ftlic (Krntre gmoctaf. BELLEPONTE, PA. The Largeit, Cheapeat and Beat Paper PUHMNIIKO IN CRNTKtC COUNTY. Take Your Choice. UTP nro integrity, lnut>, !r*%i*ry *l*i%k* yoiir i-huirt l , Hero r* ramalltv, trilvrv, knavery— TKp yOur choice, lloro it A )>1 alii ami oM-fu*hlonMl cnpurity— Tk your choice. Then* in a aiu|i|* of gr*o| and n|acMy— Take your choice, llere i* one Mnnioli'**, jut a* from the atnrt he won— Take your choice. There ! one haeer than ever iiin party wo*— Take your choice, llere it a tnati with a record mmullied vet- Take your choice. One who hat nover been hrilaul or been bullied yet— Take your choice. There is a mail wrho ha* IHM'II false to the trust of us— Take your choice. What can he claim but the blame mid disgust of us— Take your choice, llere is a mail wltoee word is verity— Take your choice. One who is noted for truth and situ erit\.— Take your choice. There is a man who was bribed and has lied to lis— Take your choice. llow as a leader can he In a pride to us ? Take your choice. —X. Y. Sun. . - TORN BY AMI SKKT BALL. The Mature and Cause of Hancock's Wound at Gettysburg. Ilia Pall Upou the Field of Battle—State ment of the Surgeon Who Extracted the Bullet-What Gen. Mitchell Knows About It. Xokristown, I'a., Sept. 28. —Mr. Francis .lonian, ex-Secretary of State, having, in a recent speech at Harris burg, made use of "Col. Baxter's" contemptible aspersion of Gen. Han cock's conduct at Gettysburg, Mr. < )vid F. Johnson wrote a letter to Dr. L. W. llead, of this place, inquir ing into the nature of Hancock's wound. Dr. Read was the General's attendaut surgeon after his removal from the battle-field to be eared for at Norristown. Following is the state ment made bv Mr. Jordan in his Har risburg speech: On his arrival on the field of Gettys burg, Gen. Hancock reported to Gen. Slocum, and from a peculiar cannonad ing accident was struck in the back with a nail from a board fence; he was taken to the hospital, where he remained un til the fight was over. From sworn tes timony from persons who were near the General when he was wounded it can be shown that he was not in command, and did not fight the battle as is claim ed by his friends. In answer to Mr. Johnson's inquiry, J)r. Read wrote as follows : DEAR SIR: Your communication dat ed September 18 has been received. In response to your interrogatory, "Did you extract a bullet from Gen. Hancock after the battle of Gettysburg?" I did —a conical one of large size. It enter ed the anterior and upper third of the thigh, just inside of the femoral artery, I>enetrated eight inches and was iui >edded in one of the bones of the pel vis. The operation was performed nearly two months after the receipt ol the injury." This conclusively settled the ques tion as to the nature of the wound and the cause of it. Rut it did not settle another poiut in the dispute, and com munication was at once opened with Gen. William G. Mitchell, which re sulted in the receipt of the appended history of the manner and time in which Gen. Hancock was wounded at Gettysburg. It appears iu the col umns of the Norristown Regi*ter. Gen. Mitchell at that battle was Gen. Hancock's assistant adjutant general, and, although not present at the time Gen. Hancock was wounded, was with him a few miuutes after he fell : "At Gettysburg, where Gen. Han cock commanded the left center of the army, July 3, 1863, he received a wound which was supposed, at the time, to be morlal. He was struck by a musket hall while on his line of bat tle just at the moment of the enemy's grand final assault on the third day. The ball passed through the front of his saddle and carried into the wound with it a large wrought nail from the saddletree. The bullet and nail in tern! near the groin, the hall passing back through the thigh and lodging near the socket of the thigh bone, which it slightly splintered. The Gen. was assisted from his horse by two of ficers of Gen. Btannard's stall', who were near him at the time. He re mained upon the ground until the assaulting column had been driven entirely from the field —giving orders to his troops (from the point at which he lay he could see the field of buttle by raising himself on his elbow,) nnd from that point he sent one of his aids to inform Gen. Meade that we bad won a great victory. "This wound so disabled Gen. Han cock as to unfit him for field service until the following December, wheu he returned to the army of the Poto mac and resumed command of the Becond Corps, to take part in the cam- D;n of 1864. The wound, however, not healed and gave him great trouble and annoynuce during the campaign, and although he continued with his command, he was obliged to travel in an ambulance a great |>or tiou of the time. His haltit on the march was to remain in hisamhulabce at the head of his columu until iu the vicinity of the enemy, when he mounted his horse and so remained until the fighting was over. During the whole of the summer of 1864 he was daily attenJed bv a surgeon, on account of bis wound, which at that time was much irritated and discharg ing more or less all the time, small portions of the bone at times passing f rom it. While in front of the enemy's works at Petersburg, Ya., in June 1864, when the troops were constantly under fire and the General was obliged to be mounted nearly all of the time both day and night, his wound became so inflamed and dangerous that lie was eoinpelled to relinquish command of the corps for a few days (Juno 17, after the bloody fight of that day was over,) he turned over the command to his next iu rank. He did not, however, leave the field, but continued with the troops, and again assumed command of the corps June 27, finding himself much relieved by the discharge of quite a largo piece of boue from the wound. He continued to suffer from his wound during all the remaining time of the war, and indeed feels serious effects from it to this time, March, 1873." The Mysterious Figures. A Bourbon (I ml.) despatch of Sept. 21st tells of an unexampled excite ment which prevailed in that place at the time stated. It says : We are having a unique time out here. On Saturday night several small boys chalked the mysterious figures. $320 all over the city. They appeared on every fence, wall, post and curb from one end of the city to the other. They were chalked on the doors of the Post Office and of the Campbellite church. Kven the thrcshholds of distinguished citizens did not escape. Ail the Han cock men in town began to laugh,and a fair share of the Garfield men be gan to curse. About midnight a brig ade of Republicans armed with mops, scrubbing brushes, brooms, and pails of water, scattered itself all over the city, and began to wash out the figures. Small boys, however, travelled in the wake of the scrubs, and the figures 8320 re-appeared as fast as erased. After five hours work the scrubbing brigade went home in disgust. Senator Alli son, of lowa, was announced to speak on the following Monday. He receiv ed telegraphic notice of the cropping out of the mysterious figures, and halted within forty miles of the city. After a council of war he took track for home. On -Monday the excite ment broke out afresh. Half a dozen prominent Republicans ap|>eared on the street with the mysterious figures chalked on their backs. A distin guished Campbellite clergyman awoke at 7 A. M., and was ouraged to find $320 on the soles of his boots. Little white flags bearing the cabalistic symbols floated from various points. A Gar field butcher went into hysterics be cause some one had inscribed the fig ures on the collnr of his dog. The ; Hancock men laughed more heartily than ever, nnd the Garfield men cursed ; like an army in Flanders. They i were even more excited than they were when they received the news of their defeat from Maine. After again vain ly trying to wash out the figures they threatened to resort to the shotgun policy. These threats made the Han cock men roar with laughter. The curses of tho Garfield crowd were so appalling that even the imported col ored element stood aghast. The worst or best of it is that the $320 mania has spread to adjoining towns, ami it threatens to run over northern Indiana like wildfire. If it reaches Ohio the Lord alone knows what will happen. 83251. Garfield not the Soldier's Friend. From th I>)litown Democrat. Garfield is one of the most unfortu nate men who ever sat in Congress. He was not only the friend of all the jobs which came before the House, but he was just as persistent in his opposi tion to measures which should have met the support of every member. While he voted FOR all the land grants to railroads, and to increase his own pay 50 per cent., nnd to date hack two years, he voted to cut down the wages of printers in the govern ment office. In a speech on the sub ject he said he thought they got too much pay. In 1864, he voted against increasing the pay of soldiers to 820 )>er month. In 1865,a bill was intro duced into the House to increase the pay of both officers and men of the army; hut Garfield opposed the in crease of the men's pay, and favored increasing the officers'. In 1862, he voted against giving honorably dis charged soldiers 160 acres of land each, and this in the face of voting away one hundred and ninety-six millions of acres to railroads. When the hill came up in Congress to grant pensions to the few surviving soldiers of the War of 1812, Gar field voted against it; nnd he like wise voted against granting {tensions to the surviving soldiers, or their widows, of the Mexican war. With this record Itefore their eyes, how can Garfield he claimed as the soldier's friend ? IK I were President I would veto nil legislation which might come before me providing for the consideration or |>aymeut of claims of any kind for losses or damnges by persons who were in the Rebellion, whether pardoned or not.—Gen, Hancock'* letter of Sept, 23. T The Effect Upon Business Interests. The favorite argument against a change of administration is the injury that will he done to the business inter ests of the country. To listen to the speeches and to read the articles upon this subject it might he inferred that the country was really in the keeping of the Republican party, and would go straightway to ruin if not looked after by its candidates. Milton de scribed an eclipse us "shedding dis astrous twilight on half the nations, and with fear of change, perplexing monarchs," but an eclipse was never half such a bugaboo as the probable election of General Hancock, if we are to judge from what we read in Republican papers. Those who write and talk such stuff must have a very low opinion of the good sense of the people of the United.States, for they know very well that the fact is the country gets along as well as it does in spite of the politicians, and not be cause of their protecting care. Two or throe very plain propositions will dispose of the pretense that the suc cess of any party is essential to our welfare: First. The men who constitute the administration to-day, with one or two exceptions, never had ability enough to manage their own business in such away as to greatly distinguish themselves, and if Mr. Hayes never became anything more than a second or third rate lawyer in a small city like Cincinnati it is absurd to suppose that by making him President he could be forthwith made capuble of controlling the business interests of the whole country. Mr. Kvarts was, of course, of a higher grade; but, after ull, he was pretty accurately de scribed by the late Judge drier as " a mere sentence monger." Mr. Sherman has shown fair business capacity in his own affairs, but there are fifty men on Third street and twice fifty on Wall street who are his superiors, and there is not one of the rest of them who could get half the salary in any private corporation he now receives. It is a hackneyed quotation of the saying of Chancellor Oxeustiern: " do, my son, and see with what little wisdom the world is governed." Rut the greatest lack of wisdom is on the part of the governed when they come to think they owe everything to their rulers; for, certainly, if the men in office have not succeeded in private life, it is follv to sup|Kse that they are any better cupable to manage the af fairs of other people. If the countrv really needed to be taken care of, it would be iu a bad way iu such hands, lint, luckily, the great American people have it and themselves in thefr own keeping, and if they wish to change their servants —not their rul ers—they need not and will not 1* afraid to do it. Second. If all our present pro*-1 perity if ssihle, the value of cotton exported is almost equal to that of both wheat and flour —$212,000,(MX) lust year, as against about $225,000,- (MM)—and if it had not been for Re publican misrule in the South, we might have had "the good times" a year or two sooner. Fortunately, what has been done in the South cannot be undone, and there is no great chance for mischief left. Upon the whole, therefore, we do not think it greatly matters whether one half-dozen of men or another sit around the Cabinet table in Washington during the next four years. So loug as price* keep going up, the |>eople will think them selves prosperous, and when the turn comes, four or five or ten years hence, they will think that the world has come to an end ugain ; hut whether they are to be rich or poor, successful or unfortunate, will depend upon their own conduct. If they wish to lie happy, they must be virtuous, and that is all there is about it. How Votes Are Mude for Hancock. To the Editor of the World. HIH : At a Republican mass-meeting held at New Ismdon, this county, yesterday, ami addressed by W. H. Gibson, of "Ohio treasury fame," there was a large banner carried over a wagon load of young ludics repre senting the different States, the banner iu question bearing this motto : '• "Arnold, a Traitor, • : Sept. 28, 1780. : j Sept. 28, 18M0, : • In Hancock one 7" \ This, of course, was authorized by the Republican committee. It was carried in the procession. It stood for an hour in the principal street of the town, aud I have not heard this infamous insult denounced by a single Republican. Now, Mr. Editor, 1 was a soldier in Hancock's old Second ('orps. I re ceived a wound—causing the loss of my leg—at the battle of Gettysburg. \\ bile being carried from the field I saw General Hancock riding at the head of a column of infantry, through a |>erfect •■torni of bullets, to close up the ranks. The next day he fell ou the front line of battle. I have never voted the Democratic ticket in my life, but shall vote for "Hancock and Union" this fall. My blood boils as I think of this scandalous insult to one of the most glorious soldiers uml men of this or any other country. I wonder if the soldiers of the Potomac Army will stand calmly by and see themselves degraded by this insult to General Hancock and still vote with the party that perpetrates this infa my ? If any one is disposed to doubt the exact truth of this statement, I can furnish the names of any number of eye-witnesses to the outrage. Respectfully, F. R. NH'KKKSON, Late Sergeant, Co. K, Hth O. V. I. Greenwich, Huron Co., Sep. 24, 'HO. A (Juration of not Much Consequence. Mr. John Sherman, recently, in a speech delivers! at Washington, said that when the war broke out every Republican rallied to the flag, ami the reliels were all Democrats. Mr. Sherman was then an able-bodied man ami a Republican, but he did not rally to the. flag, although he made, it is said, a good deal of money during the war. His brother, Gener al Sherman, did the fighting for the family. Mr. John Sherman's assertion is still further untrue. The rebels were not all Democrats. They were Democrats and Whigs and Americans, and were divided in ]s>litics,just as the Northern soldiers were. From locali ties where Democrats were in the majority, there went to the war a majority of Democratic soldiers, and from localities where the Republicans predominated there went more Repub lican soldiers. There is no way of determining the respective numbers of Democrats and Republicans among the rank and file, hut we can judge somcwhut by the politics of the gen erals who went into the service when the war broke out. Not that the gen erals were entitled to more credit than the rank and file. Generally the generals did not amount to a great deal. The Union army was immense in the able qualities of its high pri vates, it corporals, and its sergeants, for they did good fighting and won victories oflcn where the generalship was very bad. Rut who were the Republican generals when the war broke out ? McClellan, the organizer of the 5 real Army of the Potomac, was a >emoerat; so was Fighting Joe Hook er, dead now, alas! and not here to vote, as he fought, with Hancock; so was Meade a Democrat, and lialdy •Smith, the bead of the National Asso ciation of Hancock Veterans, and C. F. Smith, and Thomas, the hero of Chickamauga, and McPherson, and Lyon, and Gordon Granger, and the noble Sedgwick, aud Oanby, and Mansfield, aud Reynolds, who gave his life at Gettysburg, and llcinzel man, and Meagher, and Corcoran, and Wool, and Griffin, and Hayard, and ('lister, aud Sykes, and Sherman, and liosecrans, and Huell, aud Stcedman, and Williams, and Keyes, and Couch, and Logan, and Ward, and Frankliu, and Averell, and Morell, and Scho field, and Sweeney, and Sickles, and Stoncman, and Morgan, and Hart ranft, and Fitz John Porter, and the McCooks —five of them —all from one family, aud John Corse, who held the fort at Altoona, ami Hen Butler, and U. 8. Grant —a Breckenridgc Demo crat by the way—and last, but easily greatest of thein all, the hero of the battle that broke the back of the re bellion, the peerless Hancock of Get tysburg. And in the navv there were a few notable Democrats, such as Far ragut, and Worden, aud Porter. There were Republican generals, it is true; there was General Hanks, who was a General only in a very general sort of away, and there was Carl Schurx, too, the great piauo player of the While House. Frank Blair wat a Kcpuhli <'an. Ocn. Kigel wad a Republican. He in on the ntump for I Inn cock now, nnd doing Rplendid xervioe,hihl all the nermann are "lighting mil Sigd, too." Tom Ewing, of Ohio, wax n Republi can, hut he in working for Hancock now; no in I'aimer, once the Republi can (iovernor of Illinois. Henry \V. Slocuni, the illuntrioiiH nohlicr who coinmuiided the left w ing of Hhcrmaii'd nruiy on the march to the nea, wu a K<'[>uhlicaii; he in on the ntump for Hancock now. Hnnkx ami Schurz alone, of all the (ienerulu we have named, were Rcplilicuim when the war broke out and are Ucpuhlicanit now, und there were hut six altogether, who, according to John Sherman, ral lied to the flag when the war broke ! out. And nhall Mr. Sherman, in view of thew! undisputed facts, assert un- | contradicted that the Democrats were j all relx-ls, and that only the Kepuhli- ! cans rullietl to the flag? The Southern Itugahoon. Hon. H. A. Herbert, member of Congress from the Second district of J Alabama, upon being notified of his renomination, made a speech hearing directly on the senseless attempt of the Republicans to frighten honest voters into accepting a tainted candidate for the I'residency by pretending to he- ( lieve that the election of General j Hancock would lead to the payment of all sorts of Southern claims. Quot ing the eloquent passage from Han cock's letter of acceptance; in which he speaks of the Union as the main pillar in the edifice of our real indo |iendence, Mr. Herbert added that it we could only get the masses of the 1 North, those who are honest voters j and not office-seekers, to understand J iiud know that this is the sentiment ' that actuates us, that we recognize the results of the war fully, that we sup jsirt the constitution with all its amendments, that we protect and guard the rights of these freed men who constitute so large a part of this audience, we should add thousands of votes to Hancock in November. But every vile slander that ingenuity can invent and malice can perpetrate is being distilled into the ears of the Northern people. John Sherman, in a speech made at Cincinnati, actually stooped so low as to tell the fieople of the North that if the Democracy got in power they would claim pay tor its ! slaves. I see that Porter, candidate (or Governor, is repeating the same stuff in Indiana on that stump. The idea is so preposterous that it passes my understanding that any voter could be influenced by it, hut such men as Porter and Sherman would not condescend to use such an argu- j ment if they did not believe they could make vote* by it. To catch a vote there is nothing they would not say. This is a hard saying, but lam justified in it when men of their in- | telligence resort to such arguments. Iok at it. The South contains scarcely more than a third of the vot ing population of the Union. The j slaveholders were not a third of the Southern white people. Since the freedmeu have become voters the form- | cr slaveholders are not more than one- | eighth of our voters. To pay this one-eighth of our people we would have to saddle the other seven-eights of our people with a debt of one hun dred and fifty millions of dollars. Why, if we were separated from the j North by a gulf so wide and deep that the lightning of the telegraph could not lean it, we could not pass such a law. Fellow-citizens, this is a Demo cratic district. I am the Democratic nominee. I believe lum acceptable to the party, but if 1 should seriously announce to the people that I was in favor of taxing tiie voters who were never slaveholders to pay those who were, I could not be elected. I could not carry a county iu the district. I There is not a district in the South that could lie carried on any such platform. W hen, then, Mr. Sherman announces that there is danger that the former slaveholders of the South will make the whole United States pav one hundred and fifty millions of dollars for the liberated slaves —well, iny friends, I will only say he knows better. Another slander he indulges iu is that if Democracy is successful we will endeavor to pension Confed erate soldiers for the Confederate war. Gentlemen, I was a Confederate. I hear on my person scars received in fighting under the Southern cross. 1 yield to no man in love for mv dead comrades or in sympathv for tKe liv ing heroes of that Confederacy. Yet it never came into my mind in the wildest flights of my imagination, uor did it ever cross yours, that t he govern ment of the United States or auy oth er government could afford to pension soldiers for fighting against it. It is equally untrue that we could or would embarrass the government with claims for quarter masters' stores taken dur ing the war. All we ask is the right of local self-government! We don't want to coutrol the domestic atrairs of Indiana. They know how to govern themselves in these matters better than we do, and we kuow how to control domestic aflairs better than they do. We waut a fair shake in the blessings of honest government. We demaud to be admitted to a full and free par ticipation in its benefit* as equals, aud we do not expect the government to enrich its people, for tiie government has nothing but what it takes from the people. But I cannot waste time iq ausweriug Sherman's slanders here before thin audience. I ouly wish th people who 1 inter! to biro were down here to listen to roe and to shake you by the hand* and talk to you. Tlu n they would find out how the Jieople of the South are slandered, and tin v would spurn th-ir deceiver* from tin , and in November next they wouj<| rise io their might and rebuke, I,\ aiJ overwhelm in# defeat, this Republo Ull party a- a disturber of the \ n< • , the people. ) ben. Garth-Id's Credit Mohiljer lh-onl. From It ih i,ten tin,in tehtimunu bet rr li,, I'lilnnit Uommitiee, .lon. I I 1 - / never owned, received or agml t ceive any ttork of the Credit Stohiii, the Union Faeifir /{ad rood too on demit or profit* oritur/ from <>!/,., thrm. From Judge Foland't report, Feb 1- I —(lor/ield' testimony i>r, }ur"t The (< U io r<*nr<] to Mr. (rnrlii-M found by the committee, are that in- Hj;r with Mr. Aidm to take ten har<-. i,t (•■ Mohilier Stock, but did not pv !■ r ;■ enme. Mr. Ames roci-i vi-d the eightv • • cent, dividend in l)ond* nrnl sold tin u, • . ninety.seven per cent, and also r-.j the sixty p-r cent. <-hli dividend, h . together with the price of stock hi. 1 .. est, left balance of $■':!. This .m, u paid over to Mr. fiarlleld by a ch <, ... the sergeant-at-arm* arid Mr. rihr. j t r . i niderhtood thin Hum lean the balmier . f . itli lulu offer paying for the ttoek. from tie- NVw Vurk Tin.. ~ Fel.rti.n ) <, I Mwri. Kelly and Garteld ;• most distressing figure. Their [.art tion in the Credit Mohilier affair i. .. rated g by the most unfortunate ".Mr, . tions of testimony. r roil, lie Srw York Times, Fi-hiutr} M, 1 k " Tiie character id the ("riilit Mot was no ser n-t. The source of its | . was very well known at the time ( ■ • gr men bought it. Though Oak'-* Aon tiave succeeded in concealing his own live, which was to brib<- (Jongr-•. their acceptance of the stock wat • that account innocent. The dishor. theaat,r t, a a participation in an ol.i fraud, still rcmsins. Some of them have indulged ill te-tn. • with reference to the matter wb t. been contradicted. The commute. . tineth/ re petit the tetfttnony of trie oi < ; * member*. Thm ran only be iLmr on r/< ground that it i> untrue. Hot unt. , •. . time my girrn under oath it morally, .> legally, penury. It is tiie clear duty of Congress to i • with punishment all who took Credit M - bilier st< k from < lakes Ames, from the Nm* Y"k Trihuoe, F"liniir| J". I t C .lames A. Garfield, of Ohio, br. 1 ■ shares; never paid a dollar; received % . which, after the investigation begar. was anxious to have considers] as a . from Mr. (lakes Ames to himself. Well, the wickedness of all of it is : these men betrayed the trust of the re* ; ■ deceived their constituents and. bv ew. and falsehoods, confessed the transa : • to Ire disgraceful. Fnuu Ike Si r Turk Tribune, Feb. . I*7:t. Mr. Ames establishes very clear! \ •. fioint that he was not alone in this otb r ■ If he it to be expelled fur bribery, the ... who were bribed tfumld go with him. CEITTIiIiLL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL (Eighth Formal Sehoot Ihttrief LOCK IIAVEN, CLINTON* CO., l'A. A. N. RAL B, A. M., I'rineijnif. r piIIS SCHOOL,an at present ron w stltaled, ofl.rs lh very l-et led lib. f ; !';i> bwionsl and Clonml learning. HwMiue* s|mr ieus, iDvilinc snd >-otnnxalkui. plstaly kealel by O am well v. ottlaMl. and ! r c •I with a U.uaUful aui.|>ly ef |.ur vslai.a li p . water. taxation healthful and easy of arxeas. Surrogating arencry tianarpaMw*! T-aikn* exparieecad, eßlrtsnt, and alUs t U" work. Dta, iplina. Brrn and kind, gnif..ia and lb. r. . t Rtfe-naes Boderale FiH) ceata a week dadurtlon to lb..s neaa,- , t i tea h ' ' Students admitted a4 any time. Couraes of study |.r.wrrlid by the Stat. I V >■' fb-hmd. 11. IVefwreb-ry. 111. gbaßeaUrv eatlflc. jt sot rormars 1 Ara.bn.l<-. 11. Oammerrtat 111 Muai. 1\ AU Th Klenieatary and Srteetlbr ngrm sr. IV teestonal, and students gradnatinc therein n> is lri|domss. mnfenintr the nil.,,i, E nureag. i, : goes Master of the Kb rents, and MasOr .1 t tkdencea. liiadual.w la Uis olhei rimrsea e . < Xormat Certlkcatea of their lllcnm.u. aign.l !> the Faculty. The Ftwfeaalona! morses are libera), and art in thoT'iughiieas bat Inferior U. tbuee of our bst cvdleg*-. The Slate rejqfree a Higher .-rder of cMlmmu The tißes demand it. Il „ , Ih, ,,me elyets of this arhool to help to aer nr. It ti fnrt.tsbitig u.te, ligtot and elti'leot fwhets for her arhm.ls To tbo and it aollrita truing |>etsr>ns of g.st aldlHies at, l g LtK'UST STREET:-, HAKKISHURO. PA. Regular term will begin BKPTKMBKH I's I'Tf. •nd Art With Most and toltton tnm teW to. 3SO a ywar and n* For .-IrruUtwaad all dealrahle lafbrwmtion addm "•* mown Fa i. PATENTS. I>A TEN IS procured upon InTcn ■ uon. Ko tmmrl r.. Il Anranr. .h,f Hon UNW. U> |u invKiT* •n4 obtain THAtiK M ARK?. IT>HiS A' INVENTORS send ns a Model of r-mr Invention, mth yoni eta dew .1 pi ton of It. fir our oplniiui aa to pntrntal I' Airntt"s Five i vivas Pirttv m Barman, ii" Book of Instruction, dr., - How m hiwtxa Para*' ' aent fpee ott re<|nes< ■ also aamtde nuilse of the Bni" one Km.iati. the Intentnra' jm.rn.l II 8. A. I*. I.ACKY, I'alent Attorney*, <*H ' BL. near Patent o*oe. Waahtngion. It. (S (BARMAN'S HOTEL, A Opposite CkMirt llonae, BBLLKPOBTR, PA TKRMB tY.35 PF.U DAT. A good Uvsry attached. 1-ly For Sale. 4 FARM containing Fifty Acres, £.t and baring thereon etwrtod a TWOdTMRf FBAMR Rl'll. lll NO and uwt buildings Title mod. Inquire of A. J. I I. i QMKBT, Cahwnilla, Cuatrv woi.ty, Pa. I