ULE O? IS RULE 0 vetes. coum I, George or lerk of Some pl \ i . wanty of Centre { the (1 Jamal { \ } \ hat at an Orphan —— the of April Judges of 8 granted up 1) tives of 8 | Iitol, de Court on t! nh Monday accept or re to accept at to show y Ht ceased given as in In testim hand and day the was enta nd ust next to luation, proper of April Judges granted nn of M said dece to be giver In te hand and Befefont« Sherifl Bellefonte May 1631 AvP TO} im the Or re-estate of deceased The under the Orphans distribut acecounta titled the appointment Hellefont« A.D, I8E =i parties int or be ded A PMINIS] Estate of ( Halfmoa: v] Letters of ing been gra sons ind t immediate | ar demands without d« od. May 2 6t EX Esta! toromsah ier, § tor Bellelonte, Pa APMIN —-—tstate of gnson t signed fay Baby armages A FURNITURE At NAGINEY'S UNDERTAKING and EMBALMING a specialty. F. E. Naginey’s, ALLEGHENY BELLEFONTE, PA STREET, ALESMEN WANTED ws’ () SELL NON-NICOTINE MIDGET CIGARS, Salary or commission ples free. Address Good side line LANDIN & CO, Shippensburg, Pa Ham NTRE COUNTY BANKING COMPANY, Corner of High and Spring street, Reortve Deposits; Discount Notes LD. Bnveenr, Cashier, BEFORE THE PRICE \ ye me into CLOTHING ADVANCES, And it su in tl fall ‘WE ADVISE OUR STOCK MONROR AMANDA A \ RM OR Miron hearing appeal Po elook a. in. and 4 3 wise noted a nn and ash, desi on erected a good Ha vely i ) the Pont Yan y ' i132 feet In front running back 165 feet, sald lots being sart of a tract of land which Christian Hoffer, b s deed bearing date the first day of Mareh A M2 to Jno, Hoffer. Thereon erected on sald lots wo story frame dwelling houses, lee houses and cold storage room, 2 stables and wagon shedsand other necessary outbuildings Seized taken in execution and to be sold as the property of A. 8. Kerlin, et. al Terma No deed will be acknowledged until purchase money is paid in full, Sherift's Office Jonx PP, Coxpo. Sheriff, Bellefonte, May 28, 1806 : inty o ' tre n + " Pe na marked o respect 3 : rl Wy i on past by CARLISLE ON FINANCE. The Secretary's Speech at the Recent Memphis Convention. UPHOLDS THI [BT SYSTEM. LixUr Free Colnnge Would Result Dis natronsly rinsle slue of Metals Not Determined by Intion Present Money System Prac ally Bimetallism, Fallures of Other Nations to Maintain » Double Standard, selves and to td portance to then ity Fy Some Historieal Faot oa of the ntornational many centurion, even after the of the world had grown to enor %, the propriety « {f making any given quantity of bullion or any paps the an legal tender was not eve ruggestod t time the is no legnl tender In Intern nnd trade Coin In the United States, Although we have the gold standard, of mensure of value, in this country, our a tual stock of gold bullion and coin amounts to only about one-third of our actual cur renoy a condition of affairs which would have boon inconceivable a few centuries ago. We have about $625,000,000 in gold, $807,082,875 In full logal tender silver, $846,081,000 In old United States notes, $140,684,471 In treasury notes issued in the purchase of silver bullion, $200,719, MOous prop rtion ular coin and up to the pros | | 850 in national bank notes And 1 £74180, 1 fd 3 3 JOU 1 su id y nasing | 1 alld i, 70% w 1 & Te by presented at the mints corporations ned Relative of Gold and Silver. “i i On Valnes ery civilized 1 dalled In overy Myo atuse in every tmp Lie to ¢ » found ntain a le gnl ratio corresponding all od with the intringle or om i tio between the two metals conta in the and because whenever either of the metals was undervalued relatively to the other in the coinage laws it was oxpollod from the conn try. England persisted in the attempt for nearly 500 years, and notwithstanding the enactment of sovere penal statutes against the exportation of coins or bullion was at last forced to abandon the offort aud adopt the single standard. France, in hor efforts ta keep the coins of the tawo Ming niost | tance Policy. vor of the nok frat The AO Ww German loaxt y offect would " re 1 a ont pound ng worth 84.8608 in it now, wold he w when our people wanted to make a remit i pay a debt abroad they wou have to pay twice as much In our money for the same number of pounds as they pay now, while the foreigner who wanted to make a remittance to pay a debt here would pay only half as much in his money for the same number of dollars as he pays now. But the exchange would be in acon stant state of flactuation, Just ax it has boen between Great Britain and India on account of the changes in the prices of sil ver from day to day, and the American M ust Fl Pay. i fs LG LG en long that the the ap upon the 1 assertion s due is based WTWeen 1, that n, have afiect- at least, and influences in and at- admit non ped the all things nied that, in gold must of one £ id 8 1 had the charged w with se of prices a period as ie us 10 em n, and after a al examination made which and embodies a won these subjects in any other offi arse of prices and w Mons, thoug opinion smong the mombers as to the causes that had from time to time produced the changes. The prices of many articles and the wages of labor in many occupations wero ascertained during cach year as far back ax 1840, and for the purposes of com. | parison the prices of commodities and the wages of labor in the year 1860 were adopt: od gs the standard. he sufliclency of ronsgns for select. ing that year rather than any other will not, I think be questioned. There were no great financial or ether disturbances
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers