Of Cnvtrc gtmotrat. BELLEFONTE, PA. TUB ChiSTKh UKMOUHAT I lUhml every Tliureile) morning, *t Bi'lUfuiilx, I vuUßty, I'm. TKKMS— Caslilu e'lvsnre $1 BO If not paid In advance 12 OO A LI VK PAl'Klt—devoted lo lII* Interest* of h* hole |l*|)le. I'4)in,.ni< uiede within three months will he con sidered in advance. Sn |ipor wrlll he discontinued until erreeregeeer* paid ecopt * option of piihllatiera. Paper s going out of the county uiuat he peld for In * Ant p-raon procuring ua tencaeh enbecrlbers will he a* l lit * copy free of charge. Ourelten.i ve circulation niakea thla paper an un til .ally reliable and profitable medium foranvertlaln* We hare lh* mo*t ample faclllilea for Jull Wnlth and are pr. pared to print all hillda ol Hooka, 1 rai la, Programmes, I'oatere, Commercialprinting, Ai in the Itiieal atyle and at the lowest i*tsali.le raiea. All ailrertlaeineute lor a lewa term than three nn-nllia '.Hrenla pei line for the ftrat three lnaortione.au I ■ rents a Hue lor each additional luaertiob. ."pedal notlc* l #ono-lmlf Kditorial liotlcea lo centa per line. Local Votlrra. in local, >liinina, 111 centa per line. a liberal discount it made lo pertmia aitrertillng hy the quarter, half year.or year, ae f"llowa " *1 ~ eeaci ocecum One lu<h ("I I- IhMOP*) |ft|W||lS Too Inciter •" H 1 Three luchea 1 ' •" IJ larler c.dtiinu -r . ho heel. '■ Half column r I'Hnche. 11,... ,|.l ill>> It. he. ' K.rel.-na liertlaeio •„ uiuat I- pud for before In- I eertloa, eteopl ea rearly enntra ' whan half-yearly I •• >un ii or., re ,i. ; •• > h latertio* j N vibtag Inserted a lea* than 1 *Bl II .lai.e \|>Tl r- *ii. .... I ii.int. 15 centa er llna.e*. h int. rll i, Not Only Fair lint Liberal. The democratic apportionment com mitteo of the house, it it now apparent, made it great mistake, They should have met the enemy on hi* own ground. They should not have submitted so fair a hill os the one sent to tho senate. They should rather have sent one de manding for our party, not thirteen coneressmen out of the twenty eight' but fifteen. The republicans, had the position* been reversed, would have doneao. The democrats were, however, not fair alone, but liberal to a fault, and a* a consequence the Stewart bill that must otherwise have been looked upon a* a clear swindle, as it is, gets from non-partisans of the McClure order tin title of fairness. Its framer has not forgotten, by the way, the tactics of the party with which he trained so long, as is evident from the lact that in his bill bis own district—Franklin, I'erry and Dauphin —is what might bo railed red hot in its republicanism.— HVX- irre I'nion-Ittadrr. Arthur uml Reform. The correspondence between ex-Con gressman Itezendorf, of Virginia, and Secretary Chandler, of tho navy depart* tuent, recalls to mind the electoral fraud of 1876. It was William K.' hand ler who planned the conspiracy which resulted in tho fraudulent counting in of Hayes, the defeated candidate for president. It was ho who managed the villainy of the Florida returning board and arranged with the scoundrels wh perpetrated it for their reward in ap pointrnents to federal offices by tin fraudulent president. So offensive to common decency were bis methods in that atrocious political crime and so gen orally disreputable was his character a a politician that when ex I'resideni Darfield appointed him solicitor of the department of justice the I'nited Mate senate rejected the appointment with the votes of the most prominent repul lican senators recorded in the negative. And this is the man who has become the head of a great department and who aits at the council board of a prosi dent who pretends to execute the law for a reform of the civil service, Small wonder is it that the republican ex-congressman from Virginia should find occasion to complain of the abuse of the federal power in an interference in local elections by the navy depart ment and still lest surprising that his complaint to the unscrupulous secretary met with contempt and derision. What else could have been expected of Wil liam K. Chandler? We do not gather grapes from thorns nor figs from thistles. Nor ia Mr. Chandler at all concerned about public opinion. He is a states man of the pachydermatous order whose sensibilities could not be touched with a whip of scorpions. He triumphs in iniquity and glories in shame. For. what is political honesty to htm since he attained his present station in spite of the opposition of those who believe in public as well as private integrity? Hut while Mr. Chandler, not having any character to lose, may despise criti cism and defy bis critics, the case is somewhat different with President Ar thur. It is true that the latter was educated in the political school which holds the end to justify the means, and that on a notable occasion he expressed his admiration of the sovereign qualities of "soap" as a proselyting agent, but he has lately affected a much higher stand ard and has even manifested a purpose to make what hia flatterers style "a clean administration." The retention of Chandler in his cabinet, after the Ileten dorf exposure, cannot, however, be made to consist with the high purposes attributed to the president. Mr. Chan dler's department has confessedly vio lated the very fundamental principles ! of civil service reform by corruptly in j terfering in the local elections in Vir ginia, Nay, it i* charged by Mr. Dezen : dorf that both the Secretary of tho ; Navy and the President are "committed to tho support of Senator Mahone by arrangement," and that "arrangement," 1 in the language of that pronounced re publican journal, the New York Timet, i "has been accompanied by practices on Mr. Mahone's part which if persisted | in after the Ifilb of last .January en- I titled that gentleman to a conspicuous and reasonably permanent position in the penitentiary." Doubtless the crimi nal practices of Mahone are entitled agreeable to Mr. ('handler, who is quite j proud of his own political crimes, but the sensitive and high minded Arthur, : who has but recently discarded "soap" as a political agent and like Falstatl re solved to "eschew sack ami live clean. I y," can hardly afford to be longer asso ciated in an "arrangement with a crimi nal whom tho principal organ of the republican party condemn* to a felon's cell. In fact it i* plain that the presi dent must speedily choose between hi* reform principles and William I . < han i-ller. i 'ne or the other must go.— l far . ritfiur/ Patriot, The I'uciflt- I-attil (iranta Again. The application of tho Southern f'aci rie Hailroad Company of tho Interior i Department for tho land grant of four , teen million teres tnado by Congress to ; the Texas Pacific recalls to the attention of the public the vast are.is ol our rich ••st domain reckles-ly given away by Congress to railroads without one iota of compensation on tho part ol those cor- I poral ion. The Texas Pacific received a large land grant from the State of Texas and •t further grant of '2">,iK*i acres per mile in Arizona and New Mexico, contingent ' upon building its lino through those Territories. The company ceased work. 1 however, on arriving at the Texas bor lcr and therefore never earned an acre of the national grant. The Southern Pacific built from the profits of the ' Pnion Pacific, met the Texas Pacific at I ihe Texan border and practically con •olidated. The former, which was a Und grant without a railroad, pooled i 'Mies with the latter, which was a rail roa I without a land grant. An attempt was made to pass a 1 ill through Con j gress last winter, winch if successful would have made the consolidation complete. This wa defeated, however, md now the demand is made for the land, under the terms of the lato de iion in the Louisiana eases. 'I he department should promptly and peremptorily refue the impertinent de nand. The Texas Pacific, to which the land was pledged, never earned an acre ■fit. The Southern Pacific, which now laims it, never was granted an acre of tby Congress. The ..-rant never should , dave been made at all, and as the orlgi i oal parties have forfeited all claim by 'heir own art the first folly should not t>e deliberately repeated when there ia no occasion for it. T his 14,000,000 acres, now m;<l to t-e worth at least s2.'>.fioo,ouO. would make three States nearly as large a* New fer -ey. The land is nee.led lor settlers ind should not be turned over to swell he already bursting coffers of .lay 'iould and the Pacific partners of the -ante syndicate. They are already gorged 'o repletion with riches. The vast fer tile domains ran be more appropriately - listributed among the hundreds of housands of |>oor toilers, who can found honest homes and l>ec'ime good <nd useful citizens by it* aid. /'At '.j. Timet, Hlglit of Private Property. ■oviavo* i-attiiv nrrirs it in a vitro 0 MS" lOt. The governor ent in the fifth veto of the session yesterday to the house. II reads as annexed : 1 herewith return with' >ut my appro va! house bill No. fit, entitled *'A sup element to an act entitb d an act regu ating boroughs,approve 1 the third day of April, A I), lk.'d, authorizing the corporate authorities of any borough to vacate any road, aires -l, lane, alley or tny part thereof withir said borough. ' 1 his bill authorize* the borough au thorities, after notice and hearing, to vacate any road, etreei, Une, alley or vny part thereof, whether the same be public or private. From the exercise of such jiower by the borough authori ties, a party aggrieved thereby may make complaint to the next quarter seaaions. The order of the court upon <uch complaint is, by the terms of the bill, final and conclusive. A concluding proviso empowers the court to direct "the same proceeding* hy view* and re views as are now provided by law for the vacation of public roads in thia com monwealth." I he bill is in derogation of the right of private property, and of the right of every citizen to have his cause deter mined by the court of last resort. It slao violates aection 7 of ar tide 111, and section Bof article XVI of the consti tution. A private way or alley ia an easement in the land, ami a valuable right of property which cannot be tak en, injured or destroyed without just compensation. The bill makes no pro vision for tho payment of damages to the citizen whose property may bo in jured by tho exercise of tho powers con ferred on the borough authorities. The complaint allowed to the quarter ses sions i* not made a uprr.W. and would not stay the hand of too borough authorities pending its determination. Those defects in the bill violate section H of ai tide XVI the constitution, which ; provides that "municipal and other cor I porationsand individuals invested with . the privilege of taking private property j for public use shall make just cotnpen- I sation for property taken, injured or I destroyed by the construction orenlarg nient ol their works, highways or im t provements, which compensation shall be paid or secured before such taking, ! injury or destruction." None of these rights thus declared by the tundumen lal law are protected b the bill, now before mo, and from the adjudication, upon their infraction by an inferior tn j ! buna! no appeal is allowed. I be bill also extends to the vacation I of roads, streets, lanes, alleys or ways, public or private, within boroughs, the ! laws relating to this vacation of pub lie roads in the commonwealth without jre enacting and publishing such laws. J This is in violation of section sixth, of article three, of the constitution. It may also be mentioned that there exist in a number ol counties special law* for the vacating of public roads. If the bill seeks to extend these special laws, it would be unconstitutional, and as in [ such counties the general road law is in operation it is doubtful wliat the i-flcct, f any at nil. this l itter provision of the ' bill would have in the boroughs in thne localities. Apart from these legal and constitu i tional objections, however, I can see no j rep.) fa; the present bill 'The act ol May v lh, I *.M, en title 'an act to en i ble the courts to vi> ate lanes. illeys, roads and highways when become ue less, ' serves all the needful | impose- ->f the present bill, and at the same time protects the rights of private owner-. 'The proceedings required by thi-art, to wit, tho petition of :l least twelve fre i holder*, is aUo more in accordance j with legal analogy and the spirit of our j laws, 'The act furthermore nvests the right to vacate in the courts a safer 1 I more deliberate and more permanent tribunal than the burge-s an I council. ' j In the case of a priv .to way laid out by j the owners of the soil, act of h.VJ re ' 'pure* the i-oic nt of all the parties in t-Tested therein before the same can le ' vacated. Altogether that law is an ex celled and etTeclive enactment and I can see no need for the passage of the present bill. Tor these reasons I r< turn the bill wit hout my approval. lur l.itnir* .v., i., TV g.ves 1 some interesting information respecting the new Congressman from the oi l "Wilrnot I'.strict" that cannot fail to be of interest ||c is the youngest mem' b. r of tho present Congress and ws j born in Cuba, N. V , September Ist, IV,',, and is therefore in his twenty eighth vear. He is a lawyer by profes j sion and is destined to soon be the lead tng practitioner at the bar in Northern Pennsylvania. In politics Mr. Post is .• democrat. He is a prominent and in. fluential roetnhe,* of the Knights of Honor. In 1*77 he waa elected Mayor of >u*quehanna. lor several years ho was the secretary of the motive j-ow-or department of the Krio railway at Sua quebnnna. He is an excellent public speaker and his fr ends predict for him a brilliant Congres nonal career. As be fore stated he wi II enter the Forty eighth Congress n *t Hecember, occu pying the conspicuous position of being its youngest mcmbe r. Tiir. New V ork Tn'unr believes that the liepuhlican party may rally fcom its misfortunes and be happy becai. ae "it has a past of which it is not asham ed." This declaration stirs up the New York World to say : There is certainly no evidence that the Kepublican party is ashamed of its ; past. It had a secretary of war named Belknap, and it was not ashamed of bis practices. It showed no shame for the whiskey frauds in which its Kabrock was implicated. It waa not ashamed of the Credit Mobilier briltery and cor ruption by which liepuhlican* were bought up to vote and act in congresa for tho benefit of the Union Pacific railroad. It had a vice president named Colfax who waa covered all over with Credit Mobilier mud, but it is certainly not ashamed of him. It stole tf.e presidency for Hayes without any shame. It rewarded those who bs d aided in the theft, and did not blua b. it waa not ashamed to raise a millio i dollar* in New York to send to Indian a a* a corruption fund to buy tha vote oi' the State. It elected Garfield and Arthur by open bribery and flagrant fraud* on the ballot box without blush ing. Ita cheeks did not burn with I shame when a banker who had collect ' ed the corruption funda waa rewarded ' with tho French mission. It see* its postollico officials, its ex senator and secretary of its national committee on (rial at Washington for robbing the government ol million* of dollars, but that trifle does not call a blush of shame to its cheek, it saw ita candi date lor the presidency write a letter to the chief of the star route robbers beg ging for money for the presidential campaign, but found nothing to blush at in that. It reads the last infamous ■ j river and harbor steal unhliishingly. Ifeally, the Itepublican party i not | j ashamed of anything. Almost Perpetual Mellon. Bl VI It*VII 1, , May 22. Captain lii 1 Wangamon, of th. place, i- the invei. j tor of a machine which, if it d ,<■* not I posse.* perpetual motion, po"*e*e* the next thing to it. Captain Wurigamon s iy* that lie does not pretend to have discovered the secret of perpetual mo tion in the -cieu that a thing can move | by it - own power, but he claims that he I can apply power to machiiiey on an en j tirely new ami dill, rent principle that, any now used to generate motion by j u-ing the 1< ver. The power igeneral, I altogether by weight. He 1, . be, n en gaged on the motor ever since he iva. twelve years of age, when he fir-t g t -the idea from a B.trlow knife playing "mumble peg.' He says that the o.,wi i can he applied to every kind ol Mat nary lire bincrv, from n sewing machine to a rolling mill, i hut not to raitroa Is. He haa made a number of model. 'The lat one kepi the motion I r four days the ti: t time it was started, and the second time, bc.ng attached to a grindst-ne, it ran for -i x day*, when it stopped on a, ,unt of one of th fine piv t- wearing out The power, which in th - c ,e wa gen '■rated by si t pound weight-, wa - - great that Hip inventot could not stop i the motion I v catch ng with f.otl, hands on the main shaft and ho d i g with all h - strength, t'vpta n Wan- - gsmon i- the authority for the state nient that .a in -tor ca; able of runing a threshing machine will not c .t ri> re (hail j If. Ihe greatest d ;!i ulty he | has now to over' onto, he says. ■ to p : the machine 't• rit n motion. lur. old ou.- tion ol I'.uchanan s atti i tudn at the beginning of the war )r • I been again ca.ied up ! - discussion by Horatio K ng - arlu !• . 'i . hanan \ r d 'rated, in the 1 /i;i .1 //' - . In tin* art . Mr. Kitig insits th it President I'.uchanan went no furt her in sustaining what no mn*i<h r e I t iie clear constituti - il rights of the South than di 1 Mr. Webster n bis great 7th of March speech, .rid that In all he >i.d he was animated by a desire to quit t agitat -n and prevent blood shed In concluding his pres. ntat.on of the run Mr. King says "To ov that he was influenced by ar.V f'-hng i akin to personal fear, or that he evr i acted or forbore to act without the sanction of his const ence. ,* an out rage upon truth t ,n gr> - ■ to be endured. He had faults. IT! what faults may not be forgiven a man of gr< at ability and jure integrity, who spent the hc-l vear* of bis life in the public *erv.. e ? ll- was as honest a patriot as ever liv, d an.l no man ever sat in the Pre*iden lial chair who knew letter than be d. I how to enforce the r< sport due to liirn self and his office." ♦ llook Notices. The < Vf- for .'one it nofable for its pictorial feainres. Several of theillus trations are of uncommon interest, like the frontispiece portraits of Tennyson after Woollier * bust and the other full page pictures in theprofusely illustrated paper bv Kdmund W. hmis on "I.if tng Knglish Sculptor*:" also "Seyern'a sketch of Keats in hi* last illness, ac companied by a sonnet by Miss Kdith M. Thomas, and a portrait of the artist friend Severn. "I descriptive interest, besides, are the sixteen or seventeen cuts which reinforce H. li s concluding paper in her history of the ruin of the Franciscan Missions in l'ali'nrni*. and 1 the illustration* with George W. Cable s I sccount of the commercial growth of New l trleans since I*l4. under the title, "The Great South Gate." "A horse , ace at a country fair," by Joseph Fen n •!!, i* a burlesque upon Muyhridge'a ! " | 'he Home in Motion." and constitute* the coming portion of the illustrations for t lie month. ——- The .Tune number of the XnrlK Amrr,- r,m II open* with an article by Joseph Nimmo, Jr., Chief of the Treas ury Bur e*u of Statistics, on "American Manufac turing Interests," j n which is given a singularly full and instructive historical sketch of the rise and pro gress of n unufacturea in the United States, tog< ther with a very effective presentation of their present condition, and of the *g enry of tariff legislation in promoting d 'versified industries snd encouraging tie inventive genius of the people. Should this author'* advocacy of protective le cislalion prove distaste ful. the reader fi od* the needed correc tive in an article by the Hon. Win. M. Springer, on "Incidental Taxation," which i* an argument for Free Trade. I). C. Giiman, President or Johns Hop kin* University, writes of the "Present Aspects of College Training," a affected by the increase of wealth and luxury, the development of natural science, and I the influence of a larger religious liberty. .Kdward Self presents some weighty c onaiderat ion* on lhe"Abu*e oft itiaen si ilp," aa exhibited |io the machinations 4 of the dynamilists against a friendly power, in di-regurd 'if the obligations "f American neutrality. Prof, lviac L. Ki'-e criticises tome of "Herbert Spen cer's Fact* and Inferences" in social and political science, and ' iiri-tine Nillsori con tributes "A Few Wordsalioul Public! Singing." I inslly, them is ii symposium on "The Moral Influence of the I'rnma," the prirtici|,anta being, on the one sj,|., tho K"v. Ir. J. M. Buckley, well known us an opponent i f tho Inge, and on the I other, John Gilbert, the uetor : A. M. Palmer, theatrical manager . Mild Wil liam Winter, dramatic cut;. ,'/i cents a number -. .*'< a V"ar Published at .;<) I Lafayette Place, New Yoik. Hop Bitters an- the Pur* tar. i Bi.-.n Bitter* Bver Marie. They are compound from lloj s, Malt, . Bucliu, M indrakc and Hmdeliriri, the j olde-i, best, and most Valuable rm di cine- iii the world in 1 con! Un all the j liest and rno-t curative properties of !| other remedies, I emg the gn te-t Blood Punfi.-r, Liver regulator, .nd life arid Heaith lb Hlorin.' Agent mi earth. No disease or ill h'- dill Can pos-ibly long ! exisi win re tire <• I'.'l. iv are u-. -l, ( varied and |cr feet r<- I lie r opera I ions. I in-y give new life and i gor to the iged and infirm. To all .->•#* employ iiients r use ... reg-iGr.ty • the l-.ivel* or urinary organ*, or who require an Ap| cii/.er, Tonic and mi l umulmt. Hop Bitter- are invaluable, being b gh I v curative, !■ r . ami stimul.it;i.with out intoxicating. No mutter what your feelings or syrnotoms are. what the d or hi! ni'-nt is, use Hop I it' rs, I lor.T wait un til >ou are sick, but if vou only feel bid or miserable, use Hop Jt iters at once, it may save jour I Hundreds have fie.-n saved liv so rlou j , *\ will t.e paid f>r a . i-e thev will r.ot cure < r , help. I • > pot -utF-r or let your ! r end - -utb-r, but use and urge them to ue Hop Bit lers. K'-rneuiher Hop B 11•-r - no v ie. drugged, drunken m.strurn. tut the Bur'-t and I■ •! M-dn ine ever made he "Invalid - I r end arid II q e ' arid no per-on or fan, •> sh'.'.i'd ) n.tfiout thern. 'lrv the Butters to-day. Jj 4t. * " I he s-itne measure w ill n'it suit all circumstances. F it I. Inc. Wort -uit- ill'a-, of bver. bow-;, and kidney I dp. is, . and tin ir i -m nntants. piles, < u >r pat ion. o ague, Try it and )OU Will say so too. ♦ - dee| v regretted that she was .o color . <nd •ri, at i,t if< '. . t -rimught be i bloo-l d I no' ' .ret, <r. After one hot- j tie of II |>l j. i j I pi, tak'-n l.e was I le- r- - . ' • .• . . . rg r t 11 e town, with a v io t■. ,r. I cbeerf ulness of mind gratifying t , her fnend. Ollil k K.lilw .1' I inn-. /. ' 'I, 1 . JS.,I. Tha IX rrrw U, <*, he a,; >Ud : ■ wr ' • ' h* M k I • M w KT< H ( *r v i FY IP >*M Fit P. HUI.I \ NF ; Hiving m. -I Ibi-r ughly l< s|, ( the Hockford i- k I • Watches f. r the last three \. -rs. ! < 'i.-r them with tfie fullest i .r.tid. o< <- ,s the F- ■' ma is and ruo.t rel a 1 le I rpe k> ■ per fur the money that iun he ,il,ta.n< ; / f'w urn ' ■- - W.itfl —{ ■ - voir.'. ' / /i'.I.YA r HI.MI:. ' S - I. -I H- A .1 ii 1 prirrr Uioiir. v.Jan. '2~. lkf'J. I Ihe I; .ck'ord watch purchased Feb I*7/ Ii , performed l etter than any Watch I ever ba i. Have carried it ev ry day ar 1 at no time ha it t.een irregular, or in the least unreliable. 1 cheerfully rsrnmmsr d the Kock'ord Watch. Ip h. 4' F B. H"IU"N, at I'igbton I urnace ' . Ttt a To\. Sept, l, I**l. The Hockford Watch runs very ar curately , tetter than any watch I ever owned, and I have bnd one that cost lI.Vi l an recomrnond the K .ikford Watch to everybody who wishes fine tiruekeei^r. S. P. HUBBMtH. M. I. This is to reri fr that the Korkford Watch T,ought 1 el I*7''. ha* run very well the past vear. Having set it onlv twice during that time, it* only variation Iwing tbrrc minute*. It h* run verv much l etter than I ever an llri| tied. Il was no' adjusted and only j cost s_'o. IL P. BUY A NT, at the Ivan *lreet Flag *-ta!|r>n. Mansfield. Mas. Tel.. 21. ISM). 19 If. .Ync A<l rertinrmcitf*. ROYAt W ( royal mat IQ. **' 11 rub I ~ POWDER Absolutely Pure. I This nsw Tsrtss. A martel i-.f enrltf Mrsndh aiHt mb Im-msn** Hare scs-atnmteal iWsn th* •eltasrv via.ls u>4 rnna .t hsnl,t Is e..i|>pUlton with the nutllltn.lw nf low lost, slwwt * nrht. slnm r nhnewiw*# eea-lMs s..|d Snlj le cas. Bust Bis us. rn#nJ(*ktiM, X. t, jSriii Aelvertlsements. 1 I minus NOTJCK.—I „ t IM: 1 * Orfrfua'iCourt•fCeair* null In iii< mt -I*l' "" II • Uu I |v,,„ I 1 an awlliM i-.iat.■! l.v Hit. ~M ml in attain • v I|I,I .| . J.l wlmil. t,. 1.1- II n„ all a-lvai,'.!<.► <ta if.,,, anil f , Ifiak' 'lil' >i• .n I aii|r l.iutja in til" , j. „r Iiilnlalia)"! "I I I", 1. nl In ai lan. i, il ... J— i-all) ■ nllll. I tin i. I 111 alien I l in .*,! ..(|,|, I a|.|-.mli< nl al In, '.rirun ||. 11. |.,m.Mnn-la. Jima M.lka al In n. I t a , an I 1,.,u J li- ifit* tuny ati r. ! 1 ' Kum L. Oftvif, Auditor MOV KY 1 ° iaOii ;it fi pcrCt. .1 IV IKI Ml II W LlVl ISM ft. ANCKfO or SKW Y'KK •, f.i.t . ,t4 jifi|.rn.'l fr JI, |.r; .f tv j t , t| • ft, f*,"ri, *r. I u■ t •t' • Jr.* • • -ti.if'i >f the |.f • t ;•. I,f t" i"i Any i /1. a ti.. briacifal • |ni4 ©0 t M>y (law, hi.'l it >.• i•. i, 11,• imm ~f ' .:i.J'4li> to |W>rtfllt tli- |'filo{*| t" a* i t.K . !■• i- irr'i* r if tt,.r,t. i< t j j.r .rptly • 4 A| j.!) t i MUHI.I - I' FIIKHMAN At .*7' .n't. alia.l K.,4ib, I'a nf In II AVI II K 1,1.S K, ' . A|.|'.|a. r e-U Mallei.',,,t, Pa lIOMI \ vijmim;, ' • 1.M.1; v F' Hi .< . ,Mi •;■ ,s Agt., I'a. Illinutf, I'a. < ft., ■ 11l Ilutl, i. ,a... Ift , I !k- lullowing ..an,| iuiii.-i ri jifi —o— AUKKICAM tin. '■ ■ ■ ! M s \W - ! ll.'[ . r.arat', ( '"**nii n Hartford arid other*. —0 LIFE. lit A ii ■ it- I.ii i. ,V A• ' i Hartford ar.d ( tt.tr., lift mmiffit f. frani-h f-I uiv tiU*iri(-M " nr.(f m alien; • i'rojierti.a ! ' f ! 'i var lit.-", n 1 have facili r to: tairac of loau.i'i, land., etc., on > ■ l nolii ir a:, ; •ivti'H 1 ta rrr.p -'I ■ m HONH VALENTINE. I ■ tv- kr* ' * ■' * " AY N E'S I 0 Horse Spark A-resting i ' i ?.t ' y u.. rs f* • J ] . • fr>>m U*t hk e. * fbty J 71 " vf (itifjmr.f** to fun, h - M (f*tofll<r . IV 20 V hour* o*r . //_ ' ... to.' ; " a iluM a. (i.r f ia< k'*- .t to L f * ft f tf prwrrr 01, •, }■►• F f !Ir!v 1. .r * : &r,t rH' r Fr. B h t. : f.ntsj v th ku A tnmt c 3' ■V *r Sw *>' > . : r • I'u:,• • thrr - r V' •: I'fc'i.t BjU r - !I' \ i ►DI '• ' f fe!A>"C '. N I* ff H w I'AVNK A (. 'on , .N Y. In 14iT. FDRNITURE. AV /; Si'ASQI.y.H A CO. rt. Jm 1 • iii.V/ ij'nt tt ulrr f f>r 'i OT,,„ia ,f or fi/'o, Ths ! ict* thfy defire la tndLr j)ithl\r will hm r n irllinq rflrrt iijt'in Ih* <iomoUf fronomxj of any hou.-rhohl in whirh Ihir renin/ <■( ihrir firilitirji to *ttpjdy fumiturr of nil I; 1 ndt nl rrnnmah/t it qivrn a fair hearing. They authorize us to 1 tltiU that every nrlir/r they have on ex hibition 1* new and reasonable, uu bought Jar rash, and tri/l be mid al the lou- I jiriee den/err ran afford. They have eonslanl/y on hand parlor and bed-room suits, velvet and carpet lounges, extension tables oj their earn male, ridel pieces, secretaries, side boards, marble top tables, tables, etc., etc. Anything made to order and guaranteed to give satisfaction. They superintend tarh department in person ! and beep themselves posted in matters I of importance to customers. They a/so invite special attention to , their undertaking department. Mr. ■ Henry Snarls, practical, scientific cabi net maker and undertaker of many years experience, superintends the ar rangements and reirk. They have late, ly secured a near patent cooling board, the most perfect body preserver in use, and the only one in Centre county, at considerable expense. An elcaant hearse icill be provided gratis. - In transacting business of this kind do not forget R. B. Spaugler & Co, Hiqh St. opp. Bush House, *" UeUefonte.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers