Ehc Criitrc jflfmocrat BELLEFONTE, PA. TIIK CKNTKK PKMOCKAT Is pub liatiixl *>vory ThurU) morning, HclUfoOt*, < county, l'. TBRMB-Ch In *} 'j° If not |niJ In ntlfiiucw. LJU A LI VH PAl'KH—dcvotnd to t! lnurct of lII* I*nymiiu um<li> within thn* months will t " coii nllrs*.l In sdtinri*. N- p*|Hr will h dlscontliiniMl until arro*ri:i%rv (•ai l sicnpt St option of Iubllhrt. I'*l>u r w going out of thn county must b® pslI forln Auyporson pr>curtne us t<n<'Mh sutmcrlbors will tin nit * "py ' liW|t. Otir<tlsnilv circulation lunkcs this pi|r nn tin* usually rolial lo aiol profitable no limn f..r amortising. Wo have the most ample l.icilllios f-r Jolt \\l. h an.l *ra prepared to print all kind" ol IWk*. 11 ■ t. Programmes, Posters,t 'suntioT- lal printing, At , in t li<* " flnxit jrl. *n>t*t Hi. low-ni ,sll 1 r*ti- Ml , Iv. rli- lii. iil" f. r * I -I-1111 tlmi'llir'" > Ml'" •Ju'iMit* Ill"' f.r tli" tlr-t tlif" it - rtl"i., .ill conu III!" lir "."I' WIOUIUIMI lii.rtiuu S|..v|al notices tHie-lialf mors. K litorlal n ti. • I • •*■ I' r " f,,, t, •< vi. N'ti ki m ' • i jmns, JOcsnts p. r line A libnmldiscount •* ma Is t.. ; • I sous - h•I ■ 1 v th quarter,half >• ir, or >•• II ai I * l sr% s i run. in. h !•" l- • tliU tjr| i ■ Q ' 11. , ■ • " . tli ill . . ~ , T I. . h 111 tl N u - -V \ ' n umns r tLt *•r Jin... • % I, Inserti n Corruption ami Fvlrnuiifiiiice. I'nder the above ht*alittjr the Wash ington /'■ ' has some pertinent remarks on the mismanagement and incompe I teney of Ben. 11i.rri-< Brewster, theilmln representative <>l Pennsylvania in the Cabinet of President Arthur. i'lie /' f says: "When law abiding citizen* of South ('arolina were being arrested on Utterly groundlo-* charges, and tratisp irte.l long distances to be arraigtie-1 before 1 I'nited Mates commi*i'in-r*. for the sole purpose of giving corrupt • tii•-1 '- of the Department of Justice a chance to make fees, the /' ' called attention to those outrages and demanded such interference on the part of the Attur ney General as would protect inotlen sive citizens from summary arrests and maltreatment at the hands of his min ions. But the Attorney General gave no heed to the call for protection of honet men in their inalienable rights, and newspapers, conducted in the interest and expressing the views of the Admin istration, sneered and jeered nt the complaints of dozens of <|uiet. law keep ing farmers who had been dragged from their homes in planting time, and ul jected to gross insults by a gang of vil iainou* deputies bearing commissions or other credentials from Mr. Brewster's department. A few days after the /'>f had made its first appeal and while the Adminis tration organs were still sneering, .fudge Bond, who is more intensely radical in his Kepublicanism than any member of the Cabinet, and who has displayed a more partizin spirit than ativ other judge who has ever sat on the federal bench, felt constrained by the condi tion of things which he found in South Carolina, to issue a manifesto which fully bore out all the had alleged of unlawful, tyrannical and nnt cxaa peratingly outrageous arrests. Thus the judicial rebuked the executive depart ment; hut this stinging humiliation . or, rather, the rebuke that would hare | been humiliating to the last degree had there been capacity to appreciate it had no more influence on the head of the Department of .fustice than a vol ley of boiled peas would have on the eleven inch steel turrets of , monitor. Not one of the ra-cals rebuked by two judges was publicly censured by the Attorney General. All were retained in the employ and, presumably, in the confidence of his department. At a later day the J'o ■ published a number of specific allegations made by the grand jury in the Circuit court of the I'nited States for the Middle di trict of Alabama, showing systematic fraud and a regular combination of officials of the Department of Justice to cheat the Government. I 'f the fifty bills of indictment found by that grand jury, all hut two charged offenses by Federal officers against the law* ot the I'nited States. But even this did not move the Attorney Generai, and not a single rascal of his corps in Alabama lost bis official head or even got a re buke, ao far as we have been able to learn. Then came the < Utman compromise, arranged by one of Mr. Brewster'* spe cial attorneys, who was also the attorney for Hitman. This fragrant scandal will last a long time and be heard of in many ways. We are confident that Congress will want to know why the $19,000 of recovered money was return ed to the attorney of the thief "pal will want to know why <>ttman was not permitted to go on indefinitely asking or whistling for it. In this brief review we have made no mention of the gross indecency of em ploying contestants and contestees of seal* in Congress to defend their own claims to such seats—of paying at bat one man for such service who is and has been, while thus employed and paid, drawing pay as a tnetubei of <*iti gress. When the Congress meets there will be impertinent members of the House who will want to know some thing about this. The New York <S'un of the 19th in slant, in an article on "Kxtrsvaganre in the department of .Justice," charge*— and, and what is more to the jmint, prove*—that "gross and glaring abuses nave been conspicuous in that depart ment in three branches of it* service." The Sun states the following fact* : Nearly the whole sum of sfioo,ooo for witnesses were exhausted in the first nine month* of the current fiscal year. The fund of $3115,000 "for payment of district attorneys and their assistants" is also exhausted, the greater part of the appropriation having been paid to the different counsel in the star route ■ rosecution. Personal and political ftrorites have been retained in eighteen States and Territories to conduct cases of ordinary practice, including the com nton collection of debts. The regular district attorneys have been ignored or set aside in these cases to give large rc tainers and fees to pels of the Admin istration, who in many < f them have rendered only nominal service, and were at the same time drawing puy as members of Congress. Kvery msn who is not blinded by sell interest or prejudice will agree witii the Sun that "u system which admits of these abuses must be radically wrong," a fid that a "public officer who practice* or tolerates them i* unworthy of public confidence " If it had been the intention of the Administration to run one of the de partments as a factory to supply Demo cr.it* with campaign capital, that intent would have been carried out by the De partment o .lustioo us it lis* been man aged by Attorney General Brewster. The Mill liucMlgiition. Mll'.Arlo* 11, IKMII IV lOVMirtoV Mini THE I'llll.AllKl .I'll IA ASH I IV IV SATI 111 lI.IIIMiS. Wisii i NiiTov, .1 une HI. lit the ex ami n it.mi of the alleged fraudulent prac tires of Supervising Architect Hill, in ■oi nt-eiion with the erection of the Post i iflice and Custom House at Phils delpliin, Fx Congressman Thomas 11. Murch testified that there was gro-s ex travagnnce in tlie- payment of the stone cutter*. A representative of the firm ! of M mley, Cooper A Co., of l'hiladel- j phi.i, t<-tilled that their bid for supply ing iron shuttei * for the public building at Cincinnati was rejected and the con j tract awarded to the I'nited State* Fire 1 Proof Iron -ilo and Shutter Co, of I Boston, although the latter * bid wa* ; s2l,">isl higher than that of the Phila d- lpliia firm. Willie** also said that l.e | had been offered a bribe of $1 il by '.ill" I nited State* Company to withdraw | iii- I•: i, hut the offer wa* refuse I. In : reply it w*< contend'' 1 that the r- ,*-n Malih-y, < )Oper A 1 >.'* I Iw i* not ei-n sidere 1 w,i* that the shutters they | ro i I to furnish were not of the proj i-r gride or style. Mr. Ifill testified that he heard of the allege 1 attempt at bribery, but that Damon, the repr- s,-i, tative of the Boston cnm| my, dene-d it. He did not remember what Damon had sai l imr when nor where the i >n i ver ation took place, nor whether any one else wa* prenont at the time, lie did not take murli stock in the bribery ; story at the time hi* attention WA railed to it. He did not make any effort to personally investigate the ( charge, though ho notified the Secretary of the Treasury of it. The Ohio Democrat*. jri-.r lIOAIU.v NOXINATIII r-m i.ovrav ■: "V -El "Mt n MOT" -THE TP MT AVI, FLATFOR*. COM m.i -, dune :'|. The Democratic Mate Convention to iav ws* presided Over by -John MeSwecney. I \ Venator Ihuruian appeared upon the stage of tiie convention to second the nomina tion of General Durbin Ward. He was received with enthusiasm. He warm i tho I Vmocr tts again-t tying them>elve to any one icue, and announced that the party had always been arrayed against sumptuary legislation and houbl continue in that way. Hoadly, Ward, (ie-ldes and Denver were putin nomination for Governor. The first ballot resulted: Hoadly, 2 ■>; Ward, 1 : Geddes, 77 ; Denver. ♦. After the i call on the second ballot had been con eluded some change* began for Hoadly And the greatest excitement prevailed, delegate* clambering over each Other and storming the platform before the j result "f the ballot couhi he announce I. A motion to nominate Hoadly by accla 1 mation was carried. Ho bad in the neighborhood of .VI votes, .",|o being necessary to a choice. .Judge Hoadly soon appeared and ac- ; cepted the nomination in a brief ml dress, during which he reviewed hi* connection with the party, lie said that although he had wandered at one time with the Bepublican* to fight the battles of the colored race, the Demo cracy was broad enough to receive him again. He esteemed it a great compli ment to he nominated over more worthy candidates, and believed that the con. vention would place men on a platform whose leading principle* were personal liberty, self control in temperance mat ter and a license system. In tho meantime General Ward was brought in and made a speech, in which he severely rebuked the party for fail i ing to recognize hi* thirty years' service. Not to be daunted, he announced him self publicly as a candidate for I'nited States Senator. A speech by Judge Geddes was in a somewhat different vein, though both pledged fealty to the J parly. ( Ihe platform affirms the principles of the party as expressed in the prima ries and in the State and national plat form* in regard to personal liberty. The r application of these principles to our 1 present condition demand* the purifioa j tion of the public service, the punish • ment of the robbers of the publio f treasury, the equalisation of all publio | burdens, the arrest of the profligacy I and extravagance that corrupta the ad a miuisitation of publio affairs, and a I total change in the policy that linn no i long been pursued by the Republican i party of favoring individual and class I interest at the expense of the laboring I and wealth producing people of the ' country; favor a turitl' for revenue ' limited to the necessities of a govern 1 went economically administered and so ' adjusted in its application as to prevent ' unequal burdens, encourage protective interests at home and afford just corn ' pensation to labor, but not to create or j ' foster monopolies. The rest of the platform is chiefly d>- voted to State issues. On the liquor ' question it is in favor of the largest { liberty of private conduct consistent with the public welfare and the rights of others, and of regulating the liquor ] trallie and providing against evils re suiting therefrom by a judicious and , , properly graded license system. , The convention then proceeded to , the nomination of Lieutenant (iovernoi and John <L Warwick, of "-lark county. was selected by acclamation. The work of making the ticket wa , continued, with the following results for Supreme Judge,short term, M irtin j l. l ollett; Supreme Judge, long term, Selwin >wcn; Supreme <>urt Clerk. J. J. Cruiksliank ; Attorney fieneral, James Lawrence; Auditor of Mate, Mrml Kcisrnielter; I'rcnsurcr of State, l'eter , Rrody. • i'ulitical Assessments, ! Ihe following the text of the new i iw to j i ihibit political assessments "That it shall bo unlawful for any I o itumittee or member thereof, dire, (Iv or indirectly, to demand of any public off. cr, subordinate or employe, holding any positi nof honor, trust or | :,t in tins ( imnionwealth, ,r others i t gaged or employed in the • rv. >• <•' the •state, or from any officer, subordinate or employe in nnv w iy ■ i. 'aged or em ployed in the services of any city or county of this State, any a • -niei.t contribution, > r per rentage of any money, property, or other equivalent .n anything of value with the under stan i.ng, either expo-- ■ | ( , r tnplie I. i that the aauie may :>r shall be u • i ! r any political purpose whatsoever. Any ! person or persons violating any of the | foregoing provision* shall l e ,lectin- I guilty of a mi'demeanor and on convic tion sentenced to pay a fine not to cx j reed jIUU." The Leading Issue* in I**!. The questions relating to the civil service and tan'! w.l! <ontinue to be leading iue* and may eaailv assume decisive importance in the I'rea.den tin! canvass. The National Conven tion of loth parties will undoubt edly adopt platform declarations more or les m barm<>ny with the views of the civil service reformers, and l*r< . idential candidates will rtrire to obtain their suj port without giving too much , otfense to the active spoils politicians > \s regards the tariff i#*ue, strong efforts are being made to keep -,t ut of the < canvass entirely, but it is almost err i fain they will be futile. At present most of the Republican manager* nre deposed to commit the party wholly to the existing high tariff", but political development* at the West ar.d the out come of the approaching Mate elections may discourage the Republican lead, r* an i warn them not to a lopl a policy i that might alienate some of the strong et Republican States. Many of the democratic managers desire to dodge the tariff question, but tber. too, may ' j find it necessary to change their politi- 1 cvl programme. Within the next 1 twelve months some new question may i spring up, monopolize | üblic attention ! and exercise decisive influence upon 1 the contest for the Presidency. This is at least possible, though it doe* not seem Tory probable At present. The next session of t'ongress cannot fail to have important effect# in shaping the policies of the two leading parties.— /; (jflifo (V.vr.cr 11' em.) Marly on Sheridan. TIIR FX COSrEI'KRSTK* c.KVRRAt. TIIIMS.S 'IIRRIIMX OI'.IIT TO II SV r. I AI*Tl RRIr lII*. <>en. Jubal A. Marly, according to the Boston Uh'f, recently told a party of northern tourists that General Sheridan ought to have been court martialed for not capturing bis (Marly'a) force* in the Shenandoah valley in 1864, a* Sheridan had four men to hi* one. Marly also say# that Sheridan'# ride wa tinners * sary, as General Wright had already prepared to attack the confederate* be fore Sheridan arrived. Speaking of hia raid into Pennsylvania and Maryland, fieneral Marly said ; |"Whn I waa in York", Pa., I levies) an assessment of so much corn, so much clothing, so many boots and ahoes, so many bags of grain and $lOO,OOO in money. They delivered everything in accordance with my re quisition, except the $lOO,OOO. Of that amount the mayor brought me $72,000, and begged for further time to raise the balance. I extended the time, but left early the next morning, and York atill owe* me $28,000. York afterwards aa tablished a loan to meet this lory in aid of the southern confederacy, getting authority from the Pennsylvania b-gis ; lature to lay a special tax to pay off a i portion of it each year, and I under 1 stand that it# citizens are still contr | billing to its liquidation. If I was one j ot th'-iu I would luise the point that such a tax is in violation of article I I, section 4, oi the constitution of the I'nited States, which provides that all debts or obligations incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the I'nited Slates shall beheld illegal and void." Ml'. 1111111111111 ami the Gllio Ticket. A* we walked ulong I asked : " en atnr, what do you think of the strength ; of the ticket nominated on Thursday , last? a "I do not think thit there ue any elements of weakrn- sin it. 1 if-course it is well known that I was anxious to ee (ienei.d liiirhin Ward nominate i. This was largely becaw <1 I felt that un selfish 11 nd heroie I irmoerat w t . eni itled to the honor and the reward implied by a nomination for ' 1 oa-rnor by tin 1 h; I leiiloeraey in I-" .. lor, tnnrk \ nu, tllO nomination si-quiv .'..-nt to an election." "Io you think so "I haven't the si ghte-t doul.' of it." said the Senator, und he eniphai/ed his remari-* bv strik ng bis h. I.me violently on tM- ground. "Tne mere per-onality of the • indidaO s lllolints to but lit tie 11 tiie e Ilnpa gfl. It is the I n* 111 .-ratie party that tror,g not its raiidobates.'' A Kit tor Att.uk oil the i'rt-sldt ut. file iiu who o> 'Upie the White House no more "rules" tb in d tea the hoy who lilaek* hi br ts. lie I n t the raj 11 ity • 1 rule. \ aw r I polit c. in lie w.i- a ii., a s' ate. man he is a failure. ili jo ever limited to the narrow theater where ' the 1 ire omnipotent the he. er nnd-tri, '•r, wh) manage the p i;t;e 1 fa gleat city 111 ways that ••ate-ujen neither kn w nor rare to ur.-ler -tan I. Te „n fr >rn tins . ingeni .1 atm- >j lu re. 1 y t;.• bullet of an ui issin, he is a tni-erable failure. l.<-t us have the charity to Ml| pihe only obeys an it.-rrulihle 1 is of nature, "that t.o 1* • r. • < ;ed 1 r shall IOT rule r. ' If da, 1 lirp Iv a nu-sssge ve! 11,- tl II "to perm.t the pre-,dent judge of the 1 lift of ' nnnDon Pleas, in tlu- counties wi.ere by present laws the county treasurer collect- the taxes to change the dale or date at which aveducti n of said taxes for prompt payment shall cease t. ,v ernor Pattuon. of Pennsylvania, say,: "I am opposed to all leg lation that jr.- ve-ts our judge* with function* rut strictly ulic.si. Their independence, their dignity, and their u'-<-fuln* *■ are b -t preserved and | rotecO 1 by confin ing their diligence to the simin stra ti n of tut ice .11 the interj rotation <•' our laws ' Pew executives have ever been able to g.-, e a better reason for d cjin ng to aj pi ■ a bill. II / <!. Tiir Lancaster /•;.• ;<• - - hit* the right spot when |oking of the lottery trade siel the tl*e it* sgent* make of the public press "If the Leg '..iture really wants to stop Intteru-s, wby doe* it not lay it* hand on the stork market and the oil, grain and produce markets, where men gamble ! >,ly. and Mere the dice *r • loa led I y a few to fleece ibo many; where it I" notorious that the latiil "go only to be s|e>rn ? Ijiero are iiouM, Yunderbill and the rest sailing away in their yachts, thr ugh millions gathered by playing a lottery game with tle;r fellow*, in which the decision w k not left to unaided chsnce, hut u < cured by carefully planned schemes to beat those who entered .nto the game with them." Pier Mu this season, contest* with sjiirit its claim for superior attraction | for those seeking relaxation from busy life, toenjov the invigorating hrec7o and bathing ol the sea shore during th* hot weather. Apparently not satisfied with the endless chain of musical and mili tary attractions heretofore outlined for the season, it is announced that the celebrated Rand of the fnmou* New York Seventh Regiment,f'srlo A.Oeppa, musical director, ha# been engaged for concert* on July 4th, to be given in the new paviliyn now being erected on the lawn of the Stockton Hotel, This or ganixation stand* first among the mili tary hand* of the country, and include# among its performer# a number of di* tingmshed soloist*. The Slate Fenri hies, accompanied hv full hand and drum corps on June .',oth and July Ist ; concert* on July 2d and 3d. by the Weccaooe Rand ; the Seventh Regiment Rand nri the 4tb, together with a dis play of flraworks in the evening.gnake a list of attractions unprecedented for *0 early in the season. I.Mcr, Kidney and llright's Disease. A medicine that destroys the germ or cause of Bright'* Disease, Dialajtea, Kidney and Liver Complaints, and has power to root them out of the ayatem, is above all price. Such a medicine is Hop Bitten, and positive proof of thia can be found by one trial, or by asking your neighbon, who have been cured by iL 25 21 Doa*n . sny# a Washington corrcspon ] ; dent, i* very bitter in his denunciation j of Republican politicians who ho claims : I y lb* mail <on tracts in j' which h. brother and hi fro-ml* were 1 interested, lie j* especially severe on I Senator John A. Logan, Dnrsey'a inti j mate relations with the Republican lenders haveunabUd him to !,<•<;,,j u <, 1),,. I" ssessor of secret* w-hi- h i. • could use with terrible effect if hc< |,o>e. lie j* not at all di-incliiied to explode his lOaga/iiiM if ho , •>ii iu-ie- tout it will blowup eeitain labile 1 lie n .11 bis party. liiHt of Jurors Autpunt Ti-rm. 1 AA I. I- Uf . tie- RttV 1w • st, 11. 11. . Ji- ■ t, I)a: , furuief Wa.k'-rt AO-hip. Kll Itr-lt. turn. - I ■ •n ' wi.-;.:p. ■ - < * I ' r. IS- t-.wi. : t , I A 11 •11 1 >, Pi In in R. I- i lnt,< - f|. •„ at ; AI, rat. ain AA •T- r, 1114 r ■ limit, 11 hr I. J 1 ' M I'-r. '. r 11,, r If. • • w: ..p . J. - Shi.l'-r 1 ug< ot |*l*i,ij - irg J R Bui ;ar lner, 1 r. Lilo riv tw-j J ' M . - far,,-.. ]',.• • -. • A: on . ' A\ ■ r r. y A I. Ml .t, fare -r, • ;re ■ ; A.-.ship ■ A! ' I ' • ■ lie •. M J I' Ir> er, fnrrr ■ r R, • • r ' A r,>' ; | J M My•l ie ■ ■ to p. • • >. tw . !: ■ - ■ II A Knsrr, far,re - IS. •re • tow- >.i; . ' ' -A : M La . f..-:.,- f! J aim-, fr a> r , r 15 . Tlu-nisi A' . ;•' n, t'-sii ■'.• r, 1: ,-tj tw p. ■ i rsnkDile ~ fart -r. lino, s twi 1 : 1; ' AS : \S irir... • ,r- . • A■ ■ -v.; t has. If. lir .tn • i"-! f- , •, \| i,e 1a j - AA , Rv AS ... .... ii • I .... . j ■ •HAM, Zt 1. ■H- I K At r.I AT TJCKW. ■ V. .... ■ ■ • M .. < re an far no r. \VI.I < r twt AA Jf Tm r. fare - It r r r twp. i , ■ F I' Mu -rk. M • -i. A-Jf v. 11,. ■ • I ~1 ur.it. , I j ;r< h • . : inner, i' ■ •- twj ft '. rt Kirks.!- farmer, J*h .rg. A J. It: vs r . • . . j J nil l> ! • • t, I, ■ - A: • t ■ J! A Fir.).. farni-r, Taj r - A! ML* axe !• r \j > ,rj. M S I' ' • It R I Lap rt. wag nf. 1. \ I'h;. ;b .rg i i fa i. Sin - .f it rrrt i w mints. 0 POWDER Absblutely Pure. ; T •;• *lvf A fn*rt-v| < f fnintt ! tf iftli ttxl w!. !#*• n < < > M m , --h *J tI'MTi : t! . • a v 1 1 h Ito I ' I • ' • ! ith (lk fnulllt- \* ■ t J t-st, kh"fl * , M bit m I p)m*| }.itc j * ?• I,• tin >"• •. \AY BAP* IPO Pnvptp , ICKJ Wlkll 4T|, K. V ll HAS BEEN PROVED L- The SUREST CUnt for |i KIDNEY DISEASES. I h M I I>OMl)AfTi4 btsck or dtkTrdrTSi QrlfM indi : tkf m TiMltn pTB KW IX) HOT j j C|HKATTATB; Kidney Wort M <drne- • rnwmmMl it)pr,4 it prill *jy*cH\y oppt * thr and hrplthjr *-tion # c | rtcljnc rsrsoaplslali| *■ isCiUIODt J ** wwtknms'P. Kldnry Worl U WIMWTT 5 M It will Kith Jnorminmo<\ cfarln#, f S btiffk dntorrop7d#pm;Ui.n(ldpll flrafctnf C v pains, All jdrJ.l to ita cvtpUto popror. 3 * o.*soLr> nr AXI. nacooisT* rvt-. >i * iiw.i p'w -iTMirnrTTa tflyPl IjkHA4AA*J aPW I >KNN KU TOWNBIIIPSCI[OOL I > MSTRUT RIS xir-rs AXI Kxrr.amTt |ss,i, Jan. I T Hslsne. In h.n.ls of trsas 7* 44 to imt p*4,t l>jr O Hosier* IHO * Te Stsi. A|,|* I ft < ais-jttau so B* *tn'l P4<t lets'h'ts IrtWl 00 Its in'l |wM serin* l*p lIS T Br m l |*M Or. siel iwlls. I0 Br km 1 cool Ins e4 .ktrs n. . i I Br un'l esirt scry sn4 Irom. . MM Br *T to Bslssc# as l In < •stMir. Iran, - 1.1 I Bslsee. m hS c.Zle, OH *o—o IST 19 I AMSnvnO l>r Audltei* AIA)U tUiU, FrnnMnat. T. F. HIM, •SuvUrj OMR I V * " % AV u> A dvertiHcmentn, Bise^RED without Medicine . :■'a'o■'•'-1 I.: . : ; WARRANTED TO CURE-':>}rr ▼'' ' " fi/n Ih ih' Ik< L , b * '• llltlltk, IH riuua tt ll'l 1 , i ;> b Mff * K' nrr Iu( .t . thrum at Inn, |,t .. 1 • I t , , ll' ( M4 iLt i ! ■ I . r, 8 • ' mlia I • Mit* i • .*, !**,• , ■ ~ , J. . \ - i'mbV r u U **'' I ' • ■ T < • • > ! [f\ri\ f Ul'< 1* r. • lrtt tllil> . I*' - t I >. , -r. ■ W. ' r, I I 111 nil lIlbM ' I•' -.3 - ' r. *1 ntir> J' * t vr f • i • f Xrjff. 'r, j r f ■ Ilirii —■,• j. * *ti ii • 1 rr•t <• rr |b • in I o (4 h < aft L > w 1' ' ■1 ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER. „ TO THE LADIES;-^7/-?:^ uri irlfc, Nifiiiua I iliMniMiiN Ih t > ;>ilfc.or *!' 1 fi' < J,| % - •r % i. | Jri' >. Il . .r I 'lf or I* Mil ALI., or- Ift. J.-l, ' j •. I • . , r TT a I *. r? .. v f I t A/f U* I*. I* .•' lor I.pw Ititr I. UmUni i,f ||if •*,#. Knit. II 4, of Ii • wok W. |/f i/r '**.!<• -il i>' ~im- b. I 'm') I rrml 1 efUii t. 1 r 1 utal Mm* er I li> •. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers