fPje Centre lemnrmi SIIKiKRT A FORSTEH, Editors. VOL. fhc (Stntre JPmomit Term* >L SO P er Annum, in Advance. 5 T SHUCERT and R. H. FORSTER, Editora. Thursday Morning, January 8, 1880. fnntre County Democratic Oom- Cen mitteo— lßßo. xinm. r. o. . „>!• " William OalbraiUt It-lUfuuU-. *"! S.' W...W. C. H-lnln 8.-ll*fbt. Yf NV William Ilarpnr Helleionte. ._, ari Frank K Hilda Mllaabur*. " if. I' •' MrDonnnll .Vnionvtlte. K J !'...A J Gardner.. II ward. I titj uri". c. (1. Ilerlinger .Plilli|*btirg. L"m ....• II Krlfanjder Villi,elm. v V " b ; m Ulrlah Stove? ..Belle!.,nte. j„. A. McClaln MUeal>ur||. J"*© ""'.'....Wlltlam tlepide Cine Glenn. r ,| r .' „ David Delong ll,.ward. , H. I' ttan'l llriebellm... State College .. p t). M SUeeta... .StoruiatowD. iiretc L. M. Kndiel Spring Mill.. ,oz," tle,,rge Kel.ter Aar„nal.iirg. Haifa, £><"> Ward Slormatown. Samuel Ifttili-r Hoal.t-urg, I „ liar Id TanjnT Howard. 11, i it. '!• O.l'hru.ilater .Martha. . ! W. It. Gardner lllam hard. M „ a'""'.'.'.'. di'li" Un>. Jr............Wa1ker. M,|,< Sain'] K. Faiiat Millhoiin. li. W. Hiioilutrger Fillmore. W. F Smith Mlllhelm. Filer's' I' U. F. I.ua.- .Centre Hall. '\T JI O. W S(Muigler .... TtlvoM villi,. William Cnllen ....!'hlli|hnrg. a. „ Shoe John G Snow Slu.o. E. C. W.md Belief,,ule. T,, v |,,r... Samuel Hoover Fowler. J.S. Frederick* Fleming. HVW-r Samuel Decker Zlon. tV.rth 0. R. William". Fort Matilda. : J. L. SFANtiI.ER, Chairman. Faavk K. Biatr. Secretary. YESTERDAY was the day for the I meeting of the Maine legislature. THE Jewell City (Kansas) liepubli- ; ran favors the nomination of Don Cameron as the Republican candidate f.r President. Don is a rising young man. and we trust sufficiently liberal to make his boom profitable to Broth er Brown, even if Don himself is doomed to " tarry at Jericho until his ! beard grows." lti'MOßa are agaiu rife of au inten teutiou on the part of Governor Hoyt to call an extra session of the legis lative this winter. We trust these rumors are unfounded, though there cui he HO. doubt that certain puliti- I cians of Philadelphia, and perhaps of Allegheny, through selfish motives, are doing all they can to persuade the Governor ngaiust his better judgment that an extra session is necessary. Orr. friend Eichboltz, of the North umberland County Democrat, has as sociated Will. L. Detfart and George G. Frysiuger with him in the publica tion of that excellent newspaper, un der the firm name of Eichholtz & Co. We wish the new firm unbounded success, and know they will deserve it by hard work. The, Democrat is a journal that should receive the sup port of every member of the jiarty in Northumberland county. THE news comes from Indiana and Kansas that the emigrating negroes are suffering with hunger and are in great distress. This unfortunate and credu lous race whose sufferings excite the comniisseration of all kindly disposed people may be poor in the South, but they are infinitely better off than they are or can be iu the States to which they have been seduced by the lying promises of the human brutes who in veigled them into coming north. They are now anxious to return to their old homes, and many are pressing through trouble and great sufferings to escape the miserable doom so wan tonly brought upon them by their northern advisers. Is General Grant's trip through Siuth Carolina he observed, an ex ehange remarks, the blackened chim ney of a half burnt house and said: "That is one of General Sherman's Jnouuinents." To this pointed rebuke of the Shermnn method of making *ar he added: "There was but one pri vate house burned by my orders dur ing the war and that was one where *ater was refused to wounded sol "liers. Iu all my campaigns around Richmond there was not a single house burned except by accident or in viola lion of orders." This attack on Gen eral Sherman, the brother of Grant's Principal rival to the Presidency, has caused considerable comment in Washington. In criticizing General Sherman's course Grant indirectly called the attention of the Southern people to the opposite course pursued by himself. "KMUAL AND EXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATE ok PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OH POLITICAL."-Jnr. You should have lieen active before the committee met, if you had any objections to urge against machine rule and machjuc tactics. IT is confidently expected that Hon. J. Himpson Africa, of Huntingdon county, will he nppointed Supervisor of the Census for this district. Mr. Africa is a gentleman peculiarly fitted for the position and his appointment would mean thorough and efficient work. Wc hope in due time to have the pleasure of announcing his nomi nation by the appointing power and his unnnimons confirmation by the Senate. GENERAL HARRY WHITE is re ported as declaring that the nomina tion of Grant i* as inevitable as the rising sun. Perhaps General Harry White don't know that all the Repub lican States are not under the imme diate control and direction of the Camerons, as in Pennsylvania. They may not he prepared for the Empire yet ? AFTER ALL, it is not probable that Blaine will find it necessary to hire a substitute to do his fighting in Maiue. This is a great pity. Oue of his belli cose parsons might have been utilized in that way without a particle of loss to the cause of Christianity and the church. ' ANOTHER debt paid. Mr. Hayes has just nppointed Col. George B. Corkhill to the United States Attor neyship of the District of Columbia. Corkhill is the son-in-law of Judge Miller, of the Supreme Court and one of Urn glorious "8" of the electoral commission. Next. "Jewis of Nazareth I'asHctli By." RRTR,— HAITI:A XVIH, VIHHI- TO 4°.. Tin; 'iJlty of I'ulms" lay ImthH in light, VI liieli fell iipou turret and tower and dotue— 'l wan riot heodod hy all—for the darknt-Ea of night Hhrouded the eye* of the l>eggar lone, Whoaat by the waynide, near the gatf;, Patiantly waiting with ouUtrntchad palm* Toward the pa-Hera l.y both early and late, Fr gentle eliarlty'a kindly aim-. x hat in that ha hear* hi tle diitnfic* there ' I it not tha Nomid of many feet Now the murmur of voices till the air, AH nearer they coine Pi the hlhid IIIMIM stl. On, on they press, thin gathering crowd; 11 op© in his Umorii h©au strangely high ; The sound of their coming is loud and more loud— They may help the beggar, as they pass by. Visions of coins till his snxioun mind, In sucli a throng most be friendly hearts That will see him and graciously pity the blind, K'er they enter the City's busy marts. He knew not the wondrous, rich gift that lay In store for him, 'mid the multitude nigh," And asked of a traveler, 44 Who routes this way? " •* Tis Jesus of NaAareth, passes by." The auswvr fell on liis <|tiirken©elieve and be glad. None who liave faith iu Him e'er need de*|wir. Th* guy and the gloomy, all those who grieve, Look, for th© intwrnate Uewier is nigh! ~ Fly K> the refuge—U> hold and believe Wblle "Jesus of Hi/swth pku by " FA. ft. l'iir Iron. From the American Manufacturer. Price* of jtig iron are bounding up ward again, and some of the more thoughtful ironmnker* are feeling un easy. They fear that value* are going to reach a point from which they will drop with a thud one of the*e days. It was thought some time ago that the Knglish market would regulate ours, hut this is proving a delusion, as prices there are bounding upward to as giddy a height as they are here. In other words, instead of the Knglish market controlling ours, the reverse in the case. The cause ol the whole trouble is a scarcity of ore. If all the American furnaces were in blast they could meet the enormous demand ; but many of them cannot blow in for want of ore— and we notice by our late Knglish ex change* that the same is true with re -pect to many furnaces in Wales. Now, if ever, is the lime for the develop ment of ore properties. How Nails are Counted. Persons who have visited the exten sive nail works in and around our city, says the llarrisburg Patriot , have per haps never iuquired why the form •'four," "six," "eight" and "ten-penny" is used in designating the size of nails. "Four-penny" means four pounds to (he thousand naili, or "aix-penny" means six pounds to the thousand, and ort give up the task of suppress ing gambling, ana recommend that the calling be legitimatised and made to contribute to the ptiblio treasury. The {rand jury propose*, therefore, a tax of 5,000 per annum on each establish ment. She grand jury also reoommends the Legislature to adopt such measures as will make depositors in savings In stitutions secure under all contingen cies, and hedge the deposit by ample penalties, both civil and criminal. TERMS: #1.50 per Aiiinim, in Advance. Imperialism T*. flic People. rrom flu* X'-w Vrk Htur ru.) The year 187'J has been one of the , most prosperous in our history. Prodigal • nature hus made up for the deficiencies of man. Crops never before equaled, a : vast increase of exportation* over itn i portations, enforced idleness made hap by re-employment—these are some of i the blessings which we have to be thankful for as a people. The politicians of the Republican par ity are striving to turn to their own ae l count these lavish favors of Providence. , They have had as much to do with | them as with the discovery of the plan et Georgium Sidus. If a party whose. ! cornerstone is sectional hate can work out any beneficent popular result®, all these lessons of history have been mis understood, and must be learned over i again. The people know that they are j prosperous in spite of sectional agita- I tors. Rut we cannot always count on the I bounty of nature. Men must deserve good fortune if they would enjoy it as a | meritorious reward. The year opened i to-day will, before it is gone, test the I fidelity of the American people in a t manner which' every citizen in the land will understand, and the test will be rone which no freeman will avade or put ' away from casuistry or plausible pretexts | for self-deception. Imperialism looms | up out of the dead year as the ominous j and gaunt figure which threatens the j future of the country. We have faith ( in the people that they will exorcise I this spectre. The example of Washing ton, .Jefferson, Madison, Monroe and •Jackson, the unwritten but sacred law of the republic against a third presiden tial term for any citizen, cannot and will not, we are persuaded, be violated. Rut the formidable intrigue to violate ; this law has been hatched. The people alone can crush the intrigue and scat j ler the Imperialist* to the winds. The death is announced at his home . in Kouth b'range, New Jersey, of Chas. I Coudert, a survivor of the battle of ! l.eipsic and sometime a lieutenant in | the Guard of Honor of the First Xa ! |>oleon. Rorn in Rordeaux, December 27, 1795, when seventeen years old he joined the corps named—a part of the Young Guard—and during the last year of the first empire, as well as dur ing the Hundred Days fought gallantly for Napoleon. Ry the bridge of Leip sic he received a wound in his arm, the scar whereof he proudly carried until hi* dying day. After the Restoration he was stationed at the cavalry school of Saurnur; was arrested for complicity in a plot to place the Duke of Reich -tadi upon the throne; was tried and condemned .to be shot. Fortunately be succeeded in escaping in disguise, and. after a short stay in England came to America, where he has since lived. A fire broke out Monday morning in the basement of Turner Hall, East Fourth street, New York City, occupied by William Winkle as a ball room, and when the flames were extinguished, William Geib, 10 years old; Louis Schmidt, HO; Henry Gehweilen, 25, and Terpssa Erhardt, 25, were found on the top floor dead. Winkle and his wife were badly burned and sent to the hos pital. Annie Raur received internal injuries by jumping from the fourth story window, and was badly burned about the hands and face. An unknown woman had both legs broken by jump ing front the top door. The damage lo the building and stock is $12,000. Rishop Gilbert Haven, who died Sat urday, was born in Roston, in 1821, and graduated at Wesley an University, in 1840. In 1851 he joined the New Eng land conference of the Methodist Epis copal church. He was the first com missioned chaplain after the breaking out of the civil war, being appointed chaplain of the Eighth Massachusetts Regiment in ISfil. He was elected Rishop in 1872, and given the charge of the churches in the extreme South. A strong advocate of Protestant missions in Italy, and among the Span.sb-apeak ing people he in 1872-3 visited Mexico in the interests of this cause. Senator Chandler was believed to have died intestate, but after the defth of Postmaster Edmunds, of Washington, his will was found among that gentle man's papers, dated March 31, 18f>5. It is a very brief document, and devisee all his estate, real and personal, to his wife and daughter, to be equally divided between them During the past year there were filed in the office, of the Philadelphia register of wills inventories of the personal es tate* of eitisens who died leaving per sonalities valued at between SIOO,OOO and $200,000 each. There were also twenty-one personal estates of over $200,000 each, aggregating $18,000,000. Sinoe the burning of the railroad de pot at Tyrone the different offices are transferred to the Ward Houss. A new depot, it is said, will be erected on the site of the old one. At Waco, Texas, Miss Florence Davis, aged 17, a daughter of the llou. J. F. Davis, while carelessly handling a pistol, shot herself through the heart, causing instant death. Specimens of California quarts rock have been found In Woodward town ship, Lycoming county, which old Cali fornia minets claim contain gold or silver. _ The schools are being closed in More land township, Lycoming county, be cause of the prevalence or dipt hem. NO. 2