(L'rntrc democrat. BELLEFONTE, PA. Th* Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper l'l'HI.lHIIKI) IN CKNTRK COUNTY. THK t'KNTKK DKMOCKAT is pub lialis| *vrjr Tlmrs Uy iiH>riiiti|c, aat IHlwfont*,On If# county, I'M. TKOIU—CUsh Is $1 If not In & r.tytn.nts miflo within thro* ihonth* will Ih *!*• uMi-rwl in klvuc. A LI VK PAPER—d*oUil to the lnt#r*t of the Whole |MN>|>|P. No |M|w*r Will dlcontliiUft at option of puldiahrra. I'M|M rw Kuitirf out of tho county iiitlal ho |mld for in ndvniii o. Auy pr>n pMrurtn* u* tcncwah anlacrllMra will Iw we ll K a ropy fTCP of • Iwrg*. our atwiMirc circulation intkm tlilf paper nn tin* usually rrliwhlw and proftuhlo iik 15 •*; 20 2 11.0,th-. 4 0O it isi H tsi Im isi 12 uu 2* "01 2* t> Months, *. HOO 12 oil I I 15 00 '••*> 0O .'l5 ia r. Months. * iNi.l3 > la on 20 "• 22 • -• oo oo *• 1 4 . sr, 12 on.!* ■> 24 ■ J* O' 4.' IW m no pat i*i Advprtitcnicnts are cal< ulatd hy tha Inch In length of cnlunD, and any lees spa. • ia rwlel a- a full in. h. Koreiitn wdvertlaeui>ut must b* paid f r liefnre In* •ertioß. except -n yearly cuntrwrt-. when half yearly payment* in advance will he required Poutical Notk •. L* fills per line each Insertion. Nothing insertesl lor has than rent*. Ural**** Norn In the editorial column*, 1 cents per line, each Insertion. Noth *■*. in liM-al folumiii, 10 centa p*r line. ,\**ot *i uf names of candidates for ofltra, or M.*o P.ST.S C-nr-l fr.-.-. Iml all ..i.lluary nolU-r. will l> chr(al icsnl. |r lis*. *r*< I4L Notii-m i!> |ar root. !><• roßiilar Stalwartism in Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Republican plat form, remark* the New \ ork World, all'>rd* an edifying illustration of the way in which the accepted rules of grammar as taught in New Kuglaud schools may influence a question of constitutional law. The Conkling platform in New York declared that the "Republic" of the United States is a "nation," hut the Massachusetts platform proclaim* that "the 1 nited State* is a nation." If the Massachu setts draughtsman had grammatically said that the United States "are" a nation he would have happily knock-' ed out his iovn brains. What he ought to have written was: "The Gov ernment of the United States i* a na tion." Only it would have been rath er alisurd to solemnly proclaim, even in Massachusetts,that a "government" i* a "nation," since a government is an incident of the life of a nation, and a nation is a race of men, a people born in a given country and living under one government, or simply a people distinct from and not subject to other peoples. Who can projerly define or descril.# a government a* a nation or n people? The political corjKiration created hy the Federal Constitution is aptly described in that instrument to le "the United State* of America," and that is the end of the matter. Whoever want* t learn what powers that Government ha* must go for an answer to the document which created it. Those powers cannot lie ascertain ed by calling the Government a na tion or a league, any more than by calling it a trilie or an empire. The States are "united" by the Constitu tion and the Constitution define* the < iovernincnt. As the very concep tion of such a government was new and unknowu till devised by thefram ers of our Constitution, no name then applied to any other government could correctly describe and define it. Nearly everything else in our system of government or of governments our forefathers borrowed from their pre decessors, but the contrivance or the machinery which for certain enumer ated purpose* tied the then thirteen States and tie* the now thirty-eight State* together a* one Government wa ne*' —alwolutely new! Thank* to that contrivance, thirteen Slate* have grown to bo thirty-eight State*; and thank* to that contrivance, which stalwarts would destroy, the whole continent of North America may yet lie covered by an "indissoluble Union of indestructible State*." The dau. ger to that contrivance to-day i* in the centripetal and not in the centrif ugal force* of the country. Whatever may have been the jieril heretofore, whatever may lie the peril hereafler > the necessities of the civil war dan gerously increased the tendency of Federal power to concentrate at Wah. ington. That tendency must he steadily and surely checked. The necessity of this is a* great now as it wa* in IttOl, when JcfTersoti led the Democracy to victory. What, then, could lie more silly than for a liody of men in Massachu setts to emit such rubbish as is con mined in the second resolution of the Worcester platform, for the purpose of ei'catiug or defining a national is-sin to day i* This resolution declare* thai "local solf-govorumeut in all matters which belong to tho Stale* mint be fully rccoguizod." Who says it must not be? Certainly not tho Demo crat*, who perpetually ussert it, who iusi*t tlint to decide upon "the quali fications" of voter* for a member of Congress i* a bu*ine** which belong* exelu*ively to each State to regulate for itself, and who also contend that the Government of the I'nited State* ha* no voters of it* own ! Ami why hahhle a* the Massachusetts Republi cans do about "allegiance" when every militia officer in the convention must have .sworn to "bear true allegi ance" to the commonwealth of Ma**n cluisett* and not to the I'nited State*? Why talk about "exact equality in the exercise of civil and political right*" a* a thing to be enforced by the I'nited State* in behalf of each of it* citizen*, in the face of the fuels that no citizen of the I'nited State*, of lawful age and otherwise qualified, ran vote in Massachusetts unless be can read and write, and that no natu ralized citizen can vote in Rhode Is land unless lie own* an interest in laud ? There i* a notorious "distinc tion of origin, race, creed or color" in Rhode Island. I* there any "equality of all men before the law" which reg ulates voting in Massachusetts or in Rhode Island ? < crtaiuly not! And consider this resolution : "We (li'tnund thll election* *hll he ("!•<•<• from alt interference by unlawful tnMjies •if armed men, and half also be free from the interference of national or State mili tary force except when employed as a part of tiie po**e comitatuA." Democrats demand that no "bodies of armed men," whether lawTullv or unlawfully organized, shall interfere with elections. The State of New- York even forbids her own militia to Ik; called out on a voting day unless it be necessary to preserve the public Ieacc. What can the Republicans of Mas sachusetts mean when they proclaim a present obligation to perform "the duties" in which that party originated which was to prevent the repeal of the Missouri Compromise and to prevent the carrying of slave labor into free territory? The legal right which ju • titled that oppisition to the extension of slavery was to Is; found in the gen eral doctrine of State right* a* oj>- jH*cd to the claim of national rights- It is not easy to understand how i*l ncated men, or even men of good nat ural sen*e, could have Ih-oii brought to utter the twaddle which the lead ing Republican* are now uttering in party platforms simply because the Democrat* demand the rc|x>al of the Davenport law. The only explana tion i* that those who utter this twad dle do not expect it t< le taken seri ously and with intent to Is- believed. The inevitable answer to all these Re publican attacks on those of their countrymen who are not Republicans may be found by the Massachusetts Republicans in the out-givings of the Butler Democrat* on Saturday. Sk.xatoh A\tiio.vy, of Rhode Is land, who has always beeu swift with his party in denouncing the govern ment of the Sta(* of the South a* not awarding equitable right* to their negro citizens, i* likely to find himself in a dilemma in the next Congress when called ii|xtu to defend the gro** and shameful irregularities of his own ranch for disfranchising and bull dozing his own people, if not denying them a republican form of govern ment. Senator Wallace's committee ha* unearthed some matter* that the Rhode Island Senator will he com pelled to explaiti. He wo* the prime mover in retaining in the Con-titntion the odious and anti-republican provis ion that no citizen born in a foreign country should vote in thnt State un less he possessed a clear title to a cer tain amount of real estate. This dis franchises many of the liest citizens of Rhode Island. Somo who were voters in their days of prosperity have found themselves deprived of the ballot when reverses of fortune came ujion them. It has worked wrong and in sult in all directions. While a negro, or any person Ixirn in this country w ho |x>sM!*ses no property, can vote on payment of a small tax, a foreign bora naturalized citizen cannot have that privilege unless he owns a free hold estate. To defend this shameful discrimination, as well as the general system of hull-dozing of employes and Inborcrs to vote tt* Anthony and his party direct, will rc<|uirc all the nkill thin autocrat of Rhode Inland politico may possess, and that will scarcely bo found sufficient for the purpose. State Right*. Krwtt ttir ll.tri DLtirg I'ntrM. There was a time not very remote when some of the most prominent leaders of the Republican party were deeply enamored of the doctrine of State rights which is now to them the object of so much detestation. In 1*72 the tendency to centralization of political power in the general govern ment in the Republican party which has since developed to so great an ex tent led to an earnest protest in the platform of the Liberals who nomina ted (treeh?y and Brown at Cincinnati. In this platform the Liberal support ers of Horace (ins-ley for President declared that "local rclf-governna-nt with impartial snfl'rage will guard the rights of all citizens more securely than any centralized power." The argument against such Federal legisla tion as the bayonet election law has not been more tersely put than in this sentence. This appeal for local self-government against " centralized power" is only an assertion of the gen uine doctrine of State rights in anoth er form of words. The platform of the Liberals of 1*72 further demands "for the States self-government and for the nation a return to the method* of |cuee and the constitutional limita tions of power." Was ever the doc trine of State rights more clearly ami emphatically asserted ? Si far from this return having been made there have I recti long stridi-* in the opposite direction, as is proved by the lan guage and act* of the Republicans in the last He-siou of Congress, but many of the supjsirlers of this platform have gone ha<-k to the party of cen tralization as the dg returns to his vomit. The air of genuine Liberal ism was too fr-sh and fre-e for Schurz Bank-, Bullock, Kenton and White law Reid. Their politieal system* had been too much depraved in the close and stilling atmosphere of cen tralized power. The letter of the candidate accept ing the Liberal nomination for l'n-*i dent a* emphatically endorses the doe trine of State right* a* the platform. In this letter Horace (rceley said "that subject to our solemn obliga tions to maintain the espial rights of all citizen* our |sdicy should Is- to aim at local self government and not at centralization," and "that there shall be no federal subversion of the internal policy of the several (state* and municipalities, hut that each shall lie left free to enforce the rights and promote the well-being of it* inhabi tants hv such means a* the judgment of its own jsMple shall prescribe." These extracts from the platform of the Lilierals of 1*72 and from the letter of their candidate formulate the whole doctrine of State rights as it ha* Ix-en upheld by the Democratic party from the foundation of tie- gov ernment. This is the doctrine advo cated by the New York Tribune in 1*72 when it was the favorite organ of the .Southern Democrats north of the Potomac. With a strange facil ity the Tribune now denounces its own State rights teachings as a revi val of the aneient heresies of seces sion. In spite of in is representation and clamor the Dcnuicrncy adhere to State rights with unwavering fidelity as the essential guarantee of the 'ih erties of the people nnd the very breath of the national life. But the light-limbed Liberals of 1*72 who sought to vault into political power from the broad hack of the national democracy nnd have since deserted their associates of Cincinnati have become the most servile advocates of "centralized power." THE Board of Pardons which met at Harrisburg last week refused to recommend the pardon of .John S. Morton, of Philadelphia, who was sen tenced in December last for embezzle ment, and John O'Niell and Peter Me- Mnntis, the two Mollie Mnguirc* in Northumberland county, who were sentenced to lie hanged at Btinhiiry on the oth of October, for the murder of Frederick Denser. HIXTY-PIVK Republican!) of New York have signed a paper calling up on the party to defeat the election of Cornell us the machine candidate for Governor. They say, "We propose Hot to holt, hut to scratch," nnd that "Cornell is a weak and obnoxious candidate," Fwing is. Sherman. I'totu tlt ricsitfb'M IDJHIMP all. John Sherman, llayes' Sy the tinancial report tliat the interest on the public debt paid in 1*77 was $97,124,00(1 and last year $102,500,000, and tins year $105,000,000. In other word*, in 1878 and 1 *79 over $13,000,000 more of inter est on the debt has been paid than when Mr. Sherman took charge of Re funding operation. That large stun i* what the operation cost. It is made up of ho n u*es in Ihe xhape of puld c inter est, and of commission* paid to the syn dieale. Meantime Mr. Sherman ha* increased the principal of the bonded debt $*(1,000,000. It will take the sav ing* ol interest by refunding for eight or ten years lo pay oil' tins increased bonded debt and the bournes and duub le interest and get even on the entire operation. How i* the country benefit led by a nominal reduction of ten mil lion* of interest, when the reduction ha* been accomplished only by adding fifty per cent, to the amount of labor or property which it takes to pay it?'' Hancock. r< Ol Wilt*.)-*!).' I l.k li Sllll Isa isl There have been ft Urnnt boom, A Til ten boom, Sherman boom, and a number of leaser IHJOIII- ; and now it looks as though there vvs* going to be considerable of a Hancock boom. Ueneral Chalmers, one of the leading Democrat* of Mississippi, i* very em phftlic ill the expression of his belief that the South dont want Tihb-n, and that Hancock's nomination would evoke the utmo>t enthusiasm in that section, lie reiisell* that Hancock's unimpeach able war record would make bitu strong in the North, while his determined stand, when the war had ended, for the subordination of the military to the civil authority, would endear him equal ly to the South. iS-sldes, It would l>- ;nipo*ible to ware the bloody shirt the only efficient political wca|ion yet remaining to the Republican*—against Hancock, for either of the stay at homes, t inkling. Itlaine or Sherman, one of whom, it seem* now likely, is to !• the ]{<>publtrai) nominee. Alexander 11. Stevens, of Georgia, is a!ao for Hancock. Senator MaeDonald, of Indiana, has just said to an interviewer that the great Pennsylvania warrior ami statesman would 1e a afe candidate. The Philadelphia Timet remarked, as quoted by us last week, that Hancock is a favorite candidate all over the South, and there are daily evidences that such is the fart. < f the men who achieved distinction by personal bravery and great general ship in the late conflict, Hancock is one of the very tew wlio.e devotion to the constitutional principles of our liepub lican government has not la-en impaired Hy "the (Mtmpand circumstance of war." He ought to le a popular Presidential candidate in this, his native Mate. The bugbear* of the (thin ( aiiipaigii. If ?>••!'. • 1 - ; We show by testimony j>erfectly ir refragable that by the intent arid pro visions of the law. and its practical ap plication, supervisors snd marshals are only partisan eleclionecrers for the dom inant party, paid out of the public treasury; and thereupon a gli<>*tly pro cession of (earful figures of Mate ltighta, Ku Klux, Kliza I'inkstons and, al>ove all, Kepublican defeat*—more fearful than those which struck terror to the soul of Itichard --file before the eyes of the Attorney General; and he cries out : " I'he war is not yet over, its results are all nn|>eriled." Ami a chorus of voices exclaim: "< 'nnfederate Brigadier! osQ it and live. Judge Ord, of San Francisco, says the California election i likely to be satis factory to the conservatives of all par ties, ami may lead to the practical dis handonment of the Wotkingim-n's par ty whose, success was essential to its continued existence. The Kepublican*, h said, seem to have elected the great er part of the State officers, while the judiciary will he Democratic. There will, therefore, be two checks thrown upon the legislature should it attempt to pass laws which sro necessary to car ry out the extreme measures proposed by the new constitution and the adher ent* of the parties which supported it. The Governor will hsve the telo jaiwer, and a conservative Supreme court will have the interpretation of the new laws. It will be found there are two possible ways of interpreting almost everything under the new constitution atid be tween the Governor and the courts, the new psrty will find it* progress stopjied. The ex Kmpress Kugenie is about to sail for Carstnsnchcl, the al>omi the au tumn. It is now a quarter of a century since the P.mpress left the home of her mother at L'aramancliel. Her return to it. after such a life, is a fitting conclu sion to a trsgio romance such as her career present*. Ttbleii oil the Frauds r 1*7(1. tie EXPATIATE* AT I.KXCTII rcosi THE KMU.TOKAI. I'HOCCENIKUZ—I-EI.TOM DKrzKnr.fi. Krcm sn IM-rU. In Kd.l,, , Hw v ,, r k Tims.. The reporter said ; "Mr. Field makes the following statement: But when Mi. I'ild'-n camo to testify before the Con gressional committee, he admitted that at this time he knew, (although the public did not know till month* after ! wards; all about bis transactions in re gard to the cipher dispatches. Yet, knowing thin, lie presented to rue a man who had attempted bribery, and so been guilty of a crime, an one worthy of my confidence, and the one whom ho specially chose to represent him ; self." •Said Mr. 1 ild'-n : "The moral auda city, or rat her the immoral uudacily, i* amazing, <>| the man who could delib erately assert in a written paper, under his own signature, that 1 admitted he lore the Congressional committee that, at this very lime' (June, 1*77)'1 knew all about hi- transaction* in regard to the cipher dispatches.' I testified l* fore that committee that I never knew of the existence or content* of any of the cipher dispatches until theii publi cation in September, I*7*, and every witness examined and every fact elicit el confirmed my testimony. It was further proved that when I wa* in formed by Mr. Kdwurd l. Pel ton wa receiving, or wa* about to receive, the communication ol the !irt of the offers, and the only one thai came to my know ledge, to give to the Di tnocratic electors their certificates to a pecuniary inducement, I instantly in terfered, broke up the conference, ami crushed I to- incipient negotiation*. It wa* proved liefore that committee that certificate* for nineteen votes were in the market, while only one wa* lacking to defeat the fraud by which the Presi dency wa* wrested from Hie majority <>) the American people. It i* now known beyond controversy that the four vote of Florida belonged #• me, and were diverted from me l.f corrupt inducements since partly performed. It is now known that the eight vote* of f/Oiiisiana also belonged to me, Kveti Judge Miller, the master spirit of the F ■ doral commission, is itq>orted to have admitted the fact in a recent in terview published Iti the New York •Sun. The fraud*, perjuries and forger ies by which the (lc certificate* were *u| i*>rti d were numerous and .-otupli catcd. To these was superadded the forgery of three electoral vote* to sup ply the plai-e of the original vote* sent from l/ouisiana and found to be illegal. Die actor* and agent* in these wrongs hsve been appointed to, or continued in, all the great civic trusts of the I'ni ted Slates within the State of l/ouisi ina. It wa* proved that I refused to enter into this shameful cotn|* tilion. It 1* known that I did not obtain any one of the certificates aece.rtamed to be in the market. They were all cast ngauist me, as well a* against law and right. Mr. field, pretending to think that 'poor Pel ton,' as he calls him, has been harshly and unjustly dealt with by the public, in the next breath says that 'he had attempted bribery,' and 'had Ix-en guilty of a crime.' This it an exaggerated untruth. Col. Pelton neither initiated nor consummate*! any thing. He merely listened to ofl'ers from officer* to do what they admitted, slid he believed, to be their lawtul duty for hire before they violated that duty under corrupt inducements. His wrong did not go Uvnnl a futile dal liance. The lenefinane* of the con summated wrong, its instigator* and patrons, are high in the seats of Gov ernmental |*Twer and honor. . Shocked st a lesser wrong, which died in its mere meditation to the great crime ac tually consummated, Mr. Field 'crooks the prnguant hinges of the knee that thritt may follow fawning.' " The (Uming Census. The Superintendent of the Census Bureau had issued a circular in relation to the office of enumerator under the census law. Cnder the old law sub-di vision* were limited to twenty thousand inhabitant*, while by the present tbey are limited to four thousand, and will be generally confined to a single town where the monitor may be oven less. By the old law from June I. to Novem ler 1, w.\* allowed for enumeration, while under the present statute it is re quired lo be in JUne, and in cities of more than ten thousand inhabitants in two weeks from the lirsl 'Monday in June. The total amount of compensation to an enumerator cannot exceed one hun dred dollar* as but one month's time is allowed and the pay is not to exceed $, per day. It is exjweted that enumera tor* will work in their own immediate locality, knowing and known to most of those they enumerate without incur ring travelling expenses in a majority of case*, ami that in many cases the work can tie done without materially interfering with their other vocations so that a more competent class ol enum erators may lie secured. Township a# sessors and other local officers, |tol -master* at small offices, etc.. are sug gested a* men likely to perform the work faithfully and intelligently. County physician*, within the circuit of their usual practice, would, it is thought, often make excellent enumerators. Their knowledge of vital conditions, their appreciation of the importance of trustworthy statistic*, together with their knowledge of the history of fami lies, would combine to make returns alike of death* and of the living |topu lation from officer* of this class e*|ie cially valuable. There would also tie the practical consideration that men of this profession are as a rule already mounted, and their service* in the oa pacify of enumerators would involve no expense whatever for outfit. School masters have largely been found in Kngland among the best qualified enu merators. Accustomed lo keep lists and make report*, almost uniformly ac curate in accounts, trained in punctu ality and precision, and accustomed to enforce them upon others, the teacher within his school district would gener ally do his work rapidly, neatly and ac curately. $lOO,OOO of stook has been subscribed toward starting up the rolling mill at Kittaning, Armstrong county. Democratic Platform. *' "" Dene*rU. imly f pri,.,ayl .aula. In ...tn. ~te,„ ,etuM".l, „ IMI.HO b< Ibe ful, Irmenlal prig,,pie, p,„ |„„„.| j-rellard I.jr il.. j;ii.atrl>.u iu. i., 11.- rl|(lit „f and tb< lib-ei,,. ~j .*,,,,1, "I*l ||| ..f "||.. barmnnioiM ayaieu. and b. aa.ro rat* pail in Ila whole euindllaUMMTtia.it 1. to ■ lb® ftf*- of fl- rialloii Tlliftii. Thai th Ito'iU"* mlic |mr(; iiiaiutalhi, i it • r Jim rnaJbWJM-J, lhat U #• am! .'*o*l,l to all Mllfig*, >)l tiata to 111- Ctrl J MUof|t. It 'lfinoa ( * If I,tut thtt r^lit <#f t|,. f* I" II data. MI We ~|| all It - 1 rtuar,,. , . m|.| |„ |*r• M-frii,|i our lo.iitot. 11l l®atu> tlori I) ti.na*. io,j>*r tal io-tli***> of s,p*-r i will 'i "*lii m! anflfnae at. I ..o-rdD* Ilia pupular j ' „ ... ~,,, l.iU. .' *,**'* aaaettilda b.. gpra • tiff. r. tin-i' wIU *l.< I, i , t).-ir <*! . I T M | m," 'I id IS 11.,. ~ "im,,,,, „ 'l. . >" I"*" ."•"! "M .|| ktM.wn .nd UK.II. 1 •"' l"'l'l. '• II" ta|>raMtiutl. fa T i?' *" 1 , •* I*l.l i„ .urnmud 11.. ImII.-I 1.. i.a ,||. I|..,|w and .|., /U lr J,l. ~ j inllii.i lai. .d-„. 5.,„,. .|. nn. 1,,.| bi. I ■'fbl'-l >*'" I-' MatltUiu mi. W.MUII.. | * 'l—b"i. I .Mf. ata an 1n...H and a n.rna.. I I- 11.. .......it, , hutH li,„i u,. 1..,......II |^,i r • in itiii -ft.l Mirrt-n.y of fc „44 afid atl**r a.4 ..I Um .,tkli.*.i,t, ..,d Mm lbt-n.r. ul it. hi.t..r, .|.4 In la a. I. bin and ' !'!*' . I ~d,.lb, 1... lai.., and ,i. |. -Mia. I <.. I. | ||. Ni.tn Tbal a# 1.-.L altb alana and apbrabnuai.* I. Iba |Ma|. in. K t.*l liai aj. . ~ , jai.ia. i„ | ,1. fundainai.ul law .1 tt.i. . ...7 I Muaaaaltb wbkrh nwall wtda ..n. Mm "••• ' natiinli .< . I |.-,l t ..„, •lib lb a, .! ,|.| „ljt.„|t|,, nttwal , I*l lat..a anrfjn.l ""< all. inf.lß undar Ihal at j 7'"* "" '' " ". I .1 I. ~ v, I •' ••• ■ laaal. . and ' 11 I.,ka I. |, . iHa>i, a "allb 1 til UHlliff,. ..f •M.llar. I.i I, It. Hal.,lit* Had t„ ■... i*.,. , ta,„. I ~ a 1,. .I, and alaro.ln* f lb. a* "T"I. I-aar in , .|lua,. ~ with |.).tial and al,„,id I ,laii.nal. ~ f 11,. . Ij.vutl That tb> praaanl . "bditnai tb> ?UI. I If. ..,,., . i., I.„, t ~, ...j a,.,! ,van ,1. , and f HaiilHa Ul.al.la u. *af til. * | I 1 t.at.l i I ha, I au|.|a It, I. aan Its ~ 1.1 .llualraH •, " '"kl'aa Snati' ,aj inin.ai.aa in.nl .! lb. I m il,at. Iit... Important to Voter#. T.a nail a). l.un ia l'< I.i.at llama w,]l Iw baM ■ n I Toawda*,lba ,tb ,| N 'ivaiatwr. \ ~tnra tnn.t 1,.n ,a> I a Mala a* . >unt* tat una iiMHtli Ida .din* lb. ala.ta.ti tbat la. Id- twf.d" bntitnia.t. <"t,,i t 4 Mnalan uf Itaw. omll, uif. ~ of lturpea* J. it. Wood, on I .at Saturday, lion, Futbey, Hon. I>. K. and other i*eak und* each, that were purchased hy contribution* laat winter, were planted at the entrance to the monu ment ground* with appropriate ccremo- I fie \\ aahingu>n troop, under command of Captain Matlack, executed a cavalry drill. Philadelphia Marhata. run tit 1.1 at*. K.|.i, ..ii..., a, j*7k. t'UH'a-lili. 1.. j... 1.,*!.*. at,d aitir*. wlib al.w ' .f J r W*' larn-U. twiludin* *lint,~x.u • tl, . al WXlddiWi i W.!., do .1, at r. M l„u,. dr.. d<. all"' at>,| palMbt at..| < tb, r bt*b rradrw at " V, W llltAT—!• r*< i! 4 at>,| 4c biab.-f * > ~nr ikb-iar. *1 S4 , I n > .linulm. and fl X4'y 1..t Daaatai Bellefoata Marhata. Rn.i rn.irTt. Raydaalm t\ t*r liwabi'l.-. ft , H'd wbrwl I na far, |*. Intaba-l Sal CurtaOnlt .-..a, ... - , tu < TTrdT r. f* • 'Hit*....- , , .TH rW tif. r4*l. |*®r - ; kn|M| - h HAY AXD fTRAW. Ilay, (H(d'-a Uwwdby, ~rt b. ... „„.„4 la. sat Hay. tni*a-l.|f ~m * I•■ 1•, -■< • 1 ,1. 1• ' |., t. a lai Fhnrt atraw, pat t. j. bun* num. Caoitra. *r\ttid, |,rr b „„ fa K..a tki.tia, *r..„n,l. |r 1,*..™„„™,„ In tat Proviainn Market. OttarW nnakl, by Tlarpnt He.lbaea Applxa. dried, ,M-r p*aind ........... It IVlTlaa. died. |w. |aauut. anabl |0 Real,a pa-t ..nafl a Kreah butter par |>wind js CVitrkena |t pound a Idn-a. jor pwwwd .. .... ,g l,ami p.-r ;...„nd ,n 11. ma, an (a. rated fg tlnr-,'h ............ . y laid pet pr. nd * R*e |r dot, ]g p.dat'oe par tfkal v Ddad baaf . ,a Canned (..mattne |vr ran Ita* t'i len„ai pet dot XI titled awe. I corn per ,*>navd tc .VfM' tthfltiHfUKMtf. A Ltat- de. waaa d. late wf tbe Rnrnocb "1 Relb bottw, baaing twew grwtittd to the nn.|eiwl*t,ed. rr-atd.nl of Hellefnnte. he regnaeta an petmaaa knowing Ik mill Itea indelded V> anld deed—l In rente torwnid ami aaak> Inaebate ,aa> iwenl, anal all baring ctalnaa agnlnad him tw pranaoi't tb.lt ae> ea.nnta. dnly nwtbeen—ted. tbr naywaent mu HATII' M. l.ltß. A ltnlwMn.be laPKxl Notice. NOTICK i hereby given that an nppHrathm will taa aade h- Ibe (Vrl wf Ota •"HI of tVtitrc r**tbt