aUr Ctntw Tifwccvat. ; i, TIIK 01NTBX DKMOCHAT is nub < ih l ***ry TUarsdaj morning, at DUofonW, ntr n . county, Pa. i TKftlltt—OAshin ndfMMS Si OO '• If not pgldln ndvMo* fl OO *1 A LIVK TAPKB—dorotft! to tfct ititrreatt of tin* ol" |MM|ll*. tl |*ytnmU made within throe months will bo con* • Meml la*4v*nc. |o j' lp-r will !• discontinued until trrearngosare h paiil .except t option of publleher*. H / 4.1 I'.ipere going out of the county must be paid for In y advance. Ai> person procuring ns tencash subecribars will h b** sent a copy free of charge, t j Oareitensive circulation makes this paper au un usually reliable and profitable m •Hum for an vert Ulna We have the most ample fact! Hies lor JOB WORK ;| and are prepared to print all kinds of Rooks, Tracts j, programmes,Posters,Commercial printing, Ac., In I it et style and at the loweet puoolul* rntftt. H All advertlasMßauts far alese term than three months j, 20 cents per line for the first three insertions, and 5 . cents a line for each additional Insertion. Special Qotlcea one-half more. h KJltorlal notices 15 cents per line. t I, o%t. Vivricss, In local columns, 10 csntspsr Una. , \ lllieral discount is made to persona advertising by <1 b * quarter, half year,or year, as follows: \ JPACI iccvnsp. |!||l '' .)• Inrh (or tS llo.. this Ijr*) C ''l®!? ' Two liu-he*. ' V! L 5, " Thrss lii. hM • <1 o-iarter column (or *> inches) I- - ■+* . Mlf cliimn (or 10 lachM) ? OasOolumn ,r inches) lolftotlnci II c v ,efig t * !rrttsementmust be paid for before In ; aertioa, except on ? early contract*.when half-yearly j |j%ymets n s lvance will I e required. IMum At NottCM, 1A cents p -rltnesach Insertion V Nothing ins. rt-lfnr less that) rents. ,i 0 c sixes a N* OTIC in. in the editorialcolumns, 15 cants per line,# ach insertion. 1 — I ( Answer to Rev. J P. Do Long. , There is so much of undignified per- J sonality in He*. I>eLong's last reply, j that I am almost at a loss to know v where to find anything in it worthy of , an answer. Hut lest my silence might | he misconstrued into an endorsement , of his late article I feel called upon to reply. 1. In regard to my , knowledge of Mr. PeLong's address at , Centre Hull hoing unwritten, I want to r say that I thought the address prepared, , ns Mr. PeLong prepares almost all his , public efforts, namely, in writing. „ Therefore, with that impression I could ■ certainly call for its publication. I , most emphatically disclaim any trick | in this matter. t With reference to the "garbled"' |UO- j tations from Kontlin, Mr. DeLong j '•wastes" many words. My charge wa* ( simply that the quotation was not com . plete, and he acknowledges the charge i ) oy completing it. As to the difference ;, between the "garbled" and full quota j, tion. I leae the intelligent reader to ! judge. I demanded a fair quotation in j , connection with the clni*e immediately I following it, and for this I am called a "wilful and malicious slanderer." I 3. In reply to the statement that I ! do not accept Dr. Geo. P. Fisher au- I . thority when quoted by Rev. DcLong, j. although I used him (Dr. Fisher) as au- !. thority on Luther agin-t him(De Long,) 1 . 1 have on'y this to say : I did not use j Pr. Fisher's name to establish or j s-trengthen a doctrinal position on either side, whilst Mr. D>-Longding sees no "light" in my quo- | tations, and I fear it isonlv another illus tration of the o!d truth, that "None is so blind a he that will not ee." To establish the charge of predentin ntion against Luther, Mr. PeLong again falls back on Koestlin. This charge of predestination strike* til- a* strange thing from Mr. DeLnng, I found fault with it from the first, because of its of fensive boldness and unfairness. It would be just as fair to charge Luther with being a Roman < atholic or a Monk, etc. He was these, but did he remain them? He was a close student of Au gustine, but he noon found him unsafe end abandoned him. In hi* De Servo Arbitrio, Luther desired to have these hard sounding doctrine* made public, but warned against attempts to scrutin i*e the hidden will of Ood, and urged implicit trust in his revealed Word." This from Koestlin a.* in the Schaff Horxog f'vclopjedia of Religion* Knowl edge. Vol" ii p. I.TV 6. On the whole •question. I only ask the reader to rend nil of Koeslin. and he will find him per fectly consistent. A* regard* the ap pointment of a committee to examine into the "correctness and truth" of Mr. DeLong'* quotations, I would say that it i needless, a* the public can do ail that and Mr. DeLong. ' my suggestion, will assist, a* he has done. But Mr. Deling insist* on the Kinaleald article* teaching predestination. Having never read them for himself, (* I must conclude,) he quote* Pr*. Sohaff, Domor and one third of the Lutheran church of Amer ica a* saying that the Smaleahl Article* do o teach. Now it would be we'l for Mr. IeLong to follow the advice of •fudge Orris, or more accurately, hi statement to a friend. He said h<- tier er made a statement, in court which he could not back up. As it hnppcn* in * this case. Schaff i* no safe guide, Porner j* no out and out Lutheran, and Wnlih er acknowledges hi* pri-destination , view* to b t'glvinistic and not Luth eran, To establih the ln*l |mint. I re fer him to the April number of Vol. xl, "IHHI of the Lutheran Toe* ta' ' '!if fit-t •tfttemcat, I will now qu I: on Dr. Seis*<>n" Mi-uiytltn-itand i iig* and Mwreprenentation* of the *' Lutheran fhurch." it paper read in the )' Lutheran Diet of IST" in Philadelphia. HP "ln a recent work on the 11 "reeds'of Christrnd in * * * among >■' itlier ungraoiou* thing* said of the y Lutherans, the stale charge of man wor- ' oe<|, which charges the mon strosity of con*ub*tnntiation upon our invulnerable doctrine of the Holy Lit charjst, we had hoped was effectually buried, never to appear again in any nu i tlior worthy of respect, but alft* ' 1 find it resureeted and again put f.'rtfi in the recent volume* on the ''re- d- oft hrist ; endom, to the great discredit of tlu-ir author, who certainly ought t" know j better, if he doe* not." Pr. Schaff. lie it remembered, is the author <>f the ) freed* of Christendom, you see, Mr. \ DeLong, that 1 have most excellent company in my "Literary crime, of j saving that Schaff "twists. And while on this iMtint, I will quote the fol lowing from "Koestlin life of Luther, p lIV. "He (Luther) himself was still '•compelled to correct sotne misrej.re "sentntinn* of hi* doetrine, and lie did "thi* calmly ; he said that he had ne\ "-r taught that ''hr;st had to decern! "from heaven in order to be present nt "the Supper, but stated that the man 1 "tier in which his Issiy was truly given "to the guests, he would commit to tin- I "Divine Omnipotence." And also hi* ••( Luther's) view, written by liim less I "than nine year* liefore his death, as a "doctrinal statement found in hi*Smal "raid Articles, lie nvs : "We ear. I "nothing about the sophistical subtlety I "concerning tnn*uf*tantiation l.y "which they (the papists tench that i "bread and wine leave or low their own ••natural substance and remain only the "appearance and color of br. a 1 and not "true bread. For it agree* l.cxt with -Holy Scripture that the bread !>e and | remain there a* I'aul himself . (ill* it. i 1 I for.X.lfi. i; "Thebroad which we break," and (I for.. XI. ' Lot htm *o eat of tlint (.read." And u Pr. P .rn-r, Mr. Pel/mg will not dare insist that !■•• I Porner) is a gno•* that Ret s.froh, A ear* ick and Rrx>i|er are with him ill hi* de nial. it be observed, with all due respect for these bretheren, that I can get a iloicn at lea*t (and some of thein no church memfe-r* at all i who sustain me in my charge to the address. And I ran assure Rev. lads.ng that my j*-o pla want none of bi* sympathy. Ihev are well with the inahner and spirit in which I have thu* far "set th<'in right." 7. By refering to my charges, a* stated in the FRXTRT PXXOCRAT by me, the reader will see that Mr. Pel.ong admits at least Jfot of them, and that i* about all of them. And thu* my general charge of belittling Luther stands. I need only ask the reader to notice the contradictory ulterauce* under Mr. De Long's sth snd fith head* in his sum ming up hi* reply. He make* a denial of what I charged upon Zwinli, in re gard to the Kternal Flection of certain heathen, and then almost in tl.e same breath admits it. Who were nobler heathen than Socrates, etc? 8. On the matter of Luther's refusing the hand of Zwingli st Marburg, in ad dition to what I nave already said by way of jutifring I.uther in that act, let me yet add a quotation from Dr. Krauth, (recently deceased), but at the time of his writing it, Norton professor of Systematic Theology and helesiasti cal Polity in the Ev. Luth Theological Seminary at Philadelphia. He says: "The disturbing and radical element in the Reformation prepared the way for the later laxUyandthe unionism which attended it. The tendency which was represented in Carl-ladt and Ocolampa dins, and most energetically and con sMtcnlly in Zwingli, gave an early im pulee in this direction. This it did not simply in sett ng forth the great error which originated the divisions in the Protestant Reformation, but by the levity with which it regarded th whole matter of division. A division which meant the ren ting of the Reformation, it* confusion before its enemies, and the periling of its existence, was regarded as a something which must be held at every cost, and yet, whose guilt could not lie condoned by the shedding of a few team, the offer of a hand, • * *" Luther saved the Reformation by with holding the hand,whose grasp would have meant recognition of fundamental error, either a* in unify with faith, or a* too •] little n thing to oe weight . !>., Frofessor of Svntenmt , ic and Practical Theology in the S.-tn- ( inary of the Ev. Luth. church at Salem, Va. "But of error in all it* form* Lit- ' ther wa* the uncompromising opponent, 1 the enemy no Ic** of a false Protestant- , i*in, than of the Papacy, standing ujion the Word of tiod, and in the COII*CIOU* ' attitude of one made free in the liberty < of Christ, ho wa* a* the defender of , truth the acknowledged antagonist of error in all its forms; divine truth was not with him a matter of human opin ion, or caprice, hut of personal faith and I per-onal experience. A* the truth , which lie accepted and defended was of tiod he could make no comprom ise either with Itonie, lienova ' or Zurich. Whether at Worm* i against the Anabaptist fanatic* < or at Marburg agdn*t ZwingP, Luther | could not, or dared not, compromise or linrter away the truth for a fal*e peace. What he held so tenaciously was not hi* own. Had he heen animated by human ambition, or hy mere opposition to Home, he might and would have made j alliances with many of the Reformatory j movements ami revolutions of that age Hut what God had declared in hi* word could not he changed or rendered a mat ; tor of indifference by mere haud-shak \ ing between him and Zwingli," And now, Mr. Editor, 1 shall not ask you for ] any more of your valuable apace in llii* j discussion. I u*k the reader of your paper to calmly review tin- whole controversy. I dare not take my time from other pre—ing dutie* to devote to the further discussion of tlii* subject, ami especially when I see that the honest presentation of the truth in my endeavors toenlight- | en my friend l>e|/>ng. ha* only served to "fa-cloud his vi*inn," and render him j i impregnable to tie- truth: but more par- ! 1 ticulariy am I lo'b to protract thi*di*- j cttssion since I know that Mr. Iefa-ng ha*, in *ulstance, Mated that they could I : not *|-ak well of all the Reformers and j j TIU MO.XKT J TO si s ros rose, R*#. Washington. February 7.—K It. Wei- ; ! gand, an Examiner of the Department of j'lstice, described a novsl method for ' securing fund* to conduct a Congre* sionsl campaign. The aspirant was ' rani Strobsch. whom the Senate failed to confirm for Marshall of Alabama, i While Mr. Turner was United Mates Marshal tn that State, the witn*** said • Strobach asked to fa- ap|>ointed deputy ; marshal, explaining that he waa anxious to nnko a canvass for Congress. He secured the appointment, Mr. Weigand testified, named a number of deputy ! marshals and went through the district j mak.ng arrests that 'eo* might be obtained to defray the expense* of the I campaign. Mrohach was defeated and • ame to Washington and contested his *eat. The examiner *id that many * poor men *rr--ted in Alabama by depu tie* on the charge of chopping wood on public iattds. These men areoftencom , ei.e i i *el| their small possession* to | osv the c>*ts of their trial, taken, in tr,'si crs. more than 100 miles i and forced to go on foot, and thrn dts charged and allowed to return home as host tie i could. Sons ornsted died, for thessntof food and ex|-osure while walking tothcir home*. Their families 1 also stiff, red having to dispose of their j means for acquiring sustenance to pay the cost* of t lie trio's of the arrested parents. The Morrteon Tariff Bill. SOBK or TUB rainctrat BBDICTIOJI* 808 WHICH THB MBW MBASIBK PKOVIDK*. The two chief reductions are in sugar and woolen fabrics. The twenty per cent, horisontal reduction in the sugar duties will reduce taxation about s*,- 500,000 and leave still a protection of forty-one per i*nt. The reduction of twenty percent, on woolens may reduce taxation about $.'>.000,000. In connection with this schedule there i* a proviso that none of the article* shall pay a higher rate OR duty than sixty per cent. I suppose the consumer* will have little sympathy with a protection monopoly that can find something to grumble at in such a maximum. And yet, this proviso ia very important when we con sider that a number of articles in the woolen schedule arc paying now e ghty, ninety and 100 per cent. duty. The cetten schedule has been reduced to a maximum of forty per cent., and in connection with the horiiontal reduc tion of twenty per cent, on existing rates there will be a reduction of about sl,fioo,ooo. There will lie a reduction of about $4, 000,000 in the metal schedule and a maximum of .'tOper cent., about $1,250,- 000 in the chemical schedule, about $l,. 000,000 in the earthenware and glass SCHEDULE and about $1,000,000 in the hemn *u'd schedule. There M. l ' ** * reduction of $1,200,- 000 in the schedule, about $2,000,000 in the provision schedule, $300,000 in the wood I*- N '' woodenware schedule, aliout $250,000 til TL" paper schedule and about $2,500,00" in the *undries Bchedule. Thus a total reduction of taxes of about $28,600,000 can be relied upon by the horixontal reduction, which, with the abolition of taxes on the additional good* on the free Ht, will *wall the sura total to about $30,000,000. It remain* to be seen how many tax payer* and consumer* there will be found to resint this moder ate reduction in our tariff" system. It i* to be regretted that the free list is not larger.— J. 8. MOW*. ia RTE Ke York 7W The Republican Party Ought to Go A BKPIBUCAX JOIItNAI. CIVS* HCASOX* Tit AT AUK COMCI.t'aIVX. Take the Star Route fraud* a.* an example. The vast majority of the pcto pie of the United State* are convinced that many million* of dollar* are stolen by a combination of mail contractors and officials. They witnessed an attempt to bring the guilty partie* to justice. The exposition of tho frauds mode it clear beyond possibility of a doubt that there were groups of con tractor*, numbering in all more than a baker's dozen of individuals. After a year's preparation, with all tho resource* of the government supposed to beat the command of the officers of justice, only one of the smallest of these different groups was brought to the criminal bar. More than a year was consumed in the trial of this group, during which the government disbursed in lawyer's fees alone more than two thirds as much as the compilation w-r<- alleged to have stolen. I-ong before the trials were J concluded it w* apparent to every in- j teliigent man, woman, and child in the I country that the *o called prosecution j wa* farcical, and the ncquittal of the accused woa not unexpected. In a public add rens the attorney general declared that during two year* more than $l,- | 'MX),OOO had been ntoleu from the public treasury by the*e band* of plunderers, j ; and two years have since elapsed with | .ut a dollar of the money being recover icd or a single thief fa-ing punished. Has there been any public outcry at this miscarriage of justic? Have ther--j been sny evidences of popular discon tent at the manifest incompetency, to use no hxridier term, of the public prosecutors? How istlus supinenessof , the |eoplc lobe accounted for? Only ! upon the theory the all prevadingcon victim) that the government is the legitimate prey of all who can success fully rob it of millions. The govern ; inent i* an abstract to the people in time- of peace and general prosperity. They vaguely recognise the fact that they are the government, and that they have fa-cn robbed—but in the abstra* t of an infinitesimal num. A aeries of , wholesale robberies, by highwaymen or 1 burglar*, in a community, would cause 1 int-n*e local excitement, and rouo | every man to desperation, and if the public authoritie* failed to do their duty - a vigilance committee would *peedily ' set Judge Lynch at work .V ]'■.*/' 7*ie>'r, lisp. Convict Labor. The legislature of the state of New i York is now called upon to enact law ' to carry out provision* of the oonstitu ! ti'.nal amendment to do away with on tract . -nvict lafatr in the prisons of that •tale. This opens up in a practical way the questions of what shall 1-e done with cotiMct*. It is ju't thst habit of being 1 without lalwt and the forming of vicious habit* incident thereto that brought , many of them into the ever increasing rank* of criminals, but just how to keep thetn employed and yet not bring their ill pai l Ist or into coui|-etetion witli that of honest artisan* is a question of no •mall magnitude. If the prisoner* are not *i !f-su| porting the deficiency must at lat IK- nxseoaed u|>on the labori r who always finally pay the taxes. A* an able writer in the Crntvry for February aaya: "Send a man out with a knowledge of a trade and may)* he will come back but the chance* are he will not. Send htm away without a trade and may be he will not come beck, but the chance* are he will.'' The entire corpa of students of prison science and economy are busy with tbia question. It is akin to that lately re ceiving o much attention in the impor tation of unskilled labor under contract by mining and other corporation*. Labor i* seeking relief from the burdens that seems daily pressing more and more onerously upon it. Make haste slowly must be the motto. There are two side* to the question. Brutally Murdered Mrs Mary Lew is, aged )>5 years, was brutally murdered at the residence of Charles Twitcher, at North Bridgeport, laat night. Three men. Jaroea Blake, George Butler and John Bishop, while intoxicated called at the house abeut II o'clock. Twitchell and wife were drunk in a bedroom and the rufßian* went to the room and altemptnd to out rage Mr*. Twitchell. Hearing her cries Mrs. lewis, who was in the kitoben, . went to her assistance, when she was shot and instantly killed by one of the men. The murder wa* not discovered until this morning, Twitchell and hi* , wife awakened from their debauch. The men were than arrested. Bishop admitted the shooting, but claimed it was accidental. Heceased was a rwpec , table woman and belonged in Trum bull. IT is idle now to talk of making the , issue between free trade Nomocracy and Republican protection. The Morrison 1 bill is not free trade, and opposition to i it is not, in any decent sense, the sup- I port of protection. The bill ia, in ef I feet, a moderate and conservative stt npt to deal with the actual and ' rr wing needs of the business of the country. By treating it fairly and i intelligently the Republican can serve the country with no harm to their own i and no decided advantage to their op ponents. By blind adherence to the tariff as it la, exorbitant aud oppressive, i partiai and unjust, they csn do them r selves great injury and greately help llfeir opponents. Pbutos, cabinet* and tintypes, at IJ'.y er's. An EnthuaiaHtic Endorsement. GOBIUM, N. JL, July H, 1872. ORNTN—Whoever you arc, I don't know; but I thank the Lord and feel grateful to you to know that in thi* world of adulterated medicines there i* one compound that prove* anil doe* all it advertises to do, and more. Four year* ago I had a slight shock of ]>aly, which unnerved ui to such an extent that tho least excitement would make mo shake like the ague. L;u>t M*y I wsa induced to try Hop Hitter*. I u-"d one bottle, hut did not see any change ; another did so change uty nerves that they are now us steady as they ever were. It u.-ed to take faith hand- to write, but now my good right hand writes thi*. Now, if you continue to manufacture a* honest and g(od tin article n* you do, you will accumulate an honest fortune, aid con'or the greatest blessing On your felb w-nten that was ever conferred on mankind. TIM HI Kin. —TWo latest crar.o-wave braid, at font* •& do DKKS.S MA KIN*. In the very Latest Citv Styles, and with A 'eatntot ami h. DZALE3 5a I!7MA'.: 7A!3 55525, I (lorn Lings made to order Linking done on short notice. Stamping in French fail a Specialty. I am Afao Agent for the Celebrated Ire*s Makers' MAGIC SCALE. Vrn. A. K. SKIBEIiT, No. 11 All< gheny St., 50 3m. 11- l.efont -. I'a FORKSHOUSE Cohtirn, Centre' <"•., I'tt. GOOD MEALS\ CLEAN BEDS. PRICKS MODERATE. •nrHOTEL WITHIN TWO MIN UTES' WALK TO STATION. I(/o>*i Slaf'lr Ae&imnu-datioT,'. Excellent Hunting snl Fishing grounds quite near this Hotel. JOS. K'Kf'KNKI! - Prop'r. i BUTTS & POWERS. HARNESS MAKERS, IT-TAIRs AL"YK PSTur will IK notable. Congress, iltktod between > Republican Htatx And A liagmmUc llnow, will be busy prnldcab ■tklo(. The |rmt battle (if Protection against Pre* Trade will agitate the Capitol And the country. The I'iwKwtiil campaign will be the kudMt fought And rouut ndtln{ political | struggle for a quarter of A century Europe, in lho opinion of tho bout informed. tranbltt on th •re Of A |TOAt WAT. With ucb An ooUook A lit# newspaper which print* All tho npwu And toll* tho whole troth About It U mors tkoa oror A Docooofty. Roth A news paper LO TUB RTUHADELRMA I'HW Telegraph wires In It* own ofßco place it In iustantatx-ou* communication with A Oorpa of otror lo hondrod nowi gatherer* distributed All over tho civilised world. Tho special dally eahlo service which it •hare* with tho Now York llrrald cor era orory 1 phase of activity In European life. No paper ' excel* It in All the elenirnta which go to make op A broad, full, rouiplet* journal. Beaidea being a complete ncwapaper. TH* WEBKLT Pnaaa haa aercral apecial feature* which pat It at the top The Aoaicctn-aat DKPARTM RUT, enriched by cone lan t ©ontribu i tiona from the foremoet writer* lit various i brancbea. give* tho practical tiling* that people want to know on the larm and in the garden. The HKl.ri.ro HARD ROW WON** or Home Depart menu edited by Mr*. Kate V peon Clark. I* full < of information, binu and happy thought* for every I wife, mother and head of a household. , A great feature of tho coming year will be the I highly valnabl* letter* offJoawn P. WBKKS on Wage* of Working men. the genera) condition* of 1 labor and the Coat of Living In Europe a* com pared with America. Mr. Week*, who bad charge , of thU auhject for the Ccntui of IStKI, haa made It a life etudy, and li t* been Abroad tbt* year con ducting n (peciat investigation. Itla letter* will give the facta a* to earning* In alt the various Industrie*, the purchasing |wwer uf wag", strike*, trades-unionuuu, arbitration, etc. The Wkkkut rum la full of choice home read ing, with pllttlet And other tnatier for the little I folk*, atorh a and pastime# for adult* and children, 1 fashion Doled, recipe*, gleanings from enrrent ' literature, a careful summary of domestic and > foreign news, and an earnest diacnaaton of the great question* of the day. Sample copies moiled /rrc, i HEWTERISOP THBPPESS: t Br mall, postage free in the U. R. and Canada. I Dally, except Runday. SO eta. a mnothi K a year Daily, amonlhi ffJOayear I Run day PreM, HOB a yaar. Wmkly Prowl, • - tl.oo a Tear, Jpm/rs. cmkcfcr end *-<**• Orders may fe ernf * gar risk OA* iWsll ts modspajmNs l*e ordsr V THE PRESS CO., Limited, yi ruujuirxrutA. PA. (Jrorerirs, frovltiortf, >(> . K. lilinWN, Jr, 4' CO., • No. 3 and 5 Bishop St., Bellefonte. GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUE & FEED, FISH, SILT, k 44 U THE CHEAPEST ' STORE t 7b buy (iroc'Tien in this flec tion of the State. 4 4 LOOK At a few of ODE FEICES: .'JO lb*. No. 2 Mackeral |2 00 1 Saik Beet Roller Flour . 1 50 1 Can Finest California Peaches 35 1 " " Apricot# 30 1 Peart 30 *4 3 Can* String Bean* 25 3 " Lima " . 25 3 " Corn . . 25 3 " Tomatoes . . 25 i 3 " Peat . 25 1 " Good Tabic Peache* 20 3 Bottles Catsup . . 25 3 " Pickles . . 25 1 lb. Baking Powder . . 30 1 lb. Pure Pepper . 25 l 4 ! 5 lb*. Granulated Bugur . 4* A 1 gill. Bent Table Syrup 'all sugar ) 70 j 1 " Glucose Syrup • 45 I Choice Kice . . Ob .1 pound.* Sultaua Prunes . 25 j Lump Starch " . 06 ' Corn Starch, per pound . . Ob j 1 pound lest Co fee . . 10 ! Sardines, 3 boxes for • 25 1 Scaled Herring, per box • 35 j f Extra honed Codfish, per box 45 J I>oose Valenlia Raisins • 0? \ I Seedless Raisins • 10 v French Prunes • 15 Olieui Soap . • 08 Bloater Herring, per dor. . 20 2 lbs (anued Corned Beef , 27 Tapioca Flake or Pearl . 07 EVERYTHING ELSE Sold a* Cheap In Pro portion. —M — We also have in connection with our store a first-class Meat Market, * And sell CHEAPER them j any otlur Meat Market in ■ town. _ \ E. BROWS, JR., & CO.' 0-I.lf BELLKFONTE, FA.