EURTZ, EAS FRED'K rn SNE. VED [. NEW Fooattioned hun- NMAUTION. C All p against the pus ht fa note ton one dred A RIS fre dollars. miven by to Joseph Rishel, du {in June, 18H, ayahle ip nin ) Not having rece refuse to Pav Xx. and W wit interest. same, | \ Liew, KEEN, Penn tw, IDV ) in iad * 1 Ved Yi hae niles yor the 1H 1 MED Sry : : HEN R \ aplo3t, THE KIR 14 LX i AA A Fo Farmer: and Reaper Kirby. Send or call on —t SHORTLI apli'es: J he Best Wood and be ha ag. Al thi Be "Hei Let i He Mi Hoshy lees. Weare the tral Cenn’a. who burn Patent Blame Nila, which produces tl White Wash a Plasterine Lime offered o the trade The 1 Sh anokin and Anthrecite Con Ix for family at the . Who are will do Wid 1 for a deseript DGK il AND L J tole the onhy es In entry at in ¢ hest Wes! ail sizes, ii Hist nla Nil lowest prunes of firs Fak, paling i, 1 ¢ Che Ry ard, near Routh ley R. R. De SHORT LL {i it shingles nna wil 1 1G 2.3 ne sat ' X* 1 E ele \ dt . ‘ E, & UO), Jonte Pa, TINW ARE! aplO OR Ty. I INC He : ys PPOs, Gis : ERPLATING. for bhugeics executed in the fin durabie stvle. Give hun Bian ro ; H W! FARME GET THE VALLEY C1 ' fips, Y est and most a call His ¢! t api G8 1. RS, LOOK HER “RE PER & MOWER Cruker, rain or grass n lodged. debrated Reaper & Mon y pH wil 5 4 . "a? > O matter how { ' Ns Of at Li red enc if Walls store, { iy, ait . Vian AW is wie! Factor! dil & v ap ent mie, i aX} redit. Pri i Mo WM I machine » We £ HR. \ RY BUGG] £0 \ , Muanuinetuyer : Hid ld respecifullyagform unty, that be has on Ce : os Hh will be ind a Trea- . } . 3 ei to ive satis- 1 in she Call aud see his stock of Buggies be- purciins; aplirt RY RST X - BANK Thiz Bank is now « pose of Banking under ti ied Stags, Certif files 1==sned Ly Hw Hale & Co.. will be paid at Checks ott pif Th Sigh 18 Hsu Bg ibafion atthe connteroft? tional Han] K, P freicy ir alte: fion given toil 10 pred and = rar Sociritios E. TT MES, Preside £43 nat rw * e said First Na ias¢ wile Of a 4 aplo Ha, BROUKE RIOF) F, Vv resident. SHUGER Cashier. HENRY + DP. ’ iin HOOVER & CO., ENTI OUNTY BANKING CO. RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interes L, Discount Notes, »ove ed Buy Sand Government Secnrities, Gold a; ons, aploos, WIN( b KE J OUN Db. TATE, 3 NT 1) fice on Nathves , “OTe st At heme fst two. yr: ry MIGYLiE “AT bo extracted without pain, Bellefonte, Pa. ap lO 68 if, P2100 D. I D8 ‘ (rne except, perhaps; the eks of exe iP D. NEFF, 3f, FF, simi Otfere his pe ens of Potter towns hip. Di: Nefl has the experience of the active practice of Medicine and Sur- gery. Hplros,1y véician and Pa. ‘ofessional services to the citi- JAMES A. A BEAVER. vol BEAVER ATTORNEYS-AT-1.. 117; Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penna, PP A THORN EY Y J. 2 apl0 68 Orv gate ap HGR, DA A 11 joe 2% IA CO | iB ot wad 8 wef AD GRY MITC HE 1 L- - law, Belle forte, 5 & ALEXAN Attorney-at-law, a $ NDE: Bio tr > Bellefonte, Pa, MHOY— Moe ATTORNEY AW on Hi rly Street Uy Hf ATI NE nte » 2 plo GEL | HALL and Proprietor. CENTRE HALL REPORTER. 24th, 18S, FRIDAY,APRIL VOACRATIONTATRE NOYINA TIONS DITOR GENERAL: BOY LI, Al PEIN yt CHARLES Ek. FOR SI'RVEYOR GENERAL! WELLINGTON H. Fy. } oh & wnt TOWERS Lhe. CEE eee Mea TAG A ERT SE "ny }. 52} 1353 Foy . " ers I'he subseription neice ris, SAO per year, . ay. 8 ol thts Nearo Suffrage “Going Up.” rm $+ } via 0 8 ra i { Le of "the W necro suwilaee ReparTER ‘went up” in - the to a0). re that other state seen ho hettire oct detore ast jority against it being from 25 (0), 1. (0) Our readers are al:o0 awa © fut to hs met it in ev oTY ‘ $ 1 . I= fini in which a vote wa upon. t making it ¢ evident qi es{lon, that ople in every learly an overwhelming majority of the section, { some of mular ire onposed {0 ii ye. i measure the radicals unn oro suthrace i ne none fee the white people, now 4 cong back” unon “the man and " ‘ 3 . athe tha NCO anit mi : neero saffrao Spl inefield Re andl! giving up | the an able repub- . 1 $ INK aneoe, a Qrouan, speaks us follows as the fact may be, | that the enfran colored race in the i! have to wit ove: ent season. The | mm Conneciient and Mi- | Tonday last, that the rank A { bi: an party, are vet 20 im “ Bacroditable dent the tates w ony “rh hidieata HT that ary of from being favor of mapartial suf: | the nu immediate infer | construction miol ahi foreine the 1s re 8] jeapar CENTRE on Linpeachment, Sam, Carey, representative in Congress from Cincinnati, and the on- l who Republican member hq oives his reasons for his vote : I will now give you briefly my re: sons fi In the first place it has, in all the his | tory of this government, recavded as the his dhs 4 . : viministration, and to (ington down, been 1s select (‘abinet | officers in ever remove them at his pleasure. You re- member when Duane was Seeretary of Treasury, and he was ordered eral Jackson {O remove the de pos- of ( Jackson said: its, contrary to the law He refused, ( ir: I will iind some one who will. { Applause.] Yes n uniform practice, and has been regnrd- 11rd Ie out 8 1 countrymen, it has been the edd as indispensible to the wise and le- (rovern- 1d A shou! ave citimate admimstration of this ent, that the President ; hould he his Con. Ain't men, Cadinet officers who s advisers and friends. ? Yoo and these AL se very judees who are sitting to-day fidentia thal rent Very impeachment thought When Mur. the United States Lincoln was Pr It was osed spy that one member of his ( - Blair. Senators, including Wade of Ohio, hipye fs to) t! TY aa "J “ a lot uf to Mr. nd Sherman, and Sumner, Massa tv-four, o Lar I.in- 4 this language: “The President of the United States should be aided by a Cabinet council nel cand all ne the result of their combind wisdom and deliberations.” That's cood sense ixn'f 7 ? 1G that Mr. Monteomery that 0 on SAN not enteriain rein Mr. vinpathy r de I fregh i—that he is not v him FOWL rds full = n aud then acre constitution Mich 1s FOI On fi! teen t The pon 1 Jdonday was defeated by from thousand votes. liquor im Coubt S maj It is - Gt . in ' fotty to v {hou } ‘ Goo 20.000. fore evident that Olt Radicals * Democratic views on the negro from sand 0! | nuicty-six - thousand ~OINKe fue Sin ere mee tfanttnfe e The Radicals admit that the n egroes of the South ar mized and armed for mu ual the Where is iy gi dofonse, auch to touch an these Griiure oreaniza- | hoy then lil DD CX six or There ganization Drospect of thes e dan- | anizations th i= no war or unless ricrinates with t and secret armed ore are gy I Armv of the Our 4 1561 at war, is Is republic, y the | ps . . . Az! 01 stitutions, No such | needed for any emereency 1 i § ONT wWiao.e theory of TrOVerh- rests upon their condemnation as wd anti-dem- | Evrior Freedmen’s Affairs, has made a report MR from the Committe on | to the House which shows how many | money have | for the manufacture of n Caro votes tor set the white votes Radical; ism has Jost New Hq ampshire, Coniaectient, Mich- igan, Ohio)” Kansas, York, and other in, California, New Northern States. By taw this expensive outrage expires Ju- ly 16, 1868, and ceases to be a drain But Committee directs that a bill ‘shall be reported to the House “continuing the the ‘lurcau for another year , Wnless before ‘that time, when States have been re- | stored and their representatives in Con- “gress can speak and act for them, it “shall be found safe to suspend its ac- “tion,” “Found safe,” This shameful recommendation a4 still more shameful confes€ion that this Bu- reau, ostensibly for the benefit of the colored” brother, is an agent to Radical success ‘another year,” or through the Presidential campaign, that without it the Radical party ineloed ! IS indispensi ale the South, we Cabinet ding bo excel “Ti ‘'omposed of Fi veively en who are the cor ers of the principles and purposes President of the United States. Iie charoe oft hi 1 re, then they being guilty sh crime, this that he wanted a t Mi inister who was in full ho nf iatraron These men «aay he ought to hs ave it, President oy fo have it, [t docsen’t matter Demoerat or Republican, the contiden- with the and ey and 1 ory 20). in sympathy and harmony with him, that is hostility to h does not speak to him; im, and will and ke wanted to gel him out, [A voice Yes, Wits im out.”] If General Jackson in would touch him with the toe of [Cheers.] Think of the precedent weare setting, 4 z Democratic moeratie the D “There 1s no use in me of these days, and drould + trying to do ™ sy anything; with this i? “Oh Well” you get up against him?” Out ¢an some one says, “what they can “what did they have say agaiast Mr, “that’s it.” ] one President Johnson?” And if you can impeach and turn him out under the present charges, what President is hereafter safe when the majority in Con- [Cheers] had a man gress in opposed to him? 1" ik It is no matter to me how Andrew Johnson i=. I am not his apol- ogist and defender, A “Ah CO John=onized.” man to-day, rey, “on have heen But have 1 oo = ne over he or any other man shall be frotidied by the laws of the country. [Cheers] Mr Carey contintied by saying that Andrew Johnson could only remain in office a year Yonaar. Stanton had Jost self-respect by acting as he’ «lid ; and remain in the War Office had a con- tempt for his action in so doing. He referre ul ‘to Ber. Wade's sitting on the , Mr. Wade had no right tq vote in ee | by the letter of the Cons stitution , atin JUSTICE A FRIDAY APRIL, yg HALL, PA, { Mr. i 10 ong chit to bet spit ili ed Impeachment, by the whole CI Vi rid.” * > * The Impeachment. pixgEortTar“lHign ARE VIiewED ABROAD. London Morning Post, Marvel 20.] Count” he simply asked ih mselves wheth- X Yi. King to then zood King particular notions of what 0 should be, If Charles im- posed taxes without his i 4 | | 24TH, 1868. th a vl furnishes the tL) the Tr he other conveyaneer definition of the knw contrary.” the fol. and prac- of ten the that is pives “Tn nine eases out i limps purchgser pay: {or th law. The pre tice in Chester o unty Wrother ay and may termed! criminal, nor ( what Nir. plained helt codtiratio charact rv 1s called Johnson's ease the but when of fre ceria nly novel, in question it must not be forgot tl by { the Arose Th cannot those who de dermine this P unt tl which they arallel Sate Ww ithout a4] supreme power the mn commit an unconstitutional act, bhe- : 1s can aws or decrees are emanations from which the Bt House of ( ONETess, nor both together, the power in the the same source Constitution springs, as neither without President, the sue » J 1 vO) i Chief Mogi tneonstitution American | that /f the of preme lie, it follows ian Le NO) «alxo The ty fq ssf they acts, Frese, Can on however, l le viol; : e Houses, evils 1 Constitution, Ho any } provi les io redress for ria Y a aer- gry [his President bein y ing from sucl —- of and the daty on their part. . » DCE RO, SE juired to wield the Executive power in to law, and best calculated to protect Y the inter he felfow-citizens . ar nen ’ ii) J f gud gm i: ON 14. t Wa HE, hin Svs sisonn #3 i | ! . ature time do =o clrewhiore, / J f ) y of . (6° py’ Hiex 0 / J { fd dey Hore Cong N impartial person would think of deny fo ce i= Lenten HH J oh were not ju tif “ WE ROTIONS . of ) exclusion {from Cloner 2 of the FCPICS niatives Lie ‘ ‘ ~ 3 5 . . . southern SALES Was an act so erosshy unconstitutional, that beside it the high and misdemeanors charged oniih- rainst M~. Johnson «ink mio in: The : $4 . 3 enilt of HNOeene Li . a Ay! * f LOK grounds and this the case Lettig (et "= uncer which Jf Mr. charged with a bros: he act d he iemored, ‘hoof the constitu $y i sottinz at defiance sn Act of Congress, it is open to Lim to show {hat in the HI ceptance of the American '' ren the wef m question Wis } MSR i . Dh reyy . 100 Louisiana Eleetions. La A letter received here to-day 1 relative to the clee tions is woe nk, that X La the main contoversy will be as to the already three tickets Creal OU T=], IH Black Republican” ticket: the Talli of “White Cutler, or ©? aferro, the I. King Nobody's lican ” The 3 policy ( { the Democrats will he, so far as kno wn, to vote for the Tallio ferro ticket, the Democrats wiv- Nate fo and the [after giving the ty ing up the the Hep cans, of Orleans to 6 the Bir pitofies pee rep Wiio Pays FOR fer of the title to real estate, but many escape difficulty by stipulating in the seller shall pay the stamp duty. Village Record, West Chester, has Been prompted hy a corre espondent to look the matter up, and after consulting a lawyer and two real estate agents, i it has given thir opinions. —The lawyer says that the seller pays for the stamps unless there is an agreement to the con- trary. One of the conveyancers says : “The universal practice is that the pur- | chaser pays for the deed. The seller | ‘the stamp law was en- the ol virtue of the cost of the stamps, Litig Supreme Court decided that the seller nected, by hecame a matter of CO ations arose, and the was bound to make a deed, and a deed IY ner stamps er worthless, the celler wos bound to furnish them.’ bens The i op A hire ¢ rimes, EASTERN TALL. a 4+ TTT aM #) Hamed Andallah waqan of a grotto on*one of the slopes of Mount Olympus. When he stood at the en- { “I will grant your request, on condition that yau perpetrate some erime which may diminish your overweening pride Do not interrupt or I will kill you upon the spot ; hing, listen, three most heinous erimes which I can | i You shall either violate the of concious virtue. [ give you your choice of | maging, fill of gop wine ; or you shall murder | vapr yeperahle old father; or you shall curse the name of that De ity | wors hipy Choose between | these three Crimes The Nn Ha met was to very sorrowful, | the heart | of the, eyll Oe but 411 his prayers | unay to melt EVO oiler mason within | were Ii rly began nll the terri- | by Osman, embrace with one { origina vy lang po: wits aM of the Ottoran empire and, as he five times a day offered up upon the head of Solyman the Magnifi- cent, the reigning Rul; an in whose time Iudee d. Abdallah nowned for his anefity § and the in- habitants of the vicinit he lived. va “of his dwell- ing treated him with the most marked respect He was pot howeyer, cessive vel { { eration by his age | had sear ely attained his fortieth year when thei meident of ‘thistale took p lace His venerable fathe Tr, W ho was himself a de "MY 150 of’ rent with him in the same grotto ; and for- tunate was deemed the individual who, on his way along the sloyes of Olym pus, was allowed to join the prayers of the two dervises, kneeling upon the around at the entrance of the caye, and turning their countenanoes toward holy eities of Mecea and Medina. H met Al dst y ' Q wislah was one morning the rove N and woods, he mountain above Lis grotto, and ponde: upol been perusing but a short time previ- Lis foot ACHINST SO me thin o hurd 1 — I $s, Gaciny . v war} . : } ously, ach SU SUUCK P onthe gr: Mn nd. hil a 1 WHICH Wis It i+ mic] Ih, a 10 a sqitfre of stone 1} WC, pulse of « UT hand to the ri fis force After many th ded to his awards with the sudden {1 brass 1 siren i and h and i <hoe k, 1 Before he raid time to raise and ex- . R the at the Ha- 1 as ye a the aperture thus laid bare dense volyme of smoke issued from air eral thousand {oct craze Fost hole, and ps cend wl i i the to 1rhit of soy ne appar ition : but how much i more hs wonder excited when ® ko eradually become more and id vaipable «1 and at y Yar ] APelLY, the . s 1 ~ with ; ne w A! me nse whit S$: pine iree in » . hd ume tor of an un fluttering r | and a trewrsndous 3s 1 yoy 244Y 2 4 Hamet f about to put up a \ privel cht hand, eit upon his knees, to heaven apparition him a voice of thund “Nav in er. mention not the name of the *" “Who art thou ?" vising from his suppliant postive, victorious power shut up in that copsed hole, where I haye languished for two It is an evil day for thee that roid thee hither,” “And wheretore, proud Genie 2” Je- manded Hamet, “Because, |! In ay x shout to kill thee, in oe In vself Upo some one for this long enpivity,” trembled At these Was, Hamet Vb iv ] besough Very mich. ane gl to spare his life, Gente For a long time the kein and ordered him to prepare for immediate death but at length he suffered himself to be moved by the prayers and entreaties of the virtuous dervise... «!. “Hark ye,” was said the Genie; “I am cried Hamet, his heart | le apn: r with jov. “Name it,” said he, “1 assassinate my fa- “en ther, no contrition can wipe away my the law will ov- vengeance, If] great Allah, I! future happiness crime, and moreover ertnke me with its sigh in vain for { in the gnpe dens of Par adige. become inebriate with the juice of the grape, I can ¢ Xpinte vere mortification, penitence, and re newed prayer.” Then, turping his countenance > | AR rou fountain of all evil! I have A "” upon this injury. “Name the object of that choice.” : J ne, “I will get; drqnken with wine, as answered the dervise. the Genie: “this | pose,” “Be it 50,” cried a jar of Cyprus-wine upon | table, whe thy; father has retired | acl], nen; but woe unto to rest in hi ¢ Wij Thou mayvest thy pr omis The {ao nie vag ally bec ane. le Re spoke these words ; and | i Ng menace is- . s from his lips, 131 7 he had vanished al-! . | amet reiraced his Steps the crottn, with » but he woujd not, Oe his towards sor rrow i ul The day the and | and his sire passed rapidly away ; : Hamet evening, the door of "the Ch ca with their faces towards the | their VOICES in. praver 1 were concluded, 10 rage CDR \ xy: emihyraced his son tender- { 4 i l nan 1 . an l retired to the inner part of the | As spy as Hamet knew that bjs. fa; | ther } pt, he lichted a lamp ; and, as ble. The unhappy. dervise raised it 0 his lips, and dgank deeply of the A glow of fire | seemed. fo electrify his frame, and he | mtoxicating drancht. Again he drank; gud | reckless nnd careless of the eon- | AE he felt He drank a third time ; vhs ald empl eck t the door and. when hy he mea- | : hy Po | ne ran oud vo of the | 3 He the monytain ; then, heard i ine aloe, he laughed with oy Ag he turned to a | «aw hiz fither stand- as cerithable ie h. he "said the old man, ke slum- bers, and F rise to find my well belov- Alas! : “the nojse from my ii an me gies ; ond hove I now awakened to the Tread truth of thine impiety, for the Alas! thon hast east ashes npon the gray head of thy father!” [Tamet epuld not brook this accnsa- |. tin, and the implied suspicion that he first time ? whilst his father slept. He felt suds sire, and eried, “Return to your couch, old dotard! Thou knowest not what thou sayest!” And, ss he uttered these words, he, pushed his father violently into the T he old man resisted, and, again remonstrated with Hamet. The quor ; and a sudden dread of exposure to. the world entered his mind. With | 4 furiously against the stone walls of the orotto, The old man fell with his tem- ple agai int a sharp flint—one groan emanated from his bosom—and his A i ——. VOL. LNG, 3. TE —————— Suddenly concious - of the horrid | erime of which he. had been | Hamet tore his hair, beat his ‘and raved like a maniac. the midst of his. ravings, La | his voice againgt the majesty of hea- ven, and. eursed the Deity whom he had so long and fervently worshipped ! b upd the instant a terrible din echoed tpind about-ithe thunder rolle e tal} trees shogk with an earthquake— and, amidst the poar sofithe conflicting | cloxmepts,« were - ‘heatd shouts of infer- nablnsghter. All hell seemed to re- Juice the fall of a good man, whom | noother vig had ever tempted away from the paths. of virtue, tintil; drun- | kenness presented itself. The rage of the stern inargnsed —the, trees were torn ajpsh 7 their roots—and fragments of the xocky parts of Olympus rolled (down theill with the fury of an Al- | pine avalanghe. (Then suddenly, the | Geng appeared before the wretched Hamef, and exclaimed, “Fool! by | choosing lo commit the erime. avhich guilty, bre asasl the.other . two. likewise! cup than insany other. means of temp: tation presented hy Satan to mankind 7”. Aud the last wordsgof the, {yenie mingled-with the redoubled howling of the stores, as Hamet was borne down the slope of the mountain by the folk bottom. : or we Tun How They Live and Die in New York. Dr. Elisha Harris, Registrar of V'- tal Statistics has just madea report for the year ending Oct. 1. 1867 of the | births, magriages and deaths in New, York.ard Brooklyn. - The returns in | regard io the last named item are com-. and marriages. axe only. approximgte, be secured. # ’ Birts. Of thg 12,569 registered births itv: this. city. 6,397 were! Lmeles and 6,164 females; 8,047 were born of foreign, and 2,291 of native parents. + The birth rate, in New York is about 39,8 in 1,800, which is equal to the rates elsewhere in this country and in This is so far ‘enconraging. Makgraces. Ofthe 15,026 persons, | marriel in N Now. Xopk last very Bh 2 we were under 20 cep 20 and 30 years of age, 4.661 were men.and 4 521 were women; Kur: ape. £0 * ON Mia men and 1,26 ears of ace; betw between 30 and 50 years, 2.- 440.men.and 1,204 women. Three of the brides were over 70 years of age; wives, ren rarried at the age of 81. The was 3ly3 years; the average agetof the women was 23,6 years, The tendehey to second marriages seems to be about equally divided between the sexes, with a slight preponderance i in favor f men. : Dears. Tt has been est! mated that a nominal death-rateldm a population living under complete sanitary control, would be mhout: seventeen in one thou sand. All bavend this held to be ab- solutely “presentable The death-rate: in 1867 wes 31 A%41:1,000.! Tt hang a decrease of dedths equal to 5,03 in 1,000 inhabitants as compared with the previous.year. This shows the value of the reforms brought about by the present Board of Health, . ay ii Notwithstanding. this gain, says the: Evening Post, teva melancholy fact that the mumber of children ir one year offage who diedi.during the past year was about equal.to one-fourth of the > ole number born iu the same pe- riod. .- The rate of mortality in young children is ‘evérywhere acknowledged to be the most sensitive test of sanitary conditions; and when we remember that the dex ath-rate among childeen un- der five years of age in New. York is greater than in any.eity from: which we have accurate statistical returns, is becomes evident that the mass of our people are living under circumstances which give rise to the most deadly in- fluences. More than G0,000 people live in less wee WA, » the cellars of these houses dwell hbbubt fifteen thousand meré. This half ef- the population yields more than two- thirds of the number of deaths. It i B- in the packed and over-crowded: tamest ment houses. that children aresatis apt to die, and it is there alan that those who survive are most apt to be sickly. Clergymen neglect to obey ‘the la” whieh requires - threws. to register a marriages performed hy them, ¢ and phy sicians neglect their. duty respectin: the registry of births, > + The culaiion of Pennsylvania Su- preme Judges increased to $7,500. Fourteen and a half feet of snow fell in Central Park, New York, fram January 1 to March 7. oo BP “ie
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers