SENTINEL & REPUBLICAN MirTLINTOWN. WEDNESDAY. 11 G 16.1893. B. F. S C II WEIE R ID1TOB AUD FCOraiCTOK. Republican County Ticket COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, Vm. II. Moore, Kenl M. Stewart TI.TRICT ATTORNEY, Vilberf ree Sell weyer. COI NTY TREASURER, John F. Elu-rnztller. PROTHONOTARY, Y. II. Zfiders. AUMTORS, Viilimu (Jus., Jolm Y. Sheliv. How inauy people fire governed by feeling: emotion, prejudice. Nat in tellect. Ci.kvki. ami's niesnige lies not men tion the question of tlio revival of State 1'nukb. Cosuhkks will to on tho question of repealing Ibe silver bullion bill on tlic 2St.h lny of August. The ques tion is now being debuted. "Ci.osino down! Closing dowc!'' are the brief, but heart sickening short wnteEi'b that are lienrd in every manufacturing -t ntf r. It means Iokh of empl( nu lit for many thou sands of people. Tiik only wonder iu Unit the panic is not more severe than it is, in the fao of the mei fiag of the democrat ic Congress which was elected on the Cleveland platform that declares that a protective tariff is iincon.st:tii!:iinnl. I'uksii'Kst Ci.:-:vf.i.si's mesxajje to Corgress has only two puin's. Iu the first point h asks for the repeal of the bill that requires the. Secre tary of the Treasury to buva stated Amount of silver every month. In the pe"nd point he promises to urge tarill" revis:on or 1 11 ilT n f rm as he falls it. HARVEST HOME ADDRESS. The itself: following rohiTniimratmn explains I'r Ai.K, Ji n apa Co., Pa . August 0, is;3, li. F. SCHWKIKR, Fi.itor Ji niita Skn tini l St H cri Bi.rc.v. DEAll SIR. Hiving IV.ned t your a ldrei-s dt'livered nt the UOili annual Tnsarora Valley Harvest Home on l'-iiinabaker's Island, Aug ust 5, 1S'.13, we will be pleaded to see it in print anil hereby earnestly re piest you to pubil-h the address in the Sknti.vel ash IIi:iti:i.icax. IJe ppeetfully Yours, SMi rt. lAMJfABKKR, !I. F. CrOCSE, W'u. Van S w erinokm, James W. Orat. The Editor of the Sentinel it Re rrnucAN takes pleasure in complying with the retpio-tof Messrs. S.imuel Pannabaker, Wm. Van Sweringeu, H. F. Crouse and James "V. Gr;iy, and publishes the address that lie made on the above mentioned occa sion as nearly as he now remembers it. ADMIE3S: Ladies and Gentle men, permit me to congratulate you on this the Tweutieth Annual Har vest Home Meeting. M' li and wom'-n are social beings anil that is the reas:n they meet in an assembly like the present one. Tlen and women are religious be ings and that is the reaseu theymeet to give thanks for the harvest home. A day amidst sni rrouudinga like the present lift ; the burdens atid can 8 of fevtiy day life from onr min is and juep ue-i us to resume the battle of life with renewed energy, vigor and courage the coming week. It is tru? tbo crop bus not been an uncommonly bountiful ono. It is true the price of yraiu is low and it is equally true that iu this burly bur ly burly rushing civilization of ours the price of grain is au important, one. The most of is believe we know all about low pric s and hard tims, but the truth is there are features in every casj of low prices' and bard times, that some of us lo not understand, and in that pirticu'nr we are a good deal like the veteran school teacher, vlr thought he know it all; He had a class of bovs in Arithmetic on the iloor at recitation. "Jacob," said the teacher to ono of the larger lxya in the class: "'You aro good in mental arithmetic' "I will give you a plain, practical ques tion to solve for the class." "Your father bonght a horse for three hundred dollars and sold it for two niiu lred and fifty dollars. How much did ho lose?" Jacob seemed perplexed and hesi tated, but directly recovering himself answered: "Well, Mr. Teacher, as near as I can figure it, father lost about seven hundred and fifty dollars on the horse." "Oh! Jacob. Jacob!'' exclaim ed the teacher, "the smallest boy in the class can answer tiiat question correctly. " "Ah," s.iid Jacob that smallest boy don't understand all alwut the case." -Let me tell yoti about it." "In the first place the horse kicked 8 fo ir hundred setter dog to death." "In the second place he broke 3 ribs of mother's best Jersey cow." "Ia the third place he knocked our new buggy into'such Hiiiall pieces that the maker of the wagon did not know it." In the fourth place he broke pap's leg nud put him to bed three months." Now that is the way with us peo ple here to-day. We talk about low prices and bard times, and don't stop to count the cost of the hard times that our fathers passed through. We have never realized the hard times of the revolutionary cause of 177G, aud I hope and pray that he who holla the destiny of every nation and every individual in the hollow of bis hand may spare us such an in fliction. The Continental Congress of those days had issud one hundred and thirty-one million dollars paper mon ey and f tiled to fund or bond the deb'. Repudiation followed, the notes were not worth the c :st of tha printing. Five hundred dollars would not buy a piir of shoes. Ther was no money for exchange. Men traded this for that; anything that would piss iu exchange among them. It was only thirty-three years from the close of the revolutionary war to the war of 1812, when hard pinching times agiin came down an the coun try. Business was ruined, commerce was destroyed, the banks all closed. The United States P-Auk, a financial coj?eru that was Torganiztd "at the close of the revolution was helpless to givo aid to the people. Paper money again was worthless. Gold ami fcilver was at s ich a pi ice cr pre mium that great saeriliees were re quired to get it. Merchants and bus iness men issued little pieces of pi per milked 20c, 2"5c, and lOOcts. Tiie manufacturing establishments all closed, men were thrown out of emp'oymeut. There was no demand for labor. Ihere was no sale for real or personal property except by the sheri3' The Legii-la'urcs were ail convened to puss stay laws forjthe relief of the people Ktivins' the col lection of debts and the collection of t'lXfX. Thank God! at this harvest home we hive no such times confronting us. Such were the times that confront ed our fore fathers of three genera tions ago. Three generations ago. the people of this country raised wheat, rye, oats and corn in abund ancc, but as almost everyone was en gHsred in the nising of gra;n it was of little value. Except for f.iod f r the producers and their families, and feed for their horses it was a drug upon the market. i.iie n. mutuants , of this v:illey were of S -otch and Irish t xtracti n aud they brought iv'rli them from their acci stral homes in the bighl-inds of Scotland and Ir--lt;d a knowledge of the dis'ill -t ion of whiskv. and tht v soon learned thai ! i thty colli I col. velt their 1;) and 12. ! grain into wl.bky and sell it ;u tut-' i loulaoil nmittits eiu-t of the S'isque- I j Ininiia river for cash, real. zing (iOaud j TOi; a bushel for their gram and that I stimuhttfl the manufacture of whis ' is j ky to h wouderful degree, i You c in scarcely tame a prominent I family of SO years ago in this v illey I tin t was not actively and e igerly en gaged in tho distillation of whisky, i There were at that time over tv.o I hun 'red distilleries in fii'l Mist with in the territory of what is now Jiith ata county. TLey manufacture I their grain in to whisky in the winter time, put it ill bairels and on the spring fresh et sent it down the river to market, sold it for cisb with which they paid their school teachers, their taxes, and preachers and paid for repairs, autl improvements on their f.irius. The morality of making, ilrinkirtr and s-.-llitig whisky was not for a un ment questioned. The battle was in every hous and in every Ffere. I see in the assembly here, Judge Par ton. If the Judge bad lived iu that day as a store keeper he would have bad a free bottle in his store. Pur ing political campaign timos.sueh ss wo are now iu tho miilot of, every candidate bought every bar in the county from Waterloo to Itichf.ehl, and from the. long narrows t Thomp soiilown. at a fixed price, and pi iced a bottY iu e'tch p.ae with Im name on it, and if you and I came that way and wished to t.ke a drink we'd go in and drink to the health and j success of our favorite candidate. Times have ct ang'.d. There was I no sly drinking then. Now th re is a pood deal of sly drinking: drinking i behind the door. Sly drinking is i certain to be found out. It never lf.:t. i a ..: T. ...:n i ,. laus L'j picheiit n J-i. in u lei - i.e a min's hivath or perchance put a tlossom on his nose or in some way make its m( utal or physical mark on the drinker. However, sometimes men art- blamed with sly drinking, when Uk-v do no such thing. Abvahi'ri Lincoln's wife was a good won.:.:i tiut sho was jealous of I j i in. at,d .'u times sho would si-old If he chance. I to vs:; mire than the common civi.ties when wiili ladies she becamo alous. Sometimes frhe would scold, i.ud then s'e frequent ly Kiid. "Abe, you are drunk. O.i the night or ti e 'lay when lie was nominated for the Presidency he re mained out laU r than usu il. When he came home, 1 e knocked at the door. Mrs. Lin- oln looked out of an upstairs window and t.sked: '-Who's there." 'Tt's me Mary," said Liu co'n. ''You're drunk AU'' she re plied. ' For goodness sak' Mary, don't talk so loud," sai l Lincoln. "The neighbors w;l! hear us." "Come down Mary and let m in, I have good news to t( II you." ''Xi I will not come down and let you iu till you tell me the good news." ' Well Mary, I have been nominated for President of these great United States," answered Lincoln. "Ah, Abe! Now I know you are drunk. From such little dialogues like that, men may get the repul ition of bly drinking. As timo ran on business centers multiplied throughout the country and as they increased in number tho price of grain advanced and farmers could sell their grain without con verting it into whisky and that clos ed the distilleries, for just as soon ns tho farmers could sell their grain for as much as they coul 1 make out of it by converting it into whisky they quit the making r f tire water as the iudian call jd it. The la-.t distillery closed its doors iu Juniata about 1831. Since then two gent rations of men have came and gone their way into that bourn whence no one has ever returned. In their time wonderful advanc9 inents were make in the mechanics arts, and in the organization of cor porations and railroads. Our whole system of civilization being thus peacefully revolutionized. The corporations took thousands and tens oi thousands of men from the farms where they were producers of grain, and put them into the man ufacturing shops and yn the railroads where they became consumers of grain and all kinds of farm prod ucts and that creai-jd a demand for grain and raised the price, and for the period of a generation and more the price of grain k'-pt up. Put now by tho use or improved rn-icbinery and by tl e "puning up of j Afi Jefsm Cramer of Patti-rvtn i visit tho west by the railroads the fa -mer3 i"g in Il.t ttingaor. havo again gotten abend of the do- J Mis Mabr! Book of HarrM.urg is vUit. maud for grain to such a degree that ing -,. y. u. Maatwck. the price is dowu below what we be-' , . . . . r. ..... i , I M.-n. Cranmr ami (Uuziiter Hurth ofM I- neve is prolitiblo work i .... .,.,' ,. . v i i u it i roy are v'sitmg Mi Junnio Marc m l'a. -Now what shall we eogige in to I tuj;gon make our farms more profitable is , the problem of the d iy? Diversify The meleton ( Boyd Murray's house at our industry. " j il' Ki.l End is up, an'S is 4 curttio prom- It is probable that tho next gener- SJ ' 'rg- and hanasome housa. ation, the generation to which tho Hon. Gu. Skinner, who a few years ago boys and girls that are seated about ! ran for Conzross in this district baa been this plitform beloug, will convert tb.3 bill tops in this v-tllev into peach groves, and the sloping farm land in- . ,.1, , . . . . 1 il.A .1 I lAn.l i , . f , .... . , and rich nlanes into tohiieen nntches rese v ng only as much for grain and grass as will supply their familiis with bread and feed for a few horses and cattle. It is not probable that we will go back to the manufacture of whisky, for there is a strong moral sentiment against the traftlc that did not exist in the davs of tho fathers. L ' It will not do to destroy the cor- porat ions, for that would not better our olTairs, for to uproot the oorpor- ations and turn ttie thousands and hundreds of thousands of men with their wives and mi li ma of depen-: dent children out of the means of suppoit, would be to throw them i buck oiito tho farms as grain ra'sers, and that would decrease the number i of gmiii consumers and increase tho 1 number of grain producets and send the price of grain away below what it now is i Now we dju't want to destoy the corporations and the railroads but we don't want them to become our , masters to destroy ns financially. We don t want them to charge us as ni!i"! to haul onr produce to Philadelphia and Paltim. re and oth- er ucar by citsLiU markets ns they cliarce to haul it from tho cheap lands of the west We want a d'tTerenco b'.'t.veeu the long and short haul. As tin manage things now they cuarge us almost as much to 1 aul ' our grain and hv- stock to the ca.-t-1 'rii in irkets as they charge for the s one kind of things from the cheap lands of the west, and that kind of mm?'genient keers down the price of purifier and strength bil'l ler. It ex grmn and live stock that we raise on p: 's nil taint of scrofula, f-att rheum, o ir hiirh priced lands on which yve I pay heavy taxes. j ! You can ship grain by the quanti- itvfiorn Chicago to Piiiladelphia on V.. n V..i-l- f...."oK .,.f T..t. .. 1 1,,1 I : and you cuu't s'uip it from .1.tllin- i i town to tlo same places for less. I Wed n't ant I heui to discrimin ate and tear us to prices in that way j J 110 ''"""'I'l "' Camp .Meeting under the forms of law, to build nt -wton Hamilton on Sabbath was themselves up. attended by many people, and the Tiicv can do us justice find d rcugiobn Services that day were at what is right for tho i.eople of tho I bunded by larger audiences than fcver wtsr, ana make more money lor themselves by raising tho freight rates on the long haul from the west to correspond with the freight rates or. the short haul. We want home protection, we w.nt to protf ct our firms from the lo.v freight rates from the west. Congress should pass a law pro-' tec'ing the farmers t,f ihe eist fritu the cheap freight rates from the went I n u if t. -.,- i- 41. ......... r.... 4 ! i - from ti e chen lKor r.ilun nf tlm manufacturers of the old world. -I'.w i HOB l w-BI lJ Lo r-13'IUHIT T -I ,. ... . ... stoo l, I doti'c want a single indivi- dul to undt rstaud that I ntu nirainst ! the corporations, for such is not the i i case, I am in favor of the railroads1 j and corporations they are a grea ' good, they are a jiart and parcel of ; ' triic (rlin-i.iou ..1 i-.. 1.. 1...4 i ! beeu bui t up iu America, in this div I and ecu. ration, but the discriminat" - 'ing manairement is not to thetbest : interests of the ngricnlturalis's. j We are not faithful to ourselves ! and the great interests that ate en - ' trusted to us of we fail t consider ' these great questions. We can taiK about these ipiestims an 1 com!.are notes ns two neighbors di 1 about their wives. S .id the one "mv wif and me have lived together , 10 years f-nd we have never had a fight." Oil! thtt's nothing Mtid the .other, "mv wife atid me have lived lived together 40 years and we have jhadf. urfy thousand fights and are ' good friends yet. j Now flint's the wiy with us .the coming geuerations who jpgifate these great questions in an i intelligent way, forty ' years and ifigtt over them forty thousand I times if need be, till the crudities I and wrongs have been corrected and j be good friends in the end with tho I railroads making money and justice ; done the people. j Hull II Hie and lusl Trains to ( hlcao l air vlultic I'can i 3 l ant a Itailroad . Tho popular excursions to Chicago which are being run by the Pennsyl vania raiirna't seem to furnish exact ly what tin p-ople want. The lirst two trains were well patronized, and as the vacation season is now well ad vance I the remaining excursions will undoubtedly attract a much larger number of passengers. A decided improvement in tho train sehedii'e, which accelerates it so as to deliv. r tho passengers in Chicago at an early hour the follow ing afternoon, places tho special train almost on an equality in tbo chatter of tpeed wi.L tho best wx piess trains. The special trains are composed of the stindard coaches for which the i' nusylyani.i liailroad is famous. Only one night is passed on the road, and the nrrival in Chicago is so tim ed as to give abundant opportunity for engaging quarters befote night fall. Tho dates of the next excursion are August 23, September 4th. 10 th, 18tb, 2ot,h. The special train will leave Washington 10.13 A. M., Balti more 11.20 A. M., stopping at York, Harribburg, Lewistown Junction, and Tyrone, arriving iu Chicago early the next afternoon. The excursion rate, good only on the special train and valid for return within ten days, is 17 from Washington and Baltimore, and proportionately low from other stations. This arrangement also applies to an principal siatious on the Baltl more, Elmira, Philadelphia aud Erie .Railroad between WiHiamsport and Ilenovo, and principal stations on the main lino and branches between Har risburg and Pittsburg. . No oDe should fail to visit the Fair with buch facilities at band. appointed pension agent at Pittsburg. The Democratic County Committee mrt in the room over Dr. Bulk's drug store on Saturday to arrange for the coming cam - i plgn. The Newport News says: Eitmg apples that fell Ironi a tree nn.letnn 1 1 which pota to planta were sprinkUd with pari green, made Mrs. Foltz of Centor township very II last week. On S und ay a fire that started in an ice house in Minneapolis was finned by a liigi wind till it had burnt two hundred dwelt ing houses, making 1500 teople homeless, ; and destroying th entire lumber district ' ( ihe city. The barn of Mi's IMen Barns of Lewis town Junction was destroyed by a myster ious tire about 1 P. M.,last Thursday night, exc-pting a couple of hundred bushels of wura', all this ytar's crop, burnt. Miss Burns ha l no insuranca on the crop. The (armor Martin A. Price had $1500 on stock, implements, and his shure of the crop. Tho 1 ve stick was saved. Jolm G. Smith a well known resident of Bjrree township, Huntingdon county, aged 77 years, met with a borribli' and fatal ac cident while cutting oats. Ilia team drove o er a hornets' nest. The insi-cts stoug tin J.uiiun's causing them to become nn- manageable, and to run away. Mr. plinth "ns tluown fimn the reaper, fell in front of c"1'''1? fcif', and h.id the top of his h.M I cnnpl -tely cut oli', ore arm badly Ijc- crated and body cut, producing instant death, ! !8ii't Von Know- That to have perfect health you ni ist have pure blood, and the best W'iy to have pure blood is to take Hood's s irsiip irill t, the best blood an 1 all other humors, aud at the same time builds up the whole system and gives nerve sirength. m e wton Hamilton .Meeting. Cam - be fore in the history of tho place. It was a refreshing place for thousands of pec ph; who love to hear good preaching and religious singing, and it had a moral and religious temper ing i!'fl:iuce upon other thousands out in the grove beyond the inner court hanging on the fringe ( f nlig ious influence. To gain strength Hood's Sarea ' ' ' i. For Steady Nerves Hood's Sarsa- ' ..A-tlln .i'Ul T.1 i,, T" ,.! i Ul A 1.1 C A .V" . -Hood's Sarsapar- i ilia. IMIOTOt-RtrilS. AXDTlltU TIMK VOIt ANY I.IIXOTII OF TIME, 'Vllil.E WE A TIE IN THE MCTITtE Pfsl. ! ' ' ' ! e W1' cotir'e ourfin , 1 otograplis as low as ?1 00 il,er n. fhc-se . pictures are ! ,un"n,1 r, elegant card enameled ! OD, 'ta?' lth l".tnr? Wlt ' ' a. ,II.gh. 1 u lh .finlsh f".,l'crior in ual- i ity to to mo Ai isio x uoro l nave been taking the last year. However f fishing the Ansto V-, i 1 U ftt the V? L? ,lo7:cn dure same The extensive patronage and the many testimonials of the apprecia tion of our work, wo bavo received the last year, sives us renewed cour age to go on with these low rTrices, and we propose mal-inrr Mifilintown j head-quarters for the finest Phcto an., graphs for the money that can be "''lui.l:.l 1 ' 1 t: ii ii ouimuen au uere. aaomg ail IllO time new and costly nseessorie of the very latest designs giving Mir trade the benefit of that which would cost .'3.00 in the city, for $1.50 in Mifilintown. We can make pictures for $1.00 per dozen such as are male by all travelling photographer, bat we prefer giving our patrons a much better picture for very little more money. Thanking our ratrons fir their liberal patronage wo solicit a continuance of the same. .Respectfully, JosKpn Hess. Jlilliintown, Pa, March 9, 1803. flive you tried South Amr-men Nervinethe gem of the centiny ! The great cure for Indigestion, Dys pepsia and Nervousness. Warrant ed the most wonderful Stomach rid ixerve uure ever known, Trial lot- ties 1; cents. Sold by L. Banks & Co., Druggists, Mifflintown, Pa, Nov. 14, ly. M-rFUPJTOWN MAKKKTS. MifrtiBTowH. Ang. 16, 93. B litter Eggs Ham " " Shoulder, ........ .,, '"td """"""' it II .l te Sides, , M I f r 1 1 N TO W N O R A l" N V A i V T Wheat r orn in ear Oafs, Ryo ".' C'overnoedw Timothy sued Flax Seed bran. .... . ...... t'hee Middlings Groetid Alum Salt. Anierictu Salt 6i ?i ft .... $1.(4 $l.f') 1 f 9 Si $1.50 a hundred 1 ' ... 1 "JU 80c to 110 PlIIiAUELPlnA M.VRKETS, August 12 181)3. Wheat 05 to 70o a bushel; corn 4.0 to 60.-; oats 35 to 38c, tan gled straw 55 to 5,1o ptr lOOlbs; bay 1 to $21 a ton; butter 17 f i ok.. lb; cheese 5 to 10c a lb; ego-s lGc doz; live chickens 7 to 12cTlb; duels Q to 10c a lb; potatoes 35 to 45c for basket; sweet potatoes 2 to $3 barrel;, smoked ham 12 to 14c a lb- Susrar 5-J- to Sir- id fivoruuA.1 iJr fir I bushel. if In vesllgatioii Invited- O; course it. is proper t enquire altoJt what Mly li a:i siys Isittrue? The most riid investigation is in v te I iit j the 'esti iiii a s i ub isbl ia behalf of Hood's Sarsapanlla. Special att'ntiou is called to th high character of the persons whoso tes timonials are pub isuud by the pro prietors of this medicine, ns evidenc ed by their occjpations or eudjrsa ments. In faC.no mdter where tes tiiuonia's in b h df of H-jciI's Sarsa parilia may be from, it is rehanle and as worthy of conti lenc.u h if it came from your mos1. trussed neigh bor, t Sep.lO-lS'.K?. I'chon bunim and horses and k11 animals curel in 30 minnt's by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sold by L. Bimirs&Co. Druggists. Mifllintowu, Pa. Oct 1, ly. leg jr.. pUBLlCATION IN DIVORCE. To Jacoh N. Weller late of Junm'a Coun ty, Penna. Where-. Mary Ellen Wellcr. your wife, has filiHI s liiul in the Ciurt ol Cooiiu n Picas of Jutiia'a County, praying a divorce azninst yon, now vou are liereby ntilied nnd required to appear in said court on the First Monduv of September next, ISO!, to answ er the onrnpUint ot sai l Mary Ellen Weller. and in d. f.iult of tjiich a:pe:irancs y-u ill te Imb'e to have a divorce grunted in Tftur absence. 4t". SAML'EI. I.APP. Ph ri.T. 1 LBI.IC SALE OF VKRT VALUABLE UEATj ESTATE- The nndersipned assicnee in trust for the benefit, el" the creilitrr of Henry S. Tlart and David Hart, of K .vette Township. J uni ata county, i: expose to sle hv pi:bl!c vendue or outcry, on tract No- 1, en Saturday, September 2nd, 1893, at 2 o'clock. P. M., of said d.iy, the follow ing real estate, to wit: Tract No. 1. All t'ia ert.iin tr.iet of land titunte in F:iyette townshiji. .Tuniata conntv. I'ennsvlvania, shout one mile east el Kelly's store. hnnndH on the north by lands of Joseph Smith. Jacob Bsv and John Brown; on the east y I mils of John Brown and Benjimin Hepner; on the south by hinds of Mrs. Barbara l.onffensrre and en the west bv l imls of John Hart and Joseph Smith, containing FlflllHTT.riVF Acrfs. more or less, ar.il bnviutr thereon erected a Two Sfory Stone Pwellire House, (rami) lar.k barn and out-biiildincs. Trict No 2. A tract of woodland situate in the sunn township, and within a short distance of triet No. 1. bounded on tho north by 1 tn-ls of l lrbi'a Lonyenacre; on the east hv lands ot Renjuntn H-'pner: on the south by lands of John Fholl, William S. Brown aud others, and on the west by lands of David U.iincs and John n irt, con taining Twenty sfves Acres, more or less, Tract No 3. The undivided tivo.thirds interns' in a limestone nu-irry. situate alxmt one. halt mile north ot I'rown's Mill, con. tainine about one-hsll acre. TKKMS t)K S A I.E. Ten yr cent, oftlie purchase money to be pii-l on the dy of salt; twenfv percent on the lirst d ty of January lSIt: thirfv-tive pr rent, on the first day of April, IH'1, when deed will he delivered and nossession piven, anil thirty live per cent, on the lirst day of September 1S14, all payments to heir interest from the day ot sale and last torment to be s -cured bv Judgment note. ANDREW BASHOKE, Assignee. jriURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, the Hon. JEREMIAH President Judge of the Court of l'leas, for the Korty-Kirst Judicial LYONS, Common District. composed of th" counties of Juniata and Ferrv, and the rionorables JDSIAII L. 15 KU TON and J. P. WIOKKKSrTAM, Asso-i,fe Judges of the said court of Common l'leas of Juniata county, by precept dnlv issued and to me directed for holding a Court of (Iyer and Terminer and Oeneial J.ul Deliv ery, and (Jeneral Quarter Sessions of ihe Fesce t Milllintown, on the FIRST MON DAY OK SEPTEMBER. 1H:I3, BEING THE 4th DAY OF THR MONTH. Notice is UKRrnY nivrx. to the Coroner, Justices of the Peaca and Constables of the County of JunUta. that they be then and there in their proper p-rsons, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon ol naid day, with their rec ords, inquisitions, examinations and flyer remeinberances, to do those things that to their oilier respectfully appertain, and those that are bound by recognizance to prosecute against the prisoners that are or may be in the Jail of said county, be then and there to prosecute against them as khall be .just. By au act of the Assembly, p issed the f.th day of May, 1854, it made the duty of Justices of the Peace ot the several coun ties of this Commonwealth to return to the Clerk of the Court of Quarter .Sessions of the respective counties, all the recogni rsnccs entered into before thera by any per son or persons charged with the cob mis j sion of anv crime, except such cases as may ue enoert t-tore a Justice ol the Peace, un dor existing laws at least ten days before the commencement of the session of the Court to which they are made returnable respectively, and in all cases where racog nizances are entered iuto less than ten days bef ore the commencement of the session to which they are made returnable, the said Justices are to return the same in the same manner as if said act had not been passed Dated at Milllintown, th Und dav of Aug't in (ho year of oar -Lord, one thou snd eight hundred and niuetv-three. SAMl'EL LAPP, 6irn. SiiEBirr's Omen, ) Milllintown, August Z, 1S93. A TMOBOUCil COMMERCIAL SHORTHAND V- FfUCTlCAL tPUCATlCN VlHOS PHACTICAL BtJLT3 'T H-'.S A C Kc.l fut. fSt td A ThMj Fr.-: T -bl Ff 'bkfccrpra IT rr' C ?jir t villi Teokk. G f. btin.n isi.ati . WILLIAMS 4 RGCCRiJ. KJCMt3TR, n. t. ! Corn, - y V '' !'. k.s i-.:-A V.::c?:. r. . ., i c. t v..;..'ii i . X V sr w vXiV TLiis is r.rki.owlodrrl 'iy i " -Cw"iS all who h:ivc tricrl it. VJfcV YORK j Ah cSs-Tical Works, i "nS YORK, PA un Ht.ooit i'vot i.trv. I : --a. Luraivs BLOCS tTizzzni. I ' I viH cur.n Jliii', Vm.-.t'.s, .S. ro- ...... .-.-fr-rieif im, j r rr'-r, t rrri.l-Hr J.z.tcK r ..' "' -" " trmjtitlg mil it. ' . 1 - a. LLtn ivi is ci uc. Pittsburgh . Pa. I k' Ml PamW ; ) -P line i -: sicod.! oft That Tired Feeling and Attonrfant Erils I.aiisiiinn?!-!, j,o! oi Aiinelitc and ticucral iive-Up. DOUBLE EXTRACT S.AR8APiniiMLA 'Will CURE AM these Ailments.' iWill make a Nerr Kan of Yi.u. i Ouc Dose will make Von Hungry. It ! all in Puri'Y rnd t'.rcnsth. 50- PEH niF- THE WORLD OVER. WTG BY M MANNERS SStA.B:u CO BINGHAM TON, rj.Y. SMALL FARM AT PRIVATE SALE. K ni? little Farm in Snsnnchann town ship, near school, ohnrch, mills and store, containing more or lesa, bavin); thereon erected a (rood tnro-atory i.ofiiiorsn &ntK niRi. ami on'-hnililines. all in a riol it o' r rair. Tho land is m a srood 'i'e of cnlti- Trop- ran he b"nrh at a vwr lnw figure. For terms an ! fur'hor iteprii tion, call on. or address, PATTER'OV &. ritTVKTFR. Ato"vs at T.w, Mifflintown, Pa. Goon TIOMK IXVEMENT. own nni Pitrr-ion Wa'r r!nnrin'iTti',. rt now nfTprd for At th Jnntit Vi'It INnk. Th nmonnt nf tH iqmi i27.noO. Tn (in) bonq r $I(W rh. The rite of inprpt is fl v fo) pprr"nt. p'ir of taTs. Tivallc in pmi nnnnn' CAriTvin Th Mif- llin coupon in Fh"inr rtd A'in. ami fh Tatterson ronpona in April nn 0trhr Tht v.rinip1 rtnmh'f1 in twpntv f2n rnrsi tirA TMpomRhli in ton (T r'-flrs. The PntppunioB hrT' bn i" rpprt'ion. Vinp (0 month and hr an inromo htt f-qn:rk sr.lTir tit to mpt thp intnt on the honH nd ill oher charsr!" Thn tork-hoMprs of th comr.nnit lire Tonix E. tlcnon, prp,itltn; L Rink. vic p-si.1rtn; R. E. Pnrifpr irrtarv; T V. T-win. trpninrrr; .T"rmirh I ,ron. F. M AT. PpnnpH. WjPE. Ilooppp nnA XVm. II. R;nk. and fhv pur POf to kerp pnfp tho intrfts of patron. hord-hoMpr and rrvd ifor hnfor thfy take anv r'fnrn for their own invptilmrnt. Ex -cpt the Original Conrt TTtnine bond whiob. !Tf? s:x por cent. in,e-pt. There ba nevpr been po pood n bond inve-itnient ofTr td to inveators. Price pir and accrued in terest. Miri'LlA- ACADE3I y -WILL OPEN'- SEPTEMBER 5THt -UNDER- NEW MANAGEMENT AND PE II M A X E X T REORGANIZATION. o TUITIOV : i iiXTi:mi (i W HS) iu.oo. MRIX (imVKS) 1 OO "5Tho iifressarj- oxpenseg of Hoard ami Furnisln 1 Iioorns will bo small. As soon as I c.iu organize it, I sLall furninb those things at cost. Snd for annr'urcrnient. J II ilMta:it, a. Ii.. (Cornell Uniremitr) Princ. Mifilintown, Pinna. C- . -j- V j -i Ir It I ... . . Si. .... i; .. j II I- e I .... . il.. ir. ;u 1 1 .;. .1 n p ;,-;.tl t.,,T.i. .. ti'ittt i !i t ... n . Ii'...l wit! ,, ru e t, ' " ' "" ' ' - M. .!.. ,.H't., ...., ' ' . i. 1 V- iintT ir-iv i (fin Tw-ilnj . t ti A' t.Pif li. n l.i-. k. mw i-atly rli ' I' ,; .iiuul Mn..ji: rii :i"... rn.- til .. It;:t iii- T. ... ru s II-. I . ii- i n LI . I un. ipl ., I . :s- itvAtuuti-t. riuiiH.:t iiut.i . jVEWPORT AND SHERMAX'S VAL I 1 ley Kailrnad Compunv. Tim table ofpassfneer Imins, in effect on Mond iv January 2, l'.l:(.- J' I STATIONS. West Es 'ar . ward. ;J , ' p y ! a M ' 6 25 10 no 6 2R 10 m 6 32 10 07 6 35 10 10 6 20 10 2(1 6 42 1I 17, 6 51 10 2 6 50 10 34 7 11 10 45 7 14 10 49 7 22 1 1 00 7 32 11 07 7 37 11 12 43 11 18 7 47 11 22 7 65 1 1 80 8 01 11 36 8 03 11 40i T Newport BufTalo Bridpe.... Juniata Furnace.. R 301 H 27 8 23 8 20 811 8 1 8 OK K 02 7 45 7 40 7 34 7 26 7 19. 7 15 7 10 7 03 6 64 6 60 r m 4 0 ' 3 n7 3 63 3 50 8 41 3 4ti 3 3 3 32 3 15 3 10 3 04 2 5 2 49 2 45 2 40 2 20 2 25 2 20 -Valincta Pvlvan ...... ... Watr Pirn? r Bloomtjeld Junct'u V alloy Road T Elliot tstrarir T Green Park r Loysville Fort Robeson.... Center r Ciana'a Knn And ersouburp .... t Blain Mount Pleasant .. New Gerniant'n.. Not Sisnitiea c -t irjiu- i phone ronnriin. v. t.Kii,, rmidnt nd Manager ' C. K. AIuLtK, General Apetil. With the Changes Spring comes SCHOTT'S STORES. 10,000 COMPULSORY Clearance Jforth OF Summer Goods. REGARDLESS OF COST. EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS ARE THE ORDER OF THE DAY. Summer Dress Goods, White Goods, Lama Cloth, Indian Dimity French Zephyr Clotb, Fir:e pbr Ginghams muslin underwear, Silks, surahs, Florentine Silk, and nil trimmings wili be s-.ld at etra low Clear ance Prices. BIG REDl CTI0 IX ALL KINDS OF CARPETS AND WALL PAPER. Some email piecos of oarpot i to i off of th Orijinil l'rice Curtains and Wtndow Shades at reduoi d prices. OUR SHOE STORE has some extraordinary Birgain. S'zeo of broken lots .13 per cent, off ml arid every kind we sell jou at rtlncvl prices. Imperative necessity cowpells ns to make th;s sacrifice We need the Koom. liospeotlully ours, EMJL 13RirCiK ST.. Tl ii 11 c :t ' or-.r-.r: c; -i IT T X "M I - i it ti -r r: i ti Z Jo t- ZC IT? IT IT i T IT r , X c i - ?i "i ti r. ttti:i:ii - ihh - CT TT Tl 'T TT Tl i i TT i T l Tl f m r i r. it . it -r :t rr ti cr. x i- i- t- r- t- v'c - ; - '.3 '. o ai -i . V-rSrc'x"il?TTT: ?---C-3 21 '-' J2 . - -: "TT T. - s Z. TZ. S o j ."3 it ' " H x -j- - H K IT IT J -j i T t - IT TT X TT. CT. CT TT T I IT r J 1 - 'jo TT IT IT TI TT I- 'T Tl I- T" CC C TT C Tl CI TT -r -TTII-JT--lTriTlT t-xxxxxxxrer: rx:. SAW MILLS EXGINES, Improved Varittbft! Friction Fret. Sc-iul for Ciita'ofnf n 1 Spfi'isl l'rii'i s. A U. KAlUl II A K O . May 10 Y. .rJ:, Vu. t! y. rnw Li- : . Ii.l'1-r aim S20 ft-: PhosDhaie ttian xv nh am (-rtH Vfrniade, rji vT I " ttmtiv ;n.M for Corn or 'JJ t'w li'nf. Si. hi let I iinu- T"? YORK CKEMIC4L WORKS, Garfiaid 7sar nure?Krs.:J;c.?.r!-:r.hs w r-m n vl 9, "3 - tUK ANV ( V far DfTiaJii, ul ETEJiJAl ru GENERATION iftfp r. . Kvery oufferer "Rii.ntuii.8i, 111 B.lv i 'KJl ' ?!'",r"'.I n-n.. Hoi-tnr-. Ii. Ui.It ..r IjIii. m , . Ullfl li ft ArtmHtM w.l. - . ' .-.irminis will DJlO b tree, s-.l.t".,' f e,';J Wrow fami,w. wear' IB SCH0TT, iikf r.i: town. it i.T -r i C -r "i r; :i I Z. ccxcc x s. -1- - ?t 1- CT Tl s l 'Jt c c i" ' i: 7i ; IT i-T IT ' - Tt TT Tl ' Tl 3- Tl Tl Tl X T3 t. i? t- ?i r: it T it - "h hh:i?i--j-.c IT it IT IT l.T C". X 'Ji I I- t- c o ti Tl i i - t- t- 32 3 3 '. .' - ; ? 5 ti t- cc : x : it x c : rr rr it ti tt x it i -f -f IT IT TT C I- I- Tl I e X Tl T Tl IT i TT T7T TT TT Tl r. . i 'JT 2 x .13 h- US Tl Tl TT l-iTTTOr Tl r-r- Tl TT CT CT X S c X l T X I- t- IT O TT Tl Tl TTT I- I IT X -J Tl TT IT X n C IT IT T" C CT TT LT .ji- r 5 Z Tl L v.n K. Ateixsos. K. M. M. Fexmol ATKn.sO.1 &. PEXHELL, ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW, MIKFLINTOWX, FA. . Co?" Collect ing and CoDvsyncin(r jiromft lv atiended to. (icf On V. iin strr't, in f iace of wi Inure of Louis K. Atkinsi-n, K1., south of Bridge slre.-t. jiict in, 1(-K- ' J r-ATTERMiN, JR. WIl.BFB Si-flWKTSI. IiTTEi:so & SC'II H EVER. ATTOHNEVS AT LAW, JilFr'UNKHT.V, r . DP. 1.M CR.4 Wri fin, DR. PAR "IN M.m " Y)R- V- M- CKAWKi'KO i .SUN', I. ivc- Itirint-d a jisriricr."!iip ler Hit." lr."fiw r.i Medicine and tlieir culintier il brancln (lilice a? old siiintl. i-itiii r ot Tliir l and Ot arise Mrnetti, Milllintnn n. I'.i. One or bti I thrill will he I.inipI nt ll .-'r St ' tl luui-. Unl. Md .ti.'iri ;-r..!. .-i"il' glff.-C. All :! 1 t. !'.,. i ackli:y, I II,. .- U lllll ill'll .ii ctiui ni in , t also a:s a fiooiallv in Ine treatnit-nl of dis eases ol Ibe thrt-ut ami i-.esave iyntrHi Acute and ( hro-iic. Ap.il m, is;i;:iy. in.. ltl n-irsaC Garfield Teajg Billa. Skuiiplofree. ti .uriKiJ I k .. ' Cures Constipation HEu8H&0RQM8GLD'S SAW MILLNEKGiHES A wnmlertul Imprnvomont la Frl- ilen F'Vitp liu-lluek. Bark motion or I'nrnu-- '"TV. u iu. t"3t mm any otlur la tlie mark. 73 l liileh Fee .1. caiMlne all the ftssl ewIlK ill while tsi-kin; crrRt urnlm weitr. Write iVir circuliirs nnd pr"'pl: ' !r -e UKn appllcatlnn. Also Sprinc ptrtM ruwn. Ilnr Itnkra, Cultivators. ( rn riw rr. Mhelleris itc. AV1.011 th "" HEJICH & SPOMGQLG. V.2'MiTS.r Get good paper by snbacrihinj; tot Skntinkl and KiprtBLiCiH. tW . T- I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers