Centre Hall reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1868-1871, September 04, 1868, Image 2

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    «=
4th 1868,
FRID AY, SE P.
ered menor
Te OR PRESIDE INT :
_HORATIO SEYMOUR,
= of New York.
of ws
| EE Serr Soh: NT?
GEN. FRANK P. BLAIR,
Pen
Ref STR MIN ATIONS
TROR ATHroR GENERAL
HONS CHARLES j O% BOYI L by
add. Soi $H yO Co ity. !
y Yon Bury EYOR SRGENE RAL:
SOREN WELTINGTON H. ENT,
a oF Gobi bE Corny
For C ongres ohn
PR TW ulin ty.
ody usb Bonide les
wk Hrd dota lefonte,
3
a
(3%
fp
a.
8
Pir. Ssgnably :
oP. Giriy Mee Jol Bellefonte.
© For Dis odd Attorney : {9
4 Hénry ¥. Stitzer, of Bellefonte.
Fer County Survey ort
.
w
4
»
$3
® wwh
ais
ne
For County Commissioner: 3
John Bing, of Unionville.?
For Auditor:
John Rishel, of Potter.
«Deficiencies. »
+TFheword “deficiency,”
the tax-payer.
pirty to cover-up its tracks of extray-
bills.”
“In Hiding its applogriatiors the
UMP COMPross
"cover up their thieving by “deficiency
in upon the treasury
in .the. tax-lists. The radicals have
: been dealing in “deficiencies”
“ly as follows:
ses $657,000.
a
.« struction. expenses $278,000.
Another deficieney im third district,
for negroes in Dictrict of Columbia, |
_S87.,000,
ment. $1.900 ,000.
0 + partaicnt.
i # a
aid or
TASIeY'S department.
LM
®
&
»
seid dat + easy, department.
Iaraes s. Fibe Mige oh collector of cus-
ge od #5 op ra
A
ev a a
of the BECHSTY
a
i
p a for it.
amo
iT lo pay Sides in he House,
3 HG 1 ey
Ew "Phen second deficiency in the le
a branch.
i Adeficiency
-
in the pension office.
wi hus we mich ogo
+ column of ale Teporicr, with these
ye diedl"“déficiency bills,”
“tax-payers are to be deceived, wher
dical rulers are spending,
appropriation bills, just ask them te
the “deficiency bills”
explanation upon them.
wou vote for long rows of “
bills,” an inerease of the'debt, and hea
vier taxation,
& o>
>
eaté another 1 increase of .the debt.
" Hons:
“ment!
So we go.
Bright prospects,
Hurrah ! for Grant!
Hurrah for radical rule;
entire
Married, in Salt Lake City, “16tn
inst. in the presence of the saints, Brie-
Miss LM. Pendergast, Mrs. R. M.
Jenickson, Miss Emily P. Martin, and
y of Berks, England. No cards,
A
The Taxes and Expenditures ofthe
Radieal Government.
A my ite tearful attention of the
fhe Rusongir, fo ah ox
¢ here Haris » Froud
chief fir. Pendietd t i§ time
a thet ax ayers of’ this country re
fleet upon the alarming condition of |
Radicalism, it will be |
seen, is fast hastening the country on to |
our finances.
ruin and if their career of profligacy is |
defeat at the
taxgatherers
next
will |
{
not checked by a
election, taxes and
HS8LUS. up.
Citizens of { Centro county, wa here |
present You a truthful and alarming |
picture, just see how fearfully we are
drifting along. ;
The amount of money collected by
taxation in three years of peace, from
July, 1865, to July, 1868, reached
81, Hod N 74, 006. Thave it from official
“The Commissioner of Inter-
1866, |5061-,
Tsources.
nal Revenue re By
L. A, Mackey.
This gentlouign i i3.the nominee of the
Domogracy of this dike det for Congress.
Mr. Madkey ihn old citizen of Cline
ton county, where he is universally bes
ovod Hei 18 a ventleman of the pus
post character, mand against hime the
tongue of slander ein sy naught. Mr
' Mackey's popularity in his own county
is so great, that his friends are confi:
dent-he will recieve 500 votes from
Ile i8 a man of
ability and large knowledge of publie |
affairs, and in every particular cope:
tent to represont this district in con
Mr. Mackey was an old line |
hie, to which respectable organization
or CSS,
he clung so long as a corporal’s guard
remained, He belongs to that class of
whigs who never could be swallowed
up by the abolition monster, which
ent up the old whig party ; he never
belonged to the modern party of negro
worshippers, ‘ealling themselves Re- |
572,000; for 18068, 300,000, and
1867.856 L, 302,000; totaly $1,604,174,
000, In each case the gold collected
at the Custom. louse is: estimated "at
1,40. Of this amount. the
from the tariff reached $724,584,000.
The expenditure of ‘the Goverament
has been scarcely less than this enor-
mous sum; for if you will look. atthe
public debt on the 31st of August, 1865,
you will find that it amounted
{ $2,757,690,071, and if you look at the
you will find it stated to be |
| 82 633,588, TH6, showing a decrease of
8124.108,215. The Commissioner of |
Internal Revenue tells us that the
1868,
lands, farms, houses, towns lots, money,
stocks, bonds, railroads, steamboats,
ships—all amounted to only $14,282.
826,088. Ifthe products of three years
tion for three years has amounted to
very much more more than one-tenth |
ofall the property in the country,
while the taxation of Great Britain has
If the
assessed |
amounted to one-thirtieth part.
taxation for these years were
upen each individual equally, it would |
amount in the United States to 834,25, |
» | while in France, the taxation for the
$22, and
in $16. The
public debt of the United States, if as.
upon
amount to 874,25, the public debt of |
9
-—
same time would amount to
Austria to less than
| sessed each individual, would
France, to $53 and of Prussia, to $1
I say to that made a
| statement that I could not verify, and
[ never
youl
| T hold in my hand this report from the
Republican Commissioner
| Revenue, Mr. Wells.
| inspection of any geutleman. On
27th page of that book, which
member of Congress
for it is a public document,
can furnish you,
you will
word I have
Our Republican friends are very much
find verified every
.
‘
-1ter.] ‘Did you ever know a
thrift'whei he was bronght face to face
with the eondition of kis affairs, that
was not very much aston’shed indeed ?
They will’ turn upon with
statements made by this same commis-
sioner. Tn his letter ‘to Mr. Allison,
he says that during the three years of
which I have been speaking, the
amount paid on account of the public
debt, 1¥°8250,000,000 and that ought
to save $15,000,000 annually in gold,
by way of interest. Now if you look
into tht report carefully; you will find
the annual reduction of the puclie debt
is But 134,000,000, and that the bal-
us some
in the Treasury “which is not there, if
at all, for the purpose of paying the
publie dobt, fut for the purpose of he-
ingrused for the, ordinary expenses of
the Government ; and if you look at
this $134,000,000, you will find that of
this amount, $71,000,000 have bean re-
duced by virtue of the contraction of
the currcney and the calling in the
greenbacks, ‘which pay no interest at
all; and if* you will put side by side
with these facts that in three years the
increase of the debt, which pays inter-
| est in gold, has amounted to $602,000,-
000, you will see how much your bur-
dens have been lightened, Then this
same Commissioner tells us that the
estimated surplus In the Treasury, on
the 1st day ofJuly, 1868, is $34,000,-
000. Where ave they? They have
not been paid on the public debt, that
I' have shown you. They are not in
the Treasury ; that I have shown you.
I have unfortunately, for our Republi-
can brethern, ‘a list of the deficiency
bills that ‘were ‘passed’ during the last
two or three weeks of the last Congress
and thelist that I have, imperfect as it
shows that they have appropriated out
of this $34,000,000, the sum of $27 -
000,000 in that way. ‘I hold in my
hand the’ list.
eee el #
The reason why Butler | goes for
Grant’is because he goes for every-
thing that looks spooney.
ltl
>—
SUBRCRIPE FOR THE REPORTER.
}
)
He was a hater of Abol-
itionism in all its hideous forms, all
when
the Democracy were powerldss, Mr.
Mackey cast hiz ‘first Democratic vote
for M'Clellan, and has been in sympa-
Mr. Mackey stands squarely upon the
Democratic pistforny; he endorses the
platform of the New York convention
which nominated Seymour and Blair.
We
tre, that he 1s as sound upon the politi-
al issues of the day as the editor of |
this paper. We have scen over his
own signature that Mr. Mackey is op-
| posed to negro suffrage in every guise.
can assure the Democracy of Cen-
| He is opposed to the present scheme of
radical reconstruction. He isin favor
of equal taxation. Ie is in favorof
| paying in gold that which was express-
| ly enacted should be paid in gold ; and
| he is in favor of paying in greenbacks
| that which does not carry upon its faco
| the promise of gold. He isin favor of
| an economical administration of the
| | Government, that our be
| lightened. Lastly, he is in favor of
| returning to the old landmarks of the
Constitution, as formed by our
fathers,
taxes may
tore-
and restoring the union upon
|
the basis of the constitution.
}
fongressional Nomination.
Lockhaven,; August 28-—The PDemo-
cratic C fongressional C ‘onference for the
Tiogh counties, to-day nominated Li. A.
he eounties were all
| Mr. Mackey's election is considered
- A S——————— dlp ron Apmis
Philadelphia, Se ptember
Hom Thomas x
- sy
-—=T'Wwo
Jones,
Associate Judge of Occan county,
New Jersey, were killed by lightning
yesterday atnaw. Jigypt, that..county.
They were aged twelve and seventeen,
A son of Mr. Jones was also severely
injured.
rm eas nl MP ————————
Fi rom South America,
Progress of the War in Seunth
America—The Paraguayans Get-
ting the Worst of it.
Lisbon, Aug 28,—~One of the stea-
line between
Rio Janerio and this port, arrived late
last evening with advices from Rio Ja-
nerio to. August 8th. Iler news
highly fmportant.
The tacties of the allied forces in at
18
fortress of Humaita by starvation have
been entirely suceassful, The Para-
guayans held out to the last moment,
and on July 24th, when their stores
were exhausted, evacuated the position
and the allied forces marched into
Humaita on the next day. Two hun-
dred and fifty cannon and a large
quantity of amunition, arms, &e. which
the Paraguayians were compelled to
abandon, were captured by the allies
shelled on a taxed machine, measured
in a taxed measure, taken in a taxed’¥
sack ad gropudon a taxed
od pat, Stirre ,
sulted afith ta
taxed bake pam; “baked inna a ta¥ed fi6ve
laid outon a taxed plate, eut with a
knife, and lastly eaten by a heavily
taxed man,
“Whew! well IN swang, that’s
I declare to gracious
T never looked at it that way before.”
If it were not for the taxes you could
buy a bushel of meal for what that
peck cost you. Besides, it is not on
on every thing you have to buy. A
pound of gugar only cost three or four
cents, but you have to pay from six-
Wife Murder.
Now, York, August 31—Ja
teestod on the charge
Po Hue aan bride
19d
: rosning
that
og hor life, fo
but WAS
einer
“The death of Thaddeus Stevens” says a
cotemporary, “leaves the Radieals without
That may be =o, but, us their
road is all down hill, they won't need one,
Thad whits for them below.
ert se ene
MEXICO NOT FOR SALE.
Sax Francisco, August” 27. Phdsitent
Jaurez writes to ( onsul Gane Day de-
nying that there huve been any negotin-
tons for the sale of the Stites Hf Sonora,
Singlon or any part thereof to the U nited
| States, ns reported.
iy
a leader.”
rm
——
A Radical paper says Grant “takes well.’
He generally takes old rye; and it has been
| frequently remarked that he takes it very
well,
teen to twenty. A pound of coffee
only cost ten cents, bat you fhuve to |
pay thirty, and if it costs” you three
family, yon may safely say one half’ «
of this is tax. Now, is it any
that times are hard and that you find |
it difficult to live ?
“It costs me more, than
wl
three han-
| dred dollars a year to live.
get only fifty
lived a great deal better then than |
do now on a dollar and a quarter. I
see there is a great wrong sumewhere
to cents a day, and I |
and I am going to take your advice,
for a change of rulers I'll try the ex-
The retreating Paraguayans were pur-
in grand Chace.
Three of the Rrazilian iron
forced their way through the obstrucs-
tions past the batteries on the Parana,
Lopez, at the mouth of the Febiguary.
Marshall Coxias,
der, was also advanci ‘ing troops on Lo-
pez from the land side, and
to surrender their position.
- & Ap»
The Her: ald’s money article says the
terms proposed by the re presentatives |
of the Atlantic and Great Western
Railroad, to the rie Compary, are
Uponsuch a platform, weean g y into
| the contest for Mr, Mackey's ole etion |
{ with all our might. He
bove principles,
i
has pledged |
{ himself to the a and
willing |
Dem- |
and work.
| being a man of honor, we are
| to trust him. We now ask our
| ocratic readers to join in
| Wm. H. Armstrong, the ra-lical nomi-
| nee for congress, is pledged to the op- |
| posite of the above principles, and be- |
| tween these two, the voters of the 15th |
| congressional district must choose.
- alin ’ |
State Fair. |
The Pennsylvania, State Fair |
be held Harrisburg, commencing
will
at
| September 20th, ‘68, and will contin- |
| ue four days.
rere dp en Apne
We are » glad to notice the re-nomi-
nation of Ron G. W. Woodward,
the
Judge
for
of Lau-
zerne county. Woodward
one of the ablest defenders of the Con- |
Congress, by Democracy
Is
stitution and “the rights of the white
people of this country.
oe -
Tax-payers of Centre county, the
country is over!82,600,000,000 in debt,
and this enormous burden, saddled
upon us by placing the government in
the hands of the radieals,
instead of getting less.
Irom year to year the Federal Go- |
vernment collects from its citizens
$300,000,000 to pay the interest on
the above debt and other expenses.
Besides this the various State Gov-
ernments collect from the people some |
3300,000,000 by taxation, making the
which ‘is collected in
from the people, by State and Federal |
Governments, yearly:
800 MILLION DOLLARS!
pen..and this is more than six per cent.
pes of the value of all the property in
pz the country! and more than 30,
ger~almost 50 per cent. of all the car-
en.nings of labor and capital in the
By country... sq
i A ne
Our neighbors, across at Lock Ha-
ven, now enjoy the luxury of a daily
paper, the fruit of our enterprising
friends, Wm. P. & J. Wg I urey,
who every morning issue the “D: ly
Clinton Democrat, "a bright and =pir-
ited five column sheet. We hope the
people of Lock Haven will keep their
new daily alive, by giving it a liberal
: 7 *y N y
support. We wish the I['urey’s suc
CESS.
.
1s
growing
amount, taxes
— Ap lp .
People want to know why Grant
made a trip to the Rocky Mountains.
If some inquisitive rad will write to
Anna Dickinson about it, she, no
doubt, will reply he went out to see
his little “injung,” as there are such
there who have a right to call Grant
“pa.”
cermin
Yermont Election.
On last Tuesday the election was
held in Vermont, and as usual, the old
tory State went radical by about 27,
000. One report elaims gains for t the
radicals, another report says that the
Democrats have it, gains. The ra-
dical state ticket is elected, and also
brie fly as follows: The road is to be
£36,764,305; and the DBuffulo
for the further sum of 81,382,
The Irie ( Company i= to pay for
same by assuming all the
of
OO,
the
Western Company, to the amount of
212.894.9900, and by issuing preferred
| stock for the division] stock of the At-
lantie and Great Western Company,
to the amount of $16,169,275,
amount of 830,
032.125 » Erie Company is,
over, to
pound sterh ing, for the interest pats st due
on the bonds of the Atlantic and Great
Western Company, in order to take
the latter out of f the hands of the Re-
ceiver, paying him, at the same time
fees to the amount of £128,000.
Th
more
IMPORTANT TO TAVERN KEEPERS
the facet, that under the new
caged in the tobacco trade,
>
Taxes.
“Tey Can't Tax Me!”
We have repeatedly heard poor men,
laboring men say
any property, they can’t tax me much!”
We recently met one of this class re-
turning after a hard day’s work,
rying on his arm a peck of meal;
accosted him,
versation ensued ;
Well, Jones, how do
“Poor enouzh!
eet on!
youl
than ever before. I work hard, live
yet it is all I can do te live.”
Well, that is not to be wondered at,
when vou and other laboring men vote
after year to increase your own
Times will grow harder un-
year
burdens,
til you change your way of voting, and
taxes will inerease.
“They can’t tax me mucli for I've
got nothing.”
oD or
They can’t eh? Let's
did that peck of meal cost you?
“Thirty cents.”
Do you know what it costs to
What
seo !
’
‘
raise a
bushel of meal ?
“No.”
It costs about fifteen or twenty cents.
“The loyal people say you copper-
heads are mighty bad people, and try
to deceive us working men, and I
begin to believe it, for 1 know they
don’t tax corn meal.”
I think I ean prove to you that corn
meal is pretty heavily taxed.
“I'd like for you it, then.”
Well, the corn from which that meal
was made was raised on taxed land,
plowed by a taxed plow, drawn by
taxed horses, hitched with taxed gears.
It was hoed with a taxed hoe, cultiva-
rated with taxed impliments gathered
a taxed drawn with
to do
wagon,
the members of Congress nominated
by that party.
| periment anyhow, but I must not teil |
| old Squeese, or he'll discharge me and |
but a hundred and |
fifty dollars tax is too much for me. |
all me a rebel;
ter's fuel, sugar, coffee, flour, &e.,
‘and calico for my wife
| this before, I begin to see now why old |
| Bonds used to come round and see me
| just before the election and be smiling
and polite, and why Mrs. Bonds would |
wife some little nick-nack |
Bonls is rich he zats gold |
| from the bank for his bonds. I work to
| pay that. His bonds
| I pay 2150 a year all in little things ;
1
send my
or other. I
I
are not taxed.
even a box of matches is taxed.
thank you, Mr. Editor for this talk ;
has dene me good, a new light has hy
ken in on me—and I'll not keep it hid
I'll talk to the
“men aboutit, Itisnow all plain, Ide.
clared I'll never forget
meal !”
We gave
grip and passed on, more determi ned |
under a bushel neither.
that pack o
.‘s .
LL SE til
» the honest fel
then ever to work for the enlichtenms it |
of labor.—0Ohio Statesman.
rere th tlre
Obitnary.
Under the heading of “A Man and
' Brotheer” a Georgia exchange furnishes
the following: An unpretending slab of
| humble basswood at one end of the
| square aperture in the sand where the
emancipated dust of the veteran re-
| poses tells the passing traveller, in
| this simple manner, the tragic story.
SAM,
Born a Slave;
Bred a Slave ;
He starved to death a free
American citizen.
His
Career was brief—an excellent field
hand and a loyal soldier, and
a patriotic citizen, who voted
often and carnestly ;
being sndden!y deserted
by his earpet bag friends,
he sickened and died
of too. much
Liberty
and
too little—grub.
Yet cen these bones from insult to |
protect,
| Some frail memorial still erected nigl
With uncouth lines and shapeless scul
ture deek’d,
' Implores the passing tribute of a sigh.
BuLrock ¥egir.
3
iy
ac aie
A POPULAR INSTITUTION.
‘here is,
| learning in this country so widely
known, and so extensively patronized,
| as the Iron City College.
| Fifteen Thousand students from Thir-
| ty Three States have attended here du-
{ ring the past ten years. Young men
come thousands of miles to avail them-
selves of the advantages afforded by its
splendid system of Practical Actual
Business Training, which has given it
such a marked superiority over any
and all other business colleges in the
country.—Pitts. '( Commereéial.,
Who shall be President ? The Phren-
ological Journal for September con-
tains all the Presidential Candidates
(irant, Colfax, Seymour and Blair,
with portraits and concise Sketches of
Biography and Character. Also Hon.
Anson Burlingame, the Chinese Min-
ister; Franz Liste, the composer ; Ar-
minus Vambery, the Oriental Traveler
John H. Littlefield, artist. Who are
the Yankees? Use Togs and have legs,
A Key thought; the Developement
Theory defined ; Our Daily Lectures;
A New Class in Practical Phrenology ;
Finding a situation ; A perfect Church
on I& arth-—Is1 it possible? ? Only 30 cents
or 83 a year. $1.50 for half a year.
Address, 8. R. Wells, 389, Broadway,
New York.
i a Lie
What is the difference between a
hungry man and a glutton? One
longs to eat and the other cats too long.
A Little son of Henry Harenden, of Half
Moon, Centre County, was run over ‘by i
wagon londed with sand, and had=his logs |
atid arm bi addy: broken, on Batrduy last.
cp nll Mp
Grandmother Po oy who was brie d the
| other day i in Valle¥ Forge, hud ten chile
deen, @ shty-one weandehitdeen, one hun-
dred and "nineteen © gent grade hildren,
{ thirty three great=gre at-grandchildren, and |
five great- great pete andchildren.
rare old plant was Gra ndumather Porey.
sr dp tlie Meme
The Enterprise, of Nevada City,
| Mic LL Kelly, in that city, who,
toma alt, had sacha pow erful
! he acti wily sneezed his shoulder out ot joint,
and it required a surgeon and a good deal
of pulling) to pull-it in ngaing
Toronto. August 21. —Te erific fires have
| again broken out in the woods in the neigh-
{ hood of Bell Ewert and Sunmidale, on the
Northern Railway, On Saturday the Sta-
4
tells
oh
| time the village, erabraoing twont y five
thirty houses, was in ashes,
of Sunnidale were taken to New Lowell,
and are well eared for. The railway
was destroyed for nearly a mile, but it
repaired, and trains run regularly to-day.
| The woods are still burning, “and other vil-
destruction,
| Ol
gister,
The Merchants” Protective Union, organ-
ized to promote and protect trade, by ena-
ling its subscribers
| snfety in the granting or of credits, und the
| nounce that they will, in September, 1868,
| publish in one large quarto volume :
| THE MercnaxTs' PROTECTIVE
| MERCANTILE REFERENCE REGISTER, ¢mn-
taining winong other things, the Names, Nau-
| th re, of business, Amount of Capital, Finan-
cial Standing and Ri atingasto ¢ re «lit, of over
$00,000 of the principal merchants, traders,
bankers, manufuctors, and public compan-
ies, in more than 50.000 of the cities, towns,
villages, and settlements throughout the
United States, their Territories, and the
British Provinces of North American; em-
bracing the most ituportan] information at-
tainable and necessary to enal ble the
chant to ascertain al a glance the eapital,
character and Degree Jf Credit of such of
i
hi= ct natomers as
i
are
pa] wer Directory, containing the title, char-
price, and place of publication, with
particulars relative toeae ‘bh journal, be-
enide to the press of every
U nited Stat
sand inform towwiiDes min-
Actined worthy of seme line of
ad as the sane witl be based, so far
) upon the written statements of
o part ihe miselves, revised and correet-
Bk by well-known and re liable legal corres-
| pondents, whose characters wil prove a
| zunrantec of the correctness of the intorma-
| furnished by them, it is believed that
| the reports will prove more truthful and
i and therefore, superior to, and of
greater value, than any previously
| full
| 11
feouniy in
Tire ropor
vd to those
‘ redit 1
1
4
1..4
conivete
P Lion
complete,
1 i 8
issued,
By aid of the **Mereantile Reference Reg-
ister.” business men will be enabled to ascer-
tain at n glance, the eapital and gradation of
nearly every me rchant, manufacturer,
der Fa and bis 1 ko
territorial Hi
On or about thetirst of ench monih,
™y
sub-1
icle, containing among other things,
ord of such imporiant changes in ihe name
and condition of firms, throughout the coun-
try,
tion of cach hali=yearly volume of the
cantile Reference Register.
Price ofthe Merchants Union Mereautile
Reference Register, fifty dollars, (330.) for
which it will be forwarded to any address in
the United States, transportation paid,
Holders of five 310 shares of the C apital
Stock in addition to participating in the
Mer
tile Register free of charge; holders of ten
shares will be ¢ ntitl led to two copies; and no
more than ten shares of the Capital Stock
will be allotted to any one applicant,
All remittances, or communicias
| tions reladive to the book should be nddress-
| ed to the Merchants’ Proteetive Union,
| the American Fxchange Bank Building.
| No.128 Broadway,
i Sept, 4.
ordel 3,
(Box 2566,) New York.
08. =n.
—
oe t—
| NEW
an —— So
ADV RT
A ————————
CISEMENTN.
Fras COURT SALE!
i
By virtue of
Court of Centre
posed to public
Aaronsburg,
ON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10th, "68,
the following deseribed property of Jacob
Bowersox, dec'd, viz; 2 piece or
parcel of land, situate in Haiues township,
adjoining Aarou<burg on the north, Levi
Stover on the east and John Mover on the
west, containing THREE and one HALF
ACRES, thereon erected a small log dwel-
4 ling HOUSE, STABLE, with a fine
Ld ORCHARD of choioe fruit. Sale te
commence at 2 o'clock, p. mo, on suid day.
“TERMS :—One half the pur<hase money
to be pr aid on gonth ‘mation of Sale, and the
residue in one year thereafter, with inter-
est to be secured by bond and mortgage on
the premises, N. ROT K,
sep, Administrator,
an order of the Orphan's
county, there will be ex-
sale, on the premises near
New. BO OK Store.
ILESALE AND RETAIL
BOOK, STATIONERY & NEWS EM-
PORLUM.
ACOB D. MILLE R, has purchased the
¢) Book, Stationery and News Establish
ment of Kinsloe & Brother, on Allegheny
street, near the Diamond, Be Hefonte, to
which he has Just added a large invoice of
goods, such as is generally kept i in a well-
conducted Book and Stationery Store. His
stock consists of Theological, Medical, Law
Miscellanious, Sunday School, and School
Books, Also, blank books, time books,
pass hooks, dinries, every grade and price
dheapd legal, bill, letter, bath, and note pa-
per, drawing and tissue paper, fine French
paper, envelopes of every description and
pric e, pens, inks, ink-stands, erasers, rub-
ar bands, transparent and common slates,
slate pencils, lead pencils, ehalk crayons,
&c., Xe. Legal and justices blanks of all
kinds, revenue stamps at face,
Orders taken for goods at all times,
Goods received in three days from the
time the order is received.
Mr. Miller is also wholesale agent for
Lochman’s Celebrated W riting Fluid,
which he sells at manufacturer's prices,
County merchants would do well to give
him a call before purchasing elsewhere.
of Valuable Real Estate.
Will be sold dt public Sale, on the premi-
ges, in George's Valley,
On Saturday, September, 12th, next,
at 13 o'clock, p: m.; a lot of ground, cone
taining TWENTY ACRES one half clear,
nud} in the best state of * ‘cultivatiin thereon
Aecrected a good 2-story; weather:
boarded Log House, Barn, Wagh:
house, Smoke-house, W ond-shed and Pig-
pen; a never failing a ple Orel; a %ell of
excellent water
of this tract is well timbered w
and pine of
of tf
and adjoins tn of
i nd Sumuel Einebie
2
55
APG
ters of Adminis
Jacob Bow CTROX, Ld
dec’ wwe been K
wa ill mn
me Path] e-
»,
having accounts a
again
| sent th ey pro A
nm Put i £ of it] ¢
# 3
PP By LB
ivore
Tie Belichonte, 7h
¢1 =! dove oad odp
isydalely olf ¥
} vnbi avid
AR
-
=
ONE DOOR NORTHaof 1K
SONS HARD-WAR
| Manufacturers and Dealers in
ron andl
ladies,’ gent’s, ; -.
Youths; misses,
and CHILDREN'S BOOTS AND SHOES,
| of every description. or
Our Stock is Large and will Conare
with that of any ether E -
ment in Centre county. -
- We cordially INVITEOUR COUNTRY
FRIENDS TO C ALL nid examine for
themselves. Our prices wiil satisfy that we
| are selling off
Cheaper Than the Cheapest!
Bellefonte, Aug. 28.68.¢f #
| i
| [) OLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
Tr
The partnership existing betwéen Simon
S. Wolfand Abraham Luckenbaek, tra-
ding under the firm of 5. 8. Welt &*Uo.,
| ins this day (August 10th) been ‘distolved
by mutual consent. The hun will
hereafter be carried on hySS ire The
hooks and aceounts remain in the ham
s of
| the unde rRigne dl.
5. 8. Wolf,
21.8
i
| aug?! Uentre ile.
ALU ABLE F ARN
Y T PRIVATE SALE!
The undersigned is his he farm
situated in Penn township. #8 ike
about 2 miles west of Millheith, af
sale, containing
70 Acres of Clear. Look -
under good fences and ih thé
of gultivation, and 18 ac res’ f7
Theércim are ef
A —————— ——————————
rv Jog hot; Eb laerhogood
#7 rthuildings, with running wa-
85 or at the house a tal
2 on fine young apple orcha
This farm is under as ght a state of eculti-
vation as any in the vallév, “Alo, her
Tract of 45 Acres W
wooded with sprace, Pin Se REI ANE and
onk, situnte'on the forks ak iine-cpgek, in
Penn tp, within } mile o il
and # ile of in ie a h
40.000 1, choice Tantber,
to be seen at residence “of the ui
PETE
ang21.3t
OUSE AND LOT
H
SERRA LV The fot is goalie, and
| has several out-buildings. —~ further par-
: El BER,
ticulurs fRqUire 8f =
‘entre Hall.
| nue2l. 4
yA LUABLE FARM AT = "8
PRIVATE SALLEL
The undersigned offers his Farm *gbout
24 miles below Centre Hall, onthetu pike
leading from 01d “Fort to Tow silk, »
Private Sale. The farm contains’
306 ACR 49 A
whieh will be sold asa wholk ors suit
purchasers, as follows: . as
south-side®of bn en
‘acres, all of whic
of cultivation, will
balancehe will be soibin oo newly" equal
tral upon which are twe .
dwelling houses, 3
waod=house, 4°
ansshed, h
A od yan
: S ‘a Varig
trees on the premises. A ‘good
failing water near,the door, way
tern noar the house.
50 ACRES OF ™
well wooded, wi ith geo
ad odin last mente
land is all.under the h
vation, and under iri Ana :
And Juither pArtich ars, call u ou
ersigned upon th e PRES §
juneld'68,3m, 4
TAGENTS | V ANTED
Forthe Standard and fn] —
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ry anda work of extra-ordi rest and
rare historical value. No RE do
without it or have a just unde ing of
the issues before the country, wi
ding it. Endorsed by the le
erats and Conservatives of
claims of the Democratic.
sufitages of the people are so forcibly por-
trayed and clearly shown in this volume,
that no friend of SoLstitafional liberty
should fail to read it. pts id dani ot
the country are Radin t
work: the best opportunity hp m fandara
ever as its urge 2 low price, and’
great popularity h ave made apositive de-’
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and a full description’ of the greatest subi
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UNITED STATES PUBLISHING 1.
wer
Te
sep’ 8 Jy
au2ltd 441 Brooine st., New York,