®Jtf Crntrf BELLEPONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper PUItLISIIKD IN OKNTKK COUNTY. LET (JEN. (JAKFIELI) EXPLAIN. Ktoni the Philadelphia T'DOI H. General Garfield will make a grave mistake if he shall affect to iguoro the serious charges which meet him at the very outsot of his campaigu for the Presidency. They are not the whis perings of anonymous slanderers, nor the rank growth of partisan calumny which may spring up in a sight at the feet of the purest man in public life so soon as he receives a nomination for the Presidency. Every Presiden tial candidate from Washington down has had to trample upon that sort of thing, and not one of them was the worse for it in the end. Hut now for the first time in the history of this country does a great party present as its candidate one whose personal and official integrity has been impeached by the result of a Congressional inves tigation. If Geueral Garfield's friends suppose that a candidacy so beclouded will receive the approval or toleration of the American people when the facts are understood they are sadly mis taken and in the spirit of kindness he and they should be undeceived at once. The Credit Mobilier scandal is still fresh in the memory of all. Eight years ago it was exposed to public view, and it is unnecessary to tell the story over again. Suffice it to say that the disclosures made by a Con gressional committee of investigat'on were death to mauy a fair reputation. Some of the Congressmen implicated found it expedient to retire from pub lic life and have never since ventured to ask any trust at the hands of the people. Others were saved as by fire ; the verdict against them was simply, "Not proven they were allowed to keep their seats in Congress, but did not escape condemnation. Among these fortunate ones was James A. Garfield, of Ohio. When the charge was made through the newspapers that liis name was on the list of Senators and Representatives involved by the revelation of Oakes Ames he was qtiiek to repel thccharge. Inexplicit words, through an Associate Press dis patch, he authorized a comprehensive denial. He had never subscribed for nor received nor seen any share of that stock ; on the contrary, he had twice declined to have anything to do with it. When the affair caine before a Congressional committee, however, and he was put upon oath and con fronted by Oakes Ames, be explained that he did take a certain amount of stock and left it in the hands of Mr. Ames until the accruing dividends thereon should pay the principal of the purchase money. A check drawn by Mr. Ames in Garfield's favor was, the latter explained, only a loan from Mr. Ames to him. Mr. Ames, on his part, reluctantly denied the loan and settled the question by producing the check of the Credit Mobilier Company, which had been passed to Mr. Gar field's account. The committee came to this conclusion : The facts in regard to Mr. Garfield are as follows : Mr. Garfield agreed with Mr. Atnes to tuke ten shares of Credit Mobilier stock, but did not pay for the tame. Mr. Ames received the SO |>er cent, dividend in bonds, and sold the bonds for per cent., and also received the 60 per cent, cash dividend, which together paid the price of the stock and interest and left a balance of $320. This sum was paid over to Mr. Garfield bv a check on the Sergeant-at-arms, and Mr- Garfield then understood this sum was the balance of divideuds after paying for the stock. The committee, however, charitably failed to emphasize certain minor dis crepancies in Mr. Garfield's statement which gave his friends great pain. < >ue of these was that he explained his need of a loan by saying that a trip to Europe had somewhat impoverished him, whereas it appeared by other tes timony that the trip in question did not occur until after the Credit Mobi lier transactions. It was several ugly things like this that led that able Re publican journal, the New York Time*, to declare that Mr. Garfield presented "a most distressing figure," while the New York Tribune thought he was fortunate to escape expulsion by a Re publican House. Other victims had been selected, however, and the House by a ruling of the Speaker, evaded a vote on Mr. Wood's resolution, which absolutely condemned Garfield and others for becoming pecuniarily inter ested in a corporation dependent upon Congress for its maintenance and sup port. We have stated the case mildly and dispassionately solely for the purpose of calling the attention of General Garfield and his friends to the gravity of the matter and the manifest pro priety of an immediate explanation if he is to remain a candidate for the Ppresidency. General Garfield's nom ination was not premeditated ; for pre meditation would have been fatal to it. It was born of a crisia in the conven tion. There was no time to think, and probably not one of the 399 dele gates who, in the flurry of the moment, cast their votes for him as the only way of escape from the third term, recollected that this was the Garfled who was involved in the Credit Mobi lier scandal. If they had so recollect ed they would have rejected the Gar fleld movement as a suggestion of suicide. The sober second thought has since stolen over their minds und is possessing the country. Genernl Garfield cannot come toward too soon with his explanation. If therenre ex tenuating circumstances, let us know what they are. If he was more fool than knave, as some of his friends say, and has since found wisdom, let him throw himself upon the charity of the country. If the Congressional com mittee got the whole thing down wrong in their report, let him say so. What is war ted is his statement of the facts. It will not do for him to say, with his friend Governor Foster, that "those charges are settled," for the only set tlement that hus been made left him in a very bad plight. The Republi can party cannot afford to carry 011 the campaign under the cloud that is now hanging over its candidate for the Presidency. THAT LIE ONCE MOKE. From the Washington Post. Not only did the Republican party, unaided by the Democrats, crush out the rebellion —according to Senator Iloar—but that party was equally suc cessful in abolishing slavery, without any assistouce from Democrats. It ought not to be necessary to brand these statements as utterly and absurdly false. To every intelligent mind they bear übundunt evidence of their falsity. Hut for the couruge and patriotism of Democrats, the Union would have been destroyed inevitably. In the rank and file of the Union armies, there were more Democrats than Republicans. It was noticeable that those Republican leaders who hud been most active in fomenting strife and stirring up the war feeling were never seen within range of Confederate bullets, shot or shell. When the war which they had aided in precipitating on the country at last burst upon us, those howlers and shriekers were the mildest mannered men on the conti nent. The preservation of their corpo real integrity and the accumulation of riches coiner! from the blood and agony of their fellow-citizens, were the two objects to which their attention was devoted with such zeal and energy as could not fail of success. Democrats who had done all in their power to avert the awful calami ty of civil war accepted the issue when it could no longer be put off. They took up arms promptly, more in sor row than in anger, but with a deter mination to defend the Union and put down the rebellion. From the incep tion to the close of the long struggle there was not an hour when they fal tered, there was not a battle-field that was not stained with their blood. In the cabinet, in the Capitol and in the army, in all places where intelligence and patriotism were required, Demo crats were not wanting. Mr. Hoar and his associates know this, and they know that the man who declares that the Republican party crushed the rebellion tells a lie—an infamous lie, because it is a villainous libel on the honored dead. The abolition of slavery was an in cident of the war, and not its object. Mr. Lincoln and the leaders of his party most earnestly disavowed any snch purpose. lie said that if he could save the Union with slavery, he would do it. His party saidsthe same. Hut slavery perished as a result of the war, in which Democrats bore as conspicuous and honorable a part as their Republican opponents. And hav ing been thus destroyed, the Republi can party can no more claim to have abolished it than to hnve fought all the battles without Democratic sympa thy or aid. Mr. Hoar is not the first man who has put forth these false assertions. They have been repeated thousands of times in all possible shapes and on every conceivable occasion. It is time to hurl back such caljmmes in the faces of their inventors. A Senator has 110 more right to utter slanders than a cohbler. In attempting to ap propriate to his party all the honor, all the toil, the suffering ami the sac rifices made by the men of the North during those years of trial and con flict Mr. Hoar seeks to rob both the living and the dead. FALSE ASSERTIONS. The following running comments of the New York St in when referring to the claims of the Republicans should l>e read by every voter in the country. We have room to give a few specimens. The quoted sentences are from the Chicago platiorm: "The Republican party suppressed a rebellion which had armed nearly a nearly a million of then to subvert the national authority." Noitdidn't. The loyal people of the Union suppressed that rebellion. "It has raised the value of our paper currency from 38 per cent, to the par of gold." No it hasn't. The credit of the nation and the industry of the people have brought the currency to par. "It has restored upon a solid basis payment in coin for all the national ob ligations." No it hasn't. It has stood by while the laws of the trade have operated. "It has paid 9888,000,000 of the pub lic debt." No it hasn't. The people of the United Htates have paid the money. And but for the monstrous dishonesty of successive Republican administrations the public debt would have been furth er reduced by hundreds of millions, or the burdens of the people would have been las by hundreds of millions—the hundreds of millions wasted and stolen under Orant. •'We nffirra that no further grant of , tho public domain should be made to any railway or other corporation." You affirmed the same thing four years ago and eight years ugo, and kept on giving away the public domain until the people made you stop. "Slavery having perished in the States, its twin barbarity, polygamy, must die in the Territories." You pronounced its death warrant four years ago, and have not raised a hand to execute the sentence. "History will honor ltutherford B. Hayes." That is a lie. "The reformation of the civil service shall be thorough, radical, and com plete." You promised it in 1872 and in 187 G. You will keep on promising it as long as the promise wins the votes of fools. The real platform of the Republican party was enunciated at Chicago, not by the Hon. Edwards Pierrepont, but by one Flanagan of Texas. It is truthful and brief: "What are we hero for ex cept to get office ? ' A Picture of Conkling. HIS l-HOTOORAI'II AT Cll ICAOO, AS TAKEN "HV TIIE MAN ON THE TOI' SEAT." The following sketch is from the Chicago Tribune: To a man on the "top seat" Senator Conkling does not appear to be the Adonis he has been painted by those on the bottom seats. The majestic digni ty with which he proceeds up the aisle, after having timed his entrance so as to catch the gallery, look at the distance of the "top seat' 1 like a necessity im posed by the assaults of time upon his legs. lie poses for grand effect. His entrance carries him a considerable dig since beyond his seat, as this gives him an opportunity to return, so that the audience may have a front and rear view of him. He stands in the aisle to read his mails, and when his henchmen hand him letters they are expected to remove the envelopes. He applauds high, so that his faction may catch their cues. He waves everything aside that gets in his way, from a messenger boy to a policeman, and from the delegate from D.ikota to the speaker on the stage. From tho top seat one cannot categorically affirm which is the conven tion, Senator tk>nkling or the hi -idreds of delegates around him. When he laughs, all the Cockling men laugh- When he nods his head, all the Conk ling men nod their heads. Other lead ers and delegates desiring to see people go and hunt them. Senator Conkling holds receptions in the aisles. If he were an uglier man he would be a good proxy for Mephistopheles, for he is the embodiment of a sneer set on garish courtesy. When matters are distaste ful to him. or he is close pressed, he waves it all aside and devotes himself to the gallery, where he know j he has a constituency of hero worshippers and lion hunters. When crowded into a corner, as he was with reference to his motion to forfeit the rights in the con vention of the three West Virginia del egates, he withdraws, not with an ap pearance of defeat, but as if he were conferring a favor upon the convention. What influence propinquity to the New York senator might have on the man on the top seat it is difficult to say; but, regarding him from an altitude, distance does not lend enchantment to the view. Garfield's I'art in the Fraud. From th* !Unn*r. ('ongressnian Hewitt, while a member of that body, was one of the most able workers on the floor and gave even such lenders as Garfield no little trouble. We copy from u speech made hy the Hon. A brain Hewitt, Feb. 24, 1874, iu answer to a slander littered by Garfield against Tilden. Mr. Hewitt said : I think, however, that I can account for this extraordinary proceeding. Boring the progress of this debate, a gallant soldier, an able lawyer who has been Atto: ney-tleneral of tny State, and who is a staunch Republican. General Francis C. Barlow, of New York, bad given evidence on the lower floor of this capitol that the vote of the State of Florida had been unjustly counted for Mr. Hayes; The conclusion being that if it had been counted for Mr. Tilden he would have been occupying the White House instead of its de facto and de jure tenant. This evidence must have touched the gentleman from Ohio to the quick ; it must have revived the memories of eight to seven ; it must have reminded him how, when the electoral bill was |>ending in this House for one whole evening he devoted him self to proving that the law creating the commission was unconstitutional, hut if it should be passed it would be the duty of the commission to take evidence of fraud and go behind the returns. And yet when he was made a judge, acting under a law which he had declared to be unconstitutional, and which, as he had affirmed, required evidence to be taken, he consented to violate the constitution and to deny the admiseion of the evidence which was necessary to arrive at ihe truth. The particular words of Garfield's to which Mr. Hewitt refers are those uttered in debate and recorded in the proceedings of the forty-fourth Con gress. Mr. Garfield remarket!; The two Houses of Congress say in effect to this commission : "We trans fer our powers to you. Construe them for yourselves. Use or refuse them, as you please. If you choose to confine yourselves to the papers that have been delivered to the President of the Sen ate, halt there. If you conclude to enter the Electoral College and overnaul them enter. If you chooae to oontent your selves with such an examination, stop there; but if you wish to go deeper and embrace within the scope of your examination all the States and all the officers of the States, all the ballot boxes and all the ballots in them, do so." This same member of the Commis sion, Garfield, argued in the Florida case that it would be a violation of the powers conferred by the act creat ing the commission to go behind the return*. While entertaining this view strange an it may appear, lie violated his oath hy going behind the returns in every contested State, thereby securing their electoral votes for Mr. Hayes. Is it safe, we ask the honest, considerate, and cautious voters of Lycoming, to place such a tinie-serv iDg partisan at the head of the gov ernment ? Is it safe to make a man President that would destroy the voice of the people as expressed in the ballot box, if such a step was necessary to perpetrate Republican power ? " FRONTIER FOLK." om the New York llenM. An interesting paper from the pen of Captain George Booth, entitled " Frontier Folk," will appear in the International Review for July. Cap tain Booth lias had many opportuni ties of knowing his subject, for he served as uide on the stuff of General Miles in several of his recent cam paigns. What, he asks, do we mean by the frontier? and what by frontier folk ? He answers : The terms came into vogue when tolerably well defined lines marked the onset of civilization at the far Went, and all beyond was wilderness. Yet to-day, with aettlementa scattered all over the territories, the phrase loses none of its significance. It still lias a geographical import, and another, deeper than the geographical, suggest ing a peculiar civilization and a certain characteristic mode of life. It does not bring to mind those prosperous colonies, whose lands surveyed, secured by good legal titles and freed from dunger of savage inroadH, have a perm inent population busily engaged in founding homes. It takes us rather to the boundaries of the Indian reserva tions, along which scattered camps and settlements of white men are fringed : to lands which, though legally open to settlement, arc constantly menaced by Indians; to those strange, shifting communities which, sometimes, like Jonah's gourd, spring up in a night only to wither away in a day. Mr. Booth on the whole concludes that even if sociui distinctions arc not very fine among these people they still are happy. Here we have the nomads of civilization, pushing on from one point to another all their life. He may be a farmer, a " road agent," a trapper or a horse thief. There are no superfluous refinements in their society. The citizen is either " an elegant gentleman " or a liar and horse thief. Horse thieves are hung. In fact, homicide on the frontier as cam pared with horse stealing, is a pec cadillo. The horse has a |>oaitive value; the thief a negative one. Justice does not pursue the man who slays bis fel low in a quarrel; but if it grasps the stealer of a purse on the prairie or of a horse from the herd his last day has come. Yet he always has the chance of escaping capture, and of playing in other frontier cities the rote of " elegant gentleman " on his earnings, reimburs ing himself in a professional way : and he may continue in this career even if suspected, provided he does not ply his vocation in those communities which f e hoi ors with his presence when not engaged in prosecuting his business. Personal violence, is, however, mostly confined to instances where it is for the profit of the aggressor. The traditional free fight or killing A man at sight is | rare, probably much rarer than in the i Southwest. Benton, the head of navi gation on the Missouri, was the place where, according to the story, the early morning visitor at the barroom before it had been swept out, expressed his surprise, although he knew the soil to be good for vegetables, at the excellence of its fruit, judging from the large site of the grapes he saw u|>on the floor, when Tie waa informed, "stranger, them's eves ! " the results of the prev ious evening's amusement. Yet in two visits to Benton, the writer saw nqt the least sign of violence even in amuse ment, although he would be sorry to have some Bentonians around his camp at night if the horses we-e not well guarded or to meet them oa the prairie without sufficient protection. When they get a chance to sell out at a profit, whether it lie a mine, a claim or a farm, they do so at once and go on further into the wild. They are a proud people and have terms of contempt for travelers unlike them selves. A tourist is called a " tender foot," which is very scathing. If you retort by calling the nomad a " Mis sourian," you have touched.bottom in the way of insult. The miners and prospectors he finds a much more agreeable class than the farmers. A peculiarity of the growth of the mushroom frontier cities is the early appearance of the lawyer on the scene. How these legal limbs manage to worry army officers iR told with evident feeling. These officers, by the way, are uot idlers. It is a common mistake to suppose that an army officer on the frontier leads an idle life. Rarely is more than one of the three officers of the company present with it, and this one must accordingly attend every day to all the company duties. The other two officers may be detailed on special service, such as commissary or quartermaster's duties (and the latter in a new post will be no sinecure) or attendance on court mar tial, or searching where lime can be found ; or they may be on the aick list, or guarding the wagon train whioh brings supplies to the poet, or absent on the loaves which are granted after con tinuous service. It is not infreqent for cavalry to be six or eight months on a campaign without seeing a permanent camp, much IMS a post where any of the comforts of civilisation can be found. With small bodies of troops, where there are but few officers to form society for one another, the life becomes fearfully monotonous and dreary. Old posts are deserted and new ones built so frequently that there is little danger of officers or men stagnating through idleness, even where Indian .hostilities are less abundant. An appro priation by Congress for a new post does not represent more than a third of the real expenditure. Tho other two thirds are supplied "in kind " —that is to say , by aoldiers' labor. The money appro priation is only expended for such things that the soldiers cannot produce themselves. They cut the timber, run saw-mills, dig drains, make bricks and mortar, carry hods and plaster the inside of houses. The cavalryman is fortunate if he can leave off digging long enough to groom his own horse. Frequently one man is detailed to groom, feed and take to water the horses of several of his comrades. The American soldier on the frontier is certainly a wonderful being. He is at most times a day laborer, slouchy in his hearing and slovenly in hi dress. His one good suit must be saved for guard mounting when his turn comes or for inspection, and the nature of his mili tary vacations uses up his uniforms faster than his clothing allowance can furnish them. He has little or no real drill, and has been known to go into action without previously having pulled the trigger of his rifle. He lias not the mien or bearing of a soldier—in military parlance, is not well set up. Yet in spite of this treatment— which is virtually a breach of contract by the government, since the recruit is led to supi>oseon his enlistment that he is to be a soldier and not a hod carrier —in spite of his rarely being taught his profession or shown how to become skiliecl in arms or horsemanship, the American soldier is subordinate, quick to obey, ready in expedients, uncom plaining, capable of enduring great fatigue, brave and trustworthy in ac tion. Generally by the time a cavalry officer has reached middle age bis exposed life begins to tell upon him. The cavalry, being mounted, are called upon to do most of the frontier scouting. Some of the infantry are also mounted, especial ly the Fifth infantry. Infantry in such cases may simply be classed as cavalry, though armed with a better weapon— the long Springfield rifle. Marches in the middle of winter occur only too often. In many instances the troops must march with cooked rations and abstain from lighting fires lest the smoke may give warning to the Indians whom they are pursuing, and this with the thermometer many degrees below zero. As the Indian is as loath as a bear to leave his winter quarters, and little expects the approach of his foe, such expeditions are often successful, if a " blizzard " does not happen to blow. The blizzard, as it is termed in Mon tana and Wyoming, or the norther, as it is known in New Mexico, Arizona and Texas, is a strong, piercing wind from the north, which blows for some three days and smites everything that is not under cover. If the troops are soared this blizzard they may strike their wily foe, who has evaded them all summer, and punish him, with no other casualties than those of frozen feet and fingers and the fortune of battle. The scouts, with their long hair, faucy clothes and ability to tell lies; the squaw men, the cattle herders and other tvpicai frontier people are pleasantly described. Russian Superstition. The strange ceremony of ploughing around a village in order to drive ! away the cattle plague recently took place in one of the villages of Russia. 1 he Russky Courier descrilies it thus : i "Iu the Mouth of March the cattle j plague broke out in the village of Ozersk, in the province of Kaluga. Iu a few days thirteen cows died, aud the peasauts were panic stricken. After j warm discussions, it was decided to I drive out thq plague after the manner of our forefather* in similar emergen cies—that is, by ploughing around the village. On March 16, at mid night, all the women of the village assembled at a spot, to which were brought the things needed for that half pagan, half Christian ceremony, to wit, a holy image, a plough, har ness, a bag of saud, and a pail of tar. A strong young woman was har nessed to the plough, and, with the assistance of two other girls, proceed ed to pull it along. A young girl car rying the holy image (ikona) headed the procession ; she was followed by an old woman with the Rand bag, who threw the sand right and left, the ploughing party trying to cover the sand in ploughing, while the wo man with the tar pail besprinkled the soil with tar. A crowd of girls and women followed, each carrying some article with which to make a noise, scythes, tin cans, iron pans, boilers, basins, pokers, and other uten sils. Though the noise was indescrib able, and the women's yelling and shouting incessant, they were ineffect ual to frighten off the plague spirit, for its ravages in that village are un diminished. Women of Cyprus. From lh<- British Cypres, At nine or ten the girls are lovely, having eyes like antelopes and softly rounded cheeks, hinting at Hebe by and-by. But in their after years, when comeleness is needed most, much of this beauty fades. Fine eyes remain but contour, color, bloom, expression, all depart. The Moslem females seem to understand their fate. If their sisters of the orthodox rite were know ing, they, to, would glide about the courts and market-places veiled. A Christian woman bares her neelt and face; a Moslem woman shows no more than a pair of sparkling eyes. No man looks twice at the retreating figure of a Greek, though she is habited in nink and amber. Every one turns and gaxes at the gliding mystery of a S'rl in white whose face is shrouded om his view. CLOCKS are awfully dissipated: they keep all sorts of hours. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Kini-Lia Trait* or Oorkr—Fourth Mot,,lav. .1 , warj, April, Aukurl RIKJ November, Prx.ld.nt Judg.—Hon. CH*, A. M IND I,„V „ Additional law Judge—lion. Jon* 11.' ~k yu fuuta. "• ™>' lx. Aaa.* lab- Judgna--lion. HAMUII. V .CI 1, , ProthouoUry-J. CALVI. HABPM ~k" " B(lil(r,( Willi mil ci'k of O. c-I w Kocordur of lixxda, Ar WII.LIAK A. Ton,, ,u Iriatrlrt Attornxy—lt, tit, A. PokixtV Hh.rlfl— JOHH Hrtxiu.tsi. Trnuaur.r—lltaar YgAAirg. County Surveyor—Joaim bgvuau. Coronxr—l>r. JO.ii-ii AIMK* County Cotntuiaaioner.—Aaoklvt Olcoo (i„ u J A'Oil I't'NUI.I. '" WI , Clark to tViiinty CofarulMrforiana—>{rj. rr Br,r Attorri.y to County Coniuilaaioner.--C V 10,-.. Janitor of tl,* o,„ r t Hotllo— lammi Comity Auditor*—JAUM T. MTCWAA*, fiioaoi l\- UAU, THOA B. JAMIHO*. '* B IU Jury Oiitimlwlonan—J oil 11 MUA**O, I),vir, w i-,. Superintendent of Public Hchool.—l'rof Hi.a, u, 1 Notarie. put,lie —Kvi* M BLA.CMAtk W u Vf"" It C. CiiManuu. Bellefoutx. ***. DIRECTORY. CIICIU IIKK, Ac. I'ftEPß YTKBI A.N, BHuab-d on , , , llowaid atraota. ftervl..., Monday at ]o A J ' "i r.u. Prayer meeting, Wxdnmalay at 71 e . a ul .rt •cluail, !i A. m. lii tlm Wigwam. northern,! ,'i Bpriiig and Lamb. Pa.tot, Iter. William Uun. deocv, hiring Mith of Meth<*htt hur< h ' M KTIIODIBT RJ'ISCOI'AL. Situated * . u+r ol Spring Rr>d llowarl *tret. . Rt I<>UVJ A. M. IU'I R M l'r*y*-r-ine*tirig, W+*. u V Rt 7U P. M Smll'lr)-* hOOl.fltllidjiy £:;o >. M * of church. pßßlor, Rce. J. I> Curt In treet, west of Spring. HT JOHN'S ROMAN CATHOLIC, . Bilbop brtvppD Alhlhuif b<] Pern w, n Puildß) * Rtld lUuVj A. M Rft A. m and rit Wodiimlay -n, -!"*/ H and fundaywi 1k.,1 Huinlay J r an, i.,,,,,,.',, , • hurrb. Hxitor, lixv. Join, l|,nt'; r,idxi,i l.ainl, atrxxt ixar of LpiMopal cbut'l, LI'THKHAN, Kilualrd aoutitwaal rornxr 11,1 atldpxnnatrawta Aurrii -< t'.w ; church Rt 2:30 r. H. I'iutor, iu-v John >i p kJf l' ThoBSM IU-+l. 1 FKIENDH. Situmtc-d *nd of I|rßti B'-llffontf A< r<]* to) . Mm tiiiifp, Sundßi- ]] A . Wwdn-Rdty 11 A. H. V M. C A.. Rrr held tr+rr F.: at 4 Rnd awn Miiy rtlU F E IB tki Arm* ißtioli above thf F'tt (lift, , # \ I'll . U,.,; held In the* r-tcifu 1 h- find Sunday In J rn nth *t ; I m. K"itt oprn every night trout &Ui '* * k. The LADIFJt'TKMI'EKANCK I'KAVllh-MUTIN., m-et In the Logan lloae llouae, Thurain*. a! y A jNew York Weekly Herald. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. The r irruUtion of thi* popular ne*ft.|.. r h%k r r thßft trebled during the j,.t ymx Ir. the le/iintr new* Rntßine] in the Dun 11 MUL* : , i Rrißiif;e THE WEEKLY HERALD tli in'wt Taluatd. rhr-'tilt Ixr in thx world a. ,| t , t|, f chrapMt. Krxry axxk I. ynxn a failtiful r>j.ti of POLITICAL NEWS embracing Complete and nouipreherißiTt fr.tn Maahlngtoa, in< hiding full re |.rt# •: t;,e of eminent politician* <*1 thei ftb hour. THE FARM DEPARTMENT of til, WirklT llrtALfi |P. th latot •aw.llwU.r tnnat pr Uiiiuxation. aud diarurrrixa rxlat.ar i th. dutnw uf thx fami.r, hint. I>r ra,,int rrr,i, Pot-ttuT, fikAlaa, Tun, VaitiAiu,. A. ~ Ar, • •■k(fwta*a tor kx, , n g l uiMlnt. and utouail, ,i n [•ail. Tlila la aupfd.mxntxd t>y a a.llwditwt in, ut, wtd.ly ropiKl, undxr th. hxiul of THE HOME, firing rtwlpx. for |>rartiral di>hfw. hint. I r inakini rlothlng and for kx.f.tui up with th. lai~t fahi .in tl ikr lo.M pnr. Kr.ry it.ni of rooking or n .n.i ; .uggrwlxd in thia dxj.artmxnt ia prariKwi,, ten.-; i, I nptrtt l.xfor, jiuldiraln.n Iwtt.r. from'rur IV,i and London <*)rrrw|.>nd.nu cn th. t.'J laix,t f,.t | lon., Th. Horn, ln-i.artiu.iit of th. M inn HttiUi will aar. th. honarwif. mor. than on, I undi.l ■ | thr price of th. pa|wr. Th, IntxM.t, id SKILLED LABOR ar, I'x.kxd aflxr. and ~,rrhlne p,rtinirii t-. DU -1 rhanlr. and lat—r aaring ta- arxlully t. 0i.1.-i Tl-- ~ I. a (tagx dxrotxj t>, all th. latiwt pbatw. of tli l-uw n.M niarkxt., Oi,p. Mxixhaudiw. Ar.. A \ tii„. 1-1, foatnr. U found in th. .pieially r<|- rixd j-r, „ I and • ondition, of THE PRODDCF. MARKET. . SrokTtkn Ntwa.thom, and ahmad, u*g,th.r dk a Moat .xry wrwk, a PutUo* l.y 0,1,1 . miu.nt dx I tin., I.ITCUAUT, Ml air.l . Ilk aVa rir, puk tAI and hi* Sort. Thxr. 1. 00 ||wr in hx world lh*t ro tain, a, much u w. uiatt.r .*,r. w„k a. tl>, Wttt tr MIAMI., whirh l a.nl, piwtag. ftaid, f--r Hn, I* I lar. You can autawrllw al any tlm,-. THK "1 r ONF NKW YORK • Ina Wwkh Foin, - DOLI.AI iIKKALH j ( A TKAK. NEW YORK HERALD, H Broadway and Ana MrM, N,w Y„tk CEITTHAIi STATE NORMAL SCHOOL (Eighth Xormal Siehuol DUlricl,) LOCK HAVEN, CLINTON CO., PA. A. N. RAUB, A. M., Principal. r pHIS SCHOOL, as at present COD -L alltultd. Off' r, th. my lat mdlltlM for Pro fnulooal aud Clawilral ixaming. Building. itaolwuA, la.iting aud com modi out. Ut. Tradwr -Hon. A.Q Cartla. Hon H. L. Di.f r.nhaah, flam J*a Marrtll. Ha. William Blgl.r, J C. a Wbal.y, S. Mill.r MrlWmlrk. Eh; oiiicama. Hoa. WILLIAM BIIiI.KR, Pruld.nt, OaarfMd. Pa. U*a. J lf B MKB ftl LL, T. PrtaddMil, Lar* Har*a, Pa 8 Ml 1.1.A1t McCOHMICK. Smratary, - THOMAK YAHbI.KY, Traaaurrr, For Sale. A FARM containing Fifty Acres, add haling thereon .rUd a TWO-BTOBY FBAMK Bt'lLnnra aud out budding*. Title good. Inquire af A. J. A T. fc (IBIKBT, -Vtf CnlouTilto, Centra couafj, Pa.