Juniata sentinel. (Mifflintown, Pa.) 1846-1873, August 13, 1873, Image 2

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JuntatH Jtniiiwl.
MIFFLJNTOWN
Wednesday Morning, Aug. 13, 1873.
B. Fr SCIIWEIER,
FDITOR A PBOPRIETOR.
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO, 40 Park Row, New York
AND
S. M. PETTENGILL & CO., 37 Park Row, N.Y.
Are our sole agents in that eity, and art au
thorized to contract for advertising at our
lowest rates. Advertisers in tbat city are t
quested to leave their favors with either of
the above bouses.
PMXAItY ELECTION.
At a meeting nf the .Republican County
Committee of Juniata county, held at Will's
hotel, Miffliutown, on Saturday, the 9tb inst.,
tbe following resolutions were adopted :
Ettotre,!, Tbat the Primary elections be
held at the usual places on
8ATURDAY, AUGUST 23rd, 1873,
between the hours of 2 and 7 o'clock P. M.,
and tbat the Return Judges meet in Conven
tion, in tbe Court House, in MifSiatown, on
MONDAY, AUGUST 25th. 1873,
at 1 o'clock P. M., for the purpose of an
nouncing tbe result.
Resolved. That tbe Primary Election this
year be conducted under the same rules as
heretofore, with tbe single exception that
the rule in regit: 1 to announcements of can
didtttes is so far modified as to " permit the
announcement of candidates at any time pre
vious to tut election, August zird.
Jltnolred, Tbat Samuel Minnichan and Da
vid 0. Alter be appointed members of the
County Committee lor Perrysville borough,
to fiil vacancies caused by the death of J. W.
nbarton and the resignation of J. H. Irwin,
and Ca.vin Burton for lieale, in place of L. B.
Scale, deceased.
JOHN BALSBACH, Tres't.
Michael HormAH, Sec y.
If the second resolution of the pro
ceedingx of the meeting of the Ilcpubli
can County Committee, rnblished above.
does not express, it implies the right of
tbe ( ountj ( orumittee to change tbe
manner or system under which the pri
mary election is held. The Committee
has no right t change the system. It
has the right to offer suggestions. The
resolution is not material further than
this, that by allowing it to pass unchal
lenged, hereafter it may be quoted as a
precedent, to influence a Committee to
attempt changes in the system.
Tli a following is the system under
which the Primary Election will be con
ducted : "
Fir.'t. The candidates fur the several
offices shall have their names announced
in one or more of the county papers at
least four weeks previous to the primary
meetings staling the office, and subject
to the action of the said primary meet
ing. SctvnJ. The voters responding to Re
ivllican p-inriple in each town, ward,
or borough shall niett on Saturday, Sep
tember 2, 1S71, at the usual place of
holding tbe sjiriug election, at '1 o'clock
P. !., and proceed to elect one person
for Judge and two persons for clerks,
who shall ftum a board to receive votes
and determine who are proper persons to
vole, and shall hold the polls open until
7 P. M. After the polls are opened the
candidates announced as aforesaid shall
be balloted for ; the name of each per
son voting shall be written on a list
at the time of voting, no person being
allowed to vote more than once for each
office.
Third. After the polls are closed the
board shall proceed to count the votes that
each candidate received, and make out
the returns accordingly, to be certified
to by the Judge and attested by the
clerks.
Fowth. The judge (or one of the
clerks appoiuted by the judge) of the
respective election district, shall meet at
tbe Court house, in llifflintown, Mon
day following the primary meetings, at
1 o'clock P. M., having the returns and
iit of the voter, and count the votes,
and the person having the highest num
ber of votes for auy office shall be de
clared the regular nominee of the Repub
lican party.
Fifth. Any two or more persons hav
ing an equal number of votes for the same
office, the judges shall proceed to ballot
for its choice, the persons having the
highest unmber to be the nominee.
Sixth. The return judges shall be com
petent to reject, by a majority, the re
turns from any election district, where
there is evidence of fraud, cither in the
returns, or otherwise, to the extent of the
fratuit committed.
Seventh. No person shall be permitted
to vote proxies.
The following was suggested by the
County Committee on the lSih of June,
1S70, and Las since been followed :
"Itesolvcd, That on the day of hold
ing the primary election, after the choice
of a judge and clerk, pro tcm , by the
Republicans present, an election shall be
held forjudge aud clerk, which shall re
main open for thirty minutes, after which
the ballots shall be counted, and tbe
parties having the highest number of
votes shall be declared respectively the
judge and clerk, aud after tbe election is
held, the same to receive tbe votes for
candidates, certify the same to the Coun
ty Convention ; and the judge so elected
shall exercise the same powers as pre
scribed by the Crawford County System "
$500 reward has been offered by the
sheriff of Elk county for the capture of
William Bromley, who recently killed
William Phalen. Bromley weighs about
160 pounds ; about 45 years of age ;
rusty dark hair ; coarse chin whiskers, a
little gray ; high cheek bones, coarse
featured, aud about 5 feet 10 inches high
with ink marks on one arm.
Several Minnesota Democratic journals
of influence are proposing a new depar
ture by having the State Convention in
dorse the Republican nominees and plat
form. The income of the Lewisburg Univer
sity last year was $39,518, and the ex
penses f 38,507 90
Land Grants.
There have been mtny articles wrillen
and many speeches made, for and against
government land grants. She North
American, delivers itself as follows on
the subject. So far as onr observation
has extended th& political conventions
have declared against all further land
grants, and this sentiment seems to be
reflected by all the leading journals of
the Republic. This looks like bcking
the stable door after the horse is stolen.
For if there is any land remaining tbat
is not covered by existing land grants,
it must be in an inaccessible region.
Of the vast wilderness of the far west
the Northern Pacific, Texas Pacific, At
lantic and Pacific, Union Pacific, Pacific
Kansas Pacific Dcuver and Rio Grand.
Missouri. Kansas and Texas, and other
railroads of great length, have already
secured so much of these political decla
rations are rather amusing, when we re
member that the men who chiefly con
cocted them are the very-men who have
been concerned in the land grants, or
have voted for them, or have advocated
or endorsed them.
That the policy has been injurious to
the Republic we deny. It was begun
nnder President Pierce, and was so suc
cessful in Ulinoise that its exteusion was
nrged by him in one of his annual mes
sages Looking at the results aecotr
plished in Hliuoise, Iowa, Missouri by
the system, it requites a considerable
amount of cheek to pronounce it a fraud
and an outrage. That the northwest is
a marvel of progress is wholly owing to
the land grants The government had
no money to bestow, ana me puouc
lands, being given away free to actual
settlets, brought no cash into the Trea
sury. But iu making grants to the nn
built railroads it gave what these compa
nies could make a basis for the issue of
bonds to raise monev to bnild their lines
The process was a good one on both
sides. It settled the country more rapid
ly than the homestead act had done, be
cause it stimulated railroad building and
rendered acceseable to purchasers the
the land along the routes. It gave re
sources to the companies, avenues to
maikets to the settlers aud cheaper trans
portation for the mails, Iudian goods,
troops and munitions of war.
It is to ti e interest of a' railroad to
populate its route as soon as possible and
tbrcfore when a lino is built upon a land
grant it at once commerces to stimulate
emigration. But as its grant only covers
the alternate sections the others eome in
for a share of attention, and thus the
government can sell land for which other
wise there would be no market- It can
not be detiied that this process affords
great opportunities for mm in command
of large means to make fortunes. But
they risk much and their gains are no
more than enterprise and business shrewd
ness are fairly entitled to. In the case
of the Union Pacific the government, in
its anxiety to secure the construction of
the line, gave its endorsement to the
bonds and a land grant besides. 'But it
has not yet appeared that the land grant
was the sonrce of corruption. It was
the money subsidy that worked a'l the
mischief.
When the government etopped the
money subsidy the Kansas Pacific came
to a halt in the open prarie, and so re
mained for a time. But after a while
the company raised the means and fin
ished the line through to Denver, and it
has proved quite a success. This was
done on the basis of the land grant, and
without that grant it could not have been
done at all. The same may be said of
the Denver and Rio Grande, now push
ing on rapidly to the Mexican frontier,
and of all the railroads in Missouri, Kan
sas and Texas that are now cf so much
uee in bifugrag. Mfttlo Wm Toaaa to tho
northern markets. Without land grants
no railroads were possible in California,
Oregon, Washington, Nebraska. Corora
io or Minnesota. And hence this pro
nunciamcnto against land grants means
literally that our progress in that respect
must cease. One immediate effect of it
would be to make absolute monopolies
of all tbe lines that have land grants.
Their lands would immediately increase
in value and their credit improve, so they
could market their bonds advantageously
It will be seen, then, that every one in
terested in existing grants would natur
ally oppose new ones, and the resolution
has a concealed meaning that does not at
first appear.
Turning for the moment from the rail
road part of the case, let us see what
other objects come nnder the ban nf land
grants and are ignored. These are com
mon schools in some of the States, agri
cultural colleges in all the States, univer
sities in the new States, .and works for
the drainage of swamps. When a tract
of public land is so swampy as to be of
no nse for cultivation, the national gov
ernment grants it to the State in which
it lies on condition that it shall be drain
ed and improved. In fact, there is not a
single object to which the American land
grant policy has been devoted that is not
in itself praiseworthy and deserving of
encouragement. As a consequence of
this policy the new States have all been
very flourishing and prosperous, and
their financial condition favorable. The
popular antipathy to land grants arises
from the belief that they ennre chiefly
to the benefit of a few individuals, and
tbat they are the means of building np
huge land monopolies. We have shown
above one good reason why the railroad
companies would not favor monopolies,
and we may add that the same would
apply to all expecting to derive Targe
revenues from land grants. Neverthe
less great estates really do exist at the
west. ' Yet, that is true. But consider-'
ing the price at which land is openly
sold in these new districts, from SI 50 to
$5 per acre, it is apparent that any one
with 150,000 at command could purchase
a few thousand acres and put them under
cnltivation, stock them with live stock,
and still have something left for machin
ery and buildings. The fact is that in
making land so excessively cheap to the
poor settler we enable the monopolist to
do what under other circumstances would
be ioiposihle. The policy has one good
effect : it carries forward on the front
wave of emigration men of capital and
enterprise, whose influence npon the
rongh pioneers is of some value in refus
ing a higher civilization and setting an
example of improved agriculture. On
the hold, therefore, the situation is not a
bad one, however it may seem so.
Terrible Steamboat Accident.
Fredericksburg, Va., August 8
The steamer Wawasset, running on the
Potomac river between Washington and
Cnrriornan, took fire about 12 o'clock
to-day at Cbatterdon landing, and was
destroyed. She had about 150 passen
gers on board, and between 40 and 50
lives were lost. Six bodies were found
np to 2 o'clock, three white ladies, one
child and two colored childred. Miss
Virginia Marbnry, of Glynmost ; Miss
Bessie Saunders and a child from Cur-
riotain, are among the dead. Others
have not been recognized-. George W.
Uook, ot Warsaw, Va, is missing.
Capt. Wood did not leave the boat until
forced to do so by the flames. The fire
was first discovered in the engine room.
Washington. August 8. The repor
ter of the Associated Press at midnight
bad an interview with "Doc'' Kennev,
the barkeeper of the Wawasset, the only
one of the passengers or crew of that
vessel who reached Washington to-night
He came to this city on tbe steamer Ex
press, with an excursion party from Pin-
ey Point, the latter vessel having sighted
the wreck about four o'clock this after
noon, and picked np Kenny, who had
been sent out in a small boat to come up
to Washington, the passengers and crew
of the Wawasset being at that time car
ed for at Stewart's wharf, near the scene
of the disaster.
Kenny states that the Wawasset left
there at six o'clock this morning, on her
regular weekly trip to Cone river, with
117 registered passengers and a large
cargo of freight for the river landings.
J ust before reaching Cbatterdon landing
on the Virginia side of tbe Potomac,
about five miles below Aquia creek, and
after -the whistle of tbe boat had been
blown as a signal of her approach to
that landing the steamer at that time
being about a third of a mile from the
shore fire was discovered in the hold,
aud the hose was attached immediately,
but before the men could reach it the
conflagration became general, as tbe fire
had been burning for some time.
The fire had been smouldering, it is
supposed, for some hours, and upon
opening the hatches it burst forth with
great fury, driving the men from the
hold and completely baffling all attempts
to subdue it. In less than an instant the
wildest confusion prevailed on the ves
sel, the passengers becoming panic strick-1
en and frantic with fear, very few having
presence of mind sufficient to take care
of themselves.
Tbe steamer was without a second's
delay headed for shore on the Virginia
side, aud iu a few minutes' ran aground
about two hundred yards from the shore
At this time the flames had spread with
fearful rapidity, and in the excitement
many jumped overboard, several of them
jumping into tbe water oelore tbe steam
er struck the bottom She was provided
with but two 'small . His:-, and in the
rnj oi the moment one of these boats
was thrown overboard and lust by the
passengers, who, uncontrolled, were en
deavoring to lunch her. Captain Wood,
of the ill fated steamer, aud his assis
tants, are said to have used every effort
to control the passengers but without
avail, and but for the disobedience of
orders many who were lost would have
been saved. The vessel was well pro
vided with life preservers, but in tbe
panic it seems that none of the passen
gers secured them, and this fact also
added to the lamentable loss of life
Over forty passengers were drowned.
among whom were Mrs. Reed aud three
children, the wife and children of police
man Reed of this city, and his niece,
whose name has not yet been ascertained ;
Adelina Jenkins, a chambermaid, and a
deckhand, name nuknown ; Mrs. Vir
ginia Marbury, of Glymont ; Miss Ber
tie Sanders and a child, of Currioman,
Virginia.
Up to the time that the express in
which the narrator of this statement left
the scene of the wreck, but five or six
bodies bad been recovered, and the. con
fusion was so great that a further list of
names of those lost could not be obtain
ed. Among the saved was a Mrs. Wise,
of this city, and J. Wilkin Massev.
Kenney states that Capt. Wood was the
last man to leave the eteamcr, and the
pilot, Mr. Boswell, was surrounded by
tbe flames before he left the pilot box,
which was not until he had to rnn the
steamer aground.
The flames spread with such rapidity
that the till ropes were on fire before the
vessel struck gronnd. All of those lost,
it is supposed, were drowned, having
juniped everboard to escape tbe flames
The fire was first discovered about
twenty minutes before 11 o'clock, and
Kenney states than in less than ten min
utes the vessel was enveloped in flames,
and now lies where she was rnn aground,
burned to the water's edge. Chatterdon
Point is just opposite to Maryland Point.
. The survivors of the disaster have
been made as comfortable as possible at
Stewart's and near that place where they
will remain until about 9 o'clock Satur
day morning, at which time the steamer
Georgiana will take them on board, ex
pecting to reach this city about 9 o'clock!
. Abont one-half of the passengers on
the Wawasset were women and children,
many of whom were en route to country
places along the Potomac to spend
short time pleasuring with their friends.
There were qu'te a number of colored
people among the passengers.
The Wawasset is a mail side wheel
steamer of about S0 tons, and is engag
ed in runuing between Washington and
the landings along the Potomac. She
was insured - for $28,000. WV'hen she
left here this morning it was .supposed
she was in perfect order, and the origin
of the fire is at present unknown
The crew of the Wawasset consisted
of Captain Wood, a clerk, two engineers
two firemen, barkeeper, four deck hands
and a chambermaid.
Washington, August 9, 1 15 A. M
As soon as the particulars of the dis
aster became known to-night a great
crowd collected about the wharves, and
the steamer Express was boarded by
hundreds, anxious to learn the fate of
friends on the ill-fated steamer, but as
the registering list was destroyed, no
positive particulars as to nanus could be
gained.
It is impossible to obtain-a correct list
before the arrival of the survivors on
the Georgiana, which is expected at eight
o'clock.
The Wawasset drew only four feet of
water, and a few weeks ago was thor
oughly overhauled and repaired. She
was regarded as an excellent river boat,
and her boilers and machinery were in
first class order. She was owned by the
Potomac Ferry Company, and has been
plying on tbe Potomac river as an ex
enrsion, passenger and freight steamer
for tho past fiveorsix years.
Rkcest despatches from California
report a system of slavery in practice
in that State among tbe Chinese. They
sell women to houses of prostitution and
to people for their purpose.
Lum Yah Sung, married a chinee wo-
wan, it appears that she bad been sold,
but bad run away and married Lum.
Tbe Chinee secret tribunal that manages
this slave busiuess demanded of Lum the
price that had been paid for his wife
Instead of paying ho gave' tbe proper
information to our American authorities
and the following despatch relate to the
points in the case with tbe result as far
as disposed of : '
San Fraxcisco, August 8 Eight
Chinamen, members of the secret tribun
al of Hip Yee Tong Society, were on
trial to day before the jury at the Police
Court, on the charge of conspiracy to
extuit money from Lum Yah Sung by
threats of death on bis failure to pay
8350 as the price of his wile, who es
caped from the keeper of tbe brothel to
whom she had been sold. 1
Lum Yah Su,ng- swore thst soon after
his marriage he was summoned and tak
en before the tribunal of the society,
where thirty men were present, and the
door secured by an armed guard ; tbat
Ah Yee, one of the prisoners, told bim
he must pay the money or return the
woman, or he would be killed ; that the
Hip Yee Tong Society would spend
$10,000 to secure his death ; that he
pleaded that he had no money, when
they finally gave him' two days' time
to raise the amount and released him,
when he fled back to the mission school
for protection. Sung remains at the
school, and does not go out unless escor
ted by white men. "
Doctor Lob, who speaks English
fluently, was swvrn to translate a large
number of documents which were found
in the rooms of the society He trans
lated several. When be came to one
which was a record kept of the sale of
women to keepers of brothels, and pun
ishments inflicted npon them, he refused
to go any further.
The court admonished him, bnt still
he refused to proceed. Tbe conrt then
threatened to tend him to jail, bnt he
would not obey, and finally he was
given till Monday to consider the matter.
A complete translation of all the docu
ments found is in the hands of the au
thorities. The trial will bs resumed on
Monday.
A new corn plague has been discover
ed in Woodford county, 111. The EI
Paso Journal learns from Mr. Richard
Aeay that a peculiar sort of worm, re
sembling a maggot, is at work upon the
corn, making great havoc. It attacks
the roots, eats them entirely away, and
tbe stalk and leaves dry up and topple
over. This worm has made its appear
ance in several fields not far from town,
in vast numbers After destroying the
roots of the corn stock, it develops into
a black bug with wings, flies readily and
finishes up such corn as has escaped the
first onslaught by attacking the stock
and ear.
The papers will have to be served anew
on Brigbam Young in the divorce suit of
the seventeenth Mrs. Yonng. When the
case was called at Salt Lake, his counsel
raised the point that the serving officer
was appointed in chambers and not in
Court, and the Judge decided the point
well taken.
Wilmer Addison Davis, collector of
county taxes for Union township Schuyl
kill county, is a defaulter to a large
amount of money. He has been held in
2,000 bail for embezzlement, iu 91,500
for false personation, and in the tame
sum for perjury.
SHORT ITEMS.
Milesburg is to have a horse shoe fac
tory. . Ten emigrant swindlers were arrested
in New York on the 6th inst.
A man in Galesburg, Illinois has been
fined three dollars for 'publicly spanking
his daughter.'
A new use for petroleum is for clean
ing guns, which it is said it effectually
protects from rust.
There are thirty-three cheese factories
in Crawford county, the annual product
amounting in value to $500,000.
In a fight between troops and Indians
near Camp Verde, on June 28, three
Indians were killed and five squaws
captured. "
Advices from Savannah, Georgia state
tbat the caterpillar has appeared on the
sea islands, and is committing much dam
age in cotton.
A recent visitor to one or tbe islands
on the coast of Maine, discovered a
school of forty scholars, all of whom
were the grand children of one man.
Levi Bissell, brother of the late Gov
ernor Bissell, of Illinois, well known as
the inventor of the locomotive and other
machinery, died in New York on the 5th
inst.
One morning recently a Chicago wo
man borrowed $200 of her husband, and
in the afternoon fluttered nnder his nose
a divorce that had cost precisely that
amount
. A dispatch from Little Sock, Ark ,
says that two Chioamen fought a duel
in Lincoln county on the 31st, in which
one was killed and the other placed in
jail.
The Reedsburg Free Press employs
women exclusively. It says : We have
a calico ' foreman,'' two dimity 'compos
itors,' and the sweetest little 'devil' in
pink muslin to be found anywhere.
The discovery in season that a convict
in the Georgia State prison had seasoned
tbe dinner with arsenic saved the State
the expense of three huudred pine cof
fins.
A Texas paper speaks of a lady at
Dallas who has a bonnet worn by her
great-grandmother 200 yean ago There
must have been pome longevity among
tbe people as well as the bonnets of that
family.
Duty is the first step to greatness
the helm that steers man safely over the
billows of life. If we fail in onr duty,
we bid farewell to the land of promise
to the haven of hope ; man's honorable
occupation is gooe
John Wens, a junk dealer of Pough-
keepsic, N. Y., shot his wife on Saturday
and then shot himself. Both are dead.
They had quarreled about money mat
ters, and Wenz was drunk. They leave
seven children
During the late cholera epidemic at
Gallatin, Tennessee, many mocking birds
and canaries sickened in their cages and
died, while those which frequented the
gardens, instinctively fled to the woods
and did not return nntil the cholera took
its departure.
Miss B , of Chester, is a winning,
dark-eyed girl, who speaks three or four
languages, swims, rides, drives, and dan
ces, loving everything in life, from the
sublimity of sky and ocean to men and
horses even condescending to be gracious
to dandies and poodledogs.
Last year, on the 10th of August, the
wife of Charles Karicher, of Williams
port, whilst visiting at Pittston, gave
birth to triplets, but they lived for a
ehoit time only. August 6, she gave
birth to twins, but one has since died.
The other is reported heallhy and bids
fair to live.
The origin of tea is thus told by the
Hindoo mylhelogists. Darma, a prince
of tbat country, went on a pilgrimage to
China, vowing he would never rest on
the way. But he once, wearied out, fell
asleep, and was, on awaking, so angry
ith himself that he cut off his eyelids
and threw them on the gronnd. They
sprung np as tea shrubs, and to this or
igin is owing the power of tea to pro
duce wakefulness.
Memphis rejoices in a complicated sen
sation. A youthful citizen eloped witn
a damsel whose parents had reserved her
for another, and when she came back for
her clothes, after the marriage they look
ed her np over night and posted her off
for a divorce in the morning. Mean
while the new made and the intended
husband met on the streets, and without
any ceremonious preliminaries exchanged
shots, but without injury to either, and
both are now in jail.
Henry T. Bray got the prize as the
handsomest baby in tbe San Francisco
baby show. The other prizes for babies
were awarded to the handsomest twins,
the one having tbe heaviest head of hair,
the one with the smallest feet and hands
the fattest dark eyed baby, the fattest
bine eyed baby, the smallest, the best
dressed, the sweetest smiling, and the
loudest bawlea. Then prizes were given
to the youngest mother, the oldest moth
er, and the handsomest mother.
Five yonng Belgians lately made a
wager tbat tbey would remain awake
continuously for seven days. They kept
up all manner of exciting exercises, and
drank large quantities of coffee, and one
of them won the bet, though with the
loss of twenty-five pounds in weight
Two fell asleep after 130 honrs ; one was
seized with the inflammation of the
lungs, and had to give in to save his life
and the other fell asleep on horseback,
and then fell off and broke his arm.
riiMRRRi.AND. Md . Las had a " ten
cent" marriage. The News is authority
for the story that a minister recently
married a couple in that town, and after
the ceremony the bridegroom generously
banded the clergyman eighty-five cents.
The recipient of this handsome sum
could say nothing from the fact that he
had nothing to say alter such a remark
able display of liberality, aud he bowed
them to the door. He had hardly time
to return to the room and place the enor
mous fee in his pocket book, when "there
came a tapping, as of some one gently
rapping" at the door. Thither he went
to find the groomsman, who had returned
and begged the minister for the loan of
seventy-five cents I He explained that
they (bridegroom and himself) wete
little short to-day'," but would be paid off
on the morrow, when the married man
intended to call and "pay five- dollars for
splicin' 'em." ' That they needed just
seventy-five cents to get "somethiu' par
ticular" for the married couple, and
nopea ne couia accommodate mem. I be
minister, good-hearted as he is, could not
withstand snch an appeal as that ; he
couldu't see two fellow-mortals deprived
of 'somethiu' particular" (costing only
seventy-five cents), that would make
them still happier 1 No, no and he
forked over fifteen seventeenths of the
marriage fee instanter. To make a long
story short, the bridegroom has not call
ed to this day with the promised five
dollars, nor has the money so kindly
loaned been returned. All that the cler
gyman ever expects to get for perform
ing tbat marriage ceremony is ten cents,
and he thinks he was very lucky in get
ting that mnch out of tbe bridegroom
who was so ' short."
A Hint to Housewives how to heep Kitch
en ware Clean and Bright.
Every housewife of neat and tidy
habits takes especial delight in keeping
all the tin, copper and iron ware of her
kitchen as clean aud bright as painstak
ing Ltbor can make them. 'A pride in
this direction is commendable, and al
ways meets the smiling approval of the
"tyrant man" who pays the household
bills. Itemember that Sapolio is the ou
ly thing on earth that will mrke an old
tarnished tin pan or a rusty kettle shine
as bright as new. And by the use of
Sapolio it is the quickest aud easiest
thing in the world to keep every utensil
in a high state of polish.
mflvfrtismrnts.
Administratrix's Notice.
Ettatt of Daniel ilatigle, deceased.
LETTERS of Administration having been
granted to the undersigned upon tbe
estate of Daniel MangW. late of Suequehanba
township, deceased, all persons indebted to
said estate are requested to make payment,
and those having claims against the same,
to present them" properly authenticated for
settlement to
AMANDA MANGLE,
ngl3 Administratrix.
SPOKES,
RIMS,
And PLOW
HANDLES.
JOHN G. DAVIS & SON
Union Suoie Wc-ris,
S. W. Cor. Leopard 4 Otter St
PHILADELPHIA.
SSf Send for Price-Lift. -J
aug 13-tim
$3,000 FOR 20 CTS.
Cefore you start on a journey, buy an Acci
dent Insurance Tioket of the ilallvay Pas
sengers Assurance ., of Hartford, Conn.
Tickets for sale at railroad Btations, Ask
for an Insurance Ticket.
WY0MINGS EMINARY
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
One of the largest Boarding Schools for both
sexes in the United States. Sis courses of
study. Military tactics. Commercial College
Course and Telegraphing- Terms low. Fall
terra opens September 3rd. Send for a Cat
alogue to Rev. D. COPELAND, A. M., or
L. L. SPRAGUE, Kingston, Pa.
fjOLLEGIATE & COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE
v New Haven, Conn. Preparatory to college
Circulars sent on application. W M. II. RUS
SELL, Principal.
Columbia Classical Institute.
A Boarding School for Young Men and Boys.
For Circulars, address Rev. II. S ALEXAN
DER, Columbia, Pa,
.VH'e for Price List to J. H. JOH9rsrTOIt.
GREAT WOTERPMid wsftini lifrv
t! Smithfield St.. Fittabmh. Pa.
Breech-Loading Shot Guns. $-10 to $300.
Double Shot Guns, $8 to $150. Single Guns,
$3 to 20. Rifles, $8 to $75. Revolvers, $5
to $25. Pistols, $1 to $8. Gun Material,
Fishing Tackle, fto. Large diicountt to deal,
ers or clubs. Army Guns, Revolvers, eta.,
bought or traded for. Goods sent by express
C. O. D. to be examined before paid for.
ArOETCIE. How ? By speculating in
Stacks and gU Capital, $10 to $100 ;
will pay $100 to $1,000 a month Full ex
planation sent free. W. F. HUBBELL & CO.,
Baukers and Brokers, 39 Wall St., New York.
Box 2282
$25, MOSEY MADE FAST. $1,000.
By alt who woak for us. ir npon writing
yon do not find us all square, we will (rive
yon one dollar for your trouble. Send stamp
for circulars to
O. H. BUCKLEY 4 CO.,
Tekonsha, Mich.
ttR n COfl per day 1 Agents wasted ! All
41 IU 4&v eja9!es 0f working people, of
either sex, young or old. make more money
at work for us in their spare moments or all
the time than at anything else. Particulars
free. Address G. 8TINS0N & CO., Port
land, Maine.
Having struggled twenty years be
tween life and death with Asthma
or Phthisic I experimented myself
my compounding roots and herbs,
and inhaling the Medicine thus
obtained. I fortunately discover-
led a most wonderful remedy and
sure oure for Asthma and its kindred dis
eases. Warranted to relieve the severest
paroxysm instantly, so the patient can lie
down to rest acd sleep cemfortably. ONE
TRIAL PACKAGE SENT BY MAIL FREE
OF CHARGE. Address D. LANGELL, Ap
ple Creek, Wayne Co., O.
THE LA CROIX MEDICAL DISPENSARY,
Established in 1837,
la the oldest and most successful institution
in this country for the treatment of Chronic
and Sexual Diseases. For terms of treat
ment. calL or address bv
meat of ease. " 8. II. HUNSDON.
81 Maiden Lane, Albany, N. Y.
gtw gldrfrtisfranns.
GRANDEST SCHEME EVER KS01K!
Fourth Grand Gift Concert
roa thi tEscriT or the
Public Library of Kentucky.
12.000 CASH GIFTS $1,500,000.
Every Fif& Ticket IriTS 'a Gift.
aso,ooo FOR 850.
The Fourth Grand Gift Concert authorized
by special act of tbe Legislature for tbe ben.
efit of (be Puhlio Library of Kentucky. ill
take place in Public Library Hall, at Louis
ville. Ky.,
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1873.
Only sixty thousand tickets will be sold
and one-blf of thne r intended for the
European market, tlms leaving only- 60,000 -for
sale in tbe United Slates, where 100,000
were disposed of for tbe Third Concert. The
tickets are divided into ten coupons or parts
and have on their back tbe Scheme with a
full explanation of the mode 3f drawing.
At tbis concert, which will be the grand
est musical display ever witnessed in this
country, the unprecedented sum of
11,500,000,
divided into 12,000 caxh gifts, will be dis
tributed by lot among the ticket-holders
The numbers of tbe ticket to be drawn from
one wbeel by blind children and tbe gifts
from another.
LIST OF GIFTS:
One Grand Cash Gift $250,000
One Grand Cash Gift.. 100,000
One Grand Cash Gift......... ......... 60,000
One Grand Cash Gift 25,000
One Grand Cash Oift..... . 17,500
10 Cash Gifts or $10,000 eaoh, 100,000
30 Cash Gifts or 6,000 " ISO GOO
60 Cash Gifts of 1,000 " 60.000
80 Cash Gifts or 600 40.000
100 Cash Gifts of 400 40,000
150 Cash Gifts of 800 45,000
250 Cash Gifts ot 200 " 60.000
325 Cash Gifts of 100 32,600
11,000 Cash Gifts of 60 650,000
Total, 12,000 Gifts, all Cash, $1,500,000
The distribution will be positive, whether
all the tickets are sold or not, and the 12,000
gifts all paid in proportion to the tickets sold
all unsold tickets being destroyed, as at
tbe First and Second Concerts, and not rep
resented in the drawing.
PRICE OF TICKETS :
Whole tickets $50 ; Halves $25 ; Tenths, or
each Couron, $5; Eleven Whole Tickets for
$500, 22 Tickets for fl.OOJ; 113 Whole
Tickets for $5,000 ; 227 Whole Tickets for
$10,000. No discount on less than $500
worth of Tickets at a time.
Tbe unparalleled success of tbe Third Gift
Concert, as well as the satisfaction given by
the First and Second, makes it only neces
sary to announce the Fourth to insure tha
prompt sale of every Ticket. Tbe Fourth
Gift Concert will be conducted in all its de
tails like tbo Third, and full particulars may
be learned from circulars, which will be sent
free from ti.;s office to all who apply for them.
Tickets now ready for sale, and al! orders
accompanied by the money promptly filled.
Liberal terms given to those who buy to sell
again.
TIIOS. E. BR AM LETTS,
Agt. Pub. Lib. Ky., and Man. Gift Concert,
Public Library Building, Louisville, Ky.
Public Examination of Teachers.
The Public Examinations of Teachers will
pe held as follows :
Turbett, at Church mil S. li.. Sept 15, 1873,
Milford, at Wilson's S. II., Sept. Hith.
Patterson, at Patterson S. II., Sept. 17th.
Beale, at Johnstown S. II., Sept. 18th.
Spruce Hill, at Spruce Hill S. JI., Sept. 19tb
rmngh. at lilg Runv. H.. Spt. JJaJ.
Fayette, at McAlistervil'.e S. H.. Sept 2Jrd.
Monroe, at KicbScl 1 8 H, Sept 24:h.
Susquehanna, at Prosperity S H, Sept 25th.
Greenwood, at Wilt's 8 II. Sept 25th.
Delaware, at E ist S.ilem S II, Sept 27th.
Walker, at Mexico S H, Sept 29th.
Thompsontown. at Thompsont'nS II, Sept SO.
Lack, at Lick S H, Oct 2nd.
Tuscarora, at East Waterford S IT, Oct 3rd.
Examinations will begin at 9 A M. Each
applicant should be provided with pencil,
pen, ink, and a few shee's of foolscap paper ;
should present himself in tbe district in
which he expects to teach ; and come pre
pared to pass a creditable nomination in all
Ihe branches required by the law. Persona
who feel that tbey are unable to pass a mid
dling examination should not apply. Teach
ers should not ask for private examinations.
The grade of provisional certificates will ba
raised.
Directors and ptrents are especially invi
ted to be present to witness the examina
tions. D. E. ROB1SOS, Co. S-jp't.
Aug. G. 1873. -
Caution.
ALL persons are hereby cautioned against
hunting or in any other way trespassing
on the lands of the undersigned in Walker
and Fermanagh townships. All persona sa
offending will be dealt with to the full ex
tent of the law.
Daniel Stouffer. Joseph Dysinger.
Amos Stouffer. Alton Adams.
Jonas Kauffman. David Kurtl.
David Diven. William Adams.
Daniel Auker. Joseph Rotbrock.
John Gingrich. Daniel Sieber.
James Adams. Michael Sieber.
July 30, 1873.
Caution. .
ALL persons are hereby cautioned against
hunting or gathering berries, or in tres
passing in any way on the lands of the un
dersigned in Fermanagh township. All per
sons so offending will ba dealt with to the
full extent of the law.
EMANUEL MOYE .
DAVID RENN'O.
MICHAEL STONER.
JOHN RESNO.
ABRAHAM STOSER.
JOHN BYLER.
July 23, 1873.
Caution.
ALL persons are hereby cautioned against
Hunting, Fishing, or in any way tres
passing on the lands of the undersigned, in
Walker township. All persons so offending
will be dealt with to tbe full extent of the
law.
John Clack. J. N. Moore.
Isaac Deppen. W. II. Moore.
John Adams. William Clack.
Ang 6. 1873. "
To Farmers.
JACOB AND MARTIN WEAVER are pre-
pared to thresh grain for farmers. All.
orders promptly attended to. They use tbe
celebrated Eagle Macbiue, purchased of the
undersigned, agent for Juniata county. All
machines are warranted to clean grain ready
for market.
HEXRY AUKER, Agent.
Mexico, Juniata Co., Pa.
Aug. 6, 1873.
Tuscarora Academy.
THE 37th school year of this well known
Institution will begin September 3rd.
The course of study is quite extensive.
Young men are prepared for College and for
Business. Students in Surveying are quali
fied to be practical surveyors. Special ratea
for those studying to become teachers.
For circulars, address
D. D. 8TONE, Ph. D. 1 .,:-.i.
or, J. J. PATTERSON, A.M. 'Pl
Academia, Juniata Co., Pa.
aug 6, 1873.
Caution.
ALL persona are hereby cautioned against
hunting or otherwise trespassing on the
lands of tbe undersigned in Walker town-'
ship. All persons so offending will be dealt
with to the lull extent of the law.
JOHN R. KAUFFMAS.
Aug 6, 1873. ' .
1
N.