Centre Hall reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1868-1871, June 26, 1868, Image 1

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    in me bs nS AAA
FRED'K KURTZ,
2s
oh
ti
i
Ty
ns EC
i —
Ke
MALL
TRY
CENTRE
ITH, JUSTICE AN
HALL, PA,, FRIDAY JUNE,
1868,
et sn —————————
———
VOL. 1.—NO. 12.
Cen-
of
Ga iiss 1ONOrs ill h yd Appeals {or
tre county, for the difierent townships,
suid county, place of holding elec-
tions in said townships, as follows to wit:
Bellefonte Borough M: ay 25, 1868,
Patton township O04,
Halfmoon tp 0"
Forguson tp ON,
Harris tp oy
Potter tp
Grogg tg”
Pann tp
Haines tp
Miles tp
Walker tp
Marion tp
Bogas tp
Howard Bor
Curtin tp
Libarty th
Union & "monrille
Bannar & Soring tp
Worth a
Taylor ip
Snow Shoo
Bur ns ide tp
Rush & Philipsburg
Raton ip
By order of Comm: INRIONOTS,
may Jd xo. MORAN, Clerk.
TINWARE! TINWARE!
J. REIBER,
1
at the
& Howura wp
16.
WS.
9
on
25,
Respectfully announces to the citizens of
Potter township, that he is now prepared
to furnish upen shortest notice, and xs
eheap as slsewhaors, evary Jtiqle intheline
of Tin and Shastiron Wa
STOVE-PIPE & ar OUTING
All kinds of repairing done.
ways, on Jano buckets, cups, dippers, dish-
8s, os, Ke. . & gL. L
SILVERPLATING.
for buggies oxecuted in the finest and most
durable style. Give him a call. His cl
ges are rensonable. aplO'68, ly.
oi ranuy RS. LOOK HERE.
GET THE VALLEY CHIEF REA-
PER & MOWER,
Manufactured by J. Marsh & Co,
burg.
L.ewis-
raker,
13s NO matter
1t is a solf-
Cuts grain or gr:
® iuayv ba lodged.
This calabrated
"an at the redidance of
east of Wolls store. 1tis the
tion, all cast iron and sites} and wh
aration wel ahs only
{wo- wheal
satizsfretor.?
ing to guara
at (2 axpanlg
Prices of mae .
months cru: lit, ric ‘
WME
aplya8.3m.
B® GGIES! BU G Te IES!
J.D Murer,
Contre Hall, Pa, Manufactn
kinds of Bu 3g az, would respe ‘tally
the citizens of Centre county,
jini ’ :
FEW BUGGI1IE
1
how much
can he
ONS ahi |
Raaper & Mower
the agent,
.
af INVA
alexi Invaen
161 int
5%) "oO It is
machine, and wa. to work |
v, and ifit does not work sccord
antee, it will he made io work
of the MANN
We |
i
y
1141
ifs,
ranted
Agent,
W ols Store,
T }
which will be¢
Y
and
re ash,
with and without top.
sold at vricas {i
: Wi aay EL
sonia cradit Tiven.
Two Hore Wagons, Spring
pads ¢ to o , and wa canted
far “1 in ayery rane
All oa 12 of
ties. Call
for purchasing elsowhere.
api J 63,1 f.
I RST NATIONAL I
1
caducad
ri
rida; fo give aal
ra paring ds one in short 1X
ANK OF
Ballafi inte, Pa.
(LATER HUMES, McA LL!
& COD
STER, HALE
J.P. Tans
1 for
ER. C. Ho Mes, Pred't. s, (ish.
This Bank iz now organize:
posa of Banking under
ted Staisa,
the pur
Hu in
1
id 8! ne turity,
ight as usua
Certificates issn 4) )
Hale & (Ua. will
Chacks of deposi
santatis mn att!
tional Bank.
Particular attention given tothe purchase
and sale of Government Sec uri ities,
E.C. BU MF
P rato.
¥
Yui HAG
I= . Si
o
be
apll 68.
Ries on the Advance,
(! H. GUTELIUS,
Surgeon'& Mechanical Dentist,
who is permanently located in Aarons-
bug _in the offiea formerly occupied | by
Dr. Neff, and who has bean practicing with
entire sucenss- ~haviag tha experience of a
numbar of years in tha profession, he would
cordially invite all who have as vet not
given bon a call. to do zo, and tesi the
truthfitlnesa of this asse rtion. #& Teeth
Extracted without pain. may22o8 ly
RUUGERT,
Cashier,
HENRY BROCK ERUOFF, J. D.
President.
ILLIKEN, HOOVER & CO,
CENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO.
RECEIVE DEPOSITS,
And Allow Interest,
Discouat Notes,
Buy And Sell
Government Securities, Gold and Cou-
PORS. apl0 os.
‘TY 1Y
Kady
"OHN D. WINGAT i, D. D. 8.
DRXTIAT
Office on Northwest corner of Bishop and
Spring st. At home, except, perhaps; the
firat two weeks of every month.
~grx Teeth extracted without pain.
Belle 3» nte, Pa. apio 68,11.
> D: NE FF, M. D., Phy sician and
1 . Surgeon, Center H: dl, Pa.
Offere his professional services to the eciti-
zens of Potter and adjeining townships.
Dr. Neff has the experience of 21 yearsin
the active practice of Medicine and Sur-
KOry. AploG HR, 1.
. X. M'ALLIRTEKR, JAMES A. BEAVER.
0’ ALLISTER & BEAVER
APTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penn’a.
ALVIS & ALEXANDER,
0 Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte,
_apll 63. :
\ DAM HOY—ATT ‘ORNEY
A Office: on: High Street,
Pa.
og
ic Watchman Office.
W. H. LARTMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Belle fonte,” Pa.,
Office with the District Attorney, inthe
Court House. may 15°68.
R. P. SMITH, offers bis Professional
services. Office, Centre Hall, Pa.
apl7 68,tL.
Pa,
AT-LAW
Bellefonte
apl0 68, tf,
P. MITCHELL—: ATTORN EY-
AT-LAW, Office in the Democrat-
ap30'68.
Hall Reror-
sio0 par your
net paid an
TERMS.~The Centre
s published weekly, at
id S200 when
TER
: \
iN /AdVanee > Ki
i
i
i
Advertisom are insorted ud $1.00 per
(10 lines)
a year,
at a loss rate.
All Jobework, Cush, and
hh
» . { 3 15) } ,
peditiously executed, reasonable ol
oni
\
AN et
1
ortnree
\ 0 ’
ful’ 0 Wea, Viste
montis
half vem
{
il
449 eexb
+ 2 Ege
A % i ve | -~
Fe)
CENTRE HALL REPORTER.
JUNE th. 1808
"RIDAY,
FOR AUDITOR GENERAL
HON. CHARLES LL BOY LI,
of Fayette County.
FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL:
GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT
of Chlumbia County.
the
ink.
From the Revolution,
Ji }
(iS
hike Henry (Clay's let-
ter, has more meaning under the ink
cover that it,
A branch of the Republican party
ed States a
ssembled in Con-
vention in the city of Chicavo, on
}
ff May, 1868, and made the
following declaration of polities :
Let us eongraty
reconstruction
33s
. 4 YY %
. fey? ' Ty 1
mained OV 8 ll
.
1 1
lecrades one-hai
oD
Ds aT
t nd loads all with taxes,
in
Although a standing army
hat a wise
“0
«A
a tion could
dizcontent,
nee
*y 3A
easily turn nto pe
. . ‘ ‘
y v Ty 3 4 i + 1)
prosperity, 1% opposed IO the &ell-
i - 4 4 L
3 14341 x? 1 4
INsStituii 3 § FON vet it
ot 3yss} SE
i NOL Ould
Aang
i
11:7 . . .
Ce TO estas princinies io
ties with a transient policy
WMIy
2. Although it 18
1 30
LA) SOUR
{ Congress
of in
i t }
OO 110LV Dg!
government
wi
“to fg
Lt
} Heo our Stat
1
\
late elections. We know
radiction
black |
ad
bravely
rent
1
]
m flag in the WAT,
we FIVE it 10 every ig
ii PH lan-
South ; but as we
te of
Is a very large one,
1 1 +}
kK vo the mouth—
Jy} 13%
while ill
needed the bla
the
North it is a mere trifle—t
Rep l
L$
statesmans SER ean casily reconeile these
0 perpetu-
ate our blican Viki a Wise
150) y,
seeming contradictions.
The national honor requires the |
bynes of the pub! ic debt ;
never can be done while we continue |
but as it
to pay bondholders six per cent. in gold |
and legislate the enormous profits we
now do into national banks, amounting
82 500,000,000,
in sixty-five years to $
we must in some way shirk tty respon
Beeing that
our financial policy leads inevitably to
sibility of our own policy.
revolution and repudiation, we must
sel the dogs of war on the last scent, by
showing that greenback for bondhol-
ders is the straight road in that diree-
y as little
possible on this point, lest the great
tion.— Though we mnst sa
west should perceivethat this is a Wall
street platform.
We see that the working men are
waking up to the fact that the policy
of McCullough and Jay Cooke is na-
tional suicide, and that the taxes fall
mainly on the laboring classes, hence
the necessity of a reference at least in
our platform to “equalized and reduced
taxation.” As the masses are easily
wheedled with such high sounding
phases as and the
“great principles laid down in the im-
brorial Declaration,” itis better to give
them these glittering generalities than
promises of any specific redress of their
wrongs that we could never fulfil with-
out splitting our party.
The national debt is too big a
problem for us to solve. We dare not
repudiate and we cannot pay. So do
not let us bother our heads about it,
but go on with the show, leaving the
burden of our sins on the shoulders of
our children, that they may fight this
financial scheme with the bondholders
national honor,”
just as our Fathers left us by their
slavery for a century,
6. Though this debt was made by in-
by in-
Thoueh We ire CrOWIng yor.
5 3 5 ¥]
er every day for the lack of a curren-
|
|
|
by building
yet wo must
tage than our own pet bondholdeas do
We know
it is the® duty of
y |
but so long as the bondholders
ty in the w ay of its accomplishment,
This has heen the most corrupt
the govermnent. Both at our national |
and State capitals we have witnessed |
such wholesale demoralization, that we
have no faith left in the leading men
We doubt the hon-
esty of William Pitt Fessenden, and |
Justice Change, in |
of our own party.
We
have been “so shame nursed and fos-
now call the gods to rrant us some new
power and pabulum for our speedy re-
demption,
8. We mourn the facet that
fully
poliey for which we elected him,
Andrew
out the
We
ie prominent can- |
Johnson has so carried
him from all t!
rto eonciliate the South,
natter in
1ejeaked a |
but he rather overdone the
r rue, wo
»
,
an |
but
i"
l
rood New England Republican to make |
Andrew we rol
We tried |
h
’ 1
We founa that i
or him, in
y than we contracted {or
each him, Qo
1}
intertwisted |
s that it was |
like crucifying curown le oh; and blood;
| too much
acainst ourselves, and so we ended the
and his fate, like that Jeff
davis, is indefinitely postponed.
8. Though three hundred
. . :
zed American
farce, of
natural-
citizens have been rot-
ing in England prisons for the last
life,
i 3 1
11 O01 8) npatny with Ien- |
* .
‘Ce ovears, sentenced ior On the
ISOICH
r distin:
ae Pea !
Fancts as
ixhed eiti-
riil
i!
$ O11
i Vu
hee 11
words ol
spoken
i
1
we in
ud no stomach |
1 3
ont |
y
Lou
wirler, as
weland, we
ce to this whole |
the
with 1.000.000 |
i 1
now, on eve of a |
. . 1 *
ai nNitiey,
untry, some word
» {x ur 1 sy znd
of sympathy must be extended
1
to the |
: : :
sufferers, and calm sugeestion
+1
1 PM t Yoni “
ae to Larent y Lhe ele { that
“the doetri man 12 once a
subject he is always so, 18 a relic
8
of
1
wg § bh
of |
101 174
y the law |
nation When England reads |
Y
§ ]
100
howare ! And let the
take « ‘ourage, and
all vote for Grant 1 Colfa
10. Of all who were hithfal in the
late war,
her
Irish in this country
ant
let us not forget our brave
lives in the service of their country.
We should regard them, as well as the |
wives and children of the gallant dead,
While the |
bondholder who rolls in his gilded car-
md fine linen,
gold,
halt
streets, appeal as
as the wards of the nation.
ul In do not
the boys in blue, maimed, and
blind, beerare in our
loudly that their bounties and pensions
be paid in the same currency ? Do not
our ick and dying soldiers, their stary-
ing wives and children need bread as
well as honor? Now is the time to re-
member all classes, for we shall need
their votes in the coming election.
11,
late ourselves
i
We must not forget to congratu-
on the immense flow of
And
would remind the people of the earth
mmigration to our shores. we
that this is the asylum of the oppres-
sed from all nations, and the Republi-
an party is the Moses to lead them
thrimich the wilderness of ignorance
and poverty to the promised land of
specie payments, high tariffs, national
banks and manhood suffrage.
12. Being the party of freedom, we
extend our sympathy to all oppressed
people, black and white, struggling for
their rights ; except women. Any ame-
lioration in theis condition would in-
volve such fundamental changes in the
functions of the sexes, in the reorgani-
zation of society, would necessaril ily be
so new and revolutionary that we are
not. prepared to entertain any proposie
tions for their emancipation or enfran-
chisement,
The
The Union Leacues And
Penitentiary.
No sooner has one “trooly-loil” per-
holding office in New York been
despatched for abuse of his trust, to the
SON
Penitentiary, than another of the sane
sort in Virginia undergoes & like fate.
Mr. Callieott riend
and favorite eminent Union
Mr,
Anderson, who has been sentenced
Chief-Justice Chase inRichmond
210,000
was 4 particular fi
of that
Leaguer, Horace Greeley; and
Mr.
by
and to take
is a nephew of
| Mr. John Minor Botts, whom all the
Leagues inthe land have de-
to Is it not
while to investigate the nature of
honor, worth
mysterious connection which, as thus
seems to be shown,
treme looseness in finance ?
on
Ifthings
this ‘rate it will soon he
20
at
difficult to secure a quorum of mem-
bers in any leading Union League
Club without applying to Governor
for ticket-of-leave from the
And what a satisfac-
tion it must be to President Johnson to
Fenton
Penitentairy,
reflect that hisname has been removed
the rolls of
such patronymics as
Callicott
flocted lustre!
A
“from membership”
those of
on
which
snd
ft Ape
number: of Israelities, of
Mo., 2,000 it is said,
publicly pledged: themselves to
This act
iN Act
large
have
£( ite
OR 18
Ju nis,
against General Grant.
based upon an
the
{ the
if not w holy,
Grant during
Wir
hanishing all Jews from one o
* ee
A correspondent from
TT .
Floridacraves
ring.
Northern tax payers,
i
I think the
3 ' hot 13713 CP :
who make their living | Dy + ha 10st toil
two months the
(voverniment has been distributing fr
to the this
Leon
registered about
35.000
ions 11¢ in
Wr Mrs
County, where the ne:
Vs
v 3
y DOD
HLL
last
2.700 voters (
’
SOME rations were Issued
Do you give free rations
of the North ?
tax
to the laborers
‘ 1 .
No, id ¢n on
saints,
and
feed the
WEI, anda
.
4 1 . at r ¥ » ’ \ 3 8
hen tax ‘em acai to NINen,
i" 1 1
SHED SEY i 4 i
racy of the South.
this new aristo
ts— cmon wn commie
h | . 3 5
An Expose.
Transactions of Butler whileat New
exhumed. Deve
taken in case of Kearney vs.
York Court, ha
it, by permission of Butler,
Colonel Batler, agreed to
of naval
|
tion prohibiting the’ circulation’ of
Confederate money which
Colonel Butler
demanded «the delivery of
a nominal value.
soon after
and offered Confederate
Kearney declined.
and threatened to send
the stores
money. Butler
arrested him
chain if he did not
hall
deliver the goods,
a and
made the
£100,000.
Kearny
delivery and now sues of
re >
Faran LicirNiyg Srroke—We
learn that Friday the Oth,
the thunder storm, a man
William Ort, living in the
village of Greenville, Montealm
county, was instantly killed by light-
ning ‘while on his bed. Ilis
wife, who was sitting by the bedside,
on last,
during
named
lying
received a shock, and was thrown par-
tially upon the bed, and a little child
who was lying upon Mr, Oat’s breast,
had her hair singed, but escaped with
no further injury. The electric fluid,
it appears, passed down the stove pipe
to the, kitchen stove, whereit separa-
ted, one part of it passing into the
bedroom where the unfortunate man
was lying, killing a dog in its passage.
Another downward
through the floor,
ofthe door on one side and the door
branch passed
while the threshold
frame on the other were torn to splin-
leaves a wife and
destitute
for
The deceased
children In
stances. A: subscription
benefit is in circulation.
re fp
Growth of Othalia,
A correspondent of the Lynn Tran-
seript writing from Omaha, Nebraska,
ters.
three eireums-
their
say No.
‘Omaha is situated onthe west bank
of the Missouri, which rises gradually,
ww v A EME nan
Hon.
and
building site
State
Sehool Commissioner,
that
alording a fine
John Gillespie, Auditor
who resides here,
the fourth of
he ate his dinner on the
informed me
1854,
ground where the State
on
July,
House now
stands, and there was not then a honae
to be seen. The city has now a popu-
lation of fifteen thousand, with two
Lu-
theran, Congregational, Universalist,
Babtist, Methodist, Christian, (
lic and Episcopal,
the following denominations :
‘atho-
besides a colored
chureh.
Thief Captured.
Samuel W, Taylor’s horse has been
recovered and the thief secured. The
don county by a man named Samnel
De Aemitt, for a sun so much below
value of tho horse that suspicion
The
farmer to whom
They then re-
Ie was taken to Iunting-
There when the sheriff came
alled him to
the bed, and
while the he was so engaged DeArmitt
to locked the
sheriff in, Two females were standing
at something on
the door and
|
{
|
|
in his way and ond’of these he knocked
down, but the def hafiled him until
ased the sheriff]
de Armitt down, and
DeArmitt has |
been a resident of Huntingdon county.
rties rel who
ed ]
Losin locked him
Ol her 4
then knock
up.
i
'wo years ago he was arrested in | that
horse-steali ig, bat
broke jail and caped. f. flex “War ds
Lancaster
ry,
was arrested In
charge of robbe
county |
on and sentenced |
to one year in penitentiary, from whieh
he has been released only a few weeks.
He willl
Democrat,
he Ee ——
rox Wantep.—My
Eliza
Sherman,
e tried in this county. —True
[NFORMAT wid-
dowed daught Ray, was sent
North by GQ
(x
with her five
er,
en. in his raid |
from her. home.in
children. In-
will be
COTZIR,
Marietta,
whereabouts
. ’
received. Address
Rev, Eniian ROBERTS.
Su Alabama.
ww the above
formation of her
1
}
thankfully
nmerville,
[ Pp apers will please Cop!
’
{
the benefit of a worthy poor man
able. ]
Where is
*
the “enthusiasm” which |
Grant was to excite all over
Was it
(irant has been through
r 9 manifest at
country
West Point?
York twice within a week, and
to or from the
No
not hore
his transit cither way,
»
was absolutely unnoticed.
one ran after him: Blunt did
was not serenaded at
League Club,
he
the Union
a bouquet;
hotel ;
did not dine or breakfast him ner
Charles SN. call
of of
Connecticut.
ley,
did
with a
on him
the late
Grants
Spencer
report returns
election in
nomination may have been received
with
Tribune, but Grant himself seoms to
excite none at all.
errr
all enthusiasm claimed by the
A French paper relates the follow-
ing amusing ancedote: It seems that
a gentloman from Paris paid a visit to
a country dame in whose parlor he saw
a portrait of a lovely woman of—say
five and twenty,—~Upon the entrance
of the lady, her visifor naturally asked
her if the picture was a family por-
trait, and was told that it represented
her deceased daughter. “Has it been
you lost her?” asked the
gentleman, “Alas sir,” replied the
lady, “she died just after her birth, and
I have had her portrait painted to
represent her as she would appear if
she had lived until now.”
pip gt
long since
Different people, in different places
have different ways of expressing the
For example, in Monta-
aman asks you to take a
drink, he says: “Let's ty soe of the
molten lead and In
Idaho, “Let's have a little extract of
In' Arizona, “Lets take :
scalp.” At Sacramento, “Let's reduce
the food. About the Mud Volcanoes
on: the Humboldt it’s “Buppose we
blzee ?’ At Fort Churchill they say,
“Let's innoculate with the measels,”
same thing.
na, when
brimstone.’
» Lay
Kansas.
and: everybody is innoculated there.
TAPING we
Angling for Dogs.
A sporting y editor Was relates one of
his adventures—viz
Another time we were traveling on
grounds we had no right to tramp
over. The only excuse was like that
of military necessity —it was better
fishing throagh the farms where the
trout had been preserved than in the
open flats where all could fish,
It was early in the morning,
had risen at 3;
We
ridden ten miles, and
the creek as the trout were reg uly
for breakfast. for
a sheltered pl ace to hitch our horses,
Looking carefully
we slyly crept on behind fences, ete,
till we reached the part of the stream
A farm house
We
saw the morning smoke curling lightly
not generally fished.
stood a quarter of a mile away.
from a stovepipe ; saw a man and two
boys come to do chores ; saw woman
busy about the door ; and a ferocious
bull dog wandering about the yard.
If ever we fished close, it was then—
not a whisper to disturb the birds or
the owners of the land. We crawled
through the grass and dodged behind
clumps of elders, lifting large speckled
beauties out of the water until our bas-
kets were full.
This was the time to have gone, but
the trout were go large and bit so readi-
ly, that we could not withstand the
temptation, so we decidgd tostring and
hide what we had, and take another
basketful. No sooner would the hook
touch the water than we had a trout.
We forgot the house the man and
boys and the dog.
Suddenly there was a rushing through
an oat field as if'a mad bull were coming.
farmer and his two boys, on a
We saw
The
well trained dog had been sent to hunt.
g bounding toward us.
it all—we had been discovered.
us out, and as the matter appeared, it
was safe to bet that he was doing that
thing lively.
To outrun the dog was not thought
He
There was no time to lose.
activi-
above
we reached a tree and by great
ty, took a front scat on a limb
his reach,
a
“Ww
A vicious
bull dog under the tree, and a
Here was a precious go!
farmer
and two big boys ready to move down
| upon our works. It was a fight, foot-
race or fangs!
The farmer
“Watch him, Tige!
Tige proposed to do that little thing,
velled to hie dog—
and keeping his eye on us, seated him-
self under the tree,
Then spoke the ugly farmer man—
“Just hold on thar, hreak-
stranger ;. then we'll come and see
till we get
fast,
If you are in a hurry, however,
Watch him, Tige!”
We surmised trouble ; quite much ;
for twice had the bold man of bull dogs
you !
you ¢an go now!
and agriculture elegantly wollopped
innocent tourists for being seen on his
ITis name as a
peace man was not good, and there
arose a large heart toward our throat!
Time is the essence of contract, and
the
ble.—Wehadastout line in our pocket,
suburban premises,
aving ordinance for those in trou-
and a large hook intended for rock
bass, if we fatled to take trout.
And, as good luck would have it, we
had a nice sandwich and a piece of
boiled corned beef in our pocket.
We called the dog pet names, but
he wasn’t on it! Then wetried to move
down—when he’d move up! At last
we trebled our bass line, fastened the
great limerick to it, baited it with the
corned beef, tied the end of the line to
a limb and angled for dog!
Tige was in appetite. He swallow-
ed it and sat with his eyes for more,
but with no friendly look®beaming from
his countenance. Not any !
Then we pulled gently on the line—
it was fast! Tige yanked and pulled,
but 'twasnouse! The attention of the
anine was diverted from us—his busi-
ness was being done by another line:
We quickly slid down the tree—
coming near blistering our back doing
it—seized our .pole, aud straightway
We
found our string of fish and reached the
buggy and a commanding spot in the
road in time to see the sturdy yeoman
move forth.
We saw him and his cohorts, male
and female, move slowly, as if in no
haste—we saw them look up the tree.
We saw an anxious group engaged
about the dog. We came home quick-
ly, and kindly left the bass line and
hook to the farmer:
S——
The following somewhat facetious
replies to a Life Agent's circular, re-
questing information as to health’ and
habits of an applicant, were received
at a prominent life office in Hartford :
How long have you known ?
Since two years after I was born,
What are his general habits? In
winter red flannel and ble beaver, in
summer a straw hat, cantod #5 bho side,
and nankeen trousers, very lbose in the
legs.
What is his! profchsion ? Congrega-
tionalist,
Do you know, or have you heard,
that he has ever heen afflicted with
Gout, Asthing, Consumption, Spitting
of Blood, or any other disorder tend-
ing to shorten life? No; but he can
have them, if repuired by the com:
pany.
Has he ever had vertigo or singifig
in the head? Yes, he snores
and daily hears the music of & sting
machine. it nde
ifas he ever been afflicted with: fits
or rupture ? Never had a fit in his lifs
—his tailor being always ainsuccessful
—but once had a rupture with hid land:
lady.
Has he ever had fever and agie¥
Had fever last summer; when the thér-
mometer was at ninety, bit # Was no
great shakes. 3 =
Has he evér hind heart disease?
Yes, but was cured of it by Rev. Dr.
Hawks, years ago.
Has he been afflicted with any other
serious disease ? Yes: He once had
“negro on the brain.’
Has he been afflicted with any men-
tal derangement ? Yes; decided insani-
ty ; shown by reading the New York
Tribune, and voting with the Republi-
can party.
What state was he in when you saw
him last? The State of Michigan.
Has his application ever been rgj
ted? Yes, once—promptly by a lady.
Do you think his life safely insur-
able? Not at his own valuation.
Bought at his own estimate, and sold
at that of the publie, he would break
any bank in the country.
Do you call his lungs sound? No,—
I call them inflated air tubes:
What age do you consider him? Old
enough to kirow wore thun' he does.
COACH MANUFACTORY.
HARDMAN PHILIAPS,
T HIS manufacturing ‘establishment at
Yeagertown, an the Lewistown
and Bellefonte Turnpike, has now on hand
a fine stock of Carriages, Buggies, Sulkies
and Spring Wagons, which ho now offers
for sale as superior in _quaiity and styles to
any manufactured in te coimtry. They
are made of the very best seasonec ‘stock by
first class practical workmen, and finishes
in a style that challen nges comparison with
any work out of or in'the Eustérn cities,
and can be sold at lower prices than those
manufactured in large towns und cities,
amidst high rents and ruinous prices of liv-
ing. Being mastor of his own situation,
anxious to exeel in his artistical’
and free from any annoyau¥és in his’ blini-
ness, he has time’ and ability to devote his
entire attention to his pro no and his
customers, rendering satisfactiv #itke to
i patrons, operatives, his country, and
1Hmnse %
Call and examin'e Kis stodk and Ida
prices, and you cannot fail to" ba’ sstis
REPAIRIN
of all kinds done neatly, provaptly, sad
reasonably.
Y eagertown, June 12, 1868.—1y.
~ ADIES LOOK HERE?
FAIRER & CO,
Bellefonte,
Ia the place to bey your Silks,” Mohairs,
Mozambique Reps, Alpacas, - Delains,
Lans, Brilliants, Musing Penlicoss, Tick:
ings, Flanels, i Flandls, Ladies
ing, Gents’ Cloths, Ladies Sacques; hits’
Pekay, Linait Table Cloth, Sa
Crib Counterpanes White and Col
Tarlton, Napkins, Insertings and Edgi
White Lace Curtins Zephyr & Zephyr
terns, Tidy Cotton, Shawls, ork
SUNDOWNS,
Notions of every kind, White Goods of
every description, Perfum Ribbons—
Velvet, Taffeta and * Borin, " Cords and
Braid, "Veils Buttons, Trimmings, Ladiée
and Misses Skirts
HOOP SKIRTS,
Thread, Hosiery, Fans, Beads, Sewing Silks,
a
LADIES AND MISSES SHOES
and in fact every thing thit can be thoug!
of, desired or od in ys “a8 be thovght
FANCY GOODS OR NOTION N LINE,
which he his concluded'to sell at figures as
low if not lower than Philadelphia and
New York retail prices.
Also the only agent in’ Bellefonte, fur the
sale of the
ODESSA ~ PATENT COLLAPSING
SKIR
-
Its peculiarity isthat it can be altered in-
to any shape or size the wearer may desire,
50 as to perfectly fit all ladies. :
G. W. FAIRER & CO.
juned'68 ly. No. 4, Bush's Arcade.