She Centre BKLIIBTONTB, PA. -A. a- Ti x c xr x- rv rr xi -a- I_. . NEWS, FACTS ANI> SITQUEBTIONB. THB TUT r Till !*4TIOSAI IB TUB IRTU.U -OBltr* BHD mont-riiiT, or tub fabmbn. Every farmer in hit annual experience discovert something of value. Write it ami semi it to the "Agricultural Editor of the DEMOCRAT, IMlefonte, I'enn'a," that other farmers may have the benefit of it. !•<! comiNunirafiuiM he timely, ami be sure thai they are hrief and well pointed, A COKRKSPONHKNT iu the Practical Farmer says that his remedy for the striped bug on melon vines is a free use of bran. As soon as "the vines appear above the ground he puts a handful of bran on each hill, taking care to cover the leaves and heap it about the stem a little. We hear, from various quarters, complaints of the increase in num bers and voraciousness of the potato bug pest, and upon our own vines they are certainly more numerous than ever before. If this proves to be general, "eternal vigilance" will be the price of potatoes this year, and we advise early and frequent aj>- plications of the oni} - proven anti dote—parts green. WE are indebted to Geo. O. Brown, Esq., proprietor of the widely-known Montvue poultry yards, at Brook landvillc, Md., for copies of the Amer ican Farmer, an agricultural monthly, published in Baltimore. The Farmer is well edited, neatly printed, and lias a corps of excellent correspondents. It is invaluable to Southern agricul ture, and we hope to see it regularly upon our table. WE frequently see, in our ex changes, articles entitled "breaking colts," and would be glad to see some other tune substituted for it. Colts should never lie "broken." II properly trained , from their earliest coltliood, they will never need break ing. Begin to baiter-break them at ten days or two weeks old, and handle thetn daily from that time on, and by the time they are able to do any work they will know all about it, without any "breaking." THE improvement of the roads is a question hardly second in inqiortance to any engaging the attention of the farmer citizen. Upon him falls, main ly, the burden of the tax annually wasted in the so-called "mending" of them, and he is the greatest suffer- • cr from the miserable condition in which they are generally to lie found. Where does the responsibility for this state of affairs rest? Upon the j road laws, or upon those charged with the execution of them ? THE new educational law, now un der discussion by the French Assem bly, gives agriculture its due promi nence. Not only will the teaching of agriculture in the rural schools be obligatory, but that the teachers may lie duly qualified, the fifty Normal schools provided for their training will each have an agricultural pro fessor attached, and six years will lie allowed for the completion of the course. In addition to their labors as teachers, these professors of agri culture will Ik; required to hold con ferences or conventions for the bene fit of neigh boring farmers. Now we have the sheep sheared and soon the wool-gatherer will make his appearance, and pay just as much per pound for a half-washed, water soaked fleece, which was sheared with in three days after the pretended .washing, and has been kept tightly rolled up in the cellar ever since, as he will for one that was thoroughly washed, cleaned from all foreign mat ter ami has ail the water dried out of it. So long as the wool-buyer offers a premium for half-washed fleeces, or for those which, after having been properly washed, were allowed to re main on the sheep until the normal amount of grease hail been restored, just so long will these questionable practices prevail, aod the honest wool-grower have his labor for his pains. Wool will, as a rule, lie made as light as possible and its subse quent manipulation attended to witli the most rigid oversight whenever the markets show a premium u|ion such observance*; but until that time very little change from the present practice need be looked for. Our Milk Bureau. In our issue of lat week we prom ised to give a description of our method of keeping milk wltii lee. We luivc a stone milk-house erected over an excellent spring, with an un varying flow of near four gallons per minute, ami a uniform temperature of 48°, making a desirable place for the milk and butter; but this is situ ated something more than a hundred feet from the house, at the foot of a sharp descent, and the trips up and down this hill, many times a day, de manded by the care and use ol the milk and dairy, proved such a tax upon the strength of the weaker por tion of the household, upon whom the burden fell, that we long since de termined to adopt some other method and llnd some way of keeping our dairy products in good order nearer the kitchen. The lirst tiling which suggested itself to us was a ram, by means of which to force the water to a new milk-house close to and on a level with the kitchen ; hut the very low position of the spring precluded this, and its expense would otherwise have prevented its adoption. After a long time spent in fruitless plan ning and conjecture, our attention was attracted by an advertisement of the " Ferguson bureau Creamery," made at Burlington, Vt., ami, not to make a long story of it, we have purchased one and are now using it. " The apparatus consists of an up right bureau made of spruce lumber. In the upper part of the bureau is a rack for holding a supply of ice, and a metallic pan with rublier tube at tached, for conducting olf the waste water from the ice. immediately be low the ice are f>ur large pans, each pan having a capacity for the whole milking of a dairy. Around each pan is siilllcieiit space to admit of the free circulation of cold air from the ice above. The pans stand on suitable rests,and arc each provided with me tallic castors, so that they may be easily drawn out of the bureau on two movable rests, for skimming or drawing off; these rests are very strong, and are easily attached. Be low the pans is a closet or refrigera tor for cream and butter, with a ca pacity for several tubs; the door to this closet is large enotlgh to admit a fifty pound tub of butter. A cream can is furnished with each bureau, which can lie used for warming the bureau in cold weather, by filling it with hot water and setting it in the closet at the bottom. Each end of the bureau is supplied with four ven tilators, closing with wooden sides ami covered with wire screens, for the exclusion of flics and oilier in sects, dust and dirt. These ventila tors are for controlling the tempera ture and the circulation of nir in the bureau. It is furnished with glass doors, |H>rmitting a full inspection of its contents without opening it, nnd a thermometer is provided for regu lating the temperature." As we keep but a small number of cows, sufficient only to furnish milk, cream and butter for family use, we preferred to use small pans or crocks, and at our request the manufacturers omitted the larger pans and rests, and placed open rack shelves in place of them, upon which our small pans rest. This bureau we have placed on the kitchen porch, and are now using it with great satisfaction. With a moderate daily supply of ice it keeps ail our milk and butter in excellent condition, and the wear and tear saved to the family every day is immense. The fact is, it is a com plete milk-house, of the very best sort, right at the kitchen door, and in the winter it can be used in the kitchen, without nny inconvenience or trouble. Of course,under our circumstances, we derive but the minimum of benefit from an arrangement of this kind; but to the many farmers of our coun ty who are entirely without a proper place to keep milk, this bureau must prove a real boon. We will cheer fully exhibit it to any who may de siae to see it, and advise ail who arc interested to open up correspondence with the manufacturer. JAMES VICK, the flower and vege table seedsman, of Rochester, N. Y., has placed us under obligations by sending us copied of his " Floral (Juide,"and Monthly MagazThc. Be sides 1 icing a skilled and thoroughly conscientious seedsman, Mr. Vick is one of the most publishers in the country. Each iiumlier of his magazine is "a tiling of licnuty," and entitlixl to a place on the centre table of every dwelling In the land, us much for this us for the trustworthy character of its contents. The Farmer's Political Duties. In an address delivered before the Lycoming County Agricultural So ciety, by Hon. Clinton Lloyd, we print the following, which we readily commend to the attention of our farmer readers: But passing now from the considera tion of matters incidentally oonnected with the farmer's occupation I desire to occupy the remainder of the tune which custom has limited for such an address, in directing your attention to tho sub ject of tho conduct of our puldieall ors, and I the m-01 readily turn to tins con sideration for the reason that it is after all to thu farmers we must ever look as the great reserve force that can alone save society from perishing in tin-battle and conflict of the ages. They are the true Barons of to-day, with turner now, as in the earlier periods of English his tory, to enforce obedience to tlieir be bests whenever tiiej shall combine to glfo proper t JiplV--ioil to theoi. They tiro too the I.ordh of the soil, itli a per lu.ineul stake in the w<-lfur of society, and a greater interest in good govern ment than any ether clu -, lor they have ever been the first toattraet the cupid ity ot desp -1., and on tle in more than any other <-l-s has ever fallen the lie iv lest burdens of taxation in all monarch ical or despotic governments. That there is need of reform in all depart ments of government in- i-> no political platform to declare, 1-ul i'„ is in vain to hope for any genuine political reform from the voluntary action of any poiit icul parly. 1 lie old dm key, in South I'arobua, hit it ex telly when aske 1 it he was not going to vote for reform, "No," said lie ; "1 isn't, lb-form has been runnin' in dis country i-lx-ry \ '-.ir. and uebber got done eleeleil yit." It will only be when the farmets rise up in their might and demand it ir. tones that will lunko p ditical demagogues shiver 111 their boots, that we shall ever see any genuine < ivd service reform, and I am especially anxious, I confess, to seal this reform begin at once and like '"linnty, begin at k me. The election of a Congressman, or even of a Prc*i<b-nt, is a matter of far le importance to the farmers of Lycoming county than tho election of your town-hip officers, and yet you get greatly excited alsout the former and suflffP the elei lion of the hitler to go almost by default. We hear great outcries, mostly from the 111 sss ol political demagogues, about the expense, of the Stale and nation, and yet the taxation for these purposes i mere drop in the bucket compared wiih the expense* of local and municipal administration. As illustrative of tins 1 luay mention the fact that a few ev ening* since a friend of mine m Wil liamsport showed me a bill of taxes for the present year, which consisted of State tax alaxit four dollars, county tax thirty nine dollars, and city tales over two hundred dollars. The fact is that the stupidity orcareh ssm-ss nixn ifested in the management of our mu nicipal affairs would be utterly inexpli cable except that, like the <el in being skinned, we have got used to it and so don't mind it. Some year* ago. while District Attorney of ibis county, I made a careful inquiry as to the amount of money raised for the *up|H>rt of the poor and the nutnlier of pau|>ers sup |>orted. 1 have not the figures by nm now, but the conclusion I came to was that with the money raised for that purpose we might support every pauper at the best hotel in the county and have a surplus at the end of the year, and tho worst of it was that with all the ex|ense the pauper was cared for hardly a* well as most men care for their brute beasts. The amount it costs to keep our highways in repair is al together too Urge. It is said the Chi ne*® pay a doctor as long a.s they are well, and stop his pay when a patient gets sick. Could we not adopt some such principle in regard to our road*? f<ct out the roads for a period of ten years in each township to the highest bidder to keep them in repair, and I venture the assertion that it would not cost one-half the present expenditure. I have seen a contractor with a force of men grading a railroad, who, it is safe to say, could do more work in one day than a sujrcrvisor with the same force of men working out their taxes would do in ton. We have vastly too much municipal machinery for the work to be done. !teidc* our county officers, we must have in every township six school directors, a brace of overseers of the poor, two supervisors, and in some townshi|>. many more officer* to do the work that one man could do almost without the neglect of hia private bus iness in any degree, Wr. arc indebted to Commissioner of Agriculture, Lc Due, for hi* April report ti|on the "Condition of the Crops." He gives the acreage of winter wheat now growing as one and one-half per cent, greater than last year, ami the " condition" as two per cent, below the average. "In the Middle States conditions of growth were very unfavorable, fall drought preventing the seed from obtaining an early start." The New York Time*, which seems to lie running an agricultural bureau on Its own account, publishes reports o( a much later date, gathered from the whole country, excepting the Pa cific coast, and evidently obtained with unusual care. The Times is dis |h>*c<l to do liettcr for the country than Commissioner Lc Due, and promises more than average crops of all agricultural products, with a larg er surplus of wheat and corn for ex port. The Time* limy lie right as to tin- wheat crop, hut we submit that guesses at the prospects of the corn crop, made before the crop is all planted, are "slightly previous." A Plate of Pork. In a late numlit-r of the Tribune we find the following over the signa ture of Hon. (icorge Gcddcs. Mr. Geddcs' views and experience on the pork question coincide so entirely with our own, that we quote Ids re marks on the subject without nny emendation, and give them our full endorsement: Pork making, beyond the limited quantity that every house and farm ran raise by utilizing only otherwise unsala hie food, is not a very profitable busi ness, But a farmer would hardly know liovv to keep house unless he had a bar rel of salted pork in hi* cellar, and a eoud supply of hams and shoulder* of Inspiring; so it results that we must raise a lew pigs—for certainly w will not buy in the market. We desire to eat hum* and -ausageof pigs with which we were personally lu-ipuiitifed, ami to Jtimw that they were lieallhly nnd had good food. Tlu-ro is much idle talk regarding farmers eating pork by men whose only supply cornea from market that they know nothing <>f- and r i. \ there are few things that would so badly bear being brought into the glare of publicdiscussing a* tin- pork trada, u conducted in many plaoe*—and it i ale for the denizens of cities to let all h>g flesh alone that they bod in the general market. 'But to him who raises and fattens bl own | i r -, and know* that they arc in perfect health, their flesh in virion forni* is a real luxury. Fricasseed chicken is not i<*rfe<-t unU neconip-ni ied ill the pot by some small pn-e. * of pork, and a la-efsteik is much improv ed by being cooked with a slice of bu eon. But what i* first rale pork, and how ate we to procure it? Begin bv raising the pig. <Ev him an orchard for hi* | en ; b-t him root up the ground and consume the wormy apples as tin y I*ll from the tree#. Feed him milk that ha- been skimmed, mixing a little corn or barley im-al in it as he grows, ami before be has ever seen winter slaughter him neatly, ami make hini into hams, bacon, sausages, and some salt p rk, using his hud a* good housekeeper* know how. If you are so unfortunate a* to live in the city, ami cannot raise yout i ig, agree with some farun r that you know well to do this for you and send the dressed carcass by express to your house. <r, letter yet, let tins • killed fanner turn the pig into various delicacies tfiat ate |M-*>ble, nndwnd them to you, and then eat and enjoy the savory flesh. But I ark of this the question, rais ed by Mr. 1.. I. Windsor, of Michigan, namely, as to "the best breed," and here we reach delicate ground, for then are certainly five different breed., each of which has its advocal<-*, and Its mer it* ; *<> I do not wish to t* understood as disparaging any breed; I only ex press my preference, and give my rea sons ; first saying that I have no pigs, big or little, to sell, and am therefore to fie acquitted of any charge of adver ti*ing. Having tried M-veral kinds, 1 have settled down on the Suffolk, the same that Prince Albert raised on the royal domain*. The Suffolk is a small pig, white, and much given to growing tat on little food. We have used full blooded f-oars crossed with fine-boned sows, such as have resulted from careful breeding of ordinary stock, always aim ing at fine grained and fine-honed ani mals, We procured a Suffolk fioar from Secretary Thomas L. Hanson, of the New York State Agricultural Society, in and on the sth of 1 n-cemtier, isTft, kill ed eight pigs of his get which averaged 2.V! davs old, and whose average weight was 27.1 pound* dressed. These pigs had only bone enough to carry their flesh, and gave very delicate meat, and were full as large a* we de sire, Our trouble with this family of pigs has been to avoid tbeir becoming too fat to breed, arid much rare has been required in this particular. Two sisters of these 1 h7fi pigs were saved for breeders, and slaughtered and sold the next year at about twenty months old, and were re jKirted as weighing tog tlier something over 1,100 |>otinds dressed. I give these particulars to show that n hile the Suf folk is a small, fine-boned animal, he can be graded with ordinary breed* and berome very Urge. I add that from the day the half breed* are old enough to kill they are fat enough, and must not be fully fed in hot weather, or they will be in danger. We have lost some by not scrimping them, ami we have had to put them on very small allow ance to secure their breeding. If any body has any belter kind of hogs I have no controversy with him. and will enter into no discussion of the subject. What to do With the Weed*. W. II VI Ml* in Chantry U-nilMnsn. So long as we feed weeds to our stock, grow weeds on our farms, or suffer them to mature their seeds by the wayside, and generally to scatter their 'seeds, and then apply fresh stable and yard manure, just so long will we have plenty of weeds to con tend with, and this probably will lie so long as the world stands and soil culture continues. Fight weeds as we may, in my opinion the time will never came when we shall l>c entirely free from them. It would be bet tor to invent a practical use for them ; gather them before they so far ma ture as to ripen their seeds, and re duce them to mold, or to some other useful form. A TIRAVK MISTAKR Is made by farm era who think that stock must not lie fed at home after the first appcsrance of grass. Stook will show this false economy all through the season. J JAKDWAKK. WI T.SO.NT, McFAItLANE-A CO. DKALKRH IN STO VE S AND RANG ES, PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, RAKES, FORKB, CEADLES &c SCYTHES. SOLE AOKNTH FOR .1 OIIXSO N®H 1< A TiHOM \ allsomit P-TKKrr. .... rnrnK.' man, .... fn—FA i'PHK CENTRE DEMOCRAT BOOK arid JOB OFFICE HUSH IIOUHK LLL> A K, ' BKLLKFONTK, PA., is sow orrxaiau GRE A T IN DICE MEN T S TO TLLOSG WISIIIKO VISST-' I.ZSS Plain or Fancy Printing. W<- have unusual fn< ililiu* fur printing LAW BOOKS, PA M I'll LETS, CATALOOIES, PKOUP.AM M ES, STATEMENTS, CIRC!" LA ItS, HILL HEADS, NOTE HEADS, BI'SINFSS'CA BDS, INVITATION ('AKDS, CARTES liK VISITE, CARDS ON ENVELOPES, AND ALL KINDS OF RLANKS. Bar Printing "l-me in tho lout style, on short notice and at the lowest rates. ttzfOrUers by mail will receive prompt attention. KKMZMIIKK 711 K PLACE T CENTRE DEMOCRAT OFFICE, Hut/, Uvutf /(/.-A, mail STRKKT. nm-LEmsrit. PA PATENTS AND TniLDr-MiiniCS. \s v I'F * R* l.iTtrt* PATTVT IwtrwTi Jfo Arroftvn rrrb iw .pr 4 %r | t , f., f fs-rtwr* In th* Ctiit*f fU'ns sll'klkh cltrn I*. • DD" Us* Pafe-nl • aud *ll lit STI n *I RUNNING t. InvnU.i <*r I'AO-M* U * •L*. F'atstite In <"SLHTS *4 ODNT F-RHGU <AS*-sie }<Wt. t j-j Hgtlli fditlbed. arid all <-lh#r I aadroat frtesariaii i th® l*aUt>f fMfire r, J Uiw j Wrti Li'L deyijar.-ls tL* asytftw of •l|wtUrrwJ NLHIT • H* hiP had TEA fears PTJ*FI*I A* I'ALETD ATT Ttieyi. tii f. s< fi.N'i il ie- i : i;c <ici>. Ml Patents througli oat FEFI<J ara BOLL' •*] In THE "-ITWFFFIR R AT A ru- utlh f '* R C • RR filati I j OF LULII- I 1% WE, AOD AETOFID \r, S, TE-VITIFO a L Me. LATIK L N.aM.r* |T C TM.RU fall L.T *4 ALL ail f*at< nla. I*u|swrij tin t t# tnar |#t PAID FLOFY •efil free FM-R.D AT jtitot sl lr<*s "T> (XMIAL (H. I3tT V -feJISTTOrtS Mawl n a Drst|4i n #f ynr Ins wntson. glting four iMt li f or a iMifnuje, and •• mill git* an r. as t ,UD .th fall Instrur 1- n. <l.suing at hi fig luf adsire >ur Istwdi, M B> to |#vo4<arw rsUfita," ale ot Op PmUvt l#asrs. ral'i.tv salt, TRA-L* MatW*. ttiHf <*•!*. 4/.. atit FNA ON fM|tMVt ADDEESB: R. 8. A A. P. LACEY, PATENT ATTORNEYS, No. UM F Street, WASIIIXOTON, D. C., # Wnarly OFN—PADHT DFLRA. Arrotrs of Pay, Bounty and Pfiuiona. w* !*• s tlnr-sn In FLISISS '( • i ITSRM a4 rlLII F, | . AH n sll XMSRILLILIN. F-S, IW cnty At, I At (Lsts- f. ualnsa •iterMafnl, >lsn.|* M T-lnrs .h -SL.I L writ •• K S A A T LA< XV, GREAT REDUCTION. ECONOMY 18 WEALTH. Ths zzzx. S7C Machine! reduced to only )25. •1.50 PER WEEK! Horse A \N ngun I-"RR> to AGENTS, "THE FAMILY" SHUTTLE COft SEWING M AIV MACHINE, V|>>snlel UPON #n P.Uslml ,S RSM L-lnrh-wolnnl Inp UM* at>L LR*n 11.. O-mpl-T- UH s L U-iu >**•■.■.*, O( RF*I KM It, ML *#, nll.*R -U*. MRI ,„| NELAEXL 1.. O*lf |i, K. h fn*. BIN* IHEEMGLIL* **rr*tite.| mil, UI tattiM lot IN r~f* K*piln .*-l*R R*ll I>r rs* . If .*!♦ r. |,,R,.|„L at .•*• |I M-T aali.faf L.-TJ Th* M.*T .LTJ, rallsM*. ar, 1 Mli*f..|,nt MA. hi** #%-** intat.LA.l F,.F nil Inn, l. lamil* wnf'li. At. a. knnl*.|(*4 nn-|iil*FM-al TR.~HANI.ai *ne.-*AS, thor ■ lorlilr let I*4, an I U-EL In IHOWMINT. .4 t>.-M*> An <-m. inl, all.til, ra|S-l, fallal I* an ! .1-r ma l t h*l|*-r h> th. wnaf I .If. ..f ...fnSt'M, that ili (1., th* r..f1l <4 a (.null ..f a llln ttm-. of It will anrn ft-.n, $| la Sv |f .lay hit any on. !.....ton u. **ft fnt a lltlng.ana o,rta tna. than n.L.r TST .Sir. ..(ant at* marln.a ,4 LIL* .|alltl lla. R-itia HS, la'C*-*ITE4 Shnlll*. aaatl. f"*nl Ktlra lat(--**IF.-t Sot.Mna hnMlnc loft yaela ol thr**.|, DOING aval with th. ft. |TT)T r.lndia of hnMitn*. Il main, th* .hiilllo, .h.ol 1* Ihrfad, lock • utrh. (th. ma on Llli >I4M ,4 Ih* a-.TL . hi*S T*<T*.| ih. 51..5..T aa,*l> al ih* <>nt*nnlnl Th* ALE-otr—L Bnms ami T*L LMN|SSA .*r pe*l*-ML II U L-nitl (of BIFM>(lh and O.O.Unt hard aorh. In tor . hM*aH* N.IKU.| paita. Manilla. I*TOD TD fca. |A(- I.hrd atari W ill RAN F.r roar, niihonl n>pair. la .LAI|D* to laarn.aa'T to manag*. nndanteod parfartlr T* sn h"*F, and al**Y. mod. In a n..A*nl to do arary "Wflpthm of haaty <E fin* W.trl at t.*a o*l, ,M.R* AAALLY, amindhly and fa*L*r. and *ith lam lahor or WonW* than any mhr marhlnra. Y *T rni. K. **r did or (n do. IL *lll AAW anything a MMU* .* pi*r*. fnsn hu* of ramhrfi IN haai. . lath or harnnto tth any kind of thmad, and inn off laanty yard* par mlmiln; 11**. a SRAI. tiralght nr—ll- and MI-R break* Ihrm II rai.nol MM IS dmn a aliirh, rar.L TO braak Ih* thread Th* noa<*yih*.-ir*ll r-r>IOS.~L If H will not orreosK and oi-Thist *nr marhln* >1 donhl* Ih* prior 11 yon B.R. aor oihar mar Sine hny Ihi* and ha** • halter on* Th- aaa* and rapidity of LLA motto* and onaliiy of lla vnrk la Ua h*l TI-.-mman.L*. thin It ALL! ham, fall, lark, hratd, ford, I.lml, galhw, ■laiU. rn(B*. pleat, fold, aoallop, ahm, roll, Iml* amhesdrr. ran up I road 1 ha, *r., NLIH ategano*. aaa* and onlrknro.. *n.rps**ed by any maahtn* *.** In.entad Th* Prirea of oar ara M*.HINM AR* IROA than Iboa* aakad hy dealer* In ***! hand, ret.nlll and RSnt*h*D marhln**. or ih.a> tolling oelOtd Work lo RL.M* up host nana, many sorb TAFTSH* and atdaty TA mnrhlsaa h-lng otarad aa nan at radorod prirea It* war* of Imitation, and only buy new mnrhinra. Thar* ar* eo agw A..TO la*, markln-a offerod aa low m th* "Family." hy many dollar* For taaiinionlal. aaa daa flptl.a bmka, mailed free with aami-L*. of work. Oonda .hipped loan, part of ih* eonnirr. NO matter how ratnola the otar* may IM, and aafa DALl.ary goar antead, wlah prirllag* <ll a F#uaoUtS ttißinavtM befit* payment ..f Mil, or on iwlpi of NM by Ragt.tered letter. MFSTOI order, or Draft Agent, wanted Iheragbimt Ih* raranlry Aw Ihl. IS* R htopeat, moot aalMhriot , and rapid uttlng MM klq. HILSA world. For liharol laona. ajdrran FAMI LV SUDTTLR MACHIMR OX, Mf 'R Sroadway, RAW TsrS. |>LLLKFONTK A KNOW KHfjJ-: * wrr 11 7, """ T> "' "• '"•* 1 '••! uir i>. v 'iTt V "*"* *'"* to iMlnfcetn ">•* , rrln,nt Mo* i uVu " u< "* ,<bo * 247 r - .'"**• i* IMMik 'J-TT 4 ; -"i— .t xh.H. I •• IMNIKI. HIIOAIf*, (iriiril hup#>rßit*td'-ht I>ALI> KAGLK YALLKY HAIL. M A f:< a f• nu-TaM SI, ]I7 A' I"* t| " TtAlfc ' tAAT*ikV. Ktp Mail. T*' r ' Arrl*# at T\r"t*+ lit ... fgk n ;/! 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H . II Ir®i',i lot 4t |)AMi®ft, .bil Nr*ul r Kt> MM) *t. J(lA4t'A K* j.r.-AA W m. tn4 Kria W M ,,i |,„ k v *ml, mk *,aUu„ .| M ii|,AU,.|. ,t ,|b .% C. K 1 44 trmiti, itAflli. Krl. MAII U|, Hujiiri El|f W.,t, Af.d IH| Ci|.tt*f Kmi n.Ak, tl ~ (..OAHIA.A it Uk UA,b * lib II K 1 I! R ffAln., Krl, Mi.l R**t *nd W,i ...tinol aI trl, ltl> Iruo, I "B I. C 4 M * K R At l ..rr? H, O r A A T R R t rri,|K.ritiro will, R V A I' R R U | „ ; lirlfl* . ..) villi A V It R PA, I * <r. Bill rt,B l<tvfv PI,iIA44|.IIIA AB<I w 11it at..• {- rt . A KtAgara Eqnv Wtvt Kn li| ,m W~t. n.il.d.||.|,,A I. if.... R®.t And Iv, ki|4A Ivrt. And AtiAiU, Ri|.r< |jud AlA>|4bc 'An on All niclitUßia#. W * lI,LI'Via. (4T ."o|f if.Ur.dnnt | FARPBR BROTHBRB, *PIMI FTRRFT BEI LEmHTK, PA.. Hato thnlr counten ond fholvf. with NEW GOODS, (BANKRrPT RATES Purchawtd t - RANKRI'IT RATES ( BANKRUPT RATES WHini Tnrv orr** AT BOTTOM PRICES, BOTTOM PRICES, BOTTOM PRICES. OOXSIFTIXO or Dry Good*, Millinery (ioodr, Clothing, Fancy Good*, Notion*, Ac. BOOTS and SHOES BOOTS and SHOES at wrj low [>rtca. BOOTS and SHOES HATS and CAPS Uut itylet of HATS and CAPS HATS and CAPS Carj>pt Bag*, Umbrella*, Paraaolt, Ladi**' Cloak*, Carpeting, Oroceriea, Jkc. OorHlnf trrry Utln* IKAI ria U t.„d ia a tnl clanp atdi a. . HARPER RUOTIIERS* RPRIXO HTRRKT. . . RKU.CPOVTK, PA. OOTXTRT PRonrCR t.km I® .krh.se* AI IM lilehivt mArkrf |tfir ].|j *. c, at van. Pratt. j. r aaat. (M'r, VIKST NATIONAL BANK OF A REI.LCroXTK. Allnh.n, PA. AW rUPTBI 00UKTY BANKING V7 xMPANT. Kf4>f tVfwvilA Awl All fMrtvpi, W*l AAi XMA; ht AJnd Ml 001 hmWM, , . _ UM And (VvpnVA, d>M A. Rcitcb. Pr~rtd*Bt. _J B dnrAfA,. CfwAlrr. AW |>UOCKKRnOFF HOtTBK, A ' BKI.tamXTR, PA HOUSE A L A TELLER, Proprietor*. ' (ftxtd Sample ttnom on Pint Floor, . •F'Trtv *■ (• And fTthi *ll Trtta*. ankdnw K'tHwe And jAfvi*. l-ij
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers