mak, ER RE hes TT Eee Be EN Sadr 5 No mRTE: EAE, i i : f # ! Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 4, 1893. To CorresPONDENTS. — No communications pubiished unless accompanied by the real aame of the writer. THINGS ABOUT TOWN & COUNTY West WARD Cavcus.—The Demo- crats of the West ward of Bellefonte will meet in caucus this evening, at 8 o’clock, in the WATCHMAN office, for the purpose of naming and instructing a delegate to the Democratic County Convention. NorTH WARD CAavcus.—The Demo- cratic caucus for the North ward will be held in the Arbitration room, in the Court House, this evening at 8 o'clock, to name three delegates to the County Convention. SourE ‘WARD CAvucus.--The Demo- cratic caucus for the South ward of Bellefonte will be held in the Recorder’s office, in the Court House this, evening at 8 o'clock to name four delegates to the County Convention. ——Wait for “the Hustler.” ——What has become of Mr. Span- genburg’s band (2?) —— Philipsburg has declared war on the wooden awnings. ——~Centre county is larger in area than the state of Rhode Island. ——The Milton club will play with Bellefonte at the Park to-day. ——=Saturday’s rain went a long way toward saving the Centre county corn orop. ~——The musicale, in the opera house, Monday evening, Aug. 7th, don’t for- get it. ——Bellefonte got $3,955.97 for her share of the State appropriation of $5,- 000,000 to public schools. ——The Magnet knows how to lie, just the same as any other paper, even if itis a temperance organ. ——Oscar Struble, a son of Watson Struble, who lives near Axe Mann, re- cently had his leg broken by a horse kick. ——A number of young folks had an informal dance in the Arcade, on Mon-. day evening. A street piano furnished the music. ——Charles E. Hurlburd, State’ Sec- retary of the Y. M. C. A., is making an effort to give Houtzdale a free reading room. —A few well placed advertisements will make the average store keeper for- get that there is a dull season in the year. -— Bellefonte property ~~ owners should be compelled to keep the grass and weeds cut down in front of ther property. ——4The hustler,” one of the liveliest of musical comedies, will open the opera house season, on Tuesday evening, August 8th. ——A Mrs. Knox, who has been a missionary to India, will address a meeting, tomorrow evening, in the Presbyterian chapel, on Spring street. ——A lawn festival will be held to- morrow, Saturday evening, at the resi- dence of Rev. G. E. Zehner, on Wil- low-Bank street, for the benefit of the Evangelical church. ——The new board of pension exam- iners for this county will be made up of Drs. H. K. Hoy and J. L. Seibert, of this place, and Dr. PS. Fisher, of Zion. It will meet Wednesdays at the office of Dr. Hoy in this place. ——Our readers are warned against a well dressed lady who is likely to appear and profess that she is going to start a class in painting. After selling you the necessary outfit she “works” all your neighbors, then leaves the town. ——While working at the cornice on a barn, on the farm of W. Fred Rey- nolds, on last Thursday afternoon, Mr. David Bartley fell to the ground, a dis- tance of sixteen, teet injuring himself quite severely. Heis able to be about again. ; ——It is said that the grass at Hunt- ers park is entirely too long for comfort at a resort of that kind. It would re- quire very little trouble to keep it crop- ped and it is a wonder the management does’nt do so, when so many complaints are made. ——The musicians under instructions of Prof. Weaver, will hold a picnic in Ard’s grove, at Pine Grove, in the near future. Arrangements for the same are being made. Itis expected that 200 voices accompanied by 40 instruments will take part in the entertainment The date will be announced shortly. ——A rare sight was that witnessed at the home of Dr. A, W. Hafer, on Reynolds avenue, on last Sunday even- ing. Ten buds on an immense night blooming cereus came into flower and de- lighted the numbers of people who vis- ited the house to see them, The rare and powerful fragrance of the flowers was a matter of great inter est. Avaust WEATHER IN STORE FOR Us— Mr. preacher-weather prophet Hicks says thatthe weather we will have during the month of August will be somewhat after this manner. On the 2nd and 8rd of August will center a reactionary wave of great warmth, resulting in severe storms with- in the period embraced between the 2nd and night of the 4th. At this time we will be nearing the center of the Venus Equinox, and the phenomena will take on characteristics so often defined as re- sulting from that disturber. Excessive heat is apt to end in lightning, thunder, hail and wind, and a sudden change to abnormally cool on the very heels of great heat. The storm period, 8th to 12th, promises the most active and dan- gerous storms of the month, having as the disturbing causes “Vulcan” central on the 8th, Venus central on the 9th, New Moon on the 11th and Mercury central on the 12th. There is reason to apprehend violence in the elements be- tween the 8th and 12th. The heat will become intense before the storms appear, the barometer will be depressed general- ly, reaching .phenomenal “lows” at some points, and cloud formations will be black and ominous. Heavy hail, thunder and wind may be expected, and cloudbursts are sure to result here and there. Such are the results ordinarily following such a combination of causes, but there are exceptional cases, when in- stead of the heat breaking into storms of rain, hail, wind and thunder, the warmth is prolonged, growing more and more oppressive, the life element in the atmosphere seems exhausted, and the sky assumes a gray to brassy aspect, an incumbus seeming to fasten up all na- ture, until violent earthquake phenome- na break the spell and allow the ele- ments to return to their normal condi- tion. If perchance this particular per- iod should take this turn, we call upon the people and press everywhere to note carefully whether or not it terminates af- ter the manner we have indicated. Whether it endsin storms orsceismic per- turbations, there will be certain revul- sions from great heat to very cool, with probabilities of temperature falling al- most or quite to the frost line in north- ern regions—say from 11th to 14th, About the 15th, reactionary temperature with southerly winds will most likely result in another spell of storminess, and be followed by another northwesterly inrush of cool air. From the 18th to 22nd falls another period of heat and storms. We name the 18th, 20th and 21st as days on which the chief disturbances will be at their crisis. The moon’s first quarter on the morning of the 19th in connection with the prevailing Venus electric strain is very apt to produce gales and thunder squalls within twenty-four hours of 6 p- m. on that date. Another series of dis- turbance for two or three days will be natural during this period, but the ba- rometer, wind currents and temperature will plainly announce when the storm currents have been reduced to the nor- mal--the wind coming cool and steadily from the west and north—the barometer moving upward, and temperature fall- ing. Alter these disturbances there will be a close approach to the frost line in the north. Pleasant days and very cool nights will follow up to reactionary changes and storms on and touching the 26th and 27th. The full moon on the 27th will tend to centralize the distur- bances on and around that date, and will help to precipitate any tendency to sceismic throes that may exist, such be- ing more than probable at the time, if electral storms should not have been fre- quent and hard during the month. Au- gust ends with the first stages of a storm period coming into action—that is, ba- rometer will be falling in the west, with temperature rising in advance of it, fed by the southerly air currents that trans- port moisture, heat and electric force, from the equatorial regions. August storms in most of the northern hems- pheres, will develop and move from the northwest, the first marked indication of their coming being generally a dark or leaden bank across the northwest at sun- set. There is cause for this. Itis the return of our globe toward the autum- nal equinox, and an effort of nature to let in through our polar gates cooler ozene and atmosphere from outer space. A HARD QUESTION SOLVED —“How could two persons be born at the same time and die at the same time, at the end of fifty years, and yet one of them live a hundred days more than the oth- er?” is a query propounded to the writer the other day. Can you tell ? Perhaps not. Well, the answer turns out upon the familiar fact that a person who goes around the world toward the west loses a day, while the person who travels in the opposite direction gains a day. We will suppose then, that two men in question were born in New York, from whence a.trip around the world may easily be made once a year. One of them goes always toward the west, the other toward the east. One losses a day ever year, the other gains a day every year, after fifty years of age, one has seen one hundred days more than the other. — Exchange. When the men die, ——The process of topping tobacco has begun in the Lock Haven region. ——The season will open next Tues- day night when “the Hustler” comes to the opera house. —— The Bloomsburg base ball club paid $50 for the release of “pap” Watts the Tyrone in fielder. ——Twenty-two miles of Telford paved streets will be laid in Hunting. don. Work has begun already. ——The public roads in Ireland are said to be the best in the world. Per- haps this is the reason the people get out of it so easily. ——The Juniata Valley editorial ex- cursion which was to have gone to Bed- ford has been declared off, because so many of the editors have gone to Chi- cago. ——A Houtzdale man recently kil- led a rattle snake that weighed seven- teen pounds and had twenty-one rattles. The Advance thinks it was eiiher a large snake or is a correspondingly large story. ——Clearfleld papers say ‘nobody here complains of hard times. “It is no wonder. It has been so long since the place has known what good times are that nothing, however panicky, would disturb her. ——The Keystone express, on the Pennsylvania road, made the run be- tween Altoona and Harrisburg, on last Sunday, in 145 minutes. The distance is 182 miles. Itis the fastest time on record between the two points. ——1It is delightful without the cows on thestreet. But now since they are gone cne can hardly get along our thor- oughfares for the crowds of pretty girls. It hardly seems possible that the bovine tribe should have exercised such a sub- duing influence over the feminine popu- lation. ——The Lock Haven company of the National Guard will become a signal corps. The company will be reduced to forty members who will carry small bore guns, wear dark blue uniforms and drag along enough poles, wire, ete, to put up a mile of telegraph line in a very few moments. —— While crossing the mountain, on last Friday, James McClanathan, of Centre Hall, met a large black bear. Bruin was down pretty well on the Centre Hall side of the moun- tain, but as Mr. MecClanathan was on foot, without any means of attacking it he left it pass. ——*The Hustler” will come to the opera house, on next Tuesday evening, July 8th, and give the people of our town one of the brightest, cleanest mus- ical comedies it has ever been their good fertune to witness. Remember it will be the opening of the opera house season and a good show may be looked for. —— While listening to the free show in the Diamond, on Saturday night, Gladstone, a young son of Hugh Tay- lor, fell backward off the top rail of the band pavilion, striking his head on the hard street below. He was carried into the office of Dr. Geo. F. Harris, in a semi conscious condition, where his wounds were dressed. No bones were broken, though his skull received quite a concussion. ——The Bellefonte ball club started outon its trip on Monday morning. Games have been played at Milton, where wo won 13 to 1 ; at Bloomsburg, where we won 13 to 10; at Williamsport, where the score was 6 to 5 in our favor at the end of the 8th inning, when a rank decision of the umpire forced Cap- tain Reed to take the team off the field. The game will be contested. ——A slight blaze on the roof of a small frame house occupied hy Abe Jackson and family, on east High street, called the entire fire department out on Friday morning. In turning into Al- legheny street, from Howard, the Logan steamer horses were going at such speed that driver Sam’l Guisewhite was thrown from his seat and narrowly es- caped being run over by the heavy en- gine. Only his presence of mind in holding onto the lines saved him. In that way he was dragged along until the team was stopped. ——Rev. Morris Swartz, who will be remembered by most of our readers as the youngest son of the late Dr. Geo, M. Swartz, preached in the Methodist church, in this place, on Sunday even- ing. He is a graduate of Dickinson college, at Carlisle, and is now filling a charge at West Fairview, just across the river from Harrisburg. His sermon was listened to with.a keen interest by the friends who filled the church, Dur- ing the services Loe B. Woodcock sang the “Ave Maria” and Mrs. North, of Bradford, sang “Come Unto Me” a rarely suitable selection for her rich soprano voice. WuAN Herp UxbpeEr $5000 To ANSWER THE CHARGE OF ABORTION AND MAL-PRACTICE.—The habeas cor- pus proceedings in the case of John N. ‘Whan, who has been confined in the Centre county jail since last May, charged with abortion and mal-practice on the person of Mrs. Maize Winkle- man of Nittany all, were #gain sum- moned before Judge Furst, on last Mon- day morning. The prosecution had time to prepare its side of the case and the defense did not have the easy sail- ing it had the week previous, when Judge Furst neatly got out of releasing the prisoner by granting a stay to the prosecution. The case occupied the attention of the court during nearly the whole of Mon- day. All of the witnesses that both sides could summon were called for their testimony. The commitment which was supposed to have been irregular was proven to beall right. Whan’s inter- views were given and his kit of surgical instruments were explained by Dr. Har- ris, who also gave testimony regarding the post-mortem on the body of Mrs. Winkleman, which disclosed every evi- dence of abortion. Perhaps the most damaging bit of evidence brought out was that of Ernest L. Eddy who ac- companied the prisoner as far as the Winkleman house on the day of the crime. He testified that Whan was so thoroughly disguised that no one would have known him. The evidence all in the court decided to re-commit the prisoner in the sum of $5,000. As he was unable to find boudsmen he went back to jail to await trial. A Goop CarcH.—Our stalwart Dem- ocratic friend Mr. J. I. Delong, of Blanchard, has no idea of turning fisher- man, but as an amateur in the business thinks he can coax as many bites out of the same number of bass, as any one else. One day last week, in company with Mr. John Wagner, of Milesburg he tried his luck and in just three hours landed 25 pounds of the black beauties, one of them weighing over 34 pounds. During this time, it is said that Mr. Wagner, who imagines he is a son of old Nimrod, had not found a hole worth throwing his bait into, and when the Liberty township leader had packed his fish into his basket and was ready to return home, our Milesburg friend had not experienced the pleasure of having a bite. If Mr. Delong could only capture Republicans as readily as he does bass, the majority against him, in his town- ship, wouldn't be as big each year as it usually turns cut to be. THE LUMBER BUSINESS ON THE DE. CLINE.—Says the Lock Haven Express. “A gentleman of this city, who is thor- | oughly posted on matters, pertaining to the lumber business, informed a repre- sentative of the Express that the out- look for next year’s log crop 1s not en- couraging. The mill yards are crowded with sawed lumber, for which there is | but little demand, and owing to the un- ——George W. Dry, one of Tyrone’s pioneer residents, died on Saturday, in his 83rd year. ——Call and see E. Brown Jr. stock of furniture and wall paper. —— By ail means attend the musicale given by the Methodist choir, in the opera house, next Monday evening, ——1If you want to know just wha you are buying go to Faubles. ——Have you seen E. Brown Jr’ stock of wall paper. ——The new Lutheran church, in this place, will be dedicated on Sunday, September 3rd. ~——The Passmore house, in Philips- burg, has been remodeled and now pre- sents a very attractive appearance, ——For well made clothing go to Faubles. ——The soldiers will leave for camp Potts, at Lakemont, near Altoona, where the 5th Reg. will encamp, this morning. ——Furniture at lower prices at E. Brown Jr's. than any place in Centre county. ——Lock Haven, Philipsburg and Clearfield all have the advantage of competing express lines. The Ameri- can and Adams companies both touch those towns. ——On next Monday evening there will be a musicale in the opera house. The ladies of the Methodist church are getting it up and the best talentin town will be drawn upon, as well as that from a number of nearby towns. The con- cert will be an innovation in the mus- icale circles here and every one should attend. The admission to any part of the house will be 25 and 35 cents. A SU SC A News Purely Personal, —L.J. Evans, lately of Curwensville, |is a new resident in Bellefonte. —Miss Gertrude Stonerode, of Milesbur g, iS visiting her friend, Nellie Gibbony, in Philip s- burg. —Miss Jennie Fauble, of east High street, returned from the Fair on Wednesday, eve_ ning. —Tom Brew returned from Spangler on Wednesday afternoon. He had been clerking in a store up there: —Miss Hattie, daughter of J, Fearon Mann, of this place, is enjoying herself at !Asbury Park. —A. Scott Harris, who is mining%in the Hastings region, Sundayed at his home in this Place. —DMiss Mary beveling, disbursing clerk for the Valentine Iron Co., left on Monday morn_ ing, tor a trip to Chicago. —Mrs. Dr. E. S. Dorworth and daughter Bes- sie, are spending a few weeks with* friends in the Connellsville coke regions. —Charles G. Valentine, of Atlantic City, N. J. is visiting his wife at the home of W, T. Speer, on west High street. —Mrs. Mary Gray and son, Durbin, are vis- iting at the home of her sister-in-law, Mrs, J. Edward Horn, in Philipsburg. —Mrs. John Noll, who has been enjoying settled condition of business affairs gen- erally the stock of logs put in this season for next year’s sawing will be | very small. In fact he stated that the | people of this city will see the smallest | num ber of saw logs float down the Sus- quehanna next spring that they have ever seen. Several lumbermen of whom he mentioned; as having ten to fifteen million feet this year, will not put in a log for next year’s sawing.” ——On Monday afternoon the frame | dwelling house on the farm of Eman- uel Musser, located on the pike, about | one half mile east of State College, took | fire and in a remarkably short time was reduced to ashes. When the flames | were first discovered an effort was made | to extinguish them, but all to no avail. | The building was an old frame struc- i ture and burned like tinder. The ' prompt appearance of workmen and residents about State College added much to the saving of the furniture as it was nearly all removed before the building was demolished. Mr. Musser can assign no cause for the origin of the fire, though it was apparently caused by a defective flue. He carried insurance on the building, but none on the furni- ture. ——Salvetto Grecco, an Italian resi-' dent, of Chester Hill, a suburb of Phil. ipsburg, has been arrested and taken to Altoona by United States Marshall Yerger, for opening mail addressed to other Italians, which he secured at the Philipsburg post office. It is the cus- tom to hand all the letters addressed to foreigners out, in a batch, to any who may call, whereupon they are supposed to extract only their own. Grecco took other people's also, and is now in the toils. —— George Owen, mail carrier John Wagner and Lee Woodcock left this place at 8 o'clock, on Wednesday morn- | ing, for Liggett’s dam on the Bald Eagle creek, near Eagleville. They returned in the evening with twenty , two pounds of black bass, the result of their day’s fish. An idea of the size of the fish may be had when we say that they had only eight on the string. the sights of Atlantic City for the past three | weeks is coming home Saturday. —Miss Malone, of Germantown, who had been visiting at the home of Judge Furst, on Linn street, departed on Wednesday after- noon. —Balser Weber, the Howard merchant, and candidate for Treasurer, Howard Moore, began the week by circulating among Bellefonte friends. —R. M. McGee Esq., and family, of Philadel. phia, will spend the summer in their old home, They have furnished rooms intheir house on Penn street. —Milford Luce and wife, of Centre Hall passed through town, on Tuesday, on; their way home from a visit to Altoona and; Tyrone friends. Rev. William Laurie D. D., is spending his min-surrmer vacation at Atlantic City. The Presbyterians will have services as usual dur ing his absence. —Miss Jacobs, after a pleasant visit to the Misses Valentine, cornerof Howard and Alle- gheny streets, returned toher home in West Chester yesterday morning. —Misses Susie, Nan, and Bert Collins, of Phil.delphia, are visiting their aunts, Mrs. Shoemaker and the Misses Collins, at their beautiful home just below town. —Miss Bess Parsons, of Williamsport, and Miss Jennings, of Pittsburg, two charming guests of Miss Blanche Hayes, on High street, departed for their homes on Wednesday. —Geo. T. Bushand John and Wonds Sebring left for the Fair, on Wednesday. § They took their bicycles along with them so they can join in the grand celebration which the L. A: W. will have. —Miss Marion Nevling, of Sioux City, Ia., has been visiting at Mr. Fearon Mann's. Although it is but a few yearssince Miss Nevling left Bellefonte she has mada quite a reputation as a teacher in that time. —Mr. Wilbur Twitmire and family are among the Bellefonte people who have en- gaged tents at the Juniata Valley camp meet. ing, and will leave the beginning of next week for Newton Hamilton. —Mrs. W. E. Burchfield, of Philipsburg, with her brother, Mr. Finley Shugert, of Washington, D, O,, arrived in town Wednes- day evening and are visiting at the home of "J. Dunlop 8hugert, on Linn street. —Jerome Harper and William Kelley, two dashing young society swells from the ancient and aristocratic old borough of Bellefonte, smiled sweetly on our fair ones Wednesday evening. They are ‘‘Lulus.”—Saturday’'s Ty- rone Times. —Thomas K. Morris came over from Belle- fonte on Thursday to see the game. “Tom” is thoroughly Bellefontized by this time, and can talk by the hour about their base ball club. He believes their club can beat the world.— Saturday’s Tyrone Times. —— While trying to make a kitchen fire burn faster, by pouring on kerosene, Rose Mayer, a 17 year old Russian Po- lish girl who lived with her mother and brother, in Altoona, was so frightfully burned that she can hardly recover. The accident occurred at noon on Tuesday. The girl was pouring the oil on the fire when the flames leaped out, catching her dress and burning her from head to foot. All the hair was burned off her head and she is a mass of the most painful burns. She inhaled some of the flames, thus burning her internally. She died yesterday. For well wade clothing go to Faubles, Don't forget to attend the musi- cal in the opera house, on Monday night. Mrs. Kress, of Lock Haven, Miss Robbins, of Philadelphia, Mrs. North, of Bradford and an elocutionist from Huntingdon will make up the talent from a distance. Mr. Phil. Wad- dle, Hard P. Harris and Lee B. Wood- cock, of this place, will each sing. The proceeds will be given to the Methodist church. Admission 85 cents and 25 cents. Go to E. Brown Jr's. for your wall paper. The finest assortment of clothing you have ever seen now open at Fau- bles. ——The funeral of the late Thumas Fleming, who died at his home near the mine bank recently, was held on Tuesday afternoon. Rev. Robert E. Wright, rector of St. John’s P. E. church officiating, and the large cortege of mourners attested the great esteem in which the deceased was held by all who knew him. ——Punxsutawney has legislated against the small boy nuisance. All youngsters found on the streets after 8 :30 in the evening will be arrested, unless they produce positive proof that they are on an errand. —— “The Hustler” comes to the opera house, on next Tuesday night, with everything new, from beginning to end. The caste is a strong one and being led by John Kernell something good may be looked for. ——We never consider an article sold until the customer is perfectly sat- istled. You can at any time have your money in exchange for any goods bought at Faubles. ——The following letters remain uncalled for in the Bellefonte P. O. June 24, 1893. Mrs. Sue Glenn, Jno. Landell, Marinette Manro, David J. Neiman, Thomas Ralston, Agt. Wide Awake, Jacob E. Wilson, When called for please say advertised. J. A. FIEDLER, P. M. Benner Township Caucus, The Demoeratic eaucus for the township of Benner, Centre county; will be held in the Distriet Attorney's office, in the Court House, in Bellefonte, on Saturday afternoon, Aug. 5th between the hours of 2and 6p. m. to elect three delegates to attend the County Conven- tion. A full attendance is desired. Danier HEckmAN. Chairman, fot —— Great cash sale of stiff hats brown, light brown, tan and black. 150 hats now $1.00 200 ¢¢ “ 1.50 250-800 « 2.00 For Men and Boys MontcoMERY & Co. The, Standing of the Clubs. The standing of the River League clubs to date is as follows : WON. post. P.C. Demorests 4 2 666 Renovo..... 5 2 J14 Bellefonte 5 3 625 Tyrone...... 2 5 285 Bloomsburg. 0 1 000 Milton........coieieiiees wre 0 3 .000 #Game on August 2nd contested between Bellefonte and Williamsport. Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by Gro. W. Jackson & Co: The following are the quotations up tosix o'clock, Tor evening, when our paper oes to press : Nite! Wheab....iuimiiinnsimmssinesas | 50 Old wheat,« per bushel... Rye, per bushel......u.... Corn, ears, per bushel.... Corn, shelled, per bushel... Oats—new, per bushel.......... Barley, per bushel........... Ground Plaster, per ton......... Buckwheat per bushel. Cloverseed, per bushei Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co Potatoes'per bushel .............ccooniiniisee 80 Eggs, per dozen.... rss . 1214 Lard, per pound v 12 CountryShoulde; 12 ides 12 Hams 14 Tallow, per pound. 4 Butter, per pound.. 18 ——— The Democratic Watchman. Published every Friday morning, in Belle fonte, Pa., at $2 per annum (if paid strictly in advance); $2.50, when not paid in advance, an $3.00 if not paid before the expiration of the year; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearage is paid, except at the option of the publisher. . Papers will not be sent out of Centre county unless paid for in advance. A liberal discount is made to persons adver. ising by the quarter, half year, or year, as fol. ows : SPACE OCCUPIED. 3m | 6m 1y One inch (12 lines this type.........|8 5 [$ 8 |§ 11 Two InChes .cuscvsrrvcisrcrasmnsrnenss 7110] 18 Three inches... | 10°] 15 | 20 uarter Column (434 inches)....... 12120] 80 alf Column ( 9 inches)..... .| 20 One Column (19 inches) 55 | 100 Advertisements in special column, 25 pe cent, additional. Transient advs. per line, 8 insertions......20 cts Each additional insertion, per line.......... § wocal notices, per line.......uuevesvennee . Business notices, POF HNO. imrinninsaenis 10 cts. Job Printing of overy kind done with neat. ness and dispatch. The Warcmman office has been refitted with Power Presses and New Type, and Sversihing in the Printing line can be axecuted in the most artistic mannerand s the lowest rates. Terms—CASH. All letters should be addressed to P. GRAY MEEK, Proprietor