She Centre filetnorrat. B ILLIFOKTI, PA. TksLargest,Okssysst aad Beat Paper PUBLISHED IN CKNTHB COUNTY. TUB CBNTRK DEMOCRAT is pub lish*! sTSrjr Thursday mumlng, at Brllsfunte, I eulra county, Pi TERM*—CBXH IN ST BO If not paid In BtlTßßc*. S OO A LIVE PAPER—ka, Tra ts. Programme#, Posters, Commercial printing, Ac., In the A nest at jrle and at the lowest poaslblr rates. All advertisements for a leea term than three months SO cents per Hue for the first three Insertions, and A cents a line for each additional tusertiou. Aperlal tioticee one-half mole. Editorial notices 1% cents per line. NotICSS, iii local columns, 10 rentsper line A liberal discount la made to pero- ns advertising by the quarter, half year, or year, aa follows w •! z inn occt ruo. ill I One inch (or 1* lines this type) |#o |I?U Two Inches. T 1 | IA Three Inches 1" I ■ Ouarler column tor •" inches). 1 - Half column (or Wincheaj l One column ..r :ii.-heo pat foreign advertisements must be paid for before In ertlon, except on early contra t when half-yearly payments in advance wnl le required POLITIC A i Noticx '• ents j rliu-*ch insertion Nothing inserted for less than cents. BrilitM Nffricr* i the editorial* olumns. 1* cents per line, each Insertion. SPEECH OF 11. E. FORTNEY, DEMI - ERED AT MAIMSONM R4, Dot. 2.1, IHH2. When 1 last addressed yod from this stand we were in the middle of the Hancock campaign. Y'ou were confi dent that the eminent soldier and pat riot who bore our standard would be oar next President. Notwithstanding the fact that be had suffered much for, and rendered great service to his coun try in timo of war, the republican* fought him as desperately as though ha bad been the chief of traitors. This same republican party is now seeking out and soliciting the aid and support of the soldier for the stalwart candidate for governor because forsooth, he has been a soldier. To them the old soldier has become a great favorite, but only to vote. When he desires a nomination at the hands of the Cbunty Convention for so small an office as .' ury Commissioner the stalwart candidates friends refuse the poor boon because the one armed soldier does not suit their purpose. Their patriotism is confined only to party and their fealty to and love for the old soldier is only shown when they desire his vote for stalwart cand d t's. On our part this campaign has been commenced and must be fought and won on the question of re form. That reform is needed is demon strated by the fact that both of the great political parties have emphatically dc clarad for it, in one form or another through atate and national conventions, regularly for the last ten year*. Re form in the civil service. Reform in our system of internal revenue system. Re form in the tariff, and reform in every department of the government state and national has been vigorously de manded by the people, and insolently refused by the party in power. There has been a living and growing sentiment in favor of reform come up from the rank and file of the Republican party to its conventions, which deman fled and recieved recognition in spirited resolutions, made a* it afterward* ap peared for the ear. and only to be brok en to the hope. So often had .this been done that honest intelligent and faith ful republicans have refused to longer submit to being betrayed,trampled upon and ruled by tne machine and the boss, have organized a revolt and de* mand that the promise of reform made shall be put into execution, The republican party in 1872 by its notional convention declared that "any aystem of civil service under which the subordinate poeitions of the government are considered rewards for party zeal ia fatally demoralizing, and we therefore demand a reform of the system by law* which shall abolish the evils of patron age and make honesty fidelity anil efficiency the essential qualification for public position.'' The Democrats and Liberal republi can* in the name year made even a stronger appeal for reform, denounced the practice of using the civil service of the government to promote personal ambition, that it was a scandal and re proach to free institution* and declared that honesty and capacity constitute the only valid claims to public employ ment. In 1876 the republican party by resolution rejoiced in the quickened conscience of the people concerning nub lie affairs, and resolved they would hold all public officers toarifeid responsibility and engaged that prosecution* and pun ishment* of all who betray official trusts should be swift thorough and unspair ing. If this declaration had been rigidly adhered to, or if punishment of those who betrayed official trust bad been swift thorough and un spairing many of the chief office holders of the republican party, includ ing Dorsey and Brady would now lie found within the secure walls of the penitentiary. In 1880 the republican party by its convention adopted the declaration of president Hayes that re form in the civil service shall be thor ough, radical and complete. These several declarations of the republicans were made because the honest elements of their party demanded that reform should be instituted, but the men who controled the party and held the offices persistently refused to obey the de mands made upon them or fulfil the promise given to the people after the elections. The refusal of the boss to bear the honest demands of the people has finallv led as it naturally would, to a disruption of the republican party. When the stalwart Kepublicans met in convention on the 10th of May, 1882, they declared that public office consti tutec a high trust to be administered solely for the people, whose interests must be paramount to those of person and parties. They condemned unequiv- orally the lino of patronage to promote peritonei political end*, and that we condemn compulsory assessments for political purposes, and proscription for iailure to either to auch assets menta or to requests for voluntary con tributiona. Here then ia the party in power de claring for reform when it alone has the power to remedy the evils of which it complains. If reform is needed, and it must be, or the party would not have ■o declared, they have had full control qf the law-making power for yeura and could and should have, if they did not mean to act in had faith with the peo ple, made the laws necessary to abolish the evils of patronage, and make hon esty, efficiency and fidelity the qualifi cations for public positions. This convention condemns the use of patronage to promote personal political ends and condemns assess ments for political purposes. Who are they condemning T Can it be that this party, whose stalwart candidate said meant purity and morality, is condemn ing itself. Who uses patronage to pro mote personal political ends f The Ross* ! Who makes assessments for politi cal purposes ? The machine and the boss of the Republican party. Whose convention condemns these crimes upon the public? The conven tion of the bosses. And why, because they fear the wrath of the people and they hope by fair promises and tine res olutions to appease the people and ob tain a further lease of |>ower. I can assure you my Republican friends the men who made and passed these resolutions and placed upon them candidates, will no more keep their pledges of reform in 18*2 than they did in 1872. Kven before the election they have violated them in every particular. Patronage to promote personal political ends has gone on unceasingly. The convention that promulgates these res olutions had barely adjourned until the official guillotine is set in moiton and as last as they could ho borne away tli<- official heads of those who would not submit to the imperial will of the l>o*s tumbled into the basket. At the direr tion of the boss faithful officers were re moved, not for cause hut to give place to others who would strengthen hi* dynasty. The assessment of office holders h* not ceased. It goes on mercilessly, no toriously and incessantly as the flow of the water of the Mississippi, sparing neither agp, sex. race or previous condi tion of servitude. Right here we are tolil that General Reaver is not respon sible for thee violations of the Repub lican platform. He is the standard bearer and promised to carry that standard into every county in the State, and by right anil |>osition the leader in the campaign. To his knowledge these evils are practiced. Why does he not denounce them? As the leader of the campaign why does he not take the monster by the throat and see that every pledge of the convention is honestly and firmly adhered to. Prin ciples, however good, and however plainly declared hv conventions are of no use unless you have a man with the moral courage and force to carry th-ui out. And as 'ten. I .ear said, "if he has not the moral courage to do this he is incompetent. If he can conscientiously approve the conduct of this campaign he is morally unfit to he governor of Pennsylvania." If the monarch be a plunderer the subjects will follow the ways of the court, so he who is depend ent upon the boss will follow his ways, and do his bidding. The democratic convention of 1882 declared that "we protest against what is called the boas system and the plun dering of office holders by assess men t of money for political purposes ; public offices are the property of no party but are open to every citisen, honest, caps hie and faithful, and protested against the spoils system, that it is a prostitu tion of the office of the people so that they become the perquisites of the poll tician. So far as mere word* go, my friends, there i but little difference between the t platform* of the two parties. Why then should you prefer the one to the other. The one convention condemn*: the other protest*. I* that all, a mere dif ference in word*. No! In the work of the convention* we have all the difference in the world. The one laughed in derision at it* declation* of reform a* they passed, and nominated candidate* who have never ceased to trample upon the principle* and the reform* for which they declared. The other not only declared for reform act ual, real, and practical, but showed it* good faith with the jieople by nominal ing a man who embodies in himself the very elements of the conventions de derations. A reformer himself, tried in the fire and not found wanting. He hta met the machine and the t>o*a in the citadel of their |Kiwer, where it wa* their habit to annually *teal million* from the people, and by honesty, efli ciency and integrity, the very elements of official capacity declared for by the Republicans, succeeded in breaking the machine and driving the boa* from power. A* controller of the city of Philadelphia he has saved millon* of dollar* annually to the people of that great city. Hi* official integrity was a constant check not only upon dishon esty, but upon ill advised legislation which involved the expenditure of money. When the city paid for ma terials, under him, it was known that they were furniahed. When it paid for labor it was known that it had been perfomed. We want a little official in tegrity, efficiency and honesty at the Slate capitol. With Pattieon there we will find out why it is that in 1860 the ordinary expenditure for State govern ment amounted to only 9947,911.1.1 and in 1880 the expense* lor the same pur pose amounted to 94, 96:1, 109,69. When the Democratic party in 1876 declared for reform and then nornina ted Tilden the people believed we meant! it and they endorsed our nomination by a majority of nearly Three Hundred thousand on the popular vote. They accepted our word in good faith because we gave them a pledge in the nominee that if we were successful reform, thor ough and complete, should be instituted and carried out, and had Tilden not been cheatd by force,fraud, and perjury out of the place to which he waa elected tbereform promised would have been ac complished. We come to you again, my fellow citixena, not only with the promise of reform in word* but bring the pledge in the candidate nominated. Civil service in its broadest sense i* the business of the government. It re latea to all officers anil offices ot tlie government not military in their nature. We have a right an citizen* to demand that the business of the government shall be faithfully conducted. That it* oflicera shall be honest, ellicient and capable, qualifications which Jefferson defined to be essential elements of a faithful ofllcer, qualifications which the republican party declares for anil the lack of which it vigorously condemns. To us Democrat* and republicans alike,vrho are not and never expect to be office liolders.it can make but litttle difference who hold the offices so they are honest, faithful and efficient. That all money drawn front us by means of taxation shall be faithfully and rigidly applied to the purpose for which it is taken. The party that will give us good govern ment at the least possible cost, no mat ter what its politics, is the party to which we should give our support. All we have in it is good government, all we desire out of it is good government. The party in power has betrayed its trust it has plundered the people, squandered and misappropriated their money. It has ceased to be a party of the people anil by the people, and to rule forthein and has became the party of the hosa, bv the boss, and should therefore he turned out of place and power. For these reasons my republican fellow citizen* I call upon you to break loose for once from your party affiliations and join with us in electing a genuine reformer. lieneral Beaver has absolved us entire ly from supporting him on the ground of any neighborly or friendly feelings or local pride we have for him. He lias de cleared it is principles and not men that are at stake in this contest. We can not now and never will support the principles he advocates. They are wrong and in their results evil and per nicious. They are the outgrowth of the machine and the bos* and if permitted to grow and increase in powerwill finally lead to the overthrow of our free in stitutions. The convention that nom • nated him condemns the whole cat* logue of principles which he advocates, when he get* at anything outside of the tariff, and a* governor of this state he would have no more to do with the tantr than the comet plunging through space at the rate of millions of miles an hour. The Constitution of the Cm ted States has wisely placed that que# lion into the hands of congressmen. We have concluded in this district to leave all measures in reference to the tariff in the hands of ey the constitution and the laws of the Commonwealth and take care that they he faithfully executed. Mv friends we have had some trouble in reference to a candidate for the State Senate. A muh room politician of Clinton county who imagine'! he was fit to go to the Senate, held out induce moot* to one of the conferees of Clear field county to purchase. The tiait was taken and no sooner was the money paid, than this corrupt creature under took to force hia nomination by threaten ing to expose the parties implicated on less he was nominated forthwith. The virtue ; of this man withdrew from the conference the delegate* from Clinton county. After this Hon. C. T. Alezsn 'der our candidate was nominated bv Centre and Clearfield counties. To this nomination,though regular,the counties of Clearfield and Clinton relused to submit and it was distasteful to manv of our own people, not because they had any objection to Mr. Alexander but, be cause they desired that the nominee should come from a conference on which the blight of corruption had not fallen. ur candidate and conferees were per fectly clean. The people of the district require that we shall go into power with clean hands or stay awav and leave power in hands already polluted. In this emergency the county com mittees met and from their action grew a new conference. It met and selected the Hon. Wm. A. Wallace for Senator. Mr. Alexander had a right to insist upon the regularity of his nomination. The whole question was whether in the unsettled condition of the public mind he should insist upon his candi dacy—or relinquish his rights, for the good and harmony of the party. He met the question squarely and acted promptly and patriotically by withdraw ing from the contest, and I hope my fellow citizens you will take delight in honoring Mr. Alexander the very first opportunity you have for this patriotic action. Mr. Wallace is our candidate. Of hia pre-eminent fitness no man will have a doubt. No man is too great for to honorable a position. We should put into such positions the ablest anil best men the district affords. To us the cost is all the same. It takes from us as much in the shape of taxes to pay a had man as it doel a man of high standing and 1 great abilities. Then the one brings honor and fame to his constituents as well *• to himself ; while the other brings only shame and disgrace to him self and constituents. Our legislature becomes a shame and reproach because the men sent there are incapahla of making* it anything elae. My frienda there is no sense in sending men to make our law* who are no more fit by education aod practice, for the business, than I am at this mo aient to be declared the Pope of Rome. With Pattison for governor and Wal lace for Senator the reforms provided for in the constitution of 1873, which the republican* have willfully and ma lidoutly neglected and refused to carry out, will be accomplished to tbe great good of all the people and the honor and glory of eur Commonwealth. Decerny f" Politic*. HlrtMiwrr TMegrepa, Stalwart Dep. It ia tbe right of the public to know all about the competency and honesty of avery man who aspire* to a public trust, and to canvasa well his especial qualifications for the particular office for which he is named; but this should not, in decency, descend to slander and abuse of an honorable gentleman's V private character. A campaign of mere ly personal abuse should not he de scended to by leading newspapers of either party, because by doing *o it puts it out of the question to induce high minded, sensitive men to allow their names to he used as candidates, for fear the floodgates of groundless abuse and personalities may be opened upon tliern. In tliis light the Trh /ropk regrets the uncalled lor attacks recently made, by irresponsible correspondents of some of the papers of the state, on Mr. Chauncey F. Black, the Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor While the will use all possible means to prevent the election of Mr. Black that a journal conducted on Iron orahle, high-toned principles can, it will do so because Mr. Black and his col leagues are Democrats, and the />/oi/.A sincerely believes that the interest* of the great state ol Pettnsylvania should not tie entrusted to Democratic ollicials. Personal abuse of candidates i* not ar gument, based on ptinciple, and to win a great campaign IlKe the one now going on, it should he run on principles, and these principles should he the *u prctnacy of Republicanism as enuneiu led by the Republican party. I'ersonal abuse of candidatcc should not t ike precedence o( the principle/ l.m.nui. r liitrlligrntrr la-iii. WAI.TKR M. FRANM IN, R-u-. informs us that he received a dispatch from Mr. Farquhar, of York, a Republican, requesting liim to advise the Ej'iminrr that the story It published ftotn a I'lltsburg paper, that lire Dcino erstic candidate for lieutenant governor had been intoxicated at meetings in Western I'eiimyivanit, was untiu'-, Mr. Farquhar having been so informed by reliable parties in Waynesboro, Bed ford and ITiionlown, where the scene of the story was hud. Mr. Farquhar add ed that he had known Mr. Black lor twenty years and knew his nabits to be as good a man as a I'emoeial could he made. The H.'aminrr laded to publish this contradiction. It has also failed to print the numerous contradictions it iilids in it* western exchanges ; such as the following from the Wayne*burg .1 t'-urnjtT : "We appeal to every decent man who attended the meeting in the court room on Tuesday night, to say whether there is one word of iruth in that statement. Ii a haid and naked, from beginning lo end. a- > v r. honest man wi.n was jreunt at the meeting Will testify. We Were with Mr. Black before i.i- spec han I aft<-r * close, and feel sate in snyu.g ho had lint l>cen drinking * drop." The F.fTcrt* of I iieertuin Tenure, There is a phase of the government service in tiie department at Washing lon and elsewhere whirl) the juld.c seldom gets a glimpse of, hut which i worth the careful consideration of all thoughtful citizens. I'nder the | res< rit civil service, with its uncertain tenure, the great majority of the clerks are liable to lose their place# at the end of a few years, either at the demand of a psrli->*n los# or because of a change in partisan supremacy. The salaiis of the incumbents, after firing iwessril by the various partisan committees, do not si low of anything more than a comfort able living and leave nothing lor ac cumulation for declining years. The clerk, however, gives the first vest* of his life frequently to this service and become# totally Unfitted for anything else when he lose* his place, which he is almost certain to do aooner or Ister. In view of these farts the wonder naturally is why anyf-ody with brains and capability enough to take care of bim*elf should ever seek service in the government employ. The true answer is probably to be found in the fact that many enter the service without a prnp< r knowledge of these conditions. They learn by hitter experience when it is too lste to remedy the matter. The evils arising from this condition of the ser vice are twofold. The I and most capable men who exercise a reasonable amount of foresight in regard to their own future are deterred from entering the government employnient and thus the government is deprived of their services, and a rU*s of paupers and toadies sre engendered, who will lend fhemselvea to the most disgraceful par tisan service, not because they want to do it, but be< use they do not know what else to do to gel a living. Wash ington is full of these people, who, if they should loe their places by the de mand of an unprincipled boss or hy a political revolution, would not know where to lay their heads. The only remedy for these evils i a complete and radical reform of the civil service. Let there he a fixed ten tire of office, with a chance for promo tion for merit and for no other reason. Then compel the plundering harpies of the Hubbell Mshone stripe to keep their hands off the salaries of the in cumbent, so that a prudent man may have a chance to lay by something for old age. The result w ill be a much bet ter service to the government and a class of self respecting, self sustaining employes, instead of the horde of politi cal paupers thai now swarm in the various departments.— l'htla. Timr*. A Campaign of False Pretences ' The Stalwart machine of Tefinsylva nia has been traveling over a rocky and perilous road, indeed, during the past year. It got a severe shaking up in the campaign of lat fall, and had a narrow e*c|>e from very serious disaster. But it* trouble* were only l>egir,ning. and the poll* were hardly closed in Novem ber, 1881, before the lK*r* as on every band active and determined prepara tions for the great hatile of 1882. True to their instincts and practice, they re solved upon a campaign of false petence* and upon that line they and their henchmen and organs have been work ing ever since, with a disregard of truth, fact and decency that at limes has been amazing. The first movement in this pro gramme of deceit and fraud was led by Mr. (Juay in peraon, when he inveigled Cm* of the Independent Republican aders into the famous Continental conference, and made solemn promises of reform which never were meant to he kept. The tsme snare wa< set again atjthe time of the llarrisburg Republican con vention, baited with Davies and Rawle, and an abaurdlv transparent scheme to put Wolfe on the hook too, followed by a brazen i-fi rt to palm off as a genuine copy of the I' iiitiiii-ntal platfoiin an emasculated imitation of the same. I.ven tlie resolution* adopted, however, were openly jeer* by ti,.- boneat bat "indiscreet and undisciplined delegate, and the ink on the paper was scarcely dry before they w, re conteinplously dis regarded hy the si,en,.(.representative of the managers, the chairman of the state committee. Ihe candidate for governor immedi ately took up his part in t|,i# wed mud led plan to deceit e and betray the pn pie. In a carefully prepared speech of acceptanee h-took high moral ground as a patriot, fieemnn, leformer and de fender of the people, following this up, 1 little Inter, nail another pi ecl al llarri-biirg, which u .. a strange mix ture of glaring misrepresentation, fool ih egotism and political stupidity. Oeiiertl I', aver then to,, to the rn-d hi earnest, hut played a double put wheii VI ri< Were 1,1, nihil- so 111 do. He attended tirand Army le unions, county fall#, religious ai.nivi-r tiler, visited si-hools and public w.-lilut.on-, all with the sol<- pur| of making votes, hut pretending other* ire. A great part of 'ieiiiii! Beaver's eiliipaign work has been of this eharacter, and the la< I is discreditable 111 the extreme. 11l Ills peecie-s the cslol.iali- of lie- I has been true to then original de-lgn. il<-h,i sq-iken nearly one homlicd iiik * and n< v • r iet squarely- and hoti • -wily met the living and vital i- ueso/ | the route t. 11. has talked and talked .ii around the qu- to I the hour . <• hi- raved at tin who challenged him to how hi# rii -nhood : i.< huss-qn e lie I nd I n-v .lii #ti d; he has cringed '-efore the ii.ex< r it e .1, inand of the 1 and done hi- h \ - I b. si to-hiel l ihem and tln-ir cni-< . He has worn a musk tin ugh-iiil an I /-al -u-ly ei ili avore-i t.. turn aside the fl ing tl le of p p.j u .1.1 gr, .' 11l against ! 'he eoriupt inai ii.ue and it- vil work- . III! short, (ietieral Ii avef'* campaign ii i fa-en one of tal-. pn-ieni -• from the ! day he was "slate.i m i .mcroll's house it W >sh i .-tun nr.til the pre-, v.t hour, .nd In- will on I uiit' dlv adhere to that ■ -ut-e until tlie rapidly | ; ro,rlimg ,'itur end of in# id starred, machine :n ule and I ■# lo.i -i • ,p| . i . mdidari In every pn.#iblc the I allied m ch nc mans.-, r- hnv< tight t • misli-a i j tin- j pie. Instead of coming oat quart I.V into the opi-n field and meet i g their oi | nen!- in f,,r and ho r > l.le contest, ih-v h-.ve r< * :ti-d to all tin- ails and it k "I lo* down j to# n I p! ic< hunti-is, and r m iuriol ■ir camp* gn in hack diy arid dark ■iti rn styie. I hi> i i- w ni"ie than V i-r appalenl tntli" lies; "tale I i! MS II ik uig to w iv lav i nd c .p'ine unw it ' i >l. IS who s rnpiti. : ■ With the labor movement. 1 i.-r. - r i. pen. mai '■ II -s iq ; cal 111 work log®!-II to come •■.there-cure ofthi- c*u . i bo*iin, • nit, instead, in- II without <;iara.ier or ti lence are hired to g . out, like thieve# in the night, to g'i.-,! vol. s. I ii.at ii ' y to- harsh, but it i -irnj n the j Ism i Kngl -h. the < r i-hing truth sb >oi tms secret lalor gi itl u* ne#. It t# whol jly itir< putabie nd dt.cat le thr ugh I and through. It I. <>r* that no b n > t null call ' i gage Hi rr promote in anyway. li..- fa ~: g !..... s s r.-. mini j Hearing the ■ Ja.-e >f their final rout. h i w- ■ .. I.v -ton-runr II end rick's ( end it lon, 1 Mil ANSI- lis, 1 let., 't tobei .',i. J.x tiovernor I bonis# A. Hendricks has I.ecu confined to hi# room f..r several ■ lays past with what w# sii| |#.ev ah ut < in,ooo majority and that five of the >tx Congressmen will tc Democratic. Kx-Senator B >utell, who h* recent ly returned from Massachusetts, u is. |rfrted to have #aid that there would be a close fight in that Slate. The r pnit w* industriously circulated HI Boston during President Arthur's vi*it there that he was friendly to (ieneral Butler's eandidarv. This story the president denies with emphasis. He ssys he i* s# strongly in favor of a reptibliean gnver nor in Massachusetts a in New Yotk. The re|iort may have arisen from the fact thst Messrs. Arthur and Butler are warm jiersnnal friends of longstanding. ——— ♦ if Be Wolf Say Much. We are very busy getting in our heavy stock of Men's and Boy"* wear in cloth ing, liool* A shoes for fall and winter. Just step tn slid take a look at the largest and most attractive stock of hus oes# and dress suit*, overcoats, ever brought into this county. Their splcn dor. style, quality and qoantllv wi.l as toni'h you, you will say that there i# no man in the world who has a better taste in selecting goods anil the low prices will make you feel all hunky, sure. Boston Clothing House cheapest and best place on Karth for clothing, boots & shoes. Just opened in Reynold's block, opposite Broekerhofl' House and two doors below Reynold's Jtank Beffe fonte. Pa. P, 8. We also call vour kind atten tion lo our Ladies A Misses gum coats at the Boston Clothing House. %*"A cowsao can he a hero at a dis tance i presence of danger tests presence of mind," Presence of disease teat the valueof a curative. Kidney-Worth chal lenge* thi* test always ami everywhere, so far as all complaints of the bowels, liver and kidney* are concerned. It cure* all, nor ask any odd*. Xfir A 'lff rtiHiin rut. f% I 0 POWDER Absolutely Pure. T! ; . t . . a rtmrVfl i 1 ; IIK-r.IL, I. I (MWMMI. | ■. .• * ■ 1 i . ti, r.. t 1 iOII , "HI. 1 a ,„„, I I 1 . I> • • • It hi. it.. - I l . i -<■•! , !' >"v ' \ \ • Writ of Partition. I 1 A r ,I ~ || a4 I 'if. • - It. I , • I J M .v Ul. . ' I, ... ......i I 1. • • i 1 . ,K.t I ' f %!■*• fIIWU of I -rl.ti H. • M.I *4 tli* **t j 1*1.1.• < |f < . I "titiit t*4 \< m* \i\- m ; * 1 1 i i fc! Ul if. of J i„, : •'' ' ' ' ' :: : : ?' * * i . •* * i iii r I.' | • ♦ if i ith• k| j- ' • M.'f '! . Of!\ . \: 1 u\' > 1 J 111 N K EL. I. -L it. - C f A<]rtjiiii-trn i w i • • .• • • pom UK *•* . 'IS' • Ut- ..f E.f; rn.n t i*lii i*-<. I ......... ... ... \ wh9m Mr. MARY A MILLER. AOlßtltrs plAi-t U Very a;* to br 15 * -ni>: r*t*d viO oor.Et. pau Q n. Itidavj-WorlJ J j r -a* t\r *TvkrT partt ftatf qair t' re ! Spm : k ndaof P. '-t rrr phjnuciAJ* •la-id mvdialn* \v' rr falliwj. 4> Tw havr> cir .rr c f trembles ~ : |PWICtI.| USE [~Dru W ,t Sfll " Ni that Mi sippli- I mu.t frill u MMk& t. t>) art ROhimm■ I RflV ' I Mv I > • | . i ■ ! • ' ' . ft .f k w . t.ii . r ti. Aft A • VHi ; *' .!) !.* f Aj* 1. |*"4 fr * .1- ' . r ,1. ■ . . • • • • 1* j ■ THE VMS U) n' • 11.1.-7 I'N ( I |'i NRM I \ 4MA," 111. . i *tmvr ftifj . ' 1 I • ■• • , j |. j KftaaL . 1 . k ; ' • T. -f }< I.T - , i ,*ti •..! ' t W .. i tit. I.n.f „ r ,d rt. ' y 11-. f Wf. I- i■ ' • *t.f | ' ' . .( 11, M |.i Art AMMtiii t. li \T i.U JL t.Ei'IIAKT. I j*** • 1 " I I. FKKDKUK KS. . rl • Repairer of Sewing Machines, IlKl.l.Kfi'Nir.. PA , R.. Ut.rv , t, niiL .1 f. !• i#. „ th# Jmk - ' ' • a.tl, V ( r, I . | ' / KUtir, (> '/ Mnr) ( a Jit r. ilf-i f • f,', t lafrsf fh Ji nut i , ,4r. f %rhri% v ju\ rd. •i" VI • ik fc ittrm 1, ! Jl- I i>l:nnsylv.\NlA STATE COLLEGE. FiM tfrm opent Ati£wf 2", 188?. Thi ri >► |• !g C*unw of Mhlj : ! I. A F'.l Hmminol C"* m • of • or>a|>e9rtat l*Hv |*n? F"f (kUlifum. or otW Ibtwrrfliim, aidnw rtRiV w ITTIRKTON, rURPIVT. Futti lU'if. iiru Co . r. 42Mf piLRB! PILBBI PILRBI A SURE CURE FOI XD AT LAST XO OXE KEEP S FREER A tr C.. t..t Rlinit, Pl .- lmg, It. I.ln( mhl Cfc rtl ill", tai tow ,i> ottml ~ l>r, r> (mi In.lnn r*m~lj'. )rlt.A I* W (IHain • Indt.n . >11,1.... ~i A in,t '• InniM lli ..rl <. i nlln nlmitM P.r n|i'l)in* llit ..iK.tlul .mtl.ir.c lotion* Mnnmli noA .*lotsrt d<. n..t. Iwrm Uio r'l. w miatn'* Olijinnni *l*mrl. iim IHM, nlltva lln tnirn*.. luhlnt. |rUrnl.m m .n.r I nnii,.nn In 1.4.) b. i. w • pnnltkv. (On ir.tm.l *n I inlnl-B. i!ol. mill |b p•♦ fc.M nnnliiM fcfe f* •wl. |mmlit and imrautsnnl nIM *• Hr M llllun't In.llati (Unlniat p.* aaln by all 4mmrtata or aaaHnd on wrlH a 1 intra. II aril I Iml h.-nia nomlorla at raaanaiHa ralna Idbnrai rmlnrUoa uiariM and nUnn allaadla* Oanrt. W. ft. TftULftft. PrV 4G m* 4ny l homa. Aamnl-r -~rr;± tf bw imU On*. Addrnm A.iTIVnOM ft ( O i P Mum*. |ft | ! UUBBURIRE i-X)R THE CEN , O TRK Mill OCR AT, tan nill Ilk* 11. and an aril I f