Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, May 08, 1879, Image 4

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    Site {Draft* jPrnwrrat.
DELLEPONTE, PA.
Tho Largest, Cheapest au<l Host Pujior
FUHLISIIKI) IN I'K.NTKK COUNTY.
THK CENTRE DEMOCRAT is pub
lllil every ThursJajr morning, *t Bellefunle, I'eulre
count*. P*.
TKRUB-Outi In *<!VSBC $1 WO
If not in U OO
Payment* niAiltt within thru© nlotitli* will Iw can
•ilen*<l in advance.
A LIVIt PAl'hll—devoted to the intereet# of the
Whole people.
No |Mt|H*r will le dt**ontinud until arrearage* *re
paid, except At option of publleliem.
pAper* going out of the county aiUll he paid for 111
idvini'f.
Any poreon procuring n trtowh ul*( tller will
he aent A copy free of charge.
Our extensive circulation make* ttil* paper an tin*
uaiially reliable and profitable medium for anvertleiiiß.
We hare the moat ample fari title* for J|t VVOitk
ami are prepared to print all klnla of ll<M>k<, Tract*,
Programme*, Puetera,Commercial printing, Ac., in Ilia
tlncat atyle and at the low©*! poeelhlo rat".
RATES OK Al>\ K. lit ISI Mi
Tim-. jTTn. j 2 In. | Sin. | 4 In. | ft In. jln In. thin
1 Week, in >• la 00 S3 no 4 tM *3 <*> S* 0 fl-'
1 Weeks | 1 ftj 3On 4 U* *. IN>| rt l* 11 tm IB no
:t Week a, j it 001 3 .'U s<m 0 00 7 00 II h . In no
1 M *ti<lt. '.l .'*o| 4tw rt on' 7<* 3on 15 uo| '.O (>
- Monthe, 4 '*) i 0 out 8 a lo no 14 (X) .ft a; 2k 00
3 Month*, 1 " "> *OO 1J mi 11 00 K> lb 0" A •
6 Month*,l H On I'J <*> 1* Oil '4O <N JJ lai 35 Hi DO
1 Year, 11J : lw 00 J4 UO > 00,42 00|Ct Ou'luO 00
AJvrtl* rio lit* are r*|pul,tti by the Inch In length
of column, and any h • * pa< e I* rated a* a full inch.
Koreigft advertisement* muat he paid for before In
■ertioa, except on yearly • .ntr IN, w hen half-yearly
payment* in * Ivattre will he required.
POLITICAL KOTI- •. 1" cent* p-r line each insertion.
Nothing inverted f,.r leg* than o<' cent*.
Ilr*i!fa** Nortrr*. in the editorial column*, lft cdntg
per line, each Insertion.
LOCAL NOTK M, in IM .1! column*, to RENT* per line.
AxtorXt mors of nam*-* of candidate* for udlre,
ft each.
AxNOiMCIMKMi or Miißtiin Dstrif* Inverted
free; hut ail obituary notice* will he charged ft cent*
per line.
SPATIAL NOTICE* *25 |*r cent. a!*v© regular rate*.
IT i.s uow generally believed, says
the Washington Post, that the exodus
movement was invented and is prose
cuted for the purpose of falsifying the
next eeusus, and thus reducing South
ern representation in Congress. The
scoundrels who started this movement
have no other interest in the negro
than to utilize him for political pur
poses. It is a basely cruel trick, but
in perfect keeping with the course of
Radical politicians toward the negro
ever since ho became a i>olitical factor.
To OUTAIN the passage of an act,
to extract money from the State in
which Sam bus a pecuniary inter
est, he proposes to Bill, "if you vote
for my bill, I will vote for the law, by
which you can make a draft from the
coffers of the State." This is a mu
tual agreement of the lobby to deplete
the Treasury for the mutual benefit of
the parties. We believe it is called a
combination. Is it buying votes? Or
is it a mere combination against the
public fiuances, and morally right?
Where is the difference if Sam says to
Bill, " vote for my bill and I will pay
B'HH)," while Bill says to Sam, " you
vote for my bill, and will pay BI,fXX)?
In either case it is "you tickle me,
and I'll tickle you," nnd presents a
very nice distinction —one in which
we are unable to discover a difference.
Perhaps some of the bright intellects
of the Pennsylvania Legislature could
solve this problem. If not, please refer
it to Mr. Quay of the State depart
ment or Mr. William Kernble of
Philadelphia.
Should Hate Hnle .'
What the American people need
most of all is peace throughout the
country and confidence in the stiihil- (
ity of our government, and immunity
froin the wrangling.* and auuimositics
engendered by war and eight years of
degraded administration under Grant.
To this our statesmen mid citizens
should give their efforts. But will
they do it ? We hope the Ixwt, but it
will involve a great struggle. For al
ready we have indications that one of
the great parties is preparing to enter
the contest for power under the ban
ner of hnle, and hope for success by
the annimosities they can revive of
the past, to engender sectional strife
lietween the North ami the South.
Will they succeed ? We trust not.
But it will depend upon the temper of
the people themselves. If a majority
are willing to be led blindly to such a
contest, then indeed the hope for a
united and prosperous country will be
wrecked and perhaps never regain
that respect and confidence in the
ability of the people for self-govern
ment enjoyed before the sectional war
from which we emerged some years
ago. Why should this animosity be
permitted to continue? The prosperity
of the North is as much dependent
upon the prosperity of the Bouth, as
the South is upon that of the North.
Our interests are mutual. If the
North is prosperous so is the Bouth.
If the Bouth is weak and oppressed
by bate and hostility from the North,
so is the North in a corresponding
degree from the South. We are one
people, governed by the same laws,
with the same hopes and the same des-
tiny. This was decided by tho war.
It is accepted by the people without
regard to section, or creed, or color.
This principle—this position of mu
tual interest, and mutual destiny, the
Democratic party assume and present
to the people against the issue of hate
and discord now so clearly fbrshad
owed as the platform of the Republican
party, under tbc inspiration of its stal
warts, and the leadership of one who,
as chief Executive, could uublushitig
ly declare ho had uo respect for the
Constitution.
To make a fair show of fight on
this "bloody shirt" issue, the stal
wart Republicans in Congress are
now making the initial campaign in
efforts to retain the fraudulent appli
ances incorporated in our statutes
during the Gruut administration.
The " test oath," the " bayonet at elec
tions," and the employment of parti
san supervisors and marshals to con
! trol nnd manipulate the polls are a
j necessity. Hence Mr. Hayes, who
fraudulently obtained bis power by
I means of these appliances, is made to
stand and insist by his veto, that
the representatives of the people—the
| majority in Congress shall" leave them
. undisturbed to accomplish the same
1 1 •
; work, so effectual in placing a man in
the l'rcsidgntal chair whom the people
j refused to elect |y their ballots.
The New Trump Un.
The following is the full text of the
net "To define and punish tramps,"as
passed finally in both houses of the
Legislature:
SECTION 1. That any person going about
from place to place begging, asking or mb.
si*ting upon charity, and for tho purpose
of acquiring inenojr or n living, and who
shall have no fixed place of r- idence or
lawful occupation in the county or city in
which he shall be arrested, shall he taken
nnd decile d to bo a trump and guilty of a
misdemeanor, and on i*'livi< li- n shall )•■•
-entenccd t" undergo an imprisonment bj
separate and solitary confinement at lahor
in the county jail or w>rkh"u- f„r not
more than twelve months, in the discretion
of the court; provided that if any per-ui
so arrested > an prove by satisfactory evi
dence that he does not make a practice of
going about iu'gging or sulwi.ting upon
alms for the pur| o*e aforesaid, in the man
ner above set forth, ho shall not fx- deemed
guilty of the offence herein ta-forc desert bad,
and upon such proof shall bo discharged
from arrest either by the magistrate before
whom he is committed, or by the court
upon hearing of the case upon writ of ha
i beas corpus.
Sr.' 2. Any tramp who shall enter any
dwelling house ngainst the will or without
; the permission of the owner or occupant
; thereof, or shall kindle any fir" in the
; highway or on the land of another with
out the owner's consent, or shall IK- found
carrying any fire-arms or other dangerous
weapon with intent unlawful, t<> do injury
to or intimidate any oth"r person, which
intent may l>" inferred bv the jury trying
the*case from the facts that defendant is a
tramp and so armed, or shall do or threat
en to do any injury not amounting to a
felony to any person "r to tho real or per
sonal estate of another shall, upon convic
tion, bo d-v-med guilty of a misdemeanor,
and shall lie sentenced to undergo an im
prisonment by separate or solitary confine
ment at labor for a period not exceeding
three years.
SKC. 3. Any act of beggary or vagrancy
by anv j*ir#on not a resident of this State
shall Lo evidence thnt the person commit
ting the some is a tramp within the mean
ing of this a< t, subject to th" proviso con
tained in section one of this act.
Stcr. 4 Anv person uj-on view of any
oflfi-nre described in this act may appre
hend the otTendcr and take bint before a
Justice of tli" j-eace or alderman, whose
duty it shall lie, after hearing the evidence,
to discharge or commit the prisoner for
trial, as in the rase of other mi-demeanors.
Hue, 6. This act shall not apply to any
female or minor under the age of sixteen
years, nor to any blind, deaf or dumb per
son, nor shall it bo applicable to any
maimed or crippled person who is unable
to perform manual labor.
SEC. li. This act shall take effect on and
after Augu-t 10, l*<7b, and all a< ta or parts
of act* inconsistent herewith are hereby
repealed.
■ ■ ■■ ■ ♦ ■
(lit--i I!estt i"ii of Stutew.
from lh VuHisit.'i Test.
Tho rhilailelphia Xorth Amtrriean, a
representative Republican newspaper of
the more respectable type, does not !*-•
lieve much in the possibility of a solid
Radical Nyrth. It think* the political
battle-ground in the next and all sue
ceding National contest* will bo in that
sectional area included in Missouri, Ken
tucky, Maryland, Went Virginia and
Delaware, which it declare* ha*, a* far
a* houiidarie* are concerned, no more
to do with the South a* against the
North than New York city or Indiana.
We are pleased to agree with the Xrth
American in at least one of these conclu
sion*. Th* Pott has always claimed
that the States mentioned, with the
addition of Tenne**ee, formed no part
of the .South proper, and should not he
*o classed. Missouri, for instance, i*
just aa much of a Northern state a* is
Illinois or Indiana, and all three of
thetn belong really to the West. I tela
ware and Maryland are unquealionaby
middle states, and Weat Virginia, Ten
naee and Kentucky !>e!ong properly
in the border front. It is high time for
• revised classification after this man
ner. The Radical organs of high and
low degrees, following out the dictates
of their peculiar party policy, have al
ways exerted themselves to crowd as
many of the Democratic states as possi
ble into " the Houth," regardless of po
sition or association. This, of course,
with a view to raise a sectional issue and
lire the Northern heart after the man
ner of I&6I. It is high time for Demo
cratic newspapers and the Democracy
generally to refuse to longer aooept this
preposterous arrangement.
All Obstruction of the People'* Will
by mi I'Hurper.
I'rum IVmliliiKti.ti Put.
Tho mini who won inducted into the
l'lOMdintinl riltioe hy nii-un* violative
alike of both tho spirit unit letter of
tho Constitution has net himself U|p as
j tho champion aii'l conservator ot con
stitutional government. Tho mnn in
whose Interest stales were disfranchised
assumes the special guardianship of the j
right of suffrage. The man for whom !
! tho blackest crimes wero committed
! against tho freedom and purity ol elec
tions, and who has degraded his olliee j
by rewarding the criminals for felonies
committed in his behalf, undertakes to
lecture Congress and tho peoplo on the j
sacred duty ot preserving intact the
charter ot our liberties. The man who j
owes his position not merely to crimes 1
committed by his o.vn party. I ut to pa
j tnoiic tolerance of tho iMmnorory.
reads a homily to a I'emocratic Congress
j on tho spirit which should guide its dc
! liberations and the principles which
should control its judgment.
Considering all the circumstance* sur
rounding tin-cie, tho antecedents of
Mr. Hayes, nnd the precedents establish
od by his party, his message is simply
an insult to Congress and to the people
whom Congress represents. Its assuinp- 1
lions ol superior patriotism are ino
lent as its uttcmpt to enlarge on Co
veto power. And the tone of simulat
ed devotion, to the I'nion and tin- Coo
stitution in which Mr. II tyes addresses
the representatives of tho people, reach
es to a height of hrs/.i-n effrontery to
I which no man in the executive ollico
j has hitherto attained, it seems to have
been Mr. Haves' study not only to do a
most unjustifiable unit scarcely tolerable
| act, hut to do it in the way best caleu
lated to provoke the anger ami resent
rnent of the party which he presumes
jto arraign. Ii does not satisfy him to
i wield a stolen powi-r for the purpose
of thwarting tin- deliberate purpose of
the people, lawfully deel ired by tli• ir
authorized agents, but be chooses to
do this iii a manner that has every up- ,
pc.arancf of intentional and studied in
sult. He appears to have concluded
that the dominant party which would
permit a defeat'-d candidate to enter
'ipon and fraudulently hold, for more
than two years, the olliee which his
•incumbency has disgrace ), might safe
ly be drawn upon for forbearance to
any extent. <'n this suppo-otioii, and
on this alone, ran the matter arid man
ner of tiiis document fie explained.
There is no attempt in the message
to prc-ent any new argument. Ail
of that Mr. II lyes urges against tin
proposed legislation was advanced by
ins friends in the House and r.-y.- >t I,
over ami ov r again, bv their assoi i,%i,-
in the Senate. And the Democrat*, in
both house* of <Jo tigress, t.urly and
-quarely met these propositions, brush
ed away their oopnistrie*, ami brought
to bear such w< ignl o! argument I mil
the whole country conceded that the
itcpuldicaiis not only had no c.ise, liut
that they lIA-1 no tenable ground ol
opposition. The objection to putting
what Mr. Hayes tenus "a rider on an
appropriation bill was met by the Valid
; claim that the "rider" was germane to
the subject matter ; that in legislating
for tbe support of the army it was prop
er to direct the manner in which tin
army should bo employed. It was fur
ther shown that the Republican pot),
and even Mr. Hayes himself, were fuiiy
committed to such a mode of legislation
'7 a long line of precedents.
Mr. Hayea condescends to remark,
in substance, that he approves of all
that there is in the full except the sixth
section. This section prohibits the etn
ployrncnt of troops at the polls, and it
doe* not do, or attempt to <Jo anything
more. In disapprov.ng ibis Mr. II y,-.
declares In favor of a bayonet guarded
ballot-box, and thus rounds up the r>-
cord of his patty on that issue Ail
the long debate was on this |>eint. It
was the central idea, the pivot on which
the whole matter turned. Hut for this
proposition the bill woul 1 have bc<-n
passed in two or three days. The Re
publicans, however, decided to commit
their party in favor of military sup.-r
vision of elections. F--r this they
fought, and in this Mr. Hayes concurs
with an alacrity that amounts to posi
live haste. He seizes the negative J>ow
er of the veto, and uses it to insult nnd '
degrade the people, by declaring that
they are incapab,e of conducting peace
ful elections, lie takes a power, obtain
ed by fraud, and employs it to east ob
loquy on Republican institutions. He
places millions of American citizens in
the self degrading attitude of confessing
that a century of experiment has clem
nnstrated their incapacity for self gov
ernment. For it amounts to this pre
cisely. A people who csnnot be trusted
t-a discharge their most solemn public
duty without troops to keep them in
subjection, are not fitted for if Republi
can form of government. Tliey have
not the virtue, the intelligence and tbe
patriotism on which a republic can be
built.
From a party point of view, the I>eni
oeracy have abundant reason to he sat
isfied with the issue presented and the
part taken by Mr. Hayes in shaping that
issue. If there is any sentiment more
generally diffused and more universally
prevalent than any other, it is the senti
ment, tbe vital principle, which ani
mates the Democracy in demanding a
divorce of the bayonet froni the poll*. '
bike a tornado the resistless sweep of
an enlightened nnd patriotic public
opinion will whirl Into retirement nnd
oliscurity the party and the 1-aders
who have chosen to go to tho people on ;
the declaration that the ballot box is j
not safe unless surrounded by bayonets.
JT is not easy to regard fhe striped
and elal/orately decorated feminine
stockings as altogether a modest or re
fined fashion. I lie ladies tells us that
these expensive and frequently flashy
articles are necessary for the present
low open shoes Probably ( bMt they
have been hanging in the store windows
all winter, and have been bought by
soroetnxly before the low shoes could
have been worn with comfort. And
the m HIO is going from had to worse.
The Hoccoccio stocking is out in Vien
no. The peculiarity of a pair of Boc
caccio stockings is that one is black and
the other white. The Idea came from
the stage, from a comic opera, but it is
now tbe fashion of the drawing roam.
Forney'i Progrm.
Drriiocrutlr Doctrines.
Wo demand impartial, unprejudiced
and uninfluenced juries.
We demand the abolition of all test
oaths. The only oath to be required is
thnl the iilll-int will support the Const!
tution as it is and obey tho laws. It is
not what he /CM been, hut w hat he will
be, that the country needs to he purlieu
i lar about.
We demand frco and untrammelled
elections, open and obstructed poll*.
<>n voting days the citizen must be in
fact a* be is in luiliie, A Sovmr.io.v.
We d emitnd economy of expenditures
| in every department "f the Government.
Wo demand a simplification of the rev
i enue unit tariff laws, so that the thou
, sand* upon thousands of men now being
; supported in office by overburdened
tax-payer* shall themselves become pro
ducers instead of mere consumers, and
help reduce and sustain, instead of add
ing to the national burdens.
Wo demand u repeal or modification
of tho internal revenue law, by which it
eosts J iii.iSSl IHKI to collect three times
that amount of taxes. This is wanton
waste. Jt i* the creation of a class of
office-holders who are forever to he sup
ported by the working classes. If the
internal revenue duties cannot be made
*■ jf-collecting by some system similar
to the bank check stamp system, let
them he altogether abolished and the
| deficit be obtained elsewhere.
Wo demand, instead, a tax on in
comes running over u stated amount—
say three tbounnd dollar* per annuo .
As it is, Yanderbill with one hundreit
millions pays no more towards the sup
port ot the Government than his chief
clerk. There is many a man whose per
" nut taxes are more than Yariderbiit'*,
Garrison's nnd Scott'* added together.
Let there be a fair income tax which
shall bear equally upon all clas-cn in
proportion to their revenues, and (hut
rnuke the rich bear (heir proportion of the
burden.
We demand a cessation of internecine
s!r,fe. S , long as tiie Southern people
obey the laws tlic-y are entitled to the
protection and advantage of them.
For fourteen y.-ar* tln-y have been loyal
to the Government, kupporter* of the
laws, nnd true in every sense to the
I'nion. They have tbe light to elect
whom they please to office, arid should
not be questioned for it. They are not
i. i-ordm.it. dependents, or probation
er*. Mississippi lias j reci-el) the rights
in the I 111011 that Massachusetts has.
I In- m in, b he senator or tramp, wl o
endeavors to array one section against
another or stir up bad blood I* a dt*
unioru l. Wo demand pence, and an
equal chance for all in the raro for
pro-jM-rit-.. We also insist not only
upon untrammelled elections, but ujton
in honest count of the vote* cast.
Summing up. the following i* The
/'■>(' ill nri-cratic platform, li anybody
can I'-iier it. be shall have >pa< i„
present it. If any body i opposed to n,
iet u* bear from hitu :
lirntui -It six*.
Aooi.irin* or TOST OATHS.
F MI FLECTIONS.
AN II -NEST t.'ot .NT or THE VOTES CAST.
E iftomrsj. AMMNISTKATIOX.
A Kllll • TION or I'IIKE liol.OKO*.
LVII AI. TAX ITION.
PKACS HttMtES SECTIONS, AND PROS
i-ERitr.
.Mr*. Ilale Dead.
I r m IS. ri. lAl'ij ).!• Hi 11.
A REM ARE AH! K WON AN, WHO SI EXT FLKTV
TEAR* IN I.ITERARY WORK.
Mrs. Sarah Joseph Bucil Hale, for
forty year* cditre* of GWry'i Lady
lu d, died on Wednesday evening at the
residence of her son-in law. Dr. L. 11.
Hunter, No. 111.1 Locust street. Mm.
Hale was bom at Newport, N. If., in
IT'-s. *nd w** consequently in hi r nine- ,
ly fir-t year. In IMI she married Da
vid Hale, a p-rominent lawyer, who died
in IK_'o t leaving Iter with five children
To support her family she enti re*! the
pursuit of literature.
In 1*27 she Wcame editress of the j
l.<i iu' .If,j/arise, published in Itoston.
the first journal in this country devoted
to women. This journal was established
for Mrs. Hale, who, before that, had be ,
come known by winning a pnzo offered
by n Host on paper for a poem and also
l-y her novel. "Northwond."
It was in I HIT. ivhon Louis A. Godey
purchased tbe L. /**' Hagasme and uni
ted it with bis teady t Ib-ok, that Mrs.
H ile came to this city, where she re
sided until her rlesth. Besides editing
t l.ihll: {. Mr*.'llale published
more than twenty sepatate works, many
of which acquired more than national
reputation. She retired from the nnn
ngcnicnt nf the l, i ly't Boot on I December
31, 1877, after fifty year* of literary I
work.
\ Itepiihllnin Protest \galri*t (.rant.
from 11,. Ctrnir.K T.I-KTS| l>, R-p.
The glittering cob! steel of his fact*
should puncture the third term move
ment efirct trolly, for it demonatrate*
that General Grant, if he should be
nominated next year, would fall as a
candidate hy the weight of his oivn rcc- .
ord. It would be enough against the I
expediency of his candidacy to mention
the faction* that would savagely oppose
him, and tho*e that would give him a
lukewarm sup|M>rt; and yet they would
not be half so dangerous enemies as the
, great army of thoughtful, conservative
Republicans, who would either vote
against him or not vote at all in case of j
his nominator), because of the fact that
he would he a third term candidate, and ,
because of the character of hi* admini*- I
tration. Even the pros* of the itepub- j
lienn party would not Ire united upon :
him ; indeed, the strongest and most
powerful moulder* of public opinion in
the country and party would fight him
to the laat hour that the poll* arc open.
Pinkerton's detectives on Monday ar
rested a person supposed to he one of
the Manhattan Bank robbers. He of
fered for sale at Prexel't office five
thousand dollars' worth of bonds, the
numbers of which correspond with
those stolen from the hank. He give*
the name of Henry Hall, but decline*
to *ay anything.
Hev. Allen R. Beach, the father of
Secretary of State Beach, and the oldeet
Baptist clergyman in New York State,
died on Saturday evening at Syracuse,
aged 83 yean.
BA TCHELOB .1 Itoius' QBE AT RAILROAD SHOW.
TELL IT THROUGH THE LAND
THAT
BATCIIELOR & DORIS'
GREATEST RAII2ROAD SHOW Oil EARTH!
M tiscu in, Mcna<reric, Circus § Caravan.
ADMISSION 25 CENTS, to all the Shews,
ITNOKK COLOSSAL EIOIIT CENTKK I'OLi: TKXTS,
Comfortably Seating 8,000 Persons,
WILL KXHIHIT AT
BELLEFONTE, ON FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1879.
MOKE KAItE, SPECIAL AND EXCLUSIVE FEATURES THAN
. WAS EVE It EXHIBITED UNDEIt CANVAS.
100 AEEITIC AND GYMNIC
V CELEBRITIES,
CAItEFULLV SELECTED FROM
P arts World.
A-MIMIISSIOISR
BeegMkeei*Only 25 Cents.
' -OSK TH KI.T ADMIT* TO ALL.
1,200 MOST ELEGANT OPERA CHAIRS 25 Cts. Extra.
- ♦
The Largest Private Railway Estab
%/
lislimciit Ever Constructed.
MGUK CAGES, MORE HORSES, MORE PONIES, MORE ANIMALS, MORE
MUSEEM CUKIOSITIKS.
MORE CAPITAL INVESTED THAN' ANY OTHER SHOW!
KM I LESS, the l.li-phant living, and c<>t more than Bny twelve
Elcphnnls living. The most thoroughly trained animal
ever M*n on the Continent.
TIIE GREAT SIX TENT SHOW!
With ita aucxcclled spocimon* of auto-
ILLUMINATED
Electric I !
PRESENTS A SCENE OF MAGNIFICENT SPLENDOR AND BRILLIANCY
BEYOND DESCRIPTION.
< i KAN lb IMI < )SI N(i, IMPKESSIVE
GALA DAY PROCESSION,
MARDI 6RAS CARNIVAL
EVERY MORNING AT 10 O'CLOCK,
TWO PERFORMANCES DAILY,
DOORS OPEN AT 1 and 7.
DON'T FORGET THE DAY,
REMEMBER THE DATE,
ADMISSION 28 Cts. TO AIT.,
AT ALTOONA, May 12; TYRONE, Mar IS? CLEARFIELD, May 14;
PHILirSHURO, May 16; LOCK HAVEN, May 17;
WILLIAMSPORT, May 19.