C. K. Buckalew to United Stilts Dr. To C y'ts salary ai U S Senator $30,00'! Outfit as Midister to Ecuador 7.000 i years salary for eime. $7,500 30,IO'i $67,500 To S ale of Pennsylvania Dr. To salary as member of Constitu tional Convention- $ 1.000 3 years salary as Senator 2. H0 ' 2d leim 3,000 Extra pay to put McCltire into his -seat upon contest 500 $fi.GO0 Total $71,100 The Genera Arbitration. It was believed that upon the with drawal of the indirect damage claims from the Geneva Board of Arbitrators that no other obstacle would intervene to preveut a speedy settlement of the trouble between England and the United States. Such, however, is not the case, for England, through her agent, has again brought the arbitration to a halt This time she pauses and hesitates about the payment of damages for ships andcar goes burned, sunk or confiscated by ten rebel ships. She says these vessels were not built in English poits, consequently she objects to payment for the property that they destroyed. The opinion is held by Americans that England should be held responsible for tbe damages dune by these vessels, fur the reason that in her ports they always found a place of ref uge from the vessels of the Republic, and because they were there allowed to coal and provision and throughly to re fit themselves after a cruse of deprida tion on Northern commerce. It will not be a matter of surprise if the English arbitrators present a bill against the United States large enough to rover out of tight all America's claims. Should such un'ortutiately be tho case, it will prove itself tbe feather that will break tbe camel's back. Alderman William McMulIin. a leader rjf the rough men of Philadelphia, was shot on Monday night, by a man whom McMulIin did his utmost for when he was on trial and sent to prison for the shootin of Brooks, a Government asrent employed in ferreting out the unlawful distillation of whiskey. Marra is the name of the man who did the shooting. A Sloyameiising hall was in progress Marra entered one of the rooms and re moved a boquet from a table. McMulIin saw him do it , and followed him to a bar room in the vicinity and desired the flowers. They were not given up. Words followed. Marra drew a pistol and shot McMulIin. Latest reports an nounce him iu a dying condition. Marra has not yet been arrested. Ok the adoption of Greeley -by the Democrats, the Xatiox says : "It must be admitted that the nomination of Gree ley by the Democrats is, on the whole, the most ludicrous end which ever over took m gremt organisation. We know of nothing in sacred or profane literature to. which it can be likened, except the rush of swine, in the New Testament, 'down a steep place into the sea," when the devils entered into them. The party in electing Greeley ipxo facto per ishes, and perishes in the most ignoble way." Ex. "John F. llartranlt, as Auditor Gen eral, laid the way for the repeal of the tax on real estate, by securing the col lection of all outstanding taxes on cor porations, and the payment of all moneys due the State collators and sureties He it was who induced the Attorney General to sue out and give firtUe State, thousands of dollars which would other wise hare been lust Forney's Press Oct 5. 1S6S. Hall Bobber Con rioted. San Francisco, July 19 David E George, deputy postmaster of San Fran cisco, has been convicted in the Uuited States Circuit Court for robbing the mails. The accused pretended that the store in which the pnstofEce was kept had been broken open by robbers, who threatened his life with pietols. George was sentenced to eighteen months' im pjisonment m i i a The following proposed amendment to the State Constitution will be subject to tbe adoption or rejection of the peo ple, at the October election : Strike out he sixth section of the sixth article of the Constitution, anil in. sert in lieu thereof the following : "A State Treasurer shall be chosen by the qualified electors of the State, at such time and for such term of service as shall eb prescribed by law." A queer antic was cut up by lightnin at Muncy, the other day. It shattered a peach tree, flew to a wire clothes line, worked both ways, and struck a stable at one end and a bon at the other. Letter Trim W.im " . Charleston. 8 C I July IS, 1872. M-. E-Ubr .How" cm yon expect a letter from South Carolina' in July! To write under wide-spreading tree near some meandering stream in the mountain regions of old Pennsylvania is possible, but here, where your energy is all melted out of you, such a thing is al most impossible. Why. this is the third letter I have commenced. Two, alas! are in the waste basket. I know not but that this oue will be there before I finish. Perhaps if I do accomplish my task, your readers wiil-aay, "It ought to be there with the others !" But, after all, we who are this far south have no reason to complain. I have had several letters from northern friends, saying, "The heat is almost be yond endurance how we pity you all in the South !' .This commiseration was not at all appreciate J by ns, for we were having very pleasant weather just at that time. Before I cams South- I supposed the Leaf was so intense here tba'j no one not used to it could-endure it. But so far, I am obliged to say I have suffered more from the heat in the N'orth. The thermometer varies little from between 85 and 92 degrees. The I direct rays of the sun are very hot Stand under them for a time and you literally melt, and woe to that part of the skin which m iy be exposed. But stay in the shade, aud with the stiff breeze from the ocean blowing constant ly, yon feel qnitb comfortable. The time to go out is before 9 A. M. and after 4 in the afternoon. Between these hours it is better to keep "shady." Those who are compelled to go out be tween 9 and 4, Lave to travel at a slow pace, aud carry an umbrella over them Dealers in this commodity say their busi ness thrives best in this country. Broad rimmed hats are worn much in the South, and "white" is the color preferred. One of our dailies said the other day that this augured well for a large majority for Greeley ia this Black Republican State, but I am inclined to the op nion that the people choose white hats because they don't attract the rays of the suu as much as black. The people in the South are a very slow people. They transact busi ness in a slow and easy way none of your rush and tare sort of people, such I as we see in tbe North, aud especially in the West. This is the way with all dwellers in warm climates Charleston is cull in summer. All who can leave for the season, have gone North, 'lhey must acknowledge there is a little virtue left in that despised sec tion of our land. Many who cannot leave for the summer have moved their families either to Summerville, a beauti ful and healthy little vila;e twentv-two miles from the city; or five miles acrosB the Bay to Sullivan's Island, on the sea shore, from whence tho first gun was fired upon Ft. Sumter. These removals have thinned out our once populous city, and made all kinds of business more or less dull. Those in authority are actively cn gaged in fortifying against cholera and yellow fever They learned a lesson from the visit-sf tho latter disease last fall which they will not soon forget. Boards of health have been established in every ward the streets and lanes are carefully watched and kept clean, and chloride of lime and copperas are freely circulated throughout the city It is to be hoped that God will holdback forever that terrible scourge with which the city was visited last fall By the time this reaches the eyes of your readers, I hope to be packing my "cirpet-b;ig" for tbe purpose of finding a cool retreat somewhere in old Juniata. Hoping to see you face to face soon, I now, for this summer at least, bid you and your kind readers an affectionate farewell. Yours as ever. WM. A. PATTON. There are now in daily use on the Michigan Central railroad fifty one cars fifted up expressly for carrying butter, beef and eggs from Chicago to Boston aud New York An average of four of these loaded ears start East each day, and are inspected and re-iced at Detroit before they go further Each car con sumes four tons of ice on the trip. A Quaker who had been troubled with rats informs a friend that he greased a thiity-foot board, tilled it full of fish hooks, set it np at an angle of forty -five degrees, and put an old cheese at tbe top. The rats went up, slid back, and he caught thirty of 'em the first night. A man traveling from Syracuse 'to Buffalo on the Central Road, last week, tendered the conductor of the train a railroad ticket issued by that company sixteen years "ago. The conductor re ceived the ticket without any hesitation, but wiih a great deal of astonishment. Some idea of the immense exodus of people from the United States to Europe this season may ba. had from the fact that the ntimber-ef cabin passengers who have left this season for Europe is esti mated at upward of 50,000, the majority of whom were ladies. A fellow named Cummings circula ted slanderous reports concerning the character of a young lady residing at Petaluma, California Tho injured lady, seeing the scoundrel pass her house, took up a shot gun and shot him dead on- ike 19th insL . Half a mile of snow sheds were burn ed the other day on the Central Pacific Railroad in Nevada. Mercer county. Peuo , baa no licensed taverns. The latest prediction is a anow in August. The national debt ia being paid at the rate of over 82 50 a minute. Ten counties in Ohio Lave ladies for superintendents of schools. Swiss cheese is manufactured in large quantities at Oshkosb, Wis. Overcoats were in demand ia Duluth on the day before the Fourth. The iron ore supply of Missouri for the present year is C00.000 tons. The latest marriage in high life at La fayette, Ind., was a wedding in a bal loon a mile above the earth. Vermont boasts that half tbe slate pencils used in the world are made in I'm Green Mountain State. A Kansas paper tells of an army of toals which extends three-f ourihs of a milo along the road. '" The fleeces of California's 40,000 Cashmere goat are bringing from 25c to $1 25 per lb., according to grade. Nearly nine million dollars' worth of lard has been exported from this country within the last six months, The women of Massachusetts are to have a college of-tlu'ir own at Northamp ton, endowed with $400,000 by the late munificent Miss Smith. It is stated that forty-five per cent, of the gross products of California is from agricultural sources, while but sixteen . , , , , , r per cent is from gold and other metals. r Seventeen hundfed gallons of whisky were destroyed by lightning in an Indt- ana town the other day, but it was a pretty even tuss'.e between the two. ' . A series or experimemi, iiievuuiuu vi test the average loss in weight by dry ing, shows that corn lose one-fifth and wheat oue-foui teeuth by the process. Some people can never be too poor to marry. A young eouplecotnmenced to keep house recently whose only crock ery consisted of an ink bottle and an im perfect chart of China. An Idaho invalid was ordered by a physician to take three ounces of brandy a day, and knowing that 1G drams make an ouuee, h is patiently beeu taking 4S drinks a day ever since Au Ohio farmer has imported a "steam wagon" from England It hauls heavy loads through fields and woods and over ordinary drains with great facility, and is very easily managed. The London Tim s, speaks of the is sue of the Sckes tiial, which it calls a "Miscarriage of justice,'' and attributes it to the indifference that Americans feel for violent crimes, in which both murder er mid victim are rowdies. Two fine colls, worth about S3-10 be longing to Joshua B rker. of Mill Creek Hundred, Didawa e. were killed by light ning on the evening of the 4th, while jstaudt'ig in a held, no tree being near to j attract the electricity. The drive of Texas cattle to Kansas is estimated from the most reliable data at 200,000 head aud the cattle will a-rive in their full avenge condition, notwith standing the haid winter through which j they p issed On the 10th of October next it will be twenty five years since Henry Ward Beecher was installed pastor of the I'ly mouth Church. The congregation pro poses to celebrate the event by a jubilee. to continue four days, beginning on the 10th of October next. A late decision in the Chicago courts gives a verdict in favor of a lawyer who lost his library by fire after his policy of insurance had expired. No notice has been given by the company of the expiration, and tho eonrt decided that such a notice was imperative. Wallingford Academy, located at Charleston, was instituted in 1SCS, and incorporated by the Legislature of South Carolina in 1S72 It was established through the generous contributions of Mrs. Wallingford, of. Pittsburg, after whose departed husband the Academy is named. It is under the care of the Board of Missions for Freedom of the Presbyterian Church. A primary object with tbe fiiends of this Institution, is to furnish the colored yonth of both sexes tbe means of acquiring a liberal educa tion. But with the education of the mind, tbe heart is not neglected. A dis tinctive feature of this Institution, is to f l f ,i ,u .....,...cr, men wuuiij, and to their Una This School has enjoyed in a great degree the blessing of Almighty God j eiiice. i commencement. A very large number has been brought nnder its in fluence. Some who have received a partial education Lere. are now success ful Ministers of the Gospel; others are j filling useful stations in life. Four of the young' men attending the Academy are studying with the Sacred Office in view. All we need now, in order to place this Institution on an equality with any other of the kind in the land, is money sufficient to procure endowment and philosophical apparatus. Will our friends aid ns with their prajers and alms ? Rev. W. A. Patton of Tuscarora Val ley, Juniata County, is Superintendent of this Institution. If a horse has a good constitution, and has once been a good horse, no matter bow old or how much run down he may be, he can b) greatly improved, and in many respects made as good as new, by : a liberal use of Sheridan's Catalrv Con.- n.'Tion foiriat. COXljRESS. Ma. EaxroB : As it is of the utmost im portance that we should place before the people a man whose name would add both strength and vigor to tho ticket, allow me to present as a candidate for Congress, lbe Hon. Joseph Pomeroy, of Aiademia, a man widely known for his strict intcrrilr, fine business j quaiitieSj knowledge of publio affairs. MILFORD. LEGISLATURE. Ma. Eiutob : Xoah Hertzler, of Port Royal, has held our banner aloft in two cam paigns in a manner ihat reflected creJit on himself and his party. Ho has sgain con sented to enter Ihe field. I, therefore, ask that he be announced as a candidate for Leg islature, in your issue of tho 21th iast. He is a true man FERMANAGH. LEGISLATURE. Mb. Euitob : As our Primary Election is drawing nigh, it is necessary that we should bring out our most available and slrengest I n.on for the different Wee". I would sug- g" eme of our l!end Julia . Xlutbersbaugh, of old Fayette, as Ihe most suitable candidate for the State Legislature Mr. Muthershnugh is popular in Minlin county as well as in Juniata, and if nomina ted his e'ection would be sure. MIFFLINTOWN. DELEGATE JO CONSTITUTIONAL CON VENTION. Mr. Eiutob : It is of Ihe highest impor tance that the men who are chosen to repre sent the different districts in this Common wealth in the Suite Convention to revise tbe State Constitution should be men of charac ter, industry and ability, so that they can intelligently lay hold of the questions of rc- i form that will be brought up for the consid- ) erition of the Convention, and so that they j moulding a new fundamental law that shall be in harmony with the spir.t i v. , f reform that is abroad in the lnd. I know j o no one jn our col,niT ho U better quali j fiPll for ihee requirement than our young friend, Joreraiah Lyons, of our lon, and I j his n;"e announced a, a c indi : date for Delegate to tho Cvusiitutwual Cim- MIFFLIN. DELEGVTE TO CONSTITUTIONAL CON VENTION. We have been authorized to announce Dr. J. P. Sierrett, of Academia, as a candidate f r Delegate to the Constitutional Convention. ltv tlrrrtiscwfttts. CAUTIOi. LL persons nie hereby can'ionel against Ix. picking berries on the premises uf the undersigned, in Fer-nn-gii iiw;is!iip, from FlilDAV evi-ning until TUESDAY e eniig of each week. Kaji'y petou violating this notice will betiwili with according to law EMANUEL MO VEIL July It. lMTJ-tf South Pennsylvania r.a:lrosJ. NOTICE is hereby givn to the Sim-1!io'i2-ers of the Souiti l'ehnyvani Kuliold C'mp'iny tint the Atinuil Meeting and klei; tion for a President and twt-lve fU) D. rectors wid be held at No. Aot W-istiin'oii ti-et. iu the citv f KEDIi). C'rfcs c.iuti'v. Petun , Oi TUESDAY. JULY !5 th. 172 beiweci the hours of 12 M. and 2 P. M of tha' day. F. J. UK'HEVENT, Stcff. July 21. 1S72. I.iat of Jurors September Term, 1872. cnivu ji nons. Susquehanna 11 H A;p. 1'anerson-a.J Y Itiatton. J.din Hackcnher ger, Luciau KincrUy I.aek O l Uiirtor.. T M Neiiy. Fermanagh C It liar. ley, Mit.gle. Tuscarori Til. is lierrvuiin, J AI -MXiiken j I!eale Isiac llruliaktr. I Greenwood Louis " at gill. ; Delaware D It I'nnti I Spruce Hill Wm P G river. T!is Pit ton Fayette losGayinm Sirnujl Kiui-r.. Turbett CarUtiau liar; in in W.iiS.ewii t I MitHiutowu i' B Horning, Dan el Panne- baker. Gvo.i?e U-ynold. nalk'.T John Matter, Thomas Porter. 1'F.riT Jl Kol s lt.:a!c Daxi'I A lams Isaac Rurton, Jo t'taiiuhouse, Wm Hoops. Andy Yil.iu"l,bv. j Deliware leremiah itrjner, John Fiev. J:-!m Ke'er. Ab Shelli-r- Su-nuehauna II IL Bean, lleiiry Fn-y-; mover, George Zeller. Fermanagh S untie! 15i t;b.ik.'r. I-vicSei-j ber. It S Warner Milford Eph Cunningham. J T Meilin. A II .McDonald. Tuscarora John E Dot lis, (!.-o Kotigh. j ,'"r""k Mil'iken. John lleM. Monroe (oon rayie,i, il Louver, D.ivul Mnkle, Wm McConuell." Lai-k Jonathan Gilford, S.miul Kline, M Stump. Andrew Yea'er. rayetlc Jesse Grubb. J B McAlister. J W Muterohatigh, Peier Shelley, Adam Spon hour. Levi Vanormer. Aliffintown John lluziard. T U Parker, Israel VcakUy. Thorn psontnirn S Hostler. Walker Sol KanlTmaii, L E l!:ipp. Sam"l Sieber. ilobert Strtain. Tuibelt S II McClure Patterson Samue Strayer, Harry Slahl. Greenwood Andrew Zeidcrs. mrrnn I nnn i nun on nmr tvt i nxr IU8UMUHA itMLIi BhfllflAHI. ! 'l HE next session of this Institution will: -L commence SEPTEM HE It 4th. 1X72 ; Location unsurpassed, buildings spacious ! ami convenient, thorough teachers, and mod- erate terms. Send for a Circular. I J. P. SHERMAN, A. M. Principal. i Aca.leuiia, Juniaia Co.. Pa., July 17. 1872-U . I Election of Bank Officers. JlSIATA Y.4LLET 1S.VNK OF MlFrLlKTOwil .Mifflintown, Pa., July 8, 1872. ) THE Stockholders Annual Meeting for the election of five Directois of this Hank wl" ne I'd" at (tits omce on MO.vUAl, Al- GUST tU( jo.72, at I o clock P. M. T. V. Ill WIN, Vathi'T. July 10, 1872-4t POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 1X7 m2. GRANT 4 WILSON, GREELEY & BROWN, CA.Vl'AIGX i Capss & Torches, TRANSPARENCIES & BAHNERS, With Portraits or any device for all parties'. Silk Runting, and Muslin Flags of all sizes on hand or made lo order. Chinese Lanterns of all sizes and styles ; Paper Bal loons, Fire Voiks, Ac , &c. Campaign Clubs filled out at tbe Lowest Kates at WM. F. SCHEIBLE'S CA.MPAK&N DEPOT. 49 South Third Street. Philadelphia SE.NO TOR CIRCULAR. July 10, 1872-8m Caution. ALL persons are hereby cautioned against Hunting. Fishing, or in any way ires, passing on the farm occupied by the under signed, in Milford township. All persons so offending will be dealt with to Ihe full extent of ihe law. JOSEPH FUNK. May 22, lc:j. Si . gew StU'frUsfsnfius. " IF YOU WANT ' A GOOD SCHOOL FOR YOUR BOY. WUKSE UK WILL BK Well Tauglit, Well Fed and Well CareJ For, Amid hapy surroundings, send binit) CUAMBEHSBURG ACADEMY. J. II. SnCMAKER, Til. P.. Piiuripil, Cbwiiber.-burg, Pa. Lebanon Valley, College, FOR BOTH SEXKS. Separate building. Fall term beiato Aug. ltfth. fvr Ca'alogne, address the ;Te.ijent, L H. HAMMOND, A. M. Aiinvilt-. P. COTTAGE SEMINARY, 5. FOR Y0TJJTG LADIES, Potlstown, Montgomery Coisly, Pa. Tbe twenty-fourth rnnual ttsvoB of this Institution opens September 1:!th. For Cir culars, address Rev. JOHN MOOR, Priuci pal fMlTMArdlnu school, roit vorxt; mkx a.d buys. At Potistown, Montgomery Co., Pa. on Pbili. & Heading R k. Twenty sacond annual session opens Sep', llth. Situation healthy and beautiful. Classical. KnglisU and Mathematical courses of study thm imsrh and practical. For Circular, contain ing full particulars, address GEiJs I. MKI04, A. M. Pnocip-il. COLLEGIATE ino OM MERCI A I. IS.ST1 Ti'TE. New Haven. Conn. Preparatory lo Collage, Cin'incss. Sciiuiinc schools, I. s. Military and Nival Academics. Fallsion. thirty-sixih reir, bein S;. 15 F-r ar. alogues. adiress Gen. WM. II. IIUSSEM., Principal. Aarents Wanted for Life and Times of JFAS FiSK, Contains biographies of Drew, Vanderbilt, Gould. Tweed. .4c. with a tinancinl histors of Ihe enimirv fnr the lt ibree veav. and what Crant knew about J-BMt FKIU1I Over bv) page. Price Si. .U'tre-s NEW VOKK BOOK CO . 14-" Nassau St., Ncr Yor " CAKPAICrNlOODS FORM " Aeents wanted f t our Camp lien gnn-U. Sell at Sicht- Pay 109 per cent, profit- Ntw I is ttii? i line, feud at once tor ie-criptne Ciicul irs and Price Lists of our Fiae Stei t Engravings of all the Candidates. Iftiap'Ug Biographies, Chans, Photographs, Badge.. Pins, Flag, in I eviryihin suite ! to th times. Ten Do'l.rs per day easily uid. Full sn plus sent for S 5. Address M -ks a Uomimi'keo. ST Park Kow, New York. A GENTS WANTED Agents mat.' m.,r iiinnty at w rk for us than at nrTthiug el-Mf. l' l-iiicas light and permanent, pnr ticulars tree. G. Stinsos & Co , "; A". I'utlhkers. Portland. Maine. pino fo., . i. price coqfi . So Agents Circulars Free- "rlW'TiW&oblueT Is the cri"Hin'i and hi article in ltiniir ket fur Blaring ( lathes. The genuine his bob Uirlow.si.nd n;ihiTr"s n ine fl II. label, and is nt np at Wilthergi-r s linn S,.-re. .-;: .Niutli Sw'ii I St.. Phil id.!, phin. D. S. V. It.t'BER SEU. Pro . i'-ior. For a-i'e 'v l).-jjri;i'.:a and Giocers. Reject all Tlolcot Purgatives. Tly nil in, t-tie of the iowe aii't weaken ll 'liis. tion. Tarbimi's t r. r.RVKSi Ks r " Ski.tzu Ai-KBiErr ts used by ratioiil peop; - as a means of ri-lieviii all tietatie::ieiiis --i' ihe Mom-ich. liver and iurestiiK-s. heca'H-j it re moves obstrti rCiu.s w ti i lit pain and :!i..ar.s vigor ti, ihj nr;4-,iis wtiit-ti it put -.ti-.. SOLD BY ALL DUl tliilS 1 S Know all Men by tto Presents, That I, Simon P. Ligin, of Tn.sc irnv township, tanner, I'o,- and in consideration of the sum of twelve hundred and fiilyone d ! lavs to me iu hand paid by J. J. II.aiiHn. at mid before the ensealing and Je ivcry of these present, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, have bargained, sold and d liv.-red. and by these presents d, rvtriin. srli and di-Lver un'o the sai t J .1. II iioiliun. ''our horses, one wagon, one giain d -ill. ti:w mower and re iper, one cider press, etej tan ning mill, one set smith tool, one corn pi in ter, one horse rake. carp?nter tools. h.rn. hay fork, rope and puiley. two plows, . t . . n i . i-j trees, log cUain. wheel barrow, shuv.l plo". cultivator, three sets harness. Hails, rake. dnii fork, coru foJder emter, grindstone ana lixins, one horse (Koc.l. wn Uxvn wapons. one cart. ne three horse r.nd or two horse douMt-iree. in spring waon, four head of cows, four bead of yoi.!ir caiiie, and two mules, lo have and to boll the aforesaid property uctn Ihe said J. .1. Hamilton, bis Kie.ulors, Administrators or Assigns. Id bis and their own proper use and bent-fit and behoof iorever : and I. the said Simon P. l.o tn. my heirs, xecutors and Adniiaistrs tors, the bargained premises unto the sai l J. J. Hamilton, his Executors, A laiinistra lors or Assigns, from and against all person or persons whonisoener, shall and will war rant and defend by these presents. In w.tnvsw whereaf I have hereunto set my hand and seal tais tfrd day of July, !s72. SIMON P. LOGAN, I '(' 1 NOW, KNOW ALL MEN, nnd take natie. that Ihe said Simon P. Logan is living o" and culii'ating for ma and for my ben.'St. mt farm iu Tuscarora township, Juniata county, and thai I have left the above property with the exception of one horse and two tnuie'r wiih him. and in his possession an I care, and only during my pleasure and for di." benefit, in lbe cultivation of my farm ; al all TKtn are teamed and forbidden I" 1:1'.'"' irilh tatd properly in any wat. or lo b? eithe priucipal or accessary in diverting said prop erty from Ihe use for which I have left U i the care of said Simon P. Logan. J. J. HAMILTON. July 10, IS-72-Ct FfSSiisiitMCuiiipaip Caps, Capss Si Trcies. SendforULrsTRTtiC:s- ct" lar and Prkz I.it CUNNINGHAM i HILl. M !! rAI-TI BFItS, So. 201 Church Street. PlIILADILrHlA- May 31, '72 lai Assismee's Notice. N TOTIO; is herehy given that Chr'itop!if O. Ensler. of Walker township. J", county. Pa., and Catharine, his wifs. assigned all tbe estate, real and pergonal, of said Christopher O. Engler, to Samuel nard. of Fayette lownahip. said county, is irtisl for lbe benefit of the creditois ef lJ Christopher G. Eugler. All persons, there fore, indebted lo the said Christopher 0. S g!er will laake payment to the said A;'ign,', u'i iuvib ua.iiig Claims or n t - make known the same without dUy. SAMUEL LEONARD. Assignee of Christopher G. Englf June 12, 1872-et . All Lindr. of Job Work neatly ex""' i V 1 ' ial'll Foriuivcu-eof r.lml. Kierd 81 3 i jJlli l:cl.iii or l';r,r-l : J M ftf 'ile3 ;lf,t 1m txi; Pi, It ItrviKoy tails locure. Ii is prepared ti.res ly to curj lbe Piles, au l nothing else Su!d by all Druigi-ts. Pi ire. Sl.'f). I: Tttw-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers