= The Demora tic Watchman. BE LLEFONTE, PA Friday Morning, May 12, 1871 THINGS ABOUT TOWN & COUNTY There is considerable COlll petition in•tho meat business now, and prices are corning down. Good. --Nally Love's theatrical company arrivod linen yesterday, and performed in Boynolds' Hall last night. --Kurtz & Straub, and Mullen Co , exhibited their fine grain•fed cat tle on Wednesday. Beauties, they all wore —Frank Steinkirehne! & Co., have reduced the prices of meat at their es tablishment, and are now offering it at the lowest rates. --We notice that the Scrimshaw pavement is being repaired in several places in town, where it has received datnages --The late rnins'furnished the clerk of 'the weather an excuse for giving us a cold snap, but the weather is twin calm and serene. —Forepaugli'B 3lenagerie and clic will inithe appearmice to-morrow IVe anticipate it tremendous crowd doubtless every hotel in town will he crammed --The ball and dinner to be given by the (41t1 Fellows, Rbout which there hag been considerable speculation, 19 In COMP (4011SdIty, the /101 of Jane -- Thu dinner will take placu at the Rush Home, —We regret to chronicle tho very serious illness of Mrs. Galbraith, Wife of Ilartrim Galbraith, Esfi , of this place The lady is suffering from 111 ng fever, and is under the care of Ifr G L. Potter —We hear it rumored that a prom ising young lawyer of this place is short ly to unite himself in marriage with one of Eve's fair daughters The public aro on the tip-toe of expectation, and there is every' reason to believe that it will he a recherche affair. —The Brod:ado - dr !louse closed up its pretensions as a hotel on Tuesday, the proprietors, Messrs. Houseal & Krom, having taken the Montour house in Lock Haven. The furniture and ef fects of the house were removed to Lock Haven on Tuesday anh Wedneshay —The pupils of Miss Sophie Keller's school held a little plc-me on Tuesday last, in honor of the birthday of their teacher—one of the most intellectull and talented of the profession. We learn that the occasion was a very pleas ant and happy one —We notice that our friend, Mr henry Teal,, late of A id's store, has got down to Hoffer's, weero he is now engaged Mr Teats is one of the very best and most pleasant salesmen in town, and a most polite and affable gentleman. We think his presence an addition to any BLOC° —The funeral of Mr James Ward, of this place, who died oa Friday morn ing last, took place on Sunday, and was largely attended. Mr. Ward was high ly esteemed byjthiscommunity,and was one of the kindest hearted and moat gen erous of men. lie will be greatly miss ed and regretted by this people. —The colored barber who.was tried at the last term of court for committing • rape upon the person of the girl Cole man and convicted, was last week sen tenced by Judge .Mayer to two years imprisonment in the Western peniten tiary. Application was made fora new trial, but the motion was refused, —A race came off at the Fair groud on Monday afternoon last, between a blind horse owned by a man named Stern, and Abo liaum's trotting horse, the former running against the latter's trotting. The race was won by the blind horse, whose owner of course pock eted the stakes. —We hear of a house out in the neighborhood of the planing mill that is not famed for virtue and morality.— We learn that a number of rough•, dis guised as negroes, recently visited it and raised a terrible rumpus, alarming the whole neighborhood. Better be care ful and draw your hair stokes fine. --Mr. C. W. Lambert, of this place, whose celebrated garden seeds are so much sought after,:bas already a fine lot of early eabbase plants ready for setting out. His cabbage and tomato plants are the finest in this section of the country, and never fail to yield the very largest returns. Those In need of plants, or seeds will do well to buy of hint. —That enterprising and good-na tured gentleman, Mr. George Pifer, has emerged into a full blown auctioneer since he began to sell his goods oft at public sale. Mr. Pifer now cries his own sales, and does it as well as any professional auctioneer in the country. George is a man of versatile talent, and can turn his hand to a-most anything. He is a good singer, too, and frequently delights his audiences by the happy style in which ho delivers some of the moat popular songs of the, day. —Last Saturday night some hun gry thieves circulated around town and committed depredations upon a number of collars. Mr. George-O'Bryan lost. lot of butter and bread, Messrs. 1111111 & Galt a ham apiece, and our individu al and humble self the last morsel of meat we had on the premises, together with a lot of cakes. They were a de spicable set of thieves, whoever they were, and wo think their conduct show ed it. To steal front Rohl & (lilt was bad; to rob our coffin-making friend O'llryan,was worse, hut to 'go through' us—a printer—was the very height of Meanness. Really, we shall feel ju,di fled, hereafter, in pronouncing against the generally accepted belief that there is honor among thieves. On the following Sunday night, we presume the same party or ',trues, broke Into Burnside ( Thomas s store and robbed the Lill of about eight or nine dollars in change that had been left in it from Saturday, taking, besnli4 It revolving pistol and a watch. They got into the store by breaking the glms out of the window abote the door and pulling down the top bolt and then cut ting a hole through the lower part of the door, reaching through nod pulling up the lower bolt. Evidently, the work wits done by some person or persons /le 111111110A with the way in which the, door- were fIIbtVIIIId, and It IS supposed that the rea.,,,n why they did not take noire than they did was that they were frightened from their Purpose by the passing by of some late pode , drianc, It might ho well for our police to keep their e)es open for future opera ' eons of this kind These fellows may be strangers here, but it is quite as like ly that they are to the manor born. At all events, a little wholesome discipline In the county jail or the pewtentiary might be beneficial to their moral health. They have evidently boon badly raised, and don't know much about the ways of the world, else they would never have thought of going to our cellar to steal meat It was only by an extraordinary streak of good luck that they found any there, for we think that was about the only time we over Lad anything ahead of us in the provi sion line. Those light-fingered gentry might visit our cellar every night fur the next six months, but we don't have any idea they would find the like again. How did we make out for something to cat on Sunday, did you ask 1 Oh, we made a breakfast on scraps in the morn ing, and gime ourselves a very polite in vitation to take dinner with a friend. —Hand organs are flourishing now a-days. Several spommedill were in town this week, a couple accompanied by monkeys and one or two by women They poured forth the strains of every tune under the sun, from "Old Dog Tray" to "Greenland's Icy Mountains " 'We confess that we like the music, when we don't get too much of a There is a plantiveness about it that is sort of soothing and a mournfulness that takes one back to happier days We never heard ono yet that we didn't think of "She *elks In 1.4-anky like the night ,r elceelleen i lenes and starry skien " an allusion, we suppose, to fair Italia's sunny land, or our own beautiful South, where the sun shines more gloriously and the moon's effulgence is softer and sweeter and brighter than any where else in the wide world Sogrind away, old organist, dance and twirl the tam burin°, ye women, and climb the backs of the people, ye monkeys —we'll toler ate yo all for the sake of the sweet mem ories of boyhood and the innocent days of long ago —All farmers should use bar shear plows —Sheriff Woodring, on Monday night, left this place with Charles But ler—the rape-committing :negro--fur the Western penitentiary at Allegheny city, to which institution he was sen tenced for two years. The Sheriff do livered his prisoner the same night, about two o'clock, to the authorities of the penitentiary, and returned home on Wednesday. This penitentiary has now 363 inmates, eleven of whom aro women. The penitentiary is in good condition, and the officers are kind and attentive to prisoners newel! as stran gers. The system of solitary labor is not practiced in this institution, the convicts working in squads in shops in the building. A more merciful and in finitely bettor system, we think. —The editor of the Tyrone I feraki we are told, has chanted his residence and adopted a new business—that of raising pet rabbits. He has about a dozen on hand and more scorning. His greatest delight now is to stand in front of the cage in which his pets aro confin ed, and feed them spearsof grass through the bars. Innocent rabbits I Happy Brainerd. Surely, the millennium can not be far distant. —Amos Mullen & have pur chased the "Bellefontei.eat Market" on Bishop street, from Mr. B. V. Black. and will hereafter run that institution in lively style. Those gentlemen have purchased alforMr.M. N: McAllister's grain fed cattle, and say they will furn ish meat of a bettor quality and Ml* less price than can be had anywhere else in town. --The District Convention of the Young Mons' Christian Association, which was in session in this place on Wednesday and Thursday, gave n street meeting on the evening of each day. The first was held at the junction of Allegiiky'aVinlishop streets, more fa miliarly known as "strychnine corner," at which the exercises consisted of sing ing and prayer, with addresses by Gen. Beaver, of this place, Mr. Morrow, of Pittsburg, and Mr. Burnell, of Chicago. Tho novelty of street preaching gather ed quite a large crowd of people of both sex es,till of whom listened attentively and respectfully to the several discourses. Later in the evening the convention re assembled in the Methodist church, where other exereisels took place. • As we go to press another open-air meeting is about to be held in front of the Bush House, to which the people are begining to gather. As we presume the mode of proceedure will be about as boor., we do not deem it necessary to await its close. The sessions of the Convention have been well attended, and con interest manifested by our people. —The Engle hotel on Third street, l'hilielelphni, under the proprietorship of Gun It I). Cummings, formerly of this place, 14 rapidly glowing in popu lar favor We see it liequently noticed in the city paper•, all of which speak of it in the highest terms The following u 3 the latest that we have peon 't ul I.‘lll s unit !Intl WOlOlllll 110 t 1101 g to cpeak of the II ~,,, 'ugh intr•rrtal renovation of dm+ favorite public muse Since then the outride of tto• hotel 11114 1,/.4.1 Vett ht.. 11.111 1011, and 1100 pre..r•nta it %cry matt - 1011, appearance, being Intuited in imitation Mal hit. I.r n Cum. - ling.+, the proprietor. la.woles being It 1111111 of forogre.thirtt spirit, Is withal /I nurxt accommodating gentleman, and very popular nub 1114 puerto The rate., at Ihr• • Eagle have hoen rediteed to the very moderate NO of .tft pet day Our jolly friend, John Anderson, is great on beef tongues, and never likes to be without them The other morn ing he went across to the butcher's in the conlldent expectation of being able to procure one fur his next meal, but, unfortunately, the man of slaughter wus just out. John was very much disap pointed and come home grumbling at a terrible rate, which shows the necessity of plenty of tongue. John is a right tonguey fellow himself, which recounts for his partiality for other tongues be sides his own. ---The eccentricities of distinguish ed men are unaccountable. A case in point. a couple of our most noted citi zens attended a funeral on Sunday:last, and while the services at the grave were going on, they happened to spy a rab bit, feeding upon the grass. Instantly, both nwent for it," but the shortest legged one tripped over a tombiltono, and tumbled upon his nose 'rho other pursued and captured the rabbit Tho affair as a standing joke in town and ',how/3 Lilst the ruling passion Is strong, even at the grave. --There have been no more dogs erii%lied beneath remorseless car wheels since the untimely demise of Johnny Culd well& much admired canine compan ion, but we are bOlflellIIICS apprehensive that it will one day be our sad duty to chronicle the killing of one or more small boys, so many of whom are in the habit of collecting around the depot when the cars arrive. Parents should see to their children so that they may not be called on to mourn thu death of some beloved one. —Mr. J I'. Dingeo, of Williams port, but formerly of this county, and who lived for many years is Nittany val ley, died in that city on Tuesday even ing, the 2d of May, 1871 His remains were brought to Howard, 1111 Monday last, and from there conveyed to the old homestead, in Nittany valley, about two miles from Ilublersbu rg, w hero thoy were interred Mr. Dingee was in the bOth year of his age. • —liikard's celebrated trotting horse "Watchman," named after thin paper, was very sick last week. During his illness he was visited by a great wady people, all of whom anxiously inquired after his health. We are glad to• be able to say that our distinguished name sake is now out of danger end rapidly convalescing "Watchman" is almost as popular as the paper whose name he bears, and has many admiring and ar dent friends. —Mr. Isaac Lamborn Myers, of Forgus . o township, has taken out let ters patent for a new loiggj brake,whu, works inside the vehicle and will 1,,, I. the wheels at the slightest touch. There have boon a groat tinny inventions of this kind, most of which have been but indifferently successful, but this one of Mr. Myers's seems to be just tho That gentleman will introduce them himself and is now offering territory for sale. —A thief was arrested in Howard on Wednesday, on warrants from the Williamsport authorities, which charge him with having too great a love fur horse flesh. •lie was sent to make astronomical observations through the tarred windows of an observatory crea ted for the comfortable maintainance that peculiar class of people who are not capable of honestly maintaining themselves. We were not able to learn his name. —We stated last week flag the mon ey to build a now Academy—some throe thousand dollars—had all boon subscribed and that the work would bo proceeded with without delay. This, wo believe, was correct A large and handsome building wall be put up, or ranged"with all the modern convenien ces, and adapted to the comfortable and healthful accommodation of a very large number of pupils. It is the desire of Prof. Hughes, tho py.imiral, to have students here from every State in the Union, and we do not see why ho mar not he able to succeed in this There as every advantage hero for the establish ment of one of this very largest educa tional institutions in the country, and the Tint that would attach to it Am the commingling of northern, routhorn, eastern and western students, together with the abilitity and fitness of the corps of professors and teachers, would at once assure its unlimited prosperity. It would also be of grant advantage to the town to have such a school hero It would make us known abroad and bring stran gers among. vas from all parts of the country There is much to a town in a flrst.elassschool—morn than our slow plodding community are aware of Some of the first towns in the State owe their reputation; to their schools, which, gathering to them students from all 'e -I.IOIIS of the ,ifintry, have mado their names household words by every fire side There Is nothing to Tr e yen t Bellefonte from becoming items., fa miliar to every tongue, and the dory of our Beautiful Fountain from being breathed into every ear.• With our splendid natural advantages, our grand and picturesque scenery, our delightful climate and our handsome and heath ful town, we ought to give intellectual birth to a race of historians, poets and statesmen. There being nothing to hin der us, it will be criminal to neglect our opportunity Let us, therefore, do all we can to accomplish this most desira ble object. --Mr Devling has received 1114 new goods, and is roost :magnificent lot they uro, too. his dry goods are among the finest and most tasteful that we have ever seen, and his groceries it is not pos sible to excel. Ho has some elegant carpets, and one, in particular, that ex cites everybody's admiration It is a Brussels and of a most lovely design We doubt if its equal elm be found any where. The store is filled chuck full of splendid goods—really ono of the noblest stocks over seen in this place. It is just the place for the ladies, for there is ev erything there that heart can desire (lo in, ladies, and see if we have nut told you the truth. Mr Dos ling is a merchant of long experience, and a fine judge of goods, consequently he has noth ing that Is not really valuable --Our lively friend, Mr. Penn White, formerly with Mr, 11. A. Bai ley, in the plumbing and gas fitting bu siness, is now carrying on the same bu. illness in connection with Mr. Cyrus Strickland. Mr. White is an excellent workman, understanding every detail of his profession, and is an industrious and worthy mechanic We are glad to know that be is doing a One business, which ho will always do, inasmuch as he does everything so well. Any of our citizens who have work to be done in his line will find that they could not put it into bettor hands than Mr. White's.' —Pi r. Isaac llaupt desires us to as k "where are the police?" Ho says that somebody broke into his tin shop on Sat urday night and helped themselves to what they wanted, though ho believes they (ailed to get any money. Our po lice aro generally around, but oven their argue eyes failed to detect the Saturday night depredators. If that eminent of ficer of the law, Jim Fannin, will just for a few nights keep his eyes as wide open as he does his mouth, he may be able to catch a couple of night hawks --The moral young men are getting ready for the big show to-morrow.— They all have their half dollars in hand and are now debating the question as to whether it will bo propriety to go lc/the circus sa well as to the menagerie.— They do not expect to arrive at a nolo lion of this problem until the show hour comes around, when each one will de cide it for himself. We shall be able to give the result next week. —The regular trains on the Bald Eagle Valley railroad will resume run Iling to this phew on or about the 15th inst. The time given them between hero and Milesburg will be only 17 minutes, instead of 24, as formerly.— This will do away with the dummy train and restore matters to their former sta tus. What will the Herald man do now, wo wonder, for something to talk about? Bellefonte is the place after all, old Ganderlegs, isn't it —We are glad to learn that J. G. Larimer, of• Pleasant Gap, who has beau dangerously 111 far the IRANI"- en or eight weeks with typhoid fever, 111 gradually but surely recovering. Mr ; Lorimer has had a long beige of it, but a good constituttot and skillful medical attendance, under the Miming of Provi dence, have brought him up, as it wore, out of the valley of the shadow of death. SHOWS IN GENICII.AL AND ONE IN PARricui.mt. -- Adam Forel:laugh's World Famed Zoological and Eques trian organization will gratify the pub lie of this place by giving two exhibi tions born on Saturday, May 13th. This k really the "biggest thing on wheels" in the shape of a menagerie and circus in the United States: Half nmillion dollars have been expended in organizing and equipping it; 375 men and horses constitute the working force; two monster tents around to ex (ant under; thirty-two massive iron (lens (nearly double the number any similar establishment in the world:pos sesses) contain the immense collection of wild apimals; and the circus is one of rare excellence, and is held beneath a tent en separafrd from the Men agerie. One ticket for fifty cents, and children twenty:live cents, admits to both exhibitions. The following statement of the num ber of animal cages possessed by the various menagtrus companies now trav eling will prove the truth of the state ment made, that Adam Forepaugh's fa the largest Wild Beast show in America: o,alpang Menag, rue. Cages Van Amlutirgli Von Amluargh, (WPtdern) " I: li (1110 V 11 F Buller =M= Noyes I irello logo!, 10.111001111 =I M=l IC,111•10 10 % nretin Itheltienburger ' x 11/111111.111Illigel 11= E=IMMI EC= Stowe A Sum., North Amer man tan• .s Nortlivi enter:. threun Mlirresf!l AD ISI Po ItEPAUCIII'S The above statement is copied from ono of the most rehahlo amusement pa pers in the country, and it will thus be seen that Adam Forepuugh's Gigantic Establishment "takes the polo," and le ahead of anything in tho menagerie and Circus line in the United States It is the first and only extensive Men agerie that will \IBIL Bellefonte this season. —Below, we publish a letter from Mr. J S liuhl, the individual of whom we spoke somewhat disparaginlyi last week, in regaLjj, to his leaving Ills wife. Since then, 141 e have soon and conversed with the gentleman, and are free to say that he has been, perhaps, more sinned against than sinning. It seems his troubles have been mote the work of mischief-makers than any fault of ~his own, and if these meddlers would but keep there mouths shut and attend to there own business, the probability is that he and his wife could arrange the matter satisfactorily. We aro confident that Mr. Rohl has been undeservedly abused in the premises, and are:glad thus to correct whateter (else mires- MIMS our article of last work may have led people into Apparently, Mr Ruhl is an honora ble young man c anxlous to do right, and not willing to be unjust toward any one, but just now is somewhat uncertain as to what is the right thing for him to do. His presence in Rebersburg now, is evi dence that he has not run away, and he expresses himself as determined to do right if he can have half a chance. In the meantime he trusts all busy-bodies will attend to their own concerns. The following is hie letter Musts. Es toes or WnTCte•N Genfierrisn —Believing that you will do Jun. lice to one who has been basely and evilly maligned, I would ask you to contradict the statement In your hint Issue In regard to the separation between myself and wife. 'There are causes for Butt separation that will here after appear, but which I am not now at liberty to state. It is not true, however, that I have been guilty of the conduct attributed to me by mischief makers and enemies to my do mestic peace, as will In due season be made plain. At protect, Ido not wish to nay any thing harsh or unkind, and will therefore coa• tent myself by stating that lam greatly obliged to my particu ler frterkhl Masers Wolf sod Ilublealur the lotterct they have taken to wid ening the breach tweeu myself sod wife Y urn truly, .1 11 Hunt. —We have received the following letter from a former resident of this county, now a resident of Kanesville, Illinois, that may, perhaps, ho interest ing to a number of our residers who were the writer's personal friends. KANIVILLIC, KANX . OO., ILL , May 6th, 1871. MAR EDITOit:-1 lied a notion nut to take your paper this year, but as I live right amongst so many Abolish I can't see how to get along hors without a good old Democratic paper. I had the WATCHMAN tot the last film or six years, and now for the last four weeks 1 linvn't been getting It, it seems to eta that 1 nun lost. My K. C. Span ;14.1. left tam the n int ay Of March, 1871, as he got married on tho 7th to Silas. A. M. Wisegarver, from Knot Co., 111. Ho started farming on his own book this spring. They aro in a flourishing condition now. Corn Is 62 eta; Whaat, 1.26; Oats, 40; rota Mos, 87; Butter, 22; Pork, $6 60 per hundred, alive. We have had an abundance of snyw here the past winter, baying good sleighing for six, or seven weeks, had but one cold snap in December. The stock was wintered well ; farmers'had plenty of fodder loft. We bud a very fine Spring ; corn plant ing is most, all done; small grains look well; also grass. We bad but two rainy days hero this spring, The tenth of ApPll we had rein ell day, and the fifth of May we had rain. Our fruit i 3 yet uninjured. Apples seem not to bu as full a crop here as we had last year, but cherries will be plenty, If the frost don't kill them. Rope to seesome good letters in the paper from my good Dem ocratio friehds of old Centre. WEDDED BLISS Just one month had liorinda been married t 1110, When the dear little puss came tint' sat on it knee, With the sunniest "peepers" tint ever wt. soon, Whispered ' Hubble, I must have a Sew n Machine " Of COlllllO I (30119006)11, What nen litish,o, wouldn't If it ootti, inc a thousand, den"), her I ttenhill ho I naked my pot blandly what kind she 1,, bought And suggested a Flown, no wisely 1 Ihntight, "Oh, Ihekoy, how OM you? film cried with pout, "Why, its noisy atiki slow, I won't have it hhot And for goodness don't mention is Itrove r linker." (She said it so cross, I'd a good mind to she her ) "Nora Wheeler (4. Wilson, It sewn g oo d „ minute, lint tile next thing you know old 'lorry in it, Now ?Uric, when I went with 111111111111 to t Fair, I saw media duck, oh I the sweeteltoth, there. 'Twos n spirit, 'twat an elf, 'twat. n ratty Ills' nate, With spew!—" here I intermit - fell her, .1 darn It, A truce to your notions, so high flown a green. What's Its Immo, lover ''My Ihekey, Ringer I mean " The last neon of thil affectionate pad, th were wending their way lows Nigh Street Zitntnertnan (iron & Co , where they melee!,. Singer and went home fooling sati toed II they had chosen wisely. Their advice to i rest of mankind in 'go anti do ilkewec.,' Business Notice W ANTIS! , —T.o boy .4 ill 111/1111 It, fonto Founds y IHAAc 11.% I I Alt fin met, wanting plows, wind,' fuel it (hell adliiiitage to buy their pion 4 1,111 14 all %killing; viviting., of iuiv 1, or pork done in the Machine Or till ware of any kind, as lie nelk for Cash hunt any hotly else ~,,, hair always on bond A lot of I. 2 and .1 %V and work of wagons on 1,m1.1 !nude 141 order by t.lO bO,ll. of 11l nll kin In of repwring done hm, I place, Itellefonto Foundry, or nt tondto the linvh Howie. SITA FER—( in the it of May, tall', nt Z tieerrge Sharer, in the 68th year of 1114 ng Father Mutter's sudden demise war by roltinlar disease of the heart. It I. lot necessary that we enter Into the itiatory character while hero on earth SOllO ki lilm but became endeared in WM lii• NeSned a kind ani4 genial humor—l...fu gO.l suture,—was a pleasant and frill eranpanion—a faithful and rtallable mend In his death showed the spirit, the Loth, hope, the triumph of a true clirinttan U friends and loved ones cease to mown Look up to thie bright cell, To wicked earth I'd not return For "Fm feeling pretty well. WARD.—Friday last, of consumption, da Ward, Esq ,of this place, aged •b JEW.. ----Patrick McGinnis, whoever is, says : Grant must abdicate—t he is humbug and usurper. Mani, sometimes have a "method" of tru telling "In their madness." The Bellefonte Market I= The following ere the quotations up to clock Thursday evening, when our paper to pre.. Wilde %Vilest, per bushel tel W heat, per bushel Rye, per bushel... • •••• C.)ru, ears, per bushel, Corn, shelled, per buhel, Oats, per bushel .. Barley, per bushel . Buckwheat, per bushel... Cloverseed, per bushel Potatoes, per bushel... . Eggs, per d05en.......... lard, per pound.. Baeon--Hboulders. Hides .. llama Tallow, per pound . . Butter, per pound . (ground Plaster, per ton ....... MONEY MARKET, DoHeron & tiro, 40 Mouth Third SU Phlled'e., furnleh. he following up to the Inetant e U 8 0111, of 'Bl li3=l 112% ett •• 10-40'n . 100 Ii 11 It 8.30 Year 0 per cent. Cy . 15 ce I (.01,1 !111 (4. li Silver, 1U(3 . 1 0 42 Union Pulite RR. Ist M. Bonds. NI (4 Central Bede° R.lt . Union Pacifla hand Grant Bonds. 74(. We are prepared to furnish Rorenur °um of all denominations to our C11211.01M.r., ad ing tho following distant On I 24 and upwards 2 per cent .. " 3110 " " 4 " Wo fill and forward all °Hereupon the of their receipt. OUR TERMS.' THE "DEbiocßATic wAT, MAE" is published every Fritisy log, in the city. of Bellefonte, Pa., by I' 1 . 1 611..K8 , p c t. per annum of paid sfrtelly wince); 060, when not paid In adt %nee, Ed If not pad before the expiration of year, and no paper will be discontinued i all arrearage is paid, exoept at the opue the publisher. Papers will not be sent not of Centre (7. unless Testator M advance. All Advertisements forelegs Lorin thee t month*, 20 cents per line for the timt it insertions, and 6 cent. a line for fowls a Clonal Insertion. Special t: atices one-half Editorial notices 26 cents per 1100 A liberal discount is mado to pornonn nd Being by the quarter, half year, or year, as lows • StAO3 OCOI3IIIID One Inch (or 12 lines this typo) Two inches. fbree inches Quarter column (or 4 Manes)... Half column (ore in0he5).......... One column (or 10 inches). .. - Job Printing of every kind done With Been and dispatch. The WATCHMAN Oftiro been refitted with a Power Preen and Noel and everything iu the printing line can he cuted in the most artistic mannor and 01 lowest rules. Terrne--CABII. All letter. rho tld be addressed to P. DRAY MKEIt, EelWont°, I January 1, INN SALE BILL 6 NEATLY AND E PILDITIOUSIA PRIN'IMD I. W. G Died no r , ko , I i s 1 113 O 1 45 7 10 1 4 20 38
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