For the Warciyax, The Months in North Dakota. As April advances the last snow drift fades from along the bluffs; the last ice melts from the lakes; the smell of the fresh earth is in the air, and the voice of blackbird and lark pro- claims the arrival of spring. The days are clearand dry and bright; about the lakes the wild geese honk and clamor in the still night, you being able to hear them for miles ; as the ice disappears immense flocks of ducks make their appearance, blackbirds swarm on the brushy islands, or follow the busy plow or har row. The prairies put on a faint green dress, tne knolls are spangled with budding crocuses, and winter's reign is over. Now May has come and the farmers are busy sowing oats and wheat and barley ; the days are warm and bright, the nightsare clear and lovely; there are no rainy, foggy days; the ground becomes dry and dusty. Sometimes early in the month great fires sweep over the prairies, licking up the long dead grass and lighting up the sky at night for miles. The airis full of gray-winged screaming gulls; vast flocks of brant pass overhead or sit in mile-long rows on the grain fields. The trees put forth their leaves; the lakes shimmer like silver in the evening sunshine. Scmetimes little miniature whirl-winds go swirling over the fields, raising great clouds of dust; the prairiesare fair and green, and flowers are blooming everywhere. With the first of June the farmers finish sowing their oats and barley, and now the sea- son of rain is at hand; day after day the show- ers come pattering down; the lakes and streams are filled to overflowing ; the grass is long and lush ; roses bloom everywhere ; the timbered islands are a fairy sight; the choke- cherry and hawvhorn are in bloom. Each tree and thicket is occupied by kingbird, Crow or hawk, and many are the fierce battles they have with each other. The breaking plow is now at work ; you hear the long drawn gee of the driver and see the patient oxen plod along. As you draw near you hear the steady sh-h-h as the knife-like shear cuts its way through the tough sod that rising on the polished mould-board turns over in a long black strip and lays one furrow joining another like planks in a floor ; and so the month passes. Itis July. The rains have passed by to come again no more until the course of time rolls round to another June. The days are long and warm and bright ; the sun rises at three o'clock and does not set until nine; daylight lingers an hour longer; the northern sky gleams red and rosy through the short cool night; the twilight of evening mingles with that of dawn. The south wind blows softly, heavy with the scent of flowers; the grass waves its long plnmes over the ripening strawberries ; the wheat and barley put forth ears; the lakes are clear and limped under the warm sun, or gleam like silver in the moonlight; young ducks paddle about the sedgy shores; great white pelicans sail solemnly along asif they carried the burdens of half the worla; young gophers venture out of their deep burrows and play and chase each other on the little knolls. The grass in the sloughs is tour feet high and the wind as it passes by stirs it soft- ly. The breaking plow is laid aside; the ground becomes dry and hard; sometimes a great black cloud rises out of the west, it pass- es by with rolling thunder, with flashes of white lightning, with amighty roaring wind, but seldom any rain. The sunrise is lovely, the sunset glorious; overhead the sky is fair and blue, underfoot the grass is green and sweet, and life is beautiful. With the coming of August the hum of the busy mower is heard on every side; long low haystacks rise about the sloughs; the barley fielas are silver white, the wheat fields golden yellow. As the days go by the binders are at werk, their clatter is heard in every field; they cut and bind the grain more deftly than human hands can do it; the grass becomes brown and dry, the roads are hard and smooth; the ponds are dry, the lakes recede ; some- times you see flocks of prairie chizkens among the sheaves; in the dusk of evening foxes steal silently through the dead grass. The northern lights hang out their rosy banners in the still night time. And so the days go by . and usher in September. The days grow shorter, the nights are cool. Ducks rest upon the waters in countless num- bers and fall easy victims to the fowling piece of the hunter. The busy muskrat builds his winter house. Sometimes the ‘sunrise brings the mirage, the faraway hills seem near at hand, the lakes are elevated in air and glitter like mirrors ; about their margins are beauti- fui groves ; a littie shock is transfigured into a lovely home, with terraced lawns and grav- eled walks; sedge and weeds become forests and orchards, and the whole Prairie is a fairy scene. From dawn till dark the roar of thresh- ing is heard, the giant engines vomit black smoke, the grimey engineer and fireman look like demons, the men shout wildly to each other. When the day is done, tired and dirty they wrap a blanket about themselves and crawl into the straw pile for a few hours sleep and rest. The sky is blue, the sun is warm, but the air grows chill, October; frost in the still nigists. The brant return from the far north and light by thousands on the stubble fields; there are many gray geese also and their clamor is deaf- ening. The island trees shed their leaves and stand naked and desolate in the calm sunshine; the dead flags and wild rice, reaching far above your head, rustle and Snap as you pass among them. And now come the autumn prairie fires; day after day the air is filled with smoke; night after night you see their red light far and near, Long rows ot wagons load- ed with wheat pass by toward the town: you hear them returning far in the night, the pa- tient oxen plodding along, while the sing merrily or call to each other. The plows are busy turning over the soil for nextyear's crop; and so the days go by and usher in No- vember, drivers Ice forms on the lakes; wild storms of wind and dust sometimes come rushing from the north ; some days are cloudy and gloomy ; all the summer birds and wild fowl leave us; the owls that sits on the knolls are white as snow; the weasels that creep about the hay stacks and the long-eared rabbits are of the same color. The days are short, the nights are long and clear and frosty ; the stars shine out in countless numbers with a clear bright light that is seen in no other land; the moon gleams like a silver shield. - The prairies are dead and black with the touch of fire ; they are and lonely and desolate. The days are calm and clear; perhaps the south wind blows; if so, you need not wish for lovelier weather; you may sit around in your summer coat or work in your shirt sleeves; but cold or warm, the air is dry, thesky is clear, the sun shines by day, the stars by night, and there is no rain or fog or sleet. vast And now it is December; the weather be- comes colder; the frost artist paints the win- dows every night; there is a continual deep booming like the report of far away cannon; it is the pent up waters of the lakes bursting the ice that prisons them. In the stil] midnight you hear the hungry yelping of foxes, or the far off savage howling of wolves. The steel shoe of the skater rings merrily over the froz- en waters, and the white winged iceboat flashes along like a great sea gull. The sun rises in the southeast and sets in the southwest, and even at noonday has no great power; the moon is far in the north, the mercury gets down about zero; some night a gray cloud spreads over the sky, the snow falls faster and faster, the wind comes up out of the north, it blows and moans and wails over the vast plains; for many hours the wild blizzard rages, but snugly housed you look out aud laugh at its wild fury. At last the winds have exhausted themselves; the sun rises in the clear sky, your eyes are dazzled by the snow that lays in ridges and pillows like a wind tossed ceean ; far and near ring the merry bells, sleighs and cutters come and go; and, oh, thes happy sleighers; the men are clothed in long buffalo coats, fur mittens and caps, and look like Captain Kane's pictures of Esquimaux, and the women are hooded and mittened and wrapped in furs; they are fair, and the men are brave and strong, and all are gay and happy. January ; old winter is now in earnest and gets down to steady work ; the mercury drops down among the twenties below zero, the snow lies deep and white ; the roads are smooth, the sleighing splendid. The air is dry and pure and bracing; the sky is clear most of the time and beautiful sun dogs-show themselves in the sky ; the mirage works its wonders al- most every morning, the faraway bluffs are drawn near by its magic, the lakes are raised in air, and you seem to be in a winter fairy land. Inthe frosty mornings you see the neighbors houses for many miles around hang out their gray smoke banners } you hear talking in an ordinary voice at the distance of a mile ; the people are very social ; card-parties, dancing singing and music assist in passing the long evenings pleasantly ; and so moves the first month of the new year. And now comes February, the month of blizzards, wild winds and drifting snow. The ice dust goes rushing along the surface of the earth in blinding fury. God help him who is so foolish as to venture far out on the trackless prairie in these fierce storms. Bewildered, blinded, groping in the thick mist, beaten, buffetted. smothered and freezing, he at last lies down to die, while overhead the sun looks coldly down in seeming bitter mockery, But, thank God, such happenings are very rare indeed. The storm is over, the snow is beaten hard, cutters and horses scarcely leave a track a3 they skim over the smooth billowy surface. Oh! you poor dwellers in the fog and mud and mists of the Atlantic states, you have all the discomfort and none of the joys of winter. To you comes not the pleasure of snow shoes, ice boats, to- boggans or swift flying cutters ; to you comes not the pleasure of following red deer and an- telope over the glittering plains, or tracking the wily fox or cayote along tho winding conleys. March ; the sun is returning from the south’ the snow melts in his ardent rays; but the nights are yet cold, and some days are dark and stormy. As the month passes the warm winds come from the south, the snow melts rapidly, the water runs off into lake and conley; you see the brown sod again and smell the sweet earth, The sleigh gives place to wheels once more; the roads are never muddy ; the first wild geese make their ap- pearance and are greeted with the joyous bang of rifle and shot gun ; the cattle pasture contentedly over the prairies ; the gopherand badger coma out of ‘their winter dens; the long legged jack-rabbits hop about in the warm sunshine. The energetic tarmer has.his har- rows at work on the black soil. Some calm warm day yoda walk out along the grassy knolls, and lo ! you see a venturesome crocus, the first sweet messenger of spring. WiLL TRUCKENMILLER, le ms——————l Pine Grove Pickings. Our man of awl and pegs, Daniel Brouse. boasts of a great prize. Its a boy. Our jovial friend, Ed Bubb, at private sale purchased the Judge Smith property on the hill. John B. Mitchel, Esq., is preparing for the erection of anew dwelling on the lately pur- chased lot on Main street. Upon completion it will be occupied by himselfand family. . A Mr. Gripp, of Tyrone, has finally suc- succeeded in fixing his grippe on one of our lady friends. If it were not so serious a mat- ter we would refer to this remarkable grip of another kind, but hope to give our readers the result later. ~ It is with sadness that we note the death of little Bertha Rokison Long, a most beautiful child. We believe the cause of her death was inflammation of the bowels. On the 12th inst the remains were interred at Williamsport by the side of its little sister who preceded her to the realms of bliss but a few weeks ago. This was the sixth death in the Robison family within the short space of about one year. During their stay in our village Mrs. Robison and family formed many acquaintances who extend their sympathy in this their sad be- revements. Jottings from Philipsburg. The grip fastened on Mr. Alex Pearce and after a hopeless tussle of one day left him, and he is about his work, that of P. R. R. ticket agent, as jolly as usual. Philipsburg has added a sound young dem- ocrat to her population in the person of “Mick” Richards who moved from near Port Matilda on Monday to take charge of the Swan House, a well known boarding house and hostelry.., We wish him success in the new venture, The spread and severity of La Grippe has been as great here as inmost other towns of our population. The schools have fallen off to a marked degree. Prof. Richy says more than 40 percent of the school children of the town, have been away from school on account of it. The reports from contiguous school dis- tricts show an average, we believe, fully as great. “Drown it out,” was the adtice of a jolly po: litician given two weeks ago to a friend who was suffering from La Grippe. We met the friend a few days since and he pronounced the treatment very eflicacious. “Only” said he “I am now looking for a remedy for the blossom on my nose.” (Other papers please Copy.) The Masonic fraternity here lost two of its valued members by death recently. Mr. E. A. Ryman, a merchant and a member of the school board was buried on Monday afternoon, Jan. 6. The schools were closed out of res- pect to him and to give the teachers the op- portunity to attend his funeral. Mr. Jno. A. Lehr for four years chief of police was fol- | lowed tohis last resting place on Thursday i January 9, by the Mason, Fire Department, G. A. R. Post and a large number of friends. The | Massons were in charge. Mr. Lehr, for some- ! time not in good health, was injured while dis- | charging his duty in arresting a drunken | tough several months since and this added to | his suffering and no doubt "death, hastened his | John Jannoh, the hack driver from Morris- | dale had his tribulations too this muddy weather. Last Saturday on driving up to one of our hotels preparatory to starting on the ; return trip, a crowd of women, each carrying a huge and heavily laden basket, hurried to get in. «No, ng” said John, “I must take the men.” “To thed—I| with the men,” angrily ex- claimed an irate dame, “let them walk,” and they crowded the hack to overflowing. John fired a perfect volley of threats larded heavily with “sweets words” at them, but finding the women were there to stay and others were hurrying up to try to get on, he caught up the lines and drove rapidly away. The last we saw of him he was anchored in the mud, the | women were tenaciously clinging to the rig and several men assisting him to repair his broken hack. Mud, mud, mud, all over our city. The rains and humid atmosphere for some weeks have kept our streets wet until the mua, mix- ed and remixed, is of the consistency of paste and of uncertain depth. No material seems proof against this, the part of Front street re- cently “macadamized” with so much care, ! being in very poor condition too. The country trade is almost cut off and our merchants suf- fer in consequence. The liverymen, teamsters and lumbermen are greatly discouraged: Those of us who are not in the clutches of the grip have observed some funny incidents oc- curring to persons on the streets. I will not stop to tell how a dude after daintily picking his way nearly over one of our crossings slipped on a treacherous stone and sat down in the mud, nor how he made a break for the nearest public place with mud dripping from him and followed by the hearty cheers of some ever present urchins, but must note what struck your reporter as a very funny in- | cident. An old colored man who drives a de- livery wagon may be seen on the streets every day, beaming a benevolent smile on all whom he meets and frequently courteously tip- ping his hat, the personification of the oid time Virginia darkey. A few days since on coming toone of the street crossings his wa- gon plunged into a rut and he performed an involuntary summersault out into the mud, As he arose what could be seen of his sable coun. tenance did not wear the usual serene look and we hope the recording angle made no note of the fervent words with which he gave expression to his feelings. Vii. | ———————— . Editor of the Warcuyan. The Nation Disgraced. As a citzien of this great country I had sin- cerely hoped that the statements respecting Vice President Morton's licensed hotel would prove false. This;hope was so strong that when the reports first came I contradicted them, believing that the accusation would be found to be false, and that the action of the Terre Haute, Indiana, Liquor Dealers, Association in electing Mr Morton an honorary member, would prove to be only an attempt to besmireh his fair name by connecting him with that in- famous business. But with sorrow we find our hopes are blasted, and we must now admit with shame that the Shoreham Hotel, owned | by the Vice President of the]United States, is licensed to sell liquor. This evidence comes from the Pittsburg Times, a Republican paper which certainly would not misstate the facts. It says: “We observe with regret that the charge “that Vice President Morton is engaged in the “retail liquor business can no longer be de- “nied. The license procured by the manager “of the Shoreham Hotel hangs displayed as re- “quired by the law in the cafe thereof. The ‘ist which is handed to his guests to’ choose “from has been printed, showing that there are “for sale five different kinds of whisky, two “of rum, two of brandy,and twenty-five brands “of wine. Surely this is enough to satisfy the “most variegated appetite for intoxicants. Mr. “Morton owns the property. Without his for- “mal consent the license could ndt have been “procured, and he shares the profits of the sale “of liquor as undeniably as if hestood behind “the bar and served his customers. The Vice “President of the United States has a legal “right to add to his salary the profits of a “saloon undoubtedly. A saloon keeper is con- “stitutionally eligible for even the presidency, “and the moral sentiment of the country would “suffer no greater outrage by a saloon keeper “becoming Vice President than it does by a “Vice President turning saloon keeper.” This places the matter in its true and prop- er light before the country, It shows that there is one particular paper, and of the same political faith asthe Vice President, that bold- ly speaks out in condemnation of his course in this particular, : We ask in Heaven's name, how are the fath ers and mothers to save their boys from peing destroyed by the rum-fiend when the second highest officer of the government, with all the weight of his mighty influence, sanctions the damnable traffic by consenting to have his own hotzl or flat licensed, and; by profiting finan- cially from the sale of intoxicating liquor? The religious press and ministers of the Gospel all over the land should rise to the irue height of this emergency and boldly de- nounce the great injury and reproach inflict- ed upon the nation by this act of a Vice Presi- dent elected upon a platform that declared in’ favor of temperance and sobriety and good gov- ernment. Why does not Mr. Morton, as the owner of the property, either revoke the li- cense, or express his disapproval ? Surely he he owes that much to the people who elected him, who never would have done so had they known that he wouldZso soon be the owner of a house licensed to sell intoxicants. When General John A. Dix, then the pro- prietor of the Woodland House,Chicago,was tolaby ! his agent that his house would stand empty for the season unless he consented to a bar in it, the brave old general dispatched : ‘Let it stand empty then. I would ratherhav e it stand empty to the end of time than to have it rented for such purposes!” Would to God Vice President Morton had the convictions and integrity on the temperance question that | organized and enthusiastic. General Dix had. Then the nation would not ! feel humiliated by the act of its Vice Presiden t | as it does, nor would mothers tremble for their boys asthis sanction of the rum traffic makes | them tremble, Voters of Pennsylvania, think what you are doing ! A vote for the Republican party is a vote for the Brooks high license ; a vote for high license is a vote in favor of the whisky trafic. The two are inseparably connected. Then let us as parents and as 200-1 citizens vote for that party in the future which offers the® greatest moral good to our children, E. H. WALKER. Woodland. Puiraverenia according to the Record, eats in the course of a year 200,000,000 eggs, of which seven-eights come from Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota and Nebraska, packed in refrigerator cars holding 144,000 each. Not with- standing this food, Philadelphia is no better or wiser than other cities; but still the question arises, why ‘cannot the farmers in the East pay more attention to the raising or dropping of eggs? | We import eges in immense quantities {and yet pay little attention to the de- | Farmers, velopment of home products. { keep an eye on the hen ? An Appeal for a Monument to the Moth. er of Washington An appeal for money to erect a monument over the grave of the mother of the great Washington at Fr. dericks- burg, Virginia, has been issued as fol- lows. “An association of ladies has been formed in Fredericksburg that has for its end the building of a monument to Mary, the mother of Washington, at her grave in this town. Nowhere is her character and life so well known and so much honored as in the old town where she lived for years, in the house, which is still well preserved, and where she died and is buried. “The association is chartered, well An Ad- visory Board of responsible gentlemen pledge their counsel and their aid, and the National Bank of Fredericksburg will be the custodian of all funds in- trusted to it. “It has been one hundred years since Mary Washington died, and was buried, at her own request, in a beauti- ful spot in the borders of the town of Fredericksburg, Virginia. A good and noble woman she was. Early in life a widow, she stood bravely in her difficult lot, and reared her family in principles of patriotism, integrity and piety; and then lived to old age to illustrate the virtues she taught. “It was Mary Washington who gave her first-born son, that magnifi- cent physical form, with his extraordin- ary powers of action and endurance, that self-poised, mental force, that power to command, that calm dignit | and gentle grace which robed the un- crowned King of the American people, with a majesty perhaps unequalled by any character the world has ever seen’; and who gave her son a supreme re- gard for right, and taught him in con- fessed weakness to look to God for strength and guidance. “With confidence in the disinterested and patriotic end at which we aim, we appeal to the people of our great Ameri- can republic to aid in our work. Let the 22d of February, 1890, the anniver- sary of the day when this great woman gave birth to her first-born son, be marked and celebrated by contributions all over the land to this pious cause. Let subscriptions be opened by news- papers. Let local associations of ladies be formed with a fee of $1 per member, and the money collected be forwarded, from time to time, to the National Bank of Fredericksburg, Va.” Brice Elected Senator, CoLuMBUS, O., Jan. 14.—Calvin S. Brice was to-day elected to the United States Senate, receiving a majority of the votes in either branch of the Legis- lature. The vote in the Senate was: Halstead, 1; Foster, 14, and Brice, 19. In the House a call was demanded to- bring in members. Brown (Dem.), of Hancoock, who is sick, was carried to the hall in a chair. The only other Democrats absent were Troeger, of Holmes, and Lawler, of Franklin, who is ill. ‘Willis and Blair (Repnblicans) were absent. On the roll-call the vote of Counts for Brice was received with cheers, as was also that of Munson, two of the members who were credited with being bolters.- Smith, the third caucus bolter, voted for L. T. Neal. His vote was received with a subdued murmur. The vote in the House stood : Brice, 57; Foster, 52 ; Neal, 15. Brice was declared the choice of the House, having received a majority of the votes. The result will be can- vassad by the Senate and House in joint session to-morrow. The joint result of the two branches is: Brice, 76; Foster, 66 ; Halstead, 1; Neal, 15. ——1It needed only cyclones to com- plete the analogy between our present winter weather and that of summer, and the West furnished them on Sunday. Unfortunately, they were accompanied, as is usual in such cases, by loss of life. Science may be able to explain the cause of these disturbances, but it has so far been utterly unable to foretell their ap- proach or to check their devastating torce.— Record. New Advertisements ECOND HAND PIANOS, Organs, Sewing Machines. As good as new, cheap. For sale or rent. Payments tak- n in monthly installments. Criders Exchange third floor, 34-49-3m Room 28 ANTED. — Twenty-five steady men to join the colony now forming for settlement in Dakota. Free land; rich soil near railroad ; the chance of a lifetime ; write soon, as number will be limited. For al information address WiLn TrUuckENMILLER, Secty, Hu lersburg, Centre Co., 35 3 3t Penna DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. — Letters of administration on the es- tate of Jacob K. Runkle, deceased, late of Pot- ter township, having been granted to the un- dersigned, they request all persons knowing themselves indebted tosaid estate, to make immediate payment, and those having claims against the same to present them duly authen- ticated for settlement. JNO. F. ALEXANDER. W. K. RUNKLE. 35-2:6 CHARTER. Notice is hereby given that an application willbe made to Hon. Austin O. Furs’, President, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, on Monday the 2rd day February A.D. 1890, at 10 o'clock a. m., asking for the incorpo- ration of the St. Peters Reformed Church of Aaronsburg, Pa. The object of the said _corpo- ration being to provide its members with the means of grace, the preaching of the Gospel, and the administration of the Sacraments, in accordance with the confession of Faith, known as the Heidelberg Catechism. ORV1S, BOWER & ORVIS, Se Nomen OF APPLICATION FOR 4 ARM FOR SALE. There will be sold at Public Sale on the pre- mises, one and 3 miles west of Unionville, along the Bald Eagle Valley R. R., on? WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 19, 1890, at 2, p. m,, the VALUABLE FARM known as the Casper Peters homestead and late the property of Lewis C, Petters, containing SIXTY-SIX ACRES, upon which is erected a good dwelling house, log barn and necessary outbuildings. . The property is one of the best locations in the county. Good soil, go)d fruit, excellent water, and every foot tillable. It is near to 8hools and churches and can be made a desira- home. Terms made known at sale, 85 3 4b MRS, BUEHLA PETERS. t New Advertisements, J OLIpAY REDUCTIONS | HOLIDAY REDUCTIONS —o—fofo— SPECIAL BARGAINS! SPECIAL BARGAINS! or ISIE A reduction from 20 to 30 per cent on our entire stock from this date until after the Holidays. Sioa WE ARE NOT AFRAID TO SHOW YOU OUR GOODS AND QUOTE YOU PRICES. —=loj=— Children’s Suits (Knee Pants) from 3 -3 > iD oC “ “« “ “ % [3 [3 “« so S82 g83¢¢8 $e G0 10 pt pt & op [= < -1=7 NS tor Or Boys Suits from 14 to 18 years from Men's Suits Reduced from “@ “ $6.00 to 4.50 8.00 to 6.00 10.00 to 8.00 12.00 to 10.00 15.0 to 12.00 18.00 to 14.75 $4.00 to 3.00 5.00 to 3.50 6.00 to 5.00 10.00 to 7.50 12.00 to 9.50 16.00 to14.00 18.00 to 15.00 Over Coats Reduced from 3 c Reduced Prices in Underwear, “ i” Shirts. # Gloves & Hosiery. Mufflers & H'dk'r'fs. Hats & Caps. Trunks & Valises. ide (yaa CALL AND SEE OUR STOCK AND CON VINCE YOURSELF THAT OUR RE- DUCTIONS ARE GENUINE. ——— 34 49 3m, SIMON LOEB. New Advertisements. DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.— Letters of administration on the es- tate of O. P. Orr, deceased, late of Marion township, having been granted to the under- signed, he requests all persons knowing them- selves indebted to said estate to make immedi- ate payment, and those having claims against the same, to present them duly authenticated for settlement, JOHN W. ORR, 35-1-6t* Walker, Pa. DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. — Letters of administration on the es- tate of Leslie Markle, deceased, late of Miles township, having been granted to the undersigned,” he requests all persons know- ing themselves indebted to said estate, to make immediate payment, and those having claims against the same, to present them duly an- thenticated for settlement. H. SNYDER, 34 50 6t. Blanchard, Pa. 3 - NOTICE.—Notice is here- by given to all persons interested that the following inventories of the goods and chattels set apart to widows under the provi- sions of the Act of 14th of April, 1851, have been confirmed ni si by the court and filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Orphan's court of Centre county, and if no exceptions be filed on or before the first day of next term the same will be confirmed absolutely : The inventory and appraisement of the Real Estate of Henry Markle, late of Patton town- ship, deceased, as set apart to his widow Eliza Markle. The inventory and appraisement of the per- sonal property of Samuel S. Brickley, late of Curtin township, deceased, as set apart to his widow, Hannah Brickley. The inventory and appraisement of the per- sonal property of Wm. Orndorf, late of Haines township, deceased, as set apart to his widow, Phoebe J. Orndorf. The inventory and appraisement of the Bx sonal property of Andrew S. Zimmerman, late of Walker township, deceased, as set apart to his widow Susan Zimmerman. 35-23 JOHN A. Re EGISTER'S NOTICE.—The fol- lowing accounts have been examined, bassod and filed of record in the Register’s of- ce for the inspection of heirs and legatees, creditors, and all others in any wise interested and will be presented to the Orphans’ Court o Centre county, on Wednesday, the 29th day of January, A. D. 1890, for allowance and confir- mation. First and final account of W.F. Reynolds and Geo. W. Jackson, executors of &e., of Thomas R. Reynolds, late of the Borough of Bellefonte, deceased. First partial aceount of M.D. Rockey, execu- tor of last will and testament of Jonathan Spang- ler, late of Miles township, deceased. ‘he first and final account of Samuel Glenn and Andrew Glenn, administrators of &e., of James Glenn, late of College township, de- ceased. The first and final account of Jacob Sanders, administrator of &e., of Jonathan Sanders, late of Penn township, deceased. : Final account of Jeremiah A. Ertel, execu tor of &c., of Permelia Ertel, late of Gregg township, deceased. Account of Geo. P. Hall, administrator of &e., of Frederick Harpster, late of Union township, deceased. Final account of A. A. Pletcher, administra- tor of &c., of D. B. Pletcher, late of Howard township, deceased. . The first and final account of Levi Whippo, administrator d. b.n. ec. t. a. of Hiram Gilday, late of Walker fownshaip, deceased. The account of Isaac Stover and C. H. Harsh- berger, administrators of &c., of S. A. Stover, late of Bellefonte borough, deceased. The first and final account of Wm. and John Woods, administrator of &e., of James Woods, late of Spring township, deceased, as filed by Wm. Woods. The second and final account of D. S. Keller and E. J. Pruner, administrators of &c., of John Hoffer, late of Bellefonte borough, deceased. The second and final account of D. S. Keller, administrator of &e., ot John Hoffer, late of Bellefonte borough, deceased, accounting for proceeds of land sold for payment of debts. JOHN A. RUPP, 35-1-4t Register. Lewins’ Philadelphia Branch Clothing House. l—$— 10th ANNIVERSARY OF THE —j—| .“ . . PuapeLemra | BRANCH * x * * > ONE-PRICE = CLOTHING HOUSE. Fall and Winter Suits, - $3 to 16 Overcoats, - Children’s Suits, - from 2 to 5 Boys’ Suits, - - from from 3 to 15 fk | St 6 ceoreTursth « * Serena “serene Cases NIII ERI ERR IIRaany wees rey { HATS AND CAPS IN GREAT VARIETY AT ALL PRICES, == TRUNKS AND SATCHELS, i GRIPSACKS &C., IN ENDLESS QUANTITY. eid ET a Ea ALL GOODS GUARANTEED AS REPRESENTED OR MONEY REFUNDED. SAMUEL LEWIN, | mre ——————— ALLEGANY STREET,” BELLEFONTE, PA. Call and be Convinced. 34 39 3m