tfhr Cfutrt g3 tmottat. BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Beet Paper PUBLISH Bt) IN CINTHB COUNTY. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT is pub- Itahed every Thursday morning, at Bellefonts, Isntre county, Pa. TERMl—Cash In advance St tiO If out (Mltl in advanca... - U OO A LIVI PAPER—devoted to the interest* ol the whole people. Payment* mad* within three month* will be con* •ldered In advance. No paper will dl*rontiiiud until arrearageaar* paid, eionpt at option of publishers. Paper* going out of the couuty inuat be paid for In ndvauc*. Any person procuring ua tenraah subscribers will be eent a copy free of charge. Ourettenaive circulation make# thia paper an un* aeually reliable and prort table medium for advertising We have Ihe most ample facilities for JOB VSoKh and are prepared to print all kind* of Hooka, Tract*, programmes. Poster#, Commercial printing, Ac., lu the finest style and at the loweet possible rate* All advertisements for a lens t. rui than three month* SO cente per liue for the first three insertions, and " cents a line for each additional lueertlou. special notices one-half more. Editorial notices 15 cents per line. toTli'l*. in • •cat columns, 10 cents per line A liberal dierount is made to persona advertising by the quarter, ball year, or year, as follows: sraci occrrtßD. One inch (or 12 linos thia type) / , If 12 Two inches 7 I I 15 T'iree inch**. . ••••10 l;n tj ar>r column (or 5 Inches) 11.' . ■ :ui H ilf cdtihin cr 10llckw) ,10 i'| 06 On*c*diiutn or ioinclieei .. ........plo 55,10b P •relgn advertisement* must be paid for before In • ertioa, except on early con tract • when half-yearly pavment m advance win ue required An Important Derision. A decision has juet been rendered by Judge Allison, of Philadelphia, which is likely to revolutionize a system which has long been practiced at election times, frequently to the detriment and defeat of honest measures and good candi dates. We allude to the custom of tin payment of taxes of individual voters on the suppo- t n that such vo ers will support the party presenting nun with a tax receipt, 'lite case which called fo>- Judge Allison's ruling was that on which a voter named Durst prosecuted William H. Shrouds for illegally reject ing his vote at the last election, while Acting as judge in the Eleventh division of the twelfth ward of Philadelphia. It tppeared that Durst went early to the polls to vote an<l was challenged. He we-it home and returned with his na ura'i aliou papers and tax receipt. He was igiin challenged on the ground that ha l nil paid for ihf ten receipt. Theotlic -r were in a quandary. The in speciors referred the matter to Shrouds, thejudg-. The latter called Durst in de and proceeded to swear him. Durst, ho -ever, refused to take an affidavit mat ne bad paid a State or county tax within two years or had it authorized to he paid for him. He said that he had not personally paid or authorized the payment of the tax, but relied alto gether on the receipt. Shrouda refused to take the vote. Durt then obtained a paper from the Court advising the Election Hoard, upon the caae, as stated to them, to accept Duast's vote if he vras "olherwi-e qualified." Shrouds, however, declined to receive the ballot. Durst testified on Tliur-day that he believed that the tax receipt had been paid for by the Republican City Com mittee, but he did not know so ol his own knowledge, and had refused to lake an affidavit because of this uncer tainty. The testimony of both sides us to the facts and circumstances was sub stantially the same. Maxwell Stevenson, the counsel for the defense, took the ground thai Durst, in failing to pay his poll-tax or in deputizing anv one to do it, had not complied with the requirement" of toe new Constitution as to the qualification of voters, and that Shroud* was there fore justified in refusing to take the ballot. Judge Allison, in a long and compre henive charge on this point, said: ' The new Constitution holds as one of tbe qualifications of a voter that fie"— emphasizing the pronoun "shall have paid a State or county lax within two year*. The refusal ot the pro-ecu tor in this case to make oath thai he had male such a payment, in connection with the admission that lie had not made it and had no personal knowledge of its haying been paid, justified the judge in rejecting the vote." The Judge called the attention of the jury to the phrase ology of the Constitution ; that proper ly interpreted, would require that the tax should he paid by tbe voter bimsclf or by some person whom he had autho rized to pay it for him. In the latter instance, lie said, the principle would apply that what a man does by another he does by himself. "Hut this," he said, "by no means allows a stranger to intrude himself into the business of a voter, who alone on determine wheth er he would pay tax as a qualification for voting or not. The custom hes pre vailed in thia city, and been extensively practiced, of ohuining names of voters from the assessment list and without the authority of the voter, and even without his knowledge, having taxes paid for him." This, the Judge thought, does not constitute a legal payment oi tax, because it is not done by tbe voter directly or indirectly, and is an un authorized act of a stranger on whom tbe law confers no such right. If the defendant in the case before him. he •aid, bad accepted the prosecutor's vole, he would bare been more pro|>erly chargeable with violating the Uw than by the act for which he waa indicted. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty and put tbe costs upon the pros ecutor. Retiring General McDowell. WAJHUTOTOK, March 24. —Home little excitement prevail* in army circle* here to-night over a report, said to emtnili from trustworthy source*. that the Presi dent hM practically determined to place Major General McDowll on the retire list and to promote Generals Pope and Mo- Kenzie. These change* are *aid to con stitute one ol the objects of General Orant'a present visit to Washington. General McKmsie is said to be one of General Grant's favorites, whose pro motion in the service has been unusually rtpid. His proposed advancement, is not generally approved by army officers Jtere, Longfellow Dead. SKETCH or TUECAKEkKOP TIIB EAMOUI AMER ICAN I'OET. BOSTON, March 24. Henry WadswoKli Longfellow, (ho poet, died at 3.15 i*. M. to-day, at iiia limine in Combridge, sur rounded by his tnmily. He hud been ailing lor some time |>unt, hut it wan only yesterday that sign* of immediate din nnlutinn manifested themselv*. Mr. Longfellow wan horn at i'ortlund, Me,, February 27, 1807, and at the ugc of 14, when he entered Bowdoin College, had already given evidences ol poetic taate and genius. After graduation lie essayed the study ol the law with bin lather, but hia tantea aoon led him to accept the teniier of the Professorship of Modern Languages in bin Alma Mater, and after fouryeatsof travel abroad—in 1830—he entered upon the duties of the position, which he faithfully and satis tactorily tilled until 1835, when he re signed to accept a similar professorship at Harvard, and then again spent two veara in foreign travel. Removing to Cambridge, Mass., Professor Longfellow devoted himself lor seventeen years to the Harvard prolesaorship, which ho re signed in 1854. Mr. L< tn gi el low's first volume of poems was published in 1833, ami thencelor word ins work improved and his name spread until his poems have been trans lated into almost every spoken lng uuge, and his name to day is u tannlinr one throughout the civilized world. Mr. Longfellow paid a third visit to Europe in 1868 69,0n which occasion he eceived the degree of D C. L. from the I'niversity of Oxford. He h<d already received the degree of LL. I), from Harvard in 1859, and that ol P. C. L. from Cambridge, England, in 1868. In 1873 the Academy ol Russia, an institu tion founded by the Empress Catherine II in 1773, and in every respect a coun terpart of the Academy Francaise, ex cept that highly distinguished foreign writers can he elected honorary mem bers, conferred that distinction on Mr. Longfellow, and also on the I tie Wil liam Cullen Bryant. This distinction would have secured to the poet, in case lie had ever visited Ru*ia, the honors due to a nobleman of the first rank. In 1874 he received a large complimentary vole for the Lord Rectorship of the University of E iinhurg, ami in 1*75 be received from the Emperor of Germany the Order of Civil Merit. In 1*77 he was elected an honor,try member of the Spanish Academy. The poet married Marv S. Potter when he was tut 21 years of Rite, but his wife lived only four years. K ght year* later he married Frances Eiizibetb Ap pleton, who died in I*6l under verv tragic circumstances, Iter death being the result of serious burns. I. mgfellow's surviving family consists of two sons and three daughters. The Christianity of Longfellow was as simple as that of the N-w I estanient, and as catholic, his creed, hi* worship and his life were love. Ex-Senator Wallace. IIE I* INTMVIEU zt> o\ THE roi.iri" \i. SIT CATIO* AMI Tun I'Rosru T.s or Tiu nr.- M*; a ACT. The traveling correspondent of the Philadelphia I'reu, interviewed ex Sen tor Wallace on a rdlmad train the other <lsy ami succeeded m discovering that Mr. Wallace has no favorite for the gubernatorial nomination. Tne corres pondent also learned from the ex sena tor that the democratic psrtv is held to gether and sustained by its devotion to principles while the reputdican parly is kept Iroiu tailing to pieces hv lite slick itig plaster of the spoils. Hv further vigorous pumping the enterprising cor respondent got front bis victim an opin ion that "the democrats will nominate ihe next governor."' The interview is prt-lixd by the following compliment to Mr Wallace which is worthy of note as coming from a prominent republican source: "Mr. Wallace has rarely been in Wn-hinglnn since lie left the senate. How strangely ddl'erent from t he course of most men who have lived in the glare or official Ide at the national Capital. It is a ins-1 incboiy fact that men, who have f-een in congress ami gone out, like night flies hover about the old tim" light, rl eh into its (lame for a moment • >nly to be turned aw -y to-come again. Rid nf tbe cares of public lite they can not ml themselves of the desire to pose slatueque|v belore the phuliC eye. flow ollcn have I seen bright men reach the level ot the lobby from the height of a seat in congress. They must be in Washington, and they take what offers. How olten rosy they be seen trading on tbe standing they gained as congress men an'i the privileges they have as ex members, plying their vocation of cor rupt manipulation as shamelessly as courtesans practice their art* under the glare of gas, l lnly the strong men resist. Only the rich and brave return to their homes content to enjoy their fortune* in the respected dignity of private life, or labor like other men to gain an honest living. Wallace left the senate with great influence in the councils of his party, but he has content ed himself Industriously practicing his profession and accumulating wealth in the coal fielda of the Clearfield region." In response to the sensational report of the *|>rcad of small-pox at South Bethlehem, A. 8. Goodwin, Chief Bur ges* of the town telegraphs under date of Sunday as follows: "The spread of •mall |>nx in South Hcthleheni appears to be considerably checked. Only three caaea were reported yealerday and three o far to-day. Six houses were relieved frnm quarantine today and several more are being fumigated. There are now exactly 100 houses under quaran tine, inanv of which we expect soon to relieve. Not a single case of small pox has occurred where there had been re cent successful vaccination. The mem bers of tbe Board of Health think that they have good reason to take a hopeful view of the situation. Homo*, Mich., Sept. 25, 1875. Sir* —l have been taking Hop Hitter* for inflamation of the kidneys and blad der. It has done for me what four doc tors tailed to do. The effect of Hop Bitters seemed like magic to me. W ,L. CASTS*. I HAD Neuralgia and Palpitation of the heart. PXRI'NA cured me. Aco. M Bi'ißaT, Pittsburg, Pa. The Fulling Rivera. ENCOt'HAIIINU NEWS I'RON EVERV (JL'AKTEII —AN ESTIMATE Of THE OVERFLOW. Vicksiicho, Mia., March 24. Fncournging news from every quarter regard nig the lulling river* continues to lie received. I.urge port ion* of tillable land in the Yazoo, Tallahatehiu and in the Deer Creek country are reported clear ot water, with a rapid fall in there streams, also above here on the Missis sippi river. Dry land is appearing in several places on the Mississippi side, and planters in that quarter are feeling encouraged accordingly. At Delta, La., the river has fallen two inches in the past twenty four hours, wiih a gradual decline above that point as far up us Henderson. It is believed that plant' ing operstions will be in progress on Deer creek in about ten days and on the Sunflower in about twenty. Steam boats still continue to bring large lots of cattle, people and plunder from the flooded districts to this point. New Ori.eanr, March 24.—A Delphi (La.) special says the Black and Tensas rivers and Bayou Macon are rising rapidly and tears were entertained that the slock scaffolded along these stream* would h drowned. The loss of stoek is now estimated ut jf.'KMKK) arid the loss in fences w 1 amount to SIOO 000. Fif ty-eight thousand people live along these streams and cultivate one hun dred thousand acres of land. The over flow hi Concordia parish extends from the Black to the Mississippi river, ailis lance of thirty five miles; in Tensas parish, Irom Tensas river to the Mis sissippi river, a distance of thirty miles; in Franklin parish, from Tensas west to Ouachita river,a distance of lew miles; Madison parish, from Hiyou Macon to the Misslssipi river, a distance ot thirty five imles; Fast Carroll, from Bayou Macon to the Mississippi river, 10 miles; in the upper portion of Frankiin par ish, west of the hills ol the Tensas, which skirt Bsyou Macon, the flood ex tends to t luirhita river, a distance of 15 nnles. '1 he Tensas river since Saturday has risen 5 feel and is still rising at the rate of 11 inches in 24 hours. Along the Tensas and Bayou Macon the water is 3 feel higher thsn in 1H74, and the unprecedented flow is accounted for by l-rcnk* in the levee* at Millikcn's bend and Goodrich's landing. The ra tion* which have been sent up in this section arc sufficient to supply the wants of destitute people tor some time, un less the fl *xt becomes still more disas trous. The people nre all in good health Slid say ll the water subsides by the middle ol May they will make a full crop. Attorney General llrewster make* some Truthful Remark*. Wasiiisgtox, March 23. Attorney General Brewster has written to Dallas Sander*. Bs*itant district attorney gen eral, who is now at Charleston, S. C., ! enclosing a copy of the proceedings, testimony and argument in the con tested election case of Smalt* and j Cabman in the House, calling Ins un<l •Judge Melton's attention to It. and di reeling a thorough investigation and i the prosecution ol the most im|>ortant person* '"concerned in these attempts to defeat honest elections by fraUdu lent or forcible mean*. The prosecu j lion of a few insignificant and obscure persons, he says, he "will not consider a* being tiioso that justice recpnres to be instituted and pursued." Contin uing, he says, '"You are a Democrat, and I very property sympathize with your pirty, and I talk to you with a little more vigor because you are a Democrat, and also l*>cau*e we enjoy such close personal and friendly rela (ions. I wish to express my Republi rn conviction* upon the subject, but of my Republican convic Hons I intend more emphatically to in dicate how important all of this is to tinth sides, that there should l-e fur play—fair play all around. 'I here i* no just judgment of popular will in any .election (hat i* controlled or biased by ' force or fraud, and I do insist that faith Democrats and Republicans should have their fsce* set as fiinl against any abuse* against the free and fair ue ol the ballot lox." Mr. Sander* in reply says the rase* selected for trial are, ex cept in one or two counties, the m*ri | ager* of election* and the board of ! county canvasser*. The I'wlrM Republican llonac. W MhlrifUU iHiftfttfti t* tb iWvetr-tt The majority of the house is so weak ■ami no without a leadership that it i drifting. It ia daily brooming more riiilrnt that it ia the weakest majority the house m had. Reed cannot take rnmmand because be ia the moat thor oughly hated man in tha house. He cannot got up tha Geneva award bill, and it ia unfortunate that that measure should ba ontruatrd to him. because the longer action shall be delayed the more certain it ia that the government will retain the money, tin the whole, it ia aale to say that that aeema likely to he the result. Kaoon reveala an amount of nervous dread of taking reafionaibili ty not suspected of htm. and he wants the friendship of other ambitious men to aid him in his future aspirations. Iliscock ia thick headed, Robeson has no skill and ia not really reapected. Haskell ia wax rtpro*trra nihil, anil above all sita the stupid, ill mannered Keifer. Any one of a dosen members of the mi nority can floor the majority and their speaker at a moment's warning. The bankruptcy bill is not talked about, the civil service reform committees are both asleep, nothing is being done or con templated that is not in answer to some popular demand. Polygamy and the Chinese mut be liecause the pressure against them was too great to resist. As for the rest the majority of the house has not capacity enough to put through any important piece of legislation. Ir the mother is feeble It is impoesi hie that her children should be strong. I.ydta K. Pinkham's Vegetable com pound is a perfect specific in all chronic diseases of the sexual system of women. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, 223 Western Avenue, Lynn Mast., for pam phlets. Nsxt to an effeminate man there ia nolhiog so disagreeable as a manish woman. STATE NEWS. Hollidayzhurg wants u new school house. Burglar* are at work around Lewis town. Bradford is already forming a base hall club. Wayne county is accredited with sev enty six lakes. The wife of Congressman Beltzhoover, of IV, is reported critically ill, FH'ort* are being made to organize u street railway coinpuny in Johnstown. | Twelve thousand heads of cabbage j are sold yearly in the Philadelphia market. Joseph Blackburn was killed on the i Cambria Iron's Company Ksilroad, at | John-town, Thursday. Hcv. Dr. .Spalding, of St. John's 1\ K. church, York, has accepted a call to lirace church, Jersey City. The Franklin County Fair Grounds, divided into 93 lots, were sold at Cham ber-tburg, ThursiJuy, lor $14,73b. Mrs. Mary Bradley, a resident of Dor rv township, Westmoreland county, is one hundred and one years of Hge. A five year old child of Thomas Col litis, ol Dunoinre, last week while play- ! Ing near the stove, was burned to death. Scarlet fever is raging to such an ex- j lent hi Montgomery county that in con sequence a number of schools have been closed. The organization of the t.<-w fire de i part men I ol Lancaster ha* been nearly I completed, ami it will go into operation Thursday. The body of an unknown man wa recently found iii theSebuylkill river. I he body had been in the water two or three weeks. Decently a Chinese laundry man in Brad ord attempted to commit suicide i ta*cause a coloted girl did not requite his nflection. ihe advisability and advantage of a city charter tor Fusion and surround j nigs are being considered by the people of that town. Ibe H*rrihiirg Copper Mining and Smelling Company ha* struck a rich j vein of copper ore near Waynesboro, Franklin county. Rev. John Foster Halsey. D. D, pa*" tor cineruu* of the First Paethyterian church of Xmristowii, nearly h'J years of age, died on Friday, John T. Lruhig-r, a furniture dealer of ITirrist.urg. fell through an elevator on Thursday distune,- of fifty feet, and received fatal injuries. Ihe body of Mr. Abraham Good, wi.o died in < burchtotrn, Lancaster county, recently, was borne to tfie grave by Isdy pall bearer*. 11. B. Iliilmnn one of the pioneer cal operator* and an ex member ol the legislature do-d, in Wdkesbarre, on Saturday, a god seventy two years. A vein of iron ore estimated lo l> thirty fi-et in thickness liai been disci v ered on the farm of Henrv F. Diet*. in Spring Garden township, York county. A cbil'i of Samuel King, living in l.tcking frrck township, Fulton county, died few day* since Imm the effe in of being |ioiM.iic<l with impure vaccine virus. Hon. Kckley B. Coxe has mated to a rejKifler of the Potuville Miner's Journal that be will under no circummancc* so eept the Democratic nomination for Governor. Mi" Biker, aged nineteen year*, of Ml. I'leaaant, Westmoreland county, last week Was seixed with a fit, and tell nig into a puddle of water wan stran gled to death. John I.ewi, a prominent politician of Srranton, mi instantly killed on Sun day evening Urn while firm* off a blast in the ilmnpton mine*. Hi* head w. blown off and his fody frightfully man gled. The experiment* made at the Valley Forge Palm Pulp Work* on the manu facture of paper from the palm pulp having proven a mcoe" the null wol ,r c enlarged at once, and extra machin ery will be added. I- ute Steigerwall, a young lady of Lancaster, was fatally burned on Friday night. She was about retiring when her clothing took fire from a candle and "he received fatal injurie* before the Hatne* could be extinguished At a meeting of cittern* hel l in the Academy of Music, Heading, on Satur day night a resolution was adopted re •piesling President Arthur to pardon Sergeant Mason at once. Mayor I,owe presided at the meeting. it ia stated that the engineer* who are running the line of the Tucson and (iulf ol California Railroad have run aero** a wonderful mineral diatrict of silver and copper in an unexplored region, about seventy miles west of Tucson. They htol a terrible time at a Ken tucky horse race recently. The horse that sr as set ilown to be distanced took the bit in Ins teeth and, in spite of pulling, went to the front nnd won, cleaning out everybody but a green old countryman who had bet on that horae. Thorns* Gardner, one of the strikers at Homestead in January last, was tound guilty on Friday of assault and battery on a hoy in order to prevent him from going to work. Gardner was given the extreme penally of the law, which i imprisonment in the Work bouse for one year. Nineteen recruits for the regular army left Pittsbuig on Friday morning. Four of them are printers; one h*s lately been working on the Ihtpalrk, one on the fVifir, one was fiom Oreens burg, and the fourth from Alloona. One of the recruits is a graduate of Ox ford College. England, and speakg four language*. Of the nineteen there ia only one who baa no trade or profession. Lucy Morris a young lady of Reading, haa been lying in a trance aioce Thurs day last, when she was carried home from s meeting which she attended. So far all the efforts of the physicians to restore her to consciousness have been unavailing, with the exception of Sat urday evening, when she opened her eyes and asaeried that she was not sick, after which she relapsed into s comatose state. The Munbury Gazette say* there are several instances ola disease among people in it,ut city which so nearly r semhles what is known as pink-eye among horse* that it i* called by that name. At aliout 4 o'clock on Saturday morn ing Charles G. Well*, ol the Dudley Ob servalory, at Albany, N. 5 ~ discovered a I,right comet in llercule*. right ascen si.in seventeen hours fifty two minute*, north declination thirty iwo degree* thirty minutes. The oom.-t bus a tail about five rninutea in length, and a nucleus of about the eighth magnitude. The three masted schooner Isle of June arrived at New York from XaaCau, ; with a cargo of logwood. The entire I frame of the vessel is made of iiiah.'gny, I while the gangways, the skyleight* and | the finishing of the cabins ire of the ■•me wood. The lsleol June is one ol the same substantial vessels in th,. world. Her length is 101 feet, with 27 feet beam, and she draws 12$ feet of water. The vessel is owned in New York, Nassau and Camden, N. J. A farmer in the Neuslead neighbor hood, near llopkinavtlle, Ky., ielt some gitinbreled swine hanging on a pole oul jof doors. During the night a colored uiall stole a shoal ami walked of! will, 1 the pork on his shoulders. In attempt ing to pitch the siiiinul over a fence a hall mile away, the gauihrel-stick caughi the thief * neck and the force of the tall Wissogteal that the n-ck was broken, j On the following 'lay a person riding by j saw a strong ighl—on one of the fence a dead thief and suspended on the oth i .'r a dead porker. Xeiv Advertisementa. BcJlefontc Enterprises. With lice AVic Year liellefonle prom ises to develoj, into the moel prosperous of our inland towns —enterprise after ! ' ider],rise is being started by the capital of our public spiritrd citizens. The Car W orks are running to their full capaci tg, our Glass Works are opening with every show of success, the Steel Works will give employment to 100 men, the Sail Works, for whose success General Hearer vouches, will shortly offer employ ment to hundreds of pee,pie—all these public eni'rj,rises will j,ut Hell'fonts in the can of ],rosprre,us and wide-awak, towns. Here, then, u room and place tor hre/y, spirited and actire young men. Among the best find incjst suceess ful b usxnrss enterpriser organised recent ly m the LARGE A SI) WELL FILLED FUR SITE RE ROOMS of J OHS VROUDEOOT & CO.,op pout the Hush House —nothing like it in the County. If visitor* to Reliefontr will only take, the trouble to call at our Store, they well be surjirised at the quality, style and prices of firstclns* furniture. We arc aiming to buy all goods flircct/y from the manufacturers without the intervention of agents, so as to offer goods nt bottom figures. OS I. profit is sufficient. II r propose to fill your homes with Ear lor Suits, Redroom Suits, Sofas, Odd Chairs, Tables, any thinland everything in Furniture at prices lower than yon can get in this County. We mean just what we say. H e also offer the public the services oj Mr. John I*roudfoot who has a tho rough knowledge of the VSDERTAK IS ft business, and who will keep on hand, COEEISS, TRIMMISGS.de, together with a first-class HEARSE. Fair prices only will be charged. Give us a trial. JOBS PRO ID FOOT # CO. 23m. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR HA I.E. No. 1. All that certain tract of l* r "l •i * I*l' la Tsilr lfls.kl|), Ovtrr maty. I*a, b.ti<lt nA draci il-d as Mb.aa t! . Bagiimttig ai a port -m lb tarn,lk r.4; ih.n. by land .4 ' J"ii Shall' a 01. • nth U aaal HO prrrbaa la a rbestaul; ihn< m.rth TT| <Wm. an.l .'a Irrh. la a post! thwa north J.l awt H> pan-lias la s Itaa; than, a north 18 da t iaaa. raal 2J paraha. In a lad tab , thani-a earth 27 aaat parr baa la a mspla; ihanr-a math Ts -ttarm. anal 7S |aft*ta la > pal . Ihanra aoalh 111 da(raaa, aaal |ii paathaa la lha placa of Winning—t-na talnlng Fifty-Six Acres, more or less. Tbara-a atartod a tary lltir Kl. Ilaial Slalda. Bank Rank. IHatilbry and uibar oallwildluga All la good nedaa and aoadlitaa. No. 2. Also nil that certain men ansga, laoamant and Irani of land Stasia in said laaaabln. lying n, *r or adjrdntn, lha nU.*a trarl: BnanSos by lands nf Ilia 11,1-1 Kagla Paranaa can,any and tdbara Snn( lha aaaia ,-f a.nlaaa shell Thornaa MaOiy, High ShatlS at Ontra c-aaty. I.y daad datad Knaaaibar M, ISIWi, la Jufca i .|onbavav— •saMrtag 147 ACRES, more or less. Tbarana aaaalad TWO OWKLUXO tIOISKe. Bams and oihat nattxaiMlagi No. 3. All that certaio messuage, taaaiaaat and Iran ..(land sonata la Taylor loanabla akinaald. and j.doing laada of l.yna. Short. A On. ma •ba ninth and Ml, aad tdhaa lands nan at Oaotga J. Hand ns lha north and aaal—containing 130 ACRES, more or less. Thnraon arertad a good DW KM.INO HOI SK. Barn and t'Uiav anlhnildlngs The above properties were purchased at shsrtf ante as lha prnpaeiy of Joha Onpaahannr by BaarfS L sad, of Claarftold. Pa Tha aans- still ha sold as a what* m smwaialy. la aall pan-haawa. This properly Is la good tvndtOoa. and II la vary da slaahla as a Hotel |W-npaaty. or s IHatalle y, at ifia. Trrair will ha tt.edi la salt parrhnwrs. partly cash and pailly Ml llnte laaaira of OBoBOR I. BKRIi or lha I I.BARriaU) <T) NAT. RANK,Clsarhadd. Ps sr A. 0. rvasr, IMMbale, Pa. M, Xrw A rtvertlnement. >• hereby given, that the ~.. 1.," 1 "' l ,'* , "r J I"'*"" ••• ll—J Iholr i^li ..... .yt-ik..,,, j,:zi v.'u.v til MI'I ft, Xf.t.l ||„ 0„„,.,i, 11,||.i„,, u C. (. M.M111,. . , .. r Krik X UtiMD. 4., W H T*ll I, T I" Jubn Ai..i.f M.b ii„ ~,, „ er—) Plftilb, ,|„ . " 4 * UftftftA j&ESfc : n T mtt ir T J •'>., 2 • *'• c .iMM „ Tfttrrftt* M ' A„„ •! ~. J"' Tlt-ma* P<w,a.,ii ,j ' „ f S ™" W. A Nnw M.1.1.. ji , , JaMNkaa KHMMT. . 4.. „ J *• . J II .M.hkl.k NMrIMMM J™" - kJ"ki.r fViiti t.,%) U¥ , . u r .„, H.K.rt. ~.. Miller j„ * ua,.f iu,. *;• Join. 1. I Ulr r-t, ,a M,,.„ , ' | A.bol.n IMiitau. 4,, ~ '• • H"V;"b""r "• I , iT, ; '••►• l*.r..i„, rt J-I K ~,* J, , > M -V Mwwe ( o , i il'ft ~ k *' 1 ' S 1 i '""'I-' 1,,;. • •MMH Mi. t. : „ i.*", ' , i. l ri ; J ' llAhl'l K lltrk, ( IOI'KT I* HOC LA M A TIO X Ji-! j K a, ~ ''r>i,'r'iT.- o ;r''• 1 mi,. i ar <1 *l. ii . I" *!*' ' J 1 ' '*' 1 1,1 *•' * Cwtifl i f £?£ %: A't.'t 11 - . 1 ' ' ll't, Jl 'it,, | v ., . SL°SS"S , *1 -I. - U.IA*. .... I, I u . •• -!•—..4 .IAIL .1,. ~1 f; 1 , , *L |( t 1 tbrtn ,|,.|| laJl| „ u. |ro ,.d .... A.M. . , b . 04 ■i m...b 1., n.r „.,„i. , . :""."i'rl "*•* •"*' i !■ 1..'.,. i .- ~H~I TIIOMAA J 1,1 NK..I, Orphans' Court Sale. I )! Il>l, A N i l.i an order of the* Or -1 pUM •■ M ' , u f*" l ' ' " ■ w 1-rrn.b... .. „ .. .... at HwlanlfkM Saturday, Oie 22d of April, 1882, AH lt.t c'Tliri |r. tor pirv cof lr <l* !.* '• lluitb Laur.o. .. p, KlMl.fliM* nut.,4nmA mm* i, 1 '-in., . 11. I • l. Oft 11,. ,| K. .;, |I, I, 1,. „ , , 101 ACRES and 28 PERCHES. IJ.MAOO t".104 * f.,4 lln VI 1101 AK t.<) Ham. YOUNG ORCHARD Til, I- (ran TI.. 1-.4 I. „ f r,,,,. I *!•... Mb | **l |. t.' > At Tt.ft. . T u, I*"' ' '• ' ••#'.. ■ 1... wi. •• • >••• .11. 1M.T.0. ' 1 1 -<ll.,l ft. •!*.. •I, 11,. ■. furll,.! IMUlirftlan j, , Bt . j, „ k . r „^. . , , „ ".(.! AM II MIV A ,ir. t of Hi on Lai AiaoiA, tn 1 " ' •. .*i VuU Ai.IMMA MIS.'.N A 1., I*y*tlftft4. MAAhal |J]|' Spring Mills Academy. -rHE Summer of Sririnc tritun' "" k * to "" "OUT, <b. ba . r T "' u "" io fIA At,4 fl*. f..f 1..A of toki, lvr4lt. t iauohaLl* r r furtbot fftformitlna r.u nut ft4O,A LLW Ik lIHTKII A 11. Prlorl|ftl. fprlftt Mill*. I'A 'THOMAS .1. McTI'MJOUGH. I ATTi'IiXET AT I.AW, eiiiLirt arsG. PA. <>P '. In AlWri Oftt. . IAIIMiik In ll, , • n.,m •Hi .< I j Hi, mi.|bftig fWftk,b|| l . PATENTS Wotomttniinl/ikri aato.liriumt fn Pktowu. CgTmu Trm. Krt, opyngtiu. *i<v. f,r t(„. i nund MIH uh- England. rranor, (icrmgtir. <•. v\ r bw had thin > -lit r )ran*r]prrlrnrr. rM<nU i l*w rmd Ujrnugli ua am netioncl 11 u. fct- Sn^Li^f* ,CA * PL. , J* rs *' • ,Ml lllu.- 1T PLR. $3. AO J-W.8.->*R UW I TT*TVM -*?7 lnUrr "* ln y. Wi<l ha* an fnxirr-. >-i* ttrrulaJl"n. A.i-lmaa Mt'NN A en, r*tmt to.')'*. K "*. totr > "ft. Hand It.* *hrmi [uraiifirm. IN ihe Court of Curtimnn Pica* of Oeu* nmij, So 1/f, April T.rm. l*i In th* f H *1 j-ttia'n-n hi ib. 1 -nit. Mining and tlanotartorlag ui|aiij ( * M * dmrr of uiaat.iu ti"n. hi 1" all fxTKin* whom it mar mtimrn flo ut. K b.rl ■} aoam Ih.t ih. C*-mi h Common rim* ■lid. r* Ih. Itlb .tat at Mairti I*2 grant a ml- to -bow raau hp lb- IM.Ii. Milling and Man a fit or ng i on. pa ni' alo.uld not l du-n-d and It. .han.r .<iil.o4.rct. and thai It no r .tw b* ahonn In lb* Oditrai] a *tof dlaaalatfcia a ill I* n.*4. Un lb Oh M -t.daj of April, U*2 • . C. IIA KM R. pr. ii , V'lTll K TO STOCKHOLDERS. in rn Ant ual Mooting nl th* M.rkholda-r. ,4 th. Raid hag I- Vail.) Kali. c*d Company la railed for II I Alt AY, April 11, |a*i. at 12<<hk. M ai ill itottlh Inrib atrtmt. PhUa4.lpt.ia. I'a Ktatdtoa lur I'taaid.nl and Ihtartora aan.r da< and Ida. I *-2t A I.HURT HkWltuN. N. rotary. , )R FRAZIER'B ROOT RUTER*. P.aM.t'a Rod Ihtt.ra nr. ant a dram-abop * l.|ab* loaning*, tot ar* atrh-lla m<-li< mal In *rry am**. Tliap ail atr.ngly upon lb* Ita.r and kldn.p*. ktwp ihr laiaala o|t. and mgniar, inak. lb- act atrong hnl th. lung*, baildgip til. ncrraa and riaana* th* blood and -jao m id .11-11 inipot it a. Pot IHralnaa*. Ruah id fl!t I |h* Iliad landing to Ap.gd.gj. lii||.a f.*M and agu*. limpay. Puni-lm and RMtho* Hindu loo* It nmen and (hum. Tutor King W..rm, Whlto Ptr.lling, Rrrai|*Ua. Rng* Kr.a and for acting nan angering from to oak naua to ll, hlllty nauamt trim lmptad.nr. and to lamalo* In dahrai* b**tth. rlatlMi Root Rittoraar* aapamtollt nrtwnnW. In man: 1 bar a a*d two hottlta of ronr Root Ihtt.ra hit fitaj.-pala. fatal tuna*. Waaknm* and Rldaw-y IHaaa*., and ih.y did to* to.-t* good than lb* dooloti and all lb. toadh-lna 1 atar nai-d fr n, lb* SIM 4om I iT" "In"""? b-ahb and f.rd a. *<dl M I WH I tvwmidM r-tol gwdtoto. aw* 4 lli frmlNrt of m-ia w ... " •"***. n.r*toad O. Sold by all dmggtot* *t*r; nbrra al |1 ,*r bolt I*. HENR\ A Co., Bo|p Prop's. T "*| h. bra York S" WEDIBH BITTERB. TRI. URKAI Swedish Dyspeppiß Hemedr I Th* cfctof lapndlMt and llSa gitlng *lr**ai ofikia gnol intodj bto knf. mntmij knoaa a* Wnar. mini althnagh hM rtrj nam, tonnd to ikta nownln, .iMpUng to Uto *it*to. Hnrlbmaaf. II I* gathaowd la nr..fo, abwadann* bp th* Uptoadm la Ih* btoak and anow rind mountain, of R.rtt,, .ml gn.dim. and ha*. In noaa*cb* Itb othnr logmdlnMa. b**w mmd among lb.m-.ltM a.Hmdt-lj tor ymn aa on* of lb* gtralnat nwdto* tor Utapayato. M4ar and Llaor t ...plaint tb.t baa rt n h** knoain I* liming Iblt pr.pan.tlon botot* tba Am-rtn. a Chllr . randtdlt loll.t. thai W bar* tltod a long I nant. bp gitlng imdrin* tb.t will am onl, t.mpofnrllt taHtta, bnl trill poaltl*lt iwnadt 14 ip la. Rtdn., and U*r (Vmplalnl and all lb.la tarb ot th **• tot a* Sawr Stowaah. Slrb Hnadarb. Pain* la ■ha dda and Rath. Palpttatlv* at tb* llantt Oaatlaa aao*. Indlgamfato. Talton Sbln. latoaia; tS ?b* Rand, PnHnamat Plf #f SI maib. law Splrlta An. Tbm* duai a artll 1.1 l*t*. tha wnawf wan. _ Aak tear dmggtot tor a bcttl* awd h* toartMwd. Prtm,7 wato. t-y
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