FRIDAY, SEP 11th 1868. ES gp" For PRESIDENT : HORATIO SEYMOUR, of New York. en ne See For VieE PRESIDENT: GEN. FRANK P. BLAIR, of Missouri. DEMOCRATICSTATE NOMINATIONS FOR AUDITOR GENERAL: of Fayette County. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL! GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT, of Columbia County. For Congress : L. A. Mackey, Clinton county. For President Judge Charles A. Mayer, of Clinter county. For Assembly: P. Gray Meek, of Bellefonte. For District Attorney : Henry Y. Stitzer, of Bellefonte. For County Surveyor: William P. Mitchell, of Howard bor For County Commissioner : John Bing, of Unionville. For Auditor : Jom Rishel, of Potter. ie Rn - To CORRESPONDENTS.—AsS we were absent the greater part of the last two weeks, we ask pardon from correspon- dents for any seeming neglect on our part, during the time. We find an unusual nunber of communications on hand which it is now to late to publish this week, and such as will not become stale by being deferred will appear next week. The Judgeship—C. A. Mayer the Nominee. The democratic confrees of this judi- cial district, met again at Clearfield on Tuesday of last week without making a nomination. Judge Barret would not pledge himself to abide by the de- cision of the conference, whereupon the conferees of Center and Clinton counties withdrew, to meet at Belle- fonte vn Thursday evening 3rd, when Charles A. Mayer received the nomi- nation, by Mr. Orvis declining to be a candidate any longer. Perfect har- mony existed, and the termination of the matter was to the satisfaction of Mr. Orvis as well as of Mr. Mayer. —e eet Charles A. Mayer—our Nominee for Judge. As will be seen in another article, Charles A. Mayer is the regular nomi- nee of the Democracy for President Judge of this judicial district. Mr. Mayer is already known either persenally or by reputation, to the people of Centre county; his reputa- tionas a lawyer has been abroad for years; he is the most prominent lawyer at the Lock Haven bar, and he stands second to none in central Pennsylva- nia. No one doubts his ability to make a good judge, and no one can call in question his character. He isa man of the strictest honor and integ- rity, and Clinton county has no citizen who is more respected for these qualities than our nominee, Charles A. Mayer. He has been a life-long Democrat, but it is mot on that score that we ask Democrats to stand by hin to a man, as we wish to keep a question of this kind, as free as possible from politics ; but, with this good trait he combiness eminent fitness for the position, and is thereby tio proper person whom Demo- crats should vote for. Wehope that not a single Demo- crat will be led to cast his vote for an uulependent candidate--half renegade. —When we have men in our ranks fit for position, and such receive the party nomination, every good Demo- crat will stand by the choice of his party. Mr Mayer has the highest qualifications for the bench, which none cw gainsay, let him, therefore, alse reccive the highest vote the party can poll. Juidze Barrett an Independent Candidate. The fears which we exprssed in a recent number of the Reporter, that Judge Barrett was playing foul, are now fully confirmed. Nr. Barrett, at the meeting of the conferees in Clear- field, last week, refused to pledge him- self to abide by the decision of the conference, in which he had all along, throgch his conferces, taken a part. Loner he was bound so to do, or «o into conference at all. He ple, determined to be a candidate, sominaied or not nominated. We ope after such conduct on the part of udee Darrett, he will not receive the {2 single Demoerat, and that the winls vote of the party will be cast for Charles A, Mayer, for Presi- lent Judze, who is the regular nomi- Me, Barrett already holds a Judge- piip in the 22nd district, composed of se counties Wayne, Monroe, Carbon | of years to run yet. Let his greed be rebuked at the ballot-box. tb sin 800 MILLION DOLLARS! $500,000,000 to pay the interest on the national debt, do we pay, yearly! —and then the various State Gov- amount, which is collected in taxes from the people, by State and Federal Governments, yearly, 800 million dol- lars. This is what we got for changing from Democratic to radical rule, and the debt still growing ! How long will we be able to stand it 800 million dollars, annual tax !! country ! and more than 30, almost 50 and capital in the country. og on —— > lp — ——————— A Liltle Swindle at Harrisburg. With radicalism swindle is the watch-word—swindle in politics, swin- dle in religion, swindle in publie, . . . - N . » swindle in private, swindle in little things, swindle in big things, and adebt swindlers in the Treasury. The boldest little swindling opera- tion took place at Harrisburg, last spring, by payment of the following account : COPY. Commormwenlih of Penmsylvania ; To A. C. llyus, Dr, To salary as paster and folder, ses- OF BBB. coviais vuiiirrrinissssssenn inane STON 00 The mileage (80 miles circular)... 1200 TOtAl vce incr sniitnne warren Sve sav sav S712 00 Now every member of tht legisla- ture, radical and democrat, can be brought upon the stand to swear that this Ilyus had no such appointment, that he rendered no such service, and that he was not at Harrisburg at all during the session, and Ilyus himself admits this. Yet, radical speaker Davis makes out a warrant for pay- ing this account, and radical Auditor General Hartranft approves of it and has it paid, thus, for some reason or other, allowing a radical pet to filch 8712 from the Treasury, for no service rendered. Ilyus is from Lancaster county, and the name of the radical member and preacher, Armstrong, of the same county, is connected with shoving this swindle through. So zoes your money, tax-payers, and this Ilyus swindle, is only one of the | ten thousand radical swindles upon the Treasury. It-ms to Tickle Tax-payers. For the purpose of humoring voters, particularly such as intend voting for Grant and Colfax, we furnish the fol- lowing simple items as a “digestive,” to be taken occasionally before elec- tion time—of course, we charge noth- ing for writing these little recipes in the Reporter : At the present time of piece, it costs 30 millions of dollars more, per year, to carry on the government under ra- dical rule, than it did under the ad- ministration of Polk, when we-earried on a war with a foreign power, Mexi- co. The radical congress has enacted that you, farmers, mechanics and la- boring men, must take all your pay in rag-money and pay all the taxes, for United States, State, ceunty and all township purposes, while the lordly bondholder receives big interest in gold, gets his bonds paid in gold, and pays no taxes to keep up’ sehools, roads, county, state and federal Gov. ernments. How do you like that—is that fair? The taxation, remember voter, that our radical rulers have lifted from off the shoulders of the rich, of course now must be made up by the laboring men. The poor now make up the rich men’s portion. This cannot be denied, for somebody must pay the taxes—it is not the rich bondholder, consequent- ly it must be the poorer classes. The negroes of the South do not work now, they only eat—you, voter, must work and pay taxes that these negroes may be fed and clothed in their idleness, under the radieal freed- men’s bureau. You, who intend vo- ting for Grant, and with whom it goes hard to earn enough to pay your taxes, and to feed and clothe your wife and little ones, put this item into your stomachs as a digestive, and if you fatten upon it, then keep voting to uphold radicalism. a >> « The “Bellefonte National,” is the title of a new radical paper, at Belle- fonte, which takes the place of the Central Press. The Kinsloe Brothers are the publishers, and Wim. H. Brown the reputed editor. The National, in size and appearance, is the same as the Press was, being printed from the same material. The Kinsloes are practical printers, and pecuniarily we wish them success, while politically we have no good wishes for them, further, than thatthey may make a decenter organ of the National than its pre le- ism, defamation and deliberate, willful lying may not disgrace the columns of the National as they did the columns of the Press, even in the eyes of its own party. * > Privileged Classes. Undor this head the Cincinnati En- quirer thus enumerates those who con- stitute the “Privileged Classes,’ under the present Radical dispensation 1. The bondholder. He isexempted from all State and lecal taxation. He receives his interest on his bonds in gold while every body else has to take their interest in legal tenders 9 The National Banker, who is re ceiving some twenty five or thirty per cent on his investment, by virtue of the valuable privilege which the Govern- ment has given him—to provide a na- tional currency for the people. 3. The Southern negro, who has a Freedman s Bureau ei after his interests, and to feed and clothe him if he does not choose to work. 4. The New England manufacturer, who receives an immense bonus in the shape of protection to his fabries, all of which comes out of the pockets of the laboring classes, who are compelled to buy them. d. The railrond monopolists to whom Congress has granted tracts of land large enough for empires, out of which they can build their roads and have a great deal to spare! A few favored men have thus voted to them, free of expense, a great railroad. 6. The congressman and legislators who sustain these privileged classes in their rascalities upon the people, and who are made partners on that account in the robberies. 7. The immense army of office hol- ders who live upon the unclean drip- pings of the Treasury. It is the party opposed to the Demo- eracy which, by the act of its leaders, has brought into being these privileged classes, and upon which they manily rely for their continued existence, It is no wonder that, with such immense interests drawing its hearts-blood, that the country has ceased tu flourish, and that its great resources are being dried up. More Proof that Colfax was a Know-Nothing. The Cincinnati Volksfreund says that Schuyler Colfax, the Radical can- didate for Vice-President, took, in 1854, the two oaths, may convince himself of that fact if he will call at that office, and adds; Mr. M'Masters of this city, yesterday handed us a copy of the Philadelphia Evening Post of the 23d of June, 1835, which contains a detailed report of the proceedings and platform of the North Western wing of the Know-Nothing party, which was in session on the 11th of June of that year, at the Girard Hotel, of Philadelphia. These proceedings, and the call appended theretg, are signed by the following delegates from Indiana : “Wm. Cumback, Schuyler €olfax, Godlove 8S. Orth. J. S. Harvey, F. D. Allen, Jas. R. M. Bryant, Yet Colfax has the unutterable effrontery to deny in a recent speech, that he had ever been a Know-Nothing. What would Horace Greely call him under such circumstances, The Howell Cobb Disclaimer. The subjoined extract from a recent private letter from Howell Cobb of Georgia, is made publie: “IT entered this contest with a desire for the success of our ticket. which I never felt before. - Wearied with the bitter struggles of the past years, my heart panted for peace, quiet and repose. In the election of Governor Seymour, and success of the Democratic party I felt, in common with all all our good jeople there was not only a prospect but a certainty of peace—an enduring peace, that it would lift up our own desolated section and give to it new days of prosperity ; restoring, too, the past relations of brotherhood Wetween the two nations, and making us once more a happy and united people—uni- ted not merely in name but in heart, spirit and truth. I was induced to break a long self imposed silence, and address the people of Georgia, to in- duce a like féeling on their part. Well, imagine, if you can the surprise with which I have read the comments of Radical papers on that speech, per- verting its meaning, distorting and construing my words of peaceand hope into words of blood and revolution? I am made the advocate of strife and war, when from every pore of my heart there comes gushing the most eamest and sincere desire for peace—lasting, eternal peace. Do me the favor to read a revised apd correct copy ofthat speech which I send you, so that our friends, at least at the North may: truth- fully judge me.” tp . Secretary M'Culloch for Seymon r— His Political and Financial Views— Reconstruction Denoun- In conversation with an intimate friend, a few days since, Secretary M’Culloch defined his position on po- litical questions, and expressed himself decisively as to his proference in the coming campaign, as well as giving his deliberate opinion on the financial pol- icy of both parties. - There is no longer any doubt but that M'Culloch: will sup- port Seymour and Blair, using his per- sonal and official influence to secure their election. He thinks that the Republicans made a disastrous mistake in their reconstruction policy and course pursued toward: the Southern people. The reconstruction plank in their platform seemed to him a very objectionable one, and that was the cause of his going over to the Demo- crats. He spoke in disparaging terms of the financial policy put forth by the Democrats. The Secretary does not approve of the Republican policy rel- ative to the finances, but considers. it the most acceptable of the two. He holds that it is more profitable to sup- port the Democratic patty, with its de- fective financial policy, than to endorse the unjust and tyrannical conditions of the Radicals in their reconstruction measures, Secretary Seward Advises the support of Seymour and Blari, Secretary Seward regrets that cir- cumstances on both sides assumed such an objectionable shape, but philosoph- ically adheres to his advice to those who are in doubt, of the two evils to choose the least, which, in his opinion is the party represented by Seymour and Blair, a — edly fr a Is Grant A Drunkard ! We have never made any charge of drunkeness against the Head of the Army and Radical candidate fer the Presidency, on our own responsibility ; but as there appears to be some anx- ious inquirers after truth in the Radi- cal ranks, who are pledged not to vote for an intemperate man for any office, we refer them for information to the following authorities: New York Tribune, April 8, 1868, “Mack's” Washington letter in which he reports President Johnson as saying that Grant had (been in the Executive mansien “so drunk that he could not stand,” Anti Slavery Standard April 11, 1868 in which Wendell Phillips charges Grant with drunkenness. Independent, (Theodore Tilton’s paper), January 31, 1868, Tilton’s own telegram from Washingon, stating that Grant was “occasionally seen fuddled in the street.” Wendell Phillips’ speech in a con- vention held at Boston May 28th and 29th, 1868 ? “Imagine a Republican candidate for the Presidency—the most popular man in America—who cannot stand up before a glass of liquor without falling down.” Col. Donan, of the Missouri Vindi- cator a gentlemen of whom a cotempo- rary remarks that he never told a lie,” asserts positively that “Gen. Grant, on his recent visit to St. Joseph, Missouri, was so drunk as to require two gentle- men to support him, and was utterly unable to address the people.” These are all the authorities have at hand, but we persume any anxious Rrpublican can obtain all the information he wants by applicition to officers of the army intimately ac- quainted with the candidate, or to any person about Washington in the habi of seeing him often. ener el we bn which amounts to $500,000 perannum, is too small for his expenses and he propnses to ask for an increase from Parliament. The people of England, however, both Liberal and Conserva- jive, seem to ‘think that the public treasury is sufficiently burdened alrea- dy. The Queen receives $1,925,000 a year and the Prince of Wales $500,- 000, the Duke of Edinburg $75,000, the Crown Princess of Prussia 840,000, Princess Louisa of Hesse, $30,000, Cambridge $39,009, the Duke £60,000. (besides £17,300 as Commander in chief.) Besides all these, the Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, (Duchess of ‘ambridge eldest daughter) receives £15,000 a year, the Princess of Teck $25,000. Then there are the younger children of the Queen to be provided for, and the Prince of Wales’ children. Taking this amount of near three mil- lions of dellars in gold, the English people with their heavy debt and heavy taxation do not look with favor upon any additional burden. a BvuicipeE.—On Monday morning last, Mr. William Gearheart, reciding near Middleburg, Pa., committed suicide by hanging. He was found by his son sus nded by a hame-string to a rafter in the hayloft. A Coroner's jury re- turned a verdict that the said William Gearheart came to his death by his own hand, by strangulation produced by hanging by the neck. He was fifty eight years of age, and father of a large family. tcf. dps Curious, If True. It was stated in the American Agri- culturist, a year age, that twin rams generaly beget twins, and that ewes sired by twin animals are very prolific. Mr. H. E. Bidwell, of Minnesota. thinks the same law is applicable to seed corn, and endeavors to prove the correctness of his theory by the follow- ingstatement. If it be a fact that Mr. B's theory is correct, the raising, in- stead of selecting, seed corn is a matter of no small inportance to every farmer. We shall try the experiment, though we feel a little incredulous. Mr, B. SAYS : * art “A man in Tennessee give me a food idea, which I think worth pub- ishing. He said: ‘Five years ago my corn yielded but one ear to each stalk, on an average, although I had long practised selecting my seed corn from stalks bearing two cars. It occurred to me that the ears on the two eared stalks were fertilized by adjoining plants bearing one stalk only. Ithere- fore resolved to raise my seed corn b itself, giving it the best of soil and cul- ture, and, before the silk appeared, break off the male flowers (tassels or spindles) from those having but one ear. You see the result, entire field bearing uniformly two ears to the stalk.’ ”—lowa Homestead. mts I MP sissies Sohn YO SEMITE. SAN Fraxcisco, July 29, 1868, Dear Eprror: Well we are back again—back from the most magnifi- cint scenery on the round globe. We have been to Yo Semote snd returned, { have looked upon the principal mountain scenery of Europe, and dipt into Asia and Africa. and I never saw auvihing, on the whole, equal to this exhibition up in our snowey sierras, Other bits of landscape may surpass it in single points of comparison, but none contains in combination so many atpussisy and peerless attributes. our life will hardly be completed till you have taken in this little sketch of travel ; and I am impatient to have you come and do it. You come upon the valley on the top of the walls of it some 8,000 feet above the sea level. The valley itself is 4,000 feet above the same level. From this crest of rock you look virtually down into this mighty chasm, rifted at some old time and by some great convulsion in the heart of the mountain, You see it in its whole length, some eight miles, and a half to one and a half miles wide. Far below you rise the tall pines, and under the shadow of the giant walls winds the river (the Merced.) Off from the brow of this wall of mountains leap numerous waterfalls, kept full by the melting snows from the loftier summits. These loftier summits are from 10,- 000 to 13,000 feet high. One named the South Dome rises perpendicularly from the level of the valley 6,000 feet. You remember Mount Carmel perhaps. Thats 800 feet high. Take about eight such mountains, let the material be bald and bare granite rock, pile them up with a perpendicular face and over- hanging brow, and stand at their base and gaze up. That's the style of the thing. And this is only one height in that double wall of eight miles. The *'Bri- dal Veil” face is about 1,000 feet high and some 50 feet broad at thetop. The “Yosemite” Fall is a triple leap, or iength 2,500 feet. The “Ribbon” Fall is 3,000. The Nevada and Vernal Falls precipitate the main Merced River over two ledges, 700 and 500 feet high. These be big things. We took all the adventurous trips belonging to the tour without accident. Horseback riding on mountain trails, twenty-four miles a day—our ladies went through it bravely. We had a party of eleven and two guides in ad- dition.-~Journal of Comme ca. osm—— i Two thieves in Pittsburg met a gen- | tleman walking the strects late at | night with a box under his arm, under- | took to show him to a hotel. They re- | lieved him of the box and ran off’ with lit. The gentleman was a naturalist ‘and his box contained four rattle snakes, senna Five hundred ladies on horseback An exchange gives the following re- ceipt for killing fleas. Place the fero- cious animal on a’smooth board and pen him in with a hedge of shoema- ker's wax.—Then, as soon as he becomes quiet, commence reading to him the doings of Congress, and he will burst with indignation. Ete ee Accident to the Chicago River Tunnel. Cuicaao, September 3, —A section of the tunnel in process of construction under the Chicago River at Washington street, caved in last night. The temporary railroad bridge on West Water street, one of the immense derricks and engines attached, went down in the ruins. The loss 1s esti- mated by the contractors at $25,000. -_——— Agricultural College. Trustees of the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania met at Bellefonte, Sept. 1. There was present Messrs. Watts of Cumberland, Elis of Lycoming, Hamilton of Huntingdon, Kelly of Allegheny, Hiester of Dauphin, Mec Allister of Centre, A. B. Hamilton of the State] Society, and Mr. M’Kee, Sec'y of the board. A satisfactory re- port of the progress of the preparation for working the experimental farms in Chestcr county and at the college was made and accepted. Bre were taken to fill vacacies in the college faculty, and especially the position of Prinei- pal and Professor of agriculture. Very few persons qualified for this im- portant position are in the country, and in consequence of that, the trustees have thus far been unable te secure the services of any one who, in their judgement, is competent to supply this important trust. Negotiations now in progress may be successful, and the choice will ens the propriety of the course thus far pursued by the board. The annual meeting of the de'egates from the various county ag- ricultural societies was also held at the College in Center county on the 2d inst. Wm. B. Roberts, Esq., of Montgomery, presided and John F. Wolfinger, Esq., of Northumberland, Sec'y. 25 societies were represented. Messrs. Kelly, of Allegheny, Hiester of Dauphin, and Ellis, of Lycoming, together with Gen. White, of Indiana (te fill a vacancy), were chosen trus- tees. After a spirited but pleasant discussisn, it was judged expedient that a committee should be appointed by the presiding officer of the meeting to examine into all the affairs of the college and transactions of the trus- tees, and the trustees are instructed to call a meeting of representatives from all the county agricultural societies of the State, fixed by law at three from each society, at Harrisburg, on Wed- nesday, Sept. 30, 1868, at two o’clock in the afternoon, to meet at the office of the State Agricultural Society. “ ocrauc at CENTRE HALL, ON Friday, Sept. 25th. On Friday, September 25th, 1868, The Democracy of. Centre and ad- joining counties: The Friends of Constitutional Li- berty ; The Friends of Equal Taxation ; Of the People who are opposed to Rag Currency for the Poor and a Gold Currency for the Rich ; Of the Friends of Equal Taxation ; will meet in Grand Mass Convention, to hear the important issues of the day discussed by Eminent Speakers from abroad. GEN. M'CANDLESS, the gallant soldier and talented State Senator, from Philadel phin; bas been Soviied and is confidently expected. Also, HON. L. A. MACKEY, our gallant and able candidate for Congress, and other able speakers, will be present. Fine BRASS BANDS have been engaged. A GRAND DISPLAY OF DEL- EGATIONS OF LADIES OF POTTER TOWNSHIP ON HORSE-BACK!! Delegations of Ladies on Wagons and Horseback, from Miles, Penn, Haines and Gregg! Miles of Delegations of the sturdy Yeomanry of Penns and Brash vallies and from Bellefonte and Nittany and Bald Eagle vallies. Come, Freemen come! and meet in Grand Council ! Come, as the winds come, When forests are rended ; Come, as the waves come, When navies are stranded ! ellis ——— sion in Illinois the otherday. There was an acre of Democrats in atten- dance. The Merchant's Pretective Uni- on Mercantile Reference Re- gister. The Merchants’ Protective Unién, organ- ized to promote and protect trade, by ena- bling its subscribers to attain facility and safety in the granting of credits, and the re- covery of claims at all points, have to an- nounce that they will, in September, 1868, ublish in one Inrge quarto volume : ‘HE MErcnaxNts' Prorecrive Uxiox MERCANTILE REFERENCE REGISTER, con- taining among other things, the Names, Na- ture, of business, Amount of Capital, Finan~ cial Standing and Rasting asto eredit, of over 400,000 of the principal merchants, traders bankers, manufactors, and public compan- ies, in more than 30,000 of the cities, towns, villages, and settlements throughout the United States, their Territories, and the British. Provinces of North America; em- bracing the most important information at- tainable and necessary to enable the mer- chant to acertain at a glance the capital, character and Degree of Credit of such of his customers as are deemed worthy of any gradation of evedit, comprising also, a N ews paper Directory, containing the title, char- acter, price, and place of publication, with full particulars relative toeach journal, be- ing a complete guide to the press of every county in the United States. The reports and information will be confin- ed to those deemed worthy of some line of credit; and as the same will be based, #0 for as practicable upon the written statements of the parties themselves, revised and evrrect- ed by well-known and reliable legs} corres- pondents, whose characters will prove a varantee of the correctness of the informa- tion furnished by them, i i= believed that the reports will prove mere truthful and complete, and therefore, superior to, and of mu / greater value, than any previously issued. By aid of the “Mercantile Reference Reg- ister,” business men will be enabled toascer- tain at aglance, the capital and gradation of credit, as compared with financial worth, of nearly every merchant, mantifaeturer, tra- der, and bankers, within the above named territorial limits. On or about the first of each month, sub- seribers will also recieve the monthly Chron- icle, containing among other things, a ree- ord of such important changes in the name and condition of firms, througltotit the coun- try, as may occur subsequent to the publica- tion of each half-y early volume of the Mer- cantile Reference Register. Price of the Merchants Union Mercantile Reference Register, fifty dollars, ($50.) for which it will be forwarded to any address in the United States, transportation paid. Holders of five $10 shares of the Capital Stock in addition to participating in the profits will recieve one copy ofthe Mercan- tile Register free of charge; holders of ten shares will be entitled to two copies; and no more than ten shares of the Capital Stock will be allotted to any one applicant. All remittances, orders, or communiea- tions relative to the book should be address- ed to the Merchants’ Protective Union, in the American Fxchange Bank Building. No.128 Broadway, (Box 2566,) New York.. t Sept. 4. '68.-6m, er New Shoe Shop! The public are informed that BOOT'AND SHOE Bat ME has been started at Centre Hall by the un- ders . His Establ will be foun in the upper and Jlorth part of Mr. John Shannon's house, . al ays kept on hand, Re RE 4 4 de po accounts sent them properly aut ment, J Fopt 11,6t aye best Coal Butnt Lime can be © 3 i: 1% # CENTRE HALL His Patent Flame Kiln Plastering Lime to be h 8. F. BRUSS & 0, Chas. H. Held, Clock, Watchmaker & Jeweler Millheim, Centre ¢o,, Péfind.” ** at his new establishment, above der's 8 and k eonétafitly on ell kinds , Watches and Jewelry of the latest styles as #lso the Maranoilles Patent Oslender Clocks, provided complete inde of the month, and the month week off its face, waffinted as a Rerfoct time-k . ra, Clocks, atches and Jewelry res pa on short notice and warranted pian RPHANS' COURT SALE! : By virtue of an order of the ( 's Coit of Centre county, there will be ex- 0% SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10th, 148, Bowersox, d, viz: {gin piece or parcel of land, situate in Haines townsh adjoining Aaronsburg on the north, Lev Stover on the east and John Moyer on the west, containing THREE and 1 log dwel- erected a smal HOUSE, STABLE, with =» fine commence at 20 lock, r m., on said day. TERMS :—One half the purshase to be paid on confirmation of Sale, and the residue in one vear thereafter, with inter ont to be bee by bund and "ROE on the premises, ; vu Admimigrar. , AER Sr ati PUBLIC SALE! of Valuable Real Estate, Will be sold at public Sale, on the premi- ses, in George's Valley, On Saturday, September, 12th, next, at 1} o'clock, p. m., a lot of ground, con- taining TWENTY ACRES, one half clear, and in the best state of jcultivation, thereon erected a good 2-story, weather- rded Log House, Barn, Wash- house, Smoke-house, Wood-shed and Pig- pen; a never failing apple Orchard ; a well of excellent water near the door. The balance of this tract is well timbered with white oak and pine. This treet of Land lies on both Sides of the public fal a a iy of water running t the middle of i and adjoins Lands Tof Wp. Zerby, Petes Breon and Ssmuel Emerick. JACOBD. BREON, aug2® Gregg tp. DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given, that let- ters of Administration, over the estate of Jacob Bowersox, late of Haines township, dec'd, have been ted to the undersig- ned. All persons Br themselves in- debted fo said estate are hereby notified te come forward and make payment, and those havivg Accounts against the same will pre- sent them properly suthenticuted for atig2s 6 Aaronsburg. ALUABLE FARM AT PRIVATES SALE! The undersigned offers his valuable situated in Penn township, on the turnpi about 2 miles west of Millheim, at private sale, containing 70 Acres of Clear Land, fences and in the highest under of cultivati 0 ry log grod barn, good ng wa fh the house and bara, and This farm is under xs good a state of culti- vation as any in the valley. Also, another Twn of 43 Acres Woodland. ood ith spruce, pi esnut . le on the ae oh oh and Penn tp., within § mile of f cow-mill, and § mile of Kerstetter's saw-mill. Also, 40.000 fl. choice aber, to be seen at residence of the u opipned. PETE ; atig21.8t x REDE Boot & Shoe Store- E. GRATIAM & SON. ONE DOOR NORTH of IRWIN & WIL. SONS HARD-WARE STORE ‘ Manufacturers and Dealers in ladies,’ gents, of every deseription. with that of any other Establish: ment in Centré county, We cordislly INVITE OUR ray FRIENDS Y CALL examine for mselv prices satisfy he nolling off i wn » Than Cheapest Bellefonte, Aug. 28.68. he : —— SCALES, at wholesale and retail, cheap, IRWIN & WILSON. apl0'68.: WILSON. iY % 4 5 £ = 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers