a | AA HARTA PI HI i ve POPULATION AND FOOD. REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS OF A MODERN MALTHUS. nn dn fn Almost Every Country There is Food fio Spare=Why Malthas' Doctrine is no | Longer Plamible=The Earth's Food | Producing Capabilities, { The current number of The Forum con- | Bains a sprightly article by 'Jhomas W, Kuox, entitled “Standing Room Only.” It shows | that several countries in the world contain so | many people that they can scarcely walk about without jostling each other. For example, the statement is made that Java bas 508 ine habitants to the square milo, Japan 254, Italy | $46, Belgium 4§1, and the Netherlands 812 | The author then states that there is hardly a country whose population is diminishing, | while that of most countries is increasing | with wonderful if not with alarming rapidity, This increase of population is largely duo to | the absence of wars and better sanitary cone ditions, Mr. Knox thinks that it is time to study the philosophy of Malthus, who Leld that population, unchecked, increased in geomet rical ratio, while food can only be made to increase in arithmetical ratio. HS also argues that checks on population are absolutely necessary, and claims advantages for war, pestilence, famine and most of the destructive vices. Hoe states that few of the countries in which there is “standing room only” can pro- duce food enough for tho inhabitants, end shows by official census tables that the num ber of these countries is increasing very rapidly. He predicts that our own will Le added to the list of overpopulated countries in no very distant future. At present few of the original thirteen states produce food enough to supply all the inhabitants. The line that divides the states thay (0 not pro- duce food enough for the people from those that do is constantly moving farther west. ! NO CAUSE FOR ALARM, This modern’ Malthus has no camse for alarm. In almost every country in the world there is food enough and to spare. In nearly every land food producers are discouraged by overproduction. At one time farmers found no fault with prices, but complained becuuse they could raise but little. Now they complain of low prices, and find fault because so much is produced. English papers stats that there was never a time iu the history of the country when a day's wages would pur chase 30 much food. During last year sugar sold for a penny a pound, and many farmers used it as a condiment or food for cattle and Fresh herrings sold in London markets for a halfpenny each, and the poorest labor- ors ate white bread, oranges and bananas During several months small fruits werd 0 cheap that they commanded only a nominal price, and some farmers and gardeners used them to fertilise their land. One vessel brought 40,000 carcasses of frozem mutton from one of the Miikland islands, where it was bought for a penny a pound. Two steam: ship companies paid a penny a bushel for the privilege of carrying wheat in bags from American to English porta, so that the grain of civilization was cheaper in Liverpool than in Baltimore. The price of farm products is #0 low in Great Britain that the owners of several large estates declare that they can re alize more from them as game preserves than as cultivated farma + The truth is, the doctrine of Malthus is an exploded humbug. It was a plausible theory at the time be wrote, but the introduction of machinery on farms, the use of steam in agri- culture, the improvement in breeds of ani mals, the utilization of products formerly ‘wasted, the new methods of preserving fruits, vegetables, meat and fish, and last, but most, the increased speed of vessels and the low rates for carrying all kinds of articles intended for food, have produced a revolution and de- stroyed the philosophy of the pessimist of the dinner table. We hear of coal famines and water famines, but there are no food famines anywhere, and there is no prospect of any, FOOD PRODUCING CAPABILITIES, We have hardly begun to test the food pro- ducing capabilities of the earth. A German traveler declares that Siberia is capable of producing grain enough to supply all western Europe with bread. An English suthority states that wheat was worth but ten cents a bushel in the interior of Asiatic Turkey last year, and that many farmers did not find it profitable to harvest their flelds. The island of Hayti iscapable of producing enough yams and bananas to feed 20,000,000 people. Hardly any portion of Africa except the narrow val ley of the Nile has been brought under culti- vation. But an insignificant part of Ans tralia has been devoted to the production of food. South America, in the opinion of Humboldt, is the grand division of the earth capable of producing the most food; still & large portion of it remains unexplored, and no good farming is done in the parts that have been longest settled. It could be made not only the granary but the stock yard for supplying Europe with food. Wild cattle are almost as plentiful there as rabbits are in Australia, and thousands of them are killed every year for their hides and tallow. Sheep are raised with scarcely any cams, and pigs turned into the forests become fat on nuts and wild fruit. No believer in Malthusian phil- osophy ever visited Bouth America By selecting breeds of animals that mature early, and constantly supplying them with suitable food, steers are made to weigh as much when they are thirty months old as they formerly did at twice that age. By the gen eral introduction of the silo the beef and mutton production of this country could be doubled, even if no more land was devoted to ralsing fodder erops. Our countryman, Seth Green, originated the empresion “water farm. ing,” and demonstrated that an acre of water was capable of producing as much food as an acre of land. Experiments show that German carp can be raised at about half the price of the cheapest meat, and the prospect io that most of our small lakes and artificial ponds will soon be utilized for the production of food the same as they are in China and Japan, Pood producers everywhere are crying for more mouths to feed, so that they can get a better price for what they raise. But the prospect is that the cost of nearly every kind of food will continne to decline, even if the | ppulation of the earth bs doubled, Chicago nes, The Leow In Michigan, Ad : have to [3 vis as to reads, repay bing, fighting, ora the commision of any crime, shall 1 posted, under penalty of flue or Imprisonment. Even the ploture of Virginias in the forum fs forbidden, New York Bon, A Remarkable Operation, A very remarkable operation has just been performed by Mr. Keetloy, at the West Lone don hospital. A child was brought in, hav. ing a large mole covering nearly the whole of ita chock. Fo transplanted the mole by exchango. That is, be rumoved the mole from Lhe chook to the arm, and planted Sesh THE BINGER'® ALMS. In Lyons, In the mart of that Fronch town, | Yoars snow, a woman leading a fair child, Oravod a small alms of one who, walking down The thoroughfare, caught the child's glance and smiled To see behind its eyes a noble soul. He paused, but found he had no coln to dole. His guardian angel warned him not to lose This chanes of pear] to do another good ; | Bo, as hoe waited, sorry to refuse The asked-for penuy, there aside he stood, And with his hat held as by limb the nest, He covered his kind face and sang his best. The sky was blue above, and all the lane Of commerce, where the singer stood, was filled, And many paused, and listening, paused again To hear tia volee that through and through them thrilled. I think the guardian angel helped along That ory for pity woven In a song. | The singer stood between the beggars | there, Before a church, and overhead the spire A slim. perpetual finger in the alr Held towari Heaven, land of the heart's desire As if an angel, pointing up, had sald : * Yonder un crown awaits this singer's head.” The hat of its stamped brood was emptied soon Into the woman's lap, who drenched ' with tears Her kiss upon the hand of help : "twas noon, And noon in her glad heart drove forth her fears, The singer, pleased, passed on and softly thought: * Men will not know by whom this deed was wrought.’ But when at night he came upon the stage Cheer after cheer went up from that wide throng, And flowers rained on him ; nought could assuage The tumult of the weloome save the song That he had sweetly sung, with cov- b opr beggars in the kot 'or the two mar A pines. & a They ave Horn Wicking. “I came to that conclusion some vears " remarked Mose Hensinger the other | night, * and I tell you now that the man who has the man tournament oa his big contract to fulfil begin to kick before they are fairly out of the cradle, and keep it up just as lone | as they possibly can, They find faut with the quality of the chelk, with the balls they are given to play with, with the way in which the table is set up and | with the tips on their cues. There is sprung a new one on me in 18R% darin + the preliminary belk-line tournament. | He had exhusted all of the usnal sub. jects, anvl on this particular occasion he | was playing in unusually bal form. Right in the middle of the game he approa h- | ed the the table where | sat and said : “Say, Mose, I've found out what's the | matter of my game.” “What is it, Tom?" 1 asked, fully ex- | pecting sowething new would be sprung | on me. “By George, the cloth is too thick." “I was paralyzed and so was everybody around me, but Tom meant it and 1've | had the cloths on billiard tables spread | thin ever since.” — Chicago Inter-Ucean, Misinformed. smoker, to the flock to which he belonge« habit, his pocket. “What, Brother Thomas’ exclaimed the pastor. “I was told you haa quit smoking. “~o0 | was giben to unnerstan’ myse'f, Mistah Nelson,” said Unde Thomas, sadly, “but it "pears like 1 was done mis | conformed 4d er ——— » Pllots the World Over. As a matter of fact, qualified pilots are pilots the world over; but as men they lifer more widely as types than the Your New York harbor pilot is one of the gravest and quietest of living wen. He is sober, demure, unobtrusive, earnest You would apnually summer in Europe, | ing or coming scarcely ever see him. ‘rom dress and appearance you could not even tell he was a sealaring man. | This English pilot lived at I'll, at the edge of the tide, near Avonmouth, where dwell a hundred other pilots in slime, | color of hope, like that of a player who oon, filth and drunkenness. Their wo el are half nude brawlers, harridans Aan the husbands live rayless lives of | sodden stupor, startlingly contrasting | with the alertness, hadihood and daring ahead, landing safely of their hours of dangerous labor, But a grade higher in the qualities that prouipt Abpiration are their brothers of British northern coasts and the Eng- iish channel. They are chiefly men who | only emulation in their calling to the degree of securing note among their fellows for hardiness, knottiness and iron | in frame, heart and life. Those of the Baltic'seas are held in high esteem, not only for their bravery and skill, but in a certalns respect and almost awe for their | Josation which have come down, like through the centuries, from the w that old Danish law beheaded : ng vessels in their an element of tre Fgh 10 an a'r. 7 dager : ] Ng--are nerve and Without the blood, spirit ob an American barnyard inn } gas i 3 j & despotic sexing Pes ue ii Coon ud het excited ejaculations ~The amount of money servi [| conntry ino vear for intoxicet nges in $700, 00,000, while the su i ¢ # ! JOU, 080, for schouls fs $110 | ing and method of work. ment of a billiard | Has a pretty | Billiard yers | reall) nothing that suits them. Ithoneht | heard them all, but Tom Ga lagher | One day, however, the pastor found him suddenly thrusting a cob pipe into | tices or nations to which they belong. | the current, collidin —— ————— OLD-TIME BLOOD-HOUNDS. ~ Wild Stories Told By a Mississippl River Captain, “Blood-hounds are seldom found in | the somphnny of ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’ troupes,’ sald an old-time Lower Mis. sissippl steamboat captain. “Before the war, in the old slavery days, I was very familiar with those hounds, their train. Dogs repre- senting them on the dramatic stage are of heavier built and different species, Blood-hounds are larger an | more com- pact than ordinary hounds, with hair straicht and sleek as that of the finest race- horse, colored between yellow and brown, short-eared, long-nosed and built for scenting, quick action and spue. They can take a scent three days old and run it down. Their speed is about equal to and their endurance much greater than the grevhound, Their bark resembles neither that of a bulldog, cur or hound, but is a velp like a wolf's, Their bite is a wolf-like snap, not the fast grip of a bulldog. The ‘catch dog’ used in slavery times on Southern plantations in capturing runaway ne- roes looked like a cross between a Newfoundland and bull of large and powerful build, I'll describe you a ‘negro hunt,’ a common enough oecur- rence before the war: The overseer or hunter mounts a fleet horse, holds his ‘catch dog, by a chain and turns loose the hounds. Circling "round tliey strike the scent and soon line off, their fast receding yelps marking the rapidity of the chase. The horseman follows over fences, through timber and swamp as best he can, holding his ‘catch dog ‘in leash," Hounds sighting the negro di- fide, from a semicircle, and rapidly raw it into & large circle around him. As the pursued wretch runs the dogs in front of him fall back, but preserve their ique-distant place in circle which they are gradually closing. On nearing him they snap at his legs, but do not spring at his throat, As the circle nar- rows the hunter arrives. The ominous sound of the chainrattle, Yike the warn. ing note of a serpent, str. kes the negro's ear. The ‘eatch dog’ springs Ppon the exhausted runaway and holds him. Hounds are clubbed away, the {ugitiva secured, dogs ‘leashed’ and the hunt is over, “I recall an instance In Arkansas, where the overseer, believing he was ) close enough, tu reach | negro until, ag stated to me, oe d—d dogs between them had eaten that $2000 nigger all but the bones and head.’ Usually, how- ever, the hounds only surrounded and detained the negro until the ‘eateh dog’ reached and held him for the over seer,” “I made a trip,” resumed the captain, *down the Mississippi in a flatboat as a trading craft, which offered a fine op- portunity to study the various moods of the ‘father of waters." Landing on the Arkansas side one evening, just as the sun was closing her blines, we tied our lines for the night to sce old logs, hall sunken as if by any earthquake. "Twas a desolate spot. e land about us was a universal sink. The scene reminded one of the remains of a great political party just after a defeat. The surface was strewn with dead and wounded. Not a standing tree visable, the waters filled with floating or protruding tim- bers, the whole forming one wild waste, | Standing near the bow, | noticed a few feet away a boiling in the water, a miniature whirlpool not over two feet in diameter. Others observed it. It | spread and increased in violence, Ii nickly doubled in diameter. We threw € { the lead but found mo bottom. We Uncle Thomas Jefferson Bunch, an | ] aged colored man, who had been a great | glanced around for a place of safety. ef of the Peston of the | widened, drawing down heavy logs. | Twas two miles to the opposite bank, was under- | OF 8 mile below through a “cut off,” stood to have completely leit off the | dangerous to run evem by the light of day. Loosening our lines, we held her for the other shore. The whirlpool roared and widened. we were struck by a steamboat. Our craft was uninjured, but delayed, As | | to the damage to the steamer we did | | not inquire boat's length of shore, but the current | downed’ our oars and we failed to |, We reached within » land. "Twas then dark. We turned her and pulled for the cut-off. roaring, as of a cataract, reached ua "Twas the water rushing between the stumps, trees and other surface break- ers. It was a fearful outlook. As we flew on in the darkness, holding against with spags and our ears filed with that dreadful roar | ing as il destruction’s long, dark fingers were réac ing up for us eternity seemed near. Nota word was spoken. Fye man stood to his post an held his | "Twas not a storm, but the old | breath, river was worried, restless and savage, The men, fanned by the pinions of fear, glanced back over their lives, ran over the notes of memory, and with bul the tries to ‘call the turn’ at faro, with bated breath and thumping hearts we wade that thrilling race with death and dashed in under the wire a full length “I recall in my own life," he contin. ned, “a stirring little ‘set-to’ with blood. hounds. 1 was compelied to make a business trip to a dwelling a half-mile back from the river, the temporary head-quarters of some professional negro hunters. I was on fool, alone and unarmed. On nearing the house | saw on the porch several men playing cards and drinking, an arsenal of guns standing near by, sod horses and hounds within call, Just as I began realizing that a man would be out of luck to have such an outfit for enemies, | five bloo hounds bounded out and en. | circling me began to closein. 1 wanted ne trouble, waiting for them fo « ine hot po sound cam suave the chick of gl witli! within eighte ne nhead, alter ga. 1 then des 1 inches of me, ly snappng at the largest one a iW th a with my heavy wiikingstick, laying bim out. The other dogs were called and eaned away, I reached the house, transacted m business, and, turning to leave, the load. er of the company walked with me down to look at the dog, which lay dead. I apologized, but urged that "twas in self-defense. He re fo necessary.’ 1 bade him good-day, or, ruther an Shakespeare's ‘Merootio’ would pay, ‘Swore a prayer or two,” turned my back toward him and walked straight to my boast. Just why that man did not put a bullet hole Aeres Per, When hall way across Soon a | and walked slowly on, | 22 il off the dogs, | We wore in plain sight and easy hear | from the porch | wid the roars of | irunken lnughter, The dogs closed | ‘You ‘twas my frame New Advertisement, YREASURERS SALES OF UN. | r 1 seated lands for taxes for 1686 and 1887, Agron Io to tha provid ws of law relating to the slo of unseated tracts of lund for the non payment of taxes, nothon Ie horoby givon that theese will be ex. i posed to public sale or outery, the following tracts or uasated rods in the county of Centre for taxes due aud unpaid thereon, at the Court House, In the | borough of Bellefonte, on MONDAY, THE VITH DAY OF JUNE, 1885, at owe o'clock ¥, M. BENNER TOWNSHIP. Warrantee Name, Taxes. Johnson, Thomas #0 Johnson Jaume: 3 09 0 § HR 40 | BOGS TOWNSHIP. D Carsendden, De viiveriiin Harvey, Jonsthan Hood, Moses Packer & I IHR BURNSIDE TOWKSHIY. Barrow, John Jr Brady Wm H8 Brady John...cuiniiiniinn Cox, Paul Dallas, Alexsoder Jr... Davideon Wm Davidson, Robert Davidson Wm. Jr Ewing, Wm Ewing James 8 ........... Ewing John Ewing Hanns Ewing Ann Ewing John Jr Ewing Samus! . Fox Samuel M........... ; Fullerton, Alexander... Grant, Thomas Hall Charles Hall, Washington Hall, Sarah. .....con habia Hall, Samuel C............ Hall, Jobn E Hall, Henry..coconvnnnnne - Hall, Goorge W Hall, Nancy & Hamilon, Thomas Harris, Henry Jackson, Jersiniak...... - Jobhneon, Francis Levy, Nathaniel. ........ - Miller, Win... ie... cone Motris, Joseph. ........... Parker, Jeremish......... Roete, Daniel Reese, Thome Stewart Walter Tallman, Sarah M Thomas, Joseph......... Unkgown M14 of Vaugn, Joha 204 Withingion, Martin... 410 151 Wallace, Joseph .......... 1410 1561 Wallace Wm..oooviinonn ‘ {411 Warton, Thomas P. i 13 Wheeler, Henry 1433 168 Wilon, Bird {4156 433 163 Brady, Robert............. 1433 163 Brady, John 433 163 Brady, W. P ..... [415 Black James. ....c.coonnse | 433 163 Cook, Wm 433 168 Cowden, FORE ocnsssesss 1433 168 Dewart, Wm.....oooouis 433 163 Dewart Jobn.....covuves | 433 443 1433 163 Gray, Wo [48% 168 Grant, Thomas $33 1463 Gobin, Charles $33 163 Housel John.......... . | 438 163 Kidd, Jobn..... | 448 168 Lyon, John { 438 153 Shaffer, Henry. 438 1868 Towers, Jamo. ..ooouv.n 1 415 Wallace, Joseph Ss 415 Weitzel COLLEGE ToWNsSHIF 147 Jobnson, Ros ‘ 250 Johnson, Thomas. ..... CURTIN TOW SNAIP Brooks, Jesse, ...... Carscadden, D......... Costs, Lindley......... 120 Carseadden, DeHaven, Peter Evans, Cadwalader...... Evans, Cadwalader Killof, YWih...coocrcesnsirn Eady, Esther.......... Gilbert, Wm Hoilowell, Edd... Trewin, Jame ...ccovinin . #0 Irwin, Be Kelso, Joseph. ...cosnnses Kelso, Joseph..... Senses Kelso Joseph...covvuinnsin Laech, Matthew. ......... Lowns, Caleb Longstreth, laac......... Masson, John 8 Miller James......ccounrres Waln, Jacob Willis, Jonathan Wister, Ussper cu. 163 White, James FERGU:ON TOWNSHIP. Burchfield, Wm......... . 48 Dates, Daniel Oliver, Jametiiinion GREGG TOWNSHIP, MeDowel, Alexander... Unknown Unknown 126 Hahn, Wm HAINES TOWNSHIP. 16 Bolinder, John ........ . 6) Rolinder Henry. co. 60 Bolinder Fred .ooovui. 60 Bolinder, Adam Barr, Thomas Barr, Mary Gratz, Simon. cana Lavy: Aaron oun, 150 Mosby, Wim eomeisiiinin, Mekiroth, Robert......., Motagar, Daniel. coin Kotz, Johnie ‘ 80 Swineford, Albright. : 70 Boover & Wolleoeusiino.. Suvder, SHN0Mne... Soy der, Ustharipe......... Sov ded, Catherin....... y 139 Weiler, Jolin and Sol Neldigh,.....oor csmsssnnnin HALF MOON TOWNSHIP, Car, John. .oueusrieresiasn Lymborn, Josizh Shear, ISRRO. ersseisriins Unknown «ome. 80 Uoknownioi dn. wees 70 Unknowm. ines Unkaomwi.. coun HARRIS TOWNRHIP, fam 1 29 135 1h New Advertisemitn. Reed, James HOWARD TOWNSHIP, Graysburg, Josey h Graysburg, Josepu 92 Harris, James D HUSTON 7 WNaHIP, LAITY LIBERTY TOWNRHIP, Benham, Ebenezer... Dunwoodey, John Gorrell, Wm Hays, Robt. snd Jas... Huys, Wm Bays, Win ...ooocossccoua Hew, Grorge D Irwin, Robe t Irwin, Kobert Jackson, Jereminh.... Krouse, Daniel...... Lytle Pote:............... Nestlerode, Curist...... Potter. John Quigley, James A Stephenson, Peter Smith, Christian 2 Scott, Wm MARI XN TOWNSHIP, Allison, Wm . Decker, Adam Lamb, David Lewis, Thomas McKinney, David Rohrer, Christ Unkpown Yarger, Simon Unknown MILES TOWNSHIP, Brady Wm. covvvsenin... Deering, Christopher Hall, Charles Kets, George Parker, Richard...... - Parker, Jeremiah Parker, Wam............. Barker, Wm,....ccne.... Seigfreid, Jacob Toland, Henry Wharton, Moore Williams, David PATTON TOWNSHIP, Diehl, Nicholss FEXX TOWNSHIP. Armstrong James 10 Cowden, Joho .coverne 10 Cowden, John Hamilton, Thomas... Hepburn, James 31 Hepburn James Keanedy, Johs....... 131 Kennedy, J hn - 131 Kennedy, James... 89 Kennedy, Andrew... 8 Kennedy, Lyon, Robert.......... Lyun Eaekiet........... Lyon Benjamin....... MeCally Joho weiner McCully Wm Montgomery, Daniel Montgomery, Wm... POTTER TOWNSHIP, 111 Cameron, Alexander Fallmer, H. B Peck. Jomeph : v Smith Dintel ovina Unknown SPRING TOWNSHIP, 46 Harris James D ..... Johnson John......... McClure, Wm MeClure, Wm... 62 Toole Heary........... Thorabarg, Thomas EXOW SHOE TOWNSHIP, 153 Bayard, Andrew 80 Carseadden, D Devling, Joseph...... Eddy, (George ........ } 163 Fischer, Samuel W. } 163 Fischer, James C..... 153 Greaves, Thomas...- Hele, James T Hale, James T ..... . Linn, Samuel Lewis, Lewis. ........ Martin Alexander... McMannus, James... 153 Milliken M.F....... Mitchell, N. J 120 Misner, Luke Morgan. Benjamin. 28 Mitchell, Wm. P Martin, Alexsnder.. 153} of Norrie J. P Norion, Joseph 153 Parker, Wm Ramey, Robert 153 Tallman, Ber jamin H Tompkins, Joseph. } 153 Valentine A. 8S 183 Wahn, 153 Wharton, Moore... 152 Wharton Elizabeth, Wharton, Bsrsh 151 1-12 of Wharton, 153 1-12 of Wharton, RUSH TOWNSHIP. 153 Allison, Thomas ..... 433 153 Allison John Tg Allen, Jam®s.w. “ ison, Andrew... Allison, A ant John olly N srael... Frodoriok 132 Eberman, John. 153 Edeard, Thott coun 78 Ehler, Martin we 163 Bhler, Christian... 156 Grant, Thom sees 153 Grall, Joln. cucione ss 153 fire 156 same. ELE Ie Sede ioe, E ETT 4 Groo & MOKeomon : iti 1, Thomss.we ET Lad Aa RR BADER EN ND LAD HAD ggus . w8z.y sIBRTERE: «FusBruEsesfazld Bod2a Eases 2328.28 — ow New Advertisement. Graff, Mathias 100 Hambridge John ........ 166 Hamlin Thomas 123 Hamilton Hugh 168 Hover Christian 163 Hopking John.............. 15% Reuben Haines, Jr 155 Hamilton Thomas 152 Trwin Robert 168} of trwin Kober Jor lst Bevjamin Kiog Robert .............. King Robert, Lawrence Casper 168 Lowden John Long A 108 lat dobif...cconic..ons. 80 Libby J PRN ans hannsnsesss sn McElwine Josinh and Ferguson,.............. MeEntire Hagh........... Myers Muriin Myers Jacob 58 MoClellan John BaF of Morgan B Morrison Jumes... pon Cord J. R and A Camp bell LL LE TTT TT 1568 Miller Robert Miller June. 163} 168 O14 Davis Philips Hardman BA Potter WW ..occoneessrsesirs Passmore Brison Hazlet, 168} of Peters Richard 94 of Ramey James 163 Rankin, Ssmyel............ 1568 Reese Thomas 158 164 Radesill Jacob 47 Rosh Jecob...... ........ 1563 Rush Benjamin Robinson Wm. H 16 0b 85 10 He 6h 6% 556 61 58 0% 5b 69 65 163 Blough Mathins 143 Beott Alexander 1562 Slough Henry 163 Slough Mathias, Jr 49 Stout Jacob............... 1568 Biddens Ellonor 150 Turder Daniel Williams J. C Wilkon John Wilson Wm 162 Wallace Joseph J Witmer Henry 1563 Wharton Carney 158 Zanzinger Paul TAYLOR TOWNsHIP, Aimes & Shaler Beckwith, Clement........ Clark, Joseph 163 Copenbaver Jobin. ........ Pox James......coae..... Hootmen Kilizabeth....... Lamb John Lamb, Jobs............... Mooigomery Jobs......... Masdon Thomas............ Montgomery W .W.... MeCammond John McEwen Thomss...... . . Mdgway & Budd (No.8) Raton David 3 Snyder Barbars............ Yoh Pool €) cssencsonaaseress Van Pool J Van Richard Whitehend...... -2 UNION Towssuiy WALKER TOWNSHIP, 94 Askers Robert ............. 100 Baker Jobn Brooks Bathe rv... 65 Boaker Robert............ - 129 Currier Mary .2............ - BRIDE 06s. 0 soins onenstes veins 42 Doughtery Marg 98 same 72 Haba Peter................. 40 Baba. Whine siniiinie - 40 Johnson David....... 100 Mercer David................ 88 Miller Wm............. via u McKee Samuel g28s88=2 40. Packer. .Jobu.cuse sores on 40 Packer James Jr Parker Richard Parker Richard.............. Piles Benjamin & Co........ Bod “Davifl.......oeeiervein - Robrer Obristinn...ocovrenss Smith Johan H............... Butler Danfol......ccionnns “ NAO ara uauranisuninn si - KT BRAWN. coun aenasisionniosss - Warden Joremiah........... Amos Wickersham Hawthorn Ju Kuaves John. ot rg Goo n Jaspor,. ... Milos Samun Wiser Daniel................. 535 * CYRUS GOSS, Treasurer. TORE FOR SALE 1 «ffir a wale the store voom and wioeh of goods BH. Goodhnrt dwosnncd, at Baker strg A rare chance for a Baines fn verlsent. from tie sri on the cheok. Everything suo fowedcd pit welly.~ Boston Trameript, REESLZEIREEEYEE 15 ¢ i Education i Fischer, J. Ervirrsnnerns 1 153 Greaves, Thoma... comes high, but we must havo it, - Walid away from him 1 have Patterson, rand Timah ces never able to think out.” & — Mahia . o
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers