®he (fftntw jpnswtat. BELLEFONTE, PA. Th*LargMt,Cliipeit and Bent Paper PUHLISHKD IN CKXTRK COUNTY. Three Twenty-Nino. From III* Nsw York Hon. Whl wiw It thnt from Ann* I took' Htw*ld I In sol*inti ton** and *nd Swoar that I nmr, n*vr had ? 329. What tlld Am** liar* In hla< k and whit* That "howwl m* up In my tru* light. And loft me in a aorry plight I 329. What wn thu* pmvwl I>*votil A doubt Th* flgurmi fur which 1 mitl out, A tut which I wince have ii*nl About * 329. Wtißt nore ttiah any other thing— Tlmn *Urv grab <>r pitTing Ring— Mv (low nlnll ut the pulls sliall bring * 329. THOSE REBEL CLAIMS! Governor Wlltz and Senator • Elect Itaudull Gibson, of Louisiana, on Southern Claim* untl Aims. PEACE BETWEEN TIIE RACER —ORIIF.R AND CIVII, SERVICE REFORM TIIE DESIRE OF THE SOUTH TO-DAY. The following letter, written by Gov ernor Wilts, of Louisiana, to a gentle man in Illinois, bus been handed for publication to the World. In connection with an interview, printed below, with Senator-elect Randall Gibson, of Louis iana, now in this city, it may be taken as the voice of Louisiana in regard to the bugaboo of the rebel claims, as well as sundry other matters of great imme diate public interest: STATE or LOUISIANA, EXECUTIVE I>E- ) I'ARTMENT, NEW ORLEANS, December 21, ISBO. ) Wm. Van Foris, Sayhrook, Mr Lean County, Illinois. SIR: I have received and carefully considered your letter of September 14 and the inclosed extract from a printed interview with "Judge Southworth," originally from the Chicago Inter-Ocean. The words put into the mouth of the Judge are untrue from beginning toend in every particular—so absurdly false that I cannot see what good they can do to the Republicans in Illinois or elsewhere. Vet. from personal observa tion during a late prolonged tour in the West and Northwest, I am more than ever convinced that, on the part of many, deep and bitter prejudices are cherished against the people of our Southern States which time alone can cure. They may survive for a score of years longer among the bigoted and ignorant, although generous and intel ligent Northern people are getting rid of sentiments so unworthy of them as citizens of a common country who should be at peace in fact HA well as in name. I must say here that people who will believe one-half of what Judge Southworth is represented as having said are so grossly benighted that no denial, no facts, no argument can change their notions. All the cur rent charges made agninst Southern white men by Republican speakers and writers are for the ignorant classes only. These charges are easily inatle and for the past dozen years Republican speak ers and writers have shown great inven tion in framing them and remarkable perseverance in urging them. Rest assured, sir, that the supply will always , be equal to the demand, and that there will not be lacking manufacturers to furnish or political hawkers to peddle out their slanders against the Southern people so long as they are known to influence ignorant voters. These reck less and grossly untruthful charges against us, although a thousand times proved false, will he ten thousand times repeated throughout the Northern States until the day of the election. While willing to aid in dispelling those prejudices, I expect but little practical benefit from any denials we may make against political defamation ; but as an evidence that I appreciate the spirit which prompts intelligent North ern men like yourself to defend us, I will briefly comment on some of the more common accusations. First —The Southern people have nev er at any time asked for the payment of their debts, or of any portion of them, by the Federal Government. Each Southern Siate has now a Demo cratic Legislature, and most of them have had Democratic legislatures for several years, but no resolution has been adopted or proposed in any South ern legislature asking from Congress remuneration for property destroyed by war or for slaves emancipated. No Southern journal has set up any such claim. For some years I have been in immediate intercourse with thousands of my fellow-citizens of this and other Southern States, but I am yet to hear the first man, old or young, urge this doctrine or express the hope that such debts will be paid by Congress at any future time. Nor do they murmur at bearing their share of the Federal debt, the interest of which, to a large extent, is paid out of revenues based upon Southern exports. They desire a peace ful, constitutional and economical ad ministration, and this they hope soon to have; but they seek no bounty from the Federal Treasury and they will shrink from no burden which such a Government may impose. As for Louisiana it was much damag ed by the war, but our State was damag ed quite as much by misrule under the carpet baggers—to the extent of more than $200,000,000. Under pacific ad ministration of the Federal Govern ment and honest and efficient home government our people hope to repair the injuries suffered from intruders after the war ; but be assured that they will not seek this reparation from Con gress. Second —lt is charged that Southern voters are kept from the polls by violence. In December, 1879, an elec tion was held in Louisiana for State officers, members of the Legislature, Sheriffs and looul magistrates, and at the same time a new constitution was submitted for ratification. More than one hundred and fourteen thousand votes wore polled, of which the Repub lican candidate for Governor received 41,000. Colored voters in great num bers supported the Democratic ticket, which was elected by a majority of more than thirty thousand, while the constitution was ratified by a vote of S"i,os. r against 20,483. The constitution, framed by a Democratic hotly, was thus supported by 13,000 Republicans or more. This fact alono is enough to show that the election was peaceful ami orderly. 1 never knew of an election, here or anywhere, more en tirely fair and quiet. There was no violence at or near the polle ; there wero no threats of violence made be fore, during or after the election; there were no arms shown at the polls; no laborers were discharged or threatened with discharge for exercising their free choice. < >ur system of legislation is thorough and fair. Our laws require polls to be located for the greutest convenience of voters. The votes of colored men are solicited by the candi dates of all parties, and they vote, as do voters elsewhere, according to their personal or political preference. Note this: Our Constitutional Convention in 1879, over which I presided, was in daily session from April 21 to July 23, or over ninety days. Two-thirds of the delegates wero Democrats. In all that time no measure, resolution or ordin ance was proposed or thought of for taking away, abridging or modifying the right of suffrage of colored citizens. Without a dissenting vote the conven tion adopted an article (No. 188) declar ing that " No qualification of any kind for suffrage or office, nor any restraint upon the same, on account of race, color or previous condition, shall he made, hy law." That declaration, made by a democratic body, was ratified by eighty five thou sand voters, and it is now a part of our fundamental law. Third —The charge is made that the | negroes are cheated out of their wages and are made to work for the whites without pay. There is as little of truth as of common sense in this charge. When labor is plenty and the demand limited wages are low; but labor is in demand throughout the more product ive regions of the South and fair wages are regularly paid for it. Taking the year through, colored laborers get more than twice the average wages paid in Europe and quite as much as are paid in the Northern States. They are i adapted to the rlimate and familiar with Southern crops. Reing unre strained in their action, they go where they can get the best wages and where they are most needed. If ill-treated : they do not return to the same employ j *r, but that seldom happens, because ! few planters are so unwise us to drive j away the laborers on whom they de j pend for making and securing crops. : While perfectly at liberty to emigrate 1 to Kansas or elsewhere, not one in every five hundred of them has gone. Those who were cheated into the " exodus" movement are either coming home or anxious to coine. You know that they have the same natural attach ment for the land of their birth as white people have. They are providing themselves with home comforts, and now that they are less misguided and deceived by mischievous political ad venturers and agitators, they are con tented, and steadily gaining ground. In a word their white neighbors uro honest, and their relations with them are universally amicable. They have ' learned that they were greatly damaged by the bad government and high taxes of the carpet-bag dynasty, and they are fast finding out who their best friends uro. Fourth —lt is charged that the people of Louisiana are neglecting the educa tion of children—of white children to a great extent and of colored children altogether. We must admit that the enormous looses resulting from the war i and the damages, equally as great, re suiting from the intrusive radical State I and local misrule and spoilation, have j left the people of LouiiiAna too poor to i compete with wealthy States in free public education. Rut what are the j facts ? Refore carpet-bag State rule here j we had a free school, seminary and university fund of about a million and a half of dollars, represented by bonds on which the State paid interest for the support of public schools Rnd institu tions of learning. Under the carpet baggers, the whole of this fund was em bezzled, squandered, diverted to had uses or frittered away. Yet our Con stitutional Convention of 1879, a Demo cratic body, declared the original fund to be a debt due by the State and made the State Treasury perpetually charge able with the payment of annual inter est thereon for the benefit of public schools, the seminary and university. The same convention appropriated the State poll tax, never leas than $1 per capita, exclusively to public schools. Our State tax is limited to six mills and of this one mill is for educational pur poses. The interest on the proceeds of all public bonds granted by the United Slates, and all future grants, bequests and donations to the State, and all vacant estates falling to the State by escheat, are devoted by the constitution to the same purpose. In addition to these sources ot support for schools each parish is authorized to levy a tax for the public schools therein. Funds from all sources are equally distributed according to the number of children of designated age and they are employed impartially for colored children as well as white. There is, moreover, an in stitution, the Southern University, pro vided for by constitution and statute exclusively for the education of colored students. Let these facta apeak for the slandered white men or Louisiana! The foundation of a thorough school system has been laid again over the ruins of that which the carpet baggers destroyed. If left at peace and favored with prosperity our people will complete and perfect the edifice. The cause of universal education has many devoted supporters all over the state and it is universally encouraged hy all classes. Schools for colored children are open every year in all sections for a period as long ss the funds will permit, and their instruction Is everywhere favored and nowhere opposed or discouraged. In conclusion let me assure you, and through you all who are interested in our welfare, that Iho white people of Louisiana expect for themselves and their descendants to remote generations that the colored people and their de scendanta will be with them un fellow citizens and a* joint occupants of the land, and that therefore wo desire to sen theiu improve in every respect cal culated to make them intelligent, hon est, peaceful, law-abiding, thrifty and prosperous. Tho foregoing statement may correct erroneous impressions elsewhere than in your town and county. You are there fore at liberty to give this letter any circulation or publicity you may deem proper. I have the honor to ho your obedient servant, Louis A. WII.TZ, Governor of Louisiana. TIL K REIIEI. CI,AI MS, REVENUE REFORMS AND TIIK CIVII. SERVICE. Senator-elect Randall Gibson, of Louisiana, who is at tho New York Hotel, said last night in reply to a World reporter's question about Gen. Hancock's letter on the alleged "South ern claims"l cannot commend that letter too highly. 1 endorse every word of it. Such an expression from General Hancock was called for and was properly made, but had the Repub licans understood how absurd it was to make an ado over 'rebel claims,' they would have chosen some other subject. There has never been any talk in any part of the South, so far as I know, cer tainly not in J,ouiiana, about making any claim of any kind against the Gov ernment. The mere idea would have been laughed to scorn. I do not sup pose a single sane ex-slaveholder in the South lias ever indulged a hope of com pensation for the loss of his property by the war. It was the penalty of war. If the South to-day had tho privilege to determine by vote whether or not payment should he made for tho freed slaves there would be an overwhelming majority in the negative. The result would be not merely a matter of honor but of self-interest. There were only 350,000 slave-owners in the South before the wur—a very small proportion of the total voters. Twenty years have since passed and the negroes also are voters. Uf the slave-owners themselves few would vote for such an unjust payment. The men who have grown up and ac quired property since slave times would not be taxed for such a purpose and the negroes would vote against it. Thus if the matter were left to the decision of the South no 'rebel claim' would he paid, and so those people at the North who pretend to be a alarmed have even less cause for alarm than they thought tliev had. When it is added that the fourteenth amendment to the Constitu tion effectually bars such claims, that j General Hancock, if elected l'resident, I would veto them if presented to him, | and that no Southern Congressman who ' would vote lor tlu-ni would meet the ' approval of hi* constituent*. I think I the subject is disposed of. Really, the | 'rebel claim' erv was so absurd thai it is a sad commentary upon the degree of intelligence attributed by some North ern Republicans to the people that it had to be put down." General Gibson further said that the •South hs no schemes of any kind on hand. She discovered by the result of the war that, as an enemy, the North is too strong for her, and she wants to be in the Union for her own safety and comfort and honor and glory, and un der tho protection of the Constitution her people wish simply to pursue the avocation* of peace. Said General Gib son ; "I have received as high honors as my State and city could jmssihlv con fer upon me. lam provided for in ad vance for nine years- in Congre** until I*B3, and then in the Sonnte until 1889 —and I think that I may speak for Louisiana, if not for the whole South. My views have alwnys been freely ex pressed and they were well known in my State before the honor* referred to were conferred upon me. I atn a hard money man and am opposed to repudi at inn in any form. I voted in 1876 against the repeal of the Resumption act and Louisiana approved my con duct. I am in favor of reforms in tho tanff in the direction of free trade, but they should be made gradually and carefully, never to the destruction of interests that depend upon protection. In the matter ol the civil service I think there should be a reform accord ing to the Jeffersonian idea, office holders who have discharged their duties faithfully, without prostituting their positions to further political end*, should be retained in office whether they are in harmony with the victori ous party or not. Kvery change- in the fortunes of parties should not he made a signal for ihe change of all the hold ers of office. When General Hancock is President I shall vote in Congress in accordance with this view." ■ # The Tradition* of the Father*. Hon. Lyman Trumbull, tho Demo crntic candidate for the Governorship of Illinois, is happier in hi* replies to interruptions tlmn is John Sherman. In the midst ol hi* recent speech at Duquoin a colored man in the crowd wanted the speaker to tell what he meant by the constitutional doctrine* Htid traditions of the Democratic party. Mr. Trumbull took *omc pains to give the information, and closed by saying : "Now then, what we mean by going back to tho traditions of the fathers is going back to economy, to simplicity in the government, to an honest admin istration of its alt'nirs to rescuing the government from the hands of the plunderers; and the traditions of the fathers means that honest, simple, plain government of equality which was announced by Jefferson that all men aro created equal and endowed by their creator with certain inaliena ble rights among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. | Loud and continued cheering. J And you, my colored friend, I drafted the constitu tional amendment that made you free [renewed cheers and waving of hats], •nd more than that, after that constitu tional amendment was adopted and you could not £et your civil rights —there were laws in the Southern Htates that would not allow you to go where you pleased, and to make contracts and en force them—this hand drew the civil rights bill that protected you in your oivil rights. [Renewed cheer.J And . . Vi '• now 1 suppose you will allow some man to come along here to Duquoin and say : 'Oh! these Democrats want to enslave us.' Who made you freo? Humner and Chase and Greeley—were not we the men that did it'.' And every one of them you came out against, misled by the falsehoods and slanders ami lies of parties that go through the commu nity und charge upon the Democratic party that they want to re-establish slavery. Nobody but a fool would be lieve it." ■ Garfield and the TarilK HIS ItKCORD IN CONG REM ON THE HUIMKCT OK FREE TRADE AND PROTE< TION. From lli llnrrll/iirK Patriot. The Republican politicians have been most unfortunate in their selec tion of issues for the presidential can vass. In the first instance they un dertook to make their campaign on a revival of the sectional question with the bloody shirt as their battle-flag. The defeat in Maine sent them to the right-about and they have chosen to light with another battle-cry, the an cient slogan of the wings, a "tariff for protection." But their inconsistency and insincerity in this attempt to re vive an old issue are so evident that it is plain they have blundered ugaiu. They cannot ask nor expect the confi dence of the people in their pretense of favoring a tariff for protection with a candidate for president whose whole record is but a testimony of his de votion to free trade principles. We reprint below the record of General Garfield in congress on the tariff ques tion and challenge the Republican pajiers to deny its correctness : TEA AND COFFEE. On the 7th of July, 18Go*e duties on the fewest possible atticles. Twenty five years ago in Kogland there were more than 1,400 different article* on which duty wa* imposed and now they have been so reduced lhat upon five articles more than half the revenue of the country is collected. In Kngland in iStl'J $354,000,(XX) of revenue w-re raised, and of tliHt sum $189,000,000 were derived from five article*, namely : fermented, malt and spiritous liquors, and tea, coffee and tobacco and sugar in their various forms. "I say th*t these five article* afforded the government of Great Britian sl*9. (XXt.tXX) of it* revenue, the total of wtnch was $154,000000. Thus almost two thirds ot the revenues were raised from five articles, and two of the five were coffee and tea. Twenty-two mil lions live hundred thousand dollars were raised in l (Jon;/ret*. The Hon. W. I). Kcllcv nml till other member* of Congress in favor of protection voted against thin joint res olution repealing the duty on coal. FOREIGN IRON, lrn . During the first session of the Thirty-eight Congress the tariff on pig iron was rained from SMI to 8!) per ton. On j>age 3:112, part IV. of the Congrewional Globe of 1864, .June 27, we find .lame* A. Ourfield voting to reduce the proposed tariff on railroad iron from eighty down to sixty cents per hundred pounds, and on the final vote on raising the tariff his vote is not recorded. On the reduction of t la duty on railroad iron he voted in op position to every protective tariff man in the House, including such men a* .Judge Kcllcv,'i haddcus Stevens and General .J. K. Moorhead. In 1870 the duty of SO per ton on pig iron was reduced to 87 jar ton. General Gar field voted for the reduction. In 1872 a bill making a reduction of ten per cent, in the duties on wools, iron and steel passed Congress. This bill provided : "That on and after the Ist day of August, 1872, in lieu of the duties im posed by law on the article* in thi* sec tion enumeiated, there shall be levied, | collected and paid on goods, ware* and merchandise in this section enumerated and provided for imported from foreign i countries, ninety per centum of the ! several duties and rates of duty now imposed by law upon said article* sev erally, it bring the i ntrnt of thil section to I i educe twitting duties on taul articles ten per i centum if surh duties, that is to say : • ••*•• 't n all wool*. * * * * "On all iron and steel, and on all iron and steel, and on all manufacture* of iron and steel, of which metals, or j either of them, shall be the component part of chief value, excepting cotton | machinery." The vote of Genera! Garfield on the ! passage of this tariff bill on dune 6, ! 1x72, will be found in the Congres ; slonal (Hole, Part V., 2d session 42d < "ongrc-s, p. 3,652. It is recorded yr*j. Thus it will lc seen that General i ' iurficld voted in favor of every re j duct ion of the tariff on foreign iron I during the last six fern years. VIEWS ON FREE TRADE. In a debate on the tariff question in 1 the House of Representatives, on July j 10, 1866, .'sJtl Congress, General Gar field said : "I am willing a* a compromise to favor the reduction of the proposed duty on railroad iron, and I presume the committee on railroads will agree i with me in this. I think we should also reduce the proposed duty on salt : and I have no doubt in several other particulars we will reduce the rate of | duly." Mr. Thaddeus Stevens replied with this question: "Why not come out honestly and accept the pror osition of the gentleman from lowa | Mr. Wilson, who favored a tariff for revenue only] which is a much more ingenious one?" To which General Garfield respond ed that "Against the abstract doctrine of free trade as such very little can be said. A* a theory there i* much to commend it. But it can never he applied to value* except in time of peace. On April 1, Ix7o, the following de hate took place in the House of Rep resentatives between General Garfield ami Hon. W. D. Kclley of Philadel phia ? "Mr. Garfield : As an abstract theory of |>olitical economy free trade has many advocates and much can be said in its favor; nor will it be denied that the scholarship of modern times i* largely on thnt aide ; that a large ma jority of the great thinkers of the pres ent day are leading in the direction of what is called free trade. "Mr. Kelley: The gentleman says that no man will deny that the tenden cy of opinion among scholars ia toward free trade. I beg leave to deny it. and do moat positively. The tendency of opinion among the scholars of the con tinent is very decided towsrds protec tion. This is strikingly illustrated by the recent publication in six of the languages of the continent of the vol uminous writings of Henry 0. Carey, and their adoption as text books in the schools of Prussia. 1 think the gentle man's proposition is true of the Knglish speaking people of the world, hut that the preponderant tendency is the other way." See Appendix to Congressional Globe, 2d session, 41st Congreu. p. 268. A Democratic .Methuselah. MCMJ. naowNrixi.n, aotn 101 VKARS, MAKES A HANCOCK SPEECH. From Iti* PlillsiMphls limn. An interesting meeting was hold by the Democrats of Monroe, Fayette county, on Saturday night last. Col. Benjamin Brownfieid, a wealthy farm er, aged 101 years, presided. There were six vice presidents on the plat form with Itini, whose united ages reach 609 years. Colonel Brownfieid, in opening the meeting, said: "Providence has been very kind to me in prolonging my life and blessing me with health and strength. I have lived to be 101 years old. This is a great age. In my earlier days I took an active part in politics. I have mingled with your fathers and grandfathers and great grandfathers on occasions like this in daysJong gone in the past. 1 voted for Thomas Jefferson fcr president ia 1800, Wa had the same question up then that wry have now, whether this wan a Government of unlimited power or a government of a few simjile func tions expressly granted by the cofitj. tution. Mr. .Jefferson contended that the great MaM of t)i jtower* of run government remained with the state, while Mr. Adam* and hi* party "in tended for a strong central government to override the htate government*. J never missed a presidential ejeetion. I voted twice for Jefferson, twice for Mad ison, twice for Monroe and (lire,, time-, for General Jackson. I voted for Van Ruren and also for I'olk, Ca, Pierre Huchanan, Douglass, McGlellan, Sey mour, Greeley and Tilden.and J hopeio live to vote for General Hancock, and a* the reault of rny long experience j would advise you to vote for him Ue, The vice president* were: .!■ im j TrttUtinan, fM yours; Colonel .Jaini. | (Jttrdner. H(i; .lame* fSnyder, *■'>; I. M. < 'lawsoti, *2 ; Ceo. Morri-on, -■ ], I and Thomas Soman*, *l. s:*!£!>. "I never turned, received or agreed t , rr rriee any slock of iff t'reJit Mass Grant's present professed devotion to the sacrednes of the American ballot."—( '■amhrta freeman, STATE NORMAL SCHOOL (Kighth Xor mat Srhoot District,) LOCK IIAVEX, CLINTON Co., PA. A. N. HAI 11, A. M., Principal. r PHIS SCHOOL, aa at present con -I stltwtad. ofTr. lbs wry l-r-t tart lip for pro fr*,lonsl and Chum*! Irarnlnf. Building. •)*< ton., lantinr sad ma modi so, n,n plMelr boated by .team. ssll T-ntiiai*!. and fun -s el * 'lb • ts-uiilifu! ,u,| 1} <.f w.tet.e.ft u mr, • * Uirstt.-s healthful *nd e*i of art am. Surrounding sr-narv nn.urpaa.ed etprtleawd, slolist, and alls* IMsi Ipllns. firm and kind, uniform and Utormnih Kl-na. m -dsrat* taar'h ' r,BU * *"* k dadurtion to tboaa pr apart ng to Student* admitted at any time. Coarse, of .tody preami-ad by bs Stat, I. Mod, I Mitifir r rl*raUiry. 111. Klstnsntary. IV. Sc.. ARrrscv roratcs I. Acmlemlr. 11. OmniuTnal 111 Mtudr. IV. Art. Ths Elementary and Mentis. more* are !•>>- Wsncmal. aadtOrdeuls granatin, therein we,,,, HI pinna, mo fern as tbe folb.a.ng mrreH.mdlnc d, grew Master of tbe Klemenu. and Ma* In ."tl.e Scdencea. t.ta-lnate. In tl.e „,he, nonme. rem!.. thVriinm alUlanenn. Ico-d by ,* Th * Praf>lnoal (mr- ore liberal, aad are Is *r '—t rolleci* The State require* a higher order of ritlr-nehn. Tbe tine, demand It. I, km of thi. arhonl In Hfd"l.*mllMT. , ** rh * r * for h " "''• Ih.. rood p*rp*s thn*e nhr. deal re in Imn-nre their time and thrdr talent., a* .indent. To all each it prt.-ml.aaa '■ derelojgng their ponera and atmndar-t opportnnitlea for eell-pald Uhnr ItC.r For ratalogna and tern, nddreea the Frtncirml a. ** ~ oaas or Tat .raa. stnrkholder* Troeten~J 11. Xnrton. M B i It Beat, Jacob Rmnn. R. M. Mr hford, Samuel t brteL A N Rani-, Ik O. Cook, T. C. HlppU ST O Kie.l... " MtATENTS procure! ujton Invcn- I tlnna. No Arroasti'. Pm is Attr.sra. (btr llonae teas rateblMted In ISSB. We flle CAVXATS ami obtain TRADK MARKS. PKSIQN CATRNTS Ac' I NVENTORS "*. * f Fr I near Hon. aith yonr own lfrn|*t4*n of It. fiif our o|4nU>n h ki No Armiit'i rats t suna p.trsr ts Sms-nnn. Owr Bm>k of In.tnK-ti.m. dr., " I low fn hwiTM P.rsst. '' f'" free nn requew ; also aaanple rnples of tlt. *nu. nc K*t .i*e, the Inrentnra' Jonmnl A. P. I.ACKI , /\ifsf Affonwy*, *•* F St_ near Snlent (MWr*. WMHnglm. B t ( RAHMAN'S HOTKL. \X Oppoaila Cunrt llotne, RRLLRFUNTR, PA TERMS H tf. pRR DAT. A |pood Uverv attarhed. J_,J For Sale, i FARM (XioUining Filly Acrcx, VH7m TWTBRTORX 1- ? *"-BI>IQ end oat bnlldlnp Title gnJ. Inquire of A. J. * T A URlwf Vhtanrllln, Centre osoaty, fs,