MM SXE SENTHE FRED EITSTt Iditer. 0 Centre Hall, Pa., Nov, l7^2L_ TERMS.—The CrRTB* lb" Txa i* published weekly at IK per F advance, or $2,60 when not paW ia ad vance. Alalfyoarly *d ecooie. ftcriptlons at the same rat*- Blag 1 Advertisements $1.60 per square (H> iino) for' hree insertion*. Aa^" u for a longer period, at a reduced rate. Ru*in card* of five lines. ye*r Communication* recommending .or office, 6 cent- per line c tion* of h private nature and obituary no tices exceeding five tinea. ve ssnu per line. Business notice* in local column IV cents per line, for one insertion. Notices of death* and marriage* inserted free of charge. Our triend*. in all paruo' the county will oblige by sending u* local ii,em* of interest from their respectivetocai- The figure* set to the add rest upon each subscribes** paper indicate that the subscription i* paid up to such date, ana answer the same a* a i ecelpt. Pcr*on* re mitting by mail, or otherwise. wiU under-. stand mini a change in these date* that the money ha* been received Poor Mexico. The country of the Moutexuiua a, if would seem, will never get rid of in ternal war. The latest advices from Mexico tell of anarchy, revolution, ra june and murder. News from the capital, dated Oct. 30., rays, that an archy prevails in mauy State* of Mex ico. The revolution in Nuevo Leon still continues. The revolutionary movements are spreading in other provinces. The Revolutionists in Za catacas have invaded the State of San Luis Potosi. Numerous bauds of men are sacking villages and haciendas in the States of Hidalgu, Mexico, and in the Federal district Robberies are committed in sight of the gates of the city. The authorities of the State of Oaxeoo have neglected to promulgate the re-election of Juarex. Our readers may with to know what has become of tbe movement in fisvor of Thomas A. Scott for president. We can say that it has not died out, but on tlje other hand seems to be gaining strength. Many democratic papers have expressed themselves strongly in favor of making Mr. Scott the nomiuee, particularly tbe Cincin* nati Enquirer, which has published a strong ami able article in his favor. Mr. Scott would undoubtedly be popu far, and thore is no doubt about hie democracy, it is vouched for that he never cast any other but a democratic vote: and that he possesses great ad ministrative and executive ability, needs no endeavor to show, as his whole, life, since he has attained to manhood, is abundant proof of it. Thomas A. Scott is no second rate man; he has done more to foster the great railroad entcrprixcs of- the Uni ted States, than any fifty men living, and look at the results of bis labors — the country has been built up, by a development of its resources, the aril* dernes has been opened and made easy for imigration, and towns and cities almost numberless have been called into existence, as if by magic, throngh operations of Col. Scott In short, it is doubtful whether there is a man now living, between Maine and California, to whom the country is more indebted for real, substantial benefits, aud for what it has gained in solid advance ment, inside the last fifteen years, than to Col. Thomas A. Scott, and should he he the democratic nominee, we would cheerfully work for his elec tion. In a solemn proclamation, under date of the third instant, President Grant corrects the error in placing Marion county, South Carolina, under the suspension of the habeas corpus. He says he has ascertained that un lawful combinations do not exist there to the extent asserted in his former proclamation. Union county, which was omitted in the former ukase, is to be placed under martial law at the close of five days. Grant's Thanksgiving Proclamation must bare been written by himself. It has all the ambiguity of a speech of the ex-Emperor Napoleon, and gives signs of intellectual acquirements of of which the best expression is silence- This perspicuous document says that "the calamities of some should be an occasion of rejoicing to the many who have been more favored," while tbe "people"are recommended to invoke the Divine protection and kindness "for their lew fortunate bretbern." We agree weth tbe Louisville Cou rier-Journal that tbe administration has a queer way of showing that it is no respcctor of persona —Pardoning Boxven, and prosecuting Brighani Young. gome of the leading democrat* of New York are in favor of nominating Chas. O'Conor for tbe presidency. A very excellent man, an honest and faithful president would he make. There is no duller blunder, says a writer in Harper's Weekly, than the suppositon that the schemers and, trick sters and unscrupulous men of a party are in* shretvdest ©anagers, and that honor and decency are impracticable in |)liticß. And the writer in Har jier is right. Says the Morning Patriot: It is reported that the Hon. Famuel Jos ephs was a perfonalappiicant for the par don of Irwin, the radical deputy sheriff of Fhildelphia, who was recently convicted of extorting illegal feet. That fact need not have had any influence on an hone>t governor. Soiue people may know what kind of a fellow this Sam Josephs is—a prelly hard case, and ten years a mem ber of the legislature; but not all may know who was "Sam Joseph's candidate for speaker." Inferior lawyers, sometimes bring reproach upon their noble profession by insulting witnesses, and it is then comforting to see them disagreeably rebuked. A Mr. Watson, of Indiana, when a witness requested leave to go to her sick husband, answered no ; if her husband died she could easily get another. The woman then slapped his face in open court, and the verdict was that it served him right. Again in a court in Philadelphia the judge fined a lawyer $25 for declaring that a witness was guilty of perjury. -In this country, then, witnesses have some rights that lawyers must respect. The ties that connect business men with the public—advertise. A Governor who Doe* hl Duty. The fccU as to the killing of Thom as W. Grcwvenor by an extemporised sentinal in Chicago we havs a I remit published, and we arc not surprised that Gov. Palmer has required tho law officer* of the State to have tho case judicially investigated. Ho has writ ten a letter to too Attorney General of lllinoi*. showing that the Mayor of Chicago had no authority to raise troops or to cetabliah military law there; and thi letter he conclude* with the following word*. "It is not ntccasary in determining upon the line of duty to be adopted to inquire whether the Mayor of l htca go, Lieut-Gen. Sheridan, and Frank f. Sherman and hi* associate* and sub ordinates, who were the agent* by which the death of Thomas " • tiros venor was produced, in assuming now ers they did not nossesa, and which cannot be conferred upon them, were influenced by proper or imporpor mo livee or purpose*. They awumed to ruspcud ths optretiou of thd CootUlu* tiou and lawa of the State, aud übeti lute in their etead law and military force to be defined and appointed by themselves. They, by their la *1 we acts, atUcknl and insulted the dignity and authority of the State, and have, by their daugerous example, weakened the public confidence in the Contilu tiou end law*; and in their attempt to enforce usurped and lawless authority, they have aaorificed the life of a Peace able ciliseu. Auimated by the confi dence I have thu* expressed, and con fident in the belief that the Slate of Il linois, acting through the projier de triment* ol" iU governmeut, i* c*l* ble of protecting it* own people und of enforcing the dignity wd authority of it* own law*, 1 have to request that you, in conjunction with the Mate * Attorney of the Seventh Circuit, will briug all the facta before the Graud Jury of Cook county, in order that all (teraoo* concerned in the unlawiul kill ing of Thouia* W. Grosvenor may he brought to a psedy trial." The iwasona here given by the Gov ernor are moat weighty aud cogent; and we do not doubt that they will hare the approval and support of thinking men everywhere. ( harlt* A Dana on tbe Situation. Li norm's Amrfaift Soertiury •/ War Comp.i ret Grant vitk Tweed. The New York Sun, of the 9th pub lished the followiog editorial, double leaded : All other queatious that have hith erto divided the Amrricao people dis appear before this one: Can public corruption be stopped? Can public robbery be put down ? Can jxilitical frauds be suppressed and prevented ? Can bribery and present-taking be banished from political affair* ? Ten years ago the great question was slavery. It was settled through the war of the rebellion, with its im mense losses of life and treasure and its gigantic heritage of public debt Since then other questions growing out of tbe war have arisen, bortunateiy, they are now all Ibded and cleared away ; and there is no other subject to distract the attention of the people from this one supreme is sue : Can robbers, thieves, bribe givere. bribe takers, present takers and otacial blackmailers oe driven from power and honest men put in their places? Can the fatal svstem of corruption now so universal be brought to a close, and a svstem of honesty, frugality and puri ty be substituted in its place ? If onr public affairs continue for five years longer upon the same downward course as they have done for five year* since the closo of the rebellion, wc shall no longer have a country to be proud of; and the great American experi ment of selt government, in which the hopes of all humanity were bound up, will end in rottenness and shame. This is not a matter to be disposed of by either of the existiug parties. Both of them are alike in a state of pu trefaction, and no spirit of life and of safety can come forth from either. If the Republic is to be raved at all, tbe work must be done in tbe nation as it was done in this city on Tuesday. Upright and patriotic men of all parties must combine for this exclusive pur pose. Democrats and republcan- must forget their old quarrels, and strike hands in one united effort. What are the difference* of opinioo and of policy that have hitherto separated them, compared with this one all-embracing, all-absorbing danger? And of what use will it be to them to continue to call themselves republicans or demo crats if all that is worth living for in our free institutions is destroyed by robbers like Tweed and present-takers and corrupters of tbe public conscience like Grant. HOT A PARTY TRIUMPH. The New York Tribune of the 9th rays that "in New York party organ izations coalesced, and the grand Re form victry was the joiut triumph of honeit democrats ana bouest republi cans against tbe thieves." In another article it rays: "It is a great and in apiring triumph ; but it is a triumph of People rather than Party. We have no desire to claim for any politi cal organisation in this city the fruits of a victory which has beeu the result of the uprising of a great people." Mr. Greeley's candor will hardly be relished by the minions of Grant, who loudly boast of the result in New York as an administration victory. A Model Congreeaman. Washington, October 26.—For the past three months tbe government de tectives have been on the track of a number of southern bounty swin dlers. A whole nest of these has been dis covered in Tennessee under the leader ship of ex-Congressman Btoken, work ing in collusion with a respectable clerk in the second auditor's office. The latter, who is named Victor G. Powell, was arrested last night nnd held in SIO,OOO bail, which has not yet been procured. Mr. Stokea was arrested this after noon, but was afterwards released on $15,000 bail. The amount involved is over $60,000. There are other well known politi cians connected with this scheme whose names are withheld to enable the detectives to arrest them, all radi cals of course, Petition from Morman Women Fity Feet Long. Tbe character of the petition irom Utah, fifty feet long and signed by about twenty-five huudred woman of that territory, was unintentionally misstated. Instead of being "against, it is in "favor" of polygamy, aud was sent to the executive mansion by Delegate Hooper. The petitioners say their husbands, fathers, sons, and brothers are now being exposed to the murderous jxilicy of clique of federal officers intent on the destruction of an holiest, happy, industrious aud prosper ous people; and they therefore ask for the removal of the federal disturliers of the peace, or, at least, to stop the disgraceful court proceedings, or send candid and reliable men to I tah to in- i veetigate the queelion of the conetitu tiouai rights and liberty of the people. The petitioners express then approba tion of polygarov, asserting i hat it was •auctioned by Christ's teaching*, and that the institution is living perverted by federal officer*. S Kcverdj Johnson* Speech. How, KrvirOy Johnson, l*li\ ured * very ahls speech at Baltimore, on the 2nd inl , from which make the following el tract; There is one consideration, however, of a general nature which *houhl persuade the people that the party in p.-wer, legis lative and executive, have no:. since the termination ot'ihe war, wisely uduiinUteriHl the government. Hie war ended in April, 18tl&, Since then no body of men, nor. so far as 1 know, any individual man, has raised his arm against the authority of the United Stales The judiciary ofthe United States was alni.wt at once reinstated in each of the Stales which had been in rebellion, end they have ever since administered their I unction-, not only without reals tauce, but without the show resistance. All the fori- in these Stat -s have re mained in the quiet potessioii of the gov ernoienl. Our commercial marine visits every Southern port without opposition, and is as safe there as in any of the Other ports of the country. The law of the U nl ted States have been administered without opposition, and the general acknowledg ment of'he authority of the lulled Stales aud of the duty of allegiance has every where prevailed. Each of th>-e Stale* is now represented in both brandies of Con greas. Each has its governor, legislature, and judiciarr. and has enacted and admin tered iU own laws, recognisiug throughout the paramount authority of the Union. Notwithstanding ail this they are now üb tctvd, not onlv to oppressive laws, but to wt which 1 think are in direct conflict with the Constitution of the United State*, and in their nature destruc tive to the liberties of the people. So far from this conduct having brought about a restoration of good leeiir.g, which could have been accomplished by friendly and constitutional measures, the p.ople of on* of those State- are now subjected to the greatsst conceivable oppression, and are denied rights which, ia the nioet express and unambiguous terms, arc guaranteed by the Constitution And the Mates them selves are practically treated at if they were not Stale- of the V nion and a* sucn entitled to all the power* not c< uferred up on the general government—powers be long to them by force of of the I .institution itself—the Constitution expressly provid ing that "the powers not delegated to the United State* Vv the Constitution, nor pro hibited by it to the State*, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." Now a word or two more to show that the particular measure that I have in view,-, and the manner in which the l're*idenl i* carrying it out, are at war with the Con stitution, and inconsistent with every idea of civil and political liberty. The measure is the act of Congress, AKh of April, 1871, called the Xu-Klux law. Its title is "An set to enforce the provisions of the four teenth amendment to the Con-titution of of the U. 8. and for other purpusea." It will be siren that the only authority assert ed for this law Is the tourtecMh amend ment. Of the meaning of that amendment I shall hereafter speak. But let me first show you what the provision in the law is which is now being enforced by the Presi dent in certain portions of South Carolina After giving to individuals whose right* under the fourteenth amendment may be violated a civil action against the wrong doer for the recovery of damages, and making such wrong-doer liable to a crimi nal prosecution, it provide* that in certain cases mentioned in the section the alleged offense* "shall beemed a rebellion against the United State#," end during the exis tence of such supposed rebellion and with in the limits where it may exist, "the Pres ident, when in hi* judgement the public safety shall require it, is authorised "to suspend the privilege* of the writ of habeas corpus, to the end tnal such rebellion may be overthrown." It will be seen from the title of the act that the only warrant assert ed for it isthe fourteenth amendment. The inference from thia is, that in the judge ment of Congrees, independent ot that amendment, no such authority could be found Now, this being conceded, let me for a moment examine into the meaning of that part of the fourteenth anointment ro iled upon. By a clause in the tirst section, in connection with the fifth ac tion. Con gress has assumed the power to pass the act. By thai part of the first -return it provided that No State shall make or en force any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizen* of the United Sute*. nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without duo process of 'aw ; n->r deny to aay person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws," by tbe fifth section, "Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriste legislation the provisons of tho article." It will thus be seen that what is prohibited in the portion of the tirst section quoted is that no State" shall do the act* prohibited. Before 1 proceed to consider the meaning of this section, I cull your at tention to the terms of the fourth section of tbe act. By the ninth section .f the first article of tbe Constitution it is declared "that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspend'*! unless when in esses of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it" In commenting upon this clauc, Story says: "It would seem, at the power it given to Concre* to suspend the writ of habeas corpus in the cases of rebellion or invasion, tliat the right to judge whether the exigency had arisen must exclusively belong to that body." Now, whether this be absolutely true, and that they cannot confer the power upon the President, yet it i* obvious that to do so in a measure defeat* the object of the prohibition, a* it practically leaves to the President to ae< id* upon the existence of the exigency, lie is, in other w >rds, to de termine not only whether a rebellion or an invasion prevails, but whether the public safety require* the suspension >f the writ How formidable this power ii, and how dangerous to the liberty of the citizen it may be when ri sted in one man, howov ,er exalted hi* official position, must be ob vious. Without, however, denying that the power may be delegated to the Presi dent, one thing would seem to be perfectly clear, that the privilege of the writ cannot be denied to the citizen unless there be in fact a rebellion or an invasion and the pub lic safety demands the denial. Can it for a moment he reasonably maintained that tbe fact of the existence of either rebellion or invasion is to depend upon the mere will of Congress or the will tbe President? This is also certain, that Congress, if it ha* the authority to delegate the power to the President, can only authorize biir. to sus pend the writ when there is, in the sense of the prohibitory olause of the Constitu tion, a rebellion or an invtoion. The meaning of those two terms now is whnt it was when the Constitution wa. adopted. Neither that clause nor any other in the Constitution gives to Congress the right to define what rebellion is, and by such defi nition to make it what it is not according to its ordinary and wail-understood meaning. A different doctrine would givo to Con gress the power to escape entirely from the prohibition. If they can deeltire that the acts specified in the third section of the statute constitute "a rebellion against the government of the United States there is no limit to their power to defeat the obvious design of tne clause. I have not time to quote the acts specified in the section* referred to, but many of them are clearly not within the meaning of the term rebellion as used in tho constitution. Re bellion, in the sense of the Constitution, mean* revolt, rising, insurrection, or, in other words. Insurrection against lawful authority. Now, there is not the least evi dence to show- certainly none has been laid before the country—that there was any insurrection of revolt against the authority of the general or .State government in South Carolina. Outrages have, perhaps, been geipetraled upon individuals in the tale, as they have been and w-ill be upon individuals in every Slate. Kor their redress the law* of the State and of United States afford a remedy. This very statute gives such a remedy to the parties who may be agr.cved, ana subject* the of fender to a criminal prosecution. There it not enly nothing to show that the Stale courts of tbe United States have not the power to enforce these reinedies, but, on tbe contrary, no process of oitlu-r of these courts has been resisted by arms, or resisted at all. indeed, as is now seen, there has been no difficulty in making arrests. So far from there being interference by force with this authority, the statement is thnt hundreds are flying from the State to avoid thu illegal captures which are now making, and the imprisonment consequent thereup on—an imprisonment from which they cannot he released by virtue of any legal remedy. Tbe arrests are made without any warrant coming from any judical of ficer known to the constitution, and the prisoner is not informed of tbe cause of hit arrest, is not afforded the security which the Constitution provides of a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, but he is subjected entirely to the will ami pleasure of the President und his officei*. And one thing more would seem to he Pirfectiy evident, that to authorize the resident to interfere by force in any of the States, another provision of the Consti tution must be complied with. The mem bers of the convention by whom it was framed, and thu members of the several State contentions by which it was adopted, were most sollicitous to exemptStatesfrom the power of the United States in all case* over which the States bad jurisdiction. They were, therefore, careftil to prohibit the government of the United States from | interfering by force of arms with thu legal [jurisdiction of the States, and permitted it only in one condition ol thiiig~-th< ex- b intcnvs ot invasion or deniMlit- violence,; The language ot the provision it that the United State* "shall protect each of litem" (the States) ' against invasion, and. on ap-) plication of the Legislature, or of the Kx-j ooutive (when the Legislature cannot be convened), against domestic violence ' Under this latter authority, I'ongrot* pass ed the act of Mh Fwltuary, 174h\, by which it is provided (the restriction of the Uon •ttution being reserved) that in case of an insurrection in any State against the gov ernment thereof, It nhntt be lawful fur the! President, when ealhd U|an by the State Legislature, when in o**ton, or by the ex ecutive during tlie recess, to ue such force a* he may dtein necessary to suppf> the Insurrection. The statesmen of wi were csrefol to ob*ei ve all the limitation* on the |M>w er* of the general gov t-mnient, and not to interfere with an\ >l the power* be longing to the State*. In pa*>ing the net under which the l'rwideul i* now proceed ing in South Carolina, thi* constitutional security afforded the Htate* of not having the armed power of the general govern ment to suppress domestic violence within its limits, unless applied tor by the govern ment of the State' t* totally disregarded. Congress, in the first place, by the acL de cide* for Itself when lire force of the I'lil ted State* is to be used, and the President is to decide for hiui*etf whether it i* to he use t or not. lie mav, therefore, ue it, slid Conger** may authorise him to ue it, not only without the request of the Stale, but agaiusl Its protest. Can any Olio fail to see that this it not only a v lolatioii of the constitution, but necv-**rtly serve* to make the United State* a consolidated and centralised government and, IfMqu ill by the people, will vest in Coligre** ami the President every politicsl |H'Wi-r, ami thus defest tliu*de tared purp*>*e of the con- 1 sUlUtion. and sooner or later be lalat to lib erty itself It seem* to me inCompr- tieti • ible that Coligre** should have suppose J they had authority to pass the law In quest ion under the filth section of the fourteenth amendment. That, certainly, doe* not, in express words, give such a power, slid 11 think it may be considered a> certain that if it bad, in terms, given it, the amend ment never would have been ratified The word- used are, "Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provision* of this article." Can it be maintained that the mean* which Congre-s is authorized to adopt are to be any every meant without any constitutional restric tion" Congress, under this provision, can, it is true, legislate, but csn they legislaiu iu utter di-egard of every constilitutional limitation upon its power This can hare ly be pretended. Indeed, the provision clothes Congress, with no power which it) would not have possessed without It , but this power, whether implied or granted betaken in sifbordinstion to the express limitation* upon it* authority, and these are that the rightful power* ot the Slabs are not to be interfered with—that the guaranteed rights of the citizen* are not to be violated and as one of the securities of these right* that the privilige ol the writ of habeas corpus is not to be Uehlt-d to him in lime of peace, and w hen there is no • armed resistance on hi* part, in coqlunc lion with others and in IM- State, which,! in view of the Constitution amount* to re . bullion or insurrection, and the public safe ty require* to be suppressed by force of anus The effect or the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and declaration <;f martial law i* to place the its citi zen* without any security, constitutional or otherwise. For, a* was correctly slate-. od by the Duke of Wellington, "martial law i* no law at all." It ■* the mere wilt 1 of the commauder,,and during it* contin uance is an unmixed, de*p.Hi*ui. Can the people of the United State- be so blind, and so forgetful of the duties which they owe to the men who achieved our freedom at any longer to permit a outiuuance iu i power of the party bv which such a law hat been enforced. It ba been said by nu Englishman thai our people are more in different to the importance and value of the writ of habeas* corpus than his country men. for our* did not, as hit did. obtain it by force; in other words, jig At far if. Ine right* secured by our Constitution *:e iu substance, but transcript of the ctmsti tutional right* of England, and especially is that the case with regard to the writ of habeas corpus. Many of these rights are in England's great charter, which was ob tained, sword iu hand, from King John ; and our constitutional provision in relation to the writ in question is taken, almost in words, from habeas corpus act of Char le* 11. I feel satisfied that if •uch a law as the one I have examined, and such an ex>- cution of it as is now going on in South Carolina, was passed by the English Par liament, and was enforced by the govern ment, the peopto of the country w.>u>d with one voice drive from jmwrr ail tlio parties concerned ;n it. Are American* [essdevoted to liberity than the subjects of Iter majesty 7 Can we who often boast, and heretofore with truth, that we are amongst the freest, il not the freest, people on earth, submit to suck legislation, or will we not, when the prop, r tune come* to speak through the ballot-box, with one voice discard from power those who have abused and are abusing the most sacred S revisions of our Constitution and the carcst right* of freemen? 1* not the right which i* now being denied ta South Carolina one of the most vita! to political and civil freedom ? l>oe* li! crty exist anvw here x> here such a right is d - nied ? It must be very clear to the . >m prehension of any reflecting man that it cannot. In the word* of Hiackstone, biro telf the advocate of strong government and the warm and able •upporter of the prerogative* of crown, in referring to the value of the writ. "If it were once left in the power of any, the highest magistrate to imprison arbitrarily whomever he or his officer* thought proper ( in France it is daily practiced bv the crown), there would toon be an end of all other right* and im munities. There are various other view# in which the question I have discussed might be presented and enforced, hut I have not tne time to lay them before vou 1 believe that I have xai't enough to con vince any reflecting and impartial mind that the act of Congress of April 20, 1871. in the particular* to which I have referred and the President's course under it, have no warrant in the constitution, and are de structive of the right* of the Htates and of individual citizen*. CORRESPONDENCE. —-o Sketch of the Early History of the Moravians- LA> AYKTIK COLI.KJJK, Kikliik I*4. Nov. 9th 1871.- Dear Editor:-In my lat 1 promised, in connection with Bethlehem the Moravian town in Northampton coun tv, to give a few fact* in connection with the history of the United Brethren church In the ninth century, a sister of the king of Bulgaria, vu earned to Comtantinople a* a prisoner and became a christian ; and through her means, on her return to her native land, a church, of which the king of Moravia and Duke of Bohemia weru mem bers, was established. A part of these churches were forced Into the Itotnan church, but a select few refused to bow the knee and do homage to tho power at Home. This little remnant, adhering tc the sim ple doctrine* of the primitive church, suf fered many prosecutions for several centu ries and were at tat permitted to live in a wasted provinco of Moravia. Ifere they established a church in 1157, on what they denominated the "Rule and Law of Christ and finally called themselves "Unita* Fratriuui," or "I'nitod Broth#rn." They were a pure and sound evan gelical church a century before the reformation of Luther, and were not in in timate connection with the Wnldenas*. who have been preserved uncorrupled from the day* of the apostles. In 1720 they re moved to Georgia and established mis sion*; but refusing to take up arms in de fence of the colony, were obliged to leave and aought qn asylum in the peaceful do mains of WiHian Penn. about tho year 1789. Rev. George Wbitcfleld, who had labored in conjunction with them in Geor gia, had begun to erect a|lnrge building in the "Forks of the Delaware," II a school for negro children, to which he gave the name of Nazareth. At his request the Bretheren undertook to finish the building, though attended with great danger the Indian* refming to quit the country and threatened to murder them; they were compelled t< leave it in 1740. Some time after tho Brethnrn purchased tho "Manor'' house, at Nazareth, from Mr. Whitfield, and finished the house. Bethlehem and Nazareth continued to in crease and prosper; new Hrcthern came from other stations to labor here, and many believing Indians were baptized. Bethlehem became a eentral and controll ing station from which the liretaeru took instruction front thu elders on thuir depart ures from lime to time, for the different out-po-ts of the mission on tho upper Le high, Susquehanna and eventually in the distant wilds of tho Allegheny and Ohio rivers, Little villiages of christian In dians, Huts of Grace, lluts of Mercy, liuts ofpeace were organized at various point*. 8o frequent were tho visits of (lie mis sionaries and christian Indians to Susque hanna, that a beaten path was soon run across Nescopock mountains, between Gnudenliutten und Wyoming. Among those baptized in I"/** was one La-dcus cund, called honest John by the English. His baptism was delayed some time because ofiiis wavering disposition, buthnving boon once present at a baptism, he said to one of the Brethern ; "I am distressed that the time is nqtyet coine that 1 shall be baptized in the blood of Christ." He received the sacrament soon afler, hut finally showed tiiat the doubts of the missionaries, con cerning his steadiness, were too well foun ded. He was like a reed shaken with the wind, and when a scheme was laid to in duce the. Christian Indians to remove out of the settlement, in order that the oth ers might fall upon the Brethern with the exterminating knife, he * otio of the; iiiosi active in the work. The defeat of Rraddoek, the following year, brought a desolating spirm of a age warfare on the ( whole frontier. Many while settlements near the lllue nuHiuliiMis were cut olf and (he poor lirvthern and Indian* nltinaden hutt. n did not escape. The Moravians and tuelr Indian converts wore in danger be-/ I ween two lire#. The hostile Indians ware burning and ravaging their villages on The Lehigh. tin the oilier hand. Ihe Irish | of the K iltatiniiy valley viewed with jealous eye, liot without some tensed, the ussyliiiti ntferded to parties of hostile Indian* at the . liri-llsit Indian village ns they passed j 'it'k and forth through the country. 11l was charged, 100, against the llreiheru, that they would not lake up arm* against the common enemy slid in defence of the colony, and falsely charged that they wore tu league w Ith the French It was difficult \ tu eon v nice men enraged mid exasperated at the lu ofthelr families, that the charge* were not true. They openly threatened to) exterminate the Indian convert* and it was (dangerous for friendly Inilo# to hum in ihe woods. The missionaries themselves,, were insulted and abused. Under these circumstance*, the affrighted Indian*,! wlioe towns bad been burnt, took refuge; nl Bethlehem. The Moravian establishment* were a, great obstacle to tile design* of the hostile Indians, silica they could not persuade the friendly Indian* to destroy the missionary town*. Hoinetlines well disposed Indians, hearing of a plot, would walk mites during ,n whole uigiil to inform the Brethren ui [their schemes, and lliut tliey were defeat li-d Great numbers of the distressed while ' -ellliir* found refuge in the Moravian settle ! mcnts. Hundreds of wonu n and children . ante even fr-on distant places, crying and 'hedging tor shelter, some uluioal destitute, ha* lug left their nil mid Had in the night. Some Brethren, going in their wagons to fetch Corn from the mill, byond the Blue mountain*, were met by great numbers ol white people iti distress, tin- savages having j attacked their luwu*, burned their dwell ing, and murdered many. The Brethren loaded their wagons with these people and brought tii< ui to their home*. Atler the treaty at Huston, in 1758, it was determin ed to hold a grand council at l'liilndidphis, for the purpose of making a general pence with all the Indian tribes, and It la-came necessary to dispatch a messenger to ibe hostile tribes on the Ohio Tins was a dan gerous errand, but christian Frederick I'ost, one of the Brethren, undertook it, and alter going twice, was successful ill ills I mission. In I To 1 * lie arrived at Bethlehem with the deputies nlld llirnee proceeded with thorn to Philadelphia The journal ,> !' I'osl, a most interesting narrative, is (published in the appendix to 1 rad's his tory of Pennsylvania. A'l the property at Bethlehem formerly belonged to the Moravian society, who leased out lot* to members of their own community and communion. K*ch individual, when of age, became a voluntary subscriber to the ; rule* of the society, with the right of with drawing hint self at pleasure. 11l each ease lie was required to dis|a>s of his property and remote Ironi the town. Ksch member ) pursued hi* occupation on hi* own private ; account, but if any particular trade suffer-1 id, on account of too great competition, the society would not permit a new coin-> , pctilor, although of the same faith, to couic i Ito the town. This secured to all aeompe-i tency. Bethlehem was perhaps the only) town in the United State* in wbieb the common pro|a-rty plan wa< successfully i . arried on for any length of time—morel than a hundred year*. It is remarkable ; that there was not a single lawyer in the place, nor wa* there one needed. Our next will be devoted to Eu*t„n. PAFL WAXD. llow the Two Purl lP* Treat the SroundrelK. The Hrouk lyti Kagle say*: We have referred to this humiliating rpct-Ucle to illtistrnlu lite licpublicnu I way <>f dealing with the corruptioniat* in their own ranka. Honest Kepubli 'can* must now ndiuit that the (trccley campaign ugninst Murphy and hts swindle* amounts t nothing at all.! It ha* completely failed success., Tora'Morphy oompeU his traducor to) preside over his owu meeting, to otuti tenance and co-otieratc in servile praise of Ciraut, mi i praise of the ac tion and nominees of the Murphy Con vention. The Republican party sur renders Li its own scoundrels, and Greeley the Joiidest to denounce is tne I first to capitulate. On the contrary, , mark how the deniocrats proceed ugain.-t the seoundrela in their rank*! Here is the tiohle record : Santuel J. Tihlen and Win. F.Havemeyer. Dent >crats, protect the treasury by getting ) Andrew* H. tireen, a democrat, made Deputy and Acting Comptroller. Andrew 11. Green, Democrat, causv-a the arrest and committmcut of voucher thieves The Rochester Democratic Convention exclude the Tammany Delegates and reorgmme party ma chinery in New York. Attorney Gen eral Champlaiu and Juo. T. Hoffman Governor both l>emocrat.*, prosecutor of the frauds and thieve*. Chas. O' Conor, Democrat, on the affidavit of Samuel J. Tilden, Democrat, firings Wm, M. Tweed, the Murphy of De mocracy, branded into Court, to be tried for hi* crimes. The Democratic press and orators of the country over, not only denounce hut they are the only onca to call for the punishment of the seoundrela. The Democrat* of the Union have fumed (he raacal* out ,oftheir rank* and given them hand cufied into the clutches of the law. This action, added to the injunction of the Democratic Judge, Geo. F. Human), procured by John Fooler, Democrat, all show that the Demo crats punish their scoundrels, while l the Republicans.lake tliem to their bosom and kiss their sores till they glisen like diamonds. let this differ ent treatment by the different parlies of (heir similar rascals teach voters which side to support. Hon. Wm. M Evarts Denouiicps Dishonest Mcu. In replying to an invitation to ad ilroetlie kcpublicun* of Broome ooun tv. New York, the Hon. William M. Fvart* threw a heavy bombshell at un worthy candidates for office gonnrally, as fellows: "The favor with which you look upon my efforts in the cause of com mon honesty, and earnings of thegreat mass of our people against the rapine aud plunder shown by asking mo to address you at this time and on this subject, justifies me earncs'.ly urging you not to underrate the weight and ! completeness or the issue as made up for your suffrages. Upon this issue every candidate fur the suffrags of the people for a place in the Senate or As sembly should be free from the least taint in the past, from the ienst fear : for the future. If any candidate ia in 'the field of wh.m this is not t rue. let in dcpetideiit nominations lie made to meet thisditticnlty. If of the two can didates of th< opposite parties one be clearly honest aud courageou* and the other knavish nml uncertain,let no par tv considerutionsordUtinctions prevent a conceit rt at ion of votes upon the, wor thy candidate. The people of this State are tired of the government of rascals 'without distinction of party,' und now demand holiest und incorrup tible men without distinction of par ty. "The whole question is in a nutshell. We lire free to choose whom wo will to the Legislature, nnd the legislature which we choose has in itself substan tially, till the |>ower of the |>coplc. A fortnight of tho session of an honest Legislature can make it impossible for H knave to keep his foot In office, or even in the State itself, unles with in the walls of it jail. "Prvsa, then,all yojir efforts to this one point, ami prevent the confiagra tiou of every institution of free govern ment and every interest of society now raging in this city, even creeping tli rough the State, from covering us all with one common shame in one common ruin. ' WM. M. EVARTJ The first snow of the season fell iu Maine, on Tuesday night,covering th. ground to the depth ol two inches. Hore KmbmlluK It ap|XMtrs that General Halloch, disbursing officers of ilia Kr>•mti* Htirouu, liu*l>M*o(-tintmitliiia sotnbril- { linut financiering, as (he phrase gots, uiul JMH'U luting with bureau funds to the tuna of about a |tut rtcr of it mil lion. The Wnailing ton correspondent jof the World says : An order win iMtird from the War Department for the nrrtmt of (leu. Rut .loch, and Col. Sohriver, Inspector General, took him into custody. Hal loch ut once said that he could ac count fur the missing money, and pro ceeding to the Trotuury Depot with the officer lie produced, or the clerk* did for him, package* of eoupoti and! registered bond* uiiiinjutihg to the mm unmet), und iti Hallocb'* own name, i The officer impiirod if he had any more Hi Vestments, whereupon the clerk pro dnced another filly thousand dollar pat kagu of a*Led to explain why he had invested this money HI violation of law. To this he replies that lie had paid some colored soldier*' bounty claim* which afterward* proved to be fraudu-, lent, and he had invested in govern ment fund* toaocure interest enough to make him whole. No audi eon-! ditiou of affairs, however, ujipear* in Halloch'* accounts, ami be stand* clear on the record of receiving thous and* from ihe interest on thine bond* How long thi* has been going ou the Lord only know*. Hal loch came here! |>oor enough a few year* ago. Ho re turn* poraooal property alone includ ing his government.bond*, for $71,000.] The law covers Hal loch's ease thor-j ouglilr. aud.it remain* to Ire seen what the official* are going to do about it. | Why is n shoeblack like u clever) schoolmaster■? Uecausu he fiolishc* the understanding*. IJ dry writ* of fieri lidu, levari facias! venditioni exponas, issued out of the Court; of Com loon • tea. of Centre county, and to ; toe directed, there will be exposed to pub-) tic sale, at the court-house lit Heilefonle, on Thursday the 23rd day of November, j 1871, a> follows, to wit: The foil. t ins reel elate of defendant,! •ituate in Cotter township, Centra county, j Pennsylvania, t wit: Bounded on north) by lands of Fradertcks, cast Is>• land ol If. | roust, et. at., smith by land ol William; Mayes and on the west by land late of George Foust, dee'd, containing one hun dred and iwelvc acres more or teas, t lie re in erected a dwelling bouse, barn and taw I milt. Seised, taken into execution, and to be Isold as thr property of Stephen (iarraty. ALSO : j Ail the right title and interest of the de fendant in audio ail that certain lot of 'ground situate in Stable wn, Kuh township Centre county, lYiintylvania, bounded on the north-east by Calhoun street, on the south-east by Grant street, ou the south west by Sherman street and on the north west by lot of —— liarr. being lot No. 7 tin the plot of said village, thereon erected a two story frame dwelling house and out buildings Soiled, taken in execution and lobe .4d n* the property of Benjamin S Cram. ALSO: Ali tile right title and interest of defen dant iii and to all that certain lot of ground •ituate in Rush township. Centra county, Pennsylvania, bounded on the north cast• iby land of Morgan, Hale A Co., south by! ! lot of Jerry Reiidan alii on the west b.vj land of Morgan, Hale A Co., containing : one half acre, more or less, thereon croc-) jted a two story plank frame dwelling house iand out-building*. j Soiled, taken in elocution and to be sold at tb<> property of John Donahue. ALSO: . AH the nght, title and interest of d< f< n , dant in and to all that < .-rlain tract of land ■ -ituate in Miles township, Centre county,! Pennsylvania, bounded on the north by land of Thomas IS olf and John Sholl, east by land of if S\ \S olf and J.din Siioll, south by Ixud of J. K lUish and Jotiaib-i .in Auman and on the west by land of Pr ior Auman, containing forty two acres, i mure or less, there -n erected a dwelling boa-a, barn, tai|Uury, bark house and other out ' building*. Seized, taken in execution and lobe sold I! as the property of George M Swart/, and Martha (. Swart*. ALSO: All that certain messuagi, tenement and ; 'tract of land, situate in the township of Ferguson, Centre county, Pennsylvania. I bounded and described as follows, t> wit: beginning at a white oak corner on land of Samutl M Williams, thc.nce north 38 de- I greet ymt 186 perches to while oak, thence south :io degree* west 1021 perches to stone ! thence south *0 degrees east 141 perches t" stone, thence north 4V4 degrees east 82 J perches to a stone, thence south 86 degrees east V> 3-10 perches to a stone, thence north It degrees e ast 611 perches to place of le , ginning eontainii g ninety acrr* and al lowance, be the same more or less, togeth 'j *r with the appurtenances. . Seised, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of Julian D. William* ami i Robt. L. Williams. ALSO: 1 A two storied frame building, twenty I live feet front and sixteen feet deep situate jon a certain lot of ground in Bogg* town ship, Centre county. Pennsylvania, boun (deii on the north by a lot of James Aslon, ,on the south by a lot <>f Lewi* Fulton and on the west by land of Joseph Green, and lon the east by the railroad, fifty feet in width on railroad and running back one hundred and sixty feet. Raised tnk<'ii in exception and to be -old as the iro|iertv of William Keilerman. ALSO : The real estate of the llellefonto Glass Manufacturing Company, bounded and deseribod as follows, vix: Beginning at a post on land of M. Mackail and Win. V. riiomas. doe'd, thence south 244 degrees east to ii pott on road, thence by said road north tli degree i east 72 feet to a post, Thence north 251 degree* east :UlO feet to a post, thence north 241 degree*, wet 181 feet to a post, thence north 654 degrees east 1304 feet to u post, thence north 824 degree* east fH loet to a post, thence north 64 dngiees we*t 80 feet, thence south 214 degree* cast 00 feet, thence south 65) degrees west IIV I'eet to a post, thence north 244 degrees west 88 feet to post, thence by lands of si.id Thomas <& Martha Maeknll, south to place of begin ning; thereon erected n wwsa*aßa si J£OUHK AND LOT OR HALE. A hou.oand lot f.v r. !v at' ion Main-treat. Ar<>iiburA*, is offer*l at pri vate sale. The In tt' a '>d on", and the lot among tin !•( lu.t iww, uhh an ahundanceofrriilt ttprw"ii. A I*# lliacrw'<4 )mountain land. Fr further particular* !apply to Jo.untA H. KOXTZ, octiff. A iroii.hurg. i) arr i a r MAM FAUTDRY t'.-nire Hall, I'm. GKo II IIA It!" "TKR 11a* on had aud for *!• at the most rea sonable rate* ■ spleudi'i stock of CARRIAGES, BI GGISH, an J evary de-criplicn "f Wax •-•< blh PLAIN AND FANCY warranted to h made ,! the be-land in t [durable materials, and by the m >.t expe ' rieiieed workmen. All rU -cut .ml from j the establishment will found t" he of j the highest class suid - aV' g ite pert- t j satisfaction, li.-will n i have * five Uortment "f HLBIGHH 4 all the newest an I u l fgJliionabte jslytas well ali t eareftit? made and of the ] host material ) An i*|HHTi' rof hi* urkix iokej a* it ' is believed that none superior can be found | in the coo li try. aug2s.tf. CARD. IJ.K Caldwell - il. : Su—n, of Philadelphia, a drug,, t f tior jteen year* experience, e- as! have '-lie |charge of their pre-< rip m.l ;i:iie*. Anight bell is atta 1 to. their rt < ! r|ir. and the employee .eej mis Within the budding, will attend t" Uie * t* of the puhiic at all hours of t: • night Linn A Wilson !• • <. '■ .xotly en hand a Urge stork of Drug-. Paint-. Oils, P Iu . Tru>- j and Medical Appiia: tilt . iu t*. together v.ilh a very large .oek of Patent Modicim-'. sucli n Vinegar Bitter-, and -< Pure Wine.*, and li [ • quors, ol all kind* fr medical Virpos. ijuly 14.3n LI NN A WILSON. HOUSE AND uii OMikit The undersign i offer- at private M -ale atw o story dwelling h>.ae aud Lou on > ain Ci U C :tre II;i i, with stable and all if - ■ try • t: : . and choke fruit on the premise, and x ;- tr in the yard. The i* a* good u near. For (uther parts, ular apply to V- I> GASMAN. Ilaug tf Centra Hall qoubt i* HOC LA M .TON Wi arena the Hon. C harle- A. Mayer, I Preaiilent of ilia court • CTotumon l'loas in the 25th ludicial Di- riot, consisting ol ! the counties of Centre, t'Union and Choir tield. and Hnorabl* J. m !i '.'.erman and the Honorable William AUi-t Novrmb i M. !■ ng the 27th day of Nov. 1871. a i t" co tinueone week. Notice i* thoreforc In -by >.- .\eii to the Coroner, Justice of the Peace, Aldermonj and Constables ol the i county ot Ceii lr'. that they be then d there in theiri proper tsersoii", at 10 o'i '>cl; In the fore noon ot said dav, with :her rveorxla, in quisitioai, examination' :.n.i t .rown re-) menibrancet, to do the ■ thiac wiii.-h to their oflot ipiHtrUini ti i loo€ii und ihiwe who arc bound in reC >g.usance* to prosecute againrt the pri invr. that are or) ihall be in the Jail ot ("outre tunty be then* and to prosecotc ar .in-t them a* snail be just. (liven under my hand, at ! < iefonte, tlie °2Bili dav of Oct. iu the mi )' our Lord, 1871 and in the ninety;-! irt'i year of the Independence of the lit ' 11',S PRO FESSIONAL LIFE, le wend: ful trick* and feat*, with laughable incidents and adventure* a* a Magician, Necromancer, and Ventriloquist, lllii-trat d with 16 Full Page Kngmvinga, beside* the Author'* Polrait on steel, and numerous small cits. Tlio volume ii free from any olijecliona bio mutter, being high-foiled and moral in it* chnmeter, r.na will be rt id with inter est, both by old and young. It givei the most graphic and thrilling account* of tho effects of his wonderful teats a:id magical trick#, causing the most uncontrollable merriment and laughter, Circular*, Term*, xke., with full informa tion. sent ffeeon application to DUFFIKLI) ASH MB \D. Publisher, 711 S ansont Street, Philadelphia. f'.m FOR SALE. Th undersigned ha* a tract -r limber-j land, located between the Brush and Thick Mountains, nearly due south or Be bersburg, containing IT! acref, which he offers for sale. It is well timbered, and easy of access from Brush \ alley. b\>r all desired information call on the UlMlflTiignod. c H KIITEI , 19ocUf Aaron dmr§, 1^ GROCERIES! The OlicpHst, piirust, heatt OPPOSITETHK IRON FBONT, ' j On Allegheny Street. KUHL Ik OAULT. Coffee, Tea. Sugar, Syrup,D r ml Fruit, Canned J'aiit, Hum*. Dried Reef, j Salt. I'ieklta, Hutter, Flonr, Corn Meal, Huckweat Flour, and everything utuely kapt in a well ream | lated #r*t clam Griwery Btarc tnnrS.Ciii -'III.* GAULT. COAL, I LIME, a nil POWDER! COAL—\Vilkwh*rr COAL, I'liMUßt Slav, V-sx. farjiwre and foundry, Coal —orb M quality, at th# low e*t price*. Customnrs will please' note that our coat f* housed un der com modioa* *hed*. LI ME- WM iiiusiin* in prai>ortion, at rate*. Womeo's Sbt . .mm • gd, to waa .ill funtnu-r at $1 per pair Fitia Bool* from $3.50 ta $7,60 for CLOTHING ,l the low, -t r*: , r.J .Id at 1867 prica SUITS, from $10,(101< sls for the Wl CALL AND SEE, and if it aiattru , Sternberg will I real. Thcv only #k people to come and *e* even if they do not *ri*h to buy. r IMIK A N VIL S FORK i> now receiving, I a a;, 1 well -.rtsl Stock a: Hardware, S. , v .,. Nail*, Horse Shoe*. Sad dlery, Ola*-, Paint*, Sl'ect, Bar and Uoo| lr ri *1 > Buggy and Wagon Stock •: rv.-ry dwripti in. -Call and supply your iclvi * atllm lowest po*#ible rata* at anto'lU IRWINAWILSO HBARGMETKRS :M i Thrrmometar* at IRWIN A WILSONS PR UN I - Dll RD fi'ltßvNTS. the vrry Vv-t quality Just receiveda Wolf # old taml Laiiic* Tru*u*c. Thisin* sltmhlr article for female*, i* now : to he had at Ilerlacber'*store, and no other place in tVntr? county. Indict n-member i that these tru##e* can be had at Central Hall If- ! Chas. H. Held, ( lock. RnlrhmnkrrA Jcweln Millheim, Ceatroco., Fwit. Respectfully informs hi* friends and lbs • public in general, that he has just opeced at hi* new e.-uhlishinent. ahova Alexan • dor's Store, and keep# constantly on hand all kinds of Clocks. Watche* and Jcwdn of the latest stvlw, a* also the Maranvilu Patent Calender t'lick*. provided with r complete index of the month, and day oi th month and week on it* face, whicn it armnted a* a perfrct time-keener. Watche* and Jewelry ra i i,aired on short notice and warranted. *epH'Bß;ly i 1 P. ODKNKIKK. tf . WITH ARTM AX. D 1 LUNGER A COMPANY No. 47, NORTH THIRD ST., PHIL'A he! we. u Market and Arch, formerly 104. MANUFACTURERS A JOBBERS IN Carpet#. *>i 1 I'lotli*. Oil Shndo*, Wick Yarn, Cotton Yarn*, Carpet Chains, Grain Bag#. Window Paper. Batting, Ac. Alto. WOODEN* IND \VTLLOW WARE. Hrn-hes, LfHk!ng Glatstw, Ac. dod*-ly [{. L 1 IXT A(IKNT, tiiil Conveyancer. Deeds, Bond#, Mort gage*, and all in truments of writing faith fully attended to. Sp'cial attention given to the collection of Bounty and Pension claim*. Office uearly opposite tbe Court ilousc, two doors above Ma#*r*. Bush A Yo, un's Law Office Bcllefonte, Pa. IGjunly UNION PATENT CHURN, the bet in u*eai IKWIX* WIUOX'H uplO'GH. ' S "?' ' TABLK CUTLERY, including platod fork*, anoon*, Ac, at apIO.GH lit WIN A\* ILSON. I)OoTS, largo atock. nil *tylos, izes_and Djiricc#, for wen and boys, just arrived at Wolf well known olu .Stand. ■ tr OOALl&S, at Wholesale and retni!, cheap O •> lIiWIN & WILSON. ( GREAT FIRE! Great Destruction of high prices! I gINCETHK UiKIVAI, ;>1 &at the Old Standsj of WM. WOLF •t CVotre Hall. LADIES AND GENTS DRESS GOODS. DRY GOODS, AND GROCERIES HARDWARE, QUBENfrVt'A 1 , Hate, Cape, Boot' , Sin. ALSO, A CHEAP LIN3 < FLANNELS, MUSUNS, C'ALJCGI? SHAWLS, ALSO, A GOOD AfiSOHTM V. .*• Tin NOTIONS. SYBUPS, OOFFKKS ala© • Inrgw u k o! ! FISH, the beet, al! kind*, MACKEREL end tIFKKIM. the beet and cheapen in the n rl ■ ' ■prTl WII WOLF ' "■ ■ ' - Furniture Rooms! J O. DKIXIXGKK, eftfpecttuil > infant> the eliluu of OBU county, that ha bat constantly on bu4,Wi> mtko to order, ell kind* of BEDSTEADS, BUREAUS, SINKS. WATSHSTANDS, CORNER CCPBOA HI S TABLES. Ac.. AC HOMK Mtot Cittti ALWAYS OX BA J II i. tcck of ready-aa.de Furniture bll ,nd warranted of cood wrkman*fctpaid * .11 made under hi# own immediate mpsri • .ion, and is offered nt rate* a. cheat. ,#! > where. Thankful far put f.rora, he l it* a continuance of the Mate. Call a.d tec hi. stock before pureh > . Uewhar*. •I-"' ' /i\ wa in a. h. ] j j | I ___ j WM. it. in. A la, ii v .tiuta iLA lit A STITZEJi, AUorney. at Law. IK lh f Joffio \ on the Diamond, next door to Gar jtuan't hotel. Cencultatiot.* in i Engl ah. febiPT.inf OHN F. FOTi'l.lT. Aticraey 7( law. ' Colleetiona promptly nude slid ipMta attention given to h<#e having land* -t prapritr for ulo. Will draw up and have Hi knowledges! Deed*. Moitgage*. Ac. Of. jfiee in the diamond, north aide of th. , court house, tteliefonttv ocKJ2"ui*f IICXKT mw ukHnrt. j jt President, I -h >r. * KNTBK COUNTY BAN KIM. t II (Late Millikcn. Hoover A Co.) RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, Discount Note*, BUT slid Bo ) Government Securities, Gold nnd •aplO'dthf Ota upon*. JXv H'MANUST - Attorney Et iTu Bcllefonte, promptly attend* l. nil hti | inc. entrusted to him. jul-16- f F.~ FORTXKY, Attorney a~t iTw * Bcllefonte. Pa. Office over Key 'noid'shank. niayM'Cßtt H. X. M'ALLtwrKB, J AUKS A. SKAV) * sa'ALUSTSR a beiives A TTOHSEyS-A T-LA If . i Bcllefonte, Centre Co., Per.n'a. p j; IBA C. MITCHELL. Attorm.x at J..* Bcllefonte, Pa. Office in iiuruain.a new building opposite tbe Court Boutc. niavs,t SrinM* on th* Adramct. C. H. Gutellus, Snrjreon and Mrchauical Ec-nilst who i* permanently located in AST n-hura in the office formerly occupied b.v Sir. N , and who ha* been practicing with utin ucee*—havingthe experience of n nut b I of year* in the profe..io, he would c-c-r*! i ally invite all who have a* yet to t givi j him a call, to do *©Tand test the trvthfuln< of thic assertion. JSp-'feeth extracted \: _ tct; iV" UHFITM i>., iM. ratcnlnTnTSuT • Eeon, Centra Hall, Pa., eJli-r* hi* professional service* to the citixem 11 Pot ter and adjoining townships. Dr. Rett'ha* the experience of SB year* in tin active practice of medicine and surgery. aplO'fcS DR. J. THOMPSON BLACK. Physi cian and Surge.,t: rx°. u. OK via. c.T -LYjvAXprx ORVIB A ALEXAI,I)KI: Aitorneyi-at-law. Office itiOonrad bou.i BeHefontc % .Pa. J. 4 P. GEPHART, with Orvi* A Alexander, attends t<- collec- m the Orphan' Court. SYHUP, the finest ever made, just re ceived, cheap at Wolfs old stand—try it. PA R LO R C O OK ST O V K s Parlor Stoves, and four six soft. U rnert comtantly on band uud t\ r -al.- a nnlO'6B. IEWIX* Wii.ao* t HORN BLANKETS AND SLEIGH. > BELLS, at low prices, at uplO 1 68. IKVVIK a Wit-ox' HAXDghi iS and Belt#, ail fee a* kind* at . apW lawia tWuux*