RTZ, Editor FRED'K KU OWE SEWING MACHINE. brated Howe Sewing Machine, which has no superior in the market. Go to Fairer's store and see it. It has received prize med- als at all fairs, They arc the oldest estab- lished machines in the world. july$'68,tf, QZRA P. TITZELL, 14 Milroy Mifflin Co., Pa. MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN STOVES, TINWARE, &c. Ilis stock consists in part of x SPEARS ANTIDUST COOKING : STOVE, the best cook in the world. The Celebrated Barley Sheaf. Tronsaides Cook. Oriental Cook. Fulton Range. Oriental Base Burner Parlor Stove. Oriental Parlor Furnaces. Spears Parlor. Spears Orbicular, . Also great variety of Gas Burners, Egg Cannon. and other Stoves and Heaters, Churches, School Houses, &ec. Fruit Cans on hand. Particular attention paid to Roofing, Spouting and Jobbing. Close cash purchasers will find it an ad- vantage to give him a call. near the R. R. Depot. junel® 68 6m. TINWARE! TINWARE! J. REIBER, Respectfully announces to the citizens of Potter township, that he is now prepared to furnish upon shortest notice, and as of Tin and Sheetiron Ware. * STOVE-PIPE § SPOUTING. All kinds of repairing done. He has al- ~~ &e, &e. : -SILVERPLATING. for buggs executed in the finest and moet durable style. Give him a call. His char. mea are reasonable aploes ly. B UGGIES! BUGGIEN?! J. D. Murra 7, Contre Hall, Pa, Manufacturer of all the gigizens of Centre county, that ha hason han NEW BUGGIES, with and without top, and which will be sold at reduced prices for cash, and a rea- genable credit given. Twe Hares Wagons, Spring Wagons &e., made to order, and warranted to give salis- faction in every respect. All kinda of repairing done in short no- for purchasing elsewhere. pO rs F** NAYIONAL BANK OF Bellefonte, Ta. (LATE HUMES, McALLISTER, HAL & CO.) KE and Proprietor. | TERMS. —The Crxrrr Haul Rerow- | TrR iz published weekly, at $1,60 per year in advance; and $2,00 when not paid in advance. i Advertisomonts are inserted at $1,060 per square (10 lines) for 3 weeks. Advertise- ments for a year, half year, or three months at a less rate, All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex- | peditiously executed, at reasonable char- i i CENTRE HALL REPORTER. Tth, 1868 ‘Ohio's Statesman. Speech of George H. Pendleton— Noble and Eloquent Words—the Platform and the Candi- | dates Endorsed. FRIDAY, AUG. | on the 16th. The attendance was un- | usually large, and resolutions endors- | ing the nomination of Seymour and ' Blair, and demanding the repeal of the registry law in force in that State, were unanimously and enthusiastical- ly adopted. Hon. G. H. Pendleton | was present, and delivered the follow- { ing speech : Mr. Chgirman and Gentlemen :— : The Chairman of your State Execu- | tive Committee, when he invited me to | attend your meeting to-day, told me | that I had no truer friends in the Union "than I would meet here in West Vir | ginia. You have proven his statement [to be true. I came obedient to your bidding. . I desired to see you, to make | your personal acquaintance, and to re- ‘turn to you my thanks for the warm | and constant support of your delegates to the National Convention. I came | to show you that no personal disap- pointmant lingers in my breast or dam- | pens for an instant the ardor of my efforts for the success of your party al considerationz I rate tho .wecess of This Bank is now erganizsl for the peas of Banking under tae lawsof the ted Nixtas Cartifirates issued by Humes, McAllister, Hale & Ca.. will be paid at maturity, an Checks of daposits at sight as usual on pre- sentation atthe counter of the said First Na- tional Bank. P@ticular attention given tathe purchase and sale of Government Securities E. C. HUMES, Prezident. ‘a aplOy 68, Neianee on the Advance, ( Hn. GUTELIUS, 'e : Surgeon & Mechanical Dentist, who is permanently located in Aarons burg. in the office formerly occupied by Dr. Neff. and who has been practicing wit entire success —having the experience ofa number of years in the profession, he would cordially invite all who have a¢ yet not given him a call, to do so, and test the truthfulness of this assertion. 24 Teeth Extracted without pain. may2263 ly J. D. RUUGERT, HENRY BROCKERHOFF, Cashier. President. FILLIKEN, HOOVER & CO, CENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO, RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, Discount Notes, pons. aplO 68, COHN D. WINGATE, D. D. 8. DENTIST. Bpring st. first two weeks of every montii. fx Teeth extracted without pain. Bellefonte, Pa. apl0 68, tf. Ty) DP. NEFF, M. D, Physician and . Surgeon, Center Hall, Pa. (ifere his professional services to the citi- zens of Potter and adjoining townships. Dr. Neff has the experience of 21 yearsin the active practice of Medicine and Sur- gery. aplO G8 1y. JH. XN. M ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER. PCALLISTER & BEAVET ATTORNEY S-AT-LAW, Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penn’a. OVE ALEXANDER, Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa. AYES said MHOY-ATTORNKY AT-LAW Office on High Street, Bellefonte A DA A apl0 68 tf. YOHN P. MITCHELL _ATTORNKY- ® AT-LAW,Officeinthe Democrat- ie Watchman Office. api 08. lt ei. hh ot W. H. LARIMER, : ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bellefonte, Pa., Office with the District Attorney, in the Qourt House. may 15'68, R. P. SMITH, offers bis Professional services. Office, Centre Hall, Pa. -apl7 68 tf, AS. McMANUS, e Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, prompt- ly pave attention to all business entrusted to him. july8'68. : A ILLERS HOTEL ~ Woodward, Centre eounty, Pa. Stages arrive and depart daily. This fa- vorite: Hotel kas been refitted and furnish- ed by its new prepreior, and is now in every respect one of the most pleasant coun- try Hotels in: central Pennsylvania. The traveling community and: drovers- will al- ways find the best aceommodations. Dio- stables and pasture for any number of cat- tle or horses. GEO. MILLER. Ye ovry +f Prorn-__ | which these principles are inscribed 1 | shall be found close by his side in the thickest of the fight to cheer him with | my voice and to aid him with my arm. | I cama to urge upon you, Democrats | and Republicans alike, to trample un- | der foot every prepossession and pre- | * . . » + | judice and passion, if it were dear as | this great struggle, to remember that | we have only a life to give and anovble | and enduring government tosave. [Ap- | plause.] [ am a party man; I avow | it, but not, I trust, in any narrow or. | I am attached from principles of the Dem- | sectarian sense. | conviction to the | ocratic party ; I have studied its his- | tory from the foundation of the govern- ment. It would be impossible for me to make myself heard in this immense audience unless you keep quiet, and 1 | shall ask that while I am speaking you will alow me to proceed without inter- ruption. I thank you, gentlemen, for the very cordial reception you have | just given me. In the States I have found it to be the party of liberty and progress. In the Federal government I have found it to be exponent of that fundamental principle of the Constitu- tion that all powers which are not granted are reserved. It has been the consistent opponent of consolidation in the onc syatem and of excessive admin- istrat on in the other. It has been at once the firm supporter of the rights of the States, and of the just powers of the Federal government. In every vicissitude of our history it has ap- peared to direct us with its wisdom and to exticate us by its courage, and to- day it stands as it did in 1788 and 17- 99, under the guidance of Mr. Jeffer- son, pointing ua to the path of safety, which is now, as it was then, the path of the Constitution, of fraternal har- mony and peace. The Convention which sat in New York was an august assemblage. It was the true council of our party. It embraced our best and purest and wisest men, The roll of the States was called, and not one was without a representative. The roll of the districts was called, and not one of them was missing. The doctrine of State suicide was not recognized, tho dissolution of the Union was not ac- knowledged. Every State was invited to be present, and every State accepted the invitation. Every State selected such.citizen as she chose, and thus it Carolina, and! Georgia and: Virginia, CENTRE in fraternal council with Massachusetts and New York, and Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and that Hampton nnd Preston and Forrest sat side by side with Steadman and Morgan. The Convention was the sign and the sym- bol and the phropheey of a restored Union and a harmonious people. It rose tothedignity of its high duty. The eves of the world were upon its pro- cesdings, Greater than the holy alli- ance which subjugated people and di- vided empires, its mission was to en- franchise a people of our race, to re- store the Union of our States and to maintain tho institution of civil liber- ty. For the first timo in their history tho American people realized that free government was in danger and that the fate of the Republic trembled in the balance. They had been taught to be- lieve that freedom was indigenous in our soil, and shutting their eyes to the teachings of all history, shutting their eves to the facts connected with our own Revolution, they had hugged to themselves the delusion that in what- ever storm of faction or passion or rev- olutionary fervor, liberty at least was safe. They had awakened from the dream, and as they sent representa- tives to the Convention they charged them, as the dictator of old was charg- ed, to see to it that no detriment hap- pened to the Republic. By a unani- mous vote they adopted a declaration of principles, fidelity to the Conatitu- tion fidelity to the Union, fidelity to the rights of the States, fidelity to the rights of the citizen, fidelity to the prin- ciples of civil liberty, fidelity to that solicy in matters of finance and taxa- tion, which, by paying the public debt in legal tender notes, will lift from the shoulders of labor the burthens which oppress it, and by lightening the mea- sure of taxation will secure to it the just rewards of a cheerful and conten- ted industry. [Cheers] Thespaaker then referred in many eulogistic terms and teaitors. [Applause,] When Napoleon was ealled on, young, un- ktiown to his countrymen, never hav- ing had command even of a regiment, to quell'the revolt of the sections, he did it effectually. In four years he was First Consul and master of the French people. How grand the theory which the Democratic party opposes to this whole system of the Republicans. I read from the declaration of prinei- ples : First, Tmmediate restoration of all the States to their rights in the Union and under the Constitution and of civil government to the American people, Second, Amnesty for all past politi- cal offenses and the regulation of the | elective franchise in the States by their citizens, The Republican party is the party | of usurpation. It is also the party of | corruption. Read the report of the | Commissioner of Revenue. Count the number of clerks who are secking in vain to discover the amount of pecula- tion in the Treasury Department. Go to the War Department and sec the mutilated archieves, and ask why they were destroyed,. Visit the penitentia ries and count the public plunderers, who are confined there. [Hear, hear.] He reviewed the expenditures of the Federal government from July 1,1865 to July 1, 18688, showing that the Democratic administrations had been much moreeconomieal. Moreover, he would ask why was it that the amount realized from taxes for 1869 would be less than the amount realized in 1866, considering that the rate of taxation was substantially the same. It is time that this Republican Congress had di- minshed in part or in whole the tax on the manufactures in New England or on whisky ; but they would not ma- ferially’ change the aggregate. Pay- ment was more difficult than previously. Labor found no occupation, energy and enterprise were paralyized, and all be- cause & Republican administration cur- to the nominees of the Democratic Con- | vention, and said if anything more | were needed to fire the heart with en- | thusiasm let it be drawn from the con- trasts the country to-day presented. The Republican party had been in ab- solute power for eight years. Where was the Constitution they swore to up- hold? Where was the Union they swore to maintain? + After briefly di- lating on the course pursued by the Republican party since the war, more particularly with respoct to the recon- struction of States, he went on to state that Congress had usurpad to itselfall power over the State governments of the South, and had, in fact, destroyed them. "Adverting to the military gov- ernment, Mr. Pendleton continued : It is reproducing in our country the les sons of all history. The despotism of the legislative assembly is the worst despotism in the world. Tt isthe most selfish, the most cruel, the most auda- cious, and the most shortlived. It ends in anarchy, and this ix speedily fol- lowed by the calm repose of the order of the sword. Recall the listory of the Roman Senate and the Emperors. Recall the history of the Long Parlia- ment and the tyranny of the common- | wealth. Recall the history of the Leg- islative Assembly of France and of the consulate and the empire, and read in them the certain prophecy of the fate of this government if Congressional us urpation shall run its course. Have we not already a part fulfilment ? Con- gress has despoiled the President of the them in the Goneral. It has despoiled” the States of their right of civil gov- ernment and vested them, too, in the game officer. It has given him power over all tho military commanders, and to his ‘decision it has referred overy question of interpretation and execu- tion of the reconstruction laws. And this same officer, wielding this enor mous power, backed by the army, sus- tained by allthe military organizations by whatever name they may be known, appealing to the fervor which yet re- mains after the struggles of a terrible war, demands that he #hall be elected President of the United States. And this party which supports him declares that if they eannot do it by the votes of you men of the North, it will elect him by the votes of the negroes and carpet baggers in the reconstructed States of the South. Gentlemen, do you sce no danger here? When years ago, we predicted this result and warn- ed against the first-step in’ révolution- ues, checking all enterprise, throwing out of employment all labor. In the meantime the work of contraction is steadily pushed. Look at every monthly report of the Secretary of the Treasury. You will find that every month the debt that bears interest in gold is fucreased You will find that every dollar that bears no inter eat at all, or that bears interest in cur- rency, is converted as rapidly as possi- ble into the bonds which pay interest in gold; and why is this? Is there too much currency in the country? Is therea plethora of money? Isspecu- lation rife? No man will dare affirm it, and yet this work of contractien still goes on and valueis coined for the bondholder out of the sweat and tears, the blood and bones and muscles of the laboring man ; and when we ask the reason wearo answered by the decla- rations of the Republican Convention of Chicago, that the bonds must be paid in gold according to the spirit and letter of the contract. I deny that it is according to either the spirit or letter of the contract under which the five-twenty bonds were sold. I say neither the spirit nor the letter of the law under which these bonds were is- sued, nor good fiith, nor good morals, nor exact justice to the bondholder, require that they should be paid in der, and in this opinion I am sustained by the Democratic Convention at New York. [Applausc.] What the amount of indebtedness underthe system of the Republican party would be he could not say. $2,500,000 we knowit is now. Less than that it eertainly will not be. The interest on that sum will be $150-, 000,000 in gold, and this amount is to be drawn aunually from the people of the country, during all your lives, and the lives of your youngest children, in order to carry out the dogmas of the Republican party. On the other hand, the Democratic party are op- posed to extension and desires the im- mediate payment ef the debt. [Hoar] It declares that the money collected from the people should not be squan- dered, but applied to the payment of the debt interest. It declares that the five-twenty bonds shall be paid in legal tender, and until they be paid they shall be subjected to the snme rate of taxation as all property. It declares there shall be one currency for the government and the people, for the laborer and the office-holder, the pensioner-and the soldier, the producer a —— Be how is it practicable to pay this debt —three hundred and thirty millions— if bonds are held in the Treasury De- partment as security for the national bank circulation. Redeem thom the very moment you have the option to do so with legal tender notes, and let them supply this place of the bank pa- per. This measure alone, with very little inflation of the currency, and without any addition to the taxation will redeem the debt and save the twenty million in gold which are now paid as a bonds to national banks, He legal tender notes of tha five hundred — on the same tree where the others were hung. Previous to the hanging the prisoners were questioned as to the nu- merous robberies which have occurred in Jackson county, but with the excep- tion of acknowledgement of small de- predations, nothing was® gained from them. rmmmsa—. vi. ff ———— Nebraska. From the largest city in the State, Omaha, to the State itself the trausi- tion is easy. This infant sister of the Union is destined to play an important part as one of the great agricultural regions, when it is filled up with a twenties payable this year at the op- tion of the government. He urged that such measures would stop the contraction and reverse the policy of | the Treasury Department and give stability to the money market. He strongly advocated the expansion of the currency, and pointed out the folly and uselessness of contraction, citing many instances in favor of his arguments for the reduction of the national debt. The accruing revenues would enable you, without further expansion. to pay | off the residue of the five-twenties as they mature, and then to diminish still further the amount of interest conse. quently the taxes. Ifthen the vurren- cy were found redundant gradual con- trastion could be effected, and as it would come when the debt had been paid, when the necessity for large sums of money on the part of the govern- ment had ceased, when taxes were low, it could be accomplished without the oppression and disaster which now at- tend it. I have been represented as inimical to the bondholder. Gentle- men, you shall judge me. I am hos- tileto no class orinterastin the country. I simply desire to be just—just to the bondholder, just to th: people. I would live up with scrudulous fidelity to the terms of our contracts, 1 would pay the intarest of the five-twenties in gold, because the goverament promised to doso. I would pay the prineipal and interest of the ten-forties in gold, because the government promised to do so. 1 would pay the principal of five-twenties in legal tender notes, be- cause the bondholders agreed to receive themesin paymant, and as I would not repudiate an honest bargain to make money for tho people, so will I not re- pudiate an honest bargain to make mo- ney for the public creditors. [Cheers.] He did not think that policy would give a depreciating currency, but, on the contrary, was of opinion that just as the public debt was thus discharged will the certainty of its ultimate re- demption be more apparent, and its value be rapidly and steadily increased. These bonds operate as a mortgage up- on the property and labor of the coun- try. There are two thousand millions of them. Pay off these two thousand millions and will not the legal tenders be just in the proportion more valua- ble? I know the evils ofa depreciated currency. I would not aid in deprecia- ting our currency. I fought against it when it was proposed by the legal ten- der act, but since it was accomplished —since the debt was contracted in le- gal tender—since it may be lawfully and honestly paid in legal-tender—I am in favoa of continuing it untill we can secure the people, who have al- ready suffered all the evils, whatsoever good may be expected from the sys- tem. But, gentlemen, I detain you too long. I have sought to bring in sharp contrast the two parties and their respective principals. Choose between them. [Cheers.] Several other speakers having de- livered addresses, the Convention ad- journed at 8 o'clock. self App Parks, Moore and Jerrells, the Adam’s Express Robbers, ins hy a Mobon the Same Tree that Clifton, Elliott and Roseberry were Hung, &c., &c., CixorxNarr, July 26. — Parks, Moore and Jerrells, the Adams’ Ex- press robbers, arrested at Mat toon, Cole county, Illinois, on Friday, ar- rived at Seymour, Indiana, at half past ten o'clock : last night, and soon after loft in a wagon with a guard for Brownstown, to be delivered to the Sheriff of Jackson county. When near the vicinity where Clifton, Elliott and Roseberry were hung, the wagon was suddenly surrounded by about one hundred and fifty armed men, all mask- ed. The guard was overpowered and the prisoners taken ‘out and hung. At last accounts they were still hanging i and the bondholder., [Cheers.] And at our fears and called us copperheads ninety bushels of oats are raised to the bushel. Forty bushels of wheat, or one hundred bushels of corn, are rais- ed to the acre. Potatoes are an uncer- tain crop, in consequence of the fre- quent and long continued droughts, but in a favorable season the yield is abundant. Fruit is not generally raised, because the high winds are in- that direction must be preceded by the protection to it. Grapes are a speci- ality, and produce wines equal in quali- 3 % 7 o 1 inal FAM AAUTVS Hid -.- . itary tS — GITANON a— pain rr iF erg a VOL. Lie==NOU 47. We can’t understand how Grant tanned old Andy. If evera man was thoroughly tanned.by another. it is Grant, who was proven, publicly, a liar and a fool, by Andrew Johnson and the combined destimony: of five officers. We may indulge in a few more reminiscences concerning Grant's tanning qualities at some future time, pepper fp Baltimore, July 28.—Yesterday af- ernoon Col. W. W. Woolley, of Cin- cinnati, who was lately in the custody of the impeachment managers a3 Washington, by his counsel, R. J. Breot and R. T. Merrick; sued out of | the superior court of this city a writ against Gen. B. F. Butler for false im- prisonment, for incarcerating him be- the House of Representatives, and al- so for seizing the private telegrams of the colonel. Damages were laid in the guit at $100,000. Another suit was also brou ht in the same court, by R.. J. Brant.and W. Middleton, as counsel for Kimberly Bros., of this city, to recover some $31,000 or more, alleged to have been ‘extorted from them by Gen. Butler, by duress, while military commander at Fortras Monroe. Process in both suits was duly served on General. But- ler as he through here in the ty to those of Missouriand Iowa, while melons are abundant, Jackson vs. Grant, “I shall have no policy of my own to interfere against the people, U. 8. Graxt.” “I say again, fellow-citizens, remem- ber the fate of ancient Rome, and vote for no candidate who will not tell you with the frankness of an independent freeman, the principles upon which, if elected, he will administer your Gov- ernment. “That man deserves to bo a slave who would vete for a mum candidate when his liberties are at stake. ANDREW JACKSON, Oiled i — In Franklin, Tennessee, on the night of the 20th instant, John Guthrie, a negro who had ravished a young girl named Ezell, was taken from jail and hanged by a mop. The next evening, as a brother of the girl was on his way home, he was fired upon by some ne- groes who were lying in wait, and re- ceived a wound from which he died on Sunday. A band of about three hun- dred negroes supsequently gathered near the town, and for two or three days the citizens were in a state of great alarm—expecting an attack. The New York Times fears the Democratic majority in that city next fall may reach 90,000 votes. There are not so many papers in this country, by one hundred and fifty as there were five years ago. & A South Carolina alligatnr, proba- bly in the interest of the “rebel Demo- cracy,” ate a promising young blatk voter the other day. m——— pn Snyder County.—~The Troverton Railroad, formerly owned by Messrs. all, Thomas, & Co, has recently been ’ ’ ’ . . » purchased by the Reading Railroad been purchased by George Schuure and Mr. Carey for the sum of $30,000. tie fy tne ‘ The attempt to distribute arms to the negroes of the South by the Radi- cal Congress, soas to prevent Demo- crats from voting for President, is one of the grossest of all the outrages per- - " “ petrated by thisjinfernal Congress. It is a direct invation to another civil war in order to perpetuate the rule of the tied Forney in Praise of Seymour. Honor to New York! Her Gover- nor has acted like a man who knows when the time for partizanship is at an end. Her gallant Seventh is now at Harrisburg, and side by sideourbrave Pennsylvanians, preparing to resist the invaders. This 1s the true spirit of brotherly love. But while the city of New York is doing so much to save our State, what is the city of Philadel- phin doing *—Forney's Press, June, 1863. el eee eee A sealry sot of notes (notes endorsed by the people) for the proposed Radi- cal chorus : Grant as a flat. Colfax as a sharp. John Covode as a “natural.” el Gp gp Five Alabama negroes of the church- going sort caught the pastor of a rival congregation, a few nights since, flog- ged him, robbed him of his cash and watch, and warned him to leave the country. @ * New York train last evening, on lis way to Massachusetts. bo: dant Orville Grant, a brother of the eral, lives in Chicago, and hasjust giv- en $100 to a Seymour and Blair Club Not long ago,’ at Milyaukee, one young Jacobs, aged 19, led to’ the altar a lady of 88, whose son threatened im- mediately after-wards to kill his, juve nile step-father. Jacobs applied to the municipal authorities for ction, on and the step-son was arressed and a held to bail. Inthe same, city is living a gentlemen whose father, aged 70, re- cently married a damsel of 20, who is now the grandmother of & woman of 25, and great-grandmother of two bright boys. : New Albany, July 28.—A man named Peters, working in a saw mill near Greencastle, Ind fellon the cireu- lar saw and was cut in two, lengthwise. drill A - “Whenever I spokeof-th t ques- tions of the day, he (Grapt) immedi- ately commenced to talk horse.” — F. Wade. RR rE I ADIES LOOK HERE' 4 FAIRER & CO. Bellefonte,’ Is the place to buy your Silks, Mohai Mozambiqués:; Rens, Na L YR Lans, Brilliants, Muslins, Caligogsy. Tick. ings, Flanels, Opera Flanels, Ladies: Coat- ing, Gents’ Cloths, Ladies Sacques, ‘White Pekay, Linen Table Cloths, Coungerpan Crib Counterpanes, White and Color Tarlton, Napkins, Insertings and Edgings, White Lace Curtins, Zephyr & Zephyr Pat- terns, Tidy Cotton, Shawls, Work Baskets, SUNDOWNS, Notions of every kind, White’ Goods of every description, Perfamery, Ribbons— Velvet, Taffetat and; Bent, Cords and raid, Veils, Buttons, Trimmings, Ladi and Misses Skirts, : Cs HOOP SKIRTS, Thread, Hosiery, TF ans, Bedds, Sewing Silks, LADIES AND MISSES SHOES and in fact every thing that can be thi of, desired or used in the e thought LN RE at ya ; FANCY GGODS OR NOTION LINE which he has concluded: to sell at figures as low if not lower than Philadelphia and New York retail prices. ¥ i Also the.only agent in Bellefonte, for the sale of the » Ff or yyy ; DOESSA PATENT "COLLAPSING SKIRT. a Its peculiarity iv that it can be altered in- to any shape or size the wearer may desire, 80 as to perfectly fit 11 ladies. | G. WFATRER'& CO., - . juneb’'6s ly. No. 4, Bush's Arcade. - COACH MANUFACTORY. HARDMAN PHILLIPS,’ * a : * 'T HISmanufacturing establishment at ~ Yeagertown, on the Lewistown and Bellefonte Turnpike, has now on hand a fine stock of Carriages, Buggies, Sulkies and Spring Wagons, which he now offers for salg as superior in uality and styles to any manufactured in the country. They are made of the ‘very best seasoned stock b first class practical workmen, and finish in a style that challenges comparison with any work out of or in the rn cities, and can be sald at lower prices than those manufactured in large towns an cities, amidst high rents and ruinous prices of liv- ing. Being mastar, of his own situation, anxious to'excel in his artistical profession and free from any annoyances in his busi- ness, he has time and ability to devote his entire attention to his profession and his customers, , rendering satisfaction alike to all patrons, operatives, his country, and himself. 30 Ste Call and examine his stock and learn his prices, and you cannot fail to be satisfied. “REPAIRING of all kind: done neatly, promptly, and reasonably. SE | Yeagert wn, June 12, 1868. —1y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers