The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 23, 1884, Image 1

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    VOLUME OLD SERIES, XL.
-
23. 1884,
THE CENTRE REPORTER,
FRED. KURTZ, Eorror and Pror'n.
National Ticket.
FOR PHESIDENT,
GROVER CLEVELAND,
OF NEW YORK.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
THOMAS A. HENDRICKS,
OF INDIANA.
State; Ticket.
CONGRESS-AT-LARGE,
GENERAL W. W. H. DAVIS,
OF BUCKS COUNTY,
Senator Bayard, Dela
ware’'s noblest
son, gives Cleveland and Hendricks his
warmest support.
er ———
Democrats all over the country are
wild with joy over the nomination of
Cleveland and Hendricks,
a -
Judge Thurman, one of the country’s
purest and noblest Democrats, strongly
endorses Cleveland,
Let the star-route and other rascals
look ont—Grover Cleveland once hung a,
man.
The Philadelphia Chronicle-Herald ob-
serves that the most powerful republican
microscope cannot discover a single tat-
too mark on the skin of Grover Cleve.
land.
et— .
“Grover Cleveland,” says the Philad.
Press, in behalf of Blaine, “has no past.’
There are thousands of voters in Mr.
Blaine’s own party whose chief objection
to Mr. Blaine as a candidate is that he
has too much past. It is a past defaced
with great and indelible stains.
--————
The Republicans have Blaine as the
magnetic candidate, The west boasts of
a magnetic lady. Now let “dirty-work
Logan” be shoved off, and the magnetic
girl of the west be shoved on and if that
don’t raise thunder, what will ?
- o-oo.
It comes very the old ticket
Cleveland has been the same kind of
Governor Tilden was, and provoked the
same Hendricks stands for
himself, and after the 4th of March next
will hold the place in the Government
to which the people elected him in 1878,
a
Some of the Republicans cry against
Cleveland, that he once hung a man. As
sheriff, in the discharge of his duty, he
did hang p man who was guilty, But
now Rsporrer would like to ask
with youjrads who twice swal-
lowed Hartranft for governor after hang-
ing an innocent woman, Mrs, Surratt?
We wait for a reply.
—_—
The pictures of public men, published
by some of our exchanges, are horrid af-
fairs. That put out as a portrait of Gov.
Cleveland looks as if he had a big chew
of tobacco in each cheek, whereas neith-
er Gov, Cleveland nor the editor of the
ReroRTeR tobacco, Cleveland,
however, will chaw up tattooed Blaine
and his “dirty John" next November,
near
enemies.
the
how it is
chaw
as a
The Naw York Herald prints a column
of brief, terse and emphatic opinions of
Cleveland's nomination by the leading
bank officers and business men of New
York City, The strongest Republicans
admit the nomination the best possible.
Many of them will support it, while the
Democrats and Independent Republicans
are enthusiastic. The Jerald flies Cleve-
laud and Hendricks at its masthead in
big type.
ER ————— So
Edward 1. Conden, the fraudulent
messenger boy who collected money
from several guests in the Fifth Avenue
Hotel on fraudulent telegrams, was
brought before Recorder Smith. The
charge was that of stealing telegraph
blanks valued at one cent, He was found
guilty and sent to the penitentiary for
one year,
If Conden had been a star route thief
or a member of the firm of Grant &
Ward, he wauld have gone scott free and
could have stood high in the Blaine
ranks,
Bisons. cots tps p——
During Mr. Blaine’s brief administra-
tion of the state Department in the Gar
field cabinet he proved himself totally
unfit to cope with the diplomacy of other
nations, He came very near involving
the United States in a war with Chili
about the private business of a person
who was pot a citizen of the United
States, He did his best to provoke hos-
tilities with the friendly neighbor repub-
lic of Mexico by undertaking to meddle
in the settlemeni of the boundary line
between that country and Guatema'a,
He left the relations of the United States
with a number of foreign states in so
complicated a condition that hig succes:
gor found it very delicate and difficalt
task to disentapgle them, It istherefore
not a matter of wonder that the business
men of the country regard him asan im+
proper and unsafe candidate.
a Sr
It is whispered about that Arthur has
said to more than one friend emphati-
cally that he does not care a continental
whether the Republican ticket is elected
or not, and these whispers are traced to
sources that are esteemed to be good au-
thority.
t is said, furthermore, that the Cabi-
net are entirely in sympathy with Ar-
thar, with the exception of Chandler and
possibly Gresham. Folger has been
heard to say plainly that as the Blaine
men in New York staid at home when
he was a candidate against Cleveland,
therefore he will not lift his hand for
Blaine against Cleveland.
--———— — -
WORKMEN GETTING THEIR EYES
OPENED.
We are told that if the tariff is taken
off we will be forced to compete with
and brought to the level of the pauper
labor of Earope. That's too thin, We
know while they are slyly whispering
pauper labor in our ears, they are at the
same time negotiating for the importa
tion of these hordes as fast as they can
procure them. That's the kind of pro.
tection these magnanimous politicians
give us, It would be a cure for sore.eyes
to see anything but a Huagarian or an
Italian working about the breakers of
the middle division coal fields to-day.
Just where protection is needed is where
they fail to give it. Cheaper necessaries
of life and a restriction of this much.
talked~of foreign labor is what the work.
ingmenwanj, '® * 8 2 14 time
for the laboring classes of Pennsyivania
to open their eyes and look this question
of the tariff square in the face. We have
been deceived long enough. We have
had the tariff for the last 20 years, and
has it improved our condition? We had
the tariff in 1876 when the labor riots
occurred, and we have tariff in 1884 with
prospects just as gloomy. Let us have
change. Under a tariff for revenne on-
ly times cannot be much worse. Let us
relegate to the rear the Randalls, the
Kelieys, the Storms, and other political
traitors, who vote to make the people
pay taxes on the very necessaries of life,
and thereby add an annual surplus of
$100,000 into the already overflowing
treasury of the United States,
stmt
AN ILLINOIS BOLT.
Belleville, Ill, July 17.—A meeting of
German] Republicans, was held last
night and a society formed for political
purposes during the present campaign.
The object of the society is to work for
Cleveland aod Hendricks and against
Blaine and Logan. Sixty-two Republi-
cans joined the organization last night,
and it is expected that the number will
be increased to 300 at the next meeting.
It is the {otention to organize branches
of the society all over the county and
have almost the entire German Republis
can vote of St. Clare county cast for
Cleveland and Hendricks, After the
election the societies will break up and
the members return to the Republican
party and remain there provided the
party gives them respectable candidates
to vote for,
a
THE FACTS ABOUT CLEVELAND'S
YETOES.
{Philadelphia Times,]
The grounds upon which it was sought
to create prejudice against Gov, Cleve.
land are his vetoes of the 5-cent fare hill,
the machanics’ lien bill and the bill reg-
ulating the hours of labor of drivers and
conductors of horse cars,
The bill fixing the fare on theslevated
railways at five cents abrogated a right
vested in the corporation by a previous
Legislature. In that act the regulation
of fares was distinctly surrendered by the
State until the net earnings should reach
a given sum, In spite of this agreement
in the contract the Legislature of 1883
passed a bill making a uniform rate of
tive cents. The Goyernor vetoed it on
the ground that the Legislature could
not abrogate a vested right. There was
not the slightest doubt that the courts of
the state would have taken the same
view,
That the proposed redactions were on-
ly of the slightest interest to working-
men is shown by the fact that the rate
had long been five cents from 5.30 to 8,30
a. m. and from 4.30 to 7.30 p, m. The re-
duction of fares at other hours in the day
was a manifest advantage to bankers,
brokers, business men and amusement
seekers, but not of the smallest interést
to laboring men and mechanics, who al-
ready had the privileges the vetoed bill
conferred. Opposition to the veto was
short-lived and a feeling of satisfaction
followed that one man had nn found
who had the piuek and the intelligence
to op such futile legislation ¢Yeh' at
the risk of incurring popular disapprov-
al, : ;
The Governor also interposed his veto
to the mechanics’ lien bill, The original
intention of this bill was to give mechan-
ics power to secure their wages by means
of liens. Bat it was so amended that its
purpose was either obscure or lost, It
gave parties four months after perform.
ance of work or furnishing of material to
file a lien, a period rediculously prolong.
ed. It also allowed the same costs as in
foreclosures, which in the case of gmall
bills would have been go eparmdds as to
eat them up Shtively, it worst of all it
repedled existing mechanics’ lien laws,
which were far more favorable to the
working pacpls than the new law. It was
found to be a scheme to make increased
lawyers’ bills and to diminish the protec
tion afforded the mechanic. The Gov-
ernor very properly accepted the lesser
evil and ve the defective hill,
The bill making twelve hous a day's
work for conductors and drivers on street
ears did not in any way prohibit the
making of a contract requiring any num
ber of Boar work and, if it had, the Gov-
ernor very aptly objected that it was an
interference with the rights of employ-
ers. If ~as plain that if the car drivers
and conductors worked fewer hours th
would receive less pay, and the
neither did or could prevent that. The
Governor concluded his objections hy
saying: “I cannot think this bill is in
the interest of the workingmen.”
One charge remains against Governor
Cleveland's vetoes, The last Legislature
made a small appropriation for a charita-
ble institution known as the Weschester
Catholic Protectory. The Governor
struck it out and the charge has been
made that he was hostile to the Catholic
Church as such. Mr. Henry L. Hoguet,
president of the Pragectory, says on this
question :
We never doubted the sincerity of the
motive which induced Governor Cleve.
land to withhold his signature to the ap-
propriation to the Protectory; we thought
then and think now that he was not ac-
tuated by any feeling of bigotry or hostil-
ity to Catholics or the Catholic institu
tion. On the contrary, Gov, Cleveland
is liberal in the extreme, and we are of
the firm belief that he was led to with-
holding his approval of the appropria-
tion solely by a sense of public duty as
he viewed it.
Upon these facts are based all the
charges made against Gov, Clevelend by
which it is sought to raise objections to
him among the laboring and religious
elements.
-
GROVER CLEVELAND.
A Man in whose Person the Actual Is-
sues are Defined,
From Harper's Weekly.)
The nomination of Governor Cleveland
defines sharply the actual issue of the
presidential election of this year. He is
a man whose absolute official integrity
has never been questioned, who has no
lahorious and doubtful explanmions to
undertake, and who is universally known
as the governor of New York elected by
an unprecedented majority which was
not partisan, and represented both the
votes and the consent of an enormous
body of republicans, and who as the
chief executive of the state has steadily
withstood the blemishments and the
threats of the worst elements of his par.
ty, and bas justly earned the reputation
of a corageous, independent and efficient
friend and promoter of admiostrative ree
form. His name has become that of the
especial representative among our pub-
lic men of the integrity, purity and econ-
omy of administration which are the ob-
jects of the most intelligent and patriotic
citizens. The bitter and furious hostili-
ty of Tammany hall and of General But-
ler to Governor Cleveland as his passport
to the confidence of good men and the
general conviction that Tammany will
do all that it can to defeat him will be
an additional incentive to the voters who
cannot support Mr, Blaine, and who are
unwilling not to vote at gli, 10 secure the
election of a candidate whom tbe politi:
cal [ig and the party traders bate and
unitedly oppose,
Bo firm and “clean” and independent
in his high office has Gov. Oleveland
shown himself to be that he is denounced
a8 pot being a democrat by his democrat.
ic opponents. This denunciation springs
from the fact that he has not hesitated to
prefer the public welfare to the mere in-
terest of his party. Last autumn when
the democratic “district attorney of
Queens county was charged with mis.
conduct, the governor heard the accasa-
tion and the Why and decided that it
was his duty to remove the officer. He
was asked by his party friends to defer
the removal until after the election, as
otherwise the party would lose the dis-
trict by the opposition of the attorney's
friends. The governor understood his
daty, and removed the officer some days
before the election, and the party did
lose the district. This kind of cou
and devotion to public duty in the teeth
of the most virulent opposition of traders
of his own'party Is uousual in a public
man, and it shows precisely the executive
quality which is demanded at a time
when every form of speculation and
fraud presses upon the public treasury
under the specious plea of party advan.
tage.
The argument that in an election it is
not a man but a party that is supported,
and that the democratic party is oh to
be trusted than the republican is futile
at a time when the republican party has
nominated a candidate whom a great
body of the most conscientious republis
cans cannot support, and the democratic
party bas nominated a candidate whom
a great body of the most venal democrats
practically bolt. Distrust of the demo-
cratic party springs from the conduct of
the very democrats who madly oppose
Governor Cleveland because they know
they cannot use him. The mere party
Aan is vain also, becanse no
able man will be whipped in ta vole for
a candidate whom lieves to he per-
sonaily disqualified the presidency on
the ground that a party ought to be sus-
tained. No honorable republican would
sustain his party for such a reason, and
the honest republicans who propose to
vote for Mr. Blaine will do 80 because
they do not believe, as the protesting re-
publicans do believe, that he made his
official action subserve a personal advaao-
tage. Nothing is more hopeless than an
attempt to pursuade such republicans to
sustain their party by voting fa un
worthy candidate. Shoyl ‘ey is to
reward such a pandidate by conferring
upon his tho highest offioial honor in
the wold they could not reasonably ex.
peot the nomination of a worthier candi-
date at the next election, and they could
not consistently oppose the election of
any candidate whom their party might
select. The time to defeat unfit nomina«
tions is when they are & Dol next
time. The nominat 3 Gov. Cleve.
a 3] to the preference
land is due not go,
of his patty "0 t 4 t eral demand of
e cotintry for a candidaby which stands
rp ¥ the qualities and services
which are associated with his name.
- i —
WORK TQ BE RESUMED,
Pittsborg, July 16.—Indications point
to an early resumption of work in the
river coal mines. The strikes are weak
eulog in the second and fourth pools and
a namber of men returned to work to~
ye
-
—
COMMODORE BCHLEY TELIS HOW
THE GREELY PARTY WAS
RESCUED.
[By Assceiated Press, ]
Washington, July 17.—The following
is a telegram relative to the discovery of
Department :
St. Johns, N. F.~9 a. m.,, July 17.
Hox, W. E. Caaspres, Sec
Waskington :
The Thetis, Bearland Loch Garry ar-
rived here to-day from West Green and.
All well, Separated from Alert 150 miles
north duriog a gale, At9 a, m., Jone 20
Lient, A. W. Greely, Bergeant Brainerd.
Lady Franklin Bay Exposition.
three days after amputation, which. had
become imperative. Seventeen of the 25
persons composing this expedition per-
isbed by starvation at the point where
found. One was drowned while sealing
to procure food, Twelve bodies of the
dead were rescued, and are now on
board the Thetis and Bear, One Eskimo
was buried at Disco in accordance with
the desire of the Ins
Greenland, Five ow buried in the
ice near the camp, were swept away to
sea by winds and currents before our ar-
rival and could not be recovered.
When the proyisions were consumed
the party was forced to live upon boiled
seal skin straps from their seal
skin clothing. Lichens and shrimps
were procured in good weather, when
they were strong enough to make the ex.
ertion. As 1300 trinmphs were re juired
to fill a gill ; measure the_labor was too
exhausting to depend upon them to sus-
tain life entirely,
Cape Babive sud Littleton Istand did not
close on account of violent gules all win.
ter, so that 240 rations at the latter point
could not be reached. All of Greely's
records and all instroments brought by
him from Fort Conger are recovered and
Lare on board.
- o-oo
TERRIBLE RAILROAD ACCIDENT,
London, July 16.—An express train on
the Manchester and Sheffield railway
was wrecked to-day. Five persons were
killed and many iojored.
Later reports state that twenty-five
persons were killed and forty seriously
injured, .
—
QUEER CAUSE OF SUICID]
Pittsburg, Joly 15.—Lizsie Emerick.
Aged 20 years, well known in Franklin
township committed suicide by shooting.
Her inability to keep up with the other
pupils at school is assigned as the resson
for beg act,
a
NDING STRIKE,
oy
“
AN IMPE
New York, July 20,.~Nearly 7000 la.
borers, as well as 2500 bri. klayers, will
R0 out on a strike at 7 o'clock to-morrow
morning, if the builders refuse to grant
their demand that a day's work shall be
nine hours instead of ten. The laborers
are satisfied with their wages, which are
$2.50 a day. The action on the part of
the laborers is a sequel of the Jetermin-
ation of the bricklayers to work only 9
hours. Among the builders there seems
to be a lack of union. It is thought that
the majority will give in at once. It is
gusta, however, that some are going to
ght.
- lo
Marseilies, July 16.12.30 A. M.—The
deaths here from cholera during the past
24 hours were 53. Total since the ppw
pearance of the plague, 587.
Marsailes, July 14.—There were thirty-
six deaths from cholera in this city dur
ing the 2 hours that ended at 9 this
evening,
a ——] —— f]———————_—
COUNTRY HOUSE IN KENTUCKY,
English novels have made the novel.
reading world familiar with the charao-
teristios of English country gentlemen ;
their hospitality, their broad acres, and
above all, the comfort of their homes.
Around their hearthstones gather their
friends from far and near, and all the
comforts and all the refinements of mod.
ern civilization are called in to make
them happy. It is the same at Mt Ster.
king. There is none of that pretentious
shoddiness which so disgusts one among
the wealthy parvenues of the large com-
mercial centres. Comfort, not styls,
elegance, not attempted show, are the
rule. The hoyse is large and roomy, and
seams to be meant to accomodate a large
number of guests, as no doubt it does.
Every room is & model of comfort. Great
feather beds, inviting yon to slumber,
remind one of the good old Knicker.
booker homes about which Irviug loved
to write The fireplaces are broad,
hearty and hospitable, just the kind to
make your heart warm and All you with
a feeling of setinfaction towards yourself
and all the world The furniture is in
nocird with what yon wonld expect in a
home where comfort ruled and not show.
Sofas, made to sit on and to lie on and
not to look at are soattered about and are
covered with rich and warm-looking
rugs, while bright and sabstantial-look-
ing carpets are spread over the floors
The three graces of modern civilisation
~order, ologance and ocomfort-show
themselves everywhere, and the greatest
of these, as my genial host and his sister
will toll you, is comfort.
nn A A ————
The crops throughout Prussia are un-
usually good,
{
i
HEP TI
Scientific
Borghum sugar, reported by experts to
neighborhood of Phoenix, Arizona.
It in asserted that passengers perceive
a difference in the eass of riding in cars
having the larger or smaller wheels, and
that they prefer those with the large ones.
Yellow fever is said to be propagated
hority of Dr. Carlos Finlay, of Havana,
vho has seen under the microscope spores
and filaments of a particular nature on
16 sting of one of these insects that had
11
2IOW
just bitten a patient suffering from ye
fever,
It isa very significant fact indicative of
the closing of the gnlf between the distant
East and the far West, in quite an nnex-
pected direction, that the appointment of
& Japanese student as assistant to the Pro-
fessor of Anatomy st Berlin has reocived
the approval of the Minister of Public
Worship,
Dwellings for artisans sre at present
built on an improved plan at Hornsey,
England. They are erected on plots 15
feet 6 inches wide by 80 feet in depth
nd ven =
closet or The
ground floor,
is not more than $2 a week
ily on the
Paraffine is now superseding sperma
hardly so anxious to extract it from the
oil. Yet there is a considerable demand
for spermaceti from Sweden, where it is
largely employed in the manufacture of
matches, and in thst country the match.
making business is very active.
The new ten-versts-to-an-inch map of
Russia, by M. Tillo, gives the following
as the length of the chief rivers of the em-
pire : Volga, 2,108 miles, (the verst being
taken as equal to 0.6683 mile ;) Ural, 1,420
miles ; Dnieper, 1,820 miles; Don, 112
miles ; Kama, 1,117 miles ; Petchora, 1,024
miles, and the Oka, 915 miles,
The National Hungarian Exhibition is
to opens on May 1, 1855, and remain open
to Oct. 15. In connection with this dis
play there will be an international section
for tools, machines, motors, agricultural
machines, patented inventions, etc, in
which Americans may open up a new
market for their manufactures.
On distilling sodio chloride with the
selenized, as in the manufacture of hydro.
choric acid, Dr. Drinkwater found that
all the selemum distilled over and was
dissolved in the acid, the saline residue
being practically free from the impurity.
The results were independent of either
temperature or quantity of acid em-
ployed.
As communioated to the Academy of
Sciences, Paris by M. Erington de la
Croix, the grand earthquake waveof Aug.
27, the effect of the memorable Krakatos
catastrophe, seems to have been propa-
gated across the Indian Ocean at the pro-
digious speed of not less than 250 miles
per second, or £000 kilometres per hour.
Tests of the electric light on board the
German ironclad squadron disposes of
the idea that the new illuminant is any
protection against the attacks of torpedo
boats. These ministure marine warriors
not only could approach quite unper-
oeived the huge fortresses afloat, but the
my of the electric are served as a guide
to the aim of the torpedo-bearing craft.
Gen. Berdan is said to have invented a
new fuse for shell projectiles, which can-
not fail to effect explosion at the right
moment. The principle involved consists
in utilizing the wtary motion of the pro-
joctile to ignite a fuse after the former
has madea certain gumber of revolutions.
The rifling of the gun detérmines the
space passed over in each revolution, thus
Bolidifioation of nitrogen, according to
an experiment by M. 8. Wroblewski by
means of boiling oxygen, is effected at an
approximate temperature of 1868 C. As
yet he declines to explain the process by
which he arrives at the result in detail ;
Jersey Bliore
Jock Haven
Renovo
at Eri a.
caves Philadelphia
Piny
. a
NEWB FXPRESS
Willison
arr at Lock Haver
NIAGARA EXP, leav:
3 faa lia
rasssengers
TAET
IL leaves Erie
Renovo
Lock Haven
GInEport
WOOD
ger Agent,
J. BR
Gen'] Pass
FOR THE
AND —
. fos 1] w
J
We are till falling to low prices on all
of our stock of merchandise,
HARPOON HAY FORKS,
single and doable,) at $4.50 to $5—s0ld
a very short time ago at $7.50. Hay Fork
Pulleys at 25¢ each. Best Manilla (not
sisal) from 4 to 2 inches,
Dunn's, Beardesly, Eagle and Clipper,
GRAIN AND GRASS SCYTHES,
{Bagor Edges) 75 cents to §1.15. Emory
Sunes, Scythe Stones and Rifles at una-
sully low rates
SILVER HOLLOW WARE.
Our Silverware surprises every one for
its beautiful appearance, elegance of de-
sign, and prices Jower than were ever
known.
PAPER BAGS,
We are all right again on paper bags,
We quote the trade at 40 per cent. off
and an extra 5 per cent, off on lots of 5,
PUMPS,
There has been a great decline in the
price of pumps. If you want one write
to us for prices, or call and see them.
$3.50, formerly $5.
Chain pumps at $34, formerly $54.
LUMBER.
If you please look at this: 25,000
White Pine and Hemlock Pickets, flat
and square headed, 3, 3} and 4 feet.
Frame lumber in large quantities at $14
per thousand feet. 18.inch, White Pine
Shingles, No. 1, at $44 per thousand,
and less in large quantities. White Pine
Selects and Bara Lumber, rongh or sure
faced, from $20 to $60 per thousand,
White and yellow pine Flooring, 1-inch,
at §25 per thousand. Hemlock Flooring
from §1s to $22 per thousand.
TIN CUPS, BRASS KETTLES,
SERVING KETTLES, &c.
Think of Tin Cape at 25 cents
en, or 2 cents each; just as as we
make to sell at 5 cents each. Good
stamped Tin Basinast 15, 18 and 25 ots,
each. We are paying much attention to
our tinware stock. More than we have
ever done to supply the wants of every
one with something that is really good
COAL. COAL.
Clearfield Coal in lots at shippers’ pri.
oes. Anthracite Coal in lots at shippers’
prices,
LOOK! PAINTS! LCOK!
Liquid Paints for houses, barns, roofs,
eto, in four different colors, made to our
own order at §1 per gallon.
GRAIN CRADLES,
Our supply of Grain Cradles this season
is unusually large. Western cradle at
$2}, Eagle Cradle at $2.75—best cradle
in market, Ball's cradle, at $34.
TIN CANS AND FRUIT JARS,
Ordered to be ipa wa on July 1,
(in season) 21 n Quart very
can OD) 2 fun 4 will be offered for
sale from 50 to 60 cents per dosen. At
wl}
PRE-
r doz-
intense degree of cold the nitrogen is
olearly solidified snd falls to the bottom
of the vessel in which it is contained like
flakes of snow of a very remarkable size
However slight the terrestrial inter
course between Dante and Beatrice or
Petrarch snd Yaura, time changes the
proportion of things, and in later days it
is preferable to have fewer sonnets and
more eon vermtion.
Whatever our place, allotted $0 us by
Providenon, that for us is the post of
duty. God estimates not by the position
wo are ia, but by the way in which w
» aa
r
Frait Jars which are high and advancing
but we will hold our present stock at
present prices, without variation or
abatement.
CEDARWARE & MATCHES
our tive attention, all of which
Bae t Eastern prices. Good
Brooms at $1.75 per dozen
Door and Window Screens to suit any
door or window, ready to put up.
100 barrels of Rosendale Cement at re-
daced prices. THE TRADE will please
address us for trade prices,
Yours RANCIS
F. 6. FRANCISCUS,
feb2011 LEWISTOWN, PA.