A 1 nuerratic4tatrifinn aItAY MEEK. Emma ♦rn PnoPuiam.r: I= BELLEFONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 29 1867 T 6113., .—s2 per •rer when peed IP advs.', 2 0 when ni t paid in ad. lifer. and 8 , ,1n when not paid beliore the expiration of to.t...tr some Hope The runup Las met Th. black leg-, t hieue... strumpet-, and traitor., kiwi; g ithered togather again, in Wa‘hing ton Strong mint women, stringer s2ented nugget's, u nuke n ‘agaliond gatoblets, ituunueul-traitS, de upiccri of 010 Cutictitution adrooate. of 3lonarehy intermingled with a few decent reprecentatiue-.lrate congregated at the eapitol to make laws; and attend to public matters generally for the pen p'e of the different 'zitate-. That any good can Collie of the inealing of this lu aly—styling it-elf the Congress of the 1 - ,uteri Stau.s—but few hove any hope'. I,Ve have \Vy believe there 1, fanati cton. blackguardism torvicuu. infidelistn and oilier knit , enough in that body, to crop out and stand boldly forth, in all 1 ,, naked delintnite, the real, curb ct untial. undeniable, retire-,illative .f Cie idea, and principle- of morigreltni -to t the poople, 44 it -111dao•i-, and tulai 1., and ult%iil-b I, t the eta--c..,,• it onc", without tv- Lt uteo 4,1* ' 1,..11dy I , li ' enult lui the Union .- tli, any or the deception , taptod ,Illett tt bt2...1111C orgamiotion —uncloaked nod l naked. ciiihotbing all that 1- di.ett-ting, that 1, dreaded, that Infamous and outrageous, and they will flee from it a• from t ,iat . s of 11011. In place of num bering its supporter s by thousands tl will count them by ten+, in place of be ing a etintrolling power in the land, nt , will sink into insigniticaiwe and disgrace DO deep, that there will he none so poor as to do it honor. All that j 4 want e d, to restore our to its wonted prosperity and peace, it fir the peopl9 to get their eyes opened to see who are now representing and mak ing law- for them The poor fled- oho, calling theinselve+ Congress. men would. follow•Til.to STEvEsei into hi, gra\ e, ;multi it win a smile from his negro concubine, will do it. They will carry their madness so far, that the blindest bigot, who ha, hitherto .4111101' ted and encouraged them, will, to sate himself, be compelled to turn upon them mot help to erush them. There will be no blinking or sh rik mg of question , , Le onine despor will control their action-, They know that it is too late to 1101 O• to succeed looser by deception, and they will throw assle the Lypocraey that has hid their real devig,irt front view,and let the 1".111.10 -Vl' who and what the) ate. It will open the cN.-; of the ma —es and their will Lc hope then It will show them that the DttillON'lley 11:1- told them but themap l e, naked troth, when it ha- a--emoi, that the Mongrel part) 11.1, controlled by the Itlacke4 it alt,l, and the vilest who%e chief designs were the in ei turning of the (lot - eminent of our father-, to erect in its stead a monarchy to be controlled 1,) loggers au( erase ves, Impeachment ANDRLW J.• 115505 has the plink to r.,ist the usurpations of the fanatical and re‘olutionary body calling itself the Congress of the United State,, there may be lively times in this country be fore long. We do not desire war , and would be as curry toj see a violent out break at Washington as any one, but if the President is to be impeached and superseded in office because he has stood firmly against the assaults upon our constitution and government, thy:it we say it is high time that' a downright big* was struck somewhere for the pres ervation of our institutions. Elections do well enough when own and parties are willing to abide the result, and to wait fir nod' obey the lawfully expressed will of the people. But freemen must let all usurpers know that thee have the will and the power to enfinee their de sires when they are utterly iti , regaided by those who pretend to id the popular branch of the government. There is no use in voting fer a principle if We allow the miserable minority we have beaten to trample it iu the dust after we have endorsed it The issue between the great political parties uC the North in this Falls election was, more than any thing else. the propriety or impropriety of the coarse of Congress since the close of the war. The people have decided the question against them, and yet they boast in their papers and public Aimed'• es that they have control of affairs now, and will carry out their schemes ofrevo. lution and tyranny before they ban be reached by the people. It is but a lit tle while since they professed such rev. cream for the will of the majority, and now they turn their back upon it in dis gust. Their threatened impeachment of the President, if carried out, will bring things to an issue if JouNsoN stands firmly for his rights and the peo ples, and the fanatics an, Congress and out will find that dm people hate 0 way of dealing with those of their kind, short, sharp, but very decisig and effectual. TI o impeachment Committee has re potted in favor of impeachment, and if the House of Representatives austaius them, the question will arise, whether the president can hold office during his trial It would not be a very safe thing for the fraginent of a Congress to at tempt to remove him, or to force hint to trial before a senate from which twenty Senate re are absent. It is impossible at this time to tell exactly what is meant by the movements at Washington. A few days will show, but we doubt wheth er Congress, fanatical as it is, will dare to carry things to the extreme threaten• ed. If they do, the people ought to be prepared to ewitain JOHNSON in treat ing them as CRON WELL did the Parlia ment. Another God I'dorogrel politicians havilet go their hold on ease. Tlie late elections pro: ved that he was a heavy load to. carry and they have draped biro, They have ttuntsil their attention now to other mat ters, as political capital, and ate gazing longingly at the plethoric purses of tax exenipted bond holders, hoping that out or the,, till ell:M3 some thing that will avi.t them to maintain place and power. In place of Sandl` the "faith of the net tiott, ' far a , it was pledged to pay the rich in gold tine woe in rags; ha- 1 , 0( . 01110 their 11od, an he who will not bow done and war-hip it—who will not pays his devotion to national hanks, and tax exempted bond., is 0 "repudia tnoniit -s-as well as a "traitor - and "copperhead." As they have ever done, they nrrr champion the eau.e of the rich and oppoke the interelt, of the poor. They ra\or the confirm:ince of a ,wind ling financial -y.tern that opprek.e, the mans to benefit the few. Recau,e, the bundeiliohyloclis of the country—yogi elms or National Bank , and moneyed drone , in imciets —denminkthat the la. Inir Of the country mukt pay tribute to them —this pare that ha, clamored , o loudly for ' equality when the nigger oa.. in que•tion. now comm , boldly out m n l labor- to maintain the mokt igfa mon, ela,o legislation that was ever h. poked upon any people To make come shoW, for their oppre.kive doctrine—to have some even.e f , 4. working, to bind the poor to labor arid pay taxe, for no other purpo.e than to fill the coffer, of the rich, they t.llh about maintaining the "nation, the ' natiod, bon or &e, just a , it a nation that has vio lated it my pledge in which the ina.,es were lutere•ted la maintaining, and that is eontroleehy nigger, and nun trio c.,ll,ider theinkelvw, no better than mg gm-, could had' either a ' national faith or natl , 011:111101101 1.0 maintain. Aitci the iolatioe o f the , ok r a pledge.. of the panon en regard to the de-ign , of the liar, and rifler gin me negro,' a control' Ho.: influence in n. Loterntent it atLur', We want to jr te no tem,. o won al faith and ' honor Tho-1! INho hate boon -4) deecis ed and who were more deeply intere•ted in pre ...ening the integrit., of the Union, dm in procuring for a laiorml (lee, grill am exetnioton horn taxation will , arm ly bl .1 to belime that a ttolation of the ledge- of tie nntwn. ' utll Lo any gicater di-eredit, when the inure-t: of the w are at take than dials were when the welfare of the many were ol et looked. Their ileal•ion will and inii•t be. that 'Honey that 1, good enough for the poor, i , abo rood enough for thy ticL 3h. g reli,in will find that tax ex ululated bond, and a bluatad airt•tueracy arc a header load to ea:iv than over entree was. '1 . 113.1 . 13.3N5E, --The financial condi tion .r the country has terrified the Had Teals exceedingly, and they would glad ly escape from the witrltr atheir hands if they could Tit.tn STc E% , , who was chairman of t he Cr - murmur.. of Way.s and Means throw:ll4u the wan. has rfriflCii 3 long letter to , 11.31 that he ns not responsible for the system of linanee established by rif .l' Co When old Tit %Duda .4 ect , frrito under, there mud strotitt mdieotmm tol'a coming crash. The )lon ails eau no longer 3,eaps is I oorNillilit3 by blaming stir condition on Providence, fir the slop. were no er so good 0. this }ear The Radical party alone t, rcywnsnblc for, all that the two plc suffer on account of the financial condition of the country, and for all they afc •till to suffer in the future Let the p•oplc remember them —SomcOPum are a rea y assert tag, that the negro tote of the South will he counted in the Presidential election. next fall. While try• I r ate 1111 i / ht that negro., will vo te at every eleetnni poll throughout the South, at that time yet wit have faith to beltexiug, that before the N otes vast by these proteges or Abolicioni , t., will he counted, in order to decide who shall he our next pre-tdent, there will he a little the biggest mu-s and about the roughest time ever mongretism •aw —lt has alwori seemed strange to as that any number of abol.mon magazines could be supported in this coun try,wbile adurnooraile umgatiue can scarce ly be sustained at oil It is nut because Democrats ate not able to support the right Mad of literature, but because they do not properly appreciate the advantage it is to any party to control the reading of the pub lic We have bean tang it a lesion by the past seven years 'Mitch we will do well to profit by, and the Democrat to press of the country as mitten lug touch more encourage ment from die people [Wan bonnet tg In the 'duet gloomy daynof the war, when the timid hid themselves ur slunk into the camp of the enemy, 0 inigiscine was started is the city of New sorb, under most unfa vorable ausnlices, for the propagation of wimp] Democracy as understood by ..r;r_ eon nod It I l k compeers, and for thei,intprove went and elevation 01 Demi.ention literature The readers of the Wart 11 , 1 no are familiar with the political 'iterating of the (pH Gimcd, fur we have from time to time pub lished its articles ever since IS was first is sued To those who knEfw its political @talus we need only say that every other department shows equal ability. Bail that it is behind no means ins in the country in a purely literary point of view We be lieve that it he the duty of every Democrat who can spare the subscript ion price at all to subscribe fur the Old Guard, and thus assist in correcting the many evils which have followed the wide circulation of the hooks and magazines of the Abolitionists It is published 6y Van Everfe,llorton St Co , at only three dolliirs per annum, and at that price ought to have at least fivo hurt drtil subsordiets . in Centre county. Ile will be iiiitreed to eel as agents for any who desire to subacree, and where clubs of ten are raised the subacription le only two dollars and a half pertcopy. The firm of Van Eveme, Horton Si e 9 lieserves the gratitude and warm aupport of every Dewoorat 10 the country, for in the very darkest hours we have ever ieen,they •tood firmly at their post and continued to assail the triumphant and powerful foe which had so fiercely attacked our system eirrbc vern• ment, oven when exoluded from the mails and compelled to circulate their works en tirely by private means They'doserve sup port, and when they present us with a mag azine superior to nay other published in this country, we think they onetime', ought to bare it. Let those Democrats who have hitherto supported Abolition periodicals transfer their subscriptions to the Old Guard, and thus enable it to 'continue what it ta, the best magazine published on the continent. =I —The Radicals are anxious to repeal the experiment tried by the Whig. in 1852: when OWL linott was nominated on the ••liauy Plato of Soup" Platform. They want to nominate Cita Grant on a Negro goffrago Platform. The Bond and National Bank Swindle The masses of the people are literally roanikg under the load of taxation and cost 9f_ living imposed upon them. Still thousands on thousands of them are unable to explain or understand the canes of their trouble. —We can tell them it is the Bond and National Bank swindle that is crushing them —There are at least twenty-fire hun dred million dollars worth of U. S. Bonds that pay no tares Rich men whose money and other properly was formerly red • Mir proportion for the support of t.. 61P. " - ic burdens, Imre put their property Into Bonds to get rid of taxes. Of course this crowds alt the taxes open the shoulders of those who own no Bonds To illustrate, A. and B live side by side upon two pieces of real estate. A proposes to sell out, It lakes the deed nod pays over the money Of ;Course It ix then taxed fur the land once inward by A. But how is it wills Mr. .1' Ile inveal, the money received fur his land in U N Bands. nod of course pays no taxes It pays the taxes of both, and A pays noth ing A More pointed illuetration than this could he furnished in the cases of the rich capitalist worth his hundreds of thousands, and the poor laborer who own+ only his small house and works daily to support his family The oapitnlist pays no taxes be cause his property is all in Bonds, while the laborer's house and every article of his tiring to taxed not only to support the got - erriment, the Stale and town, but to pay the interest on the Bonds owned by the capital ist It is the most monstrous injustice in the world No wonder at the uneasiness of the laboring masses But the laboring man is not obliged to work hard and lire poor but he must take his pay in depreciated I currency, while the bondholder gets his in terest in gold. At the present price of gold the working man must pay the bondlicilder $-1 41 for everpdollar of i n terest which Ice claims on his bonds But not satisfied with hblding their twen ty-live hundred millions of dollars of Bonds, there lire more than a thousand millions of dollars of other go•ernment debts which the capitalists are laboring to get funded in Bonds so they may make still further in vesttneMs and pule an additional load upon the tax ittne: people. The mterest ee mosr, if n all of the present Bonds, is em otion:toed every six months or in other words, the interest is reinvented Bonds. to all the capital put ititi these bonds doubles 11.1 If every ten core It conies to th.a, that the laLuring man is actually coin polled to pay the government debt over and over again every ten t ears It should also be borne in ruled that tar Mond-holders boiled their Bonds silk gseenbacks worth nn the average for the past five years, only forty to sixty cents on the dollar, so that the present twenty fi‘e hundred millions of Bonds cost them only from twelve to fifteen hundred millions of dollars They now de mend dollar for dollar in gold, which would give thernLrom fox,ty to sixly•eclis premium on every &War raying noth ing of the gold interest they here drawn all the while The.° llonihholders and their radical hackers have the monstrous audaci ty to claim that the faith of the gforern ment is pledged to this species of extortion from the labor of this country Shall the toiling millions thus be made the beasts of burden, the pack horses of this els, of ar. istecrat+ for all comin7. time' But how is it about the National Banks, those stupendous in innpolies compared to which the monster killed by Andrew Jack• son, men, only nn Infant in swaddlings For a long time during the war gold was worth S 2 50, or to speak snore correctly, paper money and U it Bonds were worth but 40 cents on the dollar For one hundred dol lars the bankers bought two hundred nail fifty dollars in Bonds drawing six per cent interest in gold, or fifteen dollars per year in gold for every bemired dollars they pai d for their Bonds As soon as the National Bank let woo passed they took their $2 50 in Bonds in Washington and deposited them there.receiving back 25 or ten per ce . less than their face, in National currency to loan through their Banks to they people Or, to enlarg4 a little, a National Bank in l'ort•mouttOiltiposits $lOO,OOO of the Bonds I,in IVashington when they cost the Bank but $lll,lOOO in gold. The Bank receives back upon which to in 1,11/11091 , 11. $110,00) in Na tumid Bank bath They loan this hum to A B. e. and at 717 10 per cent in attranc,, or the nice aunt of nearly s7,oini inter cal.whieh its again loaned at 7 ll•lOpercent and MO 011 ItlatCLlliiCig 67,00 , / on ilia-m-1g !nal investment 19 nearly 18 per cent At the same time the Bank draws ti per cent in go ld on the $(00,000 In 11011,19 1111109119 d in Washington, which is IS per cent in gold 1., per cent in gold is worth at least. 2'2 per cent in currency So the account stands every dollar in gold which the Bank tins invested in It 8 Bonds, It re remit l.j per cent interest In gold, 4 '22 per cent in cute ency, and an additional in terest of eight Pen per cent in currency on the original investment by loaning their Bank bias to the peop'e bo it will be seen that the Bank actually extorts IU per cent interest from the people In there °alai's tickle we have made no account of the large dePseits of private individuals and corpora tions in those Banks, and which are loaned at an advance interest of 7 I IU per cent., adding thousands on thousands of dollars to their profits Such is this monetrotie Banking scheme now in full blast in this country And eve ry dollar of this ell-consuming interest conies ow of the toiling, laboring, lax-pay ing people So people on llite lace of the footstool ever did, or evict cid) eland suck a burden as this and live, Byt e when We talk of taxing the Bonds to he support the government which protects l sir holders, or propose to pay them up in the same kind of currency which the people are compelled to tree, and thus stop this enormous interest drain, will, what horror ddthe Bondholders and Bankers roll up their eyes They bel low about the "faith of the government," just as though they are the great all in all of this world, and the people lire obliged to eiipport them in luxury and cause until we are become beggars at their feel There never was invented uu earth ouch. gigantic swindle ar int. Bond and Bank sys tem in this country to-day It (staking the very hie blood of the people in every avoca tion of life It omits thirty millions of dot lore every year to simply collect the Inter nal Revenue alone. when it might lie done for a tenth part of that sum by the local Stale and town officers But their must be • vast army of radical office-holders fasten ed like vampires upon the vitals of ikecoun try as ringers an and barkers of loyalty far the party in power. It costs more than thirty millions • year to pay the interest on the Bonds held and depontedby the Nation al Bank, alone And now the monied aris tocracy are pushing to have all the green backs funded In Bonds drawing latereet,and givigthe National flanks the entire drools.. lion of the country. That would nap the climax of outrage and oppression, Wo de sire to know how long the laboring masses of this country propose to tolerate such iniquity and slavery I—Portsmouth. N. If Stale, and FEISI Re construction and' Taxes The expenses of orr government before tho war, was about $ 0,000,000 per year under demooratio rule nd the interest on our present publia debr is about $180,000,000 per year With a tariff properly adjusted, this sum could all be eolleoted from foreign imports. all the Internal revenue laws re.. pealed and the thousands of collectors and and assessors dispensed with Only think of the change when we get back under • democratic government No license to be taken out by the tradesmen and m•nufaa turers, no tax on the articles made, no in come tax on the farmer or otherk nostamps no inspector., no ssssss ore and no collec tors to watch for the lion's share of all our earnings —Luxuries can again be enjoyed at their natural prices Whiskey at 2Q cents per gallon, Begets at d price within the reach of all el . currant and black berry wine am agals.'be made wlthoutpay ing the government ten times their value in taxes or idcur the penalty of fine or Impel eonment. Contrast this with the present manage. meet of our government. The people now pay on foreign, and internal comperes the enormous sum of $45,000,000;0! this Bum there are paid out for,. Rspensesof the Government 570,000,000 Interest esi public debt 130,000,000 Jet...weal Ravenna officers 60,000,000 Reconstruction and stealmg 000,000,000 If fbe people wish to get rid of all inter nal taxes, let them keep the ball rolling. Let them eleetsotne honest demoorat for the next President and rid themselves of kV. host °Obliion who are-now squandering and dealing their money.— tolumbiallerald, "The Sombre Pall," The New York Throb/ has the following comments on the result of the late election in Georgia, following bard upon the same shameless farce in Virginia. It is gratify tog to know that "the white wretches" who lead Ibis morement in the S iuth, begin to he appreciated according to their merit. The Iferald says • •` Stole has beenenehrouded with 11,0 poll. Georgia, following her sister eloutu,n Staten—Virginia, Alabama. and Louietana—has been swept into the ‘ black radical Tortes. Briefly, we may re gard the entire ten reconstructed Southern Stales—with, possibly, one or two excep tions—as forced by a secret and o•erwhelm. ing revolutionary influence to a'cominon and inevitable tale. They are 641 bound to be govetnettity blacksurpirretf do by worse than blacks—white in reeks who dare nor :how their face. in reepereable society any where. Title is the Mort abominable phase bar barism has assumed since the dawn j af ci•i lization. It was all right and proper to put down the rebellion It was all right, per haps, to emancipate the slaves, although the right to. hold. them had been acknowled ged before But itis not right to ma slaves et white 4n, even though they to have been former masters of,bleeke T i k i s but o change in a system of boninge that is rendered the more odious and Intolerable because it has been inaugura ted in an enlightened instead of a dark and un oivilized age The Romans, in the height of their lei umPbs, banded the government of conquer. ed kingdoms over t o the white race who people them—never to negroes It appears, then, that the radicals are receding from the condition of civilization which marked the era even of the old humane They are creating black government. in the South, which will not Wily destroy the industrial interest of that sret ion of the country, but overturn all the established safeguards of civilized society and lead to utter harbor ism : to implant upon the soil of our own South the civilization sein in the interior of Africa--human slaughter, slavery to lie most hideous shape, menial ignorance and Paganism , Incited by creatures like Hunnicutt, in Richmond the blacks in their ignorance are made to believe that not only tbe 'day of jubilee' has come. but that of agrarian ism or a common distribution of property also They are now cravy for the promised spoils, and the ticks of outrage daily chron icled with threats of personal violence, and secret but peremptory orders of expatria tion against obnoxious whites, illustrate their infatuated disposition This the rad icals must be held responsible for. Their acts fat, in violation of the wise councils of Generals Grant and Sherman,who have rea son to be as competent jtiagea of 1.141 in. good for the newly enfranchised race 11111141 the radicals put together The whole Northern people ire appealed to to defeat this atrocious att¢mpt to sur render a large portion of the country to a debased race—an attempt fitlygharacteriv ed by a Northern republican point te.beoite intended In teifcumvent the lavis of Chid '" LifeAnsty —Henry Ward reecher cep in the concluding ampler of hiknoTel. lie I the hero of the story) had had part in the last grand battles, 'domed Lee's lines, earned every step by 4 tlesperale en deavor, and after every advantage, found Lee FIIII firm, defiant, desperate No one ma well knew the incomparable skill and bravery of that now waning army of fort " ern \ irginia se they who for fodr years had fought It, and now, in the hour of its aumeme disaster, were grinding it to pow der rather than forcing its spirender ; and wben, at length, rut off from its lines of retreat by .that lion of al battle-field, ramping cavaify lay cr uchedacross his only path, his ail illery gone, hie trains taken or destroyed, his amaiuujtion expen ded, hi 4 chief officers slain, or wounded, or captured, his men reduced to a handful, over wearied by nights without sleep, and days taxed to the ut lean oel, Lee's army yielded Gen Cathcart, and every other breve man, in their admiration felt that the heroism of Lee's army n-as the only worthy measure of the perse•eruneea and bravery of the Army of the Potomac In every generous bosom rose the thought Three are not or !Mother 5101100, hilt our 0111 -, 119---111Pir 11119111ke, Ilkeir evil cense, belonged to the .ystein under which they heroic bravery belong to the nation, that will never cease to mourn that ouch valor had not been expended in a better cause, and that the iron pen must write 'The ut most valor misdirected and wasted ' " Tug Ds to Nun —A correspondent furnishes the following dialogue which he nays he overheard, a few days ago, in the neighborhood of the Dill, between a Demo crat and a prominent Radical; tfadreaf—•'how ore you, Mr. - You Democrats hove rather worsted us this 3 ear " ' ice, rather so Don't you think we have done pretty well fora deed p.rty'" !t✓drea/—•'Lood, the devil, I told our smart men some Won muce, that if they were Uependtng on Buccal. ou the ground that the Democratic party war (lead, they would find thetn.elves mistaken " bmictral—“Tben you don't think we are dead '" Rad,al —"Dead ! If the party to dead, U tights the best battle of any corpse I ever 'Heard of, and I don't like to acknowledge that our party !we been whipped all over the country by a corpse " Ihnmerat—••Tou are mistaken. lon beat un in Lotman.. and Virginia '• /Car/teel—••Vex, rite niggers heat the him men down there, but I don't like that any better than you do, and if this m tha way things are going, there will be (1--ft few white people in the Republi can party in anther year; it will ben naunltood oorpss lint I won't he there" --Patr, • .) I ntt, tNli BODY lieu?'—The great downfall of Radicalism calls forth the above question How is it with you, Mr, Republican ! Do you el iihthink that the Democratic party is "dead "" Row do you like the result of the late elections ! Stand up ! Look pleasant' Face the music? Did you bear from Penneyl•aein I Row's New lork ' What's wrong in ''Jarsey 1" Think you will impeach Andy? Ah, gentlemen it's all up with you! Tun l'aorLit have decided and their verdict is against your wishes. They do not want a patched con stitution ! They do not want a divided country ! While mew do not want to be go•eoned by negroes. The lime for over riding public sentiment,and stifling the de mand fora just andequitable administration of the laws, is paet,uever more we hope, to be heard of, at least on this continent. The bail° cry of "dieloyalty" has lost its force, and the clap-trap expedient of giving nicij• names has gone for what it is worth. Tird , veil has been torn tram the face of the mon ster, before whom the people of this coun try, ka•o been called upon to bow down and give reverence; ite deformities have made it a laughing clock Its army of ne gro cohorts works no dismay in men doter mined upon asserting their rights,,but on th• contrary, firee their resolution to throt tle the evil epint that has brought us to the •rge of anarchy.—Sunbury &Aline! --The Radical papers are \still busily engied mviriplaining the reasons of theist rroe 'overwhelming reverse.. Ono say il i l llapt, i bras "too much nigger;" other* iliktdi ' wen because there wasn't niggiir enoug One think+ it was “apathy" did the bus nesaothers that it was the "treach ery.— of pretended friends. One charges lbe disaster upon "recoostrootion;" anoth er says it was due to IC want of vigor in en foreleg that policy. One alleges the threat ened suspension and impeachment of the president produced defeat g others that it would slaver hay. occurred if Johnson had been put out of othoe at the first seasiqp of the Fortieth Congress. A Radical peperin Connecticut think. It wee "the liquor ques tion" which injured its party : and one In Ranaas °plus that it was"woman'arighta" 8o It gore. Instead of aseigning their overthrow to the plain and obvious cause, the reppdiatlon by the people of their in humes organisation and its rctinqus, des potii,and negrirequallaing-deratuathe Rad ical leaders are Tahiti ruching oat for BOOM plausible explanation Ima indicative of the wining power of Radillffism. It is 'bf no use, gentlemen—Rena fame, lekei vphsrgin I—Louiertlle Courier The Poor Man's Soliloquy I bave'no more crusts, mypoor dog, I gave you the last one, and my God knows I needed it, but you could not starve. Don't look su wishlully—don't look as if you pitied me, for it makes me asbamed of mon when a dog is the better friend. I will tell you nil°, a few things, but perhaps you cannot understand them I must go to work in a few momenta— rily nooniug is nearly over That wagon must be finished. lou -Rad I bare eaten all the good dinner my good wife put up for me, and toy little child brought me, Tido, and I must work for more. The bondholder hue his horses, Lis car riages, bee wines, Ins dinners, his suppers, fin Hoare and his bonds. I been my tin dinner pail—my seer falai ful dog, and they las you, then kill you at that—and my tool chest, and my hard palms and tired bonesait night, and toy hasty breakfast in the morning, and lean purse, and a “tax receipt at The end of the year " It hen quarter.day coulee the bondholder cuts on' hie coupon. and draws his interest, end I draw my purse and pay rent And when the year in gone be counts up his gains, rustles his bonds and has a wine supper And when the year is gone I lytt,k at the yreal rubber,: the TAX occurs, gb to .etriliih an aching heart to dream of dem ocratic times, light and equal (a.ralon. The bondholder does nothing. Ile is sup ported. I work I pay lazes to make up the in terest on his bends! pay State taxes. pay county times pay city Lanes. pay town taxes pay revenue tares pay shoal lanes pay direct laze.. pay taxes on everythlng I pay taxes to support negroes I pay taxes to support Congress. I pay taxes to support the government, I pity taxes to support the bondholders who pay no taxes tot any purpose what ever ,\vd is th is equality" tido, I wish some limes I was a dog--a good dog, like you, but I shall never ask you to be a mau, 3 worker, a toiler—a poor opt reseed, over taxed Blase to the boudbulder My Mart grown sad, and the tears come to my eyes oft and often The bondhold ers wife dresses in bilk bought with the moue) the goverument rubs me of My wife is in a rage--my children are often hungry—cold, and are growing up la ig norance. The bondholders children will not speak to mine, for they aro to proud to apeok to the children of a pour, working, toiling, tak-paying, government robbed mechanic. You see, F tdi , it will not do speak to the children of slaves, and every mechanic in America is now the slave of the bondholder. was a soldier, Fido I went to wee. I (ought to restore the Union I fought to have pence and prosperity. {then I went to war I had a little farm, and the bondholder next door hi.d nothing but a chair to a saloon, and a glib tongue 1 fought while lie staid home to protect my poor family Ilow he protected it, you know, Fido. My wifo and little onto of ten suffered for food but his wife did 1101 IS ben I conic !ionic my farm was wort gaged--I could not pay the lanes—the glib tongued rascal was a bondholder, he had, legislated himself moh and made mehis slave —lie bad money and I had none. And he bid off my farm on a tax title arid I had to WI bek on my trade, na I must in time to the poor house, it the People do much longer keep up this fonhahneas 'Another Johnson" The overwhelniing defeat of the Radicals, at the October and November elections, has frightened many of them from their pro priety, and cause them to fight shy of the ultra men of th, r party The fnetkipa which hare been der the ban of the ea tremiste, are to lig advantage of lbw ••scaro," and i recruiting theu ranks with great rapidity The ifeed men nod the followers of Raymond, in New lork,ilie Curtin men in Pennsylvania., and the Bing ham-ilea in the Weed, have nil taken the cue, and are working away will, great real and energy to recover their ascendency in the Republican party In order io nocom plink iheir.purpose, they have declared Gen Grunt as their nominee fur the Presidency By this course they hope to out•general the extreme Radicals, and to regain the con trot of affairs in the ,organization , ~ . in ...111enee 1s onoo more la he made predominant 1 New fork, Cameron to to be laid on the half 1n Penusylvahin, and Chase and Wad are to be giving hack seats in the Wee . let these miserable factions are not m re ooneervati•e than the men whose relent aof power they oppose They do not propose to abandon any of the extreme measures inaugurated by the out spoken Radical.. Ilia they are ••policy nice," have always been such, and hence their quarrel with lireely, Wade, Sumner and Co Meanwhile, the latter ate doing all they can to stem the tide of opposition to their continued ascendency. They have brought out Judge Chase as theireandedate for the Presidency, and are advocating hie claims with great vigor. The .1; I' Tr. butte, of a late date, oontains a lung article devoted to the interest of Chase, and lie lead is followed by other prominent Radi cal journals. Already the feeling for Want is gelling weaker. and those who were ar dent in hie support a weak ago, are now inquiring as to whether lie is really %Radical and whether they can safely trust him Others say thsy will not support any man who is not a t led Radical, having lied a sufficient experience with men of doubtful political filati•. They declare they will not have another Johnson," and would rather that an out-and-out Democrat be elected, than to be afflicted with another turn.coat And thus the fight wags The question, just now, with Reptiblicanaseeins to he. 11 at ire hare another Johnson `-11.4. ford I;orette Till. X,TION (I. DIM:RACE —WO tibllth II is perfectly cote to say (lint a large majori ty of ammo who have habitually voted the Republican ticket in Penes . ,lsarta, aro filled with disgust as they road the account. of the Virginia and tiggiggittomfekrialm. They cannot help aping lkitiff.4Yere is Ooh ing but danger abd disgrace to be expected from such proceedings They must know end feel that the Stale. which aro thus subjected to the rule of the most ignorant and degraded specimen. of an inferior race, must be a dangerous element in the Repub lic. It needs uo argument to allow, no ar ray of facts to demonstrate, even to the most thoughtless. dint the political nit material intermits of the entire nation are being Imperiled by the mad course of the fanatics in Congress. No one State can he stricken without the wounds being felt by all Ten Suites of ibis Union cannot be given over to the rule of barbarian ne groes and the real remain free e nd prosperous. As well might we, ex pect the human body to continue in health and •igor with au arm crushed. orb leg paralised,— ex. Tun SLACKAnt IN POLITIeII --(By the diefranohisemeut of three-fourths of the melt 0 , the Souib, and the enfrenohmement of the emancipated slaves, the Radii:tale hope to elect the next President. They fear the loan of the Middle States, most of the IYestern States, the Pacific States, the "Burd.r States," and a good portion of New England. Hence their. , black Rectinstrue lion scheme. Southern States tiouldroot be 'oontgoled in their interest, though the black voleAthey affected to regard them out of the Mum. So seen as they eon menage those States, through negro voters, they will pro nounce them in the Union. This may be fairly styled the bladk art in politics. It is the mineable thimble-rigging of desperate political jugglers With them the Union Is the Little Joker. .-Now you see it, and' T now you do see it." But' some of the people who b ye attended the Radical show and paid den ly for a back seat In the pll. are beginning to be "among the missing " Wuo P o t Tlli PALI. —A few dive since • p r man complained to a we•Llty radical neighbor of the burdensome Saxe lion in this country, sod mild sonisting should be done to relieve it. "Why," says Ibis rich mos, "what right have you to complain. You pay p$ tax f" "Well, neighbor„' replied the poor man. '•let's look Into that. Eight years ago I could bay ouch goods as them I wear for fifty conic a yard. Now (buy soot me ono dollar•. Everything I eat awl wear rosy be platted In the mom ratio. My wages upon a proper bails were about the saute. Now I oall this a pretty heavy lax, don't you 1" Neu abbertiotmeot BUILDERS LOON HERE! The subgeriber having leneed the MILESBURII PLANI7NO NULLS nod added largely to Its hotlines for turning out first class wort, are npw prepared to furnish 10=01 FRAMES MEM =!I 61111TT8 RS, MEM MEM MEMO I=l IMEll=l = 1921 LOWEST rAsii PRICES All manner of work. ouch or SeJolj 4.n.ng Moulding., Ilrarkets, de, made sifter nub• DI:SIRR,D PATTERN, on the eherleet petit entire, times, is ono of the latent improve.' COKE DRYING KILNS which icayes the lamb.' in a perfectly healthy state, assists in pratervmg d, and to (act adds to Ito lasting qualitiev, uhile other method, of drying determratee, and rondo,. it more liable = Lumbar dried in a Coke kilo will shrink t le dried perfectly end when worked and put op, will not SISDIVIL AND SHRINK thus giving buildings the appearance of h aring been erected octet Green Material TRY US We know Oat our facilities giro us superio r sd vantages tire.. other PLANING MILLS IN Tills SECTION and we feel perfectly hew In eaylng, that all our WORK WILL RS OtTARANTKRD MITI A SUPV.RIOR QUALITY 1%• will turniab anything in our line from a =IIMIZE WllOl.ll ROM aad at snob pries., s. oanaot bat prove to be ex(lnthteetnent to THOSE DESIRING :AT BUILD AU orders promptly. filled end • fair ohs& of public patronige, impostfidly narks& MOORS A WOLTZ [Successor of H. Levi] 12-45L.1y AITLEBBURO 0 PA 14Teto illthertioements. B ALD EAGLE VALLEY EAIL ROAD. On and after Mendly, ember 25, 1807, the Ttahs• on the B. 11. V. R. Il i ?en as follows s .s . . LEAN'S EASTWARD MAIL. •CCOV. Tyrone, 10 a m 400 r o. lialt Tyrone 18 " 4 09 Intersection 24 " '• 11.14 Eagle 30 " Hannah 47 •' f 37 " Port Matilda 59 '• 4 48 •' Martha id 07 " 4 57 '• Johan 1 0 lI " 6 II " Union•ille •1038 " .3 30 " Booty Shoe in 10 49 " $ 41 " 51 ilesburg Id 5$ " 5 44 " Murmur . , 11 OS '• 51 tleeinarg II 20 " MS QIN ZEN azi BEIM liaglorslio 12 oj4 r. Bred. Creek 12.1.1 " DEL MEM Flontngtun 11 33 " Luck Haven In 12 40." II oicklen 12 4 " GOIND WESTWARD STATIIINS. MAIL. keCOll. Luck Haven 2 45 I' 31 " In 251 " Flemington 2 57 " Mill Ball 3 01 " Beeeh Creek 316 " Kagleville 3 21 " !Inward 3 40 " Mt. Engle 3 50 " Curtin :1 57 " Mlleeburg 4 10 " I.leLLsvourn 427" Ls 6 Wen Mileehnrg 4 37 " 6 10 " Snow Rhos in 443 " 616 " Unionville 4 57 " 6 :10 " Julian 5 11 " 6 4:1 •• Martha 5 23 " 6 1.1 • Port Matilda 332 " o +l • Umiak 5 4:1 ' 7 13 " Bold Engle 6 00 " 7 29 " interFcclim 6 06 • ' " Civil Tyrone niJ 7 rune C 20 " 7 " 1111Yr.u . NE CLEA KFIEI.I), It. IL. 11n arta after 741r)1 :t3. N. , ir•OPer the Pa...salter train on the T 4 C. It It.. wlli tan as follows .• • iOINO OMNI/ 1:1ST. Phalirburg 1 28 r• a Tyrone 121 a Osceola I East Tyrone V IS Vowelion I 6v 181'41,18. V 31" Sandy Ridge 2 1;2 " Oardner 10 00 " Summit 2 10 " Summit 10 30 " ❑arden 2 10 Sady Ridge 10 ;7 Intersection :1 02 " Puwolion 10 1.0 E n .t..T . , rune 3 07 '4 1/get'ola 11 00 " Tyrone 3 15 " Phmlupeburg 11 20 " D ENNsY LVAN IA CENTRAL R. It. On and lifter Monday, November 25, Ihr Owing on the P. C. R. It., will run ae &Howe DOING WESTWARD. PHIL •. 6X II GJPe 3 15 A TION 11111.181phla Lewistown 5 30 " .1 IU Huntingdon 7 05 " 5 55 Tr two: 7 52 " 0 40 " l'ittsburd APO. 200I' II ATM 1 00 Asi 001100 WESTWARV r5lL'.4 11: ! 20 r OTATIGNM. PlUsburg Trim. 10 OF • Huntingdon 11l 55 " Lewistown 12 17 " Hanlon trg 2 15 A IN Pbiladelptkin mut 7 00 " UTOFF & HOLLOW WARE STORE FLEUAL & GANOE, PHIMPSBURU, CENTRE COI' TV. PA I= TVA, COPPER t SUEET 1101 V W. 1111: and whale-sails and retail dealers I a STOVES, EIE ITERS, SE tie take pleiteure in announcing to the public that they will keep eonatantly on hand, one of the largert annortments of goods in their line ever brought to this auction of ihe Stitt. They non hate the celebrated lIIONSIDES COOK STOVE. the largest or en rook stove lit the market. has all the advantages that ran be put on a stove , large oven, !ugh under the nob pit and at the Caine tone a deep arts pit, also a large extended top. net er fails in it. operations—Four sues nuts extended fire box,* for coal or hood -- The hove also Its Contmcntsil, Lehigh, Penner, DAYLight, Nrcer's Anti Dust, Niagara, Charm, liar&ld. , with story variety of the host Pittsburg Manufacture, "AII - The Tm end Sheet Iron ware glees with the Stoves is mede of the hoariest and best ma terial, end warranted tin give perfect &allele, twin JPARLO It d 11 /.; A TING STOV S of e ery descript ton, quality and linen. TIN. COPPER, SHEET-IRON, WOODEN AND WILLOW WARE, lesale or Itotail, manufactured neatly and and with the solo *low to care ICC, tram the best material in the market. PLOWS, PLOW POINTS & COPPED, BRASS AND IRON KETTLES, Of every thomription ronotantly on bond RODS,..,SUPEitioIt poINTS put up on Ann notice. ORDERS FOR RPM-TIN( And other work belonging to thin; bumpea will be promptly filled by experienced end ekillful workmen. !RASA : , , e011'1; It AND OLD METTLE Taken in exchange for goods ulducetnente are offered to Nor ehants, wino wish to purchase at whole-sale. F2-45-ty CIENTRN COUNTY, ES ,t I, J. P. flephart. register for the probate of Win and granting Letters of administration and fur the county, o f Centre du' hereby cer tify that lettere of administration were loaned in due and legal form onto J. P. dh on estate of John Shearer, late of Miles township, deceased. certified onder my hand and seal ul vase at Bellefonte, the lath dsy of November, A. U. 1857. J.l' GHPHART, Eryiltirr B URNS A: SJI Uelt Eft. WIIOLEE.A LE GROCERS, DEE PRODUCE' copoiresioN M SRCIIANTB No. 605 D 1 et Street, Philadelphia. J. MORRIS Beafe • —late of B. S. Jemmy, Jr A Co. S. Smut:lran, Jr,—late of S. Smucker, Jr. t Co• •ep 15, 1865 1 10 CONSUMERS OF FLOUR & FEND. Orders Ipft at the wareroom in the rca of Derr's store, 1 (lour or feed, will be prompt • ly attended too atld the good• delivered free of charge, by the gan Mill. wagon,. Tuesdays end Fridays, topa. of the borough.. As we yeah have for yea b dealing in FLOUR, FEED & ()RAIN OF ALL KINDS We feel that we coo guarantee eatiafaetron to all who may favor us with their patronage.— Orders from a ulatanee prompt) y gllad. Bellefonte Jan 4'07-0m HUME'S et CO. FURNITURE: A R. 11. MoCLINTIC, LEWISTOWN, PA,, llns now on hand • largo morttuent of elegant ■nd well made Fornitura AS LOW AS CITY PRICES. Walnut Parlor Snits ,• Walnut and other Climber Suits ; Extension and Other Tables ; Dining Cane and other Chairs ; Together with a general assortment of witep Fereirerr, Mott eeeeee . Spr,Ng Beds, ke. Me talio and other Coffins ronstantly on band, par - Were-Rooms fn 'West Method street, Lewistown• 19-46 the. NEW BOU r r it BHOM ESTABLISH . • Raring removed to the room on Alimony greet formerly oecupled by Trlple'e talor ihoy, mbeeriber eery politely Writes his old Mende and the public genitally. to gine him • sell, feeling confident that he can fit any In BOOTS, anumg OR (MITERS. , Raring bed pint of experience u forum% In one of lb. bdat manufacturing *MASA mints In the 'country, ha Gala tate la %Whig a geerantoe for all work done. REPAIRING OP ALL 8151/8 Ilene enithe shorten moth*, asap op the meet reasonable tants. ULM B ORNSIDEB' WARRANTED ROOTS RAVE COME. NeW abbertioemento It 1 G S , It my. It I ofh II "op -/hour To re• /boy. 'Moue store gray 11,.yr Mingo hair to it. !hop Wog* Inal color. 1:64i- Naga II toy. cola 1:111[111 nor and Ringo II • top ` . .from the I..iinure itoty• Ewa. 8 C•A I. Reny. Mows and prey+ Rimy. 1t... lIALW , Stop Rowe neat; 1111,20 Rings einv . 1: A U 3. 12 10 rr 12 25 " 12 33 " 12 41 " 1 ' 1 " 130 •' I a 4 • ' 2 14 " a 40 2 47 Ring's Vegetable Ambrosia is the Miracle of the age t • tirey beaded People have their lucks restored by it to the dark, bateau., .Ikrit groan. of youth and are happy ! Young People, with fiyhr,fluied or red hair, base them urif titimsble color. changed to • beautiful auburn, end rejoice"! People irrhooo head. are covered with Mewl ruff and 1ieu,,,., ups it, end have clean coats sari clear rind healthy scalps! nob/ /boob,/ l'irertmo have their remaining lock, tightened, and the bare spots covered w ith a luxuriant growth of Hair, and dance for joy Young (footmen use it because It is richly pertu used ' Youn,s Ladies use it because it keep. their Hair In place ! ligEverybody rm.( and troll use it, because it is the rierme.l and best article he the market! 3 00 " 1 20" 4 10 " 4 10 " 1 40 " 4 5 " 520•' J 25" 599'• J 4 t, 00 • xi 10 6 1.0 6 30 Call for Binge Vegctable Ambrosia, end for your own plenum and comfort do not be put off with anything else "said to be Jost as good " lieware of counterfeits ! And Injurious Iml.. tatione.wbich flood the country. For Sole by "Druggists generally. 'Tito c $1 00 per BOTTLE E. N TUBBS CO.. Prow-loofa, Teterboro, N 11 S 10 8 1,7 9 12 000 10 07 10 21 10 .17 11 02 II 11 11 20 11 I Germantown. Columbus Cu , N. V Messes. E. M Ti aan & Co. gents—My hair and whiskers were at least one half gray when I was induced to try "Ring .1 Vegetable Am brosia, and after using it three weeks, my hair and whiskers were restored to their natural col or , m also eradicates all dandruff from the dscalp, and I eJosider it unequalled as a hair res•ing, keeping the hair stilt and silky and does not color the Olin or slain clothing It will do nil you claim ford IV TOMPKINS. Bt inns Burnes & Cu. Vork 11' h lesele Agent" or sale by M. Gtrk & Clearer, Pbbipsburg F. I'. Green, Bellefonte. F. S. IVilton, Belle lento, and by Druggibte genernlly. 12-46-1 y ISAAC HAUPT if CO , OF NILEBI.I 1 . 110 Take pleasure in introducing to the lum bermen of Centre and adjoining counties, their new until Improved CAteI;LA It SAM , ' MILL AND CARRIAti E with friction feed works that surpasseganything that lino been before the public, in the manner of fording the log to the saw, the sawyer can fee 4 the carriage fast or slow, just by the tires pisa the band. The great advantage ot Mo . feed is in the fact that the sawyer can work mill at pleasure when rowing in puntact with a knot or any hard substance, be can bring the log to the saw I cry gently, thee rendering the ears lest liable to break or get out of order, there is no pombility of the carrage starting un less started by the sawye-, as is the case with other feed works, the cogs often sliping one Into the other without any aid except the shaking of the mill, and then cog wheels are easily broken 11 %IL 7 S)A 14 I 15 r w MAIL. 8311 A 3 24rm 1 21 J 65 U .5 126 Am ipeeially when they are pot in gear the one standing still and the other running •t • epeed of lire hundred revolution per minute. Many thinge might be amid of cog gearing that are objectionable when attached to a mil) for feed fog purposen, but of friction feed there can be nothing ai id against it, na it le the only way to bring the log in contact with the saw sorra', fully. W 9 warrant our mills to giro ENTIRE SATISFACTION IN EVERY PAR (molar, and claim that we manufacture the es celmor Saw Mill Carriage Our,hetul blocks are made of east Iron with 2 Inch ecraws, and haLf, Inch pitch 113 that twirturns will make an mob board tbus laving labor, as most all head Woke aro only one-fourth lath pitch and requi ring 5 turns to make an inch board. All kind. of mill gearing and giaohinery made to order, and ovary thing wadi, of the beet material and by good workmen. nil fill( 'G II FARE MILLS FOR SALE,—On THURSDAY, the :Mb day of December, 11167, by virtue of a decree of the Circuit Court of Prince William county, pronounced et the October term, 1867, In the mit of Horner, et al , vs. Chapman, the under signed, as Commtnissioners of Sale, will offer to the higlicat bidder, at lilanemen Station, at 12 , that ep lend id =I a4O .e 'aw I ullding an I Water Power known as the THOROCUIISAItIi MILLS lately the property of John Chapman, deceased Said property is situated at Thoroughfare Bap, immediately upon the Mlollo9l , o.ip Railroad, with mach, , for lading and unlading cor• 42 mil.. from the city of A 'mandrill, and in direct communication by railroad with the cit ies of Washington and Baltimore. The build ing is five storima t high, with a basement, and can be racily conikerted into a factory for cot ton and woollen goods, and in eurrounded by • largo wool growing country The stream Iv uever alai the whole le comidered one of the most eligibly situated and desirable ptecegoroperty in the State of Virginia. cotton of persons desiring either a factory or merchant mill a particularly called to It Tk.ltAlli OF LE.—Ten per rent. cash, and the residue in three equal annual insta.ments, the credit payment. to bear Intermit, and to be secured to the malefaction of the Corumimielner.; title to he retained until the lest payment le made . the property subject tit be resold under an order of Court, in event of the Whirs to meet the payments. At the same time and place, and upon the same terms,will be offered for sale, TWO TRACTS OF LAND, about :nourtAG IIuNDRED ACRES each, one adjoining the described Mills, and lying on the south side of the 111.suas Gap Railroad, pertly in Fauquier and partly in Print o W all tam counties , maid hind being alto the property of the late John Chapman, divided into to traria to suit purchasers. Each tract has a small OW ELLIN() HOUSE upon it , and other huilding•, with a suflicienwr water and timber, and is partially encluseU For forther information apply to JOHN S. CHAPMAN, No. GB Pirtle. Watt. Aleoondno, JOHN 14, CHAPMAN RICE IV. PAYNE, EPPA MINTON J.ll BROOKE. Comm inionen. ERSE A DMIN tsTRATows N iIC Letters of administration on the estate of H. M. Lucas adm inistatur of dv , of Hemline. Sheet., late of Union Township dectesed, bas ieg been granted to the undersigned she re quests all persona knowing themselves indebted to said Wahl to make immediate payment, and those having claims against the same to present them dull• authenticated for settlement. 1133113 ARE YOU INSURED IF NOT DELAY NO LONOER, Miefortune may lied you to morrow, attelid to the matter at ones. FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT, HUTCHINSON & CLARK, Geom.! lornranee Agents, Allegheny street,llduate, Pa. Represent the following company's. ' /Etn• Fire, Capital and Assets 84,273,269 81 II toe, New Raven do do 1,371,616 74 Putnam Fire, do do 900,060 00 Original Travellers In. Com. Ilartford do do 798,126 35 Amertran Life do do 1,518,461 81 Conn Mutnel Life do do 10,104,209 13 ALSO. Real K.l to Aguats, Lauds Dtrallinp and lot. bought mold or lammed. FOB GALS, A valuable Ulan Inguxufaetury, M Ourington• Vega ounnty. Ps., In mueeevetul operation di years. .f 4 A valuable lonic of five year. on ■ry.ia4hra cite coal bed, with all the necessary Smash Inter for working, to active operation-44u 6kWk• •hinny, Penns., known al the R7OKINIOUNTAIN COAL BIM el?. to tunal and B. k 11. R. R. A one half interwar in .SEVENTY ACERB of land with lino Baltimore ur , 20 FIVNT RUN OF ANT/MAO/7W GOAL opened upon it, lodated •t Kingston, Pa., on the IVyotaing eon! Field. A Promo howe with two acres of Mad Lucid len locution, goad fruit. level load, water. eta Bo ilifonte borough. A dolible JOHN Pe Yank' I'ILCVAT HOUSE 417T11 TIT LOTS Land Food stable In-Itellefonte, well located anfl mbarl mew. 12-44 1m 21 fork Row, Now ilAurr 0, Milesiburg, Pa. R. M. LUCAS, Admi m istrator FOR SALE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers