The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 19, 1889, Image 1

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER
FRED KURTZ, - - EDITOR
Ham Cy
We like the Clearfield Republican ex-
cept its unwieldy form. Wonld not 8
pages be an improvement, neighbor ?
Gov. Beaver can find a fit successor
for Dr. Higbee's place, in Prof. D. M,
Wolf, of our county. Prof. Wolf is one
of the best county superintendents in
the state,
Famine is prevalent throughout Gal-
jeia, owing to short crops and the recent
terrifie snow storms. The peasantry are
killing their horses for food in order to
husband their small stores of grain against
a season of greater privation.
The Philad, Press ad. appears in anoth-
er column. Outside of its politics we
think well of the Press, yet we must
commend it for its occasional indepen-
dent criticism of men and acts in its own
ranks. As a paper for state and general
news it is complete.
Governor Beaver's administration is
yery unpopular with many on his side
of the house. We attributed this feeling
to one of jealousy, but Jack Love, the
other day, in Philadelphia, is reported
to have said that Gen. Hastings is to
blame for the whole of it, Suppose Jack
be run for Governor, might it not make
things Lovely all around ?
Why farming does not pay. Because
the farmer ia robbed right and left, If
he has a dollar in his pocketbook some-
body will steal ha!f of it before be can
tarn around. If he has a bushel grain
to sell or a steer to market, some body
will steal the whole of it before he knows
it, and the government permits it. Leg-
Jlalators permit it; Congressmen permit it;
Cou *t8 permit :t. It would be astonish-
ing if fa TIO paid, ander present condi-
tions; and commerce and society must
be turned up. ide down and ioside out
before farming vill pay. Bat there is
nobody to do that but farmers them
selves Congress and oF State Legisla-
tures must be cleaned out 8 You wouid
clean a dirty stable, The m.neybags
and monopolists of the Uniteu State
Senate give way to representatives of Jhe
people’s interests, and mind you reader,
this is the only read out of your difficul-
ties,
ED ———————- ——
The Knights of Labor are about to
open their warfare on the Sugar Trust,
and within a moath expect to fire on it
Since the decision of the New York.
courts against the lagality of the BSugsr
Trust certain members of the Executive
Board have been perfecting the plaos of
what is nothing more nor less than a
general boycott on Sogar Trust sugar
The plan is first to learn what refineries
are in the Trust, what their brands sre,
and what wholesalers buy them. Simis
lar information as to the non trust refin
eries is to be secured. Then Knights,
assisted by the Farmers’ Alliance and
other organizations, are to notify their
retail grocers as to what sugars are trust
sugars and what are not, and to assert
their determination to cease buying cer-
tain brands and kinds. It is expected
that in many states quo warranto pro-
ceedings will be begun to revoke the
charters of the trust on the ground of
their illegality and oppression of the
masses. If successful in this matter,
other trusts in life's necessaries will be
attacked. Itis said the Knights hope to
popularize themselves very much by
this measure.
The reward of $150 offered by the
Commissioners for the arrest of the vil.
lain who foully and brutally murdered
Miss Clara Price, again shows the staff
these officials are made of. This petty
offer is a disgrace to the rich county of
Centre, and is the crowning act ofshame
and humiliation to which our people
have been subjected by the Commiesion-
ers in the past 18 months,
If the story of this $150 reward is
true, as it was related to us, then Hen:
derson should follow the example of Ju-
das.
We are told that a detective, in the
section wherp the foul murder was com-
mitted, telegraphed to the Commission-
ers waoting to know what reward they
would give for the finding of the mar
derer, and thas Henderson replied $150 !
and the reason for it is given because
the detective was a Democrat! Groat
God! if this is correct jthen we abandon
all hope of finding enough of honor and
manhood in the Commissioners office to
fill the hollow of the point of a needle.
Could bigotry, spite and utter disregard
of duty in so grave a matter as this, go
farther ?
We are told the Republicans disown
these officials as much as Democrats
despise them.
-
Experiment Station Report,
The publication of the annual report
of the Penna. State College Agricultural
Experiment Station for 1888 has been
unavoidably delayed, and the volume
has just appeared,
A prominent feature of the report is
the record of experiments upon the soils
ing system for milch cows, designed to
farnish data upon which to base a ras
tional estimate of the relative advant~
ages of pasturage and soiling, Comparat-
vie trials were made both in the barn
and the laboratory, and the results are
recorded in fall,
The fleld experiments with fertilizers,
wh ich have been in progress since 1881,
are reported upon. We note, among
other points, that these experiments
seem to favor the use of the cheaper and
less soluble phosphates upon soils similar
to that of the Stallion farm. These ex.
periments are to be continued through
a term of vears, on the same plots, upon
a uniform plan. A considerable number
of varieties of farm crops have been
tested, especial attention baviog been
given to corn.
The Horticulturist’s report introduces
a new feature in the experimental work,
and gives an extended account of coms
parative trials with different varieties of
garden vegetables. An experiment in
practical forestry has alio been begun.
The report contains a description and
cuts of the new Station building, and an
address by Prof. I. P. Roberts on the
occasion of the laying of the corner
stone of the building. A general report
on the years’s operations precedes the
accoonts of experiments, and a ficancial
statement shows the disposition made of
the fands received from the United
States. An appecdix contains a detailed
report of the daily meteorological ob.
servations,
The report will be sent, free of charge,
to any citizen of Pennsylvania, so long
as the supply lasts, on application to the
Director, «t State College, Centre Co.
ipa
The Farmers Getting There.
The farmers of the West have made
several attempt so influence politics and
legislation in the direction of their
interests by organization, but so far have
made little progress. The trust and
monopoly tariff combications on 24
hours’ notice can throw a powerfu
millionaire lobby into Washington; but
the farmers who, in addition to meeting
the home demand for their products,
send abroad 75 per cent ofour total exw
norts—thus literally “saving the conntry”’
on the balance of trade view—have no
such abvantage. They are widely scat-
tered, and united effort is difficult, The
on'y farm lobby we ever hear of at Wash-
ington is the biz flockmasters owning
thousands of sheep in exas and Color.
ado. They dicker with the trusts on the
give and take principle.
An effort has been making to remedy
the lack of unity and effort on the part
of the farmers of the country, and it
culminated last week at Bt. Louis in the
organization of the National Farmers’
Alliance and Indastrial Union,” into
which arelmerged several Western and
Southern organizations, the Knights of
Labor, under Mr. Powderly's leadership,
co-operating, Negotiations are also
pending looking to a federation ofall the
stricty speaking IJabor organizations
which have simost been brought to a
successful termination, This will give
the united army of labor a membership
as follows:
Knights of Labor...... ———
Other organized labor...
verre SNK)
sen srenen dill JN)
SF
Total - 3,100,000
This is a vast army, and the figures
may be exaggerated, but who can tell?
They oaly 1epressnt one-fourth the
voters of the country, Their first move
will be to secure a foothold in State leg
islatures and then in congress. “One
possible result, politically, of the com-
bination,” states one who is foremost in
promoting it, “is that the first great im-
petus which will carry the reform moves
ment to success will come from the cons
servative, aristocratic Bouth. There is
no mora sigoificant fact in connection
with the movement than that an organi-
zation composed almost entirely of
Southern farmers has joined hands with
an organization consisting almost ens
tirely of Northern mechanics and labor-
ers,
AMARA SI. HBO A
In an interview inthe Washington Pos
Sevator Ingalls of Kansas seid: “I want
to spe the tariff reduced to a degree that
the reyenues of the country will only
meet the expenses, 1 wish to see the
tax on whisky and tobacco continued,
because they are unnecessary luxuries,
and because every dollar raised vpon
them relieves the tax on necessaries of
life to that extent.” If this isnot getting
on Grover Cleveland's platform it is
certainly getting as far away as possible
from the declared policy of the Repuabli-
can party, Senator Wilson of Iowa also
seems to have heard something drop, and
in a recent interview says that tariff
reduction is the most ime
The State Grange.
The State Grange met at Harrisbarg,
last week, with a full representation.
Thureday morniug was taken
routine business, including the hearing
of reports. That of Becretary Thomas
showed an increase of forty-three new
granges during the year and an increase
of 81,000 income above that of last year.
The total membership of the fraternity
in the state about Worthy
Lecturer Whitehead, of Washington, D,
C., was present and made an address,
Bamuel R. Downing, of Chester, who is a
member of the recently appointed com-
mission to revise the road laws, read
able paper on “Roads.” A. E. Tewks-
bury, of Columbia, gave the farmers
much practical information in his well
prepared paper on “That Farm of Mine.”
Mrs. Joboson, of Erie county, presented
the report of the committee
tion. report and
Among thiogs declared against
compulsory education as opposed to the
idea of our free institutions,
A genuine sensation was created when
the “ommittee on Resolutions reported
a resolution endorsing Williams Grove as
the place for holding the interstate
nic exhibition and expressiog
dence in R. H. Thomas, the
manager of the exhibition.
Colonel H. C. Deming, of Harrisburg,
who has been watchiog for the
tion, made a long speech against it.
up in
in 35.000,
an
on educas
It was an interesting
other
pies
confi.
Colonel
resoiu-
He
declared that the number of grangers in
the Williams
Grove had decreased until there are now
very few to be found. The grange that
Colonel Thomas belongs to is not in
good standing. The exhibition is not an
advantage to any member of any grange.
It is under bad influences carried on by
one man who has a monopoly and pers
sons who oppose it bear the crack of the
monopoly lash. Exhibitors and
pay big sums of money into one
pockets and the State Grange |
sented as emnctioniog it
as, he charged, makes at
clear and he gave facts and figures
prove it. The State Grange is asked to
endorse this, while farmers are now sul
fering a8 they never suffered before.
Grossly immoral exhibitions are held on
the grounds every year, such a8 no de-
cent man would countenance,
Liquor is both sold and
and the mansgement not only
bat encourage it.
counties surrounding
& repre-
least $15
0
distributed,
Kt
"nn
Ba
was drogged and robbed on the grounds
this year and there was gambling
bacchanalian revelry which the
is asked to investigate. Colonel Deming
concluded by advocating Mount Gretna
as the place for holding the grangerw’
picnic, the affair to be onder the mans
agement of the State Grange, which
would reap the profits,
His speech caused quite a flatter,
which was increased when Mr. McSpars
rer, of Lancaster, insisted that the reso.
lation endorsing Williams Grove was
not within the province of the grange
and should never have been introduced,
A number of speeches defending the
picnie and its management made
and the State Grange then passed the
resolution of endorsement by an overs
whelming majority, there being but a
few votes in the negative.
and
¥
grange
were
is A ca
At Batte, Montana, a prize fight very
properly resulted in the death of the
two fighters, A dispute between John
Gallagher and G. H. Ward over a trifling
debt due the former by Ward resuited in
the arranging by soms of the friends of
both parties of a prize fight to settle the
matter. It took place Sanday.
The fight was one of the most stubborn
and brutal that has ever been witnessed.
Gallagher was so badly hurt that he died
of his injaries Monday evening. It took
105 rounds to settle which was the better
man, during which Gallagher was
knocked down ninety-eight times,
In the forty-eighth round hie arm was
broken by a blow, but he insisted on
fighting and showed an amount of piack
and grit rarely seen in the ring. Not.
withstanding his injury he fought with
undiminished ferocity.
Ward got in a terrific right hander
under Gallagher's chin in the ninety-
eighth round, which sent him stunned
to the ground, but he partly recovered
and in a half dazed etate fought seven
more rounds. In the 105th and last
roand he received his quietns. Ward
strock him a terrible blow in this round
and he went down like a log, and with
the exception of a hardly perceptible
respiration showed no signs of life.
It took some time to restore him, and
he was at once removed to his home, He
never fully rallied, however, and his
death occured as noted above.
The sneeze is still all the go in Europe
and now some are known to sneeze in
New York. We actually saw a fellow
sneeze ie he passed the Ruvomren of
floe. What's in the wind ? Here we go,
too, Ka-cher-cheese-chew.
NEXT.
Milliken Fwdly clipped and handed the
# fo ua, to which we add * next”)
(Gen: Jas
Jollowing
1f tongues were all attached to brains,
"Yow thankful we should be |
If “hogs” were barred from railway trains,
How thankful we should be !
If fade and foibles were tabood,
Rum wore not by ladies chewed,
f death would kindly steal the dude,
How thankful we should be 7
~{Chicago Herald.
If cats would only sleep at night,
How thankful we should be !
Hf money would not get so tight,
How thankful we should be !
f women would pot talk, forsooth,
If ladies’ hats were less uncouth,
1f weather clerks would tell the truth,
How thankful we should be!
~{ Yonkers Statesman
If fishermen would stick to facts,
How thankful we should be !
if men would sit between the acts,
How thankful we should be !
irle in front their hats would doff,
Vike would stop at home, who cough,
empty guns would not go off,
How thankful we should be !
{Boston Courier
Ife
It
it
If women would not stop in aisles,
How thankful we should be !
If gossip wernt bred of hale, but smiles,
How than weshould !
If lawyers wou not charge big foes,
If doctors knew when vids conse,
1f editors could all readers please,
How thankful we should be!
{Centre Reporter.
fu
It is a fact strange aslit may
be
seem, that
there are rascals in the Democratic party
as well as in the Republican, and Silcott
the defaulting cashier of Bergeant at.
Arms Leedom jis one of them. Mr. Lee-
dom was just preparing to turn his of-
fice over to Mr. Holmes, his Republican
successor, with everthing in gocd shape,
when this miserable scoundrel decamped
with about $75,000 of other people's
money. Who will have to bear the loss
has not yet been determined, but Mr.
Leedom bas the sympathy of all parties
in 1 yriune that overtaken
was about to close up an
official term. Siloott had
been his cashier for about six years and
bad handled in that time over £30,000,
he misf has
him jost as he
bile
00, and great confidence was reposed in;
s' °}
Bat wine and women fetched him |
: " : ai}
end when be could no longer conceal his
criminality, knowing himself to bs a res-|
{ cal he did not wait, to be "furned out”
turned himself out as rapidly as pos-|
And so
we repeat that, curious as it seems, there |
are rascals in the Democratic as well as)
in the Republican party.
.— i
Ti { thejBepublican machine]
are leaning away from Gen. Hastings, |
ust now, and endeavoring to keep Dela!
| amater warm, and prepare him for the!
chair. Quay is boss and]
keep the millionaires |
Delamater is wealthy, and besides is a
| son-in-law of the grest Standard Oil |
which has wrozg millions |
from the masses as a monopoly and froz-|
| en out the smaller oil prodacers. The)
{ Standard leans to Quay, so that it may!
have his influence in legislation, and|
Quay leans to Delamater,—s0 here you |
have the links that bind the Standard to
(Quay, and the loafing senatorial fishers
aan to Delamater, the son-in-law of the
Standard.
It is a contest of the bosses and a de-
vouring monopoly against the people—
monopoly will win so far as the two Res
pablican contestants for gubernatorial
honors is concerned, But the Democras
cy willgtep in as a breakwater, and at
the polls will give bossism, monopoly
and the son-in-law of the monopoly an
effectual rebuke,
Toe Standard Oil company may be
able to ow a, regulate, manipulate, and
assimilate, the loafing absentee Senator
Quay, and dictate the nominee for Gove
ernor, but as sure as the sun shines in
the heavens, so sure will the people
knock out the unholy thing at the polis
sisi PAP
Reward -8150!
The $150 reward, offered by the Com-
missioners for the arrest of the murder
er of the pure and innocent Clara Price
is a little over one cent for every taxable
in the county—and from it we are 10
conclude that our population is made up
of men who will not give more than a
cent to prevent a pure, innocent young
girl from being foully murdered in
broad daylight! Reader, don’t you feel
ashamed for our county as well as of the
diegrace cast upon yourself by these
Commissioners?
We suppose in this case, these worth.
ies will plead economy, for our rich
county. Economy, eh,and trotting to
Bellefonte every day almost, to grab $3
per day, doing nothing and with noths
ing to do, as an ex-Republican Commis-
sioner remarked to ns, but what could
be done by taking half a day once jn
each month.
sible and fled 10 a safer region.
ie bosses Oo
{ Governors
wanis in with
The new rapid firing four inch gun
distance of a thousand yards, This small,
easily adjustable gun is best adapted to
coast defenses. In case of war with Eng-
land or Canada such guns could be quick-
ly placed on board of ordinary passe
ger steamers, and used for defense. The
only objection to them-~there has as yet
been found no way to obviate it in rapid
firing guns—is that they becoms so hot
in a short time that they must be cooled
off, and thus some of the time gained in
one way is lost in another,
1889,
Actors and Religion.
Bome newspaper person who must
have been a little hard put to it to fill
his space has been interviewing leading
actresses and actors on their religion.
Although the question is certainly none
of the public's business, yet several of
the ladies and gentlemen have given po-
lite answers. Some are evidently made
up, like an actor's face, to catch the pub-
lic eve, and you can read plainly be-
tween the lines, “Best seats, $2.” Others
plainly come from an honest heart, The
most deeply religious of the lot, appa-
rently, is t hat pious soul, Lily Langtry,
She accepts in full the Christian faith as
defined in the apostles’ creed, and she
has a great horror of the woman
She
unfeminine for the world
who
has no religion would not be so
When she ir
not right sure she is
Lily
prays the Lord to help her in what she
undertaken
going 10 succeed,
goes down upon her knees and
has She nave she is a
Church of England woman, with strong
lesnings towards the Homan Catholics,
Florence is a Roman Catholic, though
be does not sav He says “to love
God and be merry” is the player's reli
gion aud his, which is not a bad all
round faith, Several of the actors go
church whenever they have time to; but
they are nearly always on the road in
the Mm. D P
Bowers is a strict Episcopalian. Salvini
is a Roman Catholic, and believes actors
seadgon on Sundays
are a religious lot by nature,
WwW. H
million people laugh
Crane, who must have made a
in his Lime, does
not tell us whether he himself is pious
or not, though he says actors are more
religious as a class than members of the
learned professions. But as to church
going, Mr. Crane remarks of the actor:
He I» accustomed, naturally, to places correct
location above virtaes which other men hold in
higher eaten and the time he spends
Ww 0 a servios read In Lhe sing soc hal
fanbsion which, ] fear, Is the rule rather than the
exception, is a period of actual mental torture
in
®
inten
Crane's former partner, Stuart Rolwon,
declares his belief that, if the ords of
re
church and theatres were scarched,
the church would show more instances
of faithlessness to duty, cruelty and
sensuality than the theatre,
jess, the theatre refrains from abusing
the church in public, while the church
hurls at ita “sister institution” all the
nal
Neverthe.
mire it can collect,
Fanny Davenport has still,
led
and we are
that it is still as good as
an i
to infer
brand new spiscopal prayer book
that father and her
Fanny is ap-
when she was 8 vears old.
her mother gave
avs:
1 believe that charity bb & religion in Heelf, and
that God is the best Judge of our inmost mind and
heart. 1 believe that God does not always punish
the wicked nor reward the good, but that we our
salves do this within our own hearts and minds
Cotton and Woolen Goods
Massachusetts has at present over half
a million more cotton spindies at work
than she had in 1887. Maine has fallen
off in both cotton and woolen manufac-
tures. Vermont and Connecticut are
making less cotton and more woolen
cloth than they did in 1887, and so hold
their own. Rhode Island, on the other
hand, makes up less woolen and more
cotton.
Next to Massachusetts, the state that
has made the greatest gain in the textile
industry is South Carolina. In 1880 she
operates 118,348 more spindles than she
did in 1887. Her cotton and woolen weav.
ing has grown 50 per cent. in two years,
It bas increased 18 per cent. in Missis
gippi and Tennessee in the same period,
The gain of Massachusetts is 10.8 per
cent., while that of the whole country is
7.7 per cent. For the textile industry to
increase 7.7 per cent. throughout the
Union in two years, and one of those
years at least not an exceptionally pros.
perous one, indicates a heavy growth in
business and population. American tex.
tile fabrics are also gaining rapidly in
artistic beauty and durability. ny
A locomotive engine is soon 10 be tried
that is built on the principle of a bicy-
cle. It is ‘called the bicycle engine, from
an immense driving wheel, nine feet in
diameter fixed in the center, just forward
of the boiler, Instead of ordinary axles,
the truck wheels have bicycle spindles,
The large driving wheel of the engine
hour, it is claimed. On a solid roadbed,
built above or below the stroets, this en.
gine would be the proper one for rapid
transit in cities. To keep the train from
jumping the track an overhead rail is
constructed. Wheels attached to the
roof of the cars run in a groove in this
overhead rail, and the train is thus k
to study the story of the American revo
lution. The seeds of American liberty
were carried from England in the begin
ning. Now in return England reaps ad-
vantages from the American vindication
of the principles of liberty. Meantime
it would not bo half a bad plan for
American workingmen to study the his
tory of their own country aad find out
the true principles of the foundation of
THE WEEKLY PRESS,
PHILADELPHIA
One Yearfor One Dollar.
The Weekly Press
For 1590 will be as much better than The Week
iy Press for 1580 ax we can make it. With every
issue during the new year it will be
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Each of the fifty two numbers will contadn ten
pages, or eighty columns, with a total f 2%.e
year of 620 pages, or 4100 columns. Thus, it
will be “as Lig as 8 book,” as the saying
A Paper of Quality,
Not only will it be as bigas a book, bub it will
be a paper of quality as well as of quantity, It
will contain the pick of everything good.
A Paper of Variety.
The idea is thet The Weekly Pros shall be
both clean and wide awake, It will discuss sll
subjects of public interest and importance,
he wrilers on i list include: Julies Ward
Howe, E. Lynn Linton. Prof. N. 8 Bhaler,
Louis Pasteur, William Black, Edmund Gosse,
Edgar W, Nye, Opie F. Read, and, indeed, al
mont every popular writer of note in this coun.
try and quite a number of Alstinguished wri
ters abroad. In fiction, an sitrection of the
year will be “Esther” by H. Rider H rd;
nother serial sto siready engaged, will be
“Come Forth,” by Elizabeth Staurt Phelps.
Farmer's Paper,
The best conducted agricultural page.in Ameri
ca. Illustrations, y i
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The “Women's page” of The Weekly Press is
sione worth the subscription price. Its lus
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A Children’s Paper.
The special department for children is now sd.
dressed to the school children and school
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new Rainbow Club just started. Let them
compete for the prises—all in bright, whole
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Important Clubbing Arrangement.
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soripllons are taken for any one or more of these
is in connection with The Weekly Press at
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THE SUN.
POR
1890.
Some people agree with I'he Sun's opinions
about men and things, and some people don't;
but everybody likes 10 get hold of the newspaper
Which is ever dull and never afraid 1 speak ite
mind,
Democrats koow that for twenty years The Sun
has fought in the frout line for TRC prin.
ciples, never wavering or eakentng in its loyal
to the true interests of the party it serves wi
fenriems totelligence and disinterested vigor. At
Limes opinions Lave differed ss 0 the best means
of accomplishing the common JThoke: it is not
er into the mill
The Sun's fault if it bas seen
sone.
Eighteen hundred and ninety is (be year that
will ly determine the result of the Presis
don election of 1592, and perhaps the fortunes
of the Demo for the rest of the century. Vies
tory in 1892 is a duty, and the beginning of 18% is
the bost time to siart out in company with The
Daly, POT ARDEEE ous consnssrerrussssnss
Sunday, p ST yOAr,..
Bundsay, per pe
Daily -
Daily and Sunday. per month,
Weekly Bun, one RATS HAH Apes sae ——
Address THE SUN, New York.
I A —————
BPHANE COURT BALE PURSUANT TO
an order of the Orphan's Court of Centre
Coun-y, there will be exposed at pubiic sale on
the , how occupied by Hofer and Dale,
in Hall Borough, on
Owens SATURDAY, DEC. 25th, 1888 Owen
81 2 o'clock, the following
Oey) REAL ESTATE Owed
of Emanuel Smith, dec'd, bounded and described
as follows: On the north Jacob Richard, on
the West by an atiey, on the § by Wm. Binith,
and on the East by Turnpike, containing 40 PER-
CHES, Thereon erected & FINE
Owed TWOMTORY DWELLING HOUSE 0-0
Good summer house, wood shed, and cistern, all
under roof, also a good large sable, room for four
cows and two horses, wagon shed attached, good
bs pen. chicken house, and all necessary oul
TERMS OF SALE Ope third on confirmation
of sie. One third in one year, and the balance
in two yours, all with interest from date of con
firmation of sale. The deferred ts to be
secured by bond and mortgage on premisos
IBAAC SMITH,
Administrator of Detonsed,
b
1
CORPHANS COURT SALE -~PURSUART T0
an order of the han's Court of Centre
county, there will be at Public Sale,
Ihe presales of John Peters dec'd sitasted 3 mile
of Potters Mills, in Potter township, Centre
county on
Oem) SATURDAY JAX, 11th 1580 0 med
at 2 o'clock the following
Own) REAL ESTATE 0mm
of John Peters, dot’
soribed as follows: ‘
the North by lands of jonathan
sel Stiver, on the Hast by lands of
on the
our government. :
A —