Sltf tCnitre jOrmocvat. VVW' • vA/VVvVyV'WVVVV '>e BELLEPONTE, PA. Tlie Chnnpimt mill Bent Paper I'UULlHllKtl IN CKNTHK COUNTY. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT IK pub llnhml uvury Tliui#.ly murniug, #t DulLrunt., C*nU. rounty, IV TKUMS—I'MII in ilvnncp, $1 WO If nut in idfißCl 00 l'.ym.uiU mm In within thru# mouth# will h* aul " •iluro.l In mlvniiro. A LI VK I'Al'KU—Jot#d to thu InMrrM# of thu whulo pooplt*. No pN|N<r will It* illncoatinuwil until r pnlif, otcopl m option of Popart going out of tli cuuuljr moat bo pub! for in tdrftiice. Any person procuring u* ten mull •UUKTIIMT* will bo lent a copy frv of rliwrgo. f>ll r t'&t*uiv* clrcuUklioii fiiAk' thi |utpf*r AH un tinuAlly rfllsMc And prortuMt* m<*<tftiitt fr itntertUßig. Wr HATO tht ni"t mp!* fii.-iltn.Hi f..r JOH WoHK All ti art* pr*'pAr.*l to print All klo.U of lb* k, Tnu u, IV'grAtnni*. l , t' , ni.i , onuiAr*Ul printing;, dr., in tiu flu ..nit stylo All.l At tin* |W*At p'Mll-11. rwtcs. HATOK AhVKIITHMNU. Tlw#. | t In. | '2In. | .'tin. | 4in. sln. loin "iti 1 Wrsk, ill <*' f*i oO f.t oo| 4 00 s:> 00 s•* is. |U <. '2Wi>d, 1 I 60 • t* 4 *. 5 00. rt (si! 11 is' 10 Oo 3 Works, i 2Mi :t 60 mi A 00 7no 1.l MI 1* oo 1 fcb.jth, ! 2 6o| 4 mi rt isj| 7 is *OO 15 00j 20 mi 1 M.oiths, 4 mi ft ISI 4 MI pi on l'J is. 20 MI 28 00 3 Months, / M. * 00 W ISI )8 is. \(% ISI 25 is 115 (> A Mil tit*,! H IS" 12 ULLLH 0O 20 isi, .2 *. .MI OO isi 1 Yr, |l3 OOIIH 00*24 Oo 2H o>>! 42 OO'Ai Mi tOO <*) A'lirllroeoU Ar** mlriiUtol by tin* huh In length of column, ah.l Any aptre is rAlr-.l as full inch. Foreign AdT<*rti*finnU must b# paid f r l**fort* In* •ertion. except -n yrarly contract*. WIMMI tutlf-jr*nrly payment* in A'lv*ur will It* r*<(uirr*l I*'LiTicAL Noto'm, I* cenUi p*r liii* *.•%.• h Inter tint). N 'ihitiij inserted for !•** than 5o cents. Hi s'Nf-s N'.ITO *, in the edib>riAt eulttliift*. 15 cents p-*r line, *a< li Insertion. hs'AL Nullc*, in „*| rotuinns, 10 rents per line AnaovxcsMEsrs < t nam.* of otndUUu-* for ofßce, I *M h Aasocactntxrt or MAARIAUKS n& DEATH* Insert**.l fr*e; U , All obituary noli . will be charged 5 cents p**r line. Si'i. isL Nonets 25 r cent. Above regular rates. Stato Democratic ConventiAi. The BUt* Democralii- Convention will meet at liar risburg.on WRDNKBDAY, the 10th !AJ of July, 1179. at noon, for the ptirp-we of nominating a randklab for Utate Treasurer, anl transa* ting in h other busi ness as the interests of the jutrty may require. lly order of the State Committee. K. M. HPEKH, Chairman. 11. V. nirrrxxni* H,) I*. J. PIBRCE. Ss-eretarie*. I' 0 lUkmm;. ) What of 1880? The issues upon which the presi dential battles of 1880 will lie fought are already clearly outlined. It is not possible that any change can oe cur in the relative positions of the two great parties, nor is it within the range of human probability that any question, paramount in importance to the American people, can arise to over shadow the one upon which a Demo cratic Congress and a Republican Ex ecutive have locked horns. Assuming then that the struggle will be between the friends of fair, free elections, and ! no military interference upon the one hand, and the fast increasing party of centrftlizationists and advocates of an extension of the power of the Fed eral government upon the other, it will be'interesting to tnke a look m the field, and note such salient fea tures in the campaign as may be visi ble at this early day. When the Re publicans in Congress first fully com mitted themselves to the monstrous doctrine that the Federal government had the right to supervise elections held under State laws, even to station ing the armed soldiery of the United Htates at the polls, and before they had succeeded in coercing Mr. Hayes to a violation of his inaugural oath, I there was a marked unanimity in the sentiment of the Republican jmrty all over the country. With one accord every stalwart, in and out of Congress, every whiekey-riug thief and public plunderer, turned his gaze westward, and as they strained their eyes toward the golden slopes of the far-off Pacific they lisped the name of Grant. For awhile it looked as if the hero of Han , Domingo would have a walk over to the doors of the Republican National Convention, and there amid the loud Ho/a onus of CoiikJing, Rolieson, Bel knap, and the Ht. Louis (.lobe-Demo crat, receive for a third time a nomi nation at its hands. But insidious advisers found their way to the car of the acting Executive. Men who had heretofore lieen strangers in the White j House once more throng.il its rooms, and the triumph of the revolutionists was complete. No longer need the stalwart sigh for the iron hand of the silent soldier. The skinny fingers of the jaundiced Sherman did the work quite as effectually, and alt at once the word goes forth that the man who j holds the purse strings of the Nation is the favorite, not only of Hayes hut of a strong party in Congress for the presidential succession. Thus is erect ed the first formidable obstacle to the renomination of Grant. The financial Secretary, with his mighty balances in the New York banks, his syndicates and the whole power of the adminis tration, is not to be despised as lie puts his lance at rest and enters the lists for the great tournament of 1880. Taking a fair look at every phase of this contest it is difficult to conjecture where victory will perch; but one tiling seems absolutely certain and that is, that there are hut two real candidates for tho Republican presi dential nomination n year hence. Their names are .John Sherman and U. S. Grant. The good citizen will say with the dying Mercutio, "A plague *Oll both your houses." It is with a feeling of relief that we turn from the contemplation of Republicans intrigues and ambitions to see what tho party of Constitutional freedom will offer an outraged people as they prepare to battle for everything tbey hold dear. Here the view is not so circumscribed. The Democratic par ty is a great national organization. , It represents the diverse interests of a mighty people scattered over a vast territory. It knows no section and legislates for no particular class. Hence, it is impossible to prostitute its high aims and patriotic purposes to the mean ambitions of a few men. From the very nature of things, in looking over the list of Democratie statesmen on whom the mantle of a presidential nomination may fall — Samuel J. Tildcii comes first. Not because his claims are greater or his chances better than any other candi date, hut because he is the legal ly elected President of the United States, and was defrauded of his high [ office bv the most monstrous political : crime recorded in history, Envv, malice and calumny have marked him for their own, but the people be- I Hove in him, and if he is made the candidate of the party, that sense of , fair play, which is the ruling charac- I teristic of the American people, will ' assert itself at the polls, and he w ill be triumphantly vindicated and his traducers rebuked. Perhaps the man whose name is oftenest on men's tongues in this connexion is Allan G. Thurman. The honest, incorruptible Senator from Ohio, with his great abilities and sound ideas of public polity, would make n candidate who would be absolutely invincible. 11. (KMsesses in rare degree that personal magnetism so desirable in a candidate and be would create n degree of en thusiasm unknown in our later politi- , eal struggles. Almost the same can lie said of his distinguished neighbor, Thos. A. Hendricks. There are many points of resemblance between the two men, and both enjoy the entire confi- . donee of their party. Then there i# Thos. F. Bayard of Delaware. I\r- • haps his equal in every way was never before nnmc.l in connexion with n presidential nomination. He is to day the grandest figure in public life. His whole career is a stern rebuke to the corruption and dishonesty that have crept into the lives and besmear ed acts of many of the people's ser- , rants. While political debauchery , ran riot in the halls of legislation, | and the highest in the land bowed in ; submission to the prevailing spirit of! the time, the people of all parties knew that there was one among the Nation's law makers who would at all times, and under all circumstances, lie true to them and to himself. If the j Democratic convention should, in its wisdom, present Thos. fc\ Bayard as a gift to the party, the campaign of i IHXO would be the most memorable j this country has ever witnessed. The < result would he determined the day the nomination was made. There are many others who might lie discussed as probable candidates, fiut we have chosen to sjieak of the four men, one of whom in all probability will lead the Democratic hosts to victory in the year of our Ird one thousand eight hundred and eighty. The investigation into the crooked ness by which Kellogg wormed him self into the United Htates .Senate is progressing in Washington. It is de veloping the usual amount of Louisi ana filth, and perhaps the largest crop of liars yet exhibited. Witnesses who have made affidavits in New Orleans to certain facts, when they arrive in , Washington and go before the commit tee, swear that they lied. They of , course have been seen ami set up by Kellogg nnd his strikers and "get ; their sugar " for the peijury. Not : withstanding the unreliable character of witnesses from Louisiana, the com mittee expect to be able sufficiently to explore the case to enable them to re port the true facts nad arrive at n proper conclusion. It is ascertained that Kellogg has already bought up twenty or thirty of the witnesses ex pected to testify for Hpofford by ap pointments in tho Custom House at New Orleans. Tito State Colloyo. Tills rnstly institution has been eritized pretty severely for the pu*t few years, and recently the Legislature appointed a com mittee to look into tlie workings of the es tablishment, ami learn what grounds there are for the growling heretofore indulged in by newspaper individual*. The editor of tfni Altooiia 'Tribune, in a recent issue of that journal, indulges in remarks of this kind: "An opinion has prevailed for some time til a l the .Stule Agricultural College was to a certain extent a failure ; that the results were not up to the just expectations of its friends, and not on a scale commensur ate witii tlie great cost its maintenance en tails on the people of the State. Tie* Leg islative Committee appointed to investi gate the matter have discovered that there were a good many reasons to believe that this institution, as well as tlie experiment al farms, has not been us productive of good results as wo had a right to expect. The Statu College has cost fur too much when tlie results attained aro taken into consideration. One of the graduates testi fied that when he first went there there wus u large attendance of pupils, hut some years later the professors w<-re almost as numerous as the student*. Wo are not of the opinion, says the Lancaster AVio Era, j that such institution* can he made [ sustaining, nor wan that the idea upper most in tlie minds of our representative* when they passed the hill providing for ; their organization. The advancement of agricultural knowledge throughout the State was a primary consideration, and i the Stale could well afford to pay well for a wido dissemination of such information ; but lite people Were entitled to look tor a cb-ar and economical administation of the affair* of these institutions, and that is ap parently what they I ave not received. The unaccountable mismanagement <>f the public lands yen the (.'> : lege J> r<.rsi that the men in charge i rere at leant mult Ijrennt y negligent <>{ the (rue interfile of the ft. liege . re,- II huh they erercned control, and that the public in terentn irmild be nubnerred by their removal, in fact a thorough over hauling of the system on which tlie State College has been conducted sunn t" be imjicratively demanded, and a return to more economical and hutincai-liko meth ods." We republish the foregoing article trout the Clearfield It'publirnn in or der that our readers may see what ig norance and stiipidity exist* among the average newspapers of the State. That portion in italics, front the New Era of Lancaster, i- a fair specimen. The editor of the New Em should have known that the College never hail any public lands to manage well or ill, und therefore its trustee* and officers could not lie guilty of mis managing them. The federal govern ment, by act approved July 2, l*t>2, donated to each State an amount of public lands equal to 30,000 acres for each Senator and Representative which such State was entitled to under the census of 1*<0. L'uder this act Pennsylvania was entitled to receive 7*O,IMMI a res of land, for the purpose of endowing agricultural colleges, liy an act of the legislature, approved April 1, IfWJJ, Pennsylvania a-ceptcd this grant and pledged the faith of the State to carry out the condition* imposed hv Congress. This act can lie found in the Pamphlet Laws of 1 HtiJ, page 213. The seeund section of this act authorize* and directs the Surveyor tienrr<il of the Stale to do and perform everything necessary to entitle the .State to the land scrip, and when the land scrip was received by him to dispose of the same, "under such regulation* as the Hoard of Commissioners, hereafter minted by this act, shall prescribe." By the tltird section the Governor, Auditor General and Surveyor General of the State were eonstituted the Board of Commissioners, with power to make all needful regulations for the sale of the land scrip by the Surveyor Gener al. The proceed* were directed to lie invested in United State* or State stock, or bond*. By the fourth section of the same act the interest of the fund thus iuvested was appropriated to the Ag rieultural College of Pennsylvania. This interest is all the money the Col lege lias ever received on nccount of the land grant, and all that the insti tution could by nny possibility have mismanaged. By the fifth section of the same act, the College wa* required to make an annual report to the legis lature of the receipts and expenditures of the institution, This has lieen reg ularly and faithfully done, and if there has been any, even the least, misappropriation of the College funds, it can lie pointed out it) their annual reports. No t rustee, or other officer of the College had any voice in the man agement or sale of the land scrip. If this land scrip was mismanaged so that it did not produce as much money as it should have done, the Board of Commissioners np|minled by statute, consisting of the (sovernor, Auditor General and Surveyor Gener al of the State, is alone responsible. Next week we will publish the report of the legislative committee referred to in the above article with the proper and necessary comments. Weaktffiing—Mr. Hayes in his hope of a " democratic break-down." * Mr, Hayoß and ll in Votoen. Written f..r tin- Ckmtks ti h.hMut, Wlioru am wo drifting ? Is history re peating iUolf ? Is the old leaven of Fed oral consolidation arid of strong govern ment roaring its head fur the destruction of the Rights of tlio .State* ? A rocurreuoo to former epochs will hulp us L> elucidate those questions. The history of the Fed eral government, from it* origin to the present time, wo find has boon marked by ono continual struggle between Liberty and Power ; between the Right* of thu States and the liberties of the people on the one hand, and Federal Usurpation on the other. Up to the year ITTI the Federal govern ment was continually acquiring strength under the administration of President Adams, and popular rights were failing into contempt. At that period the pas sage of the odious Alien and Sedition laws, with other high-handed means, caused the people to arise in the majesty of their strength to resistance, and under the guidance of Jefferson a signal victory was achieved over the advocates of consolidation and elective monarchy. "The Constitution was rescued at its last gasp," and the rights and libertii-s of the fieople restored. Then was promulgated the political truth which constitutes tlie true conservative principles of this Union of Klal<-*. In pursuing our argument it oja-ris a *tiil broader field over which w will be com pelled to take a very rapid flight. In that glorious instrument, the Declaration of In de|M>ridence, the United Colonies published and declared that "the*e United Cblsnin aro and of right ought to bo fret and independent Statei, Ac. The next step was the formation of a government under the "Articles of Confederation." The first two articles of the instrument reait thus : "Article Ist, The style of this confederal v shail lie the United States of America." "Article 2d, Ka< h Stale retains its Sov reignty, Freedom and Indepcndenca and every jurisdiction and right, A< Up to that je-riod it cannot be pretended that the Statiss had parted with their sovreignty, fresdom or independence. Under the form of government just described the Revolu tion was successfully conducted and brought to a happy cioae by the acknowledgement "f our inJeiienderiec by tin- government of Great iiritiain. The government was not long in operation before it was discovered that the want of a j-ow.-r in the Confedera cy over foreign commerce was the occasion of much embarrassment In it* operation* To remedy these inc.nveriien--• Congress, on tlie 21 st of I>rotn!icr, IT*"'., passed the following resolution: Resolvent , That in lh* opinion of ('■ n gress, It Is axpadicnt that on the woad Monday of May next, „ convention of delegate* of the nereral Statei I*, held at Philadelphia/or (be note arid esprenn pur jrfwe of renting the articles of Confedera tion and reporting to Congas and the several legislature* sueh alteraW-ns therein as shall, when agr*J t m C -r.gr<--- an I confirmed by the Stolen , render the federal constitution adequate to the exigencies of government and the preservation of the Union." I ndcr this resolution delegates were chosen by the several Statei. The second Monday ol May, 17*7, the delegate* did meet in convention, at I'hiladelphia, and elected George Washington it* President After a struggie lietween the ad via-ates of consolidation and centralization and the friends of Liberty and Rights of the MateSj the constitution was framed, providing in Article V for it* amendment provided "that nn State , without it* con sent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate; and in Article VII, that "the ratification of the conventions of run* ntaten shall be sufficient for the establish ment of this constitution between the State* so ratifying the sum*." "Don* in convention by the unanimous consent of the Stgtei present, the 7th day of Heptem t*-r, 17K7." This Constitution was trans mitted to the several legislatures to be ratified or not, by the delegate! rhanen to a enrentiem isi eiteh date, by the people thereof. Here it i* manifeet that the Stales formed the constitution, for it was only hv their ratification that it was made to exist, and that it was only to lie binding upon the Slates that should ratify it, thus proving that the Federal Union wa# the creature of the States. George Washington was unanimously elected President of the United Mutes and John Adams, Vice President, and after serving his first term Washington wa* re elected for a second term—the constitution having fixed no limit to a re-election of the person elected Prewident. President Wash ington, seeing the danger of consolidation and centralization, refused a re-nominati<-n for a third term, believing it incompatible with the intention* of the American people and the principle* of Republican govern ment, thus setting forth and esUbliihing a precedent and example limiting the dency in ono individual to sf-D t years, which have been as religioi sly adhered to and followed ever since a* if a prohibition had been inserted in the Constitution. Another Presidential election coming on, John Adam* was elected President and Thomas Jefferson, Vice President. In the acts of the administration Mr. Jefferson was opposed to the construction of tho Constitution a* advocated by Mr. Adams, hi* cabinet gnd political friends. As he say* in one of his letters written at the lime, "I am opposed to th* tnonarchlsing of tU features [the constitution,] by the forme of ite administration with a view to conciliate a fresh transition to a President and Senate for Ufa and from there to a hereditary tenure of those offices, and thus to worm out th elective principles," &<■. rho administration of Adsms wont on and was Justly termed the "reign of terror" passed the odious Alien and He'lition laws cut down the Liberty pole* of the pooplt— hunted them with the Philadelphia and Lancaster Light Horse— arrested and im prisoned the honest yoeteanry of Derk* and Northampton for advocating Liberty and K|ual Light* and refu ing to wear the Hlack Cockade—the badge of Loyaity t/> the administration. The fourth J'reaidential oonl< t coming on, the Jfederalisla re-nomiiialed Mr. Adam* for President, with Gem :ul Piw.k ney for Vice President, and the Republi cnni nominated Mr. Jefferson arid Colonel Burr, Ibis wa* a conleat between the rights of the people and centralization and tile former gained a grand triumph in the decisive election of Jefferson and Burr. Bv the Conetitutiun a* it exi*ted at that |ari"d cash elector voted for two men without designating which wa to be Pres idenl, and be who obtained the greatest number wa* to !*• Preafdent and the other Vice President. Mr. Jefferaon and Colonel Burr had an equal numWr of vote*, and it ingulariy occurred that the Mutes were equally divided. The election according to the Constitution was Pi be decided by the House of Representatives. The (tfiople had designated Mr. Jefferaon for President and Burr for Vico President, hut the friends of Mr. Adams, In the House of Representative*, took advantage of the situation and endeavored to el< t Col. Burr Tins resulted in a prolonged ontet, and after thirty-five ballots, two Federal mem bers who bad voted blanks withdrew on the thirty-sistli ballot and the result was the election of Mr. Jefferson to the Presideru v and Burr to the second place. On the 4th of March, 1901, they were inaugurated, and one of the first acts of President Jef ferson was the owning of the prison doors and setting free the friends of liberty and equal rights that had been hunted, arrested and imprisoned by the marshals and mili tary cohorts of President Adams. The Constitution having been amended on the 17th of October, IWjJ, respecting the manner of electing a President and Vii a President, another election was ap proaching. Mr. Jiir-rem wsi nominated and re-electsd, with Gorge Ciinton for Vice President, and they were sworn into • ■fflee on the 4th of March, under the 12th amendment. From that time until 1871 every President arid Vice President Of the United States has le-cn elected by and under the provisions of the same arti cle (the 12th of the Constitution. l!\ another of those amendments it was em phatically declared that "the powers not delegated to the I n 1 led States by the Con stitution, nor j rohibited l>v it to the St ate n, are re nerved to Use States res |>et lively, or to the jieople," It follows that the rights thus renewed to the Slates must have lse<-n rights inherent in the sovreignty of the Stale*. The first clause of the second sec tion of Article I declares that the "flou'e of Representatives shaii lie Composed of member* chosen every second year by the Jivople of the srr rrai State*, and the elec tors in each State shall have titc* qualifica tions requisite for elector* of the most numerous branch of the State Legislature,'' and the third section of the same article declares that "The Senate of the United State* shall be composed of two Senators from each State, eJn-een by the Legislature thereof for six years, and each Senator shall baTe one vote." We have thus given an account of the origin and character of the Constitution as briefly as was consistent with the object in view, viz : to prove the imi<rUnt fact that the Status retain their reserve rights, and have elected their Senator* and mem bers of the House of Representative* of the Federal Congress without the attempt of interference and intimidation by the presence of federal marshals, supervisors and soldiers at the election* having been mad* from the time of Jefferson to the ad ministration of Grant, a period of 6b years. And now the momentous issue arises as to whether the federal government a* attempted to be administered, is a gov ernment of limited powers, or a military daspotism whether we are to be freemeo, or slave# * These questions will be the subject of future comment. Patrick He.vkt. The Kmption of ML Linn. Loanow, May 90.—The eruption of Mt. Ktna increases in force. The quan tity of ashes thrown out ia somewhat loss, but the volume of vapor has great iv increased in density. <n Wednes •lay night a Dumber of brilliant halls of fire were thrown to a great height and burst aloft like rockets, emitting a fiery shower. A stream of lava is flaming apparent ly in the direction of the town of Ran (iaxso, but the exact line has not yet lieen verified. During the whole of Wednesday night loud reports, tike the rolling of artillery, were heard. Maa. Pott, the venerable relic! of the ex President, ia in favor of removingthe dust of the Presidents for sepulchre in Washington. She says: "Of all the Presidents now dead, bow many are under monuments suitable for the memory of the greet offices they held ! Where i Monroe's! Jefl'eraon'aT Ys, Jefferson's ia in such a state of decay and neglect. Until George Washing fon'a remains were removed to Mount Vernon and an association formed, his tomb was much neglected. And if the grave of the Father of hia Country was allowed to go to ruin, bow can we expect that other* will he cared for! Mount Vernon ia only kept up now by the efforts of a few women," ADDITIONAL LOCAI-S. Hchx/at fv iihoi. CoxVKHTiojr.—All thj i delegate* who attended the Sundny-school | convention nt A I toon* lust w<--k rctur iji-d i delighted, pronouncing H the most iucc.es*- ; ful ever hel l. llev. H. Crittenden, especi ally, ws <•*ij 1 totil. mid wo donht not would ! rejoice if ho could have continued it in - definitely. The following nrt the throe ' principal resolution* reported by the Coin ! initti i- on J!'i*olutiun and adopted by the Convention: //''./rr</ ( That we hail with unfeigned joy the progreM of the Hands) .school work during the part year. The fact that many j school* were established in place* hitherto without tliii mean* of grace j that the at tendance of teacher* and x holar* baa ; largely Hi' raaaad ; that the interest in the work ha grown more intense, and that the field i humming more arnl more orgsni/.- • ed and better appreciated, call forth our *iiicre*t gratitude to our Heavenly Father, who ha* accepted and richly blessed our laleir*, and therefore we a/ knowledge Hi* hand in our improvement*, blew hi* narno for all our increase, and go forward with renewed zeal to labor for the further fx tension of the cauw- of Him to whom the work belong* and whoa: name shall be I praised forever. lteotte*i, That we recognize in the local district institutes established in some of our counties an effl< ierit intrumentality iri | the furtherance of our great work and a I valuable aid to the county conventions, j and therefore recommend the establishment of such institutes of neighboring school* d ; within the limits of the couniv organiza tion*. 7b v./red, 1 hat the cause #f t**mjieranee < annot b- separated from the true idea of the Hundayescbool work ; that continued and increased effo-t* le made in the di- I re. lion ~f exn ruluig |lm < l.rislian influ ! ence of our Hunday school* in thi* great and good cause, for we acknowledge the . truth that the foundation of a sober man j hood can la- surely laid only in the heart* f the young, at I that we pray God in hu ll:* mercy to aid us in the successful estab : iishing of tetn;a-rarice in our school*, which are the real hope of our nation's future. i —Tic- reason the boy sbout s printing office i* called a devil is because be it to be ■ ■"tne an impw -r. — Whit*hall Time * And very often he mak<-* one imp-iou*. Jfrrt im Hf'rrder. Likewise provoke* one by his imp-udence. American H*- f* rlrr. Any one wuld get a j*or imp ression of you paragrapbera.— Hubbard i'lrtrt isrr. The real reason for calling him a devil i because there'* something wrong al-<-ut bun—he'* irnp-erfoct.—Chi ; cogii t'n. on. Our Ham **y be : -an only v. urit r lieing called a devil ! locause of hi* iittp-orlance.— The Monthly I'nom. His Satanic Majesty in this vicin ity thinks that the imp-ertinence of these | paragraph'-™ is only to bo <• xceed<vi by •■heir g<id look*, and suggest* that the reason he bear* thi* unenviable title is \x aum.-it t* almost imp-ossiMe to imp-rove : him. Philadelphia Markets. I'tlLlllUlMU. Jus* is, I*7*. riot* *. Mrs!—Fl"Wr a v-rjr Urn and -h-lne .ml-** ii oi st-adr rc-gnrwt nab. i>i 13W i-*rr*l; rei-mit* llo.li- * t* i * tr* l*n.i .1. kiie-dlum ar-4 Inn I SI •. . : Mselnth d -Je si f'••■fa.:. ; ! nslo* i|. I st f". isi' and latest ai-d ■ it- i t t*ti I trade* *t 1*4*4.1 J. ii t r. ut i* Hrw *1 (ifa ji—rms-al ' oasl* lb- l—l t..*- V- I 1* talrly artlr* and in*, *ith sale. <•! —" > ... it-rindlng I'fall.M l*nnia '. s*. ' . rt, r.-i at 11 Is ~ t |IU, a,. Si. smbrr at . to( j Vg Jmt U-tstiit at flit'.- At it.. Sot all |.* Jwt-r, 5. .fas- |.u,h-1. ■lull el .1 111 , ' 5w.,11 tt lilt/., i aed it t*- uti..|...l* .In at 11 Oil. Jit. I* lb 1-HU-r rr-,—t al ."eaOs 1 r atvters I'rticwjltattle. hsna* -Cl"srs ——l t itnii at t 1 y-tAr Tliur-thy at. 1 rial*.el at < ate bar.*—!. Bellefonte Markets. Rui.tr art, Jo of I-. IST* Qt oTAriusa. j w hjf* Js# r l't* U**l ... ~ |1 H-1 * . iuintn.it t....w* ■it ,a. ■ J <*• l', ft I ••!} t*t j Oori,<xA„ ... , 4 <>fU, plttllfwl |r t ......... :*i i j*-? t**rrl . N w I rj -or, !NW)* 6 *U II AT AM fTRA W I Ily, rknk* tlßk-'hi, |ri |i.n f |o f*f| Il>. tnitfd. |t i* t. ft no ! Hl . J UH.JItwJ. JWf ft ft* Mhtrll tll-ftV, |*l J, 60 i i ftim j ftriiM, |i *r lufi • C^ . ysuf* KctAA. grim!*!. i<f ton io no Provision Market Corrected weekly 11 Ilat|u-r Rretker*. I Af-rlea. dried, |er pcltd..„.„ A j ikr lint. ]o i jm t)r1 10 . ptt fwsuv4 10 • likbn* fwf ftofiwl A j j*< r l/t i iVmmij hum* ir io ; Hwht, wtgii find 12 j I-aH pf*t p.<i)ltd.. A ! R*#* Ir 10 pt hfiwA m. ~.1111. ... ,- T ■ ?J ! IHM ........ 1* ' Mint-d t .ir.H.fa. .........10ftt U l**nttsfi pt tlot -- r -, iHit-d #.. I r.*m pf jKnii'l...a • t MARRIAGES. RIRRI.T-HRoWR—On the tr.l Ht Jst.e I j Ret. * N tai.'ll' M> llac**i f Btcrly with Rt. A lew R Rrnwu, t.AI, of Surer Vallay,("ltet e nusstr. rill!.lPft-MVKRS-Oo the .14 liwtant. t-a Res J O. M. -. tnakei, Mt W II rhillp* t. Mite ( lara F. My etw, alt of Aao-ststoirs KtstHrrr—catX -At it.. Vt K tssw-warcs Mar tl*V I*T, hy the R-r An. 1 ust. Mr tV-art-s k-estl sd Muw Oara cloa, IkASi of Relief--ate. I'a FI.KMIJtO—W'ARIi —Ots ThotwSay reewingeglay t, I*T, al the rswei- txe f the bride • parrnU T Belle ■ r.nle, h* R.t A D V-wwm, Mr R. t. Ftfanlnc sard Mot KHU P. Want. r. -laa-t <Uuht of Philo Stsd llaunah Ward. A brief M*ai*t>* with lh* granm, which ha* tern etlr-taely yleaaanl t- at, hi ni tent evtSesrw that aa s l.tislwtel bs will |s>w a* derided a swew sa were ht* aMimrOno* Ist ttie Sou of s lovor. In •faery rw*fiFCt, sine* hi* H iiUnoe In Mrllofnstr. be has f abown blnarlf a smilorS>w ywtt man, asS slho(wlh et worthy the 1-rtre he hew aer wred In hie Wir t-rtde. Ml** R.ll# Ward ertj,.y* a Iscr* rdrrte of ao*naintasi< * In tht* I'hc*. and he ta adfac-tltdftd l'f alt to I. s beauty, sad worthy the bttrh.-fa r H.e w hi, h Use mm nnmtal market aflordn After a btdrf rhdt to Wtltlsm*. pott, the tmnrr niatSsot* of the *rwwn. the young coo|.lf retwrns-l to rwude In this |4ar*. whore we hope Uwy may svnr *njey that par., happlsms asS yma' perrty which thj m well diw-utt Ri*iP- RI I KXnt Itt.F* On June *. UTS. hy Res. Smith, si hit re.t-t.nce. Mr John P. Boop of Bonnet townaht|>, t.. Mtw Fbnat. Kllsbsr(et uf Half Men _______ ftl DEATHS. W11.1.t aMA —la Itrmonb, o* fwotay, May an, nr, of Sf-tnel |R sea ill' and brats hrst, Kali. May, dnnsh- Wr of John I and M. M William*, aged *re year* WAT —OS June I, UTS, .fetter*an Way of Pert Ma I Ms, aend *0 ysntn Mr Way wn*s mambar *f ths UuMM chuxh tot tny yaaxv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers