The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 28, 1884, Image 1

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    voLume |
OLD S
NEW >
RIES, XL.
THE CENTRE REPORTER,
FRED. KURTZ, Eprror and Pror'r.
Pretty certain we are it will be Sammy
Tilden.
-
Congressman Cassidy, of Nevada, is
men who believe that ex
Governor Tilden will accept the presi-
dential nomination if tendered him by
the Democratic National Convention
He headed the Pacific coast delegation
on a visit to Gramercy : Park, and was
out in a long interview giving the inci-
dents of that visit. He says that the pub-
lished accounts of the visit are wholly
fictitious. It was purely a social affair and
the visiting Congressmen did not feel to
make public what occurred. He furthes
states that they found the ex-Governor
in robust health, and with intellectual
powers as keen and strong as
Nothing occurred during the interview,
which lasted nearly an hour, which
would lead to the belief that Mr. Tilden
would net accept the nomination if of-
fered him, and Mr. Cassidy says'he came
away from Gramercy firm in the convic-
tion that he will be nominated and elect.
ed,
one of the
ever,
. —t—
Every one of the fellows who went up
the spout in New York, the other week,
In the ruin
lies a presidential
Had con-
[ bill the
wicked
was a republican magnate.
prominently
feet up and head in the 1
assed the Morrison tari
i
on tl
boon,
nud.
gress |
blame would have
Democrats,
1f
-
pose Grant gets on the retired list
hen looses the $20000 annual in-
Sa
and
come, by another speculation, would it
not be in place to give him aspecial pen-
gion of another $20,000 per year. By the
way, how would it do to appoint a goar-
dian to take care of his funds?
»
p
t
wo
All the sub-bosses are happy now,
Don Cameron the chief boss has arrived
Many of the sub-
home frofa Europe. th
bosses were at Harrisburg to be on hand
v
cli t
at his stepping he cars, and kiss his
hand, and tell him they are still loyal
"and only too glad to do his bidding on
the presidential question, —it is thought
Don hurried back to put a block in the
path of Blaine.
in tp
Cuba is to come under the wings of the
great American Eagle at last, according
to a Washington special of the World,
which says: Minister Foster, our repre
sentative ia Spain, has been in Washing-
ton a numper of weeks. It is now learned
that he is here for the purpose of assis.-
ing the State Department to negotiate a
treaty with Spain for the purchase of Cu-
ba. Spain is ready to sell and Freling-
huysen is ready to bay. The price is not
yet agreed upon, but it is probable that
this will be soon settled on.
Spain holds Caba now only at a loss,
owing to her bad management of the al-
fairs of that unhappy island. Twice this
Government has nearly purchased Cuba.
* Buchanan once nearly bought Cuba for
$50,000,000. Hamiiton Fisu once had a
treaty all perfect to buy Caba for $350.
000,000, After the treaty had been rati-
fied by the executive authorities of the
two governments Mr. Fish, before send-
ing the treaty to the Senate for final rati-
fication, thought in his conservative fash-
jon that it would be prudent to send a
circular note to the powers asking them
if they would object to the purchase, Of
course they did, and Mr. Fish never sent
the treaty to the Senate. Now the ad
ministration has conceived the ida of
purchasing Cuba as an of’set to the brill.
ignt policy of Mr. Blaine. It is said that
Spain is now willing to sell cheap, and
that she will take $50,000,000 rather than
not sell at all. Cuba might be a fiather
in the cap of the Administration.
A
Any of these sub-bosses will be glad to
accept a pair of old pants, shoes, tie,
shirt, or other of his cast-off garments of
his European trip and wear the same as
a precious souvenir of the head-boss of
sll that is low and corrupt in politics,
. me ——
If the Republicans can’t agree on any
one of the old leaders, at Chicago, why
not settle down on Gen. Beaver without
ny further fooling ?
am — sain
Ward, of the broken firm of Grant &
Ward, has been arrested on the charge
of swindling. One of the young Grants
has gone to Earope. Bail in the actual
sam of $300,000 was asked, which Ward
did not have much prospect in finding,
and he felt a little bad over the turn of
affairs. There are some others feeling
bad too,
Lm 3 AIO
Hon. L. A. Mackey is mentioned in
Clinton connty as a candidate for assem-
bly. He would make a capital ropresen-
tative.
atmt—— ee ——— —
The Penn Bank, of Pittsburg, has fuil-
ed.
In Dauphin county potatoes are selling
for 20 cents per bushel,
If Bamuel J, Tilden is nominated for
President by the Democrats—and we
think he will be ~there is nothing the
Republicans could do, to cast greater
honor upon their party, than to
fuse to nominate a candidate in opposi-
tion to Mr. Tilden. Such action would
entirely wipe out the disgrace of the
presidential steal and acquit the party of
the charge of endorsing the 8 to 7 work by
unanimously conceding Mr, Tilden the po-
sition of chief magistrate of the nation of
which he was wrongfully deprived in
re-
1876. The Republican party could do no
more graceful act or anything to cast great-
er lustre upon its organization than to let
Mr. Tilden be elevated to the presidency
opposition, Mr,
Tilden in view of the history of the past
without This is due
Is the Republican party—which has
admitted the
equal to such an act of justice, and ready
frand was perpetrated —
to wipe out the great stain that hangs
upon nation? If not, Mr. Tilden
will be triumphantly elected anyway
with the aid of the votes of thousands of
the
the
Republicans who never endorsed
great crime of 1876,
le ps
FOR THE
NOT GRANT.
SYMPATHY REPUBLIC:
Yi 4
git
(ieneral Grant fou well as a soldier
in the war, We are quite willing that
the Government should put him on the
retired list at full pay. We favor the bill
for that purpose, not from any maudling
sympathy with the gambling stockbrok-
er, but from sound sympathy with the
honor of the nation which is disgraced
by his greedy speculative transactions,
In the name of national honor and rep-
utation, give the ex-President an income
him, and let
friends seek, if possible, to keep him out
of such business in the future,
But while d
sermons as that of
vy $93 04 + aaliaflv ta
sufficient to satisfy his
so, do not
t by such
Ir. Beecher and by
of a gushing press
and encourage him
A»
the false sentiment
condone his offenses
to repeat them,
! He was not
simple, dear old fellow, he
“God bless Gen. Grant
to blame;
knew nothing of the wrong.”
This is the verdict Mr. Beecher claims
for the bankrupt broker and solvent ex
President.
It is worse than fustian ; it is false,
Grant was not blameless and simple
when he upheld Belknap and Babeock
and stood between them and justice. He
was not blameless and simple when he
made the Black Friday pool with Fisk
He was not blameless and
simple when he accepted gifs from peo-
ple who would be certain to want favors
in return. He was not blameless and
simple when he held the Presidency for
eight years, defyigg public sentiment and
debauching public Wrtue, He was not
blameless and simple when for years and
years every Republican organ puffed him
to the very skies as a great, shrewd,
keen, wise man. He was not blameless
and simple when he degraded Lis office
and disgraced his country by stepping
from the Presidency and the supreme
command of a nation’s armies into a
Wall street broker's business to gamble
in stocks,
If Grant had ‘made $10,000,000 for him-
self instead of losing $10,000,000 for oth-
ers in his gambling speculations he
would have been just as culpable, just as
reprehensible as he is now, His offense
is in his disregard of the high dignity of
his position as the first citizen and the
first soldier of the Republic. He has de-
graded his titie, and in so doing has de-
graded the nation, What claim has such
a man on the sympathy of the people ?
So says the New York World,
EE A
The following extracts from the testis
mony of Ferdinand Ward before the re-
ferea are significant in showing the
methods of business which have been go-
ing on in Wall street :
“Upon all those transactions of
what rate of interest or profit di
pay 9" :
“From my recollection I never paid
less than 20 per cent per month.”
. - .
and Goal i.
ours
you
“What made you pay sach enormons
re nrns for the nse of money 7”
“That's hard to tell.”
“Well, hard in eae sense, but not diffi
eult. You must have some reason for
paying 20 per cent. a month for the vee
money. You were not making that profit,
were yon 7”
“No, sir.”
“And turned some of it over to Grant
& Ward?”
“Used it in general business in both
accounts. I borrowed it from Peter to
pay Paul.”
The amonnt of it is, you paid these
large returns in the name of profits, or
interests, or under whatever names you
paid them, in order to raise money to
pay denis previonsly contracted 7
a depends upon what you mean by
“Well, in order to pay or retain this
money you had borrowed or receiv
you wero willing to contract to pay
per cent. a month 7”
“You I think that was it.”
aye Sidu's So it for the fun of the
ing, did you
“ri ito avoid the transactions be-
condition that you could not pay your
debte withont raiging money at the ra e
of 20 per cent. a month ?
“Certainly two years, haven't you?”
“Yes, gir.”
The wool growers, principally of Penn
sylvaaia and Ohio, had a convention in
Their purpose was
to deroand a high tariff on wool, 80 ag t
prevent importation and give them a
chance to fix the price to suit themselves
Chicego last week.
A woul-growers convention would natur
ally be a sheepish affair, and if the peo-
ple who wear woolen goods will allow
the wool to be drawn over their eyes all
they need, pray for is mild winters,
—
Reasons why it would be to the pblic
good to have Tilden for our next Presi
dent, are, that he has a splendid record
ar
That for the crew of jobbers and
He
is 80 well fixed in this world’s goods-
and
himself by a dishonest administration,
enter his mind. That while
he is not ambitious fer the nomination
whick the Reronrer thinks he is sure
to get. his age at the expiration of his
term will not leave him ambitious to in-
tirgue for a second term.
-
A spirit medium has just interviewed
as a reformer and is unspotted in ch
acter.
plunderers he is alarmingly honest,
bachelor—that to further enrich
would never
the late Charles Guiteau on the off shore
of the river Styx. He said: “I have
been a little disappointed by Arthur's
Administration. He has not stood by his
friends very well, but if he can secure
another term I am confident that he will
do the proper thing by We business
men must
- i -
The ‘ business men” had a big meeting
in New York, one day last week, to help
the Arthur There
bundr:d millions of a surplus in
boom, Are sovera
3
the
treasury, and it stands to reason that ev.
ery one of these “business men” means
business in view of this fact.
————e—
A sipgular case was
the board
presented before
of pardons a few days a
John Baullivan, of Allegheny county
while in St. Louis a year ago murdered a
watchman and escaped
returned to this state,
he was of burglary in Alle
gheny county and sentenced to five
years’ penal servitude, A St. Louis de-
tective asked for Sullivan's pardon and
Lis extradition to St. Louis for murder.
Salliven refuses to be pardoned in order
that 8t. louis may bang him, and the | t
questi n arose whether & convict could
be pardoned against his will, Decision
was postponed for further argument,
before trial and
SX months
#5 es
ago gt
convicted
-——
The national republican convention
meets al Chicago next Toesday. *
Three magnificent ocean steamers are 4
ploughing the North Atlantic at this!
writing, all headed for New York, They
are of the aquatic greyhound species,
and they left Queenstown in conjunction.
Naturally there will be a race,
Ward, of the swindling firm of Grant
& Ward, is now in jail for want of bail. }¢
It is hardly probabie that Grant will
be placed upon the retired list this ses-
sion. A number of protests have been
tiled against his retirement, and it now
looks as if the House Comumittee will
simply pigeon-ho.e the measure,
One Ward went for Grant unanimous.
ly and now lies in jail for it. Is this
rough on the Ward or rough on Grant ?
flarry White has been nominated for
Judge in his district, Peace to his ashes,
The West Side Bank of New York sug
pended on Saturday. Next,
t
~ A rich yellow sugar 4 pounds for
25 cents, Best granulated sugar, 8 cents
per pound. A good sugar syrup at 40¢
por gallon. A Light eolored, heavy body,
pure sugar syrup, at 50 cents, This is the
rest bergain in syraps ever offered in
Bellefoate. Best New Orleans Syrup, 80
cents a gallon. 1 pound Baker's baking
powder, 25 cents, This is as good powder
as any in the market. Try a pound. Ar-|*
buckle’s coffee, three pounds for 50 cote
Mild fall cream cheess, 18¢ per pound.
Canned tomatoes for 7¢ per can, com 7¢
per can, peas 7¢ per can, beans 7 ots. per
can. Jist received, new crop maple-su-
gar in bricks. Best brands of smoking
and chewing tobacco, Kennedy's Boston
crackers, biscuits and jumbles siways
fresh. We have just received our spring
stock of fine new mackerel, which we
are selling out at the lowest possible
rice for good ds. 10 1b Kits No. 2
shore raackerel 81, 40 pounds same $4,
80 ponnda same $7.50. 10 pond Kita
No. 2 Extra $1.25, 12 pounds same $1.35,
10 1b Kits No. 1 hore mackerel 81 50, 15
ib sume 2 00, 40 Ib enme 5 00, 80 Ib same
950. 151b Kita No. 1 extra 225, 40 1b
same 560, 10 1b Kits No. Extra mess
Shore mackerel 225, 15 Ib same 3 00,
100 Ibe Labrador Herring 4 00, 100 Ibs
wore bought from the Boston packers di-
rect, and are guaranteed both In quality
and weight as branded on each package
We ara selling a good Young Hyson tea
for 40 cents por pound. We are offering
be # in sugars, syrups, canned
goods and mackerel, Our meat market
in alwars well stocked with the best,
We aro now killing cattle that weigh
1200 to 1500 pounds, and the best mut:
ton and veal to be found.
ing known.”
How long have you been jn such a
.
& Co., Bellefonte,
Wheatland, old home,
near Lancaster, mansion house and 23
acres, was sold for 820.000,
Buchanan's
ts
The shipment of coal over the Tyrone
division of the Pennsylvania railroad last
week was i {
the large
the road.
THREE HANGINGS
Portsmouth, O., May
vens, the murderer of Ax
1 1avalid soldier, was banged
verily, 20 mies distaot, at 11 o'clock
morning,
Qakiand, Cal, May 23
jor w 8 hanged thig noruiug.
23. Laban Ble
i
Alan
ob
Wa
ii
iil
Lloyd L
He
10 years old and was born near the hon
of Garfield in Ohio. He graduated
Ano Arbor College in 1870 and bey
he practice of lw, but afterwards joined
the Methodist micistry. After preach
tug several years he came to the Puacifi
oast and settled at |
iil
where he
. 1 a
Am Calon,
wurder for which he was execated was
ommitted a year ago. He planned it,
leaviug the execution, however, to two
ools named Jewell and Thomas, They
sere both tried and convicted, but belore
Ehas anil Lae facts in the case and
of Majors became koown,
Liule Valiey, N. Y., May 23. —At 10:4
t. m. the last preparations were
pleted for the haugiog of Charles B.
wiark, for the murder of his wife on Dec
i3, 1883. Clark bad given up ail hope of
areprieve and was resigoned. At 11:10}
1 was haoged, A short time before
leath Clark made a fui confession of his |
crime,
AgeELNCY
. o-oo. -
Philadelphia, May 23.~Lightning to-
aight struck a large tank containing
rade oil at the Atlastic Refining Co., on
be Schuylkill river, The f
municated to another large
silie8 vom
tank aud }
tercely. It is feared the oil iu othe:
tanks willeaich on fire.
our was § 150.000,
- —-
AN INSANE WOMAN'S
St. Louis, May 25. —This morning Mra
Alexander Edmount, of this city, cut the
The loas at that |
ACT
BH
nouths, four and six years, res pect
Ihe oldest wes not fatally injared.
tien cut her own throat, but may re
r. lusanity was the cause.
ively.
Mop
walk
¥
pn
Getting on in the world by means of
A the
irawing-roomsa of the great may be the
powerfal and the
on
To let go one's friends is one thing, but
0 be foroed to feel that they have lot
you
4 Cal -~
sed to do, is another and much harder
rial
] woo § enw
Persons desiring fruit or ornamental
s ter hd ill do well to
onsult W. W, Dellett who is represents
ng J. Austin 8haw, of Rochester, N. Y.
Mr. Bhaw
Mr.
an give the best of references if desired,
his section of country.
MARKETS,
Philadelphia, May 26, 1884.
{Corrected Weekly.)
Chicago.
May bi
“ 85
324
18.50
832
Saxven Wire, Jr, Com'n Broker,
31 South Third Street,
; BPRING MILLIS MARKET.
edd EERE A sy
4,
Philadelphia
- ¥)
-~1.02}
"
i
overseed
ton...
ssmsmsrespsassgassies 3 G0
iard, 15; ham,
Corrected weekly by 1. J. Grenoble.
COAL ~Pon, 3.25; Chestnut, 4.5; Stove, 5.1%
BELLEFONTE MARKET.
BR COrR..connn..
0 Oais A
{Corrected weekly by L. L. Brows.)
Produce—Butter 20, eggs 15, bam I8
lard 12, pota-
0
0
MARRIED.
At the residence of James Ardery, in Yort
Ym NH
of « ntro
On 17 instant, John Role aad Chestie Fisher,
W. K. Foster,
At Fhring Mills, May 22. by Rev.
Mr.J. H Eh ary L. Barree, both
em and Mise
April 3, at Contre Hall, by Rev, W. K Fischer
Perry Broon and Mise Emma Dunkie, both of
22, a4 Centre Hall x fame, Calvin Flokle
both of noar Spring Mills.
On May 22. by M. L. Rishel, Esq. Mr. Bamue! 1.
h of Bpring
a
DID,
-
Luther Swartz, In Omngeviile 11,
of Sonmiimpsttan, at the home of his
I years, 6
sounty, 11. where he \ived ati] hia
il, y ut
bool days he spent with his pe-
hill
to
™ ago they
iter he
A Ca BO
ristian fe; {Contre and Gi
Died, Martin
you
gs bis
ifr" A Frgesn,
a
A CONVIOTS SKILL.
Among the lodgers of the central police
| station recently, was Henry Dalton
| twenty-five yewrs of age, and a fine
| Appearing young man. Four years ago
hie was sent to Waupun from Tomah for
{ burglary, and was released the fore part
Beveral months ago Lie designad to es-
that he was carried outside the prison
prison, but
through a slight defect in his plan it
The plan which Dalton adopted,
wis to ship himself for sixty dozen of
i He had been at work in the shoe
nt
department, and from time to time, as an
opportunity presented itself, he removed
xty dozen of the shoes from a case that
was ready for shipment, storing them in
several hogsheads of pegs.
He removed all the nails from one end
of the case and cut them off close to the
bead and carefully returned the heads to
their original places, securing the ends
as are placed around
cases before shipping. He then placed
wng those to be shipped and
tored himself i
him with which he
such
with ropes
it, taking a kni’e with
could cut the ropes,
which would permit the head to drop out,
#0 that he could thus effect his
when the case had reached a favorable
place. The case with the others,
carried from the building and placed on
& wagon {o be taken to the depot.
A i the «
however, by the teamsier. who thinking
it was ¢ defect, had it
LE SIO FTE EE
£ BOA MW
Was
crack was discovered in RAN
returned
In the 1
was disc wvered
but
He remained in
, when he let himself
ler the floor, where
and one-hall days,
but
sbipping-room. weantime
ton's disappearan
i rid bisa
Dos wilihin
PECAD2,
rear and a half of his
racticed writing one
in the
until he has be-
is now fitted to
bh writing. He has a number of beau-
tiful designs of work which he executed
with the pen.
*
perfect an
we almost
Ws Wf ————
FISH POOD,
toward increasing
and disseminating this
if il
class of throughout the country.
The fr on to gel a fish adapted
to the neocossitigs of all sections. The
evidenoe iz accumulating to prove that in
the German carp we have a food-fish cap-
able of furnishing 10st unlimited sup-
plies at very little cost. This fish is of
espocial value to the farmers, as it will
live in ponds which become so warm that
no other fish can exist in them. It is un-
necsssary to enlarge upon the added com-
fort it would be to a farmer if he could go
out and take from his pond a five or six-
pound carp which would give him and
bis family a good dinner. Any ordinary
pond will do for a carp. An excavation
in the course of a creek, dammed at the
lower end with a grating. so that a flood
will not carry the fish away, answers
perfectly. The carp will eat almost any-
thing, and a pond of four square rods in
extent will furnish all the fish-food a
family wants. Carp grow from the egg
to three pounds in one year. They mul-
tiply rapidly, a single female yielding
half a million eggs in a year. They
spawn in May and June. In the winter
they burrow in the mud and remain dor-
want, neither making nor losing growth.
In the spawning season they must be fed,
or they will destroy the spawn. Af other
times they neod not be fed, unless there
are so many of them in the pond that the
aquatic vegetation and supplies brought
down by the feeding stream are insuffi-
cient. There is scarcely a doubt that a
carp-pond would be a profitable adjunct
to neatly every farm.
LR —
PHOTOGRAPHING LIGHTNING,
A Bohemian observer, Mr. Robert
Hansel, of Ceichenberg, has snooceded
in socuralely photographing a flash of
lightning. His pictures, of which he has
taken several, show the light of the flash,
finder the form of long continuous sparks,
traversing the atmosphere. With the
spark, the landscape is also well produced,
and a means is given for estimating the
‘ongth of the luminous train, which, in
one instance, is onlenlated to be 1,700
molres, or more than a mile. Wheat.
stone demonstrated by direct experi:
ments of great ingenuity that single
flashes of lighining do not last move than
a mititonth of a second.
food
$1.1 3
sable has be
aln
There is nothing that so goads a spirited
Woman to madness as the realization thal
My man contigs Hier husband,
nin ss A A
i stg ees os A SI mos
Now that sudden and violent changes
of weatuer cecur every 24 hours almost
Every one is troubled with coughs and
colds making a reliable, flee ve d
trustworthy cough medicine a desirable
article. In this connection Dr. Kessler's
Celebrated Eoglish Cough Medicine is
especially worthy of note—it neyer fails;
it never disappoiots, lastructions for
treatment of croup and whooping cough
accompany each botie, Dissatisfied pur.
chasers can have their money refunded,
Bold by J. D, Marray, tf
REMOVA L.
wlreet,
Frees
ater
snyihing iu wm Toe
SE RRIDe quURily Cun
A ew glock of
EHOOTING
with siaen
iy luvited to be
THEODORE 1
eset
} ESHNER, Gunsmith,
in
£4
LEWIEBURG AND TYRONE BAILROAD TIME
TABLE,
Iesve Westward,
A AM,
>
0803 pr Fy
CERER
-o BO
bes os B
Deen
0
RESIN
b ’ Montan-
urning leave Moatandony for
eR
WE ARE SELLING
TO-DAY.
Bar Iron at
2% Cents,
Lewis’ Pure White Lead at $7.00, Mix-
ed Paints, all colors, very low,
Door Locks at 25 cents and 35 cents
each. Thom Latches at 4 and 5 cents
each,
_Loog handled iron Shovels at 35 and
40 cents each.
GOOD SETS OF AXLES AT $2.50,
(rood Hickory Fellows at 75¢ per pair.
Good finished hickory Poles at 76¢.
Bright Springs 84 to Pic per pound,
Finished hickory Shafis at 50 to 60 cts,
per pair.
Dasti leather. Dull, Duck,
Drill
LOWER THAN EVER KNOWN.
od Woodscrews, Carriage and Tar bol
most at the price of bar iro >
Ask or write Fn prices. 2p.
Une-strap Horse blanket at 75c each
Two sira " Be *
Buffalo Robes, Lap Robes, Whips, &c.
very low. Call and see them. We are
selling the largest stock of goods we ever
50:id.,
Rubber
“
MACHINE BOLTS
from 43{ inches to 36 inches by ix.
You need not make them any more,
We sell them at about the price you pay
for the round iron, Think of 143%} ma-
chine boits, square Leads and nuts and
screws for 10 to 15 cents each,
Great Reduction in Shades
Bhadings.
Shades, plain, fringed and 1
Lower than ever. 8 ooliopd
The newest styles of
aud Artistic shades,
and finish,
Horse Shoes at $4.25 Per Keg.
Steel and Iron Harrow Teeth. Tool
Bit! vat wa as low,
edar tubs, galvanized and iron band
Painted Pails, Step Ladders, a:
Twines, Paper Bags, &c., &c.. never were
as low in price and as good in quality.
Dupont’s Powder,
Rifle, Maning, Eagle, Bar Lead, Shot, &e
10000 PIECES WALL PAPERS
From five cents a bolt up to any price
you want them; no trouble to show
them. Come and look at them if you
don’t want them, jost to see how pretty
they are, Oentres, Qelitigm, :
Finest Stylings in plain gilt,
SILVERWARE.
Our Silver Ware Cases will soon be
open for inspection, A full branch of Sil
Hollon ware, ves, Forks, Oastors, &o.,
Our
and
Dado, Plcturesque
beautifal in design
will be opened at unheard of low
BIRD CAGES, Japan and Brees or
full sock just in 25 per cent lower than
last season0,
Brushes of all kinds. Brooms of all
kinds. Very low.
On ication snr catalogs and price
lists will be mailed to sny one. Trade
al I cn nil. our parison a
; Ww on com w
be found as low as eastern prices.
Remember by paying the
becribers
Rerokren
one in ad cred
it Tor 14 monthe" "0 ot
F. G. FRANCISCUS,
feb264f Lewistown,