The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 11, 1883, Image 1

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{ OLD SERIES, XL.
YOLUME | NEW SERIES, XVI.
THE CENTRE REPORTER,
FRED. KURTZ,
DEMOCRATIC SATE TICKET,
FOR AUDITOR GENERAL,
CAPT. ROBERT TAGGART,
(1 Warren County
FOIL STATE TREASURER,
HON JOSEPH POWELL,
od County.
Entror and Pror's.
i Dradio
Conuty Ticket,
ASSOCIATE JUDGE
Dr. J R. SMITH,
of Pine Grove Mills,
IMSTRICT ATTORNE)
W. C. HG:INLE,
of Be llefonte.
COUNTY SURVEYOR
ELLIS LI. ORVIS,
of Bellefonte,
ew —
Alfonso, the king of Spain, was in Par
is a few days ago, and was insulted by a
mob. fur which the French government
was not responsible. At.once there arose
a talk of war between France and Spain.
Now if a little affair like this should lead
to war—as often trifles do—many lives
would be lost, and it would not be con-
sidered murder. . If two persons happen
to have a little unpleasantness and one
kills the other it is called murder and
punishment by hanging follows.
Now what we would like to know is,
where the line of distinction is drawn.
- _--e
The M'Veytown Journal still flies Ben
dutler for President. As Benjamin has
got over on the other side Coogey must
be acting the possum.
It's “possum up de gum tree, cooney in
de hollow,” with the M'Veytown fel-
jow.
OW Bi —
Twenty thousandpeople turned out in
Philadelphia, the other day, to welcome
gome professional base-ball players. This
would seem to indicate that there are in
that city 20,000 men who can wear a No,
6 hat and that not be a tight fit.
iil itn
I'he case of the commonwealth against
the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company
for £140.000 taxes on loans for the years
1880 and 1881 was, on 3d, decided by the
Supreme Court in favor of the company.
The effect of this decision is that corpo-
rations are not liable for taxes upon the.r
bonds under the specific acts of 1879 and
1581, and it is estimated to make a differ-
ence of at least $1,000,000 per annum in
the revenues in the state. The case was
stubbornly Mr. E. Olmsted
representing the company and the At.
torney-General appearing in behalf of
the commonwealth. The full opinion has
not been received, but one ground of the
decision is understood to be that, as
shown by the records, the common.
wealth has already collected from the
holders of the bonds the same tax.
contested,
- A in
According to a cable despatch from
Berlin Prince Bismark is very much an-
noved at the recent revival of the So-
cialistic propaganda, which hss already
spread broadcast great quantities of sedi-
tious literature. An extensive seizure of
Socialistic books anil pamphlets has
been made in Baden, near the Swiss
frontier, and a workingman in Constance
has been sentenced to three months’ im-
prisonment for complicity in bringing
the publications across the border. In
Bubna, a small town in Bohemia, several
houses suspected of containing Bocialis-
tic writings were searched, with the re-
sult of finding large quantities of sedi-
tious books and papers. Ten working
men who are known to have been en-
gaged in disseminating reading matter of
this character were arrested.
suites asses
The easy-going laws and customs of
the various States concerning marriage
Jead to some curious complications. It
has been settled in New York thata man
and woman can contract a valid mar
" riage without minister or magistrate, or
even without witnesses, if they simply
agree to become man and wife and live
together as such, It does mot follow,
however, that their apparantly living to-
gether as man and wife and represent
ing themselves as holding that relation
constitutes a marriage. A New York
Court has just decided that in a case
where the man and woman, through rep-
resenting themselves publicly as man
and wife, did not really consider them-
selves married, their relations were
meretricions and that there was no legal
marriage. This seems to make the fact
of marriage depend wholly upon the in-
tention—a rather vague and uncertain
basis upon which to undertake the regu-
Jation of a social institution. By this law
even the divorce courts become unneces-
sary, since a man and woman can not
only marry themselves at pleasure, but
dissolve the marriage with equal ease by
simply agreeing that they were not mar-
ried, Upon the whole, the old-fashioned
Tr PR AAA
Po” A ——-—— py 05
requirement of an outward and visible
sign that sealed the contract forever was
rather more convenient.
The engineers have completed the
work of location for the railroad from
Jellefonte to Lemont, and on Monday
Mr. White, who has charge of the engi-
neer corps, went on our part of the line
from Spring Mills to Lemont, to report to
the Penn’a R. R. Co. the condition of the
President Roberts, at the recent inter-
view. Upon the reciept of said engineer's
further interview with the Penn’a rail.
road officials, which will determine the
fate of our road. We feel hopeful of the
results ; the claims of our peonle are so
just, strong and fair, that longer delay or
refusal, on the part of the compan:
would almost seem impossible-
honor involved in the matter,
Since writing the above we learn that
the Bald Eagle railroad directors held a
meeting in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, to
take action upon the suggestion of the
Penn’a R. R. thatthe B. E. V. R. R. Co,
build the line from Spring Mills to Le-
mont, along with the Bellefonte and Lo-
gans branch link. There are 9 directors,
of these Curtin, Roberts, Blanchard,
Mayer and Irvin, a majority, are said to
have expressed themselves in favor of
the proposition. Now if this is so, then
we have a right to look for favorable ac.
tion from Tuesday's mneeting.
ple have got to the point
want to know what's what.
there is
Our peo
when they
- e———-
The Republican press take great pains
to impress the people with their views of
what the colored convention hss done at
Louisville. The truth is that convention
has expressed itself as opposed to the
methods the Republicans are using to en-
slave them as a class, If free
slavish yoke, the radical leaders have
substituted another which is becoming
from the
heavy and oppressive, and, unless re-
moved will make them mere creatures of
a few to perpetuate doctrines that are not
tepublican in their nature or character.
The negro is not considered anything bv
the Republican leaders only so far as he
votes for Republican supremacy. The
colored men in the Louisville conven-
tion expressed such declarations and in-
tend to gain recognition 2s men not as
darkies.
- “ -
Treating an election as though it had
not been held made old Thad Stevens got
out thro’ a back window of the capitol
quick as lightning. Treating our State
Constitution as though it were no Con-
stitution should result in pitching every
one of the boss Senators out of the same
back window.
000 per day.
It's costing the state £3.-
- - w -
The attitude of the Republicans of the
Senate is one of rank rebellion against
the Constitution and against every prin-
ciple of right, and they are making the
people of the state pay 33000 per day for
it to boot. Get ready to rebuke them at
the pollsin November by voting for Pow-
ell and Taggart.
———— —_
Gen. Sherman has fixed November 1
as the date upon which he will turn over
the command of tue army to General
Sheridan, and virtnally retire to civil
life, altuough he will not be placed upon
tae retired lis: of the army until the Sth
of February. Major Geaeral Pope now
commanding the Departmen: of the Mis
soari, will probably succeed CGeaeral
sheridan in command of the military di
vision of the Missoari, which inclades,
besides the Department of the Missouri,
the Department of Dakota, Texas and
the Platte.
— -idi a .
The Press says that while Niles favored
a fair apportionment on the tloor of the
House he did not favor a Democratic ap-
poriionment. But he did support the
Democratic theory of Dividing the con-
gressional districts npon the basis of the
vote. He proclaimed that if the parties
were equal in number of their votes each
should have half the dsiricts, and only
differed from the Democrats io maintain.
ing that they were entitled to only 12ia-
stead of 13 congressmen. When the
Democrats offered to take twelve and
even eleven where was Niles? He
mounted the fence and kept the same si-
lence as when asked last fall to decide
between Beaver and Stewart,
a MMM A S50
R. R~LATEST.
President Roberts has written to Mr.
Thompson, cor. sec'y ofthe local commit.
tee, that the board of directors of the
Penn'a railroad on Tuesday appointed a
sub-committee before whom the address
and all the papers recently submitted to
bim by thé committee from this valley
have been laid for examination ; that
the Penn’a board are about to start on
their annual tour of inspection over their
line, which will require about two weeks,
and that during this time the report of
the engineer, now on the line between
Spring Mills and Lemont is expected, af-
ter the receipt of which Mr, Roberts will
notify the committee from here to appear
in Philadelphia again, for further confer-
ence with reference to the demands of
our people for the completion of onr
road,
.-—
RECOGNIZED AT LAST.
In the first stage of the civil war, when
the full import of that struggle was be-
ginning to te felt, James Buchanan, ma-
igned and despised by men of all parties
as a weskling and a traitor, and bes 1 on
all sides by personal and political ene-
mies, retired from the Presidential chair
to the seclusion of private life, there
soon after to die with a stigma of dishon-
or resting upon his name. Nearly a quar-
ter of a century has passed, says a cotem-
porary, the once vital issues of the war
exist only as a memory, and now the
calm judgement of a later generation cfn
be passed upon events which conld not
then be fairly estimated through preju-
dice and passion.
The recently published life of James
Buchanan by George Ticknor Curtis is a
work that mast change
some of the prevailing opinions in regard
to the character of this much
President, It
needs radically
abused
is written
one whose
literary ability is bevond the question of
a doubt. It is of still more importance
from the fact that the
Mr. Buchanan in life,
writer never knew
VIEWS
are,
therefore, u personal
ling. They are
diligent and careful
rection, ba
ments of what the
Bochana’s motives t
We cannot |
chanan was, he wi
traitor to
sympathizer with
the North, neither was
BOCCSSION prineiy
fulness were the
chief defects in his make
But eves tho
ba thin } w 3
make the best of motives seem the worst
Indecision and over-car
ip as President.
)
igh they often
are not enough to brand
r. In scase of Mr. Buchanan they
assume some appearance of virtue when
consider how enormous the stake
aman as trail-
we :
then at isuc,
knew
lent the fearful
No one Preni-
}
{the aie whi
of the crisis which
was impending, and ba
xy & 3
kwardness in
hastening the co i was only natural,
vow that the heat of passion is over,
with all the facts r before us
prejudice shoul fairness,
The name of Jam suchanan, in
in view
of his eminent «
the nation,
and d matist, and not least
uplifted to an
ionorable place in the list of onr chief
magistrates,
as
a holar
a schon:
as President, shoul
¥
i “
PENNA STATE SABBATH SCHOOL
ASSOCIATION,
The Nioeteenth Annual convention of
this association wiil be held in the First
Presbyterian church in the city of Beran
ton, Lackawanna Co, comwencing on
Tuesday, Oct, 16, at 10-2. m., and contin-
uiog, whith three sessions daily, Wed.
uesdsy and Tharsday, Oct. 17ch and 18th,
Conaty associations throughout the
State, are earnestly requested to send
delegates to the convewstion, and thas
contribute to, aud share in, the beuefits
derived from such assemblies of Sunday
School workers,
Republican Chairman Cooper says
the Humes bill was a republican meas
ure! What a monamental falsifier he is.
He fought the bill tooth and nail and so
did Niles. They kicked like steers
against it apd made a bitter and solid
partisan fight against it, only for the
reason that it takes the people's money
out of the politicians’ banks,
TWO WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS FOR
THE PRICE OF ONE,
And the Best Daily at Low Rates.
The Harrisburg WEEKLY PATRIOT is 8 large
sight page sheet and conteins & greater variety of
reading matior than any ether paper published, itis
neways, spley, instructive, and entwriaining. » subs
soription price of the Weekly Patriot is 81,00 per
anutm cash in advance,
CLUBBIKRG,
The "Weakly Patriot” aud the New Vork "Week
* will 1
Year for SLI0- the. “Weakly Patron’ and. How York
“Weekly World" to an) u, poss
A
“wy Eo Pacer » find,
, One year jor im. in all ea
; Dally PATRIOT
# the only mors paver pab iis in the state
capital; ’ morn vataide "
CL Fie A, SCEPC A
i
FIRE a
a
THE THREE PER CENTS,
Secretary Folger's Recommendations
for a Bond 10 Take Their Place,
Wasmnaron, D. C., Oct. 5.~The policy
of retiring and continuing the retirement of
the 3 per cent. bonds as fast as surplus reve-
nue will permit, is attracting the attention of
Treasury officiale to an important question
involving the permanency of the National
banks; The National banks are large own-
ers of 3 per cents, which are deposited with
the Government as security for their cireula-
tion, and the retirement of these J per cents
will take from under the banks that upon
which they stand. A number of suggestions
as to what shall be done have been made to
Secretary Folger and Comptroller Knox.
The Secretary is consider .ng this question,
but has not decided what recommendations
to make in his forthcoming report to Con-
gress concerning the proposition to allow
National banks to deposit Btate securities ns
security for their circulation, that he did not
think it advisable. Btate bonds good enough
to be taken as National bank collateral were
about as high priced as Government 4s
and 4s, which now command such a
premium that the banks cannot afford to
purchase and deposit them as security. Be-
sides there were not enough good State bonds
to supply the collateral needed for the large
and constantly growing number of National
banks. Of all the suggestions thus far offer-
ed, he favored the issuing of a low-rate long
bond with which to take up the 48 and
434s, accomplishing the exchange by the
paying of a sufficient premium to make the
exchange desirable to the holders of the lat.
ter. He has not yet made up his mind what
rate of interest this bond should bear,
“THE RED MEN.”
An Interesting Account of Their Nes
farfous Secret Organization,
eran, W. Va, Oct. 5.—Thete is no
tion in the excitement at Clarksburg
over the disclosures of Kettles, the confessed
“Rod Man." Inthe United States Court he
was sentenced to 9 years and 4 months in the
Mundsville Penitentiary. As one result of
his confession, Jacob T, Hoffman, ex treasurer
of Barbour county, and ex-member of the
Legislature, has boen arrested and is now in
jail at Clarksburg. It is rumored that an
effort will be made to convict Hoffman, who
was a chief in the order, of one or two mur-
ders. Kettle received his sentence with per-
fect calmness. Price, another Red Man, was
sentenced 1012 years, 0 be served in Bof
falo prison on another charge. He will be
tried on another indictment. The company
to which Kettle belonged was known as
“Company CC, Regents: tribe of Crows”
But the private work was the same in all the
branches, Nom de plumes were used. The
first pass word was “ K. 0.” and the respons
“Light,” the second, “Where mre you
going™ And the snswer was “Centennial ”
Other signs and grips were in use to such an
extent that a book of then was kept. Article
IX of the Constitution makes death the pen
nity for revealing any of the work of the
iodge. By A-ticke X, “Any one divulging
the nawe of any person belonging to the so-
ciety, whether directly or indirectly, inten
tionally, shall be liable to the death penalty
Wr
dimiy
The Future of Wheat.
New Yorg, Oct. 1.—The San says: “The
futtire of the wheat market is most puzzling.
Beyond all preadventure the crop in England
and throughout Europe, with the exception
of Spain and Portugal, fs bad A well
known authority estimates the demand from
Europe for wheat at over 300,000,000 bushels,
of which about 120,000,000 must come from
the United States. But our crop is a short
one, at all events for winter wheat, and yet
the price Is abnormally low. The demand
has not begun yet, but the most experienced
and shrewdest dealers consider a large ad-
vance in price only a matter of time. The
acreage of land under wheat is much smaller
than is was last year, and the yield per acre,
although greater than that of the almost
famine years of 1870 and 1880, is not nearly
up to the average. After the bad erop in
Europe in 1879, when the amount required
was about the same as it is at present, No, 2
red wheat advanced from $1.03 per bushel
in August, 1979, to $1.58 per bushel in Janu-
nary, 1550, In 1850.81 the rise was almost as
great under «lightly improved European
crope, and operators who remember these
facts and look calmly on the future seem to
reason from sound premises when they pre-
dict a rise in wheat before the winter is far
advanted, ae
How Case RBRlundered on His Good
Fortune,
Mruwarxee, Wis, Oct. 1.—~The news of
Jay-Eyo-8ee's great victory caused much ex-
citement in Wisconsin, A special from Ra
cine, where the horse is ownad, says the town
is wild with excitement. Joe Oliver, a
prominent horseman and a leading com
to soll him Jay-Eye-Seo for $300 and Phallas
for $500, Oliver has a half brother to the lit
tie trotter, which is being trained on Colonel
West's farm, near Lexington, K;. It is also
claimed that J. 1. Case blundered on his
good fortune, if reports are to be credited,
He being in Kentucky in company with Mo-
Kenny, the Western agent of Wilkes' Spirit
of the Times, and a celebrated horseman of
Janesville, Case wanted six horses, and had
purchased five of Colonel West when McKeon
ny persuaded him to buy Jay-EyeSee to fill
out the complement. He secured a prise for
a nominal price,
A Cabman’s Notion of a Great Actor,
Loxpon, Oct. 2.-The following story of
Henry Irving was told in the drillroom of
the Grand Hotel by an American actor:
“Arving,” said he, '‘ has the reputation of
being a little ‘near,’ as they say here, in small
money matters. One night last month he
camo down 10 the Lyceum Theatre in a han-
som, and as he be handed to the
cabby his exact fare—onoe shilling. omitting
the customary gratuity of thruppen co or six-
pence. The cabby very solemnly took the
coin, looked at it croseyed and said: * Beg
pardon, Mister Hirving, but do you play
Shylock”
“Why, fellow! asked Irving in bis sub
vellar voice,
“Cause, sir,’ sid the cabby, ‘ef you're
ae good a dew hon the stage has you har
, You must bo a great hactor.! And the
abby rolled away."
A Mother's Awful Crime,
a
SLO0 BMIRTEEN, WIIG Touna win ner thnons
tut from ear to ear, The girl had been do-
inented since her birth, and the theory is
that the mother blindfolded her daughter,
til her hands and then with a razor nearly
rut the head from ber body. Afterwardsshe
Iestroyed her own life in a lke manher, A
nots in the mother’s pocket said in substance
that she would sacrifice herself for her child,
us sho believed they were both better dead
than alive, The husband is a comunercial
traveler for the Weir Plow Company,
A Hotel Destroyed.
Eav Came, Wis, Oct. 6 At wk
flames burst forth fr tie Central Hotel
und before they were extinguished destroyed
the entire bulld! gend an adic
Loss, £45,000; insur
wos given in time for the pues
wilh Leir lives
five o'el
saloon,
An a arm
to escape
ung
SOx
£25,000
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL
New York Stocks.
New Yonx, Oct, 5. —~Bpeculstion iu the
Stock Exchange was still unsettled. After a
show of strength there was a decline In
prices, and the market continued feverish
throughout the day. The resson for the
break in coal shares is the fact that the Dela
wars and Hudson Canal Company has gone
back to July prices for coal, ie other come.
nies, as yel, ars charging circolar prices,
he Board of Directors of the Northern
Pacific will meet to-morrow to pass upon the
financial scheme to fund its floating Indebts
edness, ete. The proposition is to issue §15,-
000,000 in mortgages bearing 6 per cent. in-
terest
Goneral Markets,
mw Yorg, Oct. 5. —FPrices In the New
Cotton Market today ranged ss fol.
Oct. 10.43; Nov. 10.55.54; Dec, 10.68.80.
en. 10.81.7081; Feb, 10.06.0405: March
10084008; April 11.22; May 11.58, shies
at the first call amnounted to 1,600 bales,
On the morning calls of the New York
Board Pioe Line certificates opened at 1158,
ined to 1128,@ 118 On the third call they
113% and reacted to 1129{@112}4.
Chicago,
Hh ~Disrust was written on
cos of the brokers in wheat, It was a
dull market for half an hour, then
orn went all to pieces, In the
1 meats a litte twist
a hundred,
gave
55 tw 40 counts
while old Hutch and the Fowlers went for
October lard. The shorts climbed over one
another's hoads, They « 4d not be restrained
in their cagerness to pay the bulls kaif a
cent. mors for lard than the bears sold it for,
This stimulated the wheat Prices rose
fe. Otober corn jumyg Local shorts
covered eagerly, giving or look to the
1 there has been for threes or four
Prices closed Oct. wheat 85; Nov.
ON: Jan, 85%. Oct. corn 4834;
year, 4¢ Jan 45%, Oct. oats
” t vear 27% Oct,
i: Jan. 7.70,
1060; Jan,
»
J L¥CTION PROCLAM ATION.
iit
Pil
ed for that purpose on
Merryman
For the townshi
inthe town of RB
For the tows
at the publie hou
the township o
public house of §
or Lhe ownahip of Grege, southern precinct, at
he public house owned by J B Fisher, of Penn
For the township of Coll
at Lemont,
For the township of Perguson, old
the school house st Pine Grove
For the township of Ferguson, new precinct, in
the school house in Balleyville,
For the township of Harris, in the school house
at Boalsburg
For the township of Patton, at the house of Pe-
ter Murray
For the borough of Bellefonte, and the towne
ships of Spring aud Benner, at the Cours house in
Bellefonte.
For the borough and township of Howard, at
the sohool house of sid borough
For the township of Rush, northern procinet, at
be Dold Biream schoo] house,
For the township of Rush, southern precinet, st
Poweliown school house, P
For the township of Bnow Shoe, east precinct, at
the athiool house in Snow Shoe town,
"or the township of Snow Shoe, west precinct
at the Mosbannon school house, lr
For the township of Marion, at the
Joel King, in Jecksonsvilie,
For the borough of Milcsbure.
honse of Mileslurg
For the township of Bopes. norih
the Walter school house, To or A
or the township of B sO% Sri fae
the Cera] City school ga. 4 thera precinot, st
the township of Husto s
choo I oi, at the Silver Dale
For the township of Penn. at the i
house of Wan Me , &i the public school
or Wie borough of Millheim at the school
house opposite the Evangelion] y said
borough, tgelioal church in
For tae tow, { y
in ove," of Liberty, al the school house
For the townehi Wor .
at Port Mattie P ol Worth, at the school house
For the towns > ¢
Dons or x nip of Burnside, at the school
For the township of ,
near Robert Manny, Curtin, at ihe school honse
Yor the borough of Unionvisde and the townshi
of Union, st the new school house a Unionville.”
Fur the First and Second wards of the borough of
Phitipabu , #l the large Faibile sehool house,
ay Be ind irard of borgugh of Philips
NOTICE is amo hereby given, “That
office of appointment :
frat peof Sho DUE ing (he
city or y
whether a commissioned or a .
who is or shall be ome
ordinate ofMoer or agent
: tive, Executive or Judi
is State, or of the United
"1 1 #3 Bas
ia LLeeCuon OJ
res J
precinct, in
house of
at the school
precingt, at
41,
HARVARD COLLEGE.
At a recent meeting of the overseers of
Harvard College, a discussion was held
gon the resolarion which hed been be-
‘ure the b ard for several weeks, that in
the opinion of this board, the statute
making attendance ou morning prayers
snd other religious «xercises comotinory
snould be repesied The bord, by a
Aroug vote, refused to adopt te rescin-
tion, But Mr. Gere Briffer, or Mar.
vnshorg, Bair Co., Pa., who bad a8 Csn-
cerons growth on his pose, and who wes
advised to use Peruna before a visit 10
«Cancer hospital war allowed to take that
par-excelient remedy, and by its use for
4 very short time, was cured completely
page 24 in the “lls of Life" —gel cue
rom your druggist,
- - _——
We learn that the Bell's Gap narrow
guage railroad has dispensed with all its
tixtures of that m-asare, snd has been
changed to the broad gauge from the
main live to Coslport, and will, no doubt
» oontinned to Irvona, and from thenes
np Witmer run ot the sams gauge, in the
near future.
— ———, ——
Boes Cooper and another republican
senator represent two districts wih only
89,000 population combived, while two
democratic senators have a coustitueney
of 266,000. This is the reason Cumeron
sod Cooper will not all.w the republi-
ch senators to vote for spporiivument
bills.
- vy —-
The 400 anniversary of the
ther will be celeb: ated at Bellefonte Oct.
tober 25 to 27. The best talent of the
church will be present.
birth of Lu
a I~
TO REPAIR DA
th t
bo YyEa
oss of slew
that fashic ie lik
nn your besuty. la
wenial excitement wi
shorn of those beautiful
ers around you in ¢
tutes CaN LOYET
looks. Parker's
from falling out, re
sofiness, and prove cie
OHIO by this morning's papers has
gone democratic by giving Hoadley 10,
VO0 msjority and a dewocratic legisia-
ture, nip, hip, for Ohio!
WHAT STRUCK AN OLD SOLDIER
“11 will soo
Closed.’
UCuderihe b
Dover, N. J
Jali Sharp, «
be twenty years since the war
ot sun of August, 1862, the village of
y 6s & sphinx iu Egypt, whie EH
{ thal place, slowly sud soilly spoke
of the past. “Yes,” be sald, *1 wes in the samy
ald saw any of the si ens
resuiting
iis Of Lhuse feariul 3
i Was Dusily discharged §
ae
i
J Gislivad
ron suLmroke, 1 caus botue, tulserabie iu bealith
Wok oid on the
ne
ald splints | so eulevided Lust
siighilesl exjnsure
i lived only in memory
That wes sd enough suid, dividing mr last
Lite seciuca worties 1
WO Cigars
Mr
Mg exacily,
¥ 2 ew ; & i wo havea A
bats 80.” responded Sharp. “but 1 gol
Ww
Wiel lL ue
ts Todae,” aid
EE Ti
i eal
i Owes war
Rou pi Vues Leave
uigrew 3
CULGILOL
wad Bells
UYE Tipu &
slg. Mp
a “ i Bde Wed
3 salve isso uj
3 al busier, Bald aw
f Lake UBC Bi
wk anil Be WL
¥
wi
" bak dai sUR
Wouel
lg
Ah Chjprinilag bed eiad wo
a vee ue Clady
Gaketelioey Lusit mie lu Whigs
a Friastis Tunic seves
Lids piepmisadiuiia, Wiled dues
Pai Rel » Ligel uae, be ceiied
shiny "Paiagi es Joni, Lise Clhnege Les owl
ICAO Looser LY SULsLLGIES duepomey Lipid
Vir CIVETR UY Lies lei Goede Glue
sae tie V1 RIESE , sla ms gluged I jead)y aR
Gl Pl Tid Ba Vollug lugivuaaud, WE uoep the
wainivellliag Wea,
luete a» wo costige however iu the preparation
Heel, Ri Bal VALS TelLRILILE I he bss of
wtaleds, Wished Gadel We Leet 01 Pais » Ul
of JVI Cuuiail toe golive ediCiue i vo isd
shidalie simile Ul Bsogk & LO. Is 8 Aue voli
of Le VuwiGe wisp pwr, ting
NEW DRUG STORE
way 4
Bw
a]
belvedigd
Kuown as
Wadi
-
AT SPRING MILLS, PA.
Situated in the North-east Corner of the
SPRING MILLS HOUSE.
DRUGS, SPICES
and
of all kiads
TOILET ARTICLES
and FANCY GOODS.
Also TOBACCO & SEG ARS, snd
CONFELTIONERY
of all Kinds,
Spectacles a Specialty.
Being sn apothecary of experience
prescriptions will be accurately come
pounded.
C. E. AURAND, Druggis,
wep 2Ty Spring Mills, Pa.
~ TIRED ALL OVER.
What Restored and Refreshed a W
Man in Memph oy